Lattimore v. Klein

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedMarch 4, 2019
Docket1:17-cv-08683
StatusUnknown

This text of Lattimore v. Klein (Lattimore v. Klein) 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
Lattimore v. Klein, (N.D. Ill. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOI EASTERN DIVISION

KERMIT LATTIMORE and ) CAROL G. HUTTON-LATTIMORE, ) ) Case No. 17-CV-8683 Plaintiffs, ) ) Judge John J. Tharp, Jr. vs. ) ) OFFICERS KLEIN #4983, ) STEINMETZ #8123, ) WOJTOWICZ #9506, ) STOIBER #8173, ) VAN DER LINDEN #8959, ) MCPHERSON #5634, ) GALLAGHER # 3408, ) BARNES, ) ZEIGLER #9878, and ) THE VILLAGE OF STREAMWOOD, ) ) Defendants. )

ORDER

For the reasons set forth in the statement below, the defendants’ motion to dismiss the plaintiffs’ amended complaint [57] is granted in part and denied in part. A status hearing will be held on March 20, 2019 at 9:00 a.m.

STATEMENT

The original complaint in this case was dismissed, largely without prejudice, by Judge St. Eve on May 11, 2018. Order, ECF No. 37. Shortly thereafter, it was reassigned to this Court’s calendar due to Judge St. Eve’s appointment to the Court of Appeals. Familiarity with the original complaint and Judge St. Eve’s dismissal order are assumed, but as relevant here, Judge St. Eve dismissed the plaintiff’s federal claims pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6), agreeing with the defendants that the allegations failed adequately to allege the individual participation of the defendants in the constitutional violations alleged. To be clear, however, and contrary to the defendants’ characterization, the dismissal was not on account of “group pleading” by the plaintiff; to the contrary, the dismissal order acknowledged that “group pleading” is not improper per se. Order, ECF No. 37, at 4 (“group pleading does not violate Fed. R. Civ. P. 8 so long as the complaint provides sufficient detail to put the defendants on notice of the claims”) (internal quotation marks omitted). Complaints must provide constitutionally minimal notice to each defendant as to the nature of the claim(s) asserted; doing so does not require a pleading that catalogs every individual act taken by an individual defendant in the course of an incident that involves multiple officers. Alleging that “the Defendants” or “the Responding Officers” all participated in unlawful conduct may, if plausible, suffice to provide adequate notice.

In response to Judge St. Eve’s ruling, the plaintiffs filed an Amended Complaint (“AC”). ECF No. 42. In the AC, however, they have done little to address the lack of detail that prompted dismissal of the plaintiffs’ federal claims. Here, verbatim, are the fact allegations as stated by Judge St. Eve in ruling that the complaint failed to provide sufficient notice to the defendants:

Plaintiff Kermit Lattimore (“Lattimore”) and Maribeth Rivera (“Rivera”) were married and began living together at their Streamwood residence (“Residence”), which was a pre-marital asset owned by Lattimore. Plaintiff Carol G. Hutton-Lattimore(“Hutton-Lattimore”) is Lattimore’s daughter, who lived at the Residence. Eventually Lattimore’s and Rivera’s marriage became troubled resulting in Lattimore filing a petition for dissolution of the union. On January 26, 2015, Lattimore returned to the Residence with his nephew Steven and Hutton- Lattimore. Plaintiffs allege that at that time Rivera had locked Lattimore out of the Residence. Once they gained entry into the Residence, Rivera’s son, Michael, assaulted Lattimore with a knife. Thereafter, Lattimore dialed 911 to request police assistance. Defendant Officers Steinmetz and Van Der Linden responded to the 911 call, knowing that Lattimore had made the call and was seeking assistance. Plaintiffs further allege that Defendant Officers Steinmetz and Van Der Linden had heard the recorded 911 audio of Michael threatening Lattimore. Shortly thereafter, Defendant Officers Stoiber, McPherson, and Klein arrived to assist Defendant Officers Steinmetz and Van Der Linden at the Residence. Defendant Officers Steinmetz, Van Der Linden, Stoiber, McPherson, and Klein (the “Responding Officers”) entered the Residence and interviewed the occupants therein. According to Plaintiffs, the Responding Officers knew the occupants at the Residence and had no authority to remove Lattimore, his nephew Steven, or Hutton-Lattimore from the Residence. As to Hutton-Lattimore, the Responding Officers found her in the kitchen on January 26, 2015, and knew that at that time knew she had not committed a crime and that she was not a threat to the occupants of the Residence. Nonetheless, on January 28, 2015, Streamwood police officers arrested Hutton-Lattimore and charged her with home invasion. As to Lattimore, once the Responding Officers arrived on January 26, 2015, they seized Lattimore’s lawfully owned gun and escorted him out of the Residence. Once outside the Residence, the Responding Officers searched Lattimore’s car to recover his wallet and then towed the vehicle. The Responding Officers thereafter arrested Lattimore and charged him with unlawful use/possession of a weapon and home invasion despite Lattimore’s valid firearm credentials and documents. Plaintiffs further allege that Defendant Officer Klein submitted a complaint for a search warrant to search Lattimore’s property that stated Lattimore’s concealed carry license and FOID cards had been revoked – although they were in fact valid. Moreover, Plaintiffs allege that Defendant Officers Gallagher, Barnes, and Zeigler assisted in the arrest, as well as investigated the home invasion charges against Lattimore and Hutton-Lattimore. On December 2, 2015, after a jury trial, the jury acquitted Lattimore of the home invasion charges. Lattimore’s unlawful use of a weapon charges had been dropped before trial. The charges against Hutton- Lattimore were dropped on January 6, 2016. In response to the dismissal order, the plaintiffs have essentially repeated their prior fact allegations and added a handful of new allegations, most pertaining only to Officer Wojtowicz. Here are the new allegations in the Amended Complaint:

 ¶ 31: Officer Wojtowicz was assigned to investigate the January 26, 2015 incident;

 ¶ 32: Officers Wojtowicz and Gallagher were the officers who charged or arrested, or assisted in charging or arresting, Hutton-Lattimore;

 ¶ 33: Officer Wojtowicz served an emergency order of protection on Lattimore on January 29, 2015 in bond court;

 ¶¶ 34-35: Rivera signed over Lattimore’s personal property to Officer Wojtowicz;

 ¶ 36: Officer Wojtowicz discovered on February 3, 2015 that records at the school attended by Lattimore’s and Rivera’s son listed Lattimore’s address as 1 Heather Court;

 ¶ 37: On or around March 3, 2015, Wojtowicz falsely claimed that Lattimore did not have an Order of Protection which prevented persons other than Rivera and her son from being present at the 1 Heather Court residence; and

 ¶ 50: Hutton-Lattimore’s records were expunged on or around January 11, 2017.

While these new allegations remedy the complete dearth of allegations about Officer Wojtowicz in the original complaint, they do little to cure the deficiencies of the original complaint with respect to the allegations against the other defendant officers. That does not mean, however, that the entire complaint should be dismissed. While Judge St. Eve did not find it necessary, given the grant of leave to replead, to parse through the adequacy of the allegations as to each defendant, in reviewing the plaintiffs’ allegations, the Court concludes that they suffice to state plausible claims against various subsets of the defendants, as discussed in detail below.

In Count I, the plaintiffs assert claims based on alleged violations of their Fourth Amendment rights. Lattimore alleges that he was subjected to an unlawful search based on a search warrant procured with false statements,1 that he was arrested without probable cause, and that his

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