Elliot Hawkins v. Gage County

759 F.3d 951, 2014 WL 3582886, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 13886
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJuly 22, 2014
Docket13-3107
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 759 F.3d 951 (Elliot Hawkins v. Gage County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elliot Hawkins v. Gage County, 759 F.3d 951, 2014 WL 3582886, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 13886 (8th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

RILEY, Chief Judge.

Elliot Hawkins was falsely accused of rape and spent seventeen days in jail as a result. Although a police investigation by officers of the Gage County, Nebraska, sheriff’s office ultimately revealed the purported rape victim had fabricated her accusation, Hawkins brought this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 suit, alleging that both in investigating the claim and in drafting an affidavit used to obtain an arrest warrant, the officers failed to account for certain evidence which Hawkins claims was exculpatory. The district court 1 granted sum *953 mary judgment in favor of the defendants — Gage County and the officers— concluding Hawkins failed to establish a genuine dispute as to the existence of a constitutional violation. Because we similarly conclude Hawkins’s evidence fails to establish a constitutional violation, we affirm. 2

1. BACKGROUND

A. Factual Background 3

1. Initial Accusation

In the early hours of November 24, 2011, Deputy Brandon Schley of the Gage County sheriffs office responded to a request for assistance at a local hospital. Deputy Schley arrived to find Officer Mor-abito of the local police department investigating the recently reported rape of Jennifer Valenta, who was in the emergency room of the hospital. Deputy Schley acquired basic background information but did not interview Valenta.

Deputy Schley learned from speaking with Officer Morabito that Valenta reported the following story: Valenta met her assailant, “Elliot,” a few days earlier through her sister, Stella Dillon, and agreed to perform sexual favors for Elliot in exchange for money. Elliot picked her up the evening of the assault, driving a dark, small semi-truck, and drove her to a place near a lake. After Elliot parked and the two exited the truck, three men approached. Elliot joined the three men and ordered Valenta to disrobe. She refused but eventually complied. One of the four forced her to the ground and, despite her protests, began sexual intercourse. The four men took turns, and afterwards they used paper towels to clean up. Elliot then drove her back to town, where the two visited the local bar. Before letting her leave, Hawkins threatened to harm Valen-ta and her family if she contacted the police.

Valenta’s sister Stella, who was also at the hospital, gave Deputy Schley a similar story and described Elliot’s unique truck. Deputy Schley reported this information to Sergeant Anthony Shepardson, who, based on his familiarity with the local residents, believed “Elliot” was Elliot Hawkins.

While at the hospital, Valenta signed a hospital consent form as part of a rape kit, in which she consented to the collection of evidence, but Valenta left the hospital before the rape kit examination could be completed. On the consent form, the attending nurse recorded details of Valenta’s injuries and of the purported rape. Deputy Schley was trained not to “push the issue” of a rape kit because victims were often traumatized after the rape and would often cooperate later.

Deputy Schley spoke with Valenta as she left the hospital, providing contact information and offering protection. When Deputy Schley mentioned Hawkins’s full name, Valenta became noticeably more distraught. Valenta begged Deputy Schley not to speak to Hawkins, explaining he had threatened her, and she was afraid for herself and her family.

Deputy Schley and Sergeant Shepard-son set out to look for the location of the alleged rape. The two officers drove around the lake they believed Valenta referenced and found a location with beer cans, a Coca Cola bottle, and four wadded pieces of paper towels. There was also a *954 set of dual-wheeled tire tracks consistent with Valenta’s description of Hawkins’s truck.

Two days later, Valenta returned to the local hospital to complete a rape kit screening but ultimately decided against it. She did get a pelvic exam, the results of which indicated nothing unusual. The undisputed record shows hospital personnel informed the local police department that Valenta declined to complete the rape kit after learning too much time had passed for it to be effective. The hospital did not notify the police department of Valenta’s pelvic exam. The record does not show whether either hospital or police department personnel contacted the Gage County sheriffs office.

2. Additional Investigation and Arrest

Officer Morabito arranged for a recorded interview of Valenta on the evening of November 28, 2011. Valenta cooperated and told a story substantially consistent with what she told Officer Morabito at the hospital. During the interview, Valenta provided greater detail on the alleged rape itself and described for the first time the physical appearance of the other three men.

After the interview, Officer Morabito and Sergeant Shepardson encouraged Va-lenta to call Hawkins to obtain admissions about the events of November 24, 2011. During the recorded call, Hawkins acknowledged he and Valenta were together that night, but denied the existence of the three other men. After Valenta questioned Hawkins for a couple of minutes, the call was disconnected. Valenta tried calling Hawkins back, but he did not answer.

Valenta also provided photos Stella had purportedly taken of the injuries Valenta sustained in the rape. The photos depicted abrasions on Valenta’s buttocks and vaginal area and bruises on her legs. Deputy Schley and Sergeant Shepardson spoke about the photos with the nurse who had attended Valenta on November 24, 2011, but she could not confirm whether the photos accurately depicted Valenta’s injuries because she had never seen Valen-ta undressed.

Early on November 29, 2011, Deputy Schley completed and submitted an affidavit and application for an arrest warrant, which the county judge granted later that day. The case was then turned over to Investigators Rob Sandersfeld and John Chavez, who thereafter assumed control over the investigation. The undisputed record shows that before submitting the warrant application, Deputy Schley had Investigators Sandersfeld and Chavez proofread the affidavit and warrant application for grammar and spelling. That evening, after the warrant’s issuance, Sergeant Shepardson found and arrested Hawkins.

3. Post-Arrest

During Hawkins’s initial post-arrest interview, Hawkins explained he and Valenta had gone to the lake on the night of the alleged rape, they had consensual sex in the sleeper berth of Hawkins’s truck, and no one else had been present. Hawkins initially lied about the specific location of the encounter. When confronted with a drawing of the lake and questioned about the precise location of the encounter, Hawkins admitted he had misrepresented the location, because he had not wanted the officers to find the paper towels with his DNA on them. Hawkins also explained that after the consensual encounter, he and Valenta went to a local bar, where Valenta went to the restroom unaccompanied, and did not appear fearful or in pain.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
759 F.3d 951, 2014 WL 3582886, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 13886, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elliot-hawkins-v-gage-county-ca8-2014.