Rashied Goodwin v. Edward Conway

836 F.3d 321, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 16656, 2016 WL 4728004
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedSeptember 12, 2016
Docket15-2720
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 836 F.3d 321 (Rashied Goodwin v. Edward Conway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rashied Goodwin v. Edward Conway, 836 F.3d 321, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 16656, 2016 WL 4728004 (3d Cir. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

FUENTES, Circuit Judge.

Rashied Goodwin was arrested pursuant to a warrant for allegedly selling heroin to an undercover police officer. A grand jury indicted him but the charges were eventually dropped. Goodwin then brought this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 lawsuit for false imprisonment and malicious prosecution against the three detectives involved in securing his arrest warrant. He claims that the detectives submitted a false warrant application because they knew or should have known that he was in jail at the time of one of the undercover drug deals. He argues that his incarceration was evident from a booking sheet the detectives had when they applied for his arrest warrant. The detectives moved for summary judgment and asserted a qualified immunity defense.

The District Court denied the detectives’ motion, holding that there was a genuine *324 dispute as to whether the detectives possessed the booking sheet when they submitted the warrant application, which precluded granting summary judgment on the issue of whether the detectives had probable cause to arrest Goodwin. According to the District Court, the detectives’ 'qualified immunity defense also hinged on this factual dispute.

At oral argument before this Court, defense counsel conceded that the detectives were indeed aware of the booking sheet before submitting the warrant application. The only issue we must decide is whether that booking sheet and any inferences derived therefrom preclude a finding of probable cause. We conclude that they do not. Despite the booking sheet, the detectives had probable cause when they applied for Goodwin’s arrest warrant, and they are therefore entitled to qualified immunity. Accordingly, we will reverse the order of the District Court.

I.

A.

In late September 2009, the Somerset County Organized Crime and Narcotics Task Force learned from a confidential informant that an individual known as “Snipe” was selling heroin in the Wat-chung/North Plainfield area of New Jersey. At some point during the week of September 27, 2009, Detective Lissner, acting undercover, accompanied the confidential informant to buy heroin from Snipe in a Sears parking lot in Watchung at approximately 3:30 p.m. Snipe approached Lissner’s car and handed the drugs to the confidential informant through the front passenger side window. Lissner asked Snipe if he could make future buys from him without the confidential informant present. Snipe said that was fine and gave Lissner his cell phone number. In his follow-up report, Detective Lissner described Snipe as a “black male.” 1

Through a series of phone calls and text messages, Detective Lissner set up a second buy from Snipe on October 16, 2009, again in the Sears parking lot. This time, Snipe sat down in the front passenger seat of Lissner’s car and handed Lissner the drugs. Following the exchange, Snipe drove out of the parking lot and headed towards Plainfield. Detective Lissner provided no physical description of Snipe in. his follow-up report.

Two other members of the Task Force, Detective Conway and Detective Sidorski, observed the drug deals from afar. 2 No' pictures or videos of Snipe were taken. The most detailed physical description of Snipe is found in Detective Conway’s investigation report of the first buy: “black male, dark complexion, approximately 5'8, thin build, and approximately 30 years old.” 3

The Task Force worked to identify “Snipe.” They contacted Lieutenant O’Brien in the Plainfield Police Department, who advised the detectives that he knew “Snipe” as Rashied Goodwin. In his deposition, O’Brien testified that he had previously interacted with Goodwin “on the street,” and that the only person he knew who uses the alias “Snipe” is Goodwin. 4

On November 13, 2009, Detective Conway obtained a photograph of Goodwin from the Union County jail. His investigation report indicates that he reached out to staff at the jail because he learned that Goodwin had recently been arrested and *325 was being held there. Detective Conway showed a copy of Goodwin’s photograph to Detective Lissner, who positively identified Goodwin as the “Snipe” who sold him drugs. Lissner then initialed and dated the photograph to confirm that he identified Goodwin as Snipe. In his deposition, Liss-ner testified that he “immediately recognized” the individual in the photograph as the person from whom he bought drugs, and that he would not have initialed the photograph unless he was “a hundred percent sure” about the identification. 5

The detectives prepared an affidavit of probable cause for Goodwin’s arrest'. The affidavit itself refers only to the second drug buy on October 16, 2009. But the affidavit was submitted with a packet of supporting documents that included, among other things: (1) the detectives’ investigation reports describing the first and second drug buys, (2) a supplementary investigation report explaining that the Plainfield Police Department indicated “Snipe” may be Rashied Goodwin’s alias and that Detective Lissner positively identified a photograph of Goodwin as Snipe, and (3) a copy of the photograph of Goodwin with Detective Lissner’s initials.

On November 25, 2009, a warrant was issued for Goodwin’s arrest. Because Goodwin was incarcerated on other charges at the time, Detective Conway faxed the arrest warrant to Union County jail as a detainer. Goodwin was unaware of these charges until the end of December 2009, when he was released from custody and then immediately rearrested. In January 2010, a grand jury returned an indictment for Goodwin, charging him with knowingly and purposefully distributing heroin, and with distributing heroin within I,000 feet of a school.

Some time after the indictment was issued, Goodwin told his public defender that he had been incarcerated from September 26, 2009 through [ ]. 6 At the time Goodwin made this claim, his attorney did not know the date of the first drug buy because the investigation reports included with the affidavit state only that the first buy occurred “during the week of September 27, 2009.” 7 Goodwin’s attorney asked the prosecutor for the exact date of the first drug buy, explaining that it was “essential to [his] client’s defense.” 8 The prosecutor refused to disclose this information, however, in an attempt to protect the identity of the confidential informant. Rather than reveal the-informant’s identity, the prosecutor dropped the charges, and Goodwin was released from jail. The parties now agree that the date of the first drug buy was [ ].

The dispute in this case concerns a booking sheet from the Plainfield Police Department in Goodwin’s Somerset County case file. 9

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
836 F.3d 321, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 16656, 2016 WL 4728004, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rashied-goodwin-v-edward-conway-ca3-2016.