McElroy v. United States

861 F. Supp. 585, 1994 WL 475311
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Texas
DecidedAugust 25, 1994
DocketA 93 CA 117SS
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 861 F. Supp. 585 (McElroy v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McElroy v. United States, 861 F. Supp. 585, 1994 WL 475311 (W.D. Tex. 1994).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

SPARKS, District Judge.

BE IT REMEMBERED that on the 27th and 28th days of June 1994, the Court held a bench trial for adjudication of the above-captioned matter. Plaintiffs brought claims against the United States of America pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(b) and 2674 (or the Federal Tort Claims Act) for damages resulting from the alleged negligence of officers and agents of the Organized Crime and Drug Enforcement Task Force (hereinafter, “OCDETF”) — a federal task force composed of federal, state, and local law enforcement officers. In addition, or alternatively, Plaintiffs aver they were victimized by the officers’ intentional torts. After the conclusion of the evidence and the arguments of counsel, the Court withheld ruling until the parties had an opportunity to submit additional post-trial briefs on the issue of the Defendants’ liabili *588 ty. Having considered the trial evidence, the oral arguments of counsel, and the post-trial briefs, the Court enters the following Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law.

I. Findings of Fact

In the fall of 1991, a confidential informant apprised agents of the OCDETF that George Rodriguez had sold him illegal narcotics. The informant had visited Rodriguez’s residence at 6703 Comanche Trail in Travis County, Texas, and purchased drugs from him on several occasions. This information corroborated the OCDETF’s suspicions that Rodriguez was a member of a large international drug distribution network which had been targeted in a sting operation. Consequently, members of the task force began watching Rodriguez’s apartment in late October or early November of 1991. Officer Black, a local police officer who had been deputized as a federal agent, surveyed the activities at Rodriguez’s apartment on twenty to thirty different occasions. In addition, the confidential informant had provided the task force with a description of the apartment’s layout or floorplan.

In November of 1991, officers on the task force ran a check with the Texas Department of Motor Vehicles to determine the ownership of a Blue Suzuki Samurai that was often parked in front of Rodriguez’s apartment. The check revealed that the automobile belonged to a person named Fred Griesbach who lived in Dallas. The officers then deduced Rodriguez’s girlfriend, who resided in Dallas but visited him frequently, was either borrowing the car or had registered it under a different name.

The OCDETF officers did not attempt to check the utility records for Rodriguez’s residence because they did not have direct access to the computers of the utility company, Perdinales Electric Company. Moreover, due to the small size of that company, the agents feared any inquiry by them would risk a leak to Rodriguez and, in turn, might jeopardize the entire sting operation. Finally, no pen registers were placed on the phone lines at the residence but the task force had pen registers monitoring the lines of Rodriguez’s co-conspirators who contacted him regularly.

After accumulating enough evidence to establish probable cause to search the residence, the task force obtained a valid “no knock” search warrant from the United States Magistrate Judge. At approximately 6:00 a.m. on February 6, 1992, the task force (comprised of local police officers, federal D.E.A. agents, and the Travis County S.W.A.T. team) executed the warrant at 6703 Comanche Trail. 1 They rammed through the castle doors of Rodriguez’s apartment and scattered throughout; some rushed to a bedroom where they seized Rodriguez and his female companion while others conducted a “protective sweep” to secure the area. During this protective sweep, one of the officers ran onto a balcony and, shining his light, observed an additional side of the budding which the task force had yet to secure. He then informed the other officers of his discovery and, after realizing there were no internal doors connecting the two sides of the building, they ran outside and located another door that appeared to lead to the unsecured side. They then procured a battering ram and began splintering the second door.

Unfortunately and unbeknownst to the task force, the building was a duplex and the left side was occupied by two persons, Plaintiffs McElroy and Griesbach, who had no connection with the illegal activities of their neighbor Rodriguez. McElroy and Griesbach had lived at 6703 Comanche Trail since the commencement of the OCDETF’s investigation.

McElroy awoke that morning to the terrifying sounds of crashing and screaming in Rodriguez’s apartment next door. His first thought was that his neighbors were being murdered and he would have to get out of the duplex to save his own life. He looked down from the window of his bedroom loft and saw a flashlight shining from a balcony on Rodriguez’s side of the duplex. He dialed 911 but before he could complete his call the *589 intruders began bashing in the front door of his unit. In an attempt to escape, he ran to the level below his bedroom loft and onto a balcony. He looked down from the balcony, which hung over a steep cliff, and reconsidered his escape route. He ran down the stairs to the ground floor where the front door was located. Before he could find a way to get out, the front door gave way and the Travis County S.W.A.T. team, outfitted in black suits, poured into the foyer and pounced on him. As they were taking him down, one of the officers grabbed for his head and inadvertently ripped out some of his artificially implanted hair. McElroy also sustained several small bruises and cuts on his legs. For approximately two minutes, they held him pinned to the floor with a gun to his head. To this point, the S.W.A.T. team had not identified themselves, but when McElroy, obviously terrified, implored them to identify themselves, they answered with nonresponsive obscenities.

Agents not involved in the take-down of McElroy ran past him toward Griesbach who, awakened by the commotion, had come to the base of the stairs on the ground floor. They tackled and pinned Griesbach in a similar manner, shouting obscenities, grabbing his hair, and holding a gun to his head. He received several bruises and a cut on his left shin. Like McElroy, none of Griesbach’s cuts or bruises required medical attention.

After the initial siege, McElroy and Griesbach, wearing only boxer shorts, were secured with flexible plastic handcuffs and taken next door to Rodriguez’s side of the duplex. The agents seated them on a couch next to Rodriguez and his girlfriend. Griesbach was given a bandage for the cut he sustained on his shin. After questioning McElroy and Griesbach for approximately forty-five minutes, the task force determined they were not involved in the drug-related activities of Rodriguez. The agents then took them back to their unit next door, required them to be photographed, issued a perfunctory, half-hearted apology, and released them. After they were released, no one from the OCDETF made any follow-up investigation to ensure that both men were not harmed (physically or mentally) or to assess the damages the raid caused to the apartment. 2

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Bluebook (online)
861 F. Supp. 585, 1994 WL 475311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcelroy-v-united-states-txwd-1994.