Hobbs v. Cappelluti

899 F. Supp. 2d 738, 2012 WL 4499227, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 139895
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedSeptember 28, 2012
DocketCase No. 10 C 7649
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 899 F. Supp. 2d 738 (Hobbs v. Cappelluti) 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
Hobbs v. Cappelluti, 899 F. Supp. 2d 738, 2012 WL 4499227, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 139895 (N.D. Ill. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

JOAN HUMPHREY LEFKOW, District Judge.

On May 9, 2005, plaintiff Jerry Hobbs realized every parent’s worst nightmare when he discovered the bodies of his young daughter, Laura, and her friend, Krystal Tobias, in the park by their house. Laura had been sexually assaulted and both girls had been brutally murdered. Hobbs’s nightmare did not end there, however. Police quickly identified him as a suspect and, after interrogating him for 24 hours, coerced him into falsely confessing. This confession was then used to detain him on murder charges for over five years until he was exonerated by DNA evidence and eventually released.

Shortly thereafter, Hobbs filed the present action under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983 and 1985 against the police officers who investigated and interrogated him (defendants Domenic Cappelluti, Charles Schletz, William Valko, Kevin Harris and Andrew Jones, (collectively “defendant officers”)), [747]*747the municipalities that employed them (the Cities of Waukegan and Zion and the Village of Vernon Hills), the state’s attorneys who prosecuted him (Lake County State’s Attorney Michael Waller and Assistant Lake County State’s Attorney’s Jeff Pavletic and Michael Mermel (collectively “defendant prosecutors,” collectively with defendant officers “defendants”)),1 and the county that employed them (Lake County) (collectively with Waukegan, Zion and Vernon Hills “municipal defendants”). In his third amended complaint, Hobbs alleges multiple claims of police and prosecutorial misconduct under both state and federal law. (Dkt. # 94.) Presently before the court are motions to dismiss by defendant officers (dkt. # 98 # 106), defendant prosecutors (dkt. # 100) and municipal defendants (dkt. # 103, # 106, # 107, # 109, # 111). For the reasons set forth herein, these motions will be granted in part and denied in part.2

BACKGROUND3

On Sunday, May 8, 2005, eight-year-old Laura Hobbs went missing. At the time, her father Jerry Hobbs (“Hobbs”) was living in Zion, Illinois with Laura’s mother, Sheila, and their children Jerry, Jr. (age 10), Laura (age 8), and Jeremy (age 6), and Meagan (age 13) (Sheila’s child from a previous relationship). Laura had gone outside to play and was supposed to return by dark. When she did not, Hobbs and several family members began searching for her. -They soon learned that Laura’s friend, Krystal (age 9), was also missing. Not finding Laura that night, Hobbs continued the search the next morning with the help of his family and the police.

The next day Hobbs resumed his search in nearby Beulah Park where children often played. There, in a grassy, open area, Hobbs discovered the bodies of Laura and Krystal. Both were lying face up about two or three feet apart. Laura had been stabbed twenty times, including in both eyes; Krystal had been stabbed eleven. Four years later, DNA evidence would reveal that Laura had also been sexually assaulted, although this fact was unknown to Hobbs at the time.

Interrogation

The murder investigation was handled by the Lake County Major Crimes Task Force (the “task force”), which included officers from the Cities of Waukegan and Zion, the Village of Vernon Hills and members of the Lake County State’s Attorney’s Office. Defendant officers and defendant prosecutors were all members of the task force. Shortly after discovering the bodies, Hobbs was taken to the Waukegan Police Department and was placed in a small, windowless room with no clock. Over the next 24 hours, he was interrogated approximately ten times. He was never told that he was under arrest or that he was free to leave. Defendant officers proceeded on the theory that Hobbs lost his temper when disciplining Laura and, as a result, murdered both her and Krystal. During his interrogation, Hobbs alleges that defendant officers took the following actions:

[748]*748• Schletz and Harris entered the room and Schletz told Hobbs to sign a form that he described as “nothing really ... [it] just said [that Hobbs] was agreeing to let [the officers] ask [him] questions.” Hobbs signed the form, a Miranda waiver, without reading it, and Schletz did not read it to him.
• Officers Schletz began to interrogate Hobbs about the crime, reviewing each gruesome fact in detail. Schletz forced Hobbs to view pictures of the girls’ mutilated bodies. When Hobbs refused Schletz grabbed his head and knocked him to the floor. Schletz taunted Hobbs, making obscene suggestions like “How did their neck feel when you cut it?” Schletz and Harris told Hobbs that his alibi of being at home could not be verified and Schletz sad that physical evidence linked him to the crime.
• Hobbs repeatedly asked for a lawyer but his requests were ignored. Hobbs became so exhausted that each time the officers left the room, he tried to rest by lying on the floor. Schletz and Harris told Hobbs he could go home if he passed a voice stress analysis test, which they falsely said could determine whether Hobbs was lying. After completing the test four times, Hobbs was falsely informed that he had failed and that the tests conclusively showed he was lying. Schletz then suggested that Hobbs grab his gun so Schletz would have a justification for killing him.
• Cappelluti said that the fact that Hobbs discovered the bodies was “like winning the lottery,” accusing Hobbs of committing the murders because he had found the victims. Cappelluti asked Hobbs if he believed in God and the two men prayed together for Laura. Hobbs cried. Cappelluti lied and said that there was an eyewitness who placed Hobbs at the crime scene.
• Schletz and Harris took Hobbs into a large room with a camera and told him that a light test would reveal evidence on his person. Officer Valko, the direct supervisor of Schletz, Harris and Cappellutti, was also present. The lights were turned out and shined on Hobbs’s clothes revealing a mark on his pant leg. Hobbs responded that he had wiped his nose there when he was crying. Schletz and Harris then made Hobbs remove his clothes and put on a see-through paper suit, which he was forced to wear for part of his interrogation. The officers took Hobbs’s clothes, telling him that a special camera would reveal evidence on his clothing that showed he was guilty.
• Back in the interrogation room, Hobbs was told that his family had not inquired about him, and that “everybody [the police] talked to, including [Hobbs’s] family, thinks [he] did it.” Cappelluti told Hobbs that there was an officer just outside the room who was not happy about what happened to the girls and whom Hobbs would not want to come into the room. When Hobbs again refused to confess, Cappellutti and Schletz left the room and Cappellutti said, “I warned you.”
• Officer Jones, an extremely large man, entered the room alone and began interrogating Hobbs. When Hobbs again denied committing the crime, Jones punched him in the side of his head, slamming his head into the wall. Jones threatened that if Hobbs responded to being hit, that [749]*749Jones would kill him and make up a story that Hobbs had tried to seize his gun.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
899 F. Supp. 2d 738, 2012 WL 4499227, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 139895, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hobbs-v-cappelluti-ilnd-2012.