Hernandez-Cuevas v. Taylor

723 F.3d 91, 2013 WL 3742484, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 14469
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJuly 17, 2013
Docket12-1053
StatusPublished
Cited by209 cases

This text of 723 F.3d 91 (Hernandez-Cuevas v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hernandez-Cuevas v. Taylor, 723 F.3d 91, 2013 WL 3742484, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 14469 (1st Cir. 2013).

Opinion

LIPEZ, Circuit Judge.

This case requires us to decide for the first time whether an individual who alleges that the unlawful conduct of law enforcement officers caused him to be held for three months in pretrial detention without probable cause states a Fourth Amendment claim actionable through a Bivens suit. 1 Often called a “Fourth Amend *94 ment malicious prosecution” claim, the existence and contours of such a claim are the subject of considerable discord among the Courts of Appeals. After reviewing the relevant case law, we conclude that an individual’s Fourth Amendment right to be free from seizure but upon probable cause continues through the pretrial period, 2 and that, in certain circumstances, injured parties can vindicate that right through a § 1983 or Bivens action. Furthermore, because we agree with the district court that Hernandez-Cuevas has pleaded facts which, if true, would be sufficient to establish that Taylor and Martz violated his Fourth Amendment rights, we affirm the denial of qualified immunity and remand for further proceedings.

I.

A. Factual Background

The following facts are drawn from the complaint and documents incorporated into the complaint.

In 2004, plaintiff Carlos HernandezCuevas was 40 years old and living in a rented room in a multi-unit building located at 1655 Santa Ana Street in Carolina, Puerto Rico. Hernandez-Cuevas is dark-skinned, approximately 5'10" tall, and thin, weighing about 150 pounds.

That same year, a joint federal-Commonwealth task force consisting of FBI agents and local police officers opened a special investigation targeting a significant drug and money laundering conspiracy operating in Carolina. The task force employed at least two confidential informants, referred to in the complaint as “UI-1” and “UI-2.” Working undercover, UI-1 and UI-2 arranged a meeting on July 20, 2004 with several members of the money laundering conspiracy in the parking lot of the Pueblo Supermarket on Route 187 in Carolina, “where a courier acting under the direction of such co-conspirators was to deliver proceeds of drug sales to UI-1.”

The task force agents set up a surveillance unit to observe this transaction. According to a contemporaneous surveillance report, the agents at the scene saw a white and silver Mitsubishi Montero with license plate number DMV-656 enter the parking lot and park next to UI-l’s car. The driver of the Montero, referred to in the complaint as “UNSUB # 1,” rolled down his window and spoke with UI-1. Both cars then left the parking lot.

Some time later, UI-1 returned to the parking lot, this time tailed by a white Jeep Cherokee with license plate number FDA-680. Two unknown males were inside the Jeep: the driver, referred to in the complaint as “UNSUB #2,” and a passenger, referred to as “UNSUB # 3.” In their surveillance report, the FBI officers at the scene described UNSUB # 3 as a “black male, with black hair, 5 feet and 7 inches tall, a heavy build, and in his late fifties.”

The Jeep pulled up alongside UI-l’s car. UNSUB #3 exited the Jeep and placed two bags containing $321,956 in cash in the trunk of UI-l’s car. UNSUB # 3 then returned to the Jeep, which left the parking lot. FBI agents from the surveillance unit followed the Jeep, and saw the driver *95 drop UNSUB # 3 off on Santa Ana Street in Carolina. The agents last observed UNSUB #3 walking toward the “porch area” of the multi-unit building located at 1655 Santa Ana Street, where HernandezCuevas lived.

Nearly a year passed, during which the FBI was unable to positively identify UN-SUB # 3. “In a rush to indict someone as UNSUB #3,” Martz, Taylor, and UI-1 conspired to manufacture evidence indicating that UNSUB # 3 was Hernandez-Cuevas. In furtherance of their plan, Martz and UI-1 “carried out a tainted photo identification.” On May 25, 2005, Martz emailed UI-1 pictures of six individuals, including a photograph of Hernandez-Cuevas. The following day, U-l called Martz on the telephone and identified Hernandez-Cuevas. as UNSUB # 3, even though Hernandez-Cuevas’s physical appearance — tall, thin, and 40 years old — is strikingly different from the contemporaneous FBI report describing UNSUB # 3 as “5 feet and 7 inches tall, a heavy build, and in his late fifties.” Despite the discrepancies between Hernandez-Cuevas’s appearance and the original surveillance description of UNSUB # 3, Martz wrote an internal FBI report based on UI-l’s identification concluding that UNSUB # 3 was in fact Hernandez-Cuevas.

Another two years passed without further action in the case. Finally, on November 21, 2007, Taylor “either knowingly or in reckless disregard of the truth” included the false identification of Hernandez-Cuevas as UNSUB # 3 in a warrant affidavit, attesting that on July 20, 2004, Hernandez-Cuevas had delivered $321,956 in drug proceeds to UI-1.

On the basis of these false statements, a magistrate judge in Puerto Rico issued a warrant for Hernandez-Cuevas’s arrest. According to the complaint, without Taylor’s statements, the government would have been unable to establish probable cause to obtain the warrant. FBI agents arrested Hernandez-Cuevas on December 3, 2007 and brought him before a magistrate judge the following day. On December 6, 2007, he appeared again before a magistrate judge, who ordered him detained without bail pending trial and transferred him to a federal prison in New Jersey, where he was incarcerated for nearly three months awaiting further proceedings. On February 29, 2008, he was released on his own recognizance following a hearing before a magistrate judge in New Jersey; on April 18, 2008, the United States Attorney for the District of New Jersey dismissed the charges against Hernandez-Cuevas.

Hernandez-Cuevas alleges that he was not in the parking lot of the Pueblo Supermarket on July 20, 2004, and that he has never been involved in the drug trade. He also alleges that he has never “owned, possessed, driven or traveled” in either of the cars observed by the FBI agents in the parking lot.

B. Procedural Background

Hernandez-Cuevas filed his complaint on March 2, 2009, alleging that Martz and Taylor’s misconduct caused him to be held in federal custody for three months without probable cause. 3 The defendants first moved to dismiss plaintiffs complaint on statute of limitations grounds, arguing that *96 Puerto Rico’s one-year limitations period had run by the time Hernandez-Cuevas filed his complaint on March 2, 2009. Under the government’s theory, any Fourth Amendment claim of Hernandez-Cuevas had accrued in December 2007 on the day of his allegedly unlawful arrest. As such, the Puerto Rico one-year statute of limitations expired in December 2008, several months before Hernandez-Cuevas filed this complaint.

The district court agreed in part with the defendants, reasoning that if Hernandez-Cuevas had filed his complaint shortly after his arrest in December 2007, he would have had a straightforward Fourth Amendment false arrest claim.

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Bluebook (online)
723 F.3d 91, 2013 WL 3742484, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 14469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hernandez-cuevas-v-taylor-ca1-2013.