ESTATE OF FRANK P. LAGANO v. STATE OF NEW JERSEY

CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedMarch 24, 2023
Docket2:12-cv-05441
StatusUnknown

This text of ESTATE OF FRANK P. LAGANO v. STATE OF NEW JERSEY (ESTATE OF FRANK P. LAGANO v. STATE OF NEW JERSEY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ESTATE OF FRANK P. LAGANO v. STATE OF NEW JERSEY, (D.N.J. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF NEW JERSEY

ESTATE OF FRANK P. LAGANO, Civil No.: 12-cv-5441 (KSH) (CLW) Plaintiff,

v. BERGEN COUNTY PROSECUTOR’S OFFICE; MICHAEL MORDAGA; and various JOHN DOE defendants whose individual identities or OPIN ION wrongful acts are not now known to Plaintiff,

Defendants.

Katharine S. Hayden, U.S.D.J. I. Introduction This action arises from the unsolved murder of Frank P. Lagano, who was fatally shot in the parking lot of an East Brunswick diner on April 12, 2007. His estate claims that defendant Michael Mordaga, former Chief of Detectives for defendant Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office (the “BCPO,” together with Mordaga, “defendants”), disclosed Lagano’s confidential informant status to members of organized crime, which led to his death. In August 2012, the Estate filed suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and the New Jersey Civil Rights Act, N.J.S.A. 10:6-1, et seq. (“NJCRA”) alleging that defendants’ alleged disclosure constituted a state-created danger in violation of Lagano’s due process rights. Now, more than a decade later, defendants move for summary judgment (D.E. 499, 502) arguing that the Estate has failed to uncover any competent evidence to support its claims. The motions are fully briefed, and the Court decides them without oral argument pursuant to L. Civ. R. 78.1. II. Factual Background The summary judgment record before the Court consists of 80 exhibits, the parties’ statements and counterstatements of material facts, and a lengthy final pre-trial order.1 Notwithstanding, the issue on the defendants’ motions is a narrow one: is there evidence

sufficient for a jury to determine that the BCPO and/or its Chief of Detectives Michael Mordaga disclosed Frank Lagano’s confidential informant status to members of organized crime, and that this disclosure led to his execution? Defendants challenge the quantum of evidence the Estate has produced to support its current claim, which is that before he was murdered, Lagano (who himself was a member of the Lucchese organized crime family) was having dinner at a restaurant with two men associated with organized crime when Mordaga approached their table and disclosed that Lagano was an informant for the New Jersey Division of Criminal Justice (“DCJ”). According to defendants, the only evidence of this encounter and the revelation is a single memorandum, a writing that they argue is inadmissible and of little probative value. In opposition, the Estate concedes that

the memorandum is essential to its case, but argues that it has nonetheless satisfied its burden of presenting a genuine issue for trial. A. Origins of the Sweeney Memorandum The contested document is an internal DCJ memo purportedly written by the late James Sweeney, then an investigator for the DCJ, to his superior Paul Morris. (D.E. 507-6, Sweeney Memo at 1.) Dated May 11, 2007 with the subject line “Langano Homicide” (Sweeney misspells Lagano’s surname throughout), the memorandum purports to relay “intelligence data” regarding

1 The Court is no stranger to this case, having issued an opinion on November 23, 2021 affirming two of Magistrate Judge Waldor’s discovery orders. (See D.E. 478.) the “activities and associations of Frank Langano, a member of the Luc[c]hese Organized Crime Family, prior to his death on April 12, 2007,” and to provide “a possible motive for Langano’s death, if allegations are pursued and proven.” (Sweeney Memo at 1, 20.) Although the document appears legitimate on its face, it emerged not by way of the

thousands of pages of documents the DCJ produced during discovery, but in response to a subpoena the Estate served on Sweeney’s widow Charlotte. (D.E. 514-1, Clarke Supp. Cert. ¶¶ 15-18; see D.E. 514-2, Charlotte Tr. 32:9-34:4, 132:25-133:11.) Before Sweeney died in July 2011 he had not been questioned under oath about the memorandum, and no DCJ employee or representative has ever authenticated it as a genuine DCJ record. (Clarke Supp. Cert. ¶¶ 5, 18.) There is evidence that Sweeney may have drafted the document as a counterattack against the DCJ, which he sued for wrongful termination. The origins of that litigation began in or around 2004, when the BCPO was engaged in an investigation of organized crime gambling dubbed “Operation Jersey Boyz.” (Id. ¶ 20(a).) On October 5, 2004, the BCPO picked up a conversation between Sweeney and a confidential informant on a wiretap that it deemed

suspicious. (See D.E. 514-3, Clarke Supp. Cert. Ex. B at 8, 14.) The BCPO waited to disclose this conversation to the DCJ until after arrests were made in early December 2004, a decision that the judge who issued the wiretap determined was improper. (See D.E. 507-68, Markos Cert. Ex. 64 at 94.) During the course of proceedings before the wiretap judge, Sweeney twice engaged in inappropriate ex parte communications: first in January 2006 when he called the judge’s chambers to express concern regarding the confidential informant’s safety, and again on May 4, 2007 (seven days before the date of the memorandum) when he left a voicemail on the judge’s home answering machine to “alert” her that certain sealed documents had purportedly reached the press. This resulted in the judge reporting Sweeney to a DCJ investigator and sending a letter directly to the Attorney General about his misconduct. (See Clarke Supp. Cert. Ex. B at 6-7; see also D.E. 514-4 and 514-5, Clarke Supp. Cert. Exs. C, D.) The DCJ fired Sweeney in 2008 and two years later, he sued the State of New Jersey, the New Jersey Attorney General’s Office, the DCJ, and several state officials in state court for

wrongful termination, retaliation, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and violations of the New Jersey Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, N.J.S.A. 2C:41-1, et seq. (See generally D.E. 507-20, Sweeney Compl.) Although the lawsuit was voluntarily dismissed upon his death in July 2011, Sweeney’s complaint—with the contents of the memorandum front and center—alleged that several DCJ officials knowingly attempted to obstruct his investigation into corruption in the BCPO. (See Sweeney Compl. ¶¶ 22-47, 61-66; see also Clarke Supp. Cert. ¶¶ 5, 20.) B. Contents of the Sweeney Memorandum According to the Sweeney memorandum, Mordaga, who oversaw the BCPO’s Jersey Boyz investigation into organized crime, and Lagano, identified as a potential target, were

actually friends who attended gatherings at each other’s homes and vacationed together in Florida. (Sweeney Memo at 2; see D.E. 497, FPTO Defs. Stmt. ¶¶ 10-13.) They also entered into business ventures together, including illegal business dealings with a Woodcliff Lake attorney. (Sweeney Memo at 2-4.) The memo recites that on December 1, 2004, the BCPO executed search and arrest warrants at Lagano’s home. (Id. at 1.) Lagano was processed and brought to Mordaga’s personal office. (Id. at 2.) According to the memo, Mordaga said he would have to “remove himself from the investigation in order to protect himself and his [and Lagano’s] relationship”; gave Lagano an attorney’s business card and assured him that “90% of his problems [would] go away”; and revealed that one of Lagano’s close friends who had given Lagano $67,000 just prior to his arrest was in fact a DCJ source. (Id.; see also id. at 1.) According to the memo, money and items seized from Lagano’s home in the course of the Jersey Boyz investigation had gone missing, and as a result the relationship between

Mordaga and Lagano soured. (Id. at 2.) Lagano attempted to separate himself from Mordaga and also sought new legal representation. (Id.

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ESTATE OF FRANK P. LAGANO v. STATE OF NEW JERSEY, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-frank-p-lagano-v-state-of-new-jersey-njd-2023.