HICKS v. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 16, 2023
Docket2:22-cv-00977
StatusUnknown

This text of HICKS v. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA (HICKS v. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
HICKS v. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA, (E.D. Pa. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA TERMAINE HICKS : CIVIL ACTION : v. : NO. 22-977 : CITY OF PHILADELPHIA, MARTIN : VINSON, ROBERT ELLIS, ARTHUR : CAMPBELL, MARK WEBB, MICHAEL : YOUSE, FRANK HOLMES, DOUGLAS : VOGELMAN, KEVIN HODGES, : DUANE WATSON, DENNIS ZUNGOLO, : MARY BRIDGET SMITH :

MEMORANDUM MURPHY, J. August 16, 2023 I. Introduction Termaine Hicks says he spent nineteen years in prison after police officers framed him for rape. This is his civil rights case for money damages. According to the complaint, the story began early one morning in 2001, when Mr. Hicks was on his way home from a convenience store. He heard a woman screaming and went to help. A bystander had already called 911. When police officers arrived on the scene, they found Mr. Hicks standing by the victim. Before Mr. Hicks could put his hands up, they shot him in the back three times. Mr. Hicks survived, but lived to face a new ordeal. He says that to cover up the shooting, officers planted a gun on him, falsely reported that they saw him raping the victim, and failed to reveal evidence that could have helped exonerate him. At the age of twenty-six, with a four- year-old son, Mr. Hicks was incarcerated and would not leave prison until nineteen years later. Eventually, exculpatory evidence came to light, and Mr. Hicks was freed. At the hearing where his conviction was vacated, the District Attorney’s Office admitted that “false testimony was used and I believe it is impossible to say that that did not contribute to the conviction.” This case challenges the legal system to provide a remedy to someone who spent nineteen years imprisoned after police officers allegedly framed him for a crime he did not commit. But for now, discovery is ongoing and there is a motion to dismiss on the table. Defendants seek to eliminate a number of Mr. Hicks’s claims: (1) the due process claim for concealing and

suppressing exculpatory and impeachment evidence; (2) the Fourteenth Amendment malicious prosecution claim (but not the Fourth Amendment version); (3) all claims against defendants Douglas Vogelman and Kevin Hodges; (4) the civil rights conspiracy claim based on the rights to be free from unreasonable search and seizure, false arrest, and false imprisonment; and (5) the municipal liability claim. We hold that all of Mr. Hicks’s claims can proceed except for his civil rights conspiracy claim based on the right to be free from unreasonable search and seizure, false arrest, and false imprisonment, which he waived. The remainder of Mr. Hicks’s claims will proceed through discovery. II. Factual Allegations

According to the amended complaint — the non-conclusory allegations of which we must accept — Mr. Hicks was walking home from a convenience store in the early morning of November 27, 2001 when he heard a woman screaming from an alley and went to help. DI 23 ¶¶ 2, 39. When he arrived, he found a woman who had been the victim of rape. Id. ¶¶ 2, 40. Defendant officers Martin Vinson and Dennis Zungolo were the first officers to arrive on the scene. Id. ¶¶ 2, 43. Before Mr. Hicks could put his hands up, Mr. Vinson shot Mr. Hicks three times in his back. Id. ¶¶ 2, 46. Meanwhile, defendant officers Robert Ellis, Duane Watson, Brian Smith, Michael Youse, Frank Holmes, and Kevin Hodges arrived on the scene. Id. ¶¶ 3, 47. Realizing that Mr. Vinson had shot an innocent man, they concocted a story to justify the shooting and frame Mr. Hicks for the rape. Id. ¶¶ 3-4, 53, 65. Mr. Zungolo and Mr. Ellis — who had a history of fabricating evidence — planted a gun on Mr. Hicks. Id. ¶¶ 3-4, 47, 56. One of them transferred blood from the victim to the handle of the gun to support the story that Mr. Hicks was the perpetrator. Id.

¶ 59. When detectives and officers from the Special Victims Unit (SVU) arrived, several officers who were already at the scene gave false statements to the SVU, including that Mr. Ellis found a gun on Mr. Hicks and that Mr. Hicks had been on top of the victim with his pants down. Id. ¶¶ 57-58. SVU detectives participated in the scheme to frame Mr. Hicks by concealing evidence that pointed to another perpetrator. Defendants Arthur Campbell and Mark Webb, both SVU detectives, saw hospital security camera footage that showed a man in a gray hoodie1 dragging the victim. Id. ¶¶ 27, 57, 61. The footage also showed a parked white van at the loading dock where the victim was raped. Id. ¶ 61. Mr. Webb recovered Mr. Hicks’s clothing, which included a black leather jacket but no gray hoodie. Id. ¶ 63. Even though the hospital security

footage undercut the officers’ story, Mr. Campbell confiscated the recording and a viewable version of the security footage was not made available to Mr. Hicks and his lawyer until a month after the jury convicted Mr. Hicks. Id. ¶ 62. The supervising officer — defendant Douglas Vogelman — oversaw and participated in the misconduct. Mr. Vogelman was a sergeant at the time of the investigation. Id. ¶ 23. He was the first supervisor at the scene, arriving “within minutes” of the shooting, and spoke to officers, including Mr. Vinson. Id. ¶ 71. Mr. Vogelman knew the officers’ story was “false in material

1 An initial 911 call also described the assailant as wearing a black jacket and gray hoodie. Id. ¶¶ 33, 42. respects” but nonetheless “repeated and amplified their false reports, including in a signed statement.” Id. ¶ 72. To support their false narrative, the officers also misrepresented the victim’s account of her rape. When Mr. Zungolo and Mr. Youse originally interviewed the victim at the scene, she

did not give any description of the crime or the assailant. Id. ¶ 75. By the time she was interviewed by Mr. Campbell and Mr. Webb at the hospital, she was still “obviously confused with limited memory of the attack.” Id. ¶ 76. Mr. Webb and Mr. Campbell suggested to the “disoriented” victim that the attacker was on top of her when the police arrived and then created a “false and fabricated” police report that said the victim had volunteered this information. Id. ¶¶ 78-79. Officers memorialized these and other fabrications in a series of false reports and statements. Id. ¶ 65-70. For instance, officers falsely reported Mr. Hicks was on top of the victim and in the act of raping her when police arrived, id. ¶ 66, Mr. Hicks was wearing a gray hoodie, id. ¶ 67, and that a gun had been recovered from Mr. Hicks, id. ¶ 69, often in signed

statements. Mr. Vinson said that Mr. Hicks lunged at him, struck him, pulled out a gun and pointed it at him before he shot Mr. Hicks in the front of his body. Id. ¶¶ 4, 88. Mr. Hodges “falsely reported” (albeit not in signed statements) that Mr. Hicks was in the act of raping the victim when police arrived and that a gun had been recovered from Mr. Hicks. Id. ¶¶ 66, 69. Mr. Hicks was convicted of crimes including rape on November 8, 2002, after the prosecution relied “exclusively on the false evidence Defendants fabricated and planted against Mr. Hicks.” Id. ¶¶ 88, 89, 94. This included officers’ false signed reports and accounts, which they repeated at trial. Id. Mr. Hicks was twenty-six years old with a four-year-old son when he was arrested. Id. ¶¶ 8, 37, 64. He remained incarcerated for nineteen years. Id. ¶ 64. Mr. Hicks always maintained his innocence. Id. ¶ 99. Years later, DNA evidence “conclusively excluded” Mr. Hicks as the source of the DNA on the victim. Id. ¶ 104. Additionally, a forensic pathologist retained by the Innocence Project concluded that there was no evidence that Mr. Hicks was shot in the front of his body, as officers claimed. Id. ¶¶ 107-108.

This was further confirmed by the Chief Medical Examiner for the City of Philadelphia. Id. ¶ 108. Mr. Hicks filed a second amended petition for post-conviction relief based on this new information on December 8, 2020. Id. ¶ 109.

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