O'Leary v. Luongo

692 F. Supp. 893, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8529, 1988 WL 81810
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedAugust 3, 1988
Docket86 C 0997
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 692 F. Supp. 893 (O'Leary v. Luongo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Leary v. Luongo, 692 F. Supp. 893, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8529, 1988 WL 81810 (N.D. Ill. 1988).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

ASPEN, District Judge:

Plaintiff Thomas O’Leary brings this six-count action for relief under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, charging various civil rights violations, false arrest and battery arising out of alleged incidents of harassment and intimidation by the Village of Elmhurst (“Elmhurst”) generally and police officers Dominick Luongo and Kim Revolta specifically. O’Leary seeks compensatory and injunctive relief. The defendants move for summary judgment which, for the reasons set forth below, we grant in part and deny in part.

Factual Background and Procedural History

This action arises out of numerous incidents spanning a period of three years and involving O’Leary and the Elmhurst police, most often Officer Dominick Luongo. Unless noted otherwise, the facts set forth in this section of the opinion are presented in the parties’ briefs in support of and in opposition to summary judgment.

A. Incidents Prior to 1985

The first incident took place in Plunkett Park in Elmhurst during the summer of 1982. O’Leary states that Luongo approached him and his girlfriend, remarked, “What’s a nice girl like you doing with a *896 guy like him,” and ordered them to leave the park. The parties dispute whether anyone actually reported the incident to the Elmhurst Police Department or any village official.

In May or June of 1983, Luongo issued a traffic citation between 5:00 p.m. and 6:00 p.m. to O’Leary for driving on Spring Road in Elmhurst at a speed of 48 m.p.h. when the speed limit was 25 m.p.h. With the services of a lawyer, O’Leary successfully had the charges dismissed.

Later that same summer, O’Leary screeched his tires while backing out of the driveway of a friend. Officer Decker of the Elmhurst police department approached O’Leary to admonish him for his driving. Decker asked O’Leary to produce his driver’s license. O’Leary could not find the license which, as it turned out, was located in the glove compartment. Decker then proceeded to arrest O’Leary for operating a vehicle without a license. Luongo arrived on the scene, and, according to O’Leary, he began yelling profanities and threats, including: “You are nothing but an asshole and this is the end of your license.” O’Leary’s parents happened to be in the area. Thomas O’Leary, Sr., O’Leary’s father, approached Luongo and asked him what had happened:

I asked [Luongo] what my kid did, and he went into a song and dance out there, screaming he was an asshole and Officer Decker is an 18-year veteran and he is going to get his license ... four or five of my son’s friends [were] standing [right] there.

O’Leary, Sr. and Luongo had a verbal exchange on at least one other occasion. We cannot determine from the evidence and affidavits precisely when this exchange took place. Luongo allegedly became angry when the court dismissed O’Leary’s traffic citation, and he began boasting to O’Leary’s friends that he would cite O’Leary for traffic violations regardless of O’Leary’s guilt. These friends went to the O’Leary’s home and told O’Leary, Sr. of Luongo’s claims. O’Leary, Sr. and his wife went to the police station to confront Luongo with these accusations. O’Leary, Sr. asked Luongo “What’s the problem with my kid?” Luongo responded, “Your kid is an asshole and you are an asshole ... every time he gets a ticket you have him get a lawyer and go to court and he beats it.” Luongo continued, “He [O’Leary] is a teenager. I’m going to get his license. I’ll get him for a burned out taillight ... there is no problem getting a teenager’s license. I’ll get it.”

O’Leary additionally alleged in his complaint, but has not substantiated with any evidence, that Luongo publicly threatened O’Leary and that Elmhurst police officers were told at a morning roll call to “get O’Leary.” Finally, O’Leary claims that the Elmhurst police issued him spurious traffic citations, including for playing a loud radio and failure to have a front license plate on a vehicle registered in Indiana, which has no front license plate requirement.

B. Incidents of April 1985 and the June 1985 Meeting

On April 12, 1985, at approximately 1:45 a.m., O’Leary and his friends were walking near a parking lot on York Road in Elmhurst. They had been jogging earlier that day. Officer Leide of the Elmhurst police was driving his squad car in the area. Upon seeing Leide, O’Leary and his friends fled in separate directions. Though they had not been involved in any misdeeds, they ran because, as O’Leary put it, they “didn’t want no part of the police.”

Leide radioed for assistance and pursued the youngsters. Luongo responded to the call. During this time, O’Leary had run through the parking lot and thought that the police were chasing him. He had not seen any officers specifically pursuing him, but since the officers were circling the area in general, he decided he should leave it. He ran south into a Jewel food store parking lot. Luongo saw O’Leary and began pursuing him. O’Leary called out, “Who are you?” a number of times before Luongo identified himself as a police officer. Once Luongo identified himself, O’Leary stopped running. O’Leary claims that Luongo came up to him and pushed him down, put his knee in O’Leary’s back and held him to the ground. Luongo also stood *897 on O’Leary. O’Leary was then taken to the Elmhurst police station and charged with disorderly conduct and released on a $50 bond. O’Leary suffered stiffness for a couple of days. O’Leary’s associates who were caught were also charged with disorderly conduct and released on bond.

In response to these various incidents, Elmhurst police held a meeting in June 1985 with teenagers and their parents. The parents hired an attorney to assist them in bringing grievances on behalf of their children to the attention of the police department. O’Leary alleges in his complaint that the police officers admitted “their inappropriate ‘law enforcement’ ” and that an oral agreement was reached between the Village and those present that in return for the youths’ consciously avoiding provocative or suspicious conduct, the police would refrain from inappropriate police behavior.

C. Incidents of December 1985 and Thereafter

On December 23, 1985, however, Luongo and O’Leary were involved in another incident, the details of which the parties dispute. Early that morning, Luongo pulled O’Leary over for exceeding the speed limit. O’Leary claims that he complained that the traffic stop was unjust, reminded Luongo of their June agreement and tried to telephone his father from a mobile phone that he installed in the car as a result of his deep distrust of Elmhurst police. Luongo then forcibly removed O’Leary from the car, and Officer Revolta arrived on the scene. A scuffle ensued in which the officers forced O’Leary down into the mud, slammed his head into the police car and repeatedly kicked and punched him. The officers took him to jail where his wounds were left unattended. The officers relate a different sequence of events. They claimed that O’Leary resisted from the start, and any injury that they inflicted upon O’Leary was in self-defense and in an effort to apprehend him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
692 F. Supp. 893, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8529, 1988 WL 81810, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oleary-v-luongo-ilnd-1988.