Labeed Nouri v. County of Oakland

615 F. App'x 291
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 12, 2015
Docket14-1771
StatusUnpublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 615 F. App'x 291 (Labeed Nouri v. County of Oakland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Labeed Nouri v. County of Oakland, 615 F. App'x 291 (6th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

*293 OPINION

JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge.

Dr. Labeed Nouri was convicted by a Michigan jury of sexually assaulting an employee of his medical practice, but he was eventually released under the terms of a plea agreement after evidence of juror misconduct. He sued the prosecutor, Hala Jarbou, the lead detective, Lieutenant Jason Weimer, and the Hazel Park Police Department for supposed improprieties in the investigation and prosecution. He also sued Sheriff Michael Bouchard, Oakland County, and several other Oakland County employees who he claimed violated his constitutional rights while a pretrial detainee and prisoner. The district court dismissed all of his claims on Rule 12(b)(6) motions or motions for summary judgment. He appeals the dismissal of a significant subset of those claims, but we affirm.

I.

On June 22, 2007, an 18-year-old employee of Nouri’s orthopedic surgery practice, Krystal Kirma, entered a local hospital claiming to have been sexually assaulted while alone with Nouri in his office. That same day she spoke with an officer of the Hazel Park Police Department. In her account to the police, she claimed that she had asked Nouri to examine her back, but that Nouri held her down and groped her while she lay on the examination table. (Id.) He then let her go, and she checked into the hospital after telling her mother and boyfriend of the incident.

The Hazel Park Police Department assigned Weimer to investigate the case. He retrieved the “rape kit” from the local hospital. Weimer quickly interviewed Kir-ma, explaining the seriousness of her allegations and that she herself could be prosecuted if found to have fabricated the event. Kirma gave an account to Weimer similar to her first statement to the police. Weimer then interviewed Kirma’s mother, Kirma’s father, and other employees of Nouri’s medical practice and had Kirma and her mother provide written statements. He interviewed Kirma further to see if she could recall certain details of the assault and to ascertain how she could recall some of those details. Weimer next interviewed Kirma’s boyfriend, who claimed in person and in a later statement that Kirma had come to him noticeably upset on the day of the alleged assault. On June 6, 2007, Weimer set up a “one party consent call” in which he had Kirma call Nouri to discuss the alleged assault while he listened. Nouri denied the allegations during that call.

Weimer interviewed Nouri himself on June 17, 2007. Nouri again denied Kir-ma’s allegations; he claimed that he was taking dictation and conversing on the phone at the approximate time of the alleged assault. According to Nouri, these dictations were stored with an off-site third-party and were time-stamped. Nouri suggested that Kirma may harbor animus toward him and others of Chaldean ethnicity or may be trying to set him up. Notably, he also told Weimer that he had not spoken to Kirma about the event. Nouri had another interview with Weimer two days later in which he brought four dictation tapes with time stamps. By the end of July, Weimer obtained Nouri’s dictation and phone logs, going so far as to discuss the time stamps with the CEO of the dictation company. Weimer talked to Nouri, Kirma, and Kirma’s parents again several times throughout July and early August. In mid-August, he proceeded to discuss some of the medical evidence of injury with Kirma’s gynecologist.

*294 Around this time Weimer turned over his case file to the Oakland County prosecutor, which sought and received an arrest warrant. Weimer and others testified at trial. On May 8, 2008, Nouri was convicted of one count of first-degree criminal sexual conduct and two counts of fourth-degree criminal sexual conduct.

On some basis that the record does not make entirely clear, it became apparent that juror misconduct may have occurred. 1 The parties stipulated to a new trial, and the state court entered an order granting that trial and vacating the criminal sexual conduct convictions. But Nouri was still in jail at this point, and rather than remain in jail waiting for that trial he signed an agreement with the government in which he pled no contest to a single count of aggravated assault in exchange for dismissal of the more serious sexual assault charges and an immediate release from prison. As part of the deal, he also signed a stipulation “that at a trial ... the People would produce evidence, if believed by the finder of fact, that would establish that [he] touched Krystal Kirma without her consent and that the unconsented touching resulted in an injury sufficient to satisfy the injury element” of the aggravated assault statute. The state court approved the plea and sentence agreement in April 2011, nearly three years after his conviction.

For most of that three-year period Nouri had been confined to the Oakland County Jail. Nouri claims that, while in the jail, he was repeatedly attacked by other inmates and sustained serious, lasting injuries to his mouth and head. According to Nouri, the prison guards and medical staff compounded these injuries either by denying him critical treatment altogether or by withdrawing medical care to punish him for perceived slights. He did not receive treatment for some of his injuries until after his release.

Nouri received several citations from jail staff for infractions of jail ordinances. Some involved possession of contraband, and others involved more serious altercations that required him to be placed into a different area of the prison. The jail deemed Nouri a “high security” inmate after these infractions, which meant that he had to seek special approval to receive visits from anyone under the age of 18. As a result Nouri received only one visit from his children but received numerous visits from his wife.

Nouri filed a pro se complaint while still an inmate, but for the purposes of this appeal the more important event is the filing of his amended complaint after his release (now aided by counsel). In this pleading Nouri asserted a variety of constitutional and state claims. He alleged that Oakland County and Sheriff Bouchard violated his rights under the First, Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the Federal Constitution by depriving him of necessary medical care and by denying him visitation rights with his children. The district court dismissed the medical care claim upon a 12(b)(6) motion and the visitation claim upon summary judgment. Against Weimer and the prosecutor, Hala Jarbou, Nouri asserted several claims under the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments. The district court dismissed the claims against Jarbou at the pleading stage on grounds of prosecutorial immunity. The claims against Weimer were ultimately dismissed at summary judgment. We provide further discussion of the pro *295 cedural history for each claim as necessary below, but we also note now that Nouri amended his complaint a second time after the partially successful Rule 12 motion. Nouri appeals each of the claims discussed above.

II.

We review de novo the dismissal of a claim under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). Thompson v. Bank of Am., N.A., 773 F.3d 741, 750 (6th Cir.2014).

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615 F. App'x 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/labeed-nouri-v-county-of-oakland-ca6-2015.