FULLMAN v. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 30, 2025
Docket2:24-cv-00969
StatusUnknown

This text of FULLMAN v. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA (FULLMAN v. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
FULLMAN v. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA, (E.D. Pa. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

ANDREW FULLMAN, CIVIL ACTION Plaintiff,

v.

CITY OF PHILADELPHIA, et al., NO. 24-0969 Defendants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Plaintiff Andrew Fullman, proceeding pro se, brings this civil rights action against the City of Philadelphia (“the City”) and the following municipal officials, all in their individual capacities: Assistant District Attorney Barbara McDermott (“ADA McDermott”), Officer Johnnie Mae Carter (“Officer Carter”), Officer William Dorney (“Officer Dorney”), and a Philadelphia Police Department Supervisor who he identifies not by name but with the placeholder, “John Doe”. Fullman asserts claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for denial of due process, malicious prosecution, fabrication of false evidence, supervisory liability, failure to intervene, conspiracy to deprive him of constitutional rights, and municipal liability pursuant to Monell v. Department of Social Services, 436 U.S. 658 (1978). He also brings claims under Pennsylvania law for negligent supervision, respondeat superior liability, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and negligent infliction of emotional distress. The City, on behalf of itself and all other identified Defendants, moves to dismiss Fullman’s Second Amended Complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). For the reasons that follow, the City’s Motion will be granted in part and denied in part. I. BACKGROUND A. Factual Background The following factual recitation is taken from Fullman’s Second Amended Complaint, well-pleaded allegations from which are taken as true at this stage. See Fowler v. UPMC Shadyside, 578 F.3d 203, 210-11 (3d Cir. 2009). On October 4, 1986, Officer Carter responded to a report of a disturbance on Cobbs

Creek Parkway in Philadelphia that involved Fullman and another individual, Bruce Beatty. At the scene, Beatty initially informed Officer Carter “that he began striking Fullman’s car with a baseball bat” and, in response, Fullman “displayed a silver handgun.” No one was arrested immediately thereafter. Instead, an investigation led by Officer Dorney ensued, during which Officer Dorney took statements from, among others, Fullman and Beatty. While Fullman steadfastly maintained his innocence, Beatty implicated Fullman and accused him of firing the silver handgun during the altercation. Following these meetings, Officer Dorney drafted reports to document the various statements made by the witnesses, which “definitively identified Mr. Fullman as the shooter.” Officer Dorney also, Fullman says, directed Officer Carter to fabricate evidence—specifically, that Officer Carter observed a “fresh” bullet mark at the crime scene—to

corroborate Beatty’s statements about Fullman’s use of the silver handgun. Fullman avers that “[a]ccording to Defendant Dorney, the case he built against Mr. Fullman depended entirely on Defendant Carter’s false and fabricated claim of observing an alleged ‘fresh’ bullet mark” at the crime scene. Officer Dorney eventually filed an Affidavit of Probable Cause and Fullman was arrested on November 8, 1986. At the Preliminary Hearing, Beatty took the stand and testified that he saw a bullet mark on the sidewalk of the crime scene following the incident. Shortly thereafter, he alleges that Officer Dorney had a change of heart and told Fullman “that he was going to talk to the prosecutor” overseeing the trial and tell that individual “he did not believe Mr. Fullman fired a shot” during the altercation with Beatty. Officer Dorney reneged on his offer, however, when Officer Carter—who was “an alleged friend of the Beatty family”—“conspired and pressured” other officers “to have Mr. Fullman arrested two additional times on fabricated gun

charges” in an effort “to portray him . . . as a dangerous person.” Although the Philadelphia Municipal Court eventually dismissed those two “fabricated gun charges,” the charges related to the Cobbs Creek Parkway incident with Beatty were sustained and Fullman began preparing for trial. In the ensuing months, Officer Dorney renewed his instructions to Officer Carter that she fabricate evidence and provide false testimony against Fullman. For instance, several days before Fullman’s trial was scheduled to commence, Officer Dorney attempted to find an additional witness to falsely testify about where Fullman’s car was in the days following the incident. ADA McDermott, one of the prosecutors overseeing Fullman’s case, “took matters into her own hands” and “join[ed] the police investigation in search of” such a witness from “the

Philadelphia Ugly Duckling Car Rental,” from where they believed Fullman had rented the car. Fullman avers that ADA McDermott provided further investigative support by aiding the officers in finding a law enforcement witness “with ballistics expertise” to “provide [a] fabricated scientific theory” regarding the bullet mark that Officer Carter claimed to have found at the crime scene. When Fullman’s trial eventually started in June 1987, Fullman alleges that Officer Carter acquiesced and provided false testimony, stating that she observed a “fresh” bullet mark on the street at the crime scene. She told the jury that she was able to characterize the bullet in such a way based on her experience having identified “hundreds” of similar bullet marks during her training at the Philadelphia Police Academy. Fullman avers that ADA McDermott was aware that this testimony was false, but presented it to the jury nonetheless. Beatty also took the stand, and, in contrast to his testimony at the Preliminary Hearing—where he testified that he observed a bullet mark on the sidewalk of the crime scene following the incident—claimed that he saw the

bullet mark on the street in an effort “to corroborate his story” with that of Officer Carter. Ultimately, Fullman was convicted and “spent over five and a half years in prison and an additional four and a half years” on parole. At some point while Fullman was on parole, he ran into Beatty’s wife, Barbara, at a local Popeyes restaurant where she told him that “prior to and after his criminal trial” she and her husband repeatedly “insisted to the Defendant Officers and McDermott” that Fullman “never fired a gun” and only “displayed a silver handgun.” Yet, Officers Carter and Dorney “failed to document” any of these interactions or exculpatory statements in the numerous reports they produced. And none of the three ever disclosed this information to the defense or trial court at any point during the investigation or subsequent proceedings against Fullman.

Fullman also came to learn that “the problems that Defendants Dorney and Carter had as . . . investigators, many of which were on full display” during prior investigations, “were common knowledge at the Philadelphia Police Department” and its “most senior leadership.” To that end, Fullman alleges that Officer Carter “was forced to resign from the [Department]” in 1988 due to her “false ballistics” testimony at his trial. Prior to her discharge, Officer Carter “reportedly admitted” to pressuring Beatty to provide false testimony against Fullman by instructing Beatty to: (1) “deny having a baseball bat and attacking Mr. Fullman on October 4, 1986, so Mr. Fullman would be arrested instead of Mr. Beatty even though Mr. Beatty admitted to striking Mr. Fullman’s rental car with a baseball bat”; and, (2) change his testimony about where he observed the “fresh” bullet mark to bolster her testimony (i.e., from the sidewalk to the street).

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FULLMAN v. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fullman-v-city-of-philadelphia-paed-2025.