Yattoni v. Oakbrook Terrace

801 F. Supp. 140, 1992 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14006, 1992 WL 226175
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedSeptember 10, 1992
Docket91 C 3406
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 801 F. Supp. 140 (Yattoni v. Oakbrook Terrace) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yattoni v. Oakbrook Terrace, 801 F. Supp. 140, 1992 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14006, 1992 WL 226175 (N.D. Ill. 1992).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

SHADUR, Senior District Judge.

Police from the Chicago suburbs of Oak-brook Terrace and Waukegan arrested Craig Yattoni (“Yattoni”) for crimes that he did not commit. Yattoni has sued both municipalities and the individual officers responsible for the arrests, claiming under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (“Section 1983”) that the arrests violated his Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable seizures. 1 Oakbrook Terrace and its Detective Michael De Laurentis (“DeLaurentis”), collectively “Oakbrook Defendants,” now move for summary judgment under Fed. R.Civ.P. (“Rule”) 56. 2 For the reasons stated in this memorandum opinion and order, their motion is granted.

Facts

Lori Nawa and her five-month old baby left the Venture store' in Oakbrook Terrace *142 at 9:30 p.m. on May 16, 1990. 3 She walked to her car and leaned over to put the baby in a carseat. As she did so a man approached her from the rear, put a knife to her chest and demanded her purse (O.D. 12(m) ¶ 6). After he allowed Nawa to put the baby down, he grabbed the purse from her hand and ran {id. II7 and Y. 12(n) II7).

Nawa saw her assailant face to face during part of the robbery. She also saw him from the side as he took her purse, and she watched him as he ran toward his car (O.D. 12(m) ¶ 8; Nawa Dep. 42). It is not clear how good a view of his face Nawa had as he fled. His car was “a couple lanes down” in the lot but was visible to Nawa because, like hers, it was parked under a light (id).

Police arrived on the scene shortly. To them Nawa described her assailant as being between 25 and 30 years of age, 6' to 6'3" tall, weighing 180 to 185 pounds, with receding reddish-blond hair, a thin build and fair skin (O.D. 12(m) and Y. 12(n) ff 11). Interviewed the next day by DeLaurentis, Nawa recalled a slightly younger and marginally slimmer criminal: 170 to 180 pounds, aged 19 to 25, with “wavy” hair (O.D. 12(m) and Y. 12(n) 1112).

DeLaurentis also showed Nawa some photographs of automobiles. She picked out a four-door white Dodge Aries K-car as most similar to her assailant’s car. DeLau-rentis and Officer Wayne Holakovsky (“Holakovsky”) distributed a description of the robbery, car and offender to neighboring police departments by computer (O.D. 12(m) 111113-14).

On May 18 DeLaurentis accompanied Nawa to the DuPage County Sheriffs Department. There Nawa assisted a department artist in the preparation of an IdentiKit sketch of the man who held her up. This time Nawa shaved a few more years off her assailant’s age — he was now reported as 19 to 22, not 25, and only 6 feet tall. Otherwise her description of the man and the car was consistent with what she had told DeLaurentis the day before (O.D. 12(m) ¶ 15; Yattoni Ex. 10).

At the time of the incident Yattoni did not quite conform to any of the varying descriptions. Instead he was 19 years old, 5'10" tall and weighed 150 pounds (Y.Supp. 12(n) 111).

Detective Ed Vaughan (“Vaughan”) of Darien read a newspaper article about the Nawa holdup that included a description of the robber (Vaughan Dep. 76). On May 25 he called Holakovsky to relate that he was investigating the theft of a four-door white Plymouth Reliant, a car virtually identical to the K-car identified by Nawa. On May 19 an armed robber in Waukegan, with a physical description “similar” to the man who robbed Nawa, had used that stolen car to flee from a knifepoint robbery.

Indeed, the same car was reportedly used in other area crimes as well (O.D. 12(m) II 16(a), (b), (c), (e); Y. 12(n) 1116(c))— a series of crimes that this opinion will refer to as the “K-car robberies”. Those crimes began with the theft of the white Plymouth Reliant from Darien on April 3, and they continued the same day with a theft from a store and a theft of gasoline (Y.Supp. 12(n) H1113-17). Next came the Nawa robbery on May 16. Armed robberies occurred in both Schaumburg and West Dundee the next day, followed by the Waukegan robbery on May 19 {id. ¶¶ 18-20). Each of the three armed robberies involved a white K-car, a female victim and the use of a knife to force the surrender of property {id. 1121).

Vaughan told Holakovsky that he was investigating two suspects, Yattoni and Joseph Severino (“Severino”). In 1989 Yatto-ni and Severino had been involved in an auto theft with a third person whose family owned the white K-car now suspected of being used in the armed robberies. That earlier theft did not involve the white K-car (O.D. 12(m) and Y. 12(n) II 16(d)).

Holakovsky then obtained black-and-white photos of Yattoni and Severino from the DuPage County Sheriff’s department. About June 1, 1990 DeLaurentis staged a photographic presentation at Nawa’s house, showing her pictures of Yattoni and five other white males (O.D. 12(m) 18; De- *143 Laurentis Dep. 42-43). Severino was not included in the photospread because his photograph was “substantially dissimilar” to the description given by Nawa (O.D. 12(m) If 18; DeLaurentis Dep. 126) — a point that Yattoni apparently admits, though he denies that his own photograph resembled the description (Y. 12(n) 1Í18).

At Nawa’s house DeLaurentis produced a folder of pictures and sat quietly while Nawa studied them. She tentatively identified Yattoni as her assailant (Nawa Dep. 56):

But there was another guy that I was unsure of that maybe had some of the same, a few characteristics the same and I wasn’t really a hundred percent sure. But I questioned it a little bit, but I had picked out Yattoni more. I said this [picture of Yattoni] looks like it but there’s a little question that it was someone else.

Nawa complained that the black-and-white photos left her unable to judge hair color or skin tone. At DeLaurentis’ suggestion she agreed to review a second photospread using color pictures (id. 56-57; O.D. 12(m) 1119).

Through the DuPage County State’s Attorney, DeLaurentis then obtained a grand jury subpoena commanding Yattoni to appear at Oakbrook Terrace police headquarters for the taking of a color photograph. He and Holakovsky tried but failed to serve the subpoena on Yattoni at home on June 1 (O.D. 12(m) and Y. 12(n) 1111 21-22).

On May 31 Waukegan police obtained a warrant for Yattoni’s arrest on charges resulting from the armed robbery in that community (Y.Supp. 12(n) 1137). 4 DeLau-rentis agreed to serve the Waukegan warrant at the request of the Waukegan police (O.D. 12(m) ¶ 23).

DeLaurentis says that he did not learn about the positive ID of Yattoni in Wauke-gan until June 1, nor did he learn about the Waukegan warrant until June 3 (Y. 12(n) 1131). But Yattoni claims that DeLaurentis knew about the Waukegan warrant before he obtained the grand jury subpoena for the color photo, “and had already agreed to execute the Waukegan warrant and work with Waukegan on this” (Y. 12(n) 1123).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
801 F. Supp. 140, 1992 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14006, 1992 WL 226175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yattoni-v-oakbrook-terrace-ilnd-1992.