Metris-Shamoon v. City of Detroit

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedJune 9, 2020
Docket3:18-cv-13683
StatusUnknown

This text of Metris-Shamoon v. City of Detroit (Metris-Shamoon v. City of Detroit) 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
Metris-Shamoon v. City of Detroit, (E.D. Mich. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION DEBRA METRIS-SHAMOON, ET AL., Plaintiffs, No. 18-13683 v. District Judge Arthur J. Tarnow Magistrate Judge R. Steven Whalen CITY OF DETROIT, ET AL., Defendants. / OPINION AND ORDER Before the Court is Plaintiffs’ Motion for Order to Show Cause and/or for Default Judgment for Defendants’ Failure to Comply with this Court’s Prior Discovery Order [ECF No. 90], which has been referred for hearing and determination under 28 U.S.C.

§ 636(b)(1)(A). For the reasons discussed below, the motion is GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART. I. BACKGROUND Plaintiffs’ allege that Defendants have failed to comply with this Court discovery order entered on February 7, 2020 [ECF No. 83]. That was a briefly worded order

granting the Plaintiffs’ motion to compel discovery [ECF No. 61] “for the reasons and under the terms stated on the record on February 6, 2020.” Unfortunately, Plaintiff’s have

-1- not provided a transcript of the hearing. Nevertheless, while Plaintiff’s Second Request for Production of Documents, which was the subject of that motion, was somewhat broad, the Plaintiffs’ motion and the discussion on the record centered on internal investigations into corruption in the Detroit Police Department’s (“DPD’s”) Narcotics Unit. That Unit was disbanded in 2014. The requested discovery is targeted at Plaintiffs’ Monell1 claim

against the City of Detroit, and in a general sense, the relevant inquiry is what the City knew on September 13, 2012, the date of the execution of the search warrant underlying Plaintiffs’ claims. One such investigation involved a 2010 incident in which about $800,000 was

alleged to have been skimmed from a $3 Million drug money seizure. Pointing to trial testimony of one Gary Jackson, Plaintiffs state that “[t]he import of Jackson’s testimony is that Defendant City of Detroit knew, as early as July or August, about the corruption of DPD’s Narcotics Unit.” ECF No. 61, PageID.983. Plaintiffs also referred to public

statements by Detroit Police Chief Craig “confirm[ing] that the City undertook an investigation starting in the summer of 2010.” Id. Plaintiffs’ Requests to Produce Nos. 1-3 centered on material relating to the seizure of money. Request No. 1 asked Defendants to “[p]roduce all documents prepared by Chief Ralph Godbee related to his meeting with Gary Jackson and Derrick Coleman in July or August, 2010 in Troy,

Michigan whereat the July 26, 2010 seizure of $3 million in cash by members of Sargent

1 Monell v. Dept. of Soc. Services of City of New York 436 U.S. 658 (1978). -2- David Hansberry’s crew (intended for a Mexican cartel in payment for 100 kilos of cocaine) was discussed; and, during this meeting Gary Jackson described in detail the conspiracy involving some members of Sargent Hansberry’s Narcotics Enforcement Unit stealing approximately eight hundred thousand dollars of the seized drug money.” ECF

90-2, PageID.1700. Request No. 2 included an omnibus demand for “documents which are related in any way to the alleged or actual criminal activity of members of the Detroit Police Department’s Narcotic Enforcement Unit.” ECF No. 90-2, PageID.1701. In the present motion, Plaintiffs identify two factors that they say show that Defendants have failed to produce documents as ordered. First, they refer to a Detroit

News article in which current Detroit Police Chief James Craig made statements that DPD Internal Affairs (“IA”) is examining files for the past 10 years in cases involving false affidavits. Craig is reported to have said the “the probe is focusing on the activities of officers who worked with ex-Detroit narcotics cops David Hansberry, Bryan Watson

and Arthur Leavells.” ECF No. 90, PageID.1683. Plaintiffs note that Defendant Geelhood was “part of the narcotics unit who worked with Hansberry,Watson, and Leavells.” Id. The second factor is a recent statement by Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy that she was moving to vacate two drug convictions where members of the Narcotics Unit were involved. One case was that of Darrell Chancellor, in which Defendant Geelhood

was involved. Chancellor was convicted in 2012. Attached to Defendants’ Response is the Declaration of Christopher Graveline,

-3- Director of Professional Standards & Constitutional Policing for the DPD. ECF No.94-2, PageID.1885-1890. Mr. Graveline states that he manages the Major Violators Unit task force (“MVU”), which “is separate and distinct from DPD’s Internal Affairs Unit.” Id. PageID.1886. The MVU Task Force is led by the DPD, but has investigators from the

FBI and the Michigan State Police who brief prosecutors from the U.S. Attorney’s Office and the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office. Graveline Declaration, ¶ 2, ECF No. 94-2, PageID.1886. The DPD has collected over ten years of voluminous records, with the case files from the Narcotics Unit “filling over 40 file cabinets and 200 banker boxes.” Mr. Graveline states that to date, the MVU Task Force has focused its

investigation to activity from the years 2019, 2018, and 2017. Id. ¶ 3. Witness interviews are attended by FBI agents who generate FBI 302 reports. Id. ¶ 4. Mr. Graveline states that in a meeting with Defendants’ counsel concerning the discovery order at issue, they determined that no files had been opened to date concerning any of the officers at issue in

this lawsuit or the other four related cases pending in this Court, and that the Task Force was not working on any investigations pertaining to any of the officers identified in the five pending cases. Id. ¶ 6. As such, he says, “we determined that there were no records to produce pursuant to the Court Order.” Id. Mr. Graveline states that no one on the MVU Task Force has done any

investigation on the Chancellor case because it involved a search warrant from 2011. Id. ¶ 7. However, on March 5, 2020 (subsequent to this Court’s discovery order), APA

-4- Valerie Newman informed him that the Wayne County Prosecutor Conviction Integrity Unit had completed its investigation, and would recommend that Chancellor’s conviction be reversed. Mr. Graveline then referred the case to IA, which opened its investigation on March 18, 2020. Id. ¶ 8. Mr. Graveline states that the Chancellor file consists of the

following: (1) the narcotics case jacket; (2) two days of transcripts from the bench trial; (3) email correspondence with the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office; (4) notes from Investigator Timothy Ewald; (5) four audio recordings of witness interviews; (6) personnel files of the involved officers; (6) LEIN information for certain witnesses; and (7) a thumb drive from Ewald containing an audio recording of his initial interview of

Chancellor, case supervision sheets, and an interview synopsis. Id. Regarding production of the Chancellor file, Mr. Graveline states, “While we are producing the underlying narcotics file and waiver trial transcripts with today’s filing, the other documents would be law enforcement privileged since their release would harm the ongoing internal

investigation.” Id. Mr. Graveline states that the complete IA file in the Hansberry investigation involving the 2010 seizure of money (IA Case 10-122) was produced to Plaintiffs on March 8, 2020. At oral argument on this motion, the Court learned that Mr. Ewald has made

conflicting statements as to whether there is an IA investigation of Defendant Geelhood. The Court therefore directed that Ewald’s file be produced for in camera review. The

-5- Court has now received and reviewed those documents. II. DISCUSSION First, the question of what my February 7, 2020 order covered and what it did not cover.

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Metris-Shamoon v. City of Detroit, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metris-shamoon-v-city-of-detroit-mied-2020.