Garces Robles v. Ramirez

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Texas
DecidedJune 25, 2024
Docket1:23-cv-00981
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Garces Robles v. Ramirez, (W.D. Tex. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS AUSTIN DIVISION

EDGAR GARCES ROBLES, RAMIRO § SOTO ALTAMIRANO, JUAN JOSE SOTO § HERNANDEZ, and RODOLFO RUIZ § DE LA CRUZ, § § Plaintiffs, § § v. § 1:23-CV-981-RP § MARIA RAMIREZ, JOHN CIRONE, § FELIPE GONZALEZ, RONNY TAYLOR, § KINNEY COUNTY, BRAD COE, RICARDO § ALVARADO, VAL VERDE COUNTY, § JOE FRANK MARTINEZ, and RECANA § SOLUTIONS, LLC, § § Defendants. §

ORDER Before the Court are several motions to dismiss filed by Defendants Ricardo Alvarado, Brad Coe, and Kinney County (collectively, the “Kinney County Defendants”), (Dkt. 29); Joe Frank Martinez and Val Verde County (collectively, the “Val Verde County Defendants”), (Dkt. 35); Ronny Taylor, (Dkt. 47); Felipe Gonzalez, (Dkt. 51); Recana Solutions, LLC (“Recana”), (Dkt. 59); John Cirone, (Dkt. 68); and Maria Ramirez, (Dkt. 69). Plaintiffs filed responses to all of the motions to dismiss.1 (Dkts. 42, 62, 63, 71, 77, 78). Defendants filed replies to each response. (Dkts. 54, 55, 73, 74, 76, 80, 81). The Court held a hearing on the motions to dismiss on April 30, 2024. (Dkt. 87). Having reviewed the complaint, the motions to dismiss, the parties’ responsive briefing, and the arguments made during the hearing, the Court enters the following order.

1 Plaintiffs responded to the Kinney County Defendants’ motion to dismiss and the Val Verde County Defendants’ motion to dismiss in one filing as the motions raised identical issues. (See Resp., Dkt. 43). I. BACKGROUND Plaintiffs allege the following facts. Every month since May 2021, Texas Governor Greg Abbott has renewed a monthly disaster declaration in dozens of Texas counties, including Val Verde and Kinney Counties. (Compl., Dkt. 1, at 1). In doing so, Governor Abbott has been able to roll out a multi-billion-dollar campaign called Operation Lone Star (“OLS”), which seeks to prevent illegal immigration into the United States. (Id.). As part of OLS, Texas has deployed law enforcement

officers to border communities who arrest individuals under threat of enhanced penalties. (Id. at 2). For instance, a person arrested for misdemeanor trespass in Texas will usually not incur much, if any, time incarcerated. But for the same offense, a person in Val Verde or Kinney Counties is subject to “arrest, remote processing, and detention in far-flung state prisons, whether or not they are prosecuted or found guilty.” (Id. at 1). Governor Abbott has “articulated a policy of ‘catch[ing]- and-jail[ing]’ migrants in order to deter and delay them from presenting their claims to federal law enforcement.” (Id. at 2). For individuals arrested pursuant to OLS in Val Verde and Kinney Counties, the process for release is different than that of other arrestees. Plaintiffs describe a “circuitous and delayed” release process: [R]elease orders are sent from the court to the [Val Verde Temporary Processing Center (the “VVTPC”)]. The VVTPC and/or [the county sheriff] send the release orders to the [Texas Department of Criminal Justice (the “TDCJ”)] prison holding the person. The TDCJ warden has the release paperwork signed by the person to be released. The TDCJ warden sends the executed release paperwork back to the VVTPC for review. The VVTPC physically delivers the release paperwork to [the county sheriff] . . . [The county sheriff] then instructs the jail to release the individual. Then, TDCJ officials further restrain and transport individuals back to the VVTPC, where they are not released except to federal immigration facilities. This process can take several days to weeks, assuming it is initiated, and is subject to delay at each stage.

(Id. at 23; see also id. at 26). This release process is “different, slower, and less accurate than the release process for non-OLS arrestees from Val Verde County [and Kinney County], whether those arrestees are released from pretrial detention or following completion of a misdemeanor sentence.” (Id. at 23; see also id. at 27). Plaintiffs allege that this process has had the “predictable and demonstrated consequence of causing Plaintiffs and other individuals” arrested pursuant to OLS to be overdetained. (Id. at 24). Plaintiffs also allege that Defendants each had a role in creating, enforcing, and failing to change the OLS release policy, resulting in Plaintiffs’ overdetentions. (Id. at 22). A. Plaintiffs Plaintiffs were all arrested on allegations of trespassing in either Val Verde or Kinney Counties. (Id. at 2). Because they were arrested in these so-declared “disaster” counties, they were subject to the “OLS penological infrastructure.” This entailed being detained, processed, and magistrated in a temporary processing center in a tent in a parking lot; being transported from there to state prisons over 100 miles away; being subjected to weeks and months of pretrial detention; and being detained past their legal release dates. (Id.). Even upon their release from prison, Plaintiffs were kept in handcuffs and shackles and transported to federal immigration facilities. (Id.). Plaintiffs specify that they do not challenge their underlying arrest and detention or the disposition of their charges but rather their continued detention after Texas law mandated their release. (Id. at 3 n.1). Garces Robles was arrested for misdemeanor trespass in Val Verde County in September 2021. (Id. at 4). He was detained at VVTPC, which Plaintiffs describe as “a makeshift jail created for the sole purpose of processing individuals arrested under OLS.” (Id.). A magistrate presiding via video call found probable cause to detain Garces Robles on misdemeanor trespass charges and set bail at $2,500. (Id.). Garces Robles was then taken to a state prison, the Dolph Briscoe Unit (“Briscoe”), nearly 150 miles away from VVTPC. (Id.). On January 10, 2022, the only charge against Garces Robles—the misdemeanor trespass charge—was dropped. Garces Robles received a court order to direct his release the same day, and his court-appointed defense attorney told him that he was due to be released. (Id. at 18). However, Garces Robles was not released for another 19 days. (Id.). On January 28, 2022, his attorney contacted staff at Briscoe, the TDCJ, VVTPC, and the Val Verde County Attorney’s Office to demand Garces Robles’s release. (Id.). Garces Robles was then

released from Briscoe on January 29, 2022. Upon his release, he was handcuffed by TDCJ officers and taken back to the VVTPC. From there, he was transported to a federal immigration facility. (Id.). Garces Robles brings Section 1983 claims for violations of his Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights against Martinez, Cirone, Val Verde County, and Recana. He also brings a negligence claim against Recana. Soto Altamirano was arrested alongside his father, Soto Hernandez, for misdemeanor trespass on August 30, 2021. They were both taken to VVTPC, where a magistrate presiding over video feed found probable cause to detain both Soto Altamirano and Soto Hernandez and set each of their bail at $2,000. (Id. at 4–5). Both men were then taken to Briscoe prison. (Id. at 5). On September 14, 2021, the Val Verde County Attorney declined to prosecute either Soto Altamirano or Soto Hernandez and sent a letter to Defendant Taylor at VVTPC, stating that the charges had been dropped and recommending that Soto Altamirano and Soto Hernandez be released

immediately. (Id. at 19). However, Soto Altamirano and Soto Hernandez were not released from Briscoe until 42 days later, on or after October 26, 2021, after their defense attorney contacted staff at Defendant Martinez’s office, TDCJ, and Defendant Taylor at VVTPC to ask that they be released. Like Garces Robles, Soto Altamirano and Soto Hernandez were handcuffed upon their release from Briscoe, taken back to VVTPC, and then transported to a federal immigration facility. (Id.).

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Garces Robles v. Ramirez, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garces-robles-v-ramirez-txwd-2024.