Ricks v. Pauch

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedMarch 23, 2020
Docket2:17-cv-12784
StatusUnknown

This text of Ricks v. Pauch (Ricks v. Pauch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ricks v. Pauch, (E.D. Mich. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT L E EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION MAR 23 2020 DESMOND RICKS, AKILAH CLERK'S OFFICE COBB, and DESIRE’A RICKS, U.S. DISTRICT COURT Case No. 17-12784 Plaintiffs, Vv. Paul D. Borman United States District Judge DAVID PAUCH, DONALD STA WIASZ, and ROBERT B. WILSON, Defendants. □ OPINION AND ORDER DENYING : DEFENDANTS’ MOTION TO STRIKE EXPERTS (ECF NO. 93) Plaintiff Desmond Ricks was released from prison in 2017 after serving 25

years on a wrongful conviction for murder. Mr. Ricks and his two adult daughters filed this suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the City of Detroit and three City of Detroit police officers alleging violations of Ricks’ constitutional rights based upon alleged fabrication and withholding of evidence. The City of Detroit has since been dismissed with prejudice pursuant to a Stipulated Order of Dismissal. Now before the Court is Defendants’ Motion to Strike Expert Witnesses by All Defendants. The motion has been fully briefed and the Court held oral argument on December 6, 2019. For the reasons that follow, the motion is DENIED.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND The background facts of this action are set forth in detail in prior Orders of the Court. The facts and expert opinions relevant to the instant motion will be discussed in more detail below. A. Desmond Ricks’ March 5, 1992 Arrest Gerry Bennett was shot to death in the parking lot of a Top Hat restaurant on March 3, 1992. The medical examiner retrieved two bullets from Bennett’s body on March 4, 1992 — one from Bennett’s brain and one from Bennett’s spine. Ricks had accompanied Bennett to the restaurant on March 3rd, and he was subsequently arrested for Bennett’s murder on March 5, 1992. At the time of Ricks’ arrest at his mother’s house, the police took possession of a Rossi .38 Special, 5-shot revolver, serial # D373334 (the “Rossi handgun”) that belonged to Ricks’ mother. Both the bullets retrieved from Bennett’s body and the Rossi handgun were conveyed to the Detroit Crime Lab for testing. B. Pauch and Wilson’s 3/6/1992 Firearms Identification Report On March 6, 1992, the day after Ricks was arrested, Defendant Donald Stawiasz, assigned as the Detroit Police Officer-in-Charge of the investigation into Gerry Bennett’s murder, requested that firearms testing be conducted on the Rossi handgun taken from Ricks’ home, to compare test-fired bullets to the slugs removed from Gerry Bennett’s body. (ECF No. 92-5, Request for Lab. Serv.) Stawiasz

submitted the handgun to the Detroit Crime Lab for testing, which had previously received the slugs from Bennett’s body. (/d.) Defendant David Pauch was the assigned examiner, and Defendant Robert Wilson was his immediate supervisor. (ECG No. 93-3, Pauch and Wilson Firearms Id. Rpt.; ECF No. 98-3, David Pauch Deposition Tr. at p. 39.) On March 6, 1992, Pauch, with Stawiasz present, test fired bullets from the Rossi handgun and compared those test-fired bullets to the bullets removed from Bennett’s body. (Pauch & Wilson Firearms Id. Rpt.; ECF No. 91-32, Prelim. Exam. Tr. Pauch Testimony at p. 39; ECF No. 91-34, Trial Tr. Vol. 3 Pauch Testimony at

p. 53.) Wilson, as Pauch’s supervisor, also independently examined the bullets and compared them to the test-fired bullets from the Rossi handgun. (ECF No. 98-6, Robert Wilson Deposition Tr. at pp. 45-46; Pauch Dep. at p. 110.) As explained more fully below, bullets and guns may be classified by the number of lands and grooves and the direction of twist (right-hand or left-hand) of the gun barrel or bullet. By examining the lands and grooves and the direction of twist of a firearm or bullet, these “class characteristics” can help to determine whether a certain bullet was fired from a certain gun. See Section III.A., Overview of Firearms Identification, below. Pauch states that he could not count or measure the lands and grooves on the evidence bullets because they were too damaged. (Pauch Dep. at pp. 78, 84, 99.)

He thus could not identify the general rifling characteristics or class of gun that fired

the evidence bullets. (/d. at pp. 78, 103, 106.) He indicated on the lab report that the evidence bullets had “traces of lands and grooves.” (Pauch & Wilson Firearms Id. Rpt.) Pauch further noted on the report that the Rossi handgun was classified as

a “6-R”, which means that the barrel of the gun would cut six grooves (and corresponding lands) into the surface of a bullet when fired, while the “R” designation signifies a right-hand rotation or twist. (See id.) Pauch compared the evidence slugs with the test-fired bullets from the Rossi handgun and opined that the comparison “yielded a POSITIVE ID. Meaning the fired evidence was fired from the above weapon.” (/d. (capitalization in original).) Wilson states that he performed a microscopic examination, confirmed the match found by Pauch, and signed the report. (Wilson Dep. at p. 45; Pauch & Wilson Firearms Id. Rpt.) The evidence was then returned to the property room. (Wilson Dep. at pp. 70-71; Pauch Dep. at p. 103.) C. David Townshend’s 8/17/1992 Firearms Identification Report On June 5, 1992, the trial court granted Ricks’ motion to appoint a firearms identification expert and ordered that all tests be performed at the Detroit Police facilities. (ECF No. 91-66, Mot. and Final Conf. Tr. at pp. 18, 23-24.) Ricks retained David Townshend, a retired Michigan State Police firearms examiner, to serve as

the appointed expert. (ECF No. 93-4, David Townshend Deposition Tr. at pp. 85, 87.) On July 15, 1992, the trial court entered an Order that the physical evidence, including the slugs removed from Bennett’s body and the Rossi handgun, be examined by Townshend, and that Townshend shall be allowed to test fire the Rossi handgun. (ECF No. 91-68, July 15, 1992 Court Order.) The Order further provided that Defendant Stawiasz be present during the entire time the tests are performed and that “[t]he tests will be conducted at the Detroit Police Department.” (/d.) Townshend received a copy of the Pauch and Wilson Firearms Identification Report on July 20, 1992. (ECF No. 91-72, Townshend Invoice.) On August 6, 1992, the Wayne County trial court issued a new order that Townshend’s examination take place at Townshend’s lab in Mason, Michigan instead of the Detroit Police Department, and directing Defendant Stawiasz to transport the evidence to and from Townshend’s lab. (ECF No. 91-69, August 6, 1992 Court Order.)!

' Townshend surmises that this location change was a result of “animosity” towards him by the Detroit Police Department as a result of his microscopic examination results and trial testimony in a prior shooting case that conflicted with the testimony of the Detroit Police Department firearms examiner regarding the positive identification of the evidence bullet. (ECF No. 93-8, David Townshend July 2015 Affidavit at p. 1.) He asserts that this animosity is “exemplified in a letter written by Deputy Chief Gloria Reynolds[,] the Director of the D.P.D. Crime Lab[,] and the Assistant Prosecuting Attorney Kenneth E. Simon.” (/d.) This letter was not attached as an exhibit to Townshend’s Affidavit but was discussed during

Stawiasz transported the evidence to Townshend’s lab for testing on August 16, 1992. (ECF No. 91-47, Donald Stawiasz Deposition Tr. at p. 68.) Upon receipt of the evidence, Townshend test-fired the Rossi handgun provided by Stawiasz, microscopically examined the “evidence bullets” provided by Stawiasz, compared those “evidence bullets” to the bullets Townshend test-fired from the Rossi handgun, and concluded that the bullets represented by Stawiasz to have come from the victim’s body matched the Rossi handgun. (ECF No.

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