Esparza v. Verstraete

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Illinois
DecidedFebruary 28, 2020
Docket3:18-cv-00559
StatusUnknown

This text of Esparza v. Verstraete (Esparza v. Verstraete) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Esparza v. Verstraete, (S.D. Ill. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS

GINO L. ESPARZA,

Plaintiff,

v.

SHERI VERSTRAETE, DOUG Case No. 3:18-CV-00559-NJR TALBOT, COREY MARTIN, PAUL KILQUEST, MELISSA COOPER, JOSE CERNA, and CHRISTOPHER HEDGEPETH,

Defendants.

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

ROSENSTENGEL, Chief Judge:

Pending before the Court is a Motion for Summary Judgment filed by Defendants Sheri Verstraete (“Verstraete”), Doug Talbot (“Talbot”), Corey Martin (“Martin”), Paul Kilquest (“Kilquest”), Melissa Cooper (“Cooper”), and Jose Cerna (“Cerna”) (Doc. 44); and a Motion for Summary Judgment filed by Defendant Christopher Hedgepeth (“Hedgepeth”) (Doc. 51). For the reasons set forth below, the Court grants the Motions for Summary Judgment. FACTUAL & PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND This action arises out of a search of Plaintiff Gino L. Esparza’s (“Esparza”) former apartment in Collinsville, Illinois, conducted by employees of the Illinois Department of Corrections (“IDOC”), the Collinsville Police Department (“Collinsville PD”), and the Collinsville Code Enforcement and Building Inspector Office (“Code Office”) on January 24, 2018 (Doc. 26).

At the time of the events in question, Esparza’s mother, Rosemary Miller (“Miller”), was a parolee and was subject to conditions of parole enforced by IDOC (Doc. 52-1 at 4). Defendant Hedgepeth, then employed as an IDOC parole agent, was assigned to supervise Miller (Id.). On January 9, 2018, Miller called an automated IDOC system and reported a change of address to 405 East Main Street, Apartment 5, Collinsville, Illinois, (“Apartment 5”) (Id.). Hedgepeth subsequently visited that address

on the same day (Id.) In the course of that visit, Hedgepeth had the mother of Esparza’s children, Madeline Ross (“Ross”), complete a Host Site Agreement in which Ross acknowledged that Miller resided at the address and that because of this the residence was “subject to search at any time by parole agents or designated [IDOC] staff” and that Ross consented

to the possibility of arbitrary searches (Id.; Doc. 45-1). Hedgepeth has stated that Ross indicated that she was a lessee of the apartment (Doc. 52-1 at 9). Esparza was also in the apartment at the time that the Host Site Agreement was completed (Doc. 55-1 at 3) but states that he left the room and was not present when the Host Site Agreement was completed (Doc. 45-3 at 14). Esparza has further stated that Ross was not on the lease and

did not reside at the apartment but merely stayed there on occasion when their mutual children were visiting (Doc. 45-3 at 4). Esparza has indicated that he was the only person residing at the apartment at that time and that he was not aware that Miller considered herself to be residing at that address or that she had stated as much to IDOC (Id. at 45-2 at 5, 7; 45-3 at 3).

On January 18, 2018, Hedgepeth received a call from Defendant Fields, then employed as an officer with the Collinsville PD. (Doc. 55-1 at 3). Fields requested that Hedgepeth meet with him to conduct a compliance check on Miller and Miller’s daughter, Kristen Miller, who was also a parolee and who was presently residing in Apartment 1 of the same building as Apartment 5 (Id.). Fields’s stated reason for requesting this compliance check was that the apartment complex was under surveillance

and located in a high traffic drug area (Id.). Hedgepeth spoke to his supervisor, who instructed him to tell Fields to submit a formal request on official letterhead, and Hedgepeth relayed this information to Fields (Id. at 4). Later that same day, Fields submitted a formal request, which repeated that numerous drug dealers and users frequented the apartment complex (Id.; Doc. 45-6).

Based on this request, Hedgepeth and other IDOC employees went to the apartment complex on January 24, 2018, at 8:00 a.m. (Doc. 55-1 at 4). Esparza stated that he answered the door after hearing loud knocking and discovered that an officer had knocked a hole in his door with a flashlight (Doc. 45-2 at 7). Esparza found several officers outside his door and was asked if Miller was present in the apartment (Id.). He stated that

he said he would check and went to look for her in the apartment, leaving the officers outside (Id. at 8). Esparza said that he found Miller in his children’s bedroom and returned to the door to tell the officers this, but found the officers were already entering the apartment (Doc. 45-2 at 9–10). Esparza stated that an officer grabbed him by the arm and put him up against a table and handcuffed him before sitting him down (Id.) Esparza has indicated that he told the officers that they did not have permission to enter his home

without a warrant (Id.). Hedgepeth stated that in a situation where an individual objected to the entry of IDOC officers into premises where a parolee was known to be present, IDOC officers were trained to contact their commanders, who would then determine whether or not to call and request a warrant (Doc. 52-1 at 8). Hedgepeth was present at Esparza’s apartment for some of the period in which the parole officers entered, but he also spent time in Apartment 1, which was also being entered by parole officers.

Hedgepeth did not recall seeing officers knock a hole in Esparza’s door with a flashlight and did not recall hearing Esparza state that officers could not enter without a warrant or seeing officers restrain Esparza (Doc. 52-1 at 7–8). Once officers entered the apartment, they searched the room in which Miller was staying, finding substances suspected to be methamphetamine and drug-related

paraphernalia (Doc. 55-1 at 4). A breathalyzer test was also administered to Miller, who tested positive for methamphetamine (Id.). IDOC officers then called the Collinsville PD, who came to the scene to take possession of Miller and the suspected narcotics (Id.). Kilquist, an officer in the Collinsville PD, indicated in his case report that he responded to the scene to assist the IDOC officers, having been informed that they had located illegal

narcotics and paraphernalia (Doc. 45-5 at 4). Kilquist noted that officers Martin, Cooper, Cerna, and Talbot also arrived on the scene to assist. Kilquist directed officers Martin and Cooper to Apartment 5, while he went to Apartment 1 with Cerna and Talbot (Id.), with Kilquist later entering Apartment 5 as well (Id.). Kilquist also indicated that employees from the City of Collinsville’s Code Enforcement and Building Inspector Office (“Code Office”), including Verstraete, subsequently arrived on the scene to survey “dangerous

conditions of the interior and exterior of the apartment complex” (Id.). Esparza indicates that the Collinsville PD officers entered the apartment and immediately began searching the apartment thoroughly, going through drawers and cabinets (Doc. 45-3 at 8). Esparza states that he consistently told Collinsville PD officers not to enter or search his home without a warrant (Doc. 45-2 at 11). Esparza also described a blonde female Collinsville PD officer present in his apartment whom he believed to be

Cooper (Id.). Esparza did not indicate that he had ever met Cooper before (Id.). Additionally, Esparza identified Verstraete, an employee of the Code Office, as being present in his apartment taking pictures (Id. at 13). Esparza stated that he had previously met Verstraete a week or two before when she had approached him and asked him to let her take pictures inside the apartment complex (Id.). Esparza told the officer—whom he

believed to be Cooper—to not take pictures of the apartment, but he has indicated that she responded by “trying to tell me how bad my landlord was” (Id.). Hedgepeth has indicated that he was unaware of who the landlord of the building was (Id. at 9).

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