HOWARD v. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA POLICE DEPARTMENT

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 6, 2022
Docket2:19-cv-02288
StatusUnknown

This text of HOWARD v. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA POLICE DEPARTMENT (HOWARD v. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA POLICE DEPARTMENT) 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
HOWARD v. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA POLICE DEPARTMENT, (E.D. Pa. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

LESTER HOWARD, : Plaintiff, : : v. : CIVIL ACTION NO. 19-2288 : CITY OF PHILADELPHIA POLICE : DEPARTMENT, et al., : Defendants. :

McHUGH, J. June 6, 2022 MEMORANDUM This is an action in which pro se Plaintiff alleges that Defendants violated his constitutional rights in events taking place around two arrests, as well as the prosecution that followed one of the arrests. Specifically, Plaintiff asserts the following claims: violation of his Fourth Amendment right to be free from excessive force; a Brady claim under the Fourteenth Amendment; a violation of substantive due process; federal conspiracy; together with state law claims of assault and battery, civil conspiracy, intentional infliction of emotional distress, spoliation, and abuse of process. Defendants move for summary judgment as to all claims except those involving excessive force, which I will grant. I. Factual Allegations and Procedural Posture: Plaintiff Lester Howard’s Complaint alleges constitutional violations related to a series of interactions with Philadelphia police officers. First, on July 3, 2017, Plaintiff alleges that Officer Marvis Knight and his partner, John Doe #1, approached him to investigate a report of a male throwing trash. Compl. at 2, ECF 2. Plaintiff states that after telling the officers that he was upset because some children had stolen his bike, the officers slammed him on their vehicle and dragged him on the ground, injuring his left knee and head. Id. Plaintiff was arrested and taken to the police station, but later let go “as a result of his subsequent injuries.” Id. at 2-3. He alleges that he was cited for disorderly conduct and that Officer Knight lied in the citation by stating that Plaintiff was released at the scene, when he was actually arrested and taken to the station. Id. at

3. Plaintiff reports that he spent three days recovering in the hospital following the officers’ use of force against him and that he now walks with a limp due to those injuries. Id. While at the hospital, Plaintiff called the police and reported the incident. Id. Subsequently, the police interviewed him and stated that his complaint would be investigated. Id. Several days later, Officer Knight’s partner, John Doe Officer, approached Plaintiff to ask him why he had put in a complaint. Id. at 4. Plaintiff raises several claims related to the events of July 3rd and 4th. First, he asserts claims of excessive use of force and falsifying police paperwork. Id. at 3. Plaintiff also states that there is missing surveillance video from July 3rd and 4th that would have shown this assault.1 Id. at 4. He also states that his July complaint and the resulting investigation caused the officers to be

biased against him. He alleges this is relevant to the remainder of his claims, which stem from his arrest a month later in August 2017. Id. On August 27, 2017, Plaintiff’s neighbor, Vincent Leonardo, called the police around 2 a.m. to report a burglary in progress. Compl. at 5; Police Report, ECF 29-4, Ex. B-1. Officer Knight responded to the call. Compl. at 5. Leonardo stated that he had seen a male enter a property under construction located at 504 Mercy Street. Police Report, ECF 29-4, Ex. B-1; Leonardo Interview, ECF 29-6, Ex. B-3; Arrest Memo, ECF 29-8, Ex. B-5. Officer Knight reports that he went to the rear of the property and saw Plaintiff attempting to hide against a wall. Police Report,

1 The alleged source of this first surveillance video is not clearly pleaded. ECF 29-4, Ex. B-1. Plaintiff tried to flee and was stopped at 5th and Snyder Streets. Id. Plaintiff alleges that “out of view of the surveillance camera he was beaten by Officer Knight with an asp striking Plaintiff in the head, shoulders, arms, and legs.” Compl. at 5. At that point, he was “handcuffed and thrown into Officer Knight’s vehicle.” Id. Plaintiff told another officer, John

Doe Sgt. #2, that he had been beaten by Knight and needed medical attention and told John Doe Sgt. #2 to look at and preserve the surveillance video. Id. Officer Knight called the owner of the 504 Mercy Street, who told them that no one had permission to enter the residence. Police Report, ECF 29-4, Ex. B-1. It is undisputed that Plaintiff was then transported to a detention unit, but the parties dispute what occurred during transport. Plaintiff alleges that when he was being transported in Officers Knight and Marrero’s patrol car, hands cuffed behind his back, Marrero “struck [him] in the face with a closed fist.”2 Compl. at 6. He alleges that the video of this transport is missing. Id. In contrast, Officer Marerro maintains that during transport, Plaintiff began to kick at the rear door and window of the car. Police Reports, ECF 29-4, Ex. B-1 and ECF 29-7, Ex. B-4. Marrero states

that he kept the door slightly open to avoid Plaintiff breaking the window while waiting for an emergency patrol wagon. Id. Plaintiff eventually kicked the door fully open, at which point Marerro tried to shut it, injuring Marrero’s hand in the process. Id. Around 3 a.m. on August 27, Mr. Leonardo gave a statement to Detective Kevin Duffy describing the incident and signed a photograph of Plaintiff identifying him as the person who he

2 Officer Marrero’s involvement up to this point is not clear from the record. Plaintiff states that he was transported in Officer Knight and Marrero’s patrol car, but earlier refers to another officer at the scene as John Doe Sgt. #2. The only police personnel listed in the investigation and arrest report are Knight, Marrero, and Duffy. Officers Knight and Marrero are listed as witnesses. Exs. B-1, B-2. There is a signed affidavit from Detective Duffy stating that he “was not on location at the scene when Mr. Howard was apprehended by Officer Marvis Knight.” Ex. B. Detective Duffy avers that, as the lead investigator, he prepared the 75-49 Investigation Report (Ex. B-1) and the arrest report (Ex. B-2), as well as interviewed Mr. Leonardo at the station. Id. had observed entering the residence. Leonardo Interview, ECF 29-6, Ex. B-3. Mr. Leonardo also explained that he had seen Plaintiff enter the property on previous occasions on August 25th and 26th. Id. Plaintiff was subsequently charged by the Philadelphia District Attorney’s Office with

burglary, criminal trespass, and resisting arrest. CP Docket, ECF 29-12, Ex. D. A preliminary hearing was held on September 12, 2017, at which time Mr. Leonardo testified that had seen Plaintiff entering the house through surveillance video feed from a camera that he had set up on his property. Preliminary Hearing Transcript, ECF 29-11 at 9:2-24. Defense counsel moved to preserve this footage of the incident at the preliminary hearing, which the Court granted. Id. at 9:7-8. Plaintiff was ultimately held for court on the charges of burglary and criminal trespass. Id. at 6:12. Plaintiff states the he was detained pretrial for over three months. Compl. at 13. The charges against him were nolle prossed on November 26, 2018. CP Docket, ECF 29-12, Ex. D. Plaintiff further alleges that the Defendants conspired to deprive him of his due process rights by “suppressing and destroying in bad faith evidence that would have affected the decision

to prosecute Plaintiff for criminal charges related to the incidents.” Compl. at 7. He states that police coached Leonardo into identifying Plaintiff and that the police reports were doctored and falsified. Id. He states that Marrero, Knight, and Leonardo conspired together to suppress evidence and conceal falsehoods. Id. He further alleges that the prosecution team failed to produce favorable evidence and destroyed exculpatory evidence by erasing the video footage from July 3, July 4, August 25, and August 26. Id.

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HOWARD v. CITY OF PHILADELPHIA POLICE DEPARTMENT, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howard-v-city-of-philadelphia-police-department-paed-2022.