Siggers v. Alex

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedSeptember 24, 2021
Docket2:19-cv-12521
StatusUnknown

This text of Siggers v. Alex (Siggers v. Alex) 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
Siggers v. Alex, (E.D. Mich. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION

DARRELL SIGGERS,

Plaintiff, Case No. 19-CV-12521

vs. HON. MARK A. GOLDSMITH

JOSEPH ALEX, et al.,

Defendants. __________________________________/

OPINION & ORDER (1) GRANTING IN PART DEFENDANT’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT (Dkt. 65) AND (2) DENYING WITHOUT PREJUDICE PLAINTIFF’S AND DEFENDANT’S MOTIONS TO STRIKE (Dkts. 60, 68, 69)

In 1984, Plaintiff Darrell Siggers was convicted for first-degree murder. Thirty-four years later, Siggers’s conviction was vacated, and he was granted a new trial. Three months later, all criminal charges against Siggers were dismissed. This civil rights action followed. Defendant Joseph Alex, a police officer who allegedly facilitated Siggers’s wrongful conviction by fabricating evidence and failing to disclose material exculpatory and impeachment evidence to the prosecutor, has filed a motion for summary judgment (Dkt. 65). Siggers filed a response (Dkt. 84), and Alex filed a reply (Dkt. 87). For the reasons that follow, Alex’s motion is granted in part and denied in part.1 Because the Court’s ruling on the motion for summary judgment narrows the issues in this case, the Court denies without prejudice Siggers’s motion to strike expert testimony (Dkt. 60) and Alex’s motions to strike expert testimony (Dkts. 68, 69), which may be revised and refiled to take into account the summary judgment ruling.

1 Because oral argument will not assist in the decisional process, the motions will be decided based on the parties’ briefing. See E.D. Mich. LR 7.1(f)(2); Fed. R. Civ. P. 78(b). I. BACKGROUND A. Montgomery’s Murder James Montgomery was shot and killed on the night of February 16, 1984, but the events leading up to the shooting are disputed. According to Siggers, before Montgomery was shot, he attended a party at the home of Christine Arnold, the mother of Siggers’s children. Siggers, Ranard

Jackson, Derek Lawson, Toby Red, Virgil Cook, and William Arnold (Christine Arnold’s brother) were also present at the party. Pl. Statement of Additional Material Facts (SAMF) ¶ 2 (Dkt. 84). At some point, a scuffle broke out between Montgomery and Red. Id. ¶ 3. Montgomery brandished a straight razor and attacked Red, who ran off, shouting, “I’ll be back; I got something for your ass.” Id. Siggers suggests that Red ran off to retrieve a rifle and then headed back towards the party to attack Montgomery. After the scuffle, Christine Arnold and others convinced Montgomery, Jackson, and Lawson to leave the party. Id. When the three men were about a block away from the party, someone emerged from between two houses and began firing a rifle, killing Montgomery; Jackson and Lawson fled the scene. Id. ¶ 4. Siggers suggests that Red shot

Montgomery, contending that Red appeared at the nearby home of Jack Fuqua shortly after the shooting occurred while carrying a long gun. Id. ¶ 9. Alex does not appear to dispute that Montgomery attended a party at Christine Arnold’s home on the night that he was murdered. Nor does Alex appear to dispute that a physical altercation broke out that night. However, Alex argues that the altercation was between Siggers and Montgomery—not Red and Montgomery. Def. Statement of Material Facts (SOMF) ¶ 2 (Dkt. 65). According to Alex, after the altercation, Siggers shot Montgomery in the presence of Jackson and Lawson. Id. B. Siggers’s Prosecution and Conviction Siggers was tried and convicted by a jury in July 1984 for Montgomery’s murder. Order of Conviction and Sentence (Dkt. 65-1). Alex contends that Siggers’s prosecution and conviction were supported by the following facts. First, Jackson and Lawson each identified Siggers as the shooter. Jackson Statement (Dkt. 65-4); Prelim. Exam. Trans. at 6, 11 (Dkt. 65-8); Jackson Trial

Testimony at 136, 140–145, 152–154 (Dkt. 65-2); Lawson Trial Testimony at 102–105 (Dkt. 65- 3). Second, law enforcement officials discovered bullet fragment evidence linking Siggers to the murder, upon executing a search warrant for “[t]he lower flat of a structure located at 718 Newport[,] . . . [s]uch structure [being] described as a brick building identified by the addresses of 718-720 Newport.” 718 Newport Search Warrant at PageID.1269 (Dkt. 65-5). This “structure” was a duplex with two addresses, 718 and 720 Newport. See id.; 2/1/90 E.D. Mich. Op. at 4–5 (Dkt. 65-27) (describing the layout of the structure). Both 718 and 720 Newport had an upper and lower level. Id. Siggers lived in the lower level of 718 Newport. Id.; see also SAMF ¶ 7 (stating

that Siggers’s residence at the time of the murder was “718 Newport, #1”). Siggers told an officer, Sergeant Collins, that on another occasion, Siggers had fired a gun “in the vacant apartment across from the hall from his apartment at 720 Newport”—i.e., the lower flat of 720 Newport. Collins Trial Testimony at 41–42 (Dkt. 65-2). The lower flat of 720 Newport is where officers recovered shell casings. Grange Testimony at 78–79 (Dkt. 65-16). Defendant Claude Houseworth of the Detroit Police Department, who was admitted as an expert witness in firearms identification at Siggers’s trial, testified that the shell casings recovered from 720 Newport and the shell casings found at the scene of Montgomery’s murder were fired from the same gun. Houseworth Testimony at 80–81 (Dkt. 65-2). C. Issues with Siggers’s Prosecution and Conviction Siggers contends that his prosecution and conviction were unconstitutionally tainted by Alex’s withholding of material and exculpatory evidence as well as Alex’s fabrication of evidence. According to Siggers, Alex coerced Jackson and Lawson to falsely identify Siggers as the shooter. Siggers contends that after his trial, Jackson and Lawson each admitted to falsely

identifying Siggers as the shooter due to Alex’s threats. Siggers Resp. to SOMF at ¶¶ 2, 10 (citing Spearman Dep. at 11–12 (Dkt. 84-20)).2 Siggers also argues that Alex failed to disclose Jackson’s and Lawson’s criminal histories, which Siggers could have presumably used during his trial to impeach the testimony of these witnesses. Next, Siggers argues, Alex withheld exculpatory information pointing to the existence of an alternative suspect—Toby Red. Specifically, Alex allegedly withheld that before trial, Fuqua told Alex that on the night of the murder that (i) Red—who Fuqua described as a “real light” African-American man—appeared at Fuqua’s home carrying a rifle, and that (ii) Red told Fuqua that he had “just shot a mother-fucker for starting some shit at Christine’s house.” Fuqua 1st Dep. at 11–16 (Dkt. 84-8); Fuqua 2d Dep. at 63 (Dkt. 84-9).3 Fuqua purportedly did not testify about

Red at trial because Alex coerced Fuqua to not mention Red. Siggers argues that Fuqua’s statements support that Red was the murderer. Further, Fuqua’s statements were corroborated by other evidence that Alex allegedly withheld: Gary Kelly’s statement that shortly after the murder he saw a man, who Kelly believed to be his white neighbor, carrying a long gun. Kelly Trial Testimony at 108 (Dkt. 65-2); Field Notes (Dkt. 84-

2 As discussed below, Bruce Spearman is Jackson’s cousin. Spearman claims that Jackson and Lawson confessed to him that Alex coerced each to falsely identify Siggers as the murderer.

3 Fuqua was deposed over the course of two days—September 15 and 23, 2020. 11). Alex interviewed Kelly’s white neighbor (Roy Garland) and eliminated him as a suspect, see Field Notes, thereby leaving Red (who, like the man Kelly saw, was light-skinned and was seen carrying a gun shortly after the murder) as a viable alternate suspect. Finally, Siggers argues that Alex withheld and fabricated evidence that would have undercut the prosecution’s evidence connecting the bullet fragments to Siggers.

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Siggers v. Alex, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/siggers-v-alex-mied-2021.