Walker v. City of Wilmington

360 F. App'x 305
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJanuary 14, 2010
DocketNo. 08-4218
StatusPublished

This text of 360 F. App'x 305 (Walker v. City of Wilmington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker v. City of Wilmington, 360 F. App'x 305 (3d Cir. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

STAPLETON, Circuit Judge:

This is an action brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and state law alleging that the City of Wilmington, Delaware, and Wilmington Police Detective Michael R. Lawson, Jr., (collectively, “Defendants”) violated the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments, and committed state law false imprisonment and battery, when Lawson and an armed SWAT team of the Wilmington Police Department executed an allegedly invalid search warrant by entering the home of Plaintiffs DeWayne Walker, Sr., his wife, Karen Walker, their teenaged son, DeWayne Walker, Jr., and their two-year-old daughter (collectively, “Plaintiffs”), seizing Plaintiffs, and searching the premises. The warrant authorized the search for and seizure of evidence relating to a recent homicide that the police believed had been committed by Dwayne A. Walker, whose date of birth was 12/10/82. As Defendants now acknowledge, Dwayne A. Walker is unrelated to Plaintiffs and has never been to their home at 118 Dutton Drive, New Castle, Delaware.

The District Court granted summary judgment to the Defendants on all of Plaintiffs’ federal claims and declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over their state claims. Because we write only for the parties, we will presume knowledge of the record. We will affirm in part and reverse in part.

I.

On September 13, 2005, a man named DeWayne Freeman was stabbed to death during a drug-related dispute in Wilmington. Based on statements from witnesses [307]*307at the scene, the police suspected that Dwayne A. Walker was the killer, and on that day, Lawson applied for an arrest warrant for Dwayne A. Walker.

Lawson was the chief investigator of the Freeman homicide, and as such, he retrieved Dwayne A. Walker’s criminal record from the Delaware Criminal Justice Information System (“DELJIS”). This record showed an address of 703 West Fifth Street in Wilmington, but when a police officer went to that address, the occupant stated that Dwayne A. Walker did not live there.

On September 14, 2005, a confidential informant who had observed the murder contacted Detective Jeff Silvers, one of Lawson’s colleagues. This informant had assisted Silvers with more than twenty criminal investigations over the preceding five-year period and had proved reliable. The informant told Silvers that Dwayne A. Walker was staying with the informant’s sister-in-law,1 and later that day, the informant brought Silvers to the sister-in-law’s house to show him where it was. When the police returned to arrest Dwayne A. Walker, he could not be found.

The informant contacted Silvers again later the same day to advise him that Dwayne A. Walker’s “mother lived in Wilton, and if he wasn’t at [the] sister-in-law’s house, that’s probably [the] most likely place he could be found,” because “the first thing [Dwayne A. Walker] would do was run to his mom, which he always done whenever he got in trouble.” App. at A277-78, A292. The informant did not purport to have been in contact with Dwayne A. Walker. He did not know if Dwayne A. Walker had any kind of plan at the time, and he did not know if Dwayne A. Walker in fact went to his mother’s house. The informant did not know the address of the mother’s house, aside from the fact that it was in the Wilton area of New Castle and that she had moved there recently,2 but he informed Silvers that her boyfriend and daughter (Dwayne A. Walker’s sister) might be living with her. Silvers immediately told Lawson what the informant had told him. Lawson remembers that the informant told “Silvers that he wasn’t sure of the mom’s name or the mom’s name may have been different from” Dwayne A. Walker’s last name. Id, at A216.

Regarding what kind of car Dwayne A. Walker’s mother drove at the time, the informant gave the following testimony at his deposition:

Q. What kind [of automobile did the mother have]?
A. At that time she had a Maxima.
Q. A Maxima?
A. Yes. Nissan Maxima, maroon.

Id. at A281. A short while later, the questioning regarding the car continued:

Q. So did you tell Detective Silvers that Dwayne Walker’s mother drove a Lexus?
A. Did I tell him she drove a Lexus?
Q. Yeah.
A. No.
Q. And she didn’t did she?
A. No. She drove a Maxima at that time.
Q. Was there a Lexus? Did you provide him with information that you thought there might be a Lexus at that house?
A. No. Not that I know of.
[308]*308Q. Did Detective Silvers ask you whether you knew what kind of cars may have been in the driveway or parked on the street next to this house?
A. I believe he did, but I couldn’t provide that because — Dwayne’s family, like I said, they had a couple dollars, so they could have been driving just about anything.
And then he had friends — I mean, personally. He growed up around and in my house. I knew he sold a lot of drugs. So it’s possible that they could have not only been driving a Lexus; they could have been driving a Jaguar.
Q. But you earlier testified that his mother drove a Maxima.
A. I seen her driving a Nissan Maxi-ma, yes, I did.
Q. Did you tell Detective Silvers that?
A. Yes, I did, but then he asked me were there any other vehicles. I told them it could have been anything because, like I said, they had a little bit of money at the time.

Id. at A290-91.

Based on the information from the confidential informant, Silvers entered the name “Dwayne Walker” into DELJIS to determine if anyone with that name was residing in the Wilton area of New Castle. This search yielded a report of a larceny having occurred on September 6, 2003, on Appleby Road in the Wilton Park area of New Castle. The larceny report listed as the victim Karen Alicia Walker, an African-American woman born November 10, 1962, and residing at 118 Dutton Court in New Castle, and as a witness Dwayne Walker, Jr., with no middle name or date of birth but also residing at 118 Dutton Court. In fact, the larceny report concerned the 2003 theft of plaintiff DeWayne Walker, Jr.’s, bicycle, the report having been filed by plaintiff Karen Walker, De-Wayne Walker, Jr.’s, mother.

Silvers was not assigned to the Freeman homicide, so he gave all of this information to Lawson for his investigation, and Lawson followed up by placing a telephone call to Connectiv Power Company of Delaware, whose records indicated that a “DeWayne Walker” was billed at 118 Dutton Drive3 in New Castle. While there is a difference in the spellings of the first names of Dwayne A. Walker and plaintiff DeWayne Walker, Sr., because Lawson spoke with Connectiv on the telephone, he did not pick up on the discrepancy. Lawson determined that 118 Dutton Drive is in New Castle, Delaware, behind an area known as Wilton.

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Bluebook (online)
360 F. App'x 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-city-of-wilmington-ca3-2010.