Gem Financial Service, Inc. v. City of New York

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJuly 28, 2023
Docket1:13-cv-01686
StatusUnknown

This text of Gem Financial Service, Inc. v. City of New York (Gem Financial Service, Inc. 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
Gem Financial Service, Inc. v. City of New York, (E.D.N.Y. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK ---------------------------------------------------------x GEM FINANCIAL SERVICE, INC., d/b/a GEM PAWNBROKERS,

Plaintiff, MEMORANDUM AND ORDER 13-CV-1686 (RPK) (RER) v.

CITY OF NEW YORK,

Defendant. ---------------------------------------------------------x RACHEL P. KOVNER, United States District Judge: After a two-week trial, a jury found defendant City of New York liable for Fourth Amendment violations under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and for malicious prosecution under New York law. The jury awarded plaintiff Gem Financial Service, Inc., d/b/a/ Gem Pawnbrokers, $1,003,250.00 in compensatory damages. Defendant has moved for judgment as a matter of law under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 50 and for a new trial under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 59. For the reasons discussed below, defendant’s motions are denied. BACKGROUND The Court assumes familiarity with the background and procedural history of this case, which is recounted here only as necessary to decide defendant’s motions. I. Facts Adduced at Trial A. Plaintiff’s Case-In-Chief Plaintiff offered the testimony of nine principal witnesses. 1. Gilbert Delarosa Gilbert Delarosa, a vice president at Gem, testified about his experience managing Gem’s business from 2011 through 2014. Trial Tr. 86–94. Gem has 20 branches across New York City. Id. at 135. It offers loans to customers; in exchange, customers leave collateral with Gem and pay interest on the loan. Id. at 87–91. If the customers repay the loan within the contractual timeframe, Gem will return the customer’s collateral. Ibid. If they do not, title to the collateral passes to Gem, which sells it. Id. at 91–94.

Pawnbrokers and secondhand dealers are regulated by New York State and New York City. Id. at 103–05. Among other things, these regulations require pawnbrokers to maintain a physical “buy book” recording customer, loan, and merchandise and collateral details for each pawnbroker transaction. Id. at 103, 105. Sometime in or before 2009, the NYPD deployed the LeadsOnline program. Id. at 27. Participating pawnbrokers uploaded their buy-book information into this online system, allowing NYPD officers to review the records about each pawnbroker transaction. Id. at 121. LeadsOnline not only afforded NYPD officers much easier access to buy-book information, but it allowed them to place “holds” on items—requiring the store to keep the held item on location—without going to the store. Id. at 124–25.

Gem participated in the LeadsOnline system in 2009 but stopped doing so in late 2010. Id. at 128. Afterward, police officers started coming into Gem stores “more often,” id. at 131–32, “once or twice a day” at “many different locations,” id. at 130, without a warrant, id. at 133. During these visits, officers would force Gem employees to show them proprietary records, certain merchandise and collateral and to search for specific customer names in Gem’s databases under the threat of arrest. Id. at 137, 142–45. 2. Joseph Taranto Joseph Taranto, a security officer at Gem’s main branch during the relevant period, id. at 335, testified that NYPD officers visited Gem once every three months when Gem participated in LeadsOnline, id. at 338. After Gem stopped participating in LeadsOnline, NYPD officers began visiting four to eight times per week. Id. at 341. No officer that Mr. Taranto observed had a warrant or subpoena. Id. at 348. 3. Khariton Popilevsky Khariton Popilevsky, a manager at Gem’s 608 8th Avenue location, also testified. Id. at 384–85. Mr. Popilevsky stated that after Gem stopped using LeadsOnline, NYPD officers came

to the store weekly or biweekly—“more often” than when Gem participated in LeadsOnline, id. at 391—“hounding [Gem] to get back on LeadsOnline,” id. at 414. The officers would take the buy book, look through it, and ask Mr. Popilevsky to run specific customer names through Gem’s database. Id. at 394. If he didn’t comply, the officers would threaten to arrest him. Id. at 395. Mr. Popilevsky further testified about an April 2011 incident in which NYPD detectives gave him “no other choice” than to obtain certain jewelry from Gem’s safe and then confiscated the jewelry without a warrant in front of customers. Id. at 396, 399–402. Mr. Popilevsky did not recall ever seeing a warrant during NYPD visits to Gem. Id. at 395. 4. Andre Santiago Andre Santiago, a supervisor of multiple Gem locations, id. at 447, 449, testified that,

before Gem participated in the LeadsOnline program, NYPD officers would visit his locations every three or four months, id. at 459–60. After Gem left LeadsOnline, officers would visit his store locations three to four times per week. Beginning in 2012, the frequency increased further and the officers began aggressively demanding Gem rejoin LeadsOnline. Id. at 467–68. During these visits, the officers would force Gem employees to run specific names in its database, place holds on various merchandise and collateral, and demand to see certain merchandise and collateral. Id. at 464, 471. In one instance, an NYPD officer forced Mr. Santiago to retrieve pledged jewelry from the safe and then confiscated it, saying it was stolen property. Id. at 576–77. 5. John Somar John Somar, a retired Gem employee who had processed loans for the company from 1990 until 2017, id. at 777–80, testified that, in March 2012, two “very angry” officers—one of whom was Officer Glenn Olsen—entered a Gem store and asked Mr. Somar to “run names.” Id. at 786– 88. When he refused, Officer Olsen wrote Mr. Somar a summons, issued to Gem, “for not

complying with them.” Id. at 790. This recurred more than four times in 2012. Id. at 803–04, 816, 819, 824. On each occasion, Mr. Somar appeared in court and the case was dismissed. Id. at 792, 800, 819, 823. In one such incident in August 2012 incident, Officer Olsen specifically told Mr. Somar that he “wanted Gem to go to LeadsOnline” and then issued him the summons. Id. at 813, 816–17. Mr. Somar further testified that Officer Olsen made the same comment prior to issuing a summons in September 2012, and that the summons appeared to have been written before Officer Olsen entered the store. Id. at 819–20. 6. David Kaminsky David Kaminsky, the owner of EZ Pawn Corp., a competitor of Gem, id. at 610–11, testified there was an “increase [in police presence] after [EZ Pawn] went off of LeadsOnline.”

Id. at 645. During these visits, NYPD officers “came in to examine books and records and they wanted to take the records out of the store,” id. at 648, run names, id. at 649, and sometimes attempt to take EZ Pawn’s merchandise, id. at 647. When asked why EZ Pawn eventually rejoined LeadsOnline, Mr. Kaminsky testified: We were getting threats from the police. We were being bombarded that we should go on Leads and it would be better for us. They kind of pushed us into it. And I didn't want to. My managers -- we had discussions with our managers and our managers didn’t like that they were being harassed by the police and people were coming in . . . We were having meetings with them. We knew what was going on. A lot of them wanted us to bring Leads back so that they didn't have to deal with the police coming into the stores. Id. at 654–55. After EZ Pawn rejoined LeadsOnline, “it was like we flipped a switch. The police stopped coming into the store.” Id. at 656. 7. Joseph Buoninfante Joseph Buoninfante, the managing member of another competitor, Quick Cash USA, also testified about his company’s experience with government agents. Id. at 1844–46. Mr.

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Gem Financial Service, Inc. v. City of New York, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gem-financial-service-inc-v-city-of-new-york-nyed-2023.