Stokes v. Faber

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 10, 2021
Docket2:19-cv-01642
StatusUnknown

This text of Stokes v. Faber (Stokes v. Faber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stokes v. Faber, (E.D. La. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA

CRYSTAL STOKES, CIVIL ACTION INDIVIDUALLY AND ON BEHALF OF HER MINOR SON L.B.

VERSUS NO: 19-1642

GUY FABER, ET AL. SECTION: "A" (3) ORDER AND REASONS The following motions are before the Court: Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (Rec. Doc. 76) filed by the plaintiffs, Crystal Stokes and Lennon Betancourt; Motion for Summary Judgment (Rec. Doc. 77) filed by the defendants, Sergeant Billy Matranga, Captain David Malveaux, and Sheriff Joseph P. Lopinto, in his capacity as Sheriff of Jefferson Parish. The motions, submitted on January 20, 2021, are before the Court on the briefs without oral argument.1 I. BACKGROUND This complaint arises out of an incident that occurred at a public high school in Jefferson Parish. In the fall of 2018, Lennon Betancourt was a fifteen-year old 10th grader at Grace King High School in Metairie, Louisiana. In February 2018, Lennon was formally arrested by the Jefferson Parish Sheriff’s Office for terrorizing in violation of La. R.S. § 14:40.1.2 Lennon was suspended from Grace King and expelled. The criminal

1 Oral argument has been requested but the Court is not persuaded that oral argument would be helpful in light of the issues presented and the parties’ thorough memoranda.

2 La. R.S. § 14:40.1, entitled Terrorizing, states:

A. Terrorizing is the intentional communication of information that the commission of a crime of violence is imminent or in progress or that a circumstance dangerous to human life exists or is about to exist, with the intent of causing members of the general public to be in sustained fear for their safety; or causing evacuation of a building, a public structure, or a facility of charge was eventually dismissed. Crystal Stokes is Lennon’s mother. Ms. Stokes filed this action on behalf of herself and Lennon to recover for the wrongful arrest and school discipline that Lennon was subjected to in light of the terrorizing charge and the events giving rise to it. In earlier pleadings and rulings Lennon had been referred to simply as “L.B.” given that he

was a minor. After reaching the age of majority, Lennon moved to replace Stokes as plaintiff for the claims that she had brought as his representative. The Court granted that motion and now Lennon and his mother are co-plaintiffs; she remains as plaintiff on her own claims.3 (Rec. Doc. 63, Order granting motion to substitute party). Plaintiffs describe the events giving rise to this action as follows:4 On or about the morning of February 21, 2018, Lennon was in his second period

transportation; or causing other serious disruption to the general public.

B. It shall be an affirmative defense that the person communicating the information provided for in Subsection A of this Section was not involved in the commission of a crime of violence or creation of a circumstance dangerous to human life and reasonably believed his actions were necessary to protect the welfare of the public.

C. Whoever commits the offense of terrorizing shall be fined not more than fifteen thousand dollars or imprisoned with or without hard labor for not more than fifteen years, or both.

3 Now that Lennon has reached the age of majority and joined this lawsuit as a co-plaintiff to pursue his own claims, Ms. Stokes has no claims under federal law because all of the alleged constitutional violations in this case were premised on violations of Lennon’s rights. Therefore, to the extent that Ms. Stokes has claims to assert, those claims could only arise under state law. In the motions that the Court has before it today, neither side has alluded to Ms. Stokes’s claims much less briefed the viability of those claims but both sides seem to recognize that if Lennon’s claims cannot survive summary judgment then neither can his mother’s because her claims are derivative of Lennon’s.

4 This factual background is taken in large part from the pleadings, which have proven to be consistent with the deposition testimony of record. health class at Grace King High School when his teacher, defendant Guy Farber,5 began a discussion with the students about the recent high school shootings elsewhere in the country. Mr. Farber stated to his students that the stereotypical high school shooter was a white male. Lennon, a male, was the only white person in the classroom of approximately 25 students and the only person who fit Mr. Farber’s description of the

stereotypical high school shooter. The other students began to make jokes about Lennon fitting Mr. Farber’s description. For instance, several students jokingly asked Lennon to spare them from being shot. Lennon went along with the jokes and told them they would be okay. The entire class, including Mr. Farber, laughed at those jokes. One student, continuing the joke about Lennon fitting Mr. Farber’s description of the stereotypical high school shooter, got out of his desk, walked to the front of the classroom, drew a large caricature of Lennon on the white board affixed to the front of the classroom, and wrote the words “Future School Shooter” in large letters above the caricature. Another student asked the drawing student to change the hair on the caricature to match Lennon’s hair more closely. Several students asked Lennon to pose next to the drawing so that they could take photographs. Mr. Farber observed the student

draw the caricature and words above it and heard the students ask Lennon to pose next to the drawings so that they could take photographs. Mr. Farber took no steps to discourage his students’ actions and instead laughed along with the students at the drawings on the whiteboard. In fact, Lennon testified that Mr. Farber told him to “get it over with,” in other words to just acquiesce in allowing the other students to take pictures so that the whiteboard could be erased. (Rec. Doc. 77-5, Betancourt deposition at 26).

5 The case caption does not suffer from a typographical error. Mr. Farber was incorrectly named in the original complaint as “Guy Faber.” To go along with the students and Mr. Farber’s joke about him fitting Mr. Farber’s description of the stereotypical high school shooter, Lennon complied with the students’ request, got out of his desk, walked to the front of the classroom, and posed next to the caricature, while several of the other students took photographs with their cellphones. Mr. Farber observed all this conduct yet took no action to stop or even

dissuade the students. Again, Mr. Farber laughed along with his students when Lennon posed next to the caricature while the students photographed Lennon. Lennon walked around the class giving hand gestures, such as “fist bumps” to the students in response to their jests asking Lennon to spare them. Mr. Farber observed all of this and laughed along with his class.6 The following morning, Lennon went to his first period class. The school’s dean of students came to Lennon’s classroom and asked him to come to the principal’s office. At the office, he met with Sergeant Billy Matranga of the Jefferson Parish Sheriff’s Office (another defendant herein), who was wearing a police uniform and badge, as well as carrying a firearm. Sgt. Matranga was assigned to be present daily at Grace King High School as part of the Police on Campus program. He had an office on the school

grounds. Sgt. Matranga restrained Lennon with handcuffs and placed him in the rear of a marked police vehicle parked outside of the school. Sgt. Matranga then brought Lennon to the Jefferson Parish Sheriff’s Office Detective Bureau in Harvey, Louisiana where he was placed in a holding cell.

6 The Court has reviewed the interview that police conducted of Lennon’s co-defendant, the student who drew the caricature on the whiteboard. He was not quite as certain as Lennon that Mr.

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