Golbert v. Roberts

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedMarch 28, 2018
Docket1:14-cv-02945
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Golbert v. Roberts, (N.D. Ill. 2018).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION CARL CHATMAN, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) 14 C 2945 ) CITY OF CHICAGO, Chicago Police Detectives ) Judge John Z. Lee JOHN ROBERTS, THOMAS MCGREAL, ) MARIA PENA, JACK BOOCK, RITA MISCHKA, ) BARBARA MIDONA, AND KRISTON KATO, ) Chicago Police Sergeants DENNIS WALSH and ) BRYAN HOLY, Chicago Police Officers MICHAEL ) KARCZEWSKI and RICHARD GRIFFIN, ) Cook County Sheriff’s Deputies MICHAEL ) COKELEY and BURROUGH CARTRETTE, ) Sheriff’s Deputy Sergeant MARIA MOKSTAD, ) Assistant State’s Attorney BRIAN HOLMES, ) UNKNOWN CHICAGO POLICE OFFICERS, ) UNKNOWN COOK COUNTY SHERIFF’S ) DEPUTIES, THE COUNTY OF COOK, ) THOMAS DART, in his official capacity as Sheriff ) of Cook County, ANITA ALVAREZ, in her official ) capacity as Cook County State’s Attorney, ) SUSAN RIGGIO, KAREN WOJTCZAK, former ) Office of Professional Standards Investigator, ) MILLICENT WILLIS, former Acting Chief ) Administrator of the Office of Professional Standards, ) and LORI LIGHTFOOT and TISA MORRIS, former ) Chief Administrators of the Office of Professional ) Standards, ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

After spending over a decade in prison for sexual assault, Plaintiff Carl Chatman was declared innocent, and his conviction was vacated. Based on his false conviction, Chatman has sued the individuals and entities he believes violated his rights under the Fourth, Fifth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution, as well as federal and state laws. He alleges that certain Defendants coerced and fabricated his confession, manufactured evidence, failed to disclose exculpatory evidence, conspired to deprive him of his constitutional rights, failed to intervene to prevent the deprivation of his constitutional rights, maliciously prosecuted him, and intentionally inflicted on him emotional distress.

Defendants generally fall within four categories: “the Sheriff Defendants,” “the Officer Defendants,” “the State’s Attorney’s Office (SAO) Defendants,” and “the Office of Professional Standards (OPS) Defendants.”1 The Officer Defendants properly titled their motion as one for partial summary judgment.2 Each other category of Defendants has titled their motion as one for summary judgment. But because every motion omits one or more counts, the Court construes each as a motion for partial summary judgment.3 For the reasons provided below, each of the motions is granted in part and denied in part.

1 “The Sheriff Defendants” include Cook County Sheriff’s Deputies Michael Cokeley and Burrough Cartrette, Cook County Sheriff’s Deputy Sergeant Maria Mokstad, the County of Cook, and Thomas Dart in his official capacity as Sheriff of Cook County. “The Officer Defendants” are Chicago Police Detectives John Roberts, Thomas McGreal, Maria Pena, Jack Boock, Rita Mischka, Barbara Midona, and Kriston Kato; Chicago Police Sergeants Dennis Walsh and Bryan Holy; Chicago Police Officers Michael Karczewski and Richard Griffin, and the City of Chicago. “The SAO Defendants” include Assistant State’s Attorney Brian Holmes and Anita Alvarez in her official capacity as Cook County State’s Attorney. “The OPS Defendants” are Karen Wojtczak, Office of Professional Standards (OPS) Investigator, Millicent Willis, Former Acting Chief Administrator of OPS, and Lori Lightfoot and Tisa Morris, former Chief Administrators of OPS. Although Chatman has also sued Susan Riggio, her unopposed motion for partial summary judgment has been granted by the Court, and only Count VIII (Malicious Prosecution–State Law) remains for trial as to her. See 2/14/18 Minute Entry, ECF No. 525.

2 The Officer Defendants’ motion is properly titled because it omits Count I (Coerced Confession/Fabricated Evidence–5th Am.), Count II (Coerced Confession/Fabricated Evidence–14th Am.), Count III (Detention–Fourth Am., reinstated on 2/14/18), Count IV (Exculpatory Evidence based on 24-Hour Surveillance Tape & Coerced Confession/Fabricated Evidence–14th Am.), Count V (Exculpatory Evidence based on 24-Hour Surveillance Tape & Coerced Confession/Fabricated Evidence– Conspiracy), Count VI (Failure to Intervene as to all underlying counts), Count VII (Supervisory Liability, as to unaddressed counts), Count VIII (Malicious Prosecution–State Law), Count IX (Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress–State Law), and Count X (Conspiracy–State Law, as to unaddressed counts).

3 For example, the Sheriff Defendants’ motion omits Counts III and VIII. However, after the motion was fully briefed, Plaintiff and the Sheriff Defendants stipulated that only Counts IV, V, X, XII, and XIII remain, subject to their summary judgment motion. See Stipulation of Dismissal, ECF No. 526. Factual Background4 I. The Incident On Friday, May 24, 2002, Susan Riggio arrived to work between 6:45 and 7:00 a.m. at the Circuit Court of Cook County in the Daley Center. Pl.’s Ex. 31, Riggio Dep. (Riggio Dep.)

at 128:19–21. It was the Friday before Memorial Day weekend, and the judge for whom she worked was out of town, and her co-worker, Jeannette Neibauer, typically arrived at 7:30 a.m. Def. Officers’ Ex. 6, Midona Dep. (Midona Dep.) at 182:19–20; Def. Officers’ Ex. 19, Neibauer Dep. (Neibauer Dep.) at 16:21–17:1, 33:12–16. Riggio claims that at 7:20 a.m., while she was alone in her office in room number 2101, a man attacked her, beat her head against a table, and sexually assaulted her. Riggio Dep. at 158:8–181:23. According to Riggio, with the door to her office open, she screamed loudly for help at least three times during the attack and picked up a chair and hit the assailant with it. Riggio Dep. at 168:14–169:7, 173:16–21; Pl.’s LR 56.1(b)(3)(B) Stmt. (Sheriff Defs.) ¶ 15. II. The “Sleeping Deputy”

When Neibauer arrived for work, she saw Riggio lying on her desk and heard Riggio crying and mumbling. Def. Officers’ Ex. 19, Neibauer Dep. at 40:2–24. Neibauer then walked down the hall to co-worker Pearl Bryant’s office to alert her that something had happened. Neibauer Dep. at 40:3–11, 41:22–42:7; Pl.’s Ex. 5, Floor Diagram. On the way to Bryant’s office, Neibauer saw a sheriff’s deputy asleep with his feet on a desk in a room located nearby,

The SAO Defendants’ motion omits Counts III, IV (Exculpatory Evidence based on 24-Hour Surveillance Tape), and VIII, and the OPS Defendants’ motion omits Count VIII. See generally Defs.’ Mems. Law Supp. Mots. Summ. J., ECF Nos. 459, 462, 465, 479 (failing to address these counts or a portion of the counts).

4 Unless noted otherwise, these facts are undisputed and viewed in the light most favorable to Chatman, the party opposing summary judgment. See Baptist v. Ford Motor Co., 827 F.3d 599, 599 (7th Cir. 2016). which she thought was odd. Neibauer Dep. at 40:3–11, 41:22–42:7; Pl.’s Ex. 5, Floor Diagram. When Neibauer reached Bryant’s office, Neibauer told Bryant that something had happened to Riggio and asked Bryant to come with her. Def. Officers’ Ex. 21, Bryant Dep. (Bryant Dep.) at 63:8–14. When they entered Riggio’s office, Bryant saw that Riggio was still lying on the desk,

and Bryant told Neibauer to call the Sheriff’s department to send someone to the 21st floor. Bryant Dep. at 63:23–64:18; Neibauer Dep. at 43:1–10. Cook County Sheriff’s Deputy Michael Cokeley and Cook County Sheriff’s Deputy Sergeant Maria Mokstad responded to the call and took the judges’ elevator to a non-public hallway on the 21st floor. Def. Officers’ Ex. 16, Mokstad Dep. (Mokstad Dep.) at 33:16–22, 37:16–38:4. As Mokstad walked down the hallway, the first person she saw was Cook County Sheriff’s Deputy Michael Copeland (who is not a defendant) in room 2103A, which is located near Riggio’s office. Id. at 39:12–40:20. Mokstad called via internal radio for Cook County Sheriff’s Deputy Lieutenant Burrough Cartrette to come to the 21st floor. See Officers Defs.’ Ex. 17, 12/17/14 Cartrette Dep.

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Golbert v. Roberts, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/golbert-v-roberts-ilnd-2018.