Lovell v. United States of America

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedAugust 3, 2022
Docket1:18-cv-01867
StatusUnknown

This text of Lovell v. United States of America (Lovell v. United States of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lovell v. United States of America, (E.D.N.Y. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK ----------------------------------

TAMEIKA LOVELL,

Plaintiff, MEMORANDUM AND ORDER -against- 18-CV-1867 (KAM) HELEN PARKER, ET AL.,

Defendant.

----------------------------------x MATSUMOTO, United States District Judge: Plaintiff Tameika Lovell (“Ms. Lovell”) brought this action against Defendants Stephen T. Twarowski ("Defendant Twarowski”), Helen Quanasia Parker ("Defendant Parker”), and Barbara Muñoz ("Defendant Muñoz”), in their personal capacities (collectively, “Defendants”), for alleged constitutional violations of the Fourth and Fifth Amendment pursuant to Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics, 403 U.S. 388 (1971). Defendants have moved for summary judgment on all of Ms. Lovell’s claims.1 For the reasons set forth below, Defendants’ motion for summary judgment is granted.

1 See ECF Nos. 66-1 Def. Mem. in Supp. for Summ. J; 66-3 Pl. Opp’n. to Summ. J.; 66-5 Def. Reply in Supp. for Summ. J. BACKGROUND In the instant action, Ms. Lovell alleges that she was selected for a “pat-down, secondary, and body cavity search due

to her race and gender” and without reasonable suspicion by Defendant Parker, as witnessed by Defendant Muñoz, and as authorized by Defendant Twarowski. (See ECF No. 66-3, Pl. Opp'n. to Summ. J. at 4.) The Court has taken the relevant facts from the parties’ declarations, depositions, exhibits, and from the parties’ respective Rule 56.1 statements of facts.2 Defendants’ counsel Shana A. Priore declares that “true and correct copies of relevant portions of the deposition transcripts” of Ms. Lovell and Defendants Parker, Muñoz, and Twarowski are contained in the joint deposition transcript

2 See ECF Nos. 62, Def. 56.1 Statement; 62-1, Def. Ex. B, OIG Twarowski Interview 12/13/16; 62-2, Def. Ex. C, OIG Parker Interview 4/12/17; 62-3, Def. Ex. E, OIG Muñoz Interview 12/16/16; 62-4, Def. Ex. F, CBP Personal Search Handbook; 62-5, Def. Ex. I, Decl. of Stephen Twarowski; 62-6, Def. Ex. J, DHS Personal Statement of Barbara Muñoz 12/13/16; 62-7, Def. Ex. K, DHS Personal Statement of Helen Parker 4/12/17; 62-8, Def. Ex. L, Security Footage 11/17/16; 62-9, Def. Ex. M, Incident Log Report 11/28/16; 62-10, Def. Ex. N, Lovell Passport; 62-11, Def. Ex. O, Queens County Declination of Prosecution; 62-12, Def. Ex. P, Decl. of Helen Parker; 62-13, Def. Ex. Q, Decl. of Barbara Muñoz; 62-14, Def. Ex. R, Plaintiff Tameika Lovell’s SF-95 Form; 62-15 Def. Ex. S, Declination of Lovell’s SF-95 Form; ECF No. 66-2 Decl. of Shana Priore; 66-4 Decl. of Eric Sanders; 66-6 Joint Deposition Transcript Appendix. Where the parties submitted the same evidence, such as the CBP Personal Search Handbook, interviews with the Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Inspector General, and depositions, the Court will refer to Defendants’ exhibits for ease of citations. Other portions of the Ms. Lovell’s record include ECF Nos. 63, Pl. Reply to Def. 56.1 Statement & Counter Statement (“Pl. 56.1 Reply”); 63-1, Pl. Ex. 1, GAO Report on Better Targeting of Airline Passengers for Personal Searches Could Produce Better Results (“GAO Report”); 63-3, Pl. Ex. 3, CBP Law Course Fifteenth Edition 2012; and 63-4, Pl. Ex. 4, National Standards on Transport, Escort, Detention, and Search 2015. appendix (“JDTA”).3 (See ECF No. 66-2, Priore Decl.) Based on the parties’ 56.1 Statements, the Court recounts the undisputed facts in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party. See Capobianco v. City of New York, 422 F.3d 47, 50 n.1 (2d Cir.

2005). The Court also notes where facts are disputed by the nonmoving party. I. Factual Background On November 27, 2016, at approximately 10:06 p.m., Ms. Lovell arrived from a vacation in Montego Bay, Jamaica, at John F. Kennedy International Airport in Queens, New York (“JFK”). (ECF No. 63, Pl. 56.1 Reply, ¶ 54.) Traveling alone, Ms. Lovell went through customs, and was selected by employees of the Department of Homeland Security’s (“DHS”) Customs and Border Protection (“CBP”) for a pat-down search.4 (Id., ¶ 59.) The CBP employees were Defendants Parker, Muñoz, and Twarowski. (See generally Def. 56.1 Statement & Exs.; see also Pl. 56.1 Reply

Exs.) Defendants Parker and Muñoz were the officers who stopped and conducted the pat-down of Ms. Lovell. (Id.) Defendant Twarowski was a supervisory officer on duty that day who authorized the pat-down by Defendants Parker and Muñoz. (Id.)

3 The JDTA contains the Defendants’ Exhibits A, D, G and H and Plaintiffs’ Exhibits 8-11.) 4 Ms. Lovell admits to traveling alone but denies to being stopped by Defendant Parker because she was traveling alone, as will be further detailed below. (ECF No, 63, Pl. 56.1 Reply Statement, ¶ 59.) Whether the pat-down search was “routine” is also disputed. (Id., ¶ 121.) A. CBP’s Policies at International Airports for Authorizing and Conducting Pat-down and Partial Body Searches CBP officers assigned to an international airport’s

Passenger Enforcement Roving Team (“PERT”) are responsible for surveilling and monitoring an airport’s international terminal floor to randomly intercept and examine travelers arriving into the United States off of specific high-risk flights and flights from countries considered by CBP to have more illicit drug production or narcotics-trafficking. (ECF No. 63, Pl. 56.1 Reply, ¶7.) PERT officers consult intelligence gathered from other law enforcement agencies or sources on smuggling trends and countries to be on alert for incoming travelers. (ECF Nos. 63, Pl. 56.1 Reply, ¶¶ 19-20; 66-6, JDTA at 98, 101, 124.) Jamaica is designated as a ”drug source” country, and is considered by

CBP officers as a major drug-transit or illicit drug-producing country. (ECF No. 63, Pl. 56.1 Reply, ¶ 19, ECF No. 66-6, JDTA at 131-33.). On November 27, 2016, the evening of Ms. Lovell’s incident at JFK, Defendants Parker and Muñoz were CBP officers on PERT duty and Defendant Twarowski was a supervisory officer of CBP and JFK's PERT. (Id., ¶¶ 5-8.) They were working at the airport’s International Terminal floor at JFK International Airport on November 27, 2016. (Id.) CBP officers are trained to employ various techniques and tools to determine whether to conduct a routine pat-down search of an individual, including behavioral analysis,

observational techniques, inconsistencies, and intelligence. (ECF Nos. 63, Pl. 56.1 Reply ¶¶ 12-16; 62-4, Def. Ex. F, CBP Personal Search Handbook at 2.) According to Defendants’ testimony, on November 27, 2016, the day they intercepted Ms. Lovell they were operating with the following intelligence that, inter alia, provided the bases for their search of Ms. Lovell: Mr. Lovell arrived at JFK from Jamaica, a “drug source” country; statistical smuggling trends indicated that single travelers were more likely than groups to transport illicit drugs into the United States and Ms. Lovell was travelling alone; travelers commonly concealed contraband in the breast and groin area and Ms. Lovell had tied a garment around her waist that concealed

her groin area; and the inability of Ms. Lovell not being able to provide the name of her hotel in Jamaica was behavior consistent with illicit drug smuggling. (See ECF Nos. 66-6, JDTA at 42, 45, 48, 50, 131; 62-5, Def. Ex. I, Decl. of Stephen Twarowski at ¶¶ 7-8; 62-3 Def. Ex. E, OIG Muñoz Interview 12/16/16; 62-1 Def. Ex. B, OIG Twarowski Interview 12/13/16; 62- 2 Def. Ex. C, OIG Parker Interview 4/12/17; 62-4, Def. Ex. F, CBP Personal Search Handbook at 2.) Defendants also testified that passenger behaviors they analyzed included: physiological signs of nervousness such as shaking or trembling hands, rapid breathing for no apparent

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