Stockton v. City of Freeport, Texas

147 F. Supp. 2d 642, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6556, 2001 WL 531199
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedMay 15, 2001
DocketCIV. A. G-00-744
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 147 F. Supp. 2d 642 (Stockton v. City of Freeport, Texas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stockton v. City of Freeport, Texas, 147 F. Supp. 2d 642, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6556, 2001 WL 531199 (S.D. Tex. 2001).

Opinion

ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANTS’ MOTIONS TO DISMISS

KENT, District Judge.

This case involves alleged deprivations of Plaintiffs’ rights guaranteed by the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. Now before the Court are the Motions to Dismiss for Failure to State a Claim urged by both Defendant City of Freeport (“City”) and Defendant Brazosport Independent School District (“Brazosport I.S.D.”). For the reasons set forth in more detail below, Defendants’ Motions are GRANTED.

I. BACKGROUND

Solely according to the Plaintiffs 1 , in the spring of 1999, Plaintiffs Jeremy Douglas Hill, Lucas Gallagher and Courtney Cours 2 attended Brazosport High School (“School”) in Freeport, Texas. Each was a sophomore. None knew each other well, although they did eat lunch together and seemingly traveled in the same circles. Then a series of events transpired that brought these three students together in the lawsuit now extant in this Court.

On April 27, 1999, it is alleged that fourteen students at the School were confronted by officers from the Freeport Police Department. These students, including Plaintiffs, were frisked, handcuffed and led out of the School building. The officers placed the Plaintiffs in police cars, by which they were transported to the Free-port municipal building, which houses the local municipal court. During this process, the police officers allegedly directed profane language at Plaintiffs. Neither officers nor School officials articulated any reasons for the detention. Moreover, the police threatened the students with immediate imprisonment if they did not capitulate to the officers’ authority; threatening to place the students in the municipal jail where they would suffer mightily at the hands of the facility’s resident population. No students, however, were actually *644 placed in jail cells. Instead, the police ordered that the students remain in the courtroom of the municipal building, upon threat of five year prison terms for leaving. These confrontations and subsequent detentions each took place without a warrant.

After spending more than one hour in the courtroom, the students were told to telephone their parents and tell them to come to down to the municipal building. Eventually, the students’ parents arrived. The parents were told to sit and wait with their children in the courtroom. Ultimately, after all the parents had arrived, the police and the School’s principal, Mr. Boone, hostily lectured both the students and their parents, after which all departed.

Only one of the Plaintiffs, Jeremy Douglas Hill (“Jeremy”), was ever questioned by the police. According to the Plaintiffs, this questioning only occurred because Jeremy’s mother insisted that she could wait no longer in the courtroom and had to leave with her son. Otherwise, Jeremy and his mother would simply have remained in the courtroom awaiting the same abusive lecture that the other students and parents shortly received. In his brief interrogation, a detective asked Jeremy if he knew how to make a bomb, Jeremy said no, after which the detective proceeded to explain how to do so. Thereafter, the detective went on to inform Jeremy that he knew Jeremy had done nothing wrong. The detective further apprised Jeremy that this entire exercise had been a show of force, intended to impress upon the students that they were being monitored by the authorities.

But as unfortunate as these affairs are, this entire incident at Brazosport High School occurred against the backdrop of an even more calamitous tapestry of events that has permeated American culture in recent years. Three days after two students at Columbine High took the lives of thirteen classmates, a threatening letter was found in the Brazosport High School computer room. The School suspected that a particular student had left the letter. This School knew that the suspect spent idle time at the same group of picnic tables at which the Plaintiffs and the other arrested students often congregated. This knowledge, even with little or no further connection, allegedly triggered the actions which led to the raid and detention of which Plaintiffs now complain.

Plaintiffs now allege that this confrontation and detention effected by the School, in conjunction with the local police, had no basis in the realities of who had or had not taken what actions at the School. According to the Plaintiffs, they, and the other arrested students, were singled out because they “hung out” at a particular set of picnic tables before classes and at the lunch horn*. Plaintiffs maintain that this information exposes this damaging charade as lacking probable cause or even reasonable suspicion, and that no one believed that the individual Plaintiffs posed a legitimate risk of danger to the School.

The morning after the raid, Mr. Boone, the principal, called a school-wide assembly to explain the prior day’s happenings. At this assembly, Mr. Boone pronounced the school free of terrorists and assured the students that all was safe. Mr. Boone further informed the student body that no one should bother the students who had been arrested the previous day, as these students had done nothing wrong. This admonition, however, has apparently had little effect.

Each of the Plaintiffs complains of harassment that began following their detention. For example, fellow students suggested invidiously that the Plaintiffs were contemplating a “Columbine-style” incident for the school. Jeremy twice received in-school suspension following his efforts to exonerate himself before the stu *645 dents in his geometry class. All the Plaintiffs allegedly began suffering sleeplessness and depression. Their school work suffered. Each became fearful of future arrest.

On May 5, 1999, in a state of confusion, agitation and fatigue, Jeremy fell asleep in a class, only to be aroused by a glass of water thrown upon his person by the teacher. 3 This led to riotous laughter, causing Jeremy further humiliation and embarrassment. After this incident, Jeremy’s mother scheduled a meeting with Mr. Boone. At this meeting, Mr. Boone told Jeremy’s mother, and Lucas Gallagher’s mother who was also present, that their children would be better off if they either transferred to a different school or began home schooling. 4 Indeed, Plaintiff Courtney Cours ultimately did leave the School, opting to pursue home schooling in lieu of facing the daily pressures brought on by her unrelenting peers.

Plaintiffs now contend that the actions of the City of Freeport police and School officials violated their rights guaranteed by the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. 5

II. DISCUSSION

A. Motion to Dismiss Standard,

When considering a motion to dismiss under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12

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Bluebook (online)
147 F. Supp. 2d 642, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6556, 2001 WL 531199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stockton-v-city-of-freeport-texas-txsd-2001.