Joseph J. Lynch, Joseph B. Lynch v. Sergeant T.J. Long, Sergeant Shant Bedrossian, Detective David Vernacchio, Detective Robert Lythgoe, John Does 1-2

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 20, 2025
Docket2:25-cv-02382
StatusUnknown

This text of Joseph J. Lynch, Joseph B. Lynch v. Sergeant T.J. Long, Sergeant Shant Bedrossian, Detective David Vernacchio, Detective Robert Lythgoe, John Does 1-2 (Joseph J. Lynch, Joseph B. Lynch v. Sergeant T.J. Long, Sergeant Shant Bedrossian, Detective David Vernacchio, Detective Robert Lythgoe, John Does 1-2) 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
Joseph J. Lynch, Joseph B. Lynch v. Sergeant T.J. Long, Sergeant Shant Bedrossian, Detective David Vernacchio, Detective Robert Lythgoe, John Does 1-2, (E.D. Pa. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA JOSEPH J. LYNCH, JOSEPH B. : CIVIL ACTION LYNCH : v. NO. 25-2382 SERGEANT T.J. LONG, SERGEANT SHANT BEDROSSIAN, DETECTIVE : DAVID VERNACCHIO, DETECTIVE □ : ROBERT LYTHGOE, JOHN DOES 1-2:

MEMORANDUM KEARNEY, J. October 20, 2025 An adult son living in his parents’ Haverford Township home complained to his township police and later the District Attorney’s office on May 12, 2023 about the way police did their job and the salary paid to the police chief. The township police would not talk to him at the station. An officer forced him to leave the police station. The son promptly called the District Attorney claiming the police retaliated against him for complaints. The police learned of this call. The police then called him and his mother, telling him to stop the harassment or they would arrest the son. Other officers and mental health professionals then began investigating the son’s mental health resulting in an incident report referencing concerns with the son’s mental health. The son and his father now pro se sue for a variety of constitutional and Pennsylvania law claims arising from police officers’ alleged conduct on May 12, 2023. We dismissed the father’s and son’s claims against other persons for lack of service. The two remaining served police sergeants and two detectives move to dismiss. The father and son chose to not respond. We grant the uncontested motion but define the father’s and son’s ability to timely amend on limited claims not dismissed with prejudice consistent with the facts.

I. Alleged pro se facts Haverford Township resident Joseph J. Lynch disputed the way his home Township policed the neighborhood where he lived with his father Joseph B. Lynch and how the Township paid its police chief in Spring 2023.' Son Lynch spent ninety minutes with Township Sergeant T.J. Long on April 25, 2023 discussing how he and his neighbors could support long term safety issues in their neighborhood.” Son Lynch then emailed Sergeant Long on May 9, 2023 about an officer running a redlight near his home with no siren.’ Son Lynch complains at the Police Station. Son Lynch visited Haverford Police Department to address unresolved traffic safety issues in his neighborhood at approximately 11:30 A.M. on May 12, 2023.4 He asked to speak with Haverford Police Chief John Viola to discuss rising crime in the Township including officers disobeying commands to address crime and to ask about Chief Viola’s salary increase which Son Lynch characterized as highly suspicious and indicating corruption.* Son Lynch repeatedly asked to see Chief Viola.® The police department staff did not tell Son whether he could see Chief Viola.’ Haverford Detective Joseph Fuller directed Son Lynch to leave the facility and then attempted to physically remove him approximately five minutes after Son Lynch first appeared at the department.’ Son Lynch video recorded this interaction including telling non-party Detective Fuller “You’re a fucking bum for trying to violate my rights.”? Son Lynch told Detective Fuller he would address his complaints in the next Township meeting and then left the police station." Son Lynch reports retaliation to the District Attorney who advises the police. Son Lynch waited approximately twenty minutes after leaving the police department and called the Delaware County District Attorney’s Office about his incident at the police department.'! Son Lynch spoke with Detective Robert Lythgoe and mentioned corruption

involving Chief Viola’s salary, aggressive behavior towards residents, and the police department’s failure to address crime.!* Son Lynch told Detective Lythgoe about expressing his concerns to the police department.!? Son Lynch further told Detective Lythgoe he characterized Chief Viola’s pay raise as highly suspicious and told Detective Lythgoe he shared his concerns with Sergeant Long earlier.‘ Son Lynch thanked Detective Lythgoe for his time and said he wanted to be part of the solution to make the community safer.'> Sergeant Long returned a call to Son Lynch’s cell phone approximately ten minutes later yelling expletives into the phone.'® Son Lynch hung up the phone.!? Sergeant Long called back again two minutes later allegedly cursing at Son Lynch to which Son Lynch responded “fuck off” before hanging up.'® A detective calls Son Lynch’s mother about arresting Son Lynch. Detective Vernacchio called Son Lynch’s mother three minutes later saying detectives will charge her son with harassment if he returns to the Township building.'!? Son Lynch waited approximately one hour and then called Detective Lythgoe again expressing his concerns about Sergeant Long’s lack of professionalism including calling his mother threatening arrest for harassment if Son Lynch returned to the Township building.”° Detective Lythgoe told Son Lynch he would address the matter but did not call Son Lynch back.”! Detective Lythgoe instead called the police department to tell them of Son Lynch’s call claiming the police are retaliating against

Detectives and mental health professionals visit the Lynch home. Haverford Sergeants Long and Shant Bedrossian along with two unnamed mental health professionals then arrived at the Lynches’ home at some unpleaded time later that afternoon.”? The detectives and mental health professionals sought a mental health evaluation.** Sergeant Long told

Son Lynch he did not want to arrest him or investigate a crime.”° Son Lynch repeatedly demanded the sergeants and mental health professionals leave the Lynch property.*° The mental health professionals remained on the property for over an hour before they entered the home.’ Sergeant Long asked Son Lynch to not call him “dude” to which Son Lynch responded “we are done talking Iam done talking with you.”*® Sergeant Long then threatened to arrest Son Lynch for harassment.”? Father Lynch showed up at an unpleaded time on May 12, 2023.°° Sergeants Long, Bedrossian and the mental health professionals believed Son Lynch required a mental health evaluation as detailed in the May 12, 2023 incident reports.”! IL. Analysis Father and Son Lynch sued Haverford Township Police Department, Police Chief John Viola, Sergeant T.J. Long, Sergeant Shane Bedrossian, Detective Joseph Fuller, Detective David Vernacchio, Detective Robert Lythgoe, the Delaware County District Attorney’s Office, Delaware County Mobile Crisis for Law Enforcement and two unidentified mental health professionals claiming their conduct on May 12, 2023 violated their constitutional rights through First Amendment retaliation, unreasonable search and seizure under the Fourth Amendment, and a violation of Son Lynch’s substantive due process rights under the Fourteenth Amendment.** They also seek damages under a variety of Pennsylvania claims.** We dismissed all claims without prejudice against Haverford Township, Chief Viola, Detective Fuller, the District Attorney’s Office, and the Mobile Crisis Unit on September 5, 2025 because the Lynches did not timely serve these parties.** They also claim to have served someone as “John Doe” but do not identify them and we have no basis to find proper service.*> We today strike the service upon “John Doe” without prejudice to properly identify and then serve the alleged “John Does.”

Sergeant Long, Sergeant Bedrossian, and Detective Vernacchio first moved to dismiss.

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Bluebook (online)
Joseph J. Lynch, Joseph B. Lynch v. Sergeant T.J. Long, Sergeant Shant Bedrossian, Detective David Vernacchio, Detective Robert Lythgoe, John Does 1-2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joseph-j-lynch-joseph-b-lynch-v-sergeant-tj-long-sergeant-shant-paed-2025.