Silberberg v. Lynberg

186 F. Supp. 2d 157, 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3492, 2002 WL 272240
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 20, 2002
DocketCiv. 3:99CV02249AWT
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 186 F. Supp. 2d 157 (Silberberg v. Lynberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Silberberg v. Lynberg, 186 F. Supp. 2d 157, 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3492, 2002 WL 272240 (D. Conn. 2002).

Opinion

RULING ON MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

THOMPSON, District Judge.

The plaintiff, Eric Silberberg (“Silber-berg”) brings this action against three individuals and six towns involved with the Valley Street Crime Unit (“VSCU”), a cooperative law enforcement operation in the Naugatuck Valley area of the State of Connecticut, in four counts: (1) deprivation of civil rights in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1988; (2) intentional infliction of emotional distress; (3) negligent infliction of emotional distress; and (4) malicious prosecution, against the individual defendants only. Each of the defendants has moved for summary judgment on and/or dismissal of all counts of the complaint setting forth claims against him, her or it. For the reasons set forth below, the motions for summary judgment are being granted as to the first three counts and as to defendant Lynberg on Count Four, and Count Four is being dismissed without prejudice as to defendants Locicero and DeFelice.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The plaintiff is an African-American man. The VSCU is a law enforcement body created by an interlocal agreement among municipalities in the Naugatuck Valley area, and involving personnel from each of the member municipalities and from the Connecticut State Police. At the times relevant to this case, the towns participating in the VSCU were Derby, Anso-nia, Shelton, Seymour, Woodbridge and Monroe. 1

On August 1, 1996, Detective Paul Lo-cicero (“Locicero”), Detective Jill DeFelice (“DeFelice”) and other officers assigned to the VSCU were involved in an undercover investigation of drug activity in an area of Ansonia, Connecticut known as Gatison Park. Locicero was an officer of the Anso-nia Police Department assigned to the VSCU, and DeFelice was an officer of the Seymour Police Department assigned to the VSCU. Gatison Park is an area known by the police, including the VSCU, to be frequented by sellers and users of illegal drugs. Locicero and others were in an *162 observation van, while DeFelice was alone in an unmarked vehicle. When the officers in the van arrived at Gatison Park, they saw a man sitting on a park bench wearing a green shirt and dungarees. Lo-cicero claims that he recognized the man as Eric Silberberg, the plaintiff.

Prior to August 1, 1996, Loeicero was familiar with Silberberg, and had heard from other police officers that Silberberg sold drugs. Loeicero had personally seen Silberberg on a number of occasions, and had observed him engaging in what he considered “suspicious” activities, Loeicero Dep. at 69, but had never seen Silberberg engage in a hand-to-hand sale of illegal drugs. Similarly, DeFelice had seen Sil-berberg on at least three or four occasions prior to August 1, 1996, and she had heard that he was involved in drug activity but had never seen him make a drug sale. At trial, DeFelice testified that she “did not know [Silberberg] personally” prior to August 1, 1996. Doc. # 106, Ex. 3 at 32. Silberberg admits to having sold crack in the Gatison Park area at one time, but contends that he stopped doing so in 1995.

Upon seeing the man in the park, Lo-cicero radioed to DeFelice that Eric Sil-berberg, who he knew to be a drug dealer, was sitting on the bench. He indicated that the man he identified as Silberberg was a light-skinned black male wearing a green shirt and dungarees, and told De-Felice to approach him. DeFelice drove up to the park in her unmarked vehicle, and saw only one person in the park, a man who fit the description she had been given. DeFelice was wearing a one-way radio which permitted the other VSCU officers, including Loeicero, to hear what she said and what others in close proximity said to her.

DeFelice pulled up to the edge of the park and looked at the man. The man approached her vehicle and said “What’s up?” DeFelice said “I want one”, referring to one package of crack cocaine, to which the man responded: “I only have 20s, and you have to get out of your car.” The man then turned around and walked back towards the bench where he had been sitting when DeFelice arrived. At about 6:40 p.m., DeFelice got out of her car and followed the man to the bench, where she gave him twenty dollars and he gave her a substance which was later determined to be crack cocaine. During this transaction, Loeicero was near the park in the surveillance van, approximately 40-70 feet away from the park bench at which the transaction took place. Loeicero saw the man he identified as Silberberg approach DeFelice in her car, and saw that he was the only man in the park. Loeicero did not, however, actually witness the sale of drugs by the man to DeFelice because DeFelice was out of his line of sight once she followed the man into the park.

After purchasing the drugs, DeFelice got back into her car and left the area to meet with the other VSCU officers working on the undercover assignment. DeFel-ice turned the drugs over to Loeicero. The officers decided that DeFelice should go back to make another purchase from the same man. 2 At about 6:50 p.m., De-Felice drove back to the park, and pulled into a parking lot behind an abandoned building near the park. The man who had sold her the drugs approached DeFelice in the car and sold her another twenty dollars worth of crack cocaine. At that point, DeFelice started to drive out of the parking lot, but stopped and pulled back up to the man just a few seconds later. The *163 man again approached the car and asked DeFelice if something was wrong. She said no, and asked for “another one”. The man sold her another twenty dollars worth of crack cocaine.

On or about September 24, 1996 and October 21, 1996, Locicero prepared affidavits in support of an arrest warrant identifying Erie Silberberg as the man who sold crack cocaine to DeFelice on August 1, 1996. 3 An arrest warrant was issued for Silberberg sometime after the second application was submitted. In or about February 1997, Silberberg, who was on probation for a prior conviction (which was not drug related) checked in with his probation officer and was informed that he had two outstanding warrants from the VSCU. Silberberg contacted Locicero and asked about the warrants; Locicero told Silberberg that he should turn himself in. At that time, Silberberg said: “Why? I don’t live over there. I live in New Haven. ... I didn’t do it.” Doc. # 106, Ex. 2 at 27. Silberberg turned himself in to the VSCU on or about February 18, 1997 and was arrested on the two warrants issued as a result of the events on August 1,1996. Silberberg was released after his arrest on a promise to appear; no bond was required. Silberberg claims that Locicero arranged for him to be released on only a promise to appear in order to persuade Silberberg to cooperate with the VSCU in an undercover investigation. Locicero denies any involvement in the decision to release Silberberg on a promise to appear, and claims that he did not meet with Sil-berberg at all until after he had been released on the promise to appear.

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Bluebook (online)
186 F. Supp. 2d 157, 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3492, 2002 WL 272240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/silberberg-v-lynberg-ctd-2002.