George ALVAREZ, Plaintiff-Appellee v. The CITY OF BROWNSVILLE, Defendant-Appellant
No. 16-40772
United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit.
Filed June 26, 2017
860 F.3d 799
Ramon Gustave Viada, III, Viada & Strayer, The Woodlands, TX, The Woodlands, TX, fоr Defendant-Appellant.
Before STEWART, Chief Judge, and JOLLY and WIENER, Circuit Judges.
WIENER, Circuit Judge:
Plaintiff-Appellee George Alvarez pleaded guilty to assault on a public servant in Texas state court. Several years later, the Texas Court of Criminal Aрpeals held that he was “actually innocent” of the assault and set aside his conviction. Alvarez subsequently filed suit in federal court against the City of Brownsville (“City“) and several law enforcement officers under
I.
FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
In November 2005, the Brownsville Police Department (“BPD“) arrested Alvarez on suspicion of burglary and public intoxication, then placed him in a holding cell. After an altercation at the jail, Detention Officer Jesus Arias pressed charges against Alvarez “for assaulting him and causing him pain.” Alvarez was charged with assault on a public servant, a third-degree felony. He pleaded guilty in state court in May 2006 and was given a suspended sentence of eight years of imprisonment and a sentence of ten years of community supervision. As a condition of community supervision, the court imposed “a term of confinement and treatment in a substance abuse felony punishment facility . . . for not less than 90 days or more than 12 months[.]” Alvarez did not complete the treatment program, so the court revoked his suspended sentence and ordered him to serve eight years of imprisonment.
Several years later, videos of the altercation between Arias and Alvarez were discovered in the course of a separate
The following April, Alvarez filed this suit under
The defendants filed a motion for summary judgment in August 2012, seeking dismissal of all of Alvarez‘s claims. Adopting the magistrate judge‘s report and recommendation, the district court denied the defendants’ motion as to (1) the Brady claim against the City for nondisclosure of exculpatory evidence, and (2) the claim against Arias in his individual capacity for fabrication of evidence. The court granted summary judgment dismissing all of Alvarez‘s other claims and later dismissed the remaining claim against Arias pursuant to Alvarez‘s voluntary stipulation of dismissal.
Alvarez and the City filed cross-motions for summary judgment in January 2014, addressing the three remaining issues identified by the district court: (1) whether a BPD policy of nondisclosure existed; (2) whether the BPD‘s failure to disclose the videos constituted a Brady violation; and (3) whether a BPD policy caused the Brady violation. The court granted Alvarez‘s motion for summary judgment and denied the City‘s, concluding that “Alvarez has established all substantive elements of a
The district court held a two-day jury trial in September 2014 limited to the
II.
ANALYSIS
As a threshold matter, the City contends that the district court should have granted summary judgment in its favor because Alvarez‘s guilty plea precluded him from asserting a Brady claim as a matter of law. The City‘s claim raises a pure question of law, so we review its challenge de novo.2
We have held, in the contexts of direct appeals and habeas corpus, that a defendant who pleads guilty waives the right to assert a Brady claim. In Matthew v. Johnson, a habeas case, we held that the withholding of Brady material does not render a guilty plea invalid or involuntary.3 We reasoned in Matthew that, “[b]ecause a Brady violation is defined in terms of the potential effects of undisclosed information on a judge‘s or jury‘s assessment of guilt, it follows that the failure of a prosecutor to disclose exculpatory information to an individual waiving his right to trial is not a constitutional violation.”4 We explained that the purpose of the Brady doctrine is to ensure that the defendant has a fair trial and concluded that Brady‘s “focus on protecting the integrity of trials suggests that where no trial is to occur, there may be no constitutional violation.”5 Relying on Matthew, subsequent panels of this court have rejected appellants’ challenges on direct appeal to their guilty-plea convictions on the basis that the pleas were unknowing and involuntary because the government withheld exculpatory evidence.6
The Supreme Court has not yet addressed whether a defendant who pleads guilty has a constitutional right to exculpatory evidence, but it has held that defendants who plead guilty have no such right to impeachment evidence.7 In United States v. Ruiz,
The Supreme Court held that “the Constitution does not require the Government to disclose material impeachment evidence prior to entering a plea agreement with a сriminal defendant.”11 The Court reasoned that “impeachment information is special in relation to the fairness of a trial, not in respect to whether a plea is voluntary (‘knowing,’ ‘intelligent,’ and ‘sufficient[ly] aware‘).”12 The Court did not аddress whether the withholding of exculpatory evidence during the pretrial plea bargaining process would violate a defendant‘s constitutional rights because the proposed plea agreement in Ruiz had spеcified that “‘the Government will provide any information establishing the factual innocence of the defendant.‘”13 That specification, the Court decided, “along with other guilty-plea safeguards diminishes the force of [the defendant‘s] concern that, in the absence of impeachment information, innocent individuals, accused of crimes, will plead guilty.”14
As the Seventh Circuit has recognized, the Court‘s reasoning in Ruiz “indicates a significant distinction between impeachment information and exculpatory evidence of actual innocence. Given this distinction, it is highly likely that the Supreme Court would find a violation of the Due Process Clause if prosecutors or other relеvant government actors have knowledge of a criminal defendant‘s factual innocence but fail to disclose such information to a defendant before he enters into a guilty plea.”15
An earlier panel of this court, in United States v. Conroy, rejected the distinction between exculpatory evidence and impeachment evidence, stating that ”Ruiz never makes such a distinction nor can this proposition be implied from its discussion.”16 Denying the defendant‘s contention that exculpatоry evidence must be turned over before the entry of a plea, the Conroy panel held that the defendant‘s guilty plea “precludes her from claiming that the government‘s failure to disclose [exculpatory evidence] wаs a Brady violation.”17 Conroy thus extended the impeachment evidence holding of Ruiz to cover exculpatory evidence as well, and we are bound by that decision.
Nevertheless, to prevail on his
III.
CONCLUSION
The judgment is REVERSED, and Alvarez‘s action against the City is DISMISSED with рrejudice.
