Scott v. Pritchett

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedDecember 28, 2021
Docket2:19-cv-12718
StatusUnknown

This text of Scott v. Pritchett (Scott v. Pritchett) 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
Scott v. Pritchett, (E.D. Mich. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION

KENDRICK SCOTT,

Plaintiff, Case No. 19-cv-12718

v. Paul D. Borman United States District Judge DETROIT POLICE DEPARTMENT (DPD) SERGEANT WAYNE PRITCHETT; DPD OFFICER CATHERINE ADAMS; DPD OFFICER BARBARA SIMON; and DPD OFFICER ANTHONY JACKSON,

Defendants. _________________________________/

OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING IN PART AND DENYING IN PART DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT (ECF NO. 38)

Based on post-conviction investigation, culminating in a 2018 Michigan Supreme Court decision reversing convictions, and the prosecution’s decision not to re-prosecute, Plaintiff Kendrick Scott was released from prison in November 2018 after serving over two decades in prison, including over four years in solitary confinement, for the 1999 murder of Lisa Kindred. Justly Johnson, also convicted of the murder of Lisa Kindred, whose conviction was also reversed, was also released from prison the same day.

1 Plaintiff Kendrick Scott filed this suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against four City of Detroit police officers alleging violations of his constitutional rights based

upon alleged coercion of witness testimony to falsely inculpate Plaintiff Scott and Justly Johnson, and withholding of evidence. Justly Johnson filed a separate lawsuit against two of those City of Detroit Police officers, alleging essentially the same

violations of his constitutional rights. (Case No. 19-cv-12331.) Defendants filed a Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (ECF No. 38), and Plaintiff Scott has filed a Response in opposition (ECF No. 39.) Defendants did not file a reply brief. The Court held a hearing on Defendants’ motion on Thursday, December 9, 2021. For

the reasons that follow, Defendants’ Motion for Partial Summary Judgment is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART. I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

A. Factual Background 1. Lisa Kindred is murdered between midnight and 1:00 a.m. on Sunday, May 9, 1999

On May 8, 1999, William Kindred, his wife Lisa Kindred, Mr. Kindred’s eight-year-old stepson, Charmous (C.J.) Skinner, Jr., and the Kindreds’ daughter Shelby (two years old) and son Dakota (a 10-day-old newborn), who lived in Roseville, Michigan, went to see the movie “Life” at a drive-in theater in Dearborn,

2 Michigan. (ECF No. 41-11, Deposition of Charmous (C.J.) Skinner (Skinner Dep.) at pp. 5-6, PageID.2051-52.) After the movie ended, at approximately 11:30 p.m.,

Mr. Kindred announced that he wanted to stop by the home of his sister, Lillie Harris, who lived on Bewick Street on the east side of Detroit, to talk to her boyfriend, Verlin Miller, about purchasing a motorcycle. (Id. at p. 27, PageID.2073) (ECF No.

41-12, William Kindred Witness Statement (Kindred Statement) at p. 1, PageID.2133) (ECF No. 38-2, Investigator’s Report at p. 1, PageID.344.) When the Kindred family arrived on Bewick Street, Lisa, who was driving, parked their minivan across the street from Miller’s home and waited in the van with the three

children while Mr. Kindred went inside the house. (Skinner Dep. at pp. 26-27, PageID.2072-73) (Kindred Statement at 1, PageID.2133.) After about 20 to 30 minutes, Lisa Kindred grew impatient, walked up to the

house, and spoke with Mr. Kindred about returning to the van. (Skinner Dep. at pp. 8, 27, PageID.2054, 2073.) Mr. Kindred said that he would be out shortly, and Lisa then returned to the minivan. (Id. at p. 9, PageID.2055) (Kindred Statement at PageID.2133.) As Lisa was opening the minivan’s driver’s-side door, her son C.J.,

Jr., who was sitting in the front passenger seat, heard a loud bang and saw a flash and the glass shatter. (Skinner Dep. at pp. 9-11, PageID.2055-57.) Lisa Kindred had been shot, but she managed to put the car in gear and speed up the street to a nearby

3 gas station. (Id. at p. 15, PageID.2061.) Lisa then got out of the car and collapsed. (Id.) She was later pronounced dead at the hospital. (Investigator’s Report at p. 1,

PageID.344.) According to Mr. Kindred, a few minutes after he told Lisa that he would be right out, he heard a noise that sounded like a car-door slamming. (Kindred

Statement at p. 1, PageID.2133) When he and Mr. Miller opened the door of the house, they saw the minivan quickly speeding away and Mr. Kindred states that he saw an individual running across a vacant lot adjacent to where the van had been parked. (Id.) Mr. Kindred chased this fleeing person but failed to catch him or her.

(Id.) Mr. Miller got in his pickup truck and drove around the area first looking for the individual, and then went to the gas station on the corner of Bewick and East Warren, where the minivan was parked. (ECF No. 38-2, Verlin Miller, Witness

Statement (Miller Statement) at pp. 1-2, PageID.357-58.) The medical examiner’s report revealed that Lisa’s death was caused by a single gunshot wound to the chest. (Investigator’s Report at p. 1, PageID.344.) The minivan’s driver’s side window had been shattered, but nothing had been stolen from

the minivan, and the children were not harmed, but were still in the vehicle when the police arrived at the scene. (ECF No. 41-17, Preliminary Complaint Record (Officer Scola), 5/9/1999, PageID.2574.) A .22 caliber spent casing was found in the street

4 at the scene of the shooting on Bewick Street. (ECF No. 41-19, Deposition of Defendant Catherine Tuttle (formerly Adams) on July 16, 2020 (Adams Dep. II), at

pp. 81-82, PageID.2748-49.) 2. Plaintiffs Kendrick Scott and Justly Johnson - at the time of the shooting

a. Plaintiff Scott Somewhere between 11:00 p.m. on May 8, 1999 and 12:00 a.m. on May 9th, Plaintiff Kendrick Scott walked from his home on Hurlbut Street to his girlfriend Falynn Kenner’s house on Bewick to obtain a cell phone. (ECF No. 38-4 Deposition of Kendrick Scott (Scott Dep.) at pp. 33-34, PageID.404-05.) Once at Ms. Kenner’s house, Plaintiff Scott saw two persons, one of whom was carrying a rifle, walking

in the alley near Ms. Kenner’s home. (Id. at pp. 35-37, PageID.406-08.) Ms. Kenner let Plaintiff Scott into her home, and the two individuals with the rifle were seen walking by the home, toward the site of the shooting. (Id. at pp. 39-41, PageID.410- 12.)

Plaintiff Scott then left Ms. Kenner’s home and went in the opposite direction of the two men, to the home of his nephew, Quinton Billingslea, and Billingslea’s girlfriend, Lakeniya Hicks, on Hurlbut, the street immediately west of Bewick. (Id.

5 at p. 43, PageID.414.)1 Plaintiff Scott stated that he went there because of the two suspicious men walking through the alley carrying a rifle. (Id.) (ECF No. 38-5,

Deposition of Lakeniya Hicks (Hicks Dep.) at pp. 8-9, PageID.497-98.) While Plaintiff Scott was inside Ms. Hicks’s and Mr. Billingslea’s home, they all heard a gunshot and then a car speed off. (Hicks Dep. at pp. 10-12, PageID.499-

501) (Scott Dep. at p. 43, PageID.414.) Plaintiff Scott and Mr. Billingslea got into Mr. Billingslea’s car and drove down to Bewick to see what had happened. (Scott Dep. at pp. 45-46, PageID.415-16) (Hicks Dep. at p. 11, PageID.500.) They stopped and spoke with Mr. Kindred’s sister, Lillie Harris, who was pacing back and forth

outside her house. (Scott Dep. at pp. 45-46, PageID.416-17.) Scott testified at his deposition that he could not remember what Ms. Harris said at that time (id.), but stated in his May 9, 1999 witness statement to the police that she had reported that

one of her relatives had been kidnapped in a van with her kids. (Scott Statement, PageID.654.) Plaintiff Scott and Mr. Billingslea then drove around the block and

1 This information that Scott visited Mr.

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