Miller v. City of Boston

297 F. Supp. 2d 361, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22244, 2003 WL 22927350
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedDecember 11, 2003
DocketCIV.A. 03-10805-JLT
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 297 F. Supp. 2d 361 (Miller v. City of Boston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. City of Boston, 297 F. Supp. 2d 361, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22244, 2003 WL 22927350 (D. Mass. 2003).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

TAURO, District Judge.

This action is the result of the wrongful conviction, and imprisonment for more than a decade, of Neil Miller (“Miller”) for the crime of rape in 1990. In 2000, Miller’s conviction was vacated, and the indictment against him was dismissed. He then filed suit against a number of municipal officials and entities, alleging that, at each stage of the criminal process, his rights were violated. Among those municipal officials and entities that Miller filed suit against are Joseph Pishkin (“Pishkin”), a member of the Boston Police Department, the Office of the District Attorney for the Suffolk District (“the Office of the District Attorney”), and Charles Daly (“Daly”), an assistant district attorney with the Office of the District Attorney.

Pishkin, the Office of the District Attorney, and Daly have all moved for dismissal of the claims that Miller has asserted against them.

Background

Miller has alleged the following facts: On August 24,1989, a young woman, “Joan Roe” (“Roe”), was raped and robbed in her *364 apartment. 1 Roe was not acquainted with the man who raped her. 2

After Roe was raped, she went to a hospital. 3 At the hospital, Roe provided Margot Hill (“Hill”), a member of the Boston Police Department, with a description of the man who raped her. 4 She described him as a five-foot, ten-inch tall, 160-pound black man with a thin build, brown hair, brown eyes, a short afro, and a mustache. 5

The following day, members of the Boston Police Department had Roe view approximately six hundred photographs of black men. 6 Roe was unable to identify her rapist from that array. 7 Roe subsequently viewed another one hundred photographs of black men without being able to make an identification. 8

On September 18, 1989, Hill brought Roe to a Boston Police Department artist. 9 The artist worked with Roe and prepared a composite sketch of the rapist. 10 Later that day, Hill showed the sketch to two fellow officers of the Boston Police Department. 11 One of the officers told Hill that the sketch resembled Miller, a black man that the officers had recently encountered. 12

Hill located a six-year-old photograph of Miller, which was taken when he was sixteen years old, and included it in an array of ten to twelve photographs that she showed to Roe on September 22, 1989. 13 There were two photographs in the array about which Roe “felt very strongly.” 14 That is, there were two photographs that Roe thought might depict her rapist. 15 The first photograph that she selected was the one of Miller. 16 The second photograph was of a different man. 17 After Hill asked Roe “which photo she felt most strongly about,” and after Hill told her to “go with her first impression,” Roe selected the photograph of Miller. 18

On the basis of that identification, a warrant was issued for Miller’s arrest. 19 A new photograph of Miller was taken when he was arrested on November 15, 1989. 20 On November 22, 1989, Hill showed Roe a new array of photographs that included Miller’s November 15, 1989 arrest photo *365 graph. 21 Roe selected the November 15, 1989 photograph of Miller as depicting the man who raped her, even though Miller, in the November 15, 1989 photograph, looked very different from the way that he looked when he was sixteen. 22

Miller’s case was calendared for a probable cause hearing on February 27, 1990. 23 Roe was at the courthouse for that hearing. 24

At the first call of the case, Miller’s lawyer “informed ... Daly that, since the identity of the perpetrator was a critical issue in the case, he was requesting that ... Miller be kept out of the courtroom during the probable cause hearing so that a non-suggestive identification procedure could be arranged for a later date.” 25 Daly “indicated ... that [Roe] was being kept upstairs in the district attorney’s office until the hearing took place.” 26

Before the second call of the case, Daly and Pishkin learned that Miller was waiting in the hallway outside the courtroom where the probable cause hearing was to take place. 27 Daly told Roe “that he and ... Pishkin would accompany her downstairs and, if she saw the man who had raped her, that she should identify him.” 28 Roe and Pishkin walked downstairs next to one another. 29 When they reached the courtroom where the probable cause hearing was to take place,- they saw two men standing outside of that courtroom. 30 Roe informed Pishkin that she thought that one of those two men (who was, in fact, Miller) was the man who raped her. 31 The man who Roe identified (that is, Miller) then walked into the courtroom and sat down. 32 Roe followed him into the courtroom and identified him to Pishkin as her rapist. 33

Later, at a hearing where Miller sought to suppress the above mentioned identifications, it was conceded that Miller’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel had been violated by the hallway and courtroom identifications. 34 The identifications were not admitted into evidence at Miller’s subsequent trial. 35 Roe, nevertheless, was permitted to identify Miller at trial. 36

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
297 F. Supp. 2d 361, 2003 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22244, 2003 WL 22927350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-city-of-boston-mad-2003.