Hincapie v. City of New York

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 22, 2020
Docket1:18-cv-03432
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Hincapie v. City of New York, (S.D.N.Y. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT Mere pyseqs □ SOCUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK fp ONTO De mre ape

: SEs al / P2225 □ JOHNNY HINCAPIE, : |

Plaintiff, : -against- : : 18 Civ. 3432 (PAC) CITY OF NEW YORK; Detective CARLOS : GONZALEZ; Detective DONALD CASEY; — : OPINION & ORDER Detective JAMES CHRISTIE; Detective : ARTHUR SWENSON; Detective JOSE : RAMON ROSARIO; Detective DANIEL : RIZZO; Detective MATTHEW SANTORO; : Sergeant SHARIF ALI; Sergeant JOHN : HERBST; Sergeant TIMOTHY CONNOLLY; : Sergeant GARY BORMAN; The Estate of : Deputy Chief JOSEPH DEMARTINO; : Lieutenant VICTOR MOLE; Captain “JOHN”: BAYSHIM; JOHN and JANE DOE : DETECTIVES 1-5; and JOHN and JANE : DOE SUPERVISORS 1-5, : Defendants. :

ence enna teen nee ene nnn titan nnn K HONORABLE PAUL A. CROTTY, United States District Judge: Plaintiff Johnny Hincapie seeks damages from the City of New York (the “City”) and several New York City Police Officers for his alleged wrongful conviction and imprisonment for the 1990 felony murder of “Utah tourist” Brian Watkins. In 2015, after twenty-five years in prison, a New York state court vacated Plaintiffs conviction and the New York District Attorney (“DA’s Office”) dismissed the indictment. Plaintiff then filed this § 1983 action against the City and NYPD officers, alleging eight claims including (1) malicious prosecution, (2) fabrication of evidence, (3) coercion, (4) supervisory liability as to certain NYPD defendants, (5) a Monell

claim for failure to record interrogations; (6) false arrest and imprisonment, (7) intentional and negligent infliction of emotional distress, and (8) failure to intervene. Defendants move to dismiss the First Amended Complaint for failure to state a claim pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6). (Dkt. 101.) For the reasons that follow, Defendants’ motion to dismiss is DENIED in part and GRANTED in part. BACKGROUND! On the evening of September 2, 1990, Johnny Hincapie was a part of a large group of teens who took the subway from Queens to the Roseland Ballroom in Manhattan for a birthday party. (Compl. §35.) The Watkins family, tourists from Utah, were in New York for the US Tennis Open. (/d, { 38.) They happened to be on the subway, heading on a family dinner in Greenwich Village. (id.) They never made it; they were assaulted by a group of young people. (id. 39-41.) Brian Watkins acted to protect his parents and was fatally stabbed in the chest by one of the muggers on the subway platform. (/d. Jj 34, 40.) Plaintiff Johnny Hincapie claims that he was not involved in the crime. (/d. J 46.) Plaintiff was upstairs on the subway station’s turnstile level with two girls and Luis Montero when the crime occurred, unaware of what was happening on the platform below. (/d. { 47.) Plaintiff was, however, arrested and charged with participating in the crime. In 1990, murders peaked in New York City, at 2,245 homicides; many occurred on the subway. (/d. Jf 28-29.) The Watkins murder was high-profile and a threat to tourism, such that there was unusual pressure to deliver immediate results. (id. 48.) At least eleven NYPD officers, Defendant Detectives Carlos Gonzalez, Donald Casey, James Christie, Arthur Swenson,

1 The facts are taken from the First Amended Complaint and documents incorporated by reference and are accepted as true for the purpose of Defendants’ motion to dismiss. See Chambers v, Time Warner, Inc., 282 F.3d 147, 153 (2d Cir. 2002).

Jose Ramon Rosario, Daniel Rizzo, Matthew Santoro, and Sergeants Sharif Ali, Timothy Connolly, and Gary Borman investigated the Watkins murder. (See e.g., Compl. J 187.) Hincapie alleges that the case against him rested on fabricated evidence and a coerced confession. Ud. JJ 108-11.) The first two suspects, Anthony Anderson and Luis Montero, were arrested based on eyewitness statements. (/d. 52.) At the Precinct, Anderson admitted to involvement in the crime and provided a statement naming accomplices, but did not mention Plaintiff. (fd. 54.) Defendants Gonzalez and Casey interrogated Anderson; the interrogation was not recorded. □□□□ 55.) Over the course of several hours and four separate interrogation sessions—one of which took place in the precinct’s locker room—suspect Luis Montero was beaten and interrogated by Gonzalez and Casey but refused to falsely confess. Ud. { 56.) Within hours of the crime, the next two suspects Ricardo Nova and Pascual Carpenter were taken into custody—neither were given Miranda warnings, but each was interrogated leading to statements that for the first time included “Johnny” as a member of the group traveling to the Roseland Ballroom. (Jd. 9 59.) Defendants Rosario and Borman, who initially interrogated Nova, admitted at trial that Nova was not given Miranda warnings for the first several hours of interrogation, and his interrogation was not recorded. (/d. 7 68.) The statement attributed to Nova—written by Defendant Detective Rosario-—listed eleven participants in the robbery, six more than had been reported by the victims. (Id. 69-70.) Gonzalez and Casey interrogated Carpenter; the interrogation was not recorded. (/d. | 60.) When the interrogation was finished and a statement worked out, Carpenter then made a videotaped confession to the District Attorney. Ud. { 63.) Carpenter’s confession did not mention Plaintiff. (7@.) Indeed, Carpenter repeatedly indicated to the District Attorney that the information in his statement had

been supplied by Gonzalez and Casey. (Id. { 64.) Since Carpenter’s release from prison, he has described Gonzalez and Casey as coercing him into adopting the detectives’ narrative in his written statement and instructing him to list Hincapie as present, even though Carpenter had no such knowledge. Ud. { 65.) By midday on September 3, 1990, three additional suspects were detained: Gary Morales, Emiliano Fernandez, and Ricardo Lopez. (/d. { 74.) Morales made no mention of Plaintiff Johnny Hincapie. (/d. § 76.) Defendants Detectives Rizzo, Santoro, and Christie made Fernandez go back after his statement had been drafted and insert the name “Johnny.” □□□ 977.) Lopez’s statement prepared in the presence of Defendant Swenson also makes no mention of Johnny Hincapie. (/d. 80.) Nevertheless, the police report prepared by Swenson and approved by Connelly states that Lopez told investigators that seven others “including Johnny” stayed behind to participate in the crime. (/d. 81.) Lopez’s videotaped statement to the DA’s office, makes clear that the evidence was fabricated, as he stated several times that “Johnny left” before the crime and that there were six people present. (Id. | 82.) Plaintiff Johnny Hincapie, barely 18 years old with no prior police encounters, was the last suspect arrested. (/d. { 82.) Casey, Gonzalez, Christie, and Ali interrogated Plaintiff for several hours, without Miranda warnings, threatened and inflicted bodily harm and forced him to falsely confess to participating in the crime. (Jd. {J 94-96.) Like the other interrogations, this

one was not recorded either. (/d. 100.) Defendants forced Plaintiff to adopt a role in the crime of pushing Karen Watkins, the same act attributed to an African-American perpetrator, purportedly claimed hours earlier by Carpenter. (/d. □ 99.) Detective Christie wrote out Plaintiffs purported statement. (d. { 98.) In the videotaped statement to the DA’s office, Plaintiff appears to be in a trance-like state, missing patches of hair from the violent

interrogation, providing inconsistent and confused answers to questions drawn from the false statement. (/d. {J 101-05.) No one ever positively identified Plaintiff as taking part in either the Watkins robbery or murder, either before or at trial. (id.

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