Leonard v. Lapeer County

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedMarch 30, 2024
Docket2:22-cv-10280
StatusUnknown

This text of Leonard v. Lapeer County (Leonard v. Lapeer County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leonard v. Lapeer County, (E.D. Mich. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION

GRANT LEONARD,

Plaintiff, No. 22-10280

v. Honorable Nancy G. Edmunds

LAPEER COUNTY, et al

Defendants. _________________________________/

OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGEMENT [28]

This action arises from the August 16, 2020 detention and arrest of Plaintiff Grant Leonard. On the morning of the arrest, Defendant Deputy Daniel Hinsberger of the Lapeer County Sheriff’s Department observed a black Dodge Charger with police vehicle rims. Aware of a police impersonation incident reported in Metamora Township a few days prior, Defendant Hinsberger followed the vehicle. When dispatch announced a “black unmarked car” reported in his area on the radio minutes later, Defendant Hinsberger initiated and radioed in a traffic stop. Plaintiff, the driver of the black Charger, consented to a search of his vehicle. During the search, Deputy Hinsberger located, among other things, a semiautomatic rifle, loaded magazines, body armor, handcuffs, and what he believed to be a double-edged nonfolding knife in the passenger compartment. Believing that carrying the knife in the vehicle was a violation of Michigan’s concealed weapon law, Deputy Hinsberger arrested Plaintiff and transported him to the Lapeer County Jail. Defendant Hinsberger seized several items from Plaintiff’s vehicle and he was held overnight. Lapeer County Prosecutors decided to release Plaintiff but retained some of his property for further investigation into remaining possible charges. Plaintiff forfeited the knife. All other items were returned, Metamora dropped him as a police impersonator suspect, and the County suspended all charges.

Plaintiff Leonard brings this action against Defendant Hinsberger, Defendant Parks, and Defendant Lapeer County Sheriff’s Department, alleging constitutional claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for false arrest or imprisonment, unlawful seizure and/or “unlawful holding of property,” and a municipal liability claim for a custom, practice, or policy resulting in constitutional violations. (ECF Nos. 1, 30.) Defendants moved for summary judgement under Fed. R. Civ. Pro. 56(a) and asserted qualified immunity defenses against the claims. (ECF No. 28.) Plaintiff timely responded, and Defendants filed a corrected reply. (ECF Nos. 30, 33.) For the reasons below, the Court GRANTS Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment on all counts.

I. Background Defendants Daniel Hinsberger and Jason Parks are sheriff’s deputies with the Lapeer County Sheriff’s Department. According to Defendant Hinsberger’s testimony and the case report he filed on the day of the arrest, he began following Plaintiff’s vehicle because of a roll call report a few days prior describing a police impersonator in Metamora, a township of Lapeer County, driving a black Dodge Charger. (ECF Nos. 28- 2, PageID.174, 28-5, PageID.246.) Plaintiff’s vehicle appeared to be a former police vehicle. Defendant Hinsberger observed Plaintiff on M24 and began following him as he exited onto Pratt Road. Shortly after he began his pursuit, Defendant Hinsberger received a call from dispatch alerting him to “a report of that possible black unmarked car driving back and forth on 24 between Pratt and Dryden.” (ECF No. 33-5, PageID.700.) The 911 call that prompted the dispatch included information about a push bar and lights on the vehicle, but this information was not relayed to Defendant Hinsberger in the dispatch call. Id. Hinsberger responded that he had a black Charger

going westbound on Pratt, relayed the license plate information, and notified dispatch that he would make a stop. Id. A CAD transmission came across at 8:18 am saying that a 911 call reported a black Charger with a light bar, push bar, and a small sticker on the passenger side window at that location. Throughout the record, it is undisputed that the stop occurred at approximately 8:20 am. Defendant Hinsberger testified that he could not recall if he saw the CAD transmission prior to the stop. Hinsberger noted in his deposition that Plaintiff’s vehicle “had the rims consistent with the center caps that are like our patrol vehicles here and every other patrol vehicle that we see. They weren't custom rims.” (ECF No. 28-2, PageID.175.) It is undisputed that Plaintiff’s vehicle was

formerly a police vehicle. Hinsberger stated that this was the only car in the area that matched the description at the time of the dispatch call. Id. As for Plaintiff’s physical appearance compared to the police impersonator suspect, the Metamora police report described the impersonator as 6’0, 240, and clean shaven, with short dark hair. (ECF No. 28-12, PageID.305.) Plaintiff described himself as 5’11, 290 at the time of his arrest. (ECF No. 28-3, PageID.204.) In the Police report Defendant Hinsberger filed that day, he described Plaintiff as 5’11 and 220. The police impersonator was reported as wearing a black long-sleeved shirt with tan tactical pants. Id. Plaintiff was a Cadet with the Oakland County Sheriff’s Department Cadet Program and told Defendant Hinsberger that he wears tan tactical pants and a black shirt when working in that role. Throughout the record, it is undisputed that other police officers from Matamora Township and from the Michigan State Police arrived after the stop to assist. Trooper Anthony Easlick of the Michigan State Police, who was on scene for the stop and

search, also observed Plaintiff’s vehicle prior to the dispatch call. He testified that if Defendant Hinsberger had not stopped Plaintiff, he would have. (ECF No. 28-4, PageID.237.) Once stopped, Hinsberger observed wires where sirens and radios had been removed in the center console of the vehicle. (ECF No. 28-2, PageID.176.) The back windows were also tinted. Plaintiff rolled the windows down when asked, and when Defendant Hinsberger observed a training gun and handcuffs in the backseat, he asked Plaintiff to step out of the vehicle. (ECF No. 28-2, PageIDs.176-177.) It is undisputed that Hinsberger asked for consent to search the vehicle and Plaintiff granted it.

In the search, officers discovered and seized a semiautomatic rifle, magazines with live ammunition, a KA-Bar knife, bulletproof vest, a car video recorder, and Plaintiff’s Apple iPhone. The record shows that the KA-Bar knife is a TDI (Tactical Defense Institute) model made of synthetic plastic. A description of the knife readily available online describes this knife as a “Fixed Blade” “Spear Point Double-Edge Dagger.” See e.g., Oso Grand Knives, under Self Defense Products, https://perma.cc/U2C2-KXK7. It is described as a fully concealable self-defense tool. Id. Michigan law prohibits the carrying of “a dagger, dirk, stiletto, a double-edged nonfolding stabbing instrument of any length … in any vehicle operated or occupied by the person.” Mich. Comp. Laws § 750.227. A violation is a felony. Id. Additionally, officials on the scene testified that they believed that in connection with another crime, the possession of body armor could be an additional charge. (ECF No. 28-4, PageID.236.) These items were taken to the Lapeer County Sheriff’s Office, where Plaintiff was

held. Plaintiff’s vehicle was transported to the Metamora Township Police Department for investigation in connection with the previous police impersonation incident. (ECF No. 28-5, PageID.247.) In their investigation of that incident, Metamora Township also obtained and executed a search warrant of Plaintiffs home on August 17, 2020. (ECF No. 28-5, PageID.250.) Metamora officials subsequently eliminated Plaintiff as a suspect. Id. Lapeer County officials suspended Plaintiff’s warrant for arrest and Plaintiff was released on August 17, 2020. He retrieved his vehicle the same day.

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Leonard v. Lapeer County, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leonard-v-lapeer-county-mied-2024.