Grieco v. North Carolina State Highway Patrol

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. North Carolina
DecidedOctober 7, 2025
Docket5:25-cv-00156
StatusUnknown

This text of Grieco v. North Carolina State Highway Patrol (Grieco v. North Carolina State Highway Patrol) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grieco v. North Carolina State Highway Patrol, (E.D.N.C. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF NORTH CAROLINA WESTERN DIVISION No. 5:25-CV-156-BO-BM

RAYLEE JOSEPHINE GRIECO ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) Vv. ) ORDER ) NORTH CAROLINA STATE HIGHWAY ) PATROL, NORTH CAROLINA ) DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY, _ ) ASHLEY R. DAUGHTRY, DEVIN M. ) RICH, JAMES D. DUFF, TIMOTHY T. __ ) DANIELS, DAVID SMITH, and FREDDY ) L. JOHNSON, JR., ) ) Defendants. )

This cause comes before the Court on defendants’ motion to dismiss pursuant to Rules 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. [DE 13]. Plaintiff has responded, defendants have replied, and a hearing on the motion was held before the undersigned on August 14, 2025, at Raleigh, North Carolina. In this posture, the motion is ripe for disposition. For the reasons that follow, the motion to dismiss is granted in part and denied in part. BACKGROUND Plaintiff commenced this action in Wake County Superior Court. She alleges claims arising out of an automobile accident on which occurred February 18, 2024. [DE 1-3]. In her complaint, plaintiff alleges claims for libel, slander, malicious prosecution, violation of plaintiff's Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, violation of plaintiff's rights under the North Carolina Constitution, negligence, gross negligence and malicious conduct, and intentional and negligent infliction of emotional distress. Defendants removed the action to this

court on the basis of its federal question jurisdiction and filed the instant motion to dismiss. Defendants seek dismissal of certain claims as barred by sovereign immunity and others for failure to state a claim. Plaintiff has alleged the following facts in her complaint. [DE 1-3] Compl. The accident that forms the basis of this case occurred while plaintiff was a freshman at the University of North Carolina at Wilmington (UNC-W). Over the February 16, 2024, weekend, plaintiff visited her parents at their home in Raleigh. After dinner on Sunday evening, plaintiff left her parents’ home to return to Wilmington. Compl. 9 24-26. At approximately 8:15 p.m., plaintiff was approaching the intersection of I-40 and NC Highway 41, near Wallace, North Carolina, where the speed |jmit was seventy miles per hour. At that time, plaintiff suddenly came upon a car that was completely stopped in the roadway, directly in front of her. Plaintiff attempted to swerve but was unable to avoid a collision. Jd. 27-30. The stopped car belonged to Mildo Velasquez. The car was stopped behind a pickup truck with a trailer attached, which were also stopped and which also belonged to Mr. Velasquez. It was later discovered that the trailer had become unhitched from the pickup truck, and the car had! been positioned behind the trailer in the roadway while Mr. Velasquez attempted to reconnect the trailer. When plaintiff's car clipped the back of the Velasquez family’s car, Valesquez’s car collided with the trailer, and Mr. Velasquez was killed. /d. §§ 28-31. When plaintiff's car collided with the Velasquez’s car, plaintiff's front and side airbags deployed. Plaintiff was bleeding from her nose, had facial, chest, leg, and shoulder pain, and had abrasions and bruises on her knee. /d. § 32. Defendant Trooper James Duff was assignied to investigate the accident on behalf of thie North Carolina State Highway Patrol. Trooper Duff responded to the scene and conducted a portable breath test on plaintiff to measure her blood alcohol level, which was reported at 0.00.

Plaintiff was then transported by emergency responders to ECU Health Duplin County Hospital in Kenansville, North Carolina. While at the hospital, plaintiff was examined by Lee Anne Sorto, a nurse practitioner. Sorto recorded plaintiff's injuries and ordered additional testing, Plaintiff was found to be alert, with soft but clear speech, no pressured speech, and good eye contact. Sorto examined plaintiff for signs of impairment and found none, and thus did not order a blood test to test for impairing substances. Plaintiff was found to have contusions, displaced nasal bone fracture, ear pain, and an abrasion on her left lower leg. /d. {§ 33-39. Because plaintiff was visibly shaken and had several injuries, Sorto administered NORCO to plaintiff, a narcotic pain medication that contains hydrocodone. Common side effects of hydrocodone include sleepiness, dizziness, and memory, attention, cognitive, and executive function impairment. Sorto noticed that plaintiff appeared loose and loopy after the NORCO had been administered. /d. 40-41. Plaintiff is approximately five feet, two inches tall and weighed about 100 pounds at the time of the accident. Id. § 32. When defendant Trooper Duff arrived at the hospital, his intention was to charge plaintiff with failure to reduce speed until a member of the hospital staff, who was not treating plaintiff, mentioned that plaintiff was acting strangely. Without speaking to plaintiff's attending provider or any other member of her treatment team, defendant Duff requested that a North Carolina State Highway Patrol drug recognition expert (DRE) be assigned to the case. Defendant Trooper Devin Rich was assigned as the DRE. Jd. 49 42-45. Around 11:00 p.m., plaintiff was released from the hospital. Defendant Rich had arrived at the hospital and asked if he could perform some tests on plaintiff. Rich was aware tiat plaintiff had been administered NORCO but told plaintiff's mother that the pain medication would not impact his testing. Rich was also informed by plaintiff and her mother that plaintiff had been told

that she might have a concussion. Rich stated that plaintiff's CT scan did not show evidence of a concussion and therefore plaintiff did not have a concussion. Plaintiff had been told by Sorto that the CT results were inconclusive and that she would need to follow-up with her physician the following day. Rich performed various tests on plaintiff, including walking a straight line, touching her nose with her eyes closed, and following a pen or pencil with her eyes. Rich noted that he observed nystagmus, or involuntary eye movements, during his examination. Based on his testing, Rich told plaintiff that she had been impaired at the time of the accident. Rich made this determination despite the fact that four hours had passed since the accident, plaintiff had been administered narcotic pain medication at the hospital, plaintiff had injuries which caused her to limp, plaintiff had a concussion, which was confirmed the next day, and that that the presence of nystagmus is not indicative of marijuana impairment. /d. §§ 49-54. Rich also took a blood sample from plaintiff, but the results were not known for several months. Jd. 55. After Rich concluded his examination, Sorto told plaintiff and her parents that she knew that plaintiff had not been impaired when she arrived at the hospital and that she was troubled by what the Troopers had done. After plaintiff was permitted to leave the hospital, she returned with her parents to Raleigh. Her primary care physician diagnosed her with a concussion the next day. Id. 62-64. Defendant Trooper Ashley Daughtry, a trained State Highway Patrol Trooper, was the public information officer involved in plaintiff's case. On February 19, 2024, in response to requests for information from news outlets, Daughtry communicated with Duff about the accident. Duff told Daughtry that plaintiff had been high on marijuana at the time of the accident and there was probable cause to arrest her for driving while impaired and underage driving while impaired. Daughtry then issued a press release which, stated, among other things, that plaintiff was suspected

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Grieco v. North Carolina State Highway Patrol, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grieco-v-north-carolina-state-highway-patrol-nced-2025.