ESTATE OF ROSENBAUM BY PLOTKIN v. City of New York

975 F. Supp. 206, 1997 WL 528584
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedAugust 22, 1997
Docket1:92-cv-05414
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 975 F. Supp. 206 (ESTATE OF ROSENBAUM BY PLOTKIN v. City of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ESTATE OF ROSENBAUM BY PLOTKIN v. City of New York, 975 F. Supp. 206, 1997 WL 528584 (E.D.N.Y. 1997).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

BLOCK, District Judge:

This action, seeking relief pursuant to 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983, 1985, and 1986 and a variety of State causes of action, arises out of the unrest that gripped the Crown Heights neighborhood of Brooklyn between Monday, *209 August 19 and Thursday, August 22, 1991, after an automobile escorting the late Lubav-iteher Rebbe Menachem Schneerson (“Rebbe Schneerson”) accidentally struck and killed seven-year-old Gavin Cato (“Cato”). Within hours of Cato’s death, Australian rabbinical student Yankel Rosenbaum (“Rosenbaum”) was attacked by a group of young African-American men and stabbed to death. The plaintiffs, in the main, are members of the Crown Heights Hasidic Jewish community. 1 They contend that they sustained personal injury and property damage because defendant City of New York (“City”) failed to provide adequate police protection to quell the disturbances that followed in the wake of Cato’s death. 2 Plaintiffs also contend that the City deliberately withheld police protection from the Hasidic community for discriminatory reasons.

In addition to suing the City, plaintiffs also seek to hold former City Mayor David N. Dinkins (“Dinkins”) and former City Police Commissioner Lee Brown (“Brown”) individually accountable. 3 Dinkins and Brown now move for summary judgment pursuant to Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure in respect to the federal claims on the ground of qualified immunity. While the Court recognizes that plaintiffs’ complaint implicates both substantive due process and equal protection rights, the application of well-established principles of qualified immunity requires the grant of the motion.

I. BACKGROUND

A. The Underlying Incident

The Court draws the following facts from the parties’ statements of uncontested facts pursuant to Local Rule 56.1, 4 as well as the extensive record in this case. Unless otherwise indicated, these facts are undisputed.

At approximately 8:20 PM on Monday, August 19, 1991, a station wagon driven by Joseph Lifsch (“Lifsch”) collided with another vehicle at the intersection of President Street and Utica Avenue in Crown Heights, veered out of control, and struck Cato and his nine-year-old cousin Angela Cato. Cato was killed and Angela Cato was seriously injured. The station wagon was part of a police-led motorcade accompanying Rebbe Schneerson, since deceased.

Less than five minutes after the accident, an ambulance from a private Jewish organization known as Hatzoloh arrived at the scene. A New York City Emergency Medical Services (“EMS”) ambulance arrived shortly thereafter. A group of African-Americans gathered at the site of the accident, and several men physically assaulted Lifsch and two passengers in the station wagon. A police officer at the scene directed the Hatzoloh ambulance driver to take Lifsch and these passengers to the hospital. The EMS ambulance took the Cato children to Kings County Hospital, where Cato was pronounced dead.

B. The Community Reaction and the Police Response

The accident sparked an immediate and violent reaction among certain members of the African-American community, which quickly spread to the streets of Crown Heights. The reaction appears in part to have been generated by the perception that the Hasidic community received preferential treatment from the City, a perception that was strengthened by the police escort rou *210 tinely given Rebbe Sehneerson, the Hasidic community’s religious leader. The violence also appears to have been attributable to the spread of a wholly unjustified rumor that the Hatzoloh ambulance had failed to render aid to the seriously injured black children and had favored the less-injured Hasidic driver and passengers. At approximately 9:00 PM, less than an hour after the accident, an African-American male was arrested for firing at a group of police officers. At 11:45 PM, Rosenbaum was stabbed in the chest. Although initially expected to survive his attack, Rosenbaum died several hours later. Lemrick Nelson was arrested and charged with Rosenbaum’s murder.

Participants in the unrest pelted police cars with rocks and other projectiles. A group of African-American men allegedly burned a van owned by plaintiff Yeshiva Chanoch Lenaar (“Yeshiva”) and occupied the Yeshiva’s courtyard at 876 Eastern Parkway. In one of several affidavits submitted in opposition to Dinkins and Brown’s motion, non-party Robert Bush states that from his window he saw police officers escorting a crowd of African-Americans and observed that the officers refused to make arrests, despite the fact that members of the crowd were hurling bricks and other items at Ha-sidie-owned homes. At approximately 3:00 AM, a police car parked on Eastern Parkway was set on fire. At 4:45 AM, the police dispersed a large group of Hasidic Jews and African-Americans and the disturbances quieted for a time.

More than three hundred police personnel were dispatched to Crown Heights that night in response to the outbreaks of violence. At his deposition, Chief Thomas Gallagher (“Gallagher”), Commander of Patrol Borough Brooklyn South of the New York City Police Department (“Police Department”), testified that he pursued a policy of saturating the neighborhood with police and attempting to keep apart groups of African-Americans and Hasidic Jews. He discouraged officers from making arrests for what he termed “minor” crimes, such as unlawful assembly, because in his view such arrests would have exacerbated the situation. He also testified that there was a decision from the outset not to make mass arrests and not to engage in aggressive crowd control tactics, and that this decision was communicated to officers under his command. He stated that this decision was based upon a fear that an overly aggressive approach would cause the unrest to spread outside of Crown Heights to other areas of the City.

On Tuesday, August 20, more than one thousand police officers were sent to Crown Heights. Deputy Mayor William Lynch (“Lynch”) presided over a heated community outreach meeting at P.S. 167, which was largely attended by African-Americans. At this meeting, certain members of the African-American community charged that the Hasidic community was receiving preferential treatment from the City and, moreover, indicated their belief that violence against the police and the Hasidic community would continue. Later that day, African-American demonstrators gathered in Crown Heights at the intersection of President Street and Uti-ca Avenue.

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Bluebook (online)
975 F. Supp. 206, 1997 WL 528584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-rosenbaum-by-plotkin-v-city-of-new-york-nyed-1997.