Gunn v. Village of Bolingbrook

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedSeptember 27, 2022
Docket1:19-cv-00916
StatusUnknown

This text of Gunn v. Village of Bolingbrook (Gunn v. Village of Bolingbrook) 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
Gunn v. Village of Bolingbrook, (N.D. Ill. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION

CHRISTOPHER GUNN, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) No. 19 C 916 v. ) ) Magistrate Judge P.O. McAULIFFE #1179; P.O. ) Maria Valdez MORANDA #1159; and the ) VILLAGE OF BOLINGBROOK, ) ) Defendants. ) )

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER Plaintiff Christopher Gunn brought this complaint against the Village of Bolingbrook and individual police officers McAuliffe and Moranda alleging wrongful arrest in violation of 28 U.S.C. § 1983. A bench trial was conducted on August 25- 26, October 27, and November 30, 2021. The matter is now before the Court for findings of fact and conclusions of law in accordance with Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(a). The Court has considered the testimony of the witnesses who testified at trial, the parties’ admitted trial exhibits, any stipulations made by the parties, the proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law submitted by the parties, and the closing arguments and briefs of counsel. To the extent certain findings of fact may be deemed conclusions of law, they should also be considered conclusions of law. Similarly, to the extent matters contained in the conclusions of law may be deemed findings of fact, they should also be considered findings of fact. FINDINGS OF FACT 1. On March 1, 2017, Defendants McAuliffe and Moranda were on duty as police officers for the Village of Bolingbrook. During roll call at the start of their shift, they

were told that there was an active arrest warrant for Plaintiff. (Ex. 1, McAuliffe Test. at 4-5, Moranda Test. at 132.) 2. Both McAuliffe and Moranda were familiar with Plaintiff prior to March 1, 2017. (Ex. 1, McAuliffe Test. at 56; Ex. 1, Moranda Test. at 129-30.) 3. In the early morning hours of March 2, 2017, Plaintiff was sitting in a vehicle in Bolingbrook with his friend Tia Parayor. (Ex. 2, Parayor Test. at 8.)

4. Parayor had gone to the car earlier and sat in the passenger seat, awaiting a ride to the store from Sara Remy, the vehicle’s owner and the mother of Plaintiff’s children. (Ex. 2, Parayor Test. at 8, 36-39; Ex. 6, Remy Test. at 5, 51.) 5. The car was parked a block over from the house where Remy was picking up her children. (Ex. 2, Parayor Test. at 38-39.) 6. Plaintiff came out to the vehicle about ten or fifteen minutes after Parayor and sat in the driver’s seat. (Ex. 2, Parayor Test. at 8, 42-43; Ex. 1, McAuliffe Test.

at 56.) 7. While on patrol at approximately 3:30 a.m. on March 2, 2017, McAuliffe observed a vehicle parked on Pepperwood Lane. (Ex. 1, McAuliffe Test. at 55.) 8. A Village ordinance prohibited street parking between 2:00 a.m. and 6:00 a.m. (Id.; Ex. 6, Remy Test. at 35, 41.) 9. When he was approximately 100 feet from the vehicle, McAuliffe illuminated it with his squad car’s spotlight. As he drove closer toward the front of the parked car, McAuliffe observed two occupants in the vehicle, a female passenger, and

Plaintiff, whom he recognized, in the driver’s seat. (Ex. 1, McAuliffe Test. at 55-57.) 10. McAuliffe believed at that time that there was an active arrest warrant for Plaintiff. He testified that after seeing Plaintiff in the vehicle, the purpose of the contact shifted to confirming the warrant. (Ex. 1, McAuliffe Test. at 22.) 11. After he got out of his squad car and approached the vehicle, McAuliffe heard its engine running. (Ex. 1, McAuliffe Test. at 58-59.)

12. The vehicle’s driver’s-side window was down as McAuliffe approached, but he did not know whether the driver rolled it down as he pulled up, or it was already down. (Ex. 1, McAuliffe Test. at 59.) 13. The only way for the window to have been opened is if the keys were in the ignition. (Ex. 2, Parayor Test. at 40.) 14. When McAuliffe approached the vehicle in which Plaintiff was sitting, he directed the occupants to keep their hands where McAuliffe could see them. (Ex. 1,

McAuliffe Test. at 11, 22, 37, 60.) 15. Parayor complied with the directive by raising her hands, but Plaintiff kept reaching around inside the vehicle and by his pant leg. (Ex. 1, McAuliffe Test. at 12- 13, 60-62.) 16. McAuliffe could not see what Plaintiff was reaching for. (Ex. 1, McAuliffe Test. at 12-13, 60-61.) 17. McAuliffe testified that he smelled alcohol on Gunn’s breath and burned cannabis from inside the vehicle. (Ex. 1, McAuliffe Test. at 60.) 18. Plaintiff was argumentative, yelling to McAuliffe that he had taken care of

the warrant and had paperwork for it. (Ex. 1, McAuliffe Test. at 12-13, 18, 61.) 19. In the evening of March 1, Plaintiff had gone to Will County to turn himself in and post $5000 bond for that outstanding warrant. (Ex. 3, Gunn Test. at 7-9.) 20. At some point, McAuliffe called for backup, and Officers Kendall and Moranda arrived on scene during his exchange with Plaintiff. (Ex. 1, McAuliffe Test. at 36-38, 62.)

21. McAuliffe ultimately pulled Plaintiff from the vehicle by grabbing him through the open driver’s side window with his left hand, while opening the door with his right hand. (Ex. 1, McAuliffe Test. at 62-63.) 22. Approximately twenty seconds after McAuliffe got Plaintiff out of the vehicle, he put Plaintiff in handcuffs. (Ex. 1, McAuliffe Test. at 15-16, 19-20, 64; Ex. 1, Kendall Test. at 80.) 23. McAuliffe testified that he had to apply tension and force Plaintiff into the

handcuffs. (Ex. 1, McAuliffe Test. at 15-17, 64.) 24. McAuliffe told Plaintiff he was being placed under arrest, and he later testified that Plaintiff was arrested for resisting his instructions at the beginning of their encounter, while being put into handcuffs, and during the pat-down. (Ex. 1, McAuliffe Test. at 16-21.) 25. Moranda testified that he saw in the car a cup with a brownish liquid he believed to be consistent with Crown Royal, and several empty bottles of Crown Royal, but no cups or bottles were inventoried or photographed. (Ex. 1, Kendall

Test. 85-86; Ex. 1, Moranda Test. at 157, 160.) 26. No evidence of marijuana was collected from the vehicle. (Ex. 1, Kendall Test. 85-86; Ex. 1, Moranda Test. at 157, 160.) 27. No officer questioned Parayor or Plaintiff about the presence of alcohol or marijuana in the vehicle on March 2, 2017. (Ex. 2, Parayor Test. at 12; Ex. 3, Gunn Test. at 26.)

28. No officer asked Parayor about the vehicle’s keys. (Ex. 2, Parayor Test. at 12.) 29. Remy’s vehicle was not towed on March 2, 2017 as a result of this incident. (Ex. 6, Remy Test. at 65.) 30. After the arrest, Plaintiff was transported to the Bolingbrook police station and arrived there at approximately 3:57 a.m. (Ex. 1, McAuliffe Test. at 66; Ex. 7.) 31. After Plaintiff arrived at the police station, Moranda began to perform a DUI investigation. (Ex. 1, Moranda Test. at 162-63; Ex. 7.)

32. Moranda has had specialized training to detect impaired drivers and has been involved in approximately 1000 DUI investigations. (Ex. 1, Moranda Test. at 171-72, 181-82.) 33. Moranda observed Plaintiff to have flaccid muscle tone, bloodshot and glassy eyes, and a strong odor of alcohol on his breath, and also that Plaintiff was behaving in a belligerent matter. (Ex. 1, Moranda Test. at 182.) 34. Once Plaintiff was in the booking area, Moranda asked him to perform a field sobriety test. (Ex. 1, Moranda Test. at 178-79.) 35. Plaintiff did not complete the test. (Ex. 1, Moranda Test. at 179.)

36. Officer Andrew Sraga was on duty and on patrol on March 1 and 2, 2017. (Ex. 5, Sraga Test. at 4.) 37. Sraga was a certified breath technician. (Ex. 5, Sraga Test. at 3-4.) 38. Sraga was asked to go to the police station to perform a breathalyzer test, and he arrived at approximately 4:11 a.m. (Ex. 5, Sraga Test. at 4; Ex. 7.) 39.

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