Torres v. City of Los Angeles

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedAugust 25, 2008
Docket06-55817
StatusPublished

This text of Torres v. City of Los Angeles (Torres v. City of Los Angeles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Torres v. City of Los Angeles, (9th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

RAYMOND TORRES; MARIA ELVA  ALMADOR-TORRES, Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. No. 06-55817 CITY OF LOS ANGELES; LOS ANGELES POLICE DEPARTMENT;  D.C. No. CV-05-04171-RGK BRAD ROBERTS, LAPD Detective; JENNIFER HICKMAN, LAPD OPINION Detective; STEVE PARK, LAPD Detective; F. RAINS, LAPD Detective, Defendants-Appellees.  Appeal from the United States District Court for the Central District of California R. Gary Klausner, District Judge, Presiding

Argued and Submitted February 12, 2008—Pasadena, California

Filed August 26, 2008

Before: Betty B. Fletcher and N. Randy Smith, Circuit Judges, and Samuel P. King,* District Judge.

Opinion by Judge B. Fletcher

*The Honorable Samuel P. King, Senior United States District Judge for the District of Hawaii, sitting by designation.

11723 TORRES v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES 11727

COUNSEL

Nelson E. Brestoff (argued), Moskowitz, Brestoff, Winston & Blinderman, LLP, Valencia, California, Julia A. Follansbee, Follansbee & Associates, Bend, Oregon, for the plaintiffs- appellants.

Rockard J. Delgadillo, Janet G. Bogigian, Amy Jo Field (argued), Los Angeles City Attorney’s Office, Los Angeles, California, for the defendants-appellees.

OPINION

B. FLETCHER, Circuit Judge:

In 2004, plaintiff Raymond Torres, who was then 16 years old, was arrested, without a warrant, on charges of murder and attempted murder. After 162 days of incarceration, Torres was released when the district attorney dismissed the charges against him. Following his release, Torres and his mother (“Plaintiffs”) brought a civil rights action against the City of Los Angeles, the Los Angeles Police Department (“LAPD”), and four LAPD detectives (“Defendants”), seeking damages under both federal and state law. After granting summary judgment to the City of Los Angeles and the LAPD, the dis- trict court denied two of Plaintiffs’ motions in limine and, after all of the parties had presented their evidence to the jury, granted the remaining Defendants’ motion for judgment as a matter of law. Plaintiffs appeal the grant of the motion for judgment as a matter of law as well as the rulings on the motions in limine. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand. 11728 TORRES v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES I.

The charges leading to Torres’ arrest arose from a gang- related shooting in Los Angeles on August 11, 2004. On that day, Josue Santillan, a member of the Canoga Park Alabama street gang (“CPA gang”), was driving a car that contained four other passengers: Diana Hernandez, Santillan’s girl- friend, who was seated in the front right passenger seat; Joel Castaneda, who was seated in the back seat directly behind Hernandez; and two other persons, at least one of them male, who were also seated in the back seat.1 At one point Santillan drove by a park in the Reseda area, where, according to Her- nandez and other witnesses, the male passengers flashed gang hand signs and shouted challenges at members of the Reseda street gang who were in the park. Santillan then drove away, but the members of the Reseda gang gave chase in a car of their own. When the Reseda gang members’ car pulled along- side the car driven by Santillan, Castaneda fired several rounds from a semiautomatic pistol at the Reseda gang mem- bers’ car, killing the driver and wounding another passenger.

Detectives Roberts, Hickman, Park and Rains investigated the shooting. On August 25, 2004, two weeks after the shoot- ing, Detectives Roberts and Hickman questioned Hernandez about the shooting. Hernandez identified Santillan as the driver and Castaneda as the shooter, and both were subse- quently arrested. Hernandez also expressed her belief that all the male passengers were probably members of the CPA gang.

Detectives Roberts and Hickman asked Hernandez about 1 Hernandez, who was the detectives’ main source of information about the shooting, gave different accounts of who was in the car other than her- self, Santillan and Castaneda. At first she stated that only one other per- son, a male, was in the car; later she stated that two other persons were in the car, one male and one female; and later still she stated that only two other males were in the car. TORRES v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES 11729 the third male passenger who had been sitting directly behind Santillan. Hernandez told the detectives that she had never seen him before, that she did not know his name, and that she did not remember him well because she had not been paying attention to him. However, Hernandez was able to describe this third male passenger as Hispanic, 15 or 16 years old, with a complexion darker than hers, and very overweight. Her- nandez also stated that he had some hair. She further described him as having worn a white T-shirt, blue shorts, and white tennis shoes. Detective Roberts acknowledged at trial that Hernandez’s description was “too generic to go anywhere with it.”

On September 23, 2004, six weeks after the shooting, the detectives obtained several additional pieces of information in their investigation of the third male passenger, which led them to arrest Torres that same day.

First, Detective Hickman spoke to Danny Steinberg, a school police officer assigned to El Camino High School. Previously, Steinberg had been questioned by an LAPD Juve- nile Officer, Marie Lamar, about an outstanding suspect in a murder case. Officer Lamar had described the suspect as a short and heavy-set Hispanic male with a shaved head who was “dressed down gang-style.”2 Steinberg had informed Officer Lamar that her description matched a student at El Camino—Torres—and that Torres had recently begun hang- ing out with gang members at El Camino and had begun “dressing down as a gangster” and shaving his head. On Sep- tember 23, Steinberg repeated the same information to Detec- tive Hickman. There was conflicting testimony at trial, however, as to whether Steinberg also told Officer Lamar and Detective Hickman that Torres had “recently been jumped 2 The record does not reveal how Officer Lamar had come to believe that the third male passenger had a shaved head and was “dressed down gang- style.” 11730 TORRES v. CITY OF LOS ANGELES into the CPA gang,” i.e., that Torres had become a member of the gang.

Second, Detectives Hickman and Roberts spoke to an offi- cial at El Camino high school, Mark Pomerantz. Pomerantz gave the detectives two color photos of Torres, one older, in which Torres is shown with short dark hair, and the other taken that morning at the detectives’ request, in which Torres is shown with a shaven head. In addition, Pomerantz dis- cussed with the detectives a group photo of six young His- panic males—including Torres and Santillan—that Pomerantz had provided the LAPD a year earlier when it was investigat- ing Santillan in connection with another shooting of a Reseda gang member. The group photo had been taken by a teacher at a school event called “Melody of Words,” although Detec- tive Roberts testified at trial that he was unaware of that fact at the time of Torres’ arrest.

When Pomerantz originally provided the group photo he had informed the LAPD that two of the individuals in the photo (neither of them Torres) were members of the CPA gang. On September 23, Pomerantz told the detectives that Torres and Santillan were friends and hung out. In the group photo, Torres’ right hand is not visible and only part of one finger of his left hand is visible. Conflicting testimony was presented at trial as to whether Torres is making a gang sign with his left hand. However, Detectives Roberts and Park both testified that, at the time of Torres’ arrest, they were unaware one way or the other whether Torres was a member of the CPA gang.

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Torres v. City of Los Angeles, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/torres-v-city-of-los-angeles-ca9-2008.