MT, a minor by and through his Guardian Ad Litem VIKTORIIA ZUBKOVA; AT a minor by and through his Guardian Ad Litem VIKTORIIA ZUBKOVA; and LEYLA BOROVIK v. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. California
DecidedJuly 22, 2024
Docket3:22-cv-00171
StatusUnknown

This text of MT, a minor by and through his Guardian Ad Litem VIKTORIIA ZUBKOVA; AT a minor by and through his Guardian Ad Litem VIKTORIIA ZUBKOVA; and LEYLA BOROVIK v. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA (MT, a minor by and through his Guardian Ad Litem VIKTORIIA ZUBKOVA; AT a minor by and through his Guardian Ad Litem VIKTORIIA ZUBKOVA; and LEYLA BOROVIK v. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MT, a minor by and through his Guardian Ad Litem VIKTORIIA ZUBKOVA; AT a minor by and through his Guardian Ad Litem VIKTORIIA ZUBKOVA; and LEYLA BOROVIK v. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, (S.D. Cal. 2024).

Opinion

6 7 8 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 9 SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 10 11 MT, a minor by and through his Guardian ) Case No.: 3:22-cv-00171-BEN-KSC Ad Litem VIKTORIIA ZUBKOVA; AT a ) 12 minor by and through his Guardian Ad ) ORDER: (1) DENYING 13 Litem VIKTORIIA ZUBKOVA; and ) DEFENDANT UNITED STATES OF LEYLA BOROVIK, ) AMERICA’S MOTION FOR 14 ) SUMMARY JUDGMENT; and (2) Plaintiffs, 15 ) GRANTING THE PARTIES’ JOINT v. ) MOTION TO PRECLUDE 16 ) TESTIMONY UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 17 ) Defendant. ) [ECF Nos. 30 and 38] 18

19 20 21 I. INTRODUCTION 22 Plaintiffs Leyla Borovik, and both MT and AT, minors by and through their 23 Guardian Ad Litem Viktoriia Zubkova, bring this action against Defendant the United 24 States of America (the “United States”). ECF No. 38. Before the Court is the United 25 States’ Motion for Summary Judgment. ECF No. 10. The Motion was submitted on the 26 papers without oral argument pursuant to Civil Local Rule 7.1(d)(1) and Rule 78(b) of the 27 Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. See ECF No. 41. After considering the papers submitted, 28 supporting documentation, and applicable law, the Court DENIES the Motion for 1 Summary Judgment. The parties also submit a Joint Motion to Preclude the Testimony of 2 Yevgeny Tuchinsky, which this Court GRANTS. 3 II. BACKGROUND 4 This case arises from alleged events that occurred during a raid by the Federal 5 Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”) of Plaintiffs’ home. 6 A. Statement of Facts 7 The facts set forth in the United States’ Motion for Summary Judgment paint a 8 starkly different picture than those alleged by Plaintiffs. See ECF No. 38 at 3–7. The 9 factual theories asserted by both parties are summarized below per the evidence submitted. 10 On October 24, 2019, Yevgeny Tuchinsky was indicted on various counts of 11 conspiracy, wire fraud, and money laundering related to the alleged bribery of a Federal 12 Express employee. Apparently, payments were received for Federal Express runs that 13 never occurred, and through falsifying mileage reports. See ECF No. 38, Ex. A. On 14 October 25, 2019, at 6:00 a.m. (or before it was light out), the FBI executed warrants to 15 arrest Tuchinsky and search his property.1 See Deposition of Agent Steven Hoogland, 16 ECF No. 38-5 (“Hoogland Depo. I”) at 6–7; Deposition of Leyla Borovik, ECF No. 39-4 17 (“Borovik Depo. I”) at 2. At the time of the search, Tuchinsky was home with his wife, 18 Leyla Borovik, and his two young children, AT and MT. At the time of the search, AT 19 was eight years old at the time and MT was six years old. 20 The circumstances of how exactly the warrants were executed remain in dispute, 21 including the number of agents both inside and outside the home,2 the number and type of 22 firearms utilized by the agents, the manner in which the agents conducted themselves, and 23 whether a police canine was present. However, the parties appear to agree that Tuchinsky 24 peacefully answered the door, that he was cooperative with agents, and that his arrest 25 1 The items to be seized on the warrant included three vehicles, various pieces of 26 jewelry, and one rifle. ECF No. 38, Ex. C at 4. 27 2 The Operations Report lists twenty-four total FBI agents as participants in the operation, but the parties did not clarify whether all of those agents entered the home and 28 1 occurred without any attempt to evade or harm the agents. See Hoogland Depo. I at 7. 2 The record also shows no argument or allegation that any of the Plaintiffs were 3 uncooperative during the execution of the warrants. The parties next agree that after 4 Tuchinsky peacefully opened the door, MT came out of his room and was the first Plaintiff 5 to make contact with the agents. Borovik was the second Plaintiff to emerge from her 6 room, followed by AT. However, the parties dispute the exact circumstances of each 7 Plaintiffs’ initial and continued contact with the agents throughout the duration of the 8 search. 9 Agent Steven Hoogland stated that MT came out of his room almost immediately 10 with his father, appearing before Hoogland even entered the home. Hoogland Depo. I at 11 8, 9. Agent Rebekah Frank claimed that she witnessed agents with Tuchinsky in the 12 doorway and MT ran outside to the yard in his pajamas. See Deposition of Rebekah Frank, 13 ECF No. 38-7 at 5. Agent Frank claimed she holstered her weapon and grabbed MT for 14 his safety before turning him away from seeing his father being arrested. Id. at 6. Agent 15 Frank also stated that she stayed outside with MT until the first part of the house was 16 cleared before bringing him back inside. Id. at 7–8. Agent Frank did not recall many of 17 the details, including whether she explained what was happening to MT, whether another 18 agent was with her and MT, or the timing of events. See id. at 6–8. 19 MT, however, claimed that he came out of his room to people yelling and pointing 20 “big guns” at him. See Deposition of MT, ECF No. 39-3 (“MT Depo.”) at 3. MT stated 21 that the agents grabbed him “really hard on his shoulder” and pulled him “towards the 22 wall, closet.” Id. MT explained that people were standing next to him and the person on 23 his rights side was aiming a “really large gun at” him. Id. MT claimed he saw his father 24 up against the door being handcuffed, and then his mother came out and the agents 25 “immediately pointed guns at her.” Id. MT claimed he “started crying because they were 26 pointing guns at [him] and were about to kill [him].” Id. MT claimed his older sister, AT, 27 came out next, accompanied by two people. Id. at 2. MT said that when she came out 28 “three to four people started pointing large guns at her, as well.” Id. at 4. Based on the 1 above deposition excerpts, there are factual disputes as to whether MT was inside or 2 outside during his father’s arrest, to what extent he witnessed the arrest, whether there 3 were one or two agents with him, and whether one agent pointed a large gun at him during 4 the arrest. There is also a dispute regarding Agent Frank’s intent in grabbing MT, the 5 extent to which she “grabbed” him, and whether MT was crying, which Agent Frank does 6 not recall. 7 As for AT, Agent Hoogland testified at deposition that he opened her door and saw 8 movement in the bed, immediately recognizing that it was a child’s room. Hoogland Depo. 9 I at 13. Hoogland claimed that his gun was “at a 45-degree angle towards the floor, so it 10 was never pointed at anyone.” Id. Agent Hoogland claimed that Agent Kari Harrison 11 came around his right side, went into the room, took MT by the hand, “and gently pulled 12 her” into the hall. Id. Agent Hoogland claims another agent cleared AT’s room and they 13 went onto the next. Id. Conversely, AT testified at deposition that she woke up and saw 14 three men telling her to come with them, and that one grabbed her and made her walk. 15 Deposition of AT, ECF No. 39-5 (“AT Depo.”) at 3. AT claimed that in the hallway, she 16 saw people with uniforms, masks, and big guns. Id. AT explained that “they were holding 17 big guns on me and yelling at me,” and “then the person who was grabbing me, he pushed 18 me to my mom.” Id. AT further claimed that she saw her father pushed against the door 19 with a person holding a gun to his back and saw a person grabbing her brother. Id. When 20 asked if and how the agents were mean to her, she said yes and that “[t]hey were grabbing 21 [her] really tightly, and they were pushing [her] aggressively . . . .” Id. at 7. AT’s 22 recollection of events also differs from Agent Hoogland’s, in that she said three men woke 23 her up and one grabbed her. There is no deposition testimony in the record from Agent 24 Harrison—the person who Agent Hoogland claimed took AT out of bed and into the hall.

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MT, a minor by and through his Guardian Ad Litem VIKTORIIA ZUBKOVA; AT a minor by and through his Guardian Ad Litem VIKTORIIA ZUBKOVA; and LEYLA BOROVIK v. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mt-a-minor-by-and-through-his-guardian-ad-litem-viktoriia-zubkova-at-a-casd-2024.