Montoya v. Vigil

898 F.3d 1056
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedAugust 7, 2018
Docket17-1106
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 898 F.3d 1056 (Montoya v. Vigil) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montoya v. Vigil, 898 F.3d 1056 (10th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

TYMKOVICH, Chief Judge.

*1059 A jury convicted fourteen-year-old Lawrence Montoya for the New Year's Day murder of a teacher from his school. After serving over thirteen years in prison, Montoya brought post-conviction claims for ineffective assistance of counsel and actual innocence. The prosecution agreed to a compromise resulting in Montoya's release from prison. He then sued several detectives involved in the investigation and trial, claiming they were responsible for his wrongful conviction. Alleging constitutional violations under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 , Montoya claims the Detectives instigated a malicious prosecution against him, coerced his confession in violation of the Fifth Amendment, and subjected him to false arrest.

The district court held qualified immunity and absolute testimonial immunity did not shield the Detectives from liability, and denied their motion to dismiss. The Detectives filed this interlocutory appeal. We hold qualified immunity shields the Detectives from liability for Montoya's malicious prosecution claim. We further conclude both qualified immunity and absolute testimonial immunity bar Montoya's Fifth Amendment claim. As for Montoya's false arrest claim, we lack jurisdiction to consider whether or not qualified immunity applies.

I. Background

A. The Crime and Investigation

On the morning of New Year's Day in 2000, a neighbor found Emily Johnson, a 29-year-old Denver school teacher, almost lifeless in her backyard. Ms. Johnson died shortly thereafter. She had been beaten to death at her home, and her white Lexus was gone.

Martin Vigil and Michael Martinez, detectives with the Denver Police Department, investigated the crime. After receiving a tip, they interviewed Nicholas Martinez, who said that he and his cousin, Lloyd Martinez, had found Ms. Johnson's Lexus unlocked with the keys on the floor. They had taken the car, Martinez said, and picked up friends for a joy ride-nothing more. Police interviewed a number of people Martinez mentioned-including Luke Anaya, Montoya's cousin-but none directly implicated Montoya in the robbery and murder. 1 Still, some of the persons implicated were either family or friends of Montoya, and the Detectives eventually decided to interview Montoya.

On January 10, 2000, beginning at about 8:00 PM, the Detectives questioned Montoya about the crime. Montoya was fourteen years old and in the eighth grade at the time. According to the complaint, "it was apparent that [Montoya] suffered from clear cognitive deficiencies and developmental delays." App. 752 ¶ 46. Though his mother was present for approximately the first forty minutes of the interview, both he and his mother consented to letting the police interrogate Montoya alone after that.

In the questioning that followed-recorded on video-Montoya alleges the officers coerced him into confessing to the robbery. They did so, he claims, by falsely claiming they had evidence linking him to the crime, asking leading questions, feeding him statements, illegally searching his shoes, and intimidating him. Montoya initially admitted to having been present for *1060 the joy ride, but denied any involvement in the robbery and murder. He insisted he was asleep at the time of the early-morning assault. In fact, he claimed he had not met Nicholas Martinez until Martinez and some acquaintances picked him up for the joy ride. After maintaining this denial for about two hours (including the forty minutes during which his mother was present), Montoya admitted he was at Ms. Johnson's house. A bit later, he further admitted he had been involved in the robbery. At first, Montoya only said he had been a lookout, but upon further questioning he said he entered the house too. The entire interrogation lasted approximately two and a half hours. 2

With that confession in hand, the Detectives obtained an arrest warrant. As the complaint recounts it, however, many of the details Montoya provided during his confession were factually incorrect-proof of his innocence. Montoya alleges this could not have escaped the Detectives' notice, and yet the Detectives' affidavit in support of the arrest warrant intentionally misrepresented Montoya's statements and omitted exculpatory evidence.

Montoya was then charged with Felony Murder, Aggravated Robbery, First Degree Burglary, and First Degree Aggravated Vehicle Theft. Before trial, the court excluded all statements Montoya made after his mother left the room-including his confession to being present at the robbery and murder-because Montoya's mother had not signed a written parental waiver required by statute.

B. The Trial

In a joint trial including Nicholas Martinez and Lloyd Martinez, the prosecution argued Montoya was actively involved in Ms. Johnson's robbery and murder. To support this theory, the state presented several witnesses. Matthew Hernandez, a juvenile in custody at the same detention center as Montoya, testified Montoya had told him he was guilty of the crime. Lieutenant Jonathan Priest, a defendant in this case, testified as a crime scene expert and corroborated the details Hernandez put forward. And Detective Vigil-another defendant here-provided testimony regarding Montoya's interrogation. Though Vigil's testimony was supposed to be limited to the portion of the interrogation during which Montoya's mother was present, Montoya claims Vigil strayed into impermissible territory. In two instances, Montoya alleges Vigil testified about statements he made during the suppressed part of his interrogation-the part he argues was coercive.

The prosecution also presented physical evidence to link Montoya to the crime. The state argued a pair of "Lugz" boots matching the footprints at the crime scene belonged to Montoya. As proof of Montoya's ownership, Detective Vigil testified the boots were found in a bedroom that Montoya's aunt had said belonged to Montoya. Police had also found a Broncos jacket at the crime scene, and the Prosecution argued it was Montoya's. One more piece of evidence tied Montoya to the scene, albeit only to the joy ride after the murder: police recovered Montoya's fingerprint from the rear passenger door of Ms. Johnson's stolen Lexus.

This evidence did not go unchallenged. Montoya denied the jacket and shoes were his-insisting the shoes, at least, belonged to his cousin, Luke Anaya. Montoya's aunt, Tomasita Martinez, corroborated Montoya's *1061 side of the story. Contradicting Detective Vigil's testimony, she testified that the bedroom in which the boots were found was actually Luke's room, not Montoya's. Montoya did not challenge the fingerprint evidence, as he admitted having joined the others for the joy ride. He only contested his participation in the robbery.

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Bluebook (online)
898 F.3d 1056, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montoya-v-vigil-ca10-2018.