Milke v. Phoenix, City of

CourtDistrict Court, D. Arizona
DecidedOctober 30, 2020
Docket2:15-cv-00462
StatusUnknown

This text of Milke v. Phoenix, City of (Milke v. Phoenix, City of) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Milke v. Phoenix, City of, (D. Ariz. 2020).

Opinion

1 WO 2 3 4 5 6 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 7 FOR THE DISTRICT OF ARIZONA 8 9 Debra Jean Milke, No. CV-15-00462-PHX-ROS 10 Plaintiff, ORDER 11 v. 12 City of Phoenix, et al., 13 Defendants. 14 15 Plaintiff Debra Milke’s approach to this litigation has been troubling. 16 Immediately after being arrested for the murder of her son in 1989, Milke planned to file 17 a lawsuit for monetary damages. At that moment, her intent seemed unlikely to ever lead 18 to litigation. But in 2013, Milke’s criminal convictions were vacated and she was 19 released. Shortly after her release, Milke destroyed boxes of documents she had 20 accumulated during her time in prison. There is no record of what she destroyed. Milke 21 filed the present suit in 2015. Two years after filing suit, Milke traveled to her mother’s 22 home in Germany and destroyed additional boxes of documents regarding her criminal 23 convictions. Again, there is no record of what she destroyed. Crucial items, such as a 24 personal journal, were in her mother’s possession at one time. Those items have never 25 been found. 26 In addition to destroying documents despite anticipating litigation, Milke filed this 27 suit without conducting any meaningful investigation of the evidence in her possession, 28 custody, or control. Even after this case had been pending for years, neither Milke nor 1 her counsel had reviewed Milke’s own documents to determine their contents. Had 2 Milke reviewed her own documents, and been forthcoming with her counsel regarding 3 her behavior, it would have been clear she had shared privileged communications with a 4 broad array of individuals. It also would have been clear Milke had provided numerous 5 privileged documents to Jana Bommersbach1 for use in the book Bommersbach was 6 writing about Milke. Thus, if Milke had reviewed her documents and informed her 7 counsel of her behavior, Defendants and the Court would have avoided months of wasted 8 effort regarding privilege disputes. Beyond avoiding privilege issues, Milke also would 9 have been able to provide complete, accurate, and timely responses to discovery requests. 10 Instead, Milke and her attorneys ignored evidence, litigated baseless privilege claims, 11 failed to provide complete discovery responses, and delayed this case for three years. 12 In a previous order recounting much of Milke’s misconduct, the Court observed 13 Milke’s behavior was sufficient to support the sanction of dismissal. (Doc. 503 at 26). 14 But the Court concluded dismissal was too harsh and opted to first attempt an award of 15 costs and attorneys’ fees as a lesser sanction. Milke subsequently testified she could not 16 pay an award close to the amount requested by Defendants. And the evidence now shows 17 Milke would not be able to satisfy even the lowest possible monetary award. Thus, the 18 lesser sanction of a monetary award is not feasible. Defendants have now identified more 19 instances of discovery misconduct. Those instances, when combined with those already 20 identified plus the unavailability of any other meaningful sanction, require this case be 21 dismissed. 22 BACKGROUND 23 Milke was tried and convicted of first-degree murder, conspiracy to commit first- 24 degree murder, kidnapping, and child abuse. She was sentenced to death in 1990. On 25 March 14, 2013, the Ninth Circuit granted Milke “a conditional writ of habeas corpus 26 setting aside her convictions and sentences.” Milke v. Ryan, 711 F.3d 998, 1019 (9th Cir. 27 2013). The Ninth Circuit concluded the prosecution had failed to turn over all 28 1 Jana Bommersbach is an author whom Milke contacted to write a book about her life.

-2- 1 “impeachment evidence” regarding the credibility of Detective Armando Saldate, a 2 crucial witness in Milke’s criminal proceedings. Id. at 1006. In particular, the Ninth 3 Circuit documented numerous “judicial findings of Saldate’s mendacity and disregard for 4 constitutional rights” that the prosecution had not turned over. Id. at 1009. The Ninth 5 Circuit noted Saldate’s actions were in public records but Milke’s trial counsel “couldn’t 6 possibly have found [the] records in time to use them at Milke’s trial.” Id. at 1018. And 7 Milke had been prejudiced by the nondisclosure because the evidence would have 8 impacted Saldate’s credibility, a central feature of the state’s case against Milke. Id. at 9 1018. 10 In a concurring opinion, Judge Kozinski noted “Milke may well be guilty, even if 11 Saldate made up her confession out of whole cloth.” Id. at 1024. But Judge Kozinski 12 was especially disturbed by “Saldate’s unorthodox interrogation methods.” Id. at 1023. 13 Judge Kozinksi noted that both the state trial judge and a federal district court judge had 14 heard testimony from Milke and Saldate regarding what happened in the interview room. 15 Both of those judges had “found that Saldate was telling the truth when he testified that 16 Milke waived her Miranda rights and didn’t ask for a lawyer.” Id. at 1024. But Judge 17 Kozinski found both those judges to be wrong and he decided that Milke, not Saldate, 18 was telling the truth. Based on that, Judge Kozinski would have barred “use of the so- 19 called confession during any retrial of Milke.” Id. But the majority held otherwise. The 20 state was free to use Saldate’s testimony in a retrial of Milke. 21 Milke was released shortly after the Ninth Circuit’s opinion. The state pursued a 22 retrial but on December 11, 2014, the Arizona Court of Appeals ruled Milke could not be 23 retried. Milke v. Mroz, 339 P.3d 659, 668 (Ariz. Ct. App. 2014). That court relied on the 24 Ninth Circuit’s findings regarding the prosecution’s failure to disclose “seven cases 25 involving investigation of Saldate’s interrogation methods and honesty.” Id. at 664. The 26 court also noted, during her original criminal trial, Milke had “subpoenaed the Police 27 Department’s Custodian of Records for Saldate’s personnel records” but the Police 28 Department had filed a successful motion to quash. Id. at 665. The instances of

-3- 1 nondisclosure, the filing of the motion to quash, and the duration of nondisclosure meant 2 the state had engaged in “egregious prosecutorial misconduct.” Id. at 667. The court 3 then explained “the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Arizona Constitution affords even 4 greater protection than the federal Constitution, barring retrial when there are instances of 5 egregious prosecutorial misconduct that raise serious concerns regarding the integrity of 6 our system of justice.” Id. at 664. Therefore, under the Arizona Constitution, Milke 7 could not be retried. Id. at 667. The state court noted, however, it was “express[ing] no 8 opinion regarding her actual guilt or innocence.” Id. Thus, there has never been a final 9 determination in a possible retrial of the criminal case of what happened when Saldate 10 interviewed Milke in 1989. 11 On March 13, 2015, Milke filed the present suit. At that time, she was represented 12 by, among others, attorneys from the law firm of Neufeld Scheck & Brustin (“NSB”). 13 (Doc. 1). Her central claim was that Saldate fabricated her confession in 1989. Multiple 14 motions to dismiss delayed discovery but, in September 2016, the parties exchanged their 15 initial disclosures. Defendants propounded discovery requests on November 23, 2016. 16 The Court previously observed the early history of this case meant “[b]y the time 17 [Milke] made her initial disclosures, over three years had passed since the Ninth Circuit 18 set aside her convictions and approximately eighteen months had passed since she filed 19 her complaint. Given those time periods, Milke had more than ample time to organize 20 her files before any production was necessary.” (Doc. 503 at 3).

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Milke v. Phoenix, City of, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milke-v-phoenix-city-of-azd-2020.