Williams v. Roe

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedFebruary 28, 2025
Docket4:21-cv-11578
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Williams v. Roe, (E.D. Mich. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION

LAVELLE RENARD WILLIAMS, JR., Plaintiff, Case No. 21-11578 Honorable Shalina D. Kumar v. Magistrate Judge Elizabeth A. Stafford

KAYLA ROE et al., Defendants.

OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT (ECF NO. 73)

Plaintiff Lavelle Renard Williams, Jr. sued the City of Detroit, as well as defendant police officers Kalya Roe, Matthew Miller, Alejandro Vela, and several other Detroit police officers (“Individual Defendants”)1 under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983 and 1985 for alleged violations of Williams’ constitutional rights in connection with a shooting and subsequent criminal prosecution. ECF No. 1. Defendants move for summary judgment on all claims. ECF No. 73. The parties fully briefed the motion, and the Court heard oral argument on February 12, 2024. ECF Nos. 73, 75, 77. For the reasons below, the Court grants defendants’ motion.

1 These officers are Lamont Nelson, J. Reynoso, D. Kline, B. Atkinson, J. Sayles, A. Williams, R. Dyas, D. Cross, Brent Shur. ECF No. 1. Page 1 of 11 I. Background This action stems from an underlying criminal case involving a 2018

shooting. On August 7, 2018, Diamond Walton was sitting in her car waiting for her boyfriend, Benson Harris-Lindsey, when she observed two individuals aim guns at her as they drove by in a black Kia. ECF No. 73-2, PageID.3971-78, 3981-82. After Harris-Lindsey entered Walton’s car and

she started driving, gunfire struck the car. Id. at PageID.3985-90. During the gunfire, Walton and Harris-Lindsey saw three individuals, whom they later-identified as Blackwell-Esters, Jackson, and Lavelle

Williams,2 standing outside the same black Kia shooting at them. Id. at PageID.3996; ECF No. 73-3, PageID.4004-05, 4011. A bullet struck Walton’s leg before Walton managed to drive away. ECF No. 73-2, PageID.3996; ECF No. 73-3, PageID.4014-15. Walton and Harris-Lindsey

then went to a nearby hospital, where Walton received medical care for her bullet wound. ECF No. 73-3, PageID.4017-18. When Detroit police officers arrived at the scene, they found Walton’s

car with bullet holes on the driver’s side. ECF No. 73-5, 05:30-08:48. On a street nearby, they found 17 spent bullet casings from three different

2 Blackwell-Esters and Jackson separately sued defendants in a companion case to this action. See Case No. 21-11586, ECF No. 1. Page 2 of 11 firearms. ECF No. 73-6, PageID.5806. Officer Marlon Carter’s bodycam footage shows that while canvassing the area, Carter and another officer

spoke with Dennis Nichols, who claimed to have witnessed the shooting. ECF No. 73-7, 01:56-02:38. Nichols stated that he saw four Black men, armed with pistols, exit a

“station wagon” and start shooting at a woman in a Chrysler 300. Id., 02:20- 03:13, 04:30-04:40. Nichols stated that based on the position of the vehicles at the time of the shooting, he believed that all of the bullet holes should be in the back of the vehicle. Id., 03:50-04:10. Nichols said that the

shooters got back into the station wagon and fled through an alley. Id., 02:50-03:05. Carter’s bodycam footage contains the only record of Nichols’ description of the shooting.

Later that day, defendant Roe interviewed Walton at the hospital. ECF No. 73-9, PageID.4043. Walton recounted the shooting and told Roe that she did not know who the shooters were. Id. at PageID.4045-46. Roe wrote a report detailing the interview with Walton but did not submit it. Id.

Defendant Miller and other officers later arrived at the hospital and interviewed Walton again. Id. at PageID.4046, 4048. During this subsequent interview, Walton identified Blackwell-Esters and Jackson by

their street names. Id. at PageID.4046-47. Roe’s bodycam footage Page 3 of 11 transcript shows that after this subsequent interview, Miller told Roe not to put her initial interview with Walton in her report and Roe replied, “I’m

gonna delete the whole report right now.” ECF No. 75-12, PageID.6085. Roe testified that she submitted a revised report instead indicating that Walton identified two shooters. ECF No. 73-9, PageID.4046-47. Walton’s

initial statement that she could not identify the shooters does not appear in any record other than Roe’s bodycam. The officers also interviewed Harris-Lindsey, who identified Blackwell- Esters, Jackson, and a “third person” as the shooters. ECF No. 73-3,

PageID.4019. Walton and Harris-Lindsey separately identified Blackwell- Esters and Jackson as the shooters when shown a photo of each. ECF No. 73-10. And after the hospital released Walton, she and Harris-Lindsey

separately identified Lavelle Williams as the third shooter out of a pair of six pack photo-lineups. ECF No. 73-11. As the officer in charge of the investigation, defendant Vela prepared and presented warrant requests for the arrest of Blackwell-Esters, Jackson,

and Williams to the Wayne County prosecutor. ECF No. 73-15. On August 9, 2018, officers arrested Blackwell-Esters and Jackson at a residence where they found several weapons, including a rifle later tied to the

shooting. ECF No. 73-13. On August 21, 2018, officers arrested Lavelle Page 4 of 11 Williams on an out-of-custody warrant. ECF No. 73-14. Blackwell-Esters, Jackson and Williams were jointly charged with two counts of assault with

intent to murder and multiple felony firearms offenses. ECF No. 73-17. The parties dispute whether defendants turned over Carter’s and Roe’s bodycam footage to the prosecutor for pre-trial disclosure to

Williams. Defendant Vela testified that he provided the prosecutor with Carter’s and Roe’s bodycam footage, as well as everything else obtained as part of the investigation. ECF No. 73-18, PageID.4224. Discovery emails and testimony from Blackwell-Esters’ defense attorney confirm that the

prosecutor possessed Carter’s bodycam footage, which the defense attorneys had the chance to review weeks before the trial started. ECF No. 73-19; ECF No. 75-10, PageID.6031, 6034; ECF No. 73-36, PageID.4323.

However, the prosecutor’s office later admitted that its files did not contain Roe’s bodycam footage, ECF No. 75-10, PageID.6030, and the defense attorneys testified that before trial, they never actually received or were aware of Roe’s bodycam footage and the initial interview with Walton. ECF

No. 75-10, PageID.6031, 6035; ECF No. 73-31, PageID.4294, 4296. At trial, Blackwell-Esters and Jackson were convicted of two counts of assault with intent to do great bodily harm and several felony firearm

charges. ECF No. 73-17. Williams defended on grounds that he was Page 5 of 11 “merely present” during the shooting and was acquitted on all charges. ECF No. 73-20, PageID.4232. However, the court found by a

preponderance of the evidence that he had violated the terms of his probation related to a prior arson conviction and thus sentenced Williams to 6.5-10 years’ imprisonment. ECF No. 73-21, PageID.4242; ECF No. 73-22,

PageID.4251-52. The defense attorneys aver that had they possessed Carter’s and Roe’s bodycam footage, they would have impeached Walton based on her identification. See ECF No. 75-10, PageID.6035; ECF Nos. 75-15, 75-16.

On July 6, 2021, Williams filed this action, asserting under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983 and 1985 First, Fourth, Fifth and Fourteenth Amendment claims against the Individual Defendants based on the alleged suppression of

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