Randy Alman v. Kevin Reed

703 F.3d 887, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 364, 2013 WL 64370
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 7, 2013
Docket10-2489
StatusPublished
Cited by118 cases

This text of 703 F.3d 887 (Randy Alman v. Kevin Reed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Randy Alman v. Kevin Reed, 703 F.3d 887, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 364, 2013 WL 64370 (6th Cir. 2013).

Opinions

KEITH, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which MOORE, J., joined, and BOGGS, J., joined in part and in the judgment. BOGGS, J. (pp. 905-06), delivered a separate opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part.

OPINION

KEITH, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiffs-Appellants Randy Alman (“Al-man”), Michael Barnes (“Barnes”), and the Triangle Foundation sued several Michigan law enforcement officials, the City of Westland, and Wayne County for their respective involvement in Alman’s arrest and the seizure of Barnes’s vehicle during an undercover operation. The district court granted the Defendants’ motion for summary judgment after finding that probable cause existed for the various state and municipal offenses that Alman was charged with violating. The Plaintiffs appealed. For the reasons discussed below, we REVERSE the district court’s judgment in part, AFFIRM its judgment in part, and REMAND the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Plaintiffs-Appellants Alman and Barnes are gay men and domestic partners who lived in Yorktown, Indiana in October 2007. Alman was arrested in Westland, Michigan on October 12, 2007, during an undercover police operation in Hix Park, while he was taking a break from helping his mother move to a nearby apartment building. This case arises out of the circumstances of his arrest and the subsequent seizure of the car Alman had driven to the park, which belonged to Barnes.

[892]*892A. Alman’s Airest

Around 1:00 p.m. on October 12, 2007, Alman decided to take a break from helping his mother move to a new apartment and go visit Hix Park, which was nearby. Hix Park is a public nature park with maintained trails winding through the woods, and its entrance drive leads to a parking lot with a pavilion nearby. When Alman arrived at the park that day, he parked his car and remained in his car for a while listening to the radio. He eventually got out and sat down at a picnic table under the pavilion. Defendant-Appellee Kevin Reed, a Wayne County Deputy Sheriff who was working undercover, approached Alman at some point after Alman sat down at the table and struck up a conversation.

Deputy Reed was part of a law enforcement task force staffed by officers from the Westland Police Department and the Wayne County Sheriffs Department. Sergeant Robert Swope of the Westland Police Department supervised the team, which, along with Deputy Reed, also included Officers Randy Thivierge and John Buffa of the Westland Police Department. The task force, known as the Metro Street Enforcement Team (“MSET”), was formed to conduct surveillance at Hix Park to investigate complaints of lewd conduct and possible sexual activity taking place in the park. (Sgt. Swope testified that his supervisor informed him that Department of Public Service workers had found empty condom wrappers and pornographic materials while emptying trash cans in the park.)

At the request of Swope’s supervisor, Lieutenant Engstrom of the Westland Police Department, MSET had conducted visual surveillance at Hix Park prior to October 12, 2007, and although they had found used condoms along the trails in the park, they had not observed any sexual or lewd activity during those outings. (R.40-5 at 7.) Lt. Engstrom instructed Sgt. Swope to continue the surveillance and conduct a decoy operation in the park with his team. That operation took place on October 12, 2007.

Sgt. Swope supervised the decoy operation, Deputy Reed acted as the decoy, and Officers Thivierge and Buffa were the surveillance and backup officers. Swope monitored the operation from his car, while Thivierge and Buffa surveilled on foot and in plain clothes. Swope testified that he selected Reed to be the decoy because Reed had experience working with the morality unit for the Sheriffs Department for about five years.

When the officers arrived at the park, they observed Alman sitting on the picnic bench under the pavilion. According to his testimony, Reed walked over to the pavilion, sat down at a picnic bench, and struck up a conversation with Alman because Alman was the only person around. (R.42-3 at 20; R.40-5 at 10.) Alman testified that Reed asked him what he was doing in the park, and Alman told him that he was taking a break from helping his mother move. Alman also told Reed that he and his partner had just moved to Indiana after living in California for some time. (R.42-3 at 20.) Reed testified that Alman’s mentioning his “partner” led him to assume that Alman was gay. (R.40-5 at 10.)

There is some dispute about what else was discussed and what happened next. Reed testified that Alman told him he liked to visit Hix Park for recreation, but Alman testified that he had never visited Hix Park before that day. (R.40-5 at 11; R.42-3 at 7-8.) According to Reed, Alman asked him if he had found the park through a website called “squirt.org,” which Reed had never heard of before that day. (R.40-5 at 11.) Reed told Alman that he was in the park to look for deer, [893]*893and testified that Alman said he had often seen deer in his mother’s yard nearby. According to Reed, Alman then invited Reed to “take a walk down the trail” to see if they could find “a big buck.” (R.40-5 at 12.) Alman disputes this, claiming that he got up and said he was going for a walk and leaving the park, and that Reed then got up and followed him without invitation. (R.42-3 at 20.) In any event, it is undisputed that Alman began walking down a trail and that Deputy Reed followed him. According to Alman, Reed asked him if there was a more secluded spot they could go after they had been walking a short distance. (R.42-3 at 20-21.) Reed testified, however, that Alman veered off on his own into a small clearing after they had walked a short distance. (R.40-5 at 12.)

Once in the clearing, the two men began talking. Alman testified that he believed that Reed was flirting with him, and that Reed told Alman that he “liked to watch” (R.42-3 at 23). Reed testified that he told Alman he was “a little nervous” and “new to this” type of activity. (R.40-5 at 13.) The two were standing close to one another when Alman leaned forward and reached out and touched the zipper area on the front of Reed’s crotch. The fact that Alman touched Reed’s crotch is undisputed. What is disputed, however, is the nature of this touching. Alman testified that he “brushed” his hand up against Reed’s zipper area and that he did not even consider it touching (R.42-3 at 22); Reed testified that Alman “grabbed” his crotch with his “whole cupped hand” for “an instant, maybe a second or half a second.” (R.40-5 at 14.) Not expecting it, Reed took a step back, and Alman went down on one knee. Alman testified that he was positioned “sideways” to Reed when he went down on one knee, and that he pretended to tie his shoe to demonstrate that “everything was okay.” (R.42-3 at 22, 23; R.42-15 at 58.) For his part, Reed did not mention whether Alman was facing him or facing sideways, and he did not recall whether Alman pretended to tie his shoe, stating that Alman’s hands may have been “by his side or maybe even resting on his knee.” (R.40-5 at 17.) At that point, Reed pulled out his badge and told Alman that he was under arrest. (R.40-5 at 18.)

Reed walked Alman back to the pavilion, where the other officers were waiting. They handcuffed him and placed him in a squad car when one arrived. Reed reported what had happened to Sgt.

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703 F.3d 887, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 364, 2013 WL 64370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/randy-alman-v-kevin-reed-ca6-2013.