THOMPKINS v. MCKEESPORT POLICE DEPARTMENT

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 31, 2025
Docket2:24-cv-00008
StatusUnknown

This text of THOMPKINS v. MCKEESPORT POLICE DEPARTMENT (THOMPKINS v. MCKEESPORT POLICE DEPARTMENT) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
THOMPKINS v. MCKEESPORT POLICE DEPARTMENT, (W.D. Pa. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA COURTNEY THOMPKINS, et al., ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) 2:24-cv-00008 v. ) ) MCKEESPORT POLICE DEPARTMENT, ) et al., ) ) Defendants. OPINION Mark R. Hornak, Chief United States District Judge This case focuses on events alleged to have occurred in the City of McKeesport, Pennsylvania, over several days in December 2020, when law enforcement was seeking to apprehend one or more individuals who they believed were involved in the shooting of a police officer. The Plaintiffs have already once amended their Complaint, and the First Amended Complaint (“FAC”), ECF No. 21, is the operative pleading from their side of the caption. The Defendants are various law enforcement agencies and adjacent individuals: the City of McKeesport and its Police Department; several individuals who held positions with the Department at the time of the events in question ranging from Chief to Patrol Officer; Allegheny County (PA), where McKeesport is situated, and its police department, and the then- Superintendent of the Allegheny County Police Department (“ACPD”); a former McKeesport Police Officer who had moved on to the Office of the Pennsylvania Attorney General; and an array of unnamed “John Doe” and “Jane Doe” Defendants. All named Defendants have filed some sort of Motion pursuant to Rule 12 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure to dismiss claims for improper service and failure to state a claim. (ECF Nos. 27, 29, 31, 33.) Several defendants also move to strike certain material they say is irrelevant or prejudicial from the FAC. (ECF No. 27.) The Motions are all briefed, both in support and in

opposition. (ECF Nos. 28, 30, 32, 34, 38.) The matters are therefore ripe for disposition. I. Factual Background1 On December 20, 2020, the McKeesport Police sought to arrest Koby Lee Francis. Mr. Francis allegedly shot a police officer and fled the scene. The Plaintiffs in this case allege that in the course of the search for Mr. Francis, various McKeesport and Allegheny County police officers violated their constitutional rights in several different ways. Courtney Thompkins is a Black resident of McKeesport. On December 20, 2020, her domestic partner was stopped in his car near their home by police officers who displayed their guns. When Ms. Thompkins opened her front door, she was allegedly confronted by police in tactical gear with guns out, who allegedly demanded to enter her home. Four police officers, out

of more than ten alleged to be surrounding her home, entered and searched the home. The officers allegedly continued to train their weapons on Ms. Thompkins until she brought that fact up with a superior officer who directed them to lower their guns. Ms. Thompkins says she was not presented with a search warrant and did not know why the police wanted to search her home. Ms. Thompkins’ partner was detained by Brenda Sawyer, who was apparently well known as the first Black female police officer in McKeesport but was no longer on the force. Ms. Sawyer eventually told Ms. Thompkins’ partner that he was free to leave but could not go back in the home, and then Ms. Sawyer entered the home. Ms. Thompkins alleges she has a white neighbor

1 These facts are taken from the First Amended Complaint. (ECF No. 21.). For these purposes, the Court is obligated to treat them as accurate so long as they are plausible. with a closer connection to the suspect whose home was not searched in the same manner as Ms. Thompkins’ home was. Ezra Dixon is also a Black resident of McKeesport. Mr. Dixon was driving on December 20, 2020, and turned his car to avoid the traffic resulting from a police roadblock. A police car

pulled him over and officers asked to search the car. One of the police officers, Dante Diberadin, alleged that he smelled cannabis and asked Mr. Dixon and his passengers for identification. Mr. Dixon refused to provide identification and refused to consent to a search of the car. Mr. Diberadin allegedly said, “I’ll smash your fucking face in this car and get what I want, and nothing is going to happen to me.” Mr. Diberadin and another officer then searched the car and conducted a pat-down search of Mr. Dixon. Mr. Dixon then provided his identification, apparently because he felt it was the only way to conclude the interaction. A superior police officer looked up Mr. Dixon’s identification after Mr. Diberadin claimed Mr. Dixon had outstanding warrants. When the police found no outstanding warrants, Mr. Dixon and his passengers were allowed to leave the scene of the stop. The involved police officers allegedly

followed their car to Mr. Dixon’s home. Kim Neal is also a Black resident of McKeesport. She is Mr. Francis’ mother. In the days following the shooting, at least seven officers from the McKeesport and Allegheny County Police allegedly surrounded her house and several trained guns on the home. Ms. Neal refused to consent to a search of her home. Ms. Sawyer stepped slightly inside the door of Ms. Neal’s home and said the police did not need a warrant to search the house. Allegedly believing that Ms. Sawyer was still a local police officer, and because she was told that a warrant was unnecessary and she was afraid given the guns and police presence, Ms. Neal allowed the search. During that time, several officers stayed outside and kept their guns trained on Ms. Neal. In the next few days, Ms. Neal and her family were followed, questioned, and searched by police, but never shown a search warrant or a warrant for their arrest. Ms. Neal alleges that there were a number of baseless traffic stops, including one where police jumped out from behind bushes, surrounded the cars, “approached screaming with guns drawn” and pointed their

guns at her head. Police officers allegedly yanked her young son from her car, then cuffed and detained him while Ms. Neal yelled “That’s not Koby [Francis]” and “You have the wrong person.” They then pointed their guns into the car and looked inside. The Neals were ultimately allowed to leave without the police finding anything of interest. Ms. Neal’s husband, who is white, was allegedly not pulled over at any time during the manhunt, even though he left from the same house every day. On another day, Ms. Neal arrived back at her home around 8:00 pm to find police with guns drawn who blocked her from entering the house. She refused to allow them to enter without a warrant. This went on for hours until Ms. Neal’s son gave the police his house key. The police allegedly searched the home (without a warrant) for several hours, then left a spotlight shining

through the window for another hour. The Plaintiffs say that the warrantless searches were driven by racial bias, were part of custom and practice of the police department Defendants, and that the named supervisory police officers directed, condoned, and encouraged that policy and its implementation. The Plaintiffs further say that the decision-makers in McKeesport and Allegheny County, including the named police officer Defendants, made a deliberate choice to engage in racially biased and warrantless searches. Finally, they say that Allegheny County and the ACPD provided inadequate training on appropriate search tactics and use of force. II. Motion to Strike Various McKeesport-related Defendants move to strike references to an array of newspaper and other media reports, minutes of a McKeesport City Council meeting, a “scorecard” from a non-governmental organization with that organization’s assessment of arrest

statistics in the City of McKeesport, and a papers relative to a lawsuit in state court about the conduct of City Council meetings in McKeesport.

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