Saucedo-Carrillo v. United States

983 F. Supp. 2d 917, 2013 WL 5719428
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedOctober 21, 2013
DocketCase No. 3:12 CV 2571
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 983 F. Supp. 2d 917 (Saucedo-Carrillo v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Saucedo-Carrillo v. United States, 983 F. Supp. 2d 917, 2013 WL 5719428 (N.D. Ohio 2013).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

JACK ZOUHARY, District Judge.

Introduction

Plaintiffs, a mother and daughter from Mexico now living in Ohio, bring claims under the Federal Tort Claims Act [920]*920(“FTCA”) against the United States, in connection with a September 2009 questioning and subsequent administrative detention by the U.S. Border Patrol for remaining in the United States illegally. This case is related to a civil rights suit brought as a class action in this Court and dismissed in November 2012, in which Plaintiffs were named plaintiffs. See Muniz-Muniz v. U.S. Border Patrol, No. 3:09 CV 2865, 2012 WL 5197250 (N.D.Ohio 2012).

Pending before this Court is Defendant United States’ Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 28), which Plaintiffs have opposed (Doc. 29). For the reasons stated below, the Motion is granted.

Background

Plaintiffs Rocío Saucedo-Carrillo and Rosa Carrillo-Vasquez are daughter and mother who legally entered the United States through Laredo, Texas under a six-month visitors visa on or about January 13, 2001 (Doc. 28-3, Saucedo-Carrillo Dep. 8; Doc. 28-2, Carrillo-Vasquez Dep. 8-9; Doc. 28-1, Shaver Dep. 96; Doc. 28^4, Shaver Decl. ¶ 4). Plaintiffs overstayed their six-month visas and are currently in the United States without proper documentation (Shaver Dep. 96).

On September 13, 2009, U.S. Border Patrol Agent Bradley Shaver encountered Plaintiffs at a Norwalk, Ohio Marathon gas station. Plaintiffs stopped for gas after a trip to the nearby K-Mart (Saucedo-Carrillo Dep. 18; Carrillo-Vasquez Dep. 15). Rocío had been driving and Rosa was in the passenger seat (Saucedo-Carrillo Dep. 19). They were traveling in a blue truck with two silver scorpion decals in the back window with the words “Durango Duran-go” (Saucedo-Carrillo Dep. 19-20; Shaver Dep. 46; Carrillo-Vasquez Dep. 16). The rear windows were tinted (Saucedo-Carrillo Dep. 21). The truck also had flares such that the wheel wells flared out from the truck and a vanity license plate with the name “Anani” (Rocio’s middle name) (Shaver Dep. 46; Saucedo-Carrillo Dep. 21-22).

Agent Shaver was traveling on State Route 250 when he observed the truck parked at the gas station (Shaver Dep. 46). Agent Shaver testified that, in his experience, large flares were “often used to hide narcotics on the undercarriage of the vehicle” (id.) and that “Durango” is a state in Mexico “known with drug-trafficking organizations ... down in that area for use in smuggling across the country, narcotics into the country” (id.). Agent Shaver further testified that “scorpions are one of the logos used by drug-trafficking organizations” (id. 47). Given the appearance of the truck and its close proximity to the Ohio turnpike, Agent Shaver testified he suspected the truck may be involved in illegal narcotic activity and decided to investigate further (id).

Agent Shaver then pulled into the gas station parking lot “to get a closer look at the vehicle” (id). At that time he observed Rosa in the front passenger seat (id). However, Rocío testified that Agent Shaver pulled into the gas station only after he saw her exiting the station food mart back to her car which was parked at a gas pump (Saucedo-Carrillo Dep. 32) (“I saw the gentleman from the truck from Border Patrol. We looked at each other’s eyes, he looked at me, I looked at him, and he put his signals [on].”).

As Rocío walked by Agent Shaver’s vehicle, he began speaking to her in English (Shaver Dep. 49). Agent Shaver testified that, at this point, his vehicle was in between the food mart and the front of Plaintiffs’ truck, but not blocking Plaintiffs’ truck; they could have pulled forward or reversed (id). In contrast, Rocío testified that Agent Shaver parked his vehicle im[921]*921mediately in front of her truck such that she could not have pulled forward (Sauce-do-Carrillo Dep. 37-39), but could have put her truck in reverse and backed out (id. 38-39).

Rocío began filling the truck with gas, and Agent Shaver began asking Rocío questions about where she was from (Shaver Dep. 51; Saucedo-Carrillo Dep. 40). The parties dispute whether Agent Shaver was in his vehicle or on foot when he began asking Rocío questions (Sauce-do-Carrillo Dep. 52; Carrillo-Vasquez Dep. 24-25; Shaver Dep. 50-52). Rocío testified Agent Shaver was “less than one meter” from her as she filled her truck with gas, and he began asking her questions (Saucedo-Carrillo Dep. 53). Agent Shaver testified he remained in his vehicle during this initial questioning and did not exit his vehicle until Rocío leaned into the truck to speak with Rosa (Shaver Dep. 52).

Agent Shaver asked Rocío for identification and for her “papers” (Saucedo-Carrillo Dep. 43-44). She provided Agent Shaver with a Michigan driver’s license (id. 40) which Agent Shaver kept “throughout the whole time” (id. 44). Rosa provided Agent Shaver with a health insurance card (id.; Carrillo-Vasquez Dep. 32). Rocío continued filling the truck with gas (SaucedoCarrillo Dep. 51). Agent Shaver never told Plaintiffs they could not leave (id. 54).

At some point,1 Agent Shaver asked Rocío who owned the truck. Rocío responded that the truck was hers, but it was registered in the name of Rocio’s brother-in-law (Saucedo-Carrillo Dep. 22-23; Shaver Dep. 51).

As Rocío continued filling the truck with gas, Agent Shaver spoke with Rosa (who was still seated in’ the truck’s passenger seat) in Spanish and asked if she was from the area (Saucedo-Carrillo Dep. 51; Shaver Dep. 51-52). Rosa responded that she was originally from Mexico (Shaver Dep. 52). Plaintiffs told Agent Shaver they entered the United States on a visa permitting them to stay in the United States for ten years (Saucedo-Carrillo Dep. 46). There is no such visa (Shaver Decl. ¶ 5). Agent Shaver obtained Plaintiffs’ names and birth dates to radio the Detroit sector for an immigration inquiry (Shaver Dep. 61).

Rocío testified she was afraid of Agent Shaver because he was “very aggressive” and because of the “tone” he used in his questioning (Saucedo-Carrillo Dep. 54-55). Rosa testified she felt “scared because of the way he put his car — truck in front of us” and because he was “authoritative” (Carrillo-Vasquez Dep. 38, 40).

Plaintiffs admitted to Agent Shaver that they had overstayed their visas (id. at 96; Saucedo-Carrillo Dep. 46). Agent Shaver then asked Rocío to move her car away from the gas pump and into a parking spot, which she did (Saucedo-Carrillo Dep. 48). Agent Shaver allowed Rocío to give her truck keys to an acquaintance who happened to be at the gas station (id. 49)

He then took Plaintiffs into custody, placing them in the back of his vehicle and transporting them to the Border Patrol station in nearby Sandusky for administrative processing (Shaver Deck ¶¶ 7-8). When Plaintiffs were in the back of Agent Shaver’s vehicle, Rosa informed Agent Shaver that Rocío was pregnant (SaucedoCarrillo Dep. 57). Plaintiffs were pro[922]*922cessed and released that day (Shaver Dep. 103-04). At no time were Plaintiffs handcuffed (id. 105).

Standard of Review

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
983 F. Supp. 2d 917, 2013 WL 5719428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saucedo-carrillo-v-united-states-ohnd-2013.