Snyder v. City of Alexandria

870 F. Supp. 672, 1994 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17230, 1994 WL 673783
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedNovember 30, 1994
DocketCiv. A. 94-528-A
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 870 F. Supp. 672 (Snyder v. City of Alexandria) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snyder v. City of Alexandria, 870 F. Supp. 672, 1994 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17230, 1994 WL 673783 (E.D. Va. 1994).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

ELLIS, District Judge.

Walter T. Snyder, convicted of rape and other charges by a Virginia jury, spent nearly seven years in prison before being pardoned as a result of DNA tests that indicated his innocence. Snyder believes his conviction was not merely a regrettable error, but resulted instead from police misconduct that violated his common-law and constitutional rights. Accordingly, he sues here, under a number of federal and state law theories, to recover damages from the City of Alexandria and three of the City’s police officers. Treated here are the issues raised by defendants’ threshold dismissal motion.

I 1

On October 28, 1985, the Police Department of the City of Alexandria assigned Detective Barry Shiftic to investigate a complaint of rape, sodomy, and burglary received that day. The victim described her assailant as a black male who wore red shorts, a grey hooded sweatshirt, and white tennis shoes. In the first of many conflicts between Snyder’s and the police officers’ versions of these events, Snyder alleges that the victim, at this time, also informed Shiftic that she could not see the man’s face, because the room was too *676 dark. According to Snyder, Shiftic withheld this statement from Snyder’s defense counsel.

After interviewing the victim, Shiftic canvassed the neighborhood to obtain information about the crime. He spoke to two neighbors who had seen Snyder, a black male who lived across the street from the victim, in his (Snyder’s) front yard several hours prior to the rape. According to Snyder, the two witnesses reported to Shiftic that Snyder was not wearing a shirt at the time, and Shiftic unsuccessfully pressured the two witnesses to change their statements to fit more closely the victim’s description of her assailant as wearing a grey hooded sweatshirt. 2 On November 8, 1985, Shiftic obtained a warrant to search Snyder’s home, stating in the supporting affidavit that the witnesses had seen Snyder wearing a grey hooded sweatshirt, and that Snyder had admitted that he owned such a sweatshirt. Snyder denies that statement, and no such sweatshirt was ever found.

Also on November 8, Shiftic met with the victim and showed her photographs of several individuals. She tentatively selected Snyder’s .photo, although she noted she was not certain he was her assailant. Three days later, the victim observed Snyder washing his car in his driveway. At Snyder’s trial, the victim testified that this observation was insignificant to her at the time, and that she did not report it to the police until after learning from the police that Snyder lived across the street from her house and was a suspect. In sharp contrast to the victim’s testimony, Shiftic testified at trial that the victim called the police immediately after seeing Snyder washing his car, and that she had not previously been told Snyder’s name, where he lived, or that he was a suspect.

On January 29, 1986, Snyder went to the Alexandria police station to retrieve clothing-seized pursuant to the search warrant in November. Shiftic refused to return the clothing, indicating that it was evidence in an ongoing investigation. The next day, Snyder returned to the station seeking return of his clothing. Shiftic asked Officer George Burn-ham to escort Snyder to the building’s lobby, and wait there with him. Shiftic then telephoned the victim and asked her to come to the station where, upon arrival, she identified Snyder as her assailant in a “show-up,” a face to face confrontation with the accused.

Shiftic, Burnham, and Officer Russell Peverall then questioned Snyder about the rape. Although Snyder alleges that he consistently maintained his innocence, the three police officers contend that Snyder confessed to committing the rape. After the officers arrested Snyder and handcuffed him to his chair in the interrogation room, Shiftic removed a number of hairs from Snyder’s head. When Snyder blew the hairs off the table, Snyder claims Shiftic struck him in the face. At one point, Snyder attempted to leave the room, still handcuffed to the chair. Several officers restrained him and, in the process, Snyder suffered a broken nose and an injured shoulder. After Snyder was subdued, Shiftic pulled down Snyder’s pants and removed a pubic hair. Snyder claims that the officers then moved him, with his pants at his ankles, to a public area of the police headquarters.

Snyder pled not guilty to charges of rape, cunnilingus, anal intercourse, aggravated sexual battery, and breaking and entering. Snyder raised several objections to the evidence presented against him, including (i) a motion to exclude evidence of his alleged confession of January 30, 1986, because he was not given Miranda warnings, (ii) a motion to suppress all evidence seized from his house pursuant to the November 1985 search warrant, on the ground that there was no probable cause for the warrant, (iii) a motion to suppress the victim’s January 30, 1986 “show up” identification, on the ground that the procedure employed was unconstitutionally suggestive, and (iv) a motion to suppress the head and pubic hairs taken on January 30, 1986, as the results of an unreasonable seizure. The state trial court ruled against Snyder on each point.

*677 On June 25, 1986, a jury in the Alexandria Circuit Court convicted Snyder on all charges, 3 and the court sentenced him to forty-five years in prison. Snyder appealed each of the trial court’s evidentiary rulings to the Virginia Court of Appeals, but that court denied each of his contentions, upholding the conviction and the sentence. Snyder v. Virginia, No. 0300-87-4 (Va.Ct.App. June 5, 1990); Snyder v. Virginia, No. 0300-87-4 (Va.Ct.App. Dec. 15, 1989). The Supreme Court of Virginia refused Snyder’s petition for appeal.

Snyder remained in prison for nearly seven years. In May 1992, state officials agreed to release evidence from Snyder’s case for DNA testing. On October 28,1992, a private laboratory in Boston returned test results indicating that Snyder did not commit the rape for which he was convicted. Additional testing confirmed that result. Thereafter, armed with these test results, the Commonwealth’s Attorney joined Snyder’s counsel in requesting a pardon from Virginia Governor L. Douglas Wilder. Governor Wilder granted Snyder' an absolute pardon on April 23, 1993, explaining that, while he found no fault with the prosecution or the jury’s verdict as rendered on the evidence available at the time, the DNA test results “place a cloud upon the verdict and raise a doubt concerning the ultimate issue of whether Walter Tyrone Snyder, Jr. is guilty of the crime for which he was convicted.” 4 Snyder was released from prison on the day the Governor signed the pardon.

Subsequent to his release from prison, Snyder filed a complaint with the Alexandria Police Department concerning the conduct of the officers who investigated his case. In February 1994, the Chief of Police, Charles E.

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Bluebook (online)
870 F. Supp. 672, 1994 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17230, 1994 WL 673783, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snyder-v-city-of-alexandria-vaed-1994.