Sparrow v. Goodman

361 F. Supp. 566, 1973 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12479
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. North Carolina
DecidedJuly 31, 1973
Docket2988
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 361 F. Supp. 566 (Sparrow v. Goodman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sparrow v. Goodman, 361 F. Supp. 566, 1973 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12479 (W.D.N.C. 1973).

Opinion

McMILLAN, District Judge.

I.

PRELIMINARY STATEMENT

Plaintiffs brought this action against the federal and local defendants, alleging that they were unconstitutionally arrested and assaulted, and excluded from “Billy Graham Day” at the Charlotte Coliseum, on October 15, 1971. Hearings were conducted; evidence (six hundred pages) was taken; motions were made, briefs were filed; the case is before the court on claims of executive privilege and of Fifth Amendment privilege, and on motions for summary judgment and motions to dismiss.

This opinion and order attempts to recite the evidence, to reach factual findings, and to decide the issues presently existing among the parties, arising from a sometimes amusing but essentially grave and alarming series of events.

II.

SUMMARY OF EVIDENCE AND FINDINGS OF FACT

A. BILLY GRAHAM DAY IN CHARLOTTE.

October 15, 1971, was “Billy Graham Day.”

In tribute to Charlotte's famous native son, the Coliseum, seating 13,000 or more, was leased by the Chamber of Commerce; a holiday (later to be made up by Saturday classes) was declared for Mecklenburg’s 80,000 public school children by the Board of Education; free tickets (printed, for ordinary guests, and engraved, for those who sit above the salt) were given out; United States Senators, Governors, and other distinguished political personages were invited and attended.

President Richard M. Nixon, a friend of Dr. Graham, agreed to come and did come.

The Secret Service, and others, wheeled into action. Advance men were dispatched to Charlotte to make arrangements for presidential security. Numerous ushers were appointed by the Chamber of Commerce. A ten-mile route was plotted for the presidential caravan from the airport to the Coliseum. Conferences were held among the Secret Service and local law enforcement authorities, particularly Chief of Police Jake Goodman and his aides of the Charlotte City Police, and the Mecklenburg County Police, the State Highway Patrol, the F.B.I., and others.

The Secret Service called for manpower, and made “unreasonable demands” upon the Charlotte City Police and other law enforcement agencies. According to the local police authorities, the local police for the duration of the President’s visit, made themselves unpaid and cooperative servants of the Secret Service. The gathering and the celebration were accomplished without untoward event or disruption. The President and Dr. Graham appeared and spoke acceptably to the duly admitted group inside the Coliseum. So far as the record shows, all was harmony inside; there is no evidence that any dissenting voice, sign, banner or gesture marred the occasion.

At the entrances, and outside, it was a different story.

B. THE CHARLOTTE COLISEUM.

The Charlotte Coliseum and the adjacent Auditorium are owned by the citizens of Charlotte through the Charlotte Coliseum-Auditorium Authority. The court takes judicial notice that the Coliseum was built through municipal bond funds in the early 1950’s; that it is used for ice hockey, basketball, circuses, rock and roll, hard rock groups, *569 school commencements, baccalaureate sermons, Billy Graham crusades, presidential campaign rallies and other such functions. The Authority once had a policy of selective censorship of plays and other events, but since the case of “Hair” (Southeastern Promotions v. Charlotte, 333 F.Supp. 345 (W.D.N.C.1971)), there have been no restrictions other than the criminal laws upon the kind of program that is allowable. The Coliseum is not a private hall. Billy Graham Day — a school holiday with the President on hand — was not a private affair.

The Coliseum seats about 13,000, has a 367-foot circular dome (once the largest in the world), and sits on the south side of Independence Boulevard in Charlotte. The main entrance is on the south side facing the large parking lot. This entrance is a rectangular, glass-enclosed area, perhaps fifty feet square (R. 567), whose doors open south onto the ramp leading to the parking lot. A great deal of the action of the day took place inside this entrance.

The Coliseum generally, according to the Secret Service, was a “secured” area. However, the gates per se were not part of the “secured” area! People came in through the doors holding their tickets. A few feet inside the door was another “unsecured” area where Ernie Helms, a person of muscle and dimensions adequate to play tackle for the Washington Redskins, was taking up tickets. (On this record Helms’ credentials are unknown except for a Charlotte address and membership in the Veterans of Foreign Wars; he was not a member of the Secret Service nor was he admitted to be an agent of the Secret Service. When interrogated by deposition he took the Fifth Amendment and refused to testify! (R. 572))

The boundaries of the “unsecured” area were not fixed. Some of the personnel who manned it are poorly identified. It seems to have varied in size and location from time to time. It reminds one of the description in the play, ‘‘'Parl-J.oey,” of Nate’s roving crap game —“the oldest established permanent floating crap game in New York.” This “unsecured” area, inside the wisecured doors, was the open area where tickets were taken up, and where bottles and pennants were taken from visitors, and in which were carried out the numerous decisions to exclude people from the Coliseum after their tickets had been taken from them.

Those chosen for exclusion were subjected to the experience of having their valid tickets falsely and publicly pronounced “counterfeit” and then were ushered or shoved or carried bodily along a corridor of ropes and barrels and out another nearby door.

C. THE [NOT SO FUNNY] THINGS THAT HAPPENED TO THE PLAINTIFFS ON THE WAY TO THE COLISEUM.

1.

AS IT LOOKED TO THE PLAINTIFFS.

Marvin Ray Sparrow (R. 6 through 37), plaintiff, was an apprentice lather. He went to the Coliseum conservatively dressed in a blue shirt, tweed jacket and Schiaparelli tie. His hair was shoulder length. He was a member of an organization called the “Red Hornet May Day Tribe,” an organization of young people to oppose, peacefully, the “imperialist policies” of the administration in Vietnam and also to oppose racism and sexism and the policies generally of the “ruling class.” The Red Hornets had met two or three times (R. 19), and planned to go to the Coliseum as a group with banners and signs indicating their dissent. They planned no violence and had no firearms and no weapons of any kind. Sparrow arrived at the Coliseum about one o’clock in the afternoon, visited with acquaintances outside, and then got in line to enter the main entrance door. He entered the door holding a proper ticket. A large man, wearing a “Marshal” arm band, later identified as Ernie Helms, told him to stand *570 aside. He was directed into an alleyway marked by ropes and barrels which led east along the glass south wall and back out the south side of the building. Sparrow inquired of Helms as to the meaning of this procedure, and was told to “Shut up and stand over to the side” (R. 9).

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Bluebook (online)
361 F. Supp. 566, 1973 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sparrow-v-goodman-ncwd-1973.