Sanford v. Russell

381 F. Supp. 3d 905
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedMay 15, 2019
DocketCase Number 17-13062
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 381 F. Supp. 3d 905 (Sanford v. Russell) 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
Sanford v. Russell, 381 F. Supp. 3d 905 (E.D. Mich. 2019).

Opinion

DAVID M. LAWSON, United States District Judge

The Court issues this corrected opinion and order to correct certain non-substantive errors in the original.

*910Defendants Michael Russell and James Tolbert move for a summary judgment of dismissal of all claims brought against them by plaintiff Davontae Sanford. Sanford alleged in a complaint that when he was fourteen years old, he was coerced into confessing and pleading guilty to murdering four people, largely based on the misconduct of the defendants, who were Detroit police officers at the time. After another person confessed to the crimes and confirmed that Sanford was not involved, a state police investigation uncovered evidence that lent substance to Sanford's claims. The defendants argue here that discovery has not borne out the allegations in Sanford's complaint, and that the undisputed facts require judgment in their favor as a matter of law. The Court disagrees and will deny the motion for summary judgment.

I. Facts and Proceedings

The facts of the case as taken from the complaint were discussed at length in the opinion and order denying the present defendants' motion to dismiss. See Sanford v. City of Detroit , No. 17-13062, 2018 WL 6331342, at *1-4 (E.D. Mich. Dec. 4, 2018). The following factual record was developed through the discovery taken in the case.

A. The Murders on Runyon Street

Former hitman Vincent Smothers testified under oath that, on September 17, 2007, he and an accomplice, Ernest Davis, murdered Michael Robinson at his home on Runyon Street, on the east side of Detroit. Vincent Smothers dep., ECF No. 170-5, PageID.8386-87. Smothers was hired to kill Robinson by Leroy Payne. Id. at PageID.8388. Smothers assumed that Payne wanted Robinson killed because he was a rival drug dealer. Ibid. Smothers used an AK-47 rifle, and Davis used a .45 caliber pistol for the hit. Id. at PageID.8389. Smothers was dressed in a Carharrt "overall jumpsuit" and wore a ski mask. Id. at PageID.8392. He also found a .40 caliber pistol at the scene, lying on a coffee table next to Robinson's dead body, which he took with him when he left. Id. at 8389. Smothers later informed police that two of the weapons involved in the murders had been hidden at a house on Promenade Street. Both the .45 and .40 caliber pistols were recovered by police from the residence. Id. at 8390.

Smothers initiated the attack by attempting to push open the front door; when the door was opened from the inside, Davis began shooting through the front window at a person who could be seen sitting on a couch. Smothers dep. at PageID.8391. Smothers fired through the front door, hitting the person who had opened it. Ibid. As Smothers burst into the house, he saw a woman who was inside "run[ ] past into a hallway and out of [his] field of view." Ibid. Once inside, Smothers saw several persons in the front room who were hit by gunfire. The assault on the home ended with four people dead. Id. at 8392.

The first arriving officers on the scene found four dead bodies in the front room of the home. In the southwest bedroom of the home a woman, Valerie Glover, was suffering from several gunshot wounds ; her seven-year-old son, also in the room, was unharmed. Incident Report dated Sept. 17, 2007, ECF No. 170-6, PageID.8402. Glover testified that she was shot five times while she was in and running from the front room of the house, and that she then ran and hid in the bedroom. Valerie Glover dep., ECF No. 170-7, PageID.8763, 8769. Smothers attested in an affidavit that as he was going through the house, he found Glover hiding under a bed in a back room, and she said, "Don't kill me"; Smothers assured her that he would not kill her, and he told her to stay in the bedroom until he had left the house.

*911Smothers aff. ¶ 41, ECF No. 170-8, PageID.8784.

Smothers attested that he did not know Davontae Sanford or any of his family. He also verified that Sanford was not present during the attack, nor was he involved in any way with the planning of the hit, which was done entirely by Smothers and Davis. Smothers dep. at 8393-94.

B. The Police Investigation

Defendant Michael Russell was assigned to the Detroit police homicide department in September 2007. He was dispatched to investigate the Runyon Street murders and arrived on the scene with another Detroit police investigator, Dale Collins, and a K-9 unit. Criminal Trial Tr., ECF No. 170-10, PageID.8870, 8878. In September 2007, due to his supervisory role, Tolbert was "never directly investigating homicides." Tolbert dep. at PageID.8802. However, when the Runyon Street murders occurred, he was on the scene within hours. Id. at PageID.8805. Tolbert subsequently spent hours at the scene investigating and attempting to piece together what had happened. Id. at PageID.8806-08.

Sanford recalled that he encountered Russell outside, on a street near his home, early in the morning of September 18, 2007, when the two walked up to each other and had a conversation. Davontae Sanford dep., ECF No. 170-12, PageID.8941-43. Russell asked Sanford who he was, where he lived, and if he had "seen anything"; he responded that he had not. Id. at PageID.8944. Sanford says that, after a brief conversation, the officers took Sanford to his home and spoke to his grandmother. Id. at PageID.8948. At some point Tolbert was told by defendant Russsell that Russell had a person who might know about the crime and identified the person as Sanford. Tolbert dep. at PageID.8810. Russell and Tolbert went to Sanford's home, spoke to Sanford's grandmother, and got her permission to question the boy. Ibid. The police told Sanford's grandmother that they wanted to talk to him to see if he had any information about what was "going on in the area," and she then signed a consent form allowing the police to talk to Sanford. Sanford dep. at PageID.8949-50.

Sanford then got into a police car with Russell, and they drove around to various places, passing some houses and stopping at a Coney Island restaurant. Sanford dep. at PageID.8951. Tolbert testified that they drove around in the police car with Sanford for some length of time, during which he asked Sanford questions. Tolbert dep. at PageID.8811. Tolbert and Russell both were in the car, along with another police investigator and Sanford. Id. at PageID.8813-14. During that initial interview in the car, Sanford "did not make any admissions concerning the crime." Id. at PageID.8813. However, the police asked Sanford about "who ... in the neighborhood [sells] drugs and different things like that," and Sanford "gave them two or three names." Sanford dep. at PageID.8951.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
381 F. Supp. 3d 905, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanford-v-russell-mied-2019.