Switzer v. The Village of Glasford Illinois

CourtDistrict Court, C.D. Illinois
DecidedOctober 26, 2021
Docket1:18-cv-01421
StatusUnknown

This text of Switzer v. The Village of Glasford Illinois (Switzer v. The Village of Glasford Illinois) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, C.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Switzer v. The Village of Glasford Illinois, (C.D. Ill. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT CENTRAL DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS

GREGORY A. SWITZER, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) Case No. 18-cv-1421-JES-JEH ) THE VILLAGE OF GLASFORD, ) ILLINOIS and ANDREW BURGESS, ) ) Defendants. )

ORDER AND OPINION

This matter is now before the Court on Defendants’ Motion (Doc. 29) for Summary Judgment, Plaintiff’s Response (Doc. 39), and Defendants’ Reply (Doc. 40). Subsequent to briefing the summary judgment motion, the Court granted Defendants’ agreed motion for leave to file supplemental briefs in light of the Seventh Circuit’s decision in Smith v. City of Chicago. The parties have filed their respective briefs (Docs. 43, 44) and this matter is now ripe for adjudication. For the reasons set forth below, Defendants’ Motion (Doc. 29) for Summary Judgment is granted. BACKGROUND This case involves the arrest of Plaintiff, Gregory Switzer, by Officer Andrew Burgess during the early morning hours of October 1, 2015. Prior to his arrest, Switzer arrived home and noticed the sound and smell of gas emanating from a gas line between his house and a neighbor’s. Switzer called 911 and Officer Burgess responded. After ensuring the gas line was shut off, Officer Burgess investigated the cause of the broken gas line and determined Switzer hit the gas line with his vehicle when driving home intoxicated. Switzer was arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol. The charges were later dismissed by the state court based on a purported lack of probable cause, and that decision was affirmed by an Illinois appellate court. The issues currently before the Court are whether Officer Burgess had probable cause to arrest Switzer and whether Plaintiff’s Fourth Amendment claim is timely. Because no dispute of material fact exists as to whether Officer Burgess has probable cause to arrest Plaintiff, the Court

grants Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment. Further, because Plaintiff’s detention ended more than two years prior to him filing suit, the statute of limitations bars Plaintiff’s claims. The following facts are undisputed by the parties unless otherwise noted. Around 11:00 p.m. on September 30, 2015, Switzer called 911 to report a gas leak on 7th Street in Glasford, Illinois. He stated to the 911 operator that a “gas main just got hit.” He did not answer the operator’s question of whether the gas line had been hit by a vehicle. Officer Burgess was dispatched to the scene and his squad car video camera and microphone were activated. When Officer Burgess arrived, he saw the lit taillights of a truck parked near where the severed gas line was located. Burgess further noted Switzer’s presence outside in the front yard of the home next to the one with the broken gas line. Burgess told Switzer he needed to evacuate

the area, to which Switzer responded by indicating he was the one who discovered the gas leak when he arrived home from work and called 911. While speaking with Switzer, Burgess noticed Switzer’s heavily slurred speech, glassy, bloodshot, heavy eyes, trouble balancing, a smell of alcohol from his mouth and person, and stumbling while walking. Officer Burgess knew from his training and experience that these observations were consistent with intoxication. Switzer told Burgess the truck behind the house was his and he had arrived home 10 to 15 minutes earlier. He elaborated that “I pulled up in the backyard, and that shit’s fucking blown.” Officer Burgess next informed Switzer that he had seen the lit taillights of Switzer’s truck when he arrived, to which Switzer replied that the truck was off but that he “pulled in” and it “takes a few minutes” for the lights to go off. Soon thereafter, the fire department arrived to attempt to shut the gas line off. When Switzer began to walk toward the gas leak, Officer Burgess had to stop him from trying to turn the gas line off himself. Once the fire department turned off the gas line, a firefighter told Burgess it looked like someone had hit the gas meter causing it to

tear off the pipe. After the gas had dissipated, Burgess inspected the damage to the gas meter along with members of the fire department and concluded someone had driven through the area that night and hit the gas meter causing the line to break. Additionally, Burgess and the fire department inspected the tires on Switzer’s truck and determined the tire tracks leading from the gas meter matched the tread of Switzer’s truck tires, and that Switzer’s truck had marks and scratches on it consistent with hitting the gas meter. Next, Officer Burgess asked Switzer how much he had to drink that night, to which Switzer responded “enough.” Switzer then reiterated his prior statement that he “pulled down the driveway, and the fucking shit was going off, and [he] called [911].” When confronted with information that the tire tracks near the gas line appeared to match Switzer’s truck tires, Switzer

responded that he had helped his neighbor move a refrigerator days earlier and “that shit stays.” Switzer then repeated “I got home, and it was hissing, and called 911 right away.” Officer Burgess again asked Switzer where he was coming from before he arrived home, to which he replied, “I was coming from wherever the fuck I was coming from.” Switzer then stated he “pulled in the back about two hours ago.” After Burgess confronts Switzer with his earlier statement that he was coming home from work, Switzer denied he made such a statement. Switzer then told Burgess the gas line was not broken when he left for work in the morning and that he had arrived home two hours before calling 911. He then told Burgess he arrived home one hour before calling 911. Next, Officer Burgess again asked Switzer where he had come from when he arrived home, and Switzer said he and his neighbor Jeff (later identified as Jeff Ganieany) “went out for a little bit,” to a bar. Burgess then asked if Switzer had come home by himself, and Switzer stated he had. When asked if Jeff had been in the truck with Switzer when he arrived home, Switzer

stated he was not. Burgess then detained Switzer in his squad car to continue investigating the scene. He took pictures of the paint transfer between the truck and gas meter, damage to the exterior of the home, damage to the truck consistent with it hitting the gas meter, and the tire tracks. When Burgess returned to the squad car, Switzer told Burgess “one of the these kids in the neighborhood” hit the gas line “with a four-wheeler” but could not provide further information. Burgess then asked for Jeff’s phone number, but Switzer stated he did not have it and did not “hang out at all” with Jeff. Burgess then reminded Switzer he previously stated he went to the bar with Jeff, but Switzer insisted that was a lie. He also told Burgess “I pulled in, and I fucking called you guys. I pulled in, it was fucking spewing. That’s what it is. It is what it is.” Switzer stated “I pulled down the alley.” An Ameren employee called to the scene to fix the

gas line told Burgess he could see tire marks and it looked to him like a tire hit the gas meter. Officer Burgess called for backup to assist him with having Switzer perform a field sobriety test as Switzer had become belligerent. Burgess removed Switzer from the squad car to have him perform field sobriety tests. Asked again how much he had to drink, Switzer responded “one beer.” He further told Burgess “you did not see me driving, so I’m done.” After Switzer refused the field sobriety tests, he was placed under arrest. Switzer attempted to pull away from Burgess and had to be physically controlled by the officers present during his arrest. Switzer was then transported to the Peoria County Jail, where he provided a breath sample registering a 0.203 blood alcohol concentration. Switzer was subsequently charged with driving under the influence of alcohol.

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Bluebook (online)
Switzer v. The Village of Glasford Illinois, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/switzer-v-the-village-of-glasford-illinois-ilcd-2021.