Estrada v. Torres

646 F. Supp. 2d 253, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 64551, 2009 WL 2235864
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedJuly 24, 2009
DocketCivil 3:07cv1683 (JBA)
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 646 F. Supp. 2d 253 (Estrada v. Torres) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estrada v. Torres, 646 F. Supp. 2d 253, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 64551, 2009 WL 2235864 (D. Conn. 2009).

Opinion

*255 RULING ON DEFENDANT’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT [Doc. # 20]

JANET BOND ARTERTON, District Judge.

Plaintiff Antonio Estrada, a diabetic man subject to hypoglycemia, brings suit against Maximo Torres, a Police Officer with the Waterbury Police Department, in connection with Officer Torres’s arrest of Mr. Estrada outside a supermarket in Waterbury, Connecticut. Plaintiff brings claims pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for false arrest, malicious prosecution, and excessive force under the Fourth Amendment and denial of proper medical care under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Following discovery, Defendant moved for summary judgment on the Fourth Amendment claims. For the reasons stated below, Defendant’s motion will be granted. Plaintiffs claim for denial of proper medical care remains for trial.

I. Background

The parties agree on the following facts: On October 2, 2005, Plaintiff and his brother, Joselito Estrada, were shopping at a Shaw’s Supermarket in Waterbury, where Defendant “was working an extra duty assignment.” Plaintiff tried on sunglasses, including one with a “grade” of 250, and as he waited in line to purchase a lottery ticket he “pulled off the sticker that said ’250’ (the grade of the glasses) and tried the glasses on again.” Plaintiff put the glasses in his back pocket when he reached for his wallet to pay for the lottery ticket, and “then exited the store, without paying for the eyeglasses.” Defendant watched these events transpire in real-time via the store’s closed-circuit security cameras after being called by Shaw’s security manager Tiffany Tenner. When Plaintiff felt the glasses in his pocket as he sat down in Joselito’s car, he “took [them] out of his rear pocket and straightened the glass frame because it was slightly bent[,] ... tried the glasses on to see if they still fitted him well[,] ... tried reading the cashier’s receipt with the eyeglasses on[,] and found that the glasses suited his vision and he could read the receipt okay.” Immediately thereafter, Office Torres “approached Mr. Estrada at his car and Mr. Estrada was taken into custody and escorted to the security office inside the store,” after which Defendant “arrested Mr. Estrada on a charge of Larceny in the Sixth Degree.” (Def.’s Rule 56(a)l Stmt. [Doc. # 20-2] at ¶¶ 1-15; Pl.’s Rule 56(a)2 Stmt. [Doc. #21-1] at § A (admitting these statements).)

Mr. Estrada relies primarily on his own sworn discovery responses and on a February 2006 letter he wrote to his psychiatrist, Dr. Efren E. Rebong, about this incident. 1 In these documents Plaintiff asserts that he is diabetic and had begun “feeling mild symptoms of hypoglycemia” while waiting to pay for the lottery ticket and before pulling off the sticker. As Plaintiffs symptoms increased in severity “[i]t seem[s][he] panicked and [was] a bit confused,” whereupon he left the store, found his brother near their ear, “told him [he was] having hypoglycemia,” and sat down in the car to “open[] the console where [he] keep[s][his] insta-glucose and chocolates and regular soda.” When he sat down he “realized that [he] walked out of the store without paying for the glasses.” He then tried them on, “[b]ut before [he] could tell [Joseljito to go back to the *256 store and pay for” the glasses, Defendant (whom Mr. Estrada calls “the security guard”) asked him to exit the car, “handcuffed [him], and led [him] to the store[’]s security room,” patted Plaintiff down and questioned him inside the supermarket’s security office. (Letter to Dr. Rebong, Ex. B to Pl.’s Rule 56(a)2 Stmt., at 1-3; PL’s Discovery Responses, Ex. A to PL’s Rule 56(a)2 Stmt.) According to Plaintiff:

In the security room I was told to spread my legs and patted on, searching and emptying my pockets of all its contents (my wallet, cell phone, keys [and] coins). [Officer Torres] counted the money in my wallet, checked my cards and even the spare key for my car.... I was held in detention for almost an hour standing with handcuffs being yelled at and screamed at by [Ms. Tenner]. By that time I’m already experiencing mild to moderate hypoglycemia [in] my toes, feet and hands were hurting because of neuropathy.... When I told [Office Torres] that my hands were hurting and feels like the handcuffs were feeling tight he lifted my hands/arms on my back which was painful[ ], he also yanked up my pants 2x that hurts my groin area.

(Letter to Dr. Rebong at 2-3.) In his deposition Plaintiff explained that the “excessive force” to which he was subject included Officer Torres “pulling my pants about five times,” which “hurts my groin.” (PL’s Dep. at 52:2-3.) Defendant does not rebut Plaintiffs recitation of these facts.

Plaintiff further states that in the presence of Defendant both Plaintiff and his brother informed Ms. Tenner (whom Mr. Estrada calls “the security officer”) that he was having a hypoglycemic attack. Plaintiff wrote to his psychiatrist that while Defendant took Plaintiff to the Shaw’s security office “[Josel]ito kept on telling the security guard that I’m having hypo, and telling them to be careful with me.” (Letter to Dr. Rebong at 2.) In his discovery responses Plaintiff states that he told Defendant “that I was having a seizure and that I was having a hypoglycemic attack. I was pleading to get something for my hypoglycemia. My brother also told him that I was having a seizure and an episode.” Defendant, in response, “called me crazy,” “told the other officers that I was a crazy one,” and “forced me to be in handcuffs and in the back of the van while I was having a seizure.” (PL’s Discovery Responses at Interrogatories 7, 8, 10.) Plaintiffs letter states that while he was detained by Defendant and Ms. Tenner, he insisted that he “never intended to steal” the glasses, but nevertheless “opted for them to call the police” because “all [he] want[ed][was] to get out of there and get [his] insta-glucose gel and eat something.” (Letter to Dr. Rebong at 3.)

At some point thereafter a police “wagon responded to Shaw’s and transported [Plaintiff] to [headquarters] for booking” by a non-party officer. (Incident and Offense Report, Ex. C to Def.’s Mem. Supp., at 2.) 2 The unrebutted record is *257 that Defendant knew Plaintiff claimed to be suffering from hypoglycemia and that in response to Plaintiffs symptoms and repeated requests for assistance Defendant called Plaintiff “crazy” and did not provide him any medical care or permit him to get his insta-glucose gel or anything to eat.

Plaintiff states that “[t]he [criminal] case against [him] was dismissed [on] December] 16, 2005.” (Letter to Dr. Rebong at 5-6.) Plaintiff proffers records from the Waterbury Police Department listing the “Court Disposition]” of his case as “DISMISSED” and a “Disposition] Date” of “12/16/2005.” (Mugshot, Ex. D. to Pl.’s Rule 56(a)2 Stmt., at 2.) Defendant claims that the criminal proceedings did not terminate in Plaintiffs favor, pointing to Superior Court records listing Plaintiffs charge as larceny in the sixth degree with three hand-written and stamped notes (“plea vacated,” “dismissed,” and “Conditional Plea to 12/16 Dismissal”) and four dates (“10/02/2005,” “Dec. 16[,] 2005,” “Nov.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
646 F. Supp. 2d 253, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 64551, 2009 WL 2235864, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estrada-v-torres-ctd-2009.