Rodriguez-Rodriguez v. Ortiz-Velez

405 F. Supp. 2d 162, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 36730, 2005 WL 3535068
CourtDistrict Court, D. Puerto Rico
DecidedAugust 1, 2005
DocketCIV 01-1267CCC
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 405 F. Supp. 2d 162 (Rodriguez-Rodriguez v. Ortiz-Velez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rodriguez-Rodriguez v. Ortiz-Velez, 405 F. Supp. 2d 162, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 36730, 2005 WL 3535068 (prd 2005).

Opinion

ORDER

CEREZO, District Judge.

Before the Court is the verbal motion under Fed.R.Civ.P. 50 made by defendants in open court on July 27, 2005.

The incident giving rise to the complaint occurred on November 2, 2000 at 9:00 P.M., 5 days before the general elections held that year. Plaintiff Reynaldo Rodriguez, a retired policeman, had begun early that day actively campaigning for the New Progressive Party (NPP) in outlying wards of Sabana Grande, using a sound-truck owned by him labeled with NPP propaganda. Around 8:30 P.M., he went to the NPP committee in El Burén Sector of Sabana Grande which is about three blocks from the town plaza, according to his testimony. He estimated that the Popular Democratic Party (PDP) committee was about 6 or 7 blocks from the plaza. Since there was no parking at the NPP committee, he decided to go for one more round with the sound-truck, drove toward Francisco Mariano Quiñones street, and continued on to the corner of July 25th street. He testified that about three blocks from the PDP committee, there was a lot where construction was going on and from that site someone threw a stone at his vehicle. He immediately turned right, saw no one in the street, parked 1 at the corner of July *164 25th and Francisco Mariano-Quiñones, got out of the vehicle, looked around, did not see anyone and checked the driver’s side window. He observed a scratch made by the stone and mud residue. When he stopped to verify the damage, he saw a large group of people coming from behind a PDP van, going out from the Núñez Street intersection on July 25th Street, which he referred to as the Mayor’s group. Mr. Rodriguez thought of leaving but decided to stay upon seeing the rotating light of a patrol car since he wished to complain to the police about the stone that had been thrown.

Municipal police officer Katia Medina arrived in an official vehicle. Mr. Rodriguez made a drawing of the location of the vehicles that were parked, stating that he “was blocked within three vehicles,”: an unknown parked car, the police vehicle and a PDP van, and that the PDP committee was about 500 feet from where he was parked. A jingle of NPP candidate for Governor Pesquera was being played on his sound system and continued throughout the incident. The police woman parked one or two minutes after Rodriguez. She approached Rodriguez and asked: “what’s going on?,” to which he replied nothing, that someone threw a stone at his vehicle and he had stopped to verify the damages. Although he stated in direct that while verifying the damage and before talking to the police woman he had seen a large group of people running behind a PDP van, on cross-examination his testimony was that minutes passed once he started talking to agent Medina until he saw the Mayor coming, that while talking to her the Mayor was approaching, walking on July 25th street with a group of 20 or 25 persons, and that when he started his conversation with officer Medina people started coming out from behind the van traveling from the area of the PDP committee. He presumed that the people coming from behind the van was the same group as the Mayor’s. While he spoke to the police woman, he first saw the Mayor about ten feet away from him, accompanied by the group of approximately 25 persons and he could see another crowd in the back. He did not see the Mayor carrying anything in his hands; he walked with his hands outside his pockets. When Rodriguez finished talking to officer Medina, at a distance of about two feet, the Mayor tells her not to intervene, “I’ll take charge of this.” He testified that the May- or then gestured with his left hand at the police woman to step aside, that he took out a metal object that looked like a blackjack, either from his pocket or waist, and hit him in the eye.

According to Rodriguez, immediately after this the police woman hit him with her baton on the ribs and the crowd, which he later learned could have been 30 to 35 persons, kept on hitting him while he was on the ground. Although he testified that he threw a punch at the Mayor and did not know if he hit him or not, he later said that he did not know if he hit him in the face. After being shown previous sworn statements where he admits throwing a punch at the Mayor, stating in one of them that he hit him on the mouth and in another that he hit him on the .face and that after this the police woman hit him with the baton on the ribs, he described the sequence of events as follows: I was hit, I threw a punch and hit, Medina hits me. He elaborated stating that this happened within seconds.

In direct, he mentioned that the police woman, the Mayor and the crowd all pulled him down to the ground, that during the assault the Mayor hit him with the blackjack, the policewoman with the baton, and the crowd with flags and with their feet. In cross, he testified that after the Mayor hit him he threw a punch to his face *165 and after he felt the blow from Medina’s baton, the crowd jumped on him, beat him to the ground and kept hitting him. He explained that at that time the people had surrounded the Mayor, Medina and himself and that the Mayor must have been down on the ground because the crowd jumped on them, that he knew the Mayor was in a mess with the people on the ground and that two or three males, in addition to himself and the Mayor, could also have been down on the ground. These people were also assaulting him. He recognized a young man by the name of Osvaldo Ocasio-Rodriguez who was on top of him and who threw a hard blow to his left knee. Other than the Mayor, the police woman and Ocasio, he did not know anyone else there.

Rodriguez was found guilty of assaulting minor Henry Acevedo on the night of November 2, 2000. (See, defendants’ Exhibit C) Plaintiff stated that during his trial on said charge there were testimonies that the assault incident involving the minor happened before the incident with defendant Ortiz-Velez. This judgment of conviction is final since he did not appeal. Rodriguez was found not guilty of assaulting Ortiz-Velez on November 2, 2000,

Plaintiff witness Aníbal Almodovar-Soto, who lives in Sabana Grande close to July 25th and Francisco Mariano Quiñones streets, testified that he heard the announcements of the NPP sound-truck the night of November 2, 2000 around 9:00 P.M. and thought that it was odd that it lasted for such a long time. He went to the corner of Francisco Mariano Quiñones and July 25th streets and saw the Mayor with a group of people. Although he did not see the Mayor or the Mayor’s group beating Rodriguez, he saw them while they were leaving the site where Rodriguez was being beaten by a lot of people while on the ground. When Almodovar Soto first got there and saw the Mayor leaving with a group of people he was making violent gestures, and it seemed like the group of people surrounding the Mayor, described as more than five, were taking him away in the direction of the PDP committee. He did not know what the Mayor was shouting because of the sound of the NPP van, but he made violent movements raising both fists. At that time he did not know that the Mayor had been involved in the incident.

Almodovar further explained that he saw a lot of people beating Rodriguez on the ground, stating in cross that he saw more than fifty persons around Rodriguez acting violently.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Mullins v. Johnson
N.D. West Virginia, 2024

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
405 F. Supp. 2d 162, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 36730, 2005 WL 3535068, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rodriguez-rodriguez-v-ortiz-velez-prd-2005.