McGhee v. POTTAWATTAMIE COUNTY, IOWA

514 F.3d 739, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 2248, 2008 WL 268995
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 1, 2008
Docket07-1453, 07-1524
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 514 F.3d 739 (McGhee v. POTTAWATTAMIE COUNTY, IOWA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGhee v. POTTAWATTAMIE COUNTY, IOWA, 514 F.3d 739, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 2248, 2008 WL 268995 (8th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

RILEY, Circuit Judge.

In 1978, Curtis W. McGhee Jr. (McGhee) and Terry Harrington (Harrington) were convicted of murdering John Schweer, a retired police department captain who was working as a security guard. McGhee and Harrington were each sentenced to life imprisonment. In 2002, the Iowa Supreme Court reversed Harrington’s conviction and remanded for a new trial, finding the prosecutor committed a Brady 2 violation by failing to disclose evidence of an alternative suspect. The current prosecutor, Matthew Wilber (Wilber), concluded it would be impossible to retry Harrington and also agreed to move to vacate McGhee’s conviction. McGhee agreed to enter an Alford 3 plea to second degree murder in exchange for a sentence of time served. With the agreements, McGhee was released.

McGhee and Harrington both brought civil rights actions against Pottawattamie County, Iowa (County), and the former prosecutors and officers involved in the initial investigation and prosecution, arguing they used perjured and fabricated testimony and withheld evidence in violation of McGhee’s and Harrington’s constitutional rights. McGhee and Harrington also alleged Wilber defamed them. Defendants moved for summary judgment based on qualified and absolute immunity. The district court found some defendants were entitled to qualified immunity on certain claims and denied qualified immunity and absolute immunity on the remaining claims.

Defendants Joseph Hrvol (Hrvol) and David Richter (Richter) filed a consolidated interlocutory appeal from the denial of qualified, absolute, and sovereign immunity arguing the district court: (1) used an improper standard for determining probable cause in the absolute immunity analysis, (2) erred in waiving sovereign immunity for the prosecutors, and (3) erred in concluding McGhee and Harrington alleged a constitutional violation when the district court denied qualified immunity to Hrvol and Richter. Wilber also appeals the denial of his motion for summary judgment regarding McGhee’s defamation claim, contending Wilber has sovereign and qualified immunity. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

I. BACKGROUND

In July of 1977, John Schweer (Schweer), a retired police captain working as a night security guard at the McIntyre Oldsmobile dealership (McIntyre dealership) in Council Bluffs, Iowa, was shot and killed with a 12-gauge shotgun. Two Council Bluffs detectives, Daniel C. Larsen (Detective Larsen) and Lyle W. Brown (Detective Brown) (collectively, detectives) led the murder investigation with the active participation of Assistant County Attorney Hrvol participating in witness interviews and canvassing the neighborhood near the crime scene. Hrvol admits he was “intensely involved in the investigation,” even though he was not yet assigned any role in the prosecution of the case.

Richter, the County Attorney, oversaw his office’s participation in the murder investigation and received regular reports *742 from Hrvol. Richter had been appointed as County Attorney in 1976 and would stand for election, for the first time, in 1978. Richter was campaigning in the face of Schweer’s unsolved murder.

In the investigation’s early stages, more than a dozen individuals were under suspicion, but McGhee and Harrington were not yet suspects. The best lead was Charles Gates, known to investigators as “the man with the dog and shotgun.” Gates had been a suspect in a 1963 homicide investigation involving the murder of a female coworker of Gates. The detectives knew Schweer left a note at the McIntyre dealership the night before his murder noting Schweer had chased off someone who had a gun. A witness saw a man with a dog and a shotgun around the time of the murder, a man Detective Larsen determined was Gates. Richter personally interviewed another witness who positively identified Gates as the person seen walking dogs in the vicinity of the murder. Two more witnesses also placed Gates near the scene of the murder in the relevant time frame. Richter and Hrvol went so far as to consult an astrologer regarding their suspicions of Gates. Gates submitted to a polygraph exam in which the examiner opined Gates was not truthful when he denied owning a shotgun and, more importantly, denied shooting Schweer. Eight reports dealing with Gates and the murder investigation were written by the Council Bluffs police, yet, Richter and Hrvol never disclosed any of this evidence to Harrington’s or McGhee’s trial or post-conviction relief counsel. Hrvol, in answering McGhee’s post-conviction hearing discovery, went so far as to disavow any other suspects but McGhee, inaccurately answering that the “man and dog” (Gates) was “never found or identified.”

The primary witness relied upon in bringing charges against McGhee and Harrington was Kevin Hughes (Hughes), a 16-year old with a long criminal record. Hughes was interrogated by both Fremont, Nebraska, and Council Bluffs, Iowa, police before the arrests of Harrington and McGhee. On September 9, 1977, Hughes, along with two other teenagers, was stopped in a Cadillac which had been stolen nine days earlier from a Fremont, Nebraska, car dealership. Hughes denied stealing the Cadillac, and identified Harrington, McGhee and Anthony Houston (Houston) as the men who stole the Cadillac and three other cars from dealerships in Fremont and Lincoln, Nebraska, and Council Bluffs, Iowa.

Detectives Larsen and Brown traveled to Lincoln to interview Hughes, telling Hughes they knew he was involved in the car theft ring and the Schweer murder, but promised: (1) he would not be charged with the murder, (2) he would be helped with his other criminal charges, and (3) there was a $5,000 reward available, if Hughes helped the detectives with the Schweer murder. Hughes agreed to help.

Hughes’s first written statement identified a light skinned man, later identified as Steven Frazier, as the man who told Hughes that he stole a Lincoln Continental from the McIntyre dealership, killing a security guard in the process. The detectives told Hughes they knew he was lying because no Lincoln was stolen from the Mclntrye dealership.

Next, Hughes identified Arnold Kelly as involved in the murder. This was also demonstrably false as Kelly was in the Kansas City Job Corps at the time of the murder.

Harrington and McGhee assert that Hrvol, Richter, Detective Larsen and Detective Brown (1977 Defendants) began to pressure Hughes to implicate Harrington, *743 McGhee and Houston in the Schweer murder, even though Hughes initially expressed his belief the three were incapable of murder. Hughes’s story then changed again as he reported Harrington and the others told him they had murdered Schweer. Authorities accused Hughes of lying about this conversation. Once confronted, Hughes admitted to lying once more.

On September 30, 1977, Hughes told police he was at the McIntyre dealership when Schweer was murdered. The 1977 Defendants met with Hughes at the murder scene. After this visit, Hughes reported he was with Houston at the McIntyre dealership when the Schweer murder occurred. The 1977 Defendants knew Hughes was lying again because they already knew Houston was in jail at the time of the murder.

Hughes’s story continued to change.

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Bluebook (online)
514 F.3d 739, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 2248, 2008 WL 268995, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcghee-v-pottawattamie-county-iowa-ca8-2008.