LoSacco v. City of Middletown

822 F. Supp. 870, 1992 WL 392627
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 22, 1993
Docket2:89CV00825 (AHN)
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 822 F. Supp. 870 (LoSacco v. City of Middletown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
LoSacco v. City of Middletown, 822 F. Supp. 870, 1992 WL 392627 (D. Conn. 1993).

Opinion

*871 NEVAS, District Judge.

After review and absent objection, the Magistrate Judge’s Recommended Ruling is approved, adopted and ratified.

SO ORDERED.

MAGISTRATE’S OPINION

SMITH, United States Magistrate Judge.

The pro se plaintiff brought this civil rights action against the defendant town, its mayor, and several of its police officers claiming that he was falsely arrested and that the defendants caused false and defamatory statements to be published about him in a Middle-town newspaper. 1 Shortly before the scheduled commencement of jury selection, the defendants filed the instant motion for summary judgment contending that the doctrine of qualified immunity bars suit against them. For the reasons set forth herein, the defendants’ motion for summary judgment should be denied.

Facts

On September 2, 1989, the plaintiff was involved in an altercation with an individual named James Smith. During that incident, the plaintiff was stabbed with a knife.

Upon arriving at the scene, members of the Middletown Police Department arrested James Smith. Three days after the incident, however, officer John Chowaniec of the Middletown police department made an application for a warrant to arrest the plaintiff. In support of that application, officer Chowaniec signed a six-page sworn affidavit.

The affidavit, which allegedly was based on officer Chowaniec’s personal knowledge as well as information received from, other Middletown police officers, indicated that officer Chowaniec first heard of the altercation between Smith and the plaintiff at 2:57 p.m. on September 2, 1989. Upon receiving this information, Chowaniec immediately proceeded to the scene.

Once there, Chowaniec observed James Smith who had already admitted' to another officer that he had stabbed the plaintiff in the chest. ' According to Chowaniec, however, it was Smith’s contention that he had acted in self defense.

Chowaniec and his fellow officers then secured the scene. Based on information received from Smith, they found the knife with which Smith had stabbed the plaintiff in the front seat of the car in the driveway. Examination of the knife revealed blood-like fluids and what appeared to be skin particles and hair fibers.

After Smith was taken to police headquarters where he was processed on a charge of assault in the first degree and subsequently gave a voluntary statement, officer Chowaniec continued to cheek the scene for signs of a struggle. According, to Chowaniec, he could not find any signs of blood from the *872 knife wound but he did find what appeared to be fingerprints, scuff marks, and footprints on the hood of the ear. Chowaniec spread black fingerprint powder on the car, and the marks were photographed for later use.

Chowaniec and a fellow officer then proceeded to Middlesex Hospital where, after photographing the plaintiffs wound, they interviewed the plaintiff. At that time, the plaintiff indicated that he had gone to the house where Smith was staying to pick up his son who resided there. When the plaintiff inquired of his son’s whereabouts, Smith allegedly told him that his son had gone away for the weekend. Smith also threatened to call the police if the plaintiff did not leave.

According to Chowaniec’s affidavit, the plaintiff then related the following scenario:

After being told that his son was not home, he sat on the steps waiting for the arrival of the police. Before the police could arrive, however, Smith exited the house through the garage and attempted to get in the car parked in the driveway. The plaintiff went up to Smith to inquire whether he had called the police. The plaintiff also wanted to talk to Smith to find out what kind of a guy he was because he had heard that Smith had slept in the same room as his son. Upon being questioned, Smith indicated that he had not called the police. Then, without provocation, Smith produced a knife and stabbed the plaintiff in the chest. The plaintiff fell, hitting his head on the ground. He then got up and drove himself to the hospital.

Chowaniec noted nothing more about his interview with the plaintiff other than the fact that the plaintiff denied having touched Smith.

Chowaniec’s affidavit indicated that he also interviewed James Smith.

According to the affidavit, Smith told Chowaniec that LoSacco had harassed him for the preceding eight or nine days and wanted to have him evicted from his son’s mother’s residence. Smith claimed that he received about 25 telephone calls on the day of the incident from LoSacco, who asked to speak to his son and shouted obscenities at Smith. According to Smith, LoSacco knew that his son was not at home on that day, that his son spent every weekend with his aunt in New Britain, and that his son had told LoSacco that he would be away for the Labor Day weekend. Nevertheless, LoSacco came to the house asking to see his son. Smith refused to let LoSacco in and told him to go away or he would call the police. LoSacco then banged on the front door, according to Smith, screaming obscenities. Smith tried to get away in the car parked in the driveway, but LoSacco allegedly shoved Smith, who was of slight build and a cancer victim, against the car and then picked him up and threw him onto the hood. Smith claimed that he stabbed LoSacco in self-defense because he was sure that LoSacco meant to do him harm, that LoSacco had injured Smith’s left leg by scraping it against the car, and that Smith feared that LoSacco was about to hit him in the groin.

LoSacco v. City of Middletown, 745 F.Supp. 812, 815-16 (D.Conn.1990) (Nevas, J. ruling on defendants’ motion to dismiss).

After the interviews with the plaintiff and Smith, Chowaniec continued to investigate in an attempt to determine what happened. According to the affidavit, he spoke with Debra Parmalee, the mother of the plaintiffs son and a resident at the house where the incident occurred. Parmalee allegedly showed him the sneakers Smith was wearing on the day of the incident. Chowaniec indicated that he took the shoes outside and physically matched them to the footprints found on the car. He concluded that “it is positive the shoes Smith had on that day were the same as the prints left on the car.” Affidavit, p. 5. With respect to the other footprints on the car, Chowaniec represented that “it is unknown if the other shoe imprints are those of LoSacco [sic] as no match has been made as of this affidavit.” Id.

Finally, the affidavit reveals that on September 4, 1989, officer Chowaniec and detective Gervais went to the plaintiffs home to get a written statement from him. Upon being advised of his rights and being informed that Smith had filed a cross-complaint against him, the plaintiff allegedly got *873 upset and told the officers to leave his resi: dence.

Based on the representations in Chowaniec’s affidavit, a judge of the Connecticut Superior Court signed a warrant for the plaintiffs arrest. That warrant was executed October 25, 1989.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
822 F. Supp. 870, 1992 WL 392627, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/losacco-v-city-of-middletown-ctd-1993.