Lennox Emanuel v. Wayne County, MI

652 F. App'x 417
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 20, 2016
Docket15-2094
StatusUnpublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 652 F. App'x 417 (Lennox Emanuel v. Wayne County, MI) 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
Lennox Emanuel v. Wayne County, MI, 652 F. App'x 417 (6th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

MARTHA CRAIG DAUGHTREY, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff Lennox Emanuel was arrested after Wayne County Sheriffs Office personnel observed him speaking with a known prostitute, inviting the woman into his car, and then driving her to a motel parking lot a few miles away. After a Michigan state-court judge found Emanuel not guilty of the resulting “receiving and admitting” charges, the plaintiff filed this federal suit against the Wayne County officers involved in his arrest, as well as against Wayne County itself. The district court granted summary judgment to the defendants on Emanuel’s claims of arrest without probable cause, malicious prosecution, failure to supervise, failure to train, and gross negligence. Emanuel now appeals that decision, arguing that if the district court had considered an affidavit from the woman with whom he was arrest.ed, he would have established a genuine dispute of fact that would have precluded summary judgment. Because we conclude *419 that the district court did not abuse its discretion in striking the affidavit and did not err in its grant of summary judgment to the defendants, we affirm the district court’s judgment.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In response to citizen complaints of prostitution and drug activity in the vicinity, officers of the Wayne County Sheriffs Office conducted a surveillance operation in the area around Derby and Remington Streets in Detroit in late September 2011. On September 28, Officer Sheri Tanner, while working with an employee of the Detroit Police Department, observed Leiann Gross, a woman to whom Tanner previously had issued more than six citations for prostitution, flagging down vehicles driving in the area. Eventually, Tanner saw Gross approach a black Audi automobile with tinted windows, speak with the driver, and then get into the passenger seat of the vehicle.

At that time, Tanner radioed other members of her team who were in the general vicinity, and she herself began following the Audi from a distance, noting at one point in the journey that the driver of the Audi failed to signal a turn properly. One of Tanner’s team members, Officer Assad Turfe, heard Tanner’s report, and he too began tailing the Audi in his unmarked car as the Audi traveled northward on Woodward Avenue. Turfe was able to travel between the Audi and Tanner, who was some distance behind Turfe. Eventually the Audi driver turned into the parking lot of the De Lido Motel, pulled into a parking space, and remained seated in the car. After “[t]hree to four minutes,” Turfe and Officer Jason Mathews, who by then also had arrived at the scene, approached the Audi “[t]o conduct an investigatory stop,” “[b]ased on the information [Turfe] had received over the police radio that a prostitute had entered the vehicle and the fact that [the Audi was] currently parked in a parking lot where there’s high prostitution activity.”

Mathews approached the driver of the Audi while Turfe went to the other side of the vehicle and ordered the passenger, later confirmed to be Leiann Gross, to exit the car. After reading Gross her Miranda rights, Turfe inquired what the vehicle’s driver had wanted with her, to which Gross replied that they had driven “to the [De Lido] Motel to have sex but ha[d] not discussed money yet.” Upon hearing that admission, Turfe approached Mathews to ascertain what, if any, information Mathews had obtained from his conversations with the driver, plaintiff Lennox Emanuel. Mathews told Turfe that Emanuel had refused to speak with him about details of his association with Gross or the reason he was at the De Lido Motel but had stated that he was a lawyer. Based upon what Gross already had divulged to Turfe, the officer placed Emanuel under arrest.

While Turfe was handcuffing Emanuel, Mathews took his turn speaking with Gross. During that second round of questioning, Gross offered “[tjhat she knew [Emanuel], she knew [him] well and [he] had picked her up on several occasions and [Emanuel] had had sexual intercourse with her” on previous occasions. According to Turfe, his subsequent questioning of Emanuel led to similar admissions. The officer testified during his deposition that,- while in the De Lido Motel parking lot, he also read the Miranda warnings to Emanuel, who then confessed both that he knew Gross was a prostitute and that he drove her to the motel “to have sex with her.”

Later, however, Emanuel vehemently denied that he had given any such information to Turfe during the officer’s questioning or that he had confessed to any *420 crime whatsoever. In fact, during his deposition testimony, Emanuel cast a radically different light on his interaction with Gross. According to Emanuel, he did not know that Gross was working as a prostitute and did not pick her up in order to engage in sexual activities. Rather, he asserted that he was in the area at the time seeking clues to the murder of a friend, Raina Blasius, whom he had represented when Blasius faced loitering and other misdemeanor charges. Because Blasius had been murdered in the vicinity of the Derby Street/Remington Street intersection, Emanuel claimed that he had driven to that area from his office in an effort to locate anyone who could offer information about the murder. When he saw Gross walking in the area, he recognized her as a former companion of Blasius and thus stopped to see whether she knew anything about the murder, despite the fact that Emanuel claimed that he never had spoken to Gross before September 28.

Emanuel also said that when Gross indicated a willingness to speak with him about Blasius, he invited her into his car and drove to the De Lido Motel, not to engage in any sexual activity, but because the motel parking lot was lighted and was one of the safer locations in the area. Emanuel said that, once in the lot, he and Gross remained in the car talking about Blasius “for about 15, 20 minutes before the officers approached.” He testified further that after handcuffing him, Turfe screamed at him and ordered him to admit that he had driven Gross to the motel for a sexual liaison. Emanuel claimed that he refused to say anything at all to Turfe and just “started] at the guy dumbfounded.”

Nevertheless, as a result of the information Turfe and Mathews claimed to have received from Gross and Emanuel, Mathews wrote up complaints for Emanuel and for Gross — a citation for “receiving and admitting” a person for an act of prostitution for Emanuel, see Detroit City Code § 38 — 9—4(b), and a citation for “accosting and soliciting” an act of prostitution for Gross. See Detroit City Code § 38-9-4(a). Officer Tanner signed both complaints as the issuing officer because her initial observation of the interaction between Emanuel and Gross had led to the arrests. Turfe also processed paperwork to impound Emanuel’s vehicle pursuant to the provisions of Michigan’s nuisance-abatement statutes, see Mich. Comp. Laws §§ 600.3801-3841, before allowing both Emanuel and Gross to leave the area. The following week, Emanuel paid $3,600 for the release of his vehicle from the impound lot, the fourth time he was forced to pay to retrieve an automobile that had been seized by the authorities in connection with a violation of a municipal ordinance.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
652 F. App'x 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lennox-emanuel-v-wayne-county-mi-ca6-2016.