Plemmons v. Rokey

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJune 3, 2022
Docket3:18-cv-50389
StatusUnknown

This text of Plemmons v. Rokey (Plemmons v. Rokey) 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
Plemmons v. Rokey, (N.D. Ill. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS WESTERN DIVISION

Troy L. Plemmons,

Plaintiff, Case No. 3:18-cv-50389 v. Honorable Iain D. Johnston Kristian Montanez, Sara Rokey, Kelly Wilhelmi, and the City of Rock Falls, Illinois,

Defendants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER Plaintiff Troy L. Plemmons was arrested for, among other things, driving under the influence of alcohol. He was well beyond the legal limit. The first officer on the scene, Defendant Sara Rokey, testified that Plemmons told her he had been driving. He contends that he would have never admitted such a thing because he was incapable of driving, though he does not remember. Based on the events of that night, he brings this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging that the various defendants violated his due process rights under the Fourteenth Amendment by fabricating evidence against him. He sues Officer Sara Rokey and her employer, the City of Rock Falls, Illinois (“Rock Falls Defendants”), as well as Whiteside County Sheriff’s Deputy Kristian Montanez, and his employer Sheriff Kelly Wilhelmi (“Whiteside County Defendants”). Both sets of defendants have moved for summary judgment. For the reasons explained in detail below, the Whiteside County Defendants’ motion for summary judgment [97] is granted. The Rock Falls Defendants’ motion for summary judgment [94], however, is denied. I. Background

On June 25, 2014, Plaintiff Troy Plemmons called his cousin Dustin Funderburg to collect money that Funderburg owed Plemmons from the sale of a vehicle. Funderburg came over and paid Plemmons the money. From there, the two went to a bar called Longshots.1 They arrived just before noon and drank excessively for at least nine hours. All told, Plemmons consumed between twenty and thirty alcoholic drinks.2 Plemmons remembered very little about the end of the

night. He didn’t know whose car he got into, and he only vaguely remembered leaving the bar. City of Rock Falls police officer Sara Rokey was on duty that night. She was dispatched to investigate a purported vehicle collision. On her way to the scene, she encountered a red Lincoln Navigator. The Navigator then turned onto English Street and parked, though she didn’t see who exited the driver’s seat. Officer Rokey then arrived at the scene of the collision, which was only a couple blocks away, and

was told by a witness that the Navigator had been the vehicle involved in the collision. The vehicle had apparently veered off the road and struck an

1 The Court wonders what the Dram Shop Act insurance carrier for Longshots thinks about these uncontested facts. 2 Plemmons further testified in his deposition that he was drinking on an empty stomach. He explained that he had not eaten anything that day, though he clarified that he can’t remember enough to know for sure that he didn’t eat anything at the bar. Dkt. 98-1, at 50– 51. embankment. The license plate was torn off the front bumper, and further damage was done to a couple of boat trailers, a wooden fence, and a parked vehicle. Rokey then went back to where the Navigator had parked. When Rokey

arrived, she observed Funderburg getting out of the passenger side of the Navigator. She asked him to stop and answer some questions, and he stumbled to an adjacent home and sat on the steps. Because of the stumbling and his slurred speech, he appeared heavily intoxicated. Funderburg also had injuries on his head, face, and hand. He confirmed that the Navigator was his but explained that he had not been driving. Funderburg later testified that he and Plemmons had been

drinking at Longshots, which was about a half mile from Funderburg’s home. At the time, Funderburg would drink at Longshots most nights and then sleep it off in his car in the parking lot. In his deposition, Funderburg explained that he told Plemmons that they should either walk the half mile to Funderburg’s house or again sleep it off in the Navigator. Instead of walking, they decided to sleep in the vehicle. Notwithstanding that decision, Funderburg testified that he woke up in the back seat with Troy Plemmons driving off the road and hitting things. According to

Funderburg, Plemmons had decided to drive the longer distance to his girlfriend’s house.3 After being woken up because of the collision, Funderburg crawled into the front passenger seat. On Funderburg’s telling of the night, Plemmons then parked, exited the vehicle, and went inside his girlfriend’s home. When Officer Rokey approached, Funderburg called for Plemmons to come outside.

3 Dkt. 98-2, at 9–13, 38 (Deposition of Dustin Funderburg). As Plemmons exited the home to speak with Officer Rokey, he was stumbling, slurring his speech, and had urinated on his pants. After Plemmons identified himself, Rokey determined that Plemmons had a suspended license. Rokey contends

that Plemmons told her that he knew his license was suspended and that he had been driving. Plemmons’ deposition testimony establishes that he does not remember any conversations that night, but he adamantly claimed that he would never have said that he was driving the vehicle. The purported statement is central to this case, as is Plemmons’ opinion that he did not and would not have said it. Although Funderburg was also intoxicated, he testified in his deposition that he

remembered this exchange and that Plemmons admitted to driving. Funderburg explained, “No, he was definitely driving. He told them he was driving. Q. You also previously testified that you remember him admitting to that at the scene? A. Yes, he told them he was driving.” Dkt. 98-2, at 31. Rokey then arrested Plemmons for driving on a suspended license, leaving the scene of an accident, and for driving under the influence.4 Whiteside County Sheriff’s Deputy Kristian Montanez arrived on scene after Rokey had already placed

Plemmons in the back of her squad car. Rokey updated Montanez on what had taken place, including what Plemmons had told her. Deputy Montanez then moved Plemmons from Rokey’s squad car to his own and transported Plemmons to the Rock Falls Police Department. Montanez wrote in his report that during the booking process Plemmons told him that he had screwed up and that it was time to

4 Officer Rokey further testified at her deposition that she inspected the front driver’s seat of the Lincoln Navigator and it “was soiled; it was wet.” Dkt. 98-3, at 28, 41. pay the piper. Montanez further wrote that Plemmons said he was just trying to make it right, that he didn’t want his cousin to get into any more trouble because he knew Funderburg had received a DUI a few years before.

Plemmons’ fabrication of evidence claim against Officer Rokey turns on whether Plemmons told Rokey that he had been driving the Navigator. When deposed, Rokey and Funderburg both testified that Plemmons indeed told Rokey that he had been driving the Navigator. Plemmons’ fabrication case against Deputy Montanez turns on whether Plemmons told Deputy Montanez that he was sorry and that he “fucked up.” Dkt. 106, at 5–6 (response brief clarifying Plemmons’ claim).

The only evidence available to dispute the testimonies of Rokey, Montanez, and Funderburg is Plemmons’ own deposition. Thus, a thorough examination of Plemmons’ deposition testimony is critical. Early in his deposition, Plemmons testified that he remembered very little from that day. When asked about what parts of the day he could not remember, he explained: A. Timewise, I don’t know, but I know it was probably within a couple of hours, a couple or three hours or so. Q. So you have some pretty good memory of what took place in the first two, three hours that you were at Longshots. After that it gets kind of hazy? A. Yes.

Dkt. 98-1, at 51.

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