KEITH HARRIS, Plаintiff-Appellant, v. DENNIS KUBA and EDWARD MUZZEY, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 05-3357
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
ARGUED DECEMBER 1, 2006—DECIDED MAY 18, 2007
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Illinois. No. 03 238—David R. Herndon, Judge.
MANION, Circuit Judge. In 1979, a jury convicted Keith Harris of armed robbery and attempted murder, and an Illinois judge sentenced him to fifty years in prison. After spending more than twenty years in prison, then-Governor George Ryan granted Harris a full pardon based on innocence and exрunged the conviction on January 10, 2003. Harris claims that he was falsely convicted based on the actions of two police officers, and he sued those officers under
I.
In the early morning hours of December 4, 1978, Mark Resmann was tinkering with his car at the Caseyville Shell Station where he worked. Two men entered the store, one with a rifle and one with a handgun. They demanded money, and Resmann turned over about forty dollars from his pocket. The man with the rifle then directed Resmann to the back office of the store to search for more money. Resmann gave them about $150 from an envelope in the back room. The man with the handgun took the money, while the man with the rifle instructed Resmann to lie down on the floor. The man then took aim with his rifle and shot Resmann about six times. The two men then started to leave, and Resmann tried to get up. The man with the rifle returned to the back room, ordеred Resmann to lie down, and shot Resmann again. The pair then departed and somehow Resmann managed to call the police.
Resmann described his assailants to the officer who found him in the back room. Relevant here, he described the individual with the rifle as a dark-skinned black male, 5’10“, approximately 25-30 years old, and having a deep voice. He also gave a desсription of his clothes. Later in the day, he elaborated on the description to an officer at the hospital, stating that the man with the rifle had a thin build, and was 20-30 years old. Officer Dennis Kuba
Harris subsequently faced trial for attempted murder and armed robbеry along with Bryan Lawrence. The prosecution relied solely on Resmann’s identification of the assailants as evidence of guilt. By the time of trial, police officers had yet to recover the gun, fingerprints, clothing, or other evidence linking Harris to the crime. Harris’s defense at trial relied solely on mistaken identity. He argued that he was light-skinned, not dark-skinned as Resmann had originally stated, and thаt his features became familiar to Resmann because his photograph was shown to Resmann before the line-up, even though Resmann did not initially identify him. Additionally, Harris had a twin brother who testified at trial that he was Harris’s twin, a fact defense counsel argued cast doubt on Harris’s identity as the perpetrator. Resmann testified at
The shooting at the Caseyville Shell Station, however, may not have been an isolated crime. Ballistics testing on the bullets recoverеd from the Shell Station shooting linked the shooting to two other local crimes, a shooting and robbery at the Perfect Circle Donut Shop about an hour before the Shell Station crime, and a robbery and murder at the Mexico City Café about three weeks later. Harris’s counsel received this ballistics evidence before trial. A victim of the Mexico City Café shooting had also identified Harris as thе assailant from a photograph. Police, however, determined by visiting Harris’s employer that he had an alibi for the Mexico City Café shooting because he had been at work during that shooting. This alibi evidence for the Mexico City Café shooting was not given to defense counsel. Harris was never charged in the other two crimes. Another individual, Randolph Chamberlain, supposedly confessed to the Mexico City Café shootings.
Adding a further complication, three other individuals confessed to the Caseyville Shell Station shooting after Harris and Lawrence were convicted. On September 9, 1979, Girvies Davis confessed to committing the crime (in addition to the shootings at the donut shop and café, as well as others) along with Ricky Holman. A few days later, Holman likewise confessed to committing thе crime (also in addition to the shootings at the donut shop, café, and others). Davis was able to lead officers to an individual
Harris was released from prison in 2001, and in 2003 Governor George Ryan ultimately granted Harris a pardon and expungement of his record based on innocence. Harris received $154,000 from the State of Illinois as compensation, but this compensation did not settle any potential claims against Officers Kuba and Muzzey. Harris subsequently brought suit against the officers, claiming that they failed to turn over exculpatory evidence to the prosecutor and made false statements to the prosecutor regаrding the case. Specifically, Harris points to three pieces of information that he claims Officer Kuba allegedly should have given to the prosecution, and in turn to defense counsel: (1) the fact that Harris had an alibi for the Mexico City Café shooting, (2) that a victim of the Mexico City Café shooting identified Harris as the perpetrator, and (3) that Chamberlain allegedly confessed to the Mexico City Café shooting. Harris also claims that while his motions for post-trial relief were pending, Officers Kuba and Muzzey told the prosecutors that Harris associated with and knew Davis, knowing this to be false. The district court granted summary judgment to the officers. Harris appeals.
II.
Harris’s claim arises from
Harris claims that Officers Kuba and Muzzey violated his constitutional rights under Brady v. Maryland and are therefore liable under section 1983. In Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83, 87 (1963), the Supreme Court held that the right to due process and a fair trial requires that the prosecutor turn over to the defense all potentially exculpatory evidence. That obligation extends to police officers, insofar as they must turn over potentially exculpatory evidence when they turn over investigative files to the
To establish a Brady violation, Harris must show three elements: “(1) the evidence at issue is favorable to the accused because it is either exculpatory or impeaching; (2) the evidence has been suppressed by the government, either willfully or inadvertently; and (3) the suppressed evidence resulted in prejudice.” United States v. O’Hara, 301 F.3d 563, 569 (7th Cir. 2002) (citation omitted). Prejudice exists if there is “a reasonable probability that the suppressed evidence would have produced a different verdict.” Id. (citation and internal quotation omitted). A Brady violation further requires “materiality” of the evidence withheld, which “in the Brady context is the same thing as prejudice.” United States v. Wilson, 481 F.3d 475, 480 (7th Cir. 2007). This court stated,
The [Supreme] Court has further explained that “there is never a real ‘Brady violation’ unless the nondisclosure was sо serious that there is a reasonable probability that the suppressed evidence would have produced a different verdict.” We have described this inquiry as “materiality,” and stated that the demonstra-
tion of materiality is the key to obtaining a new trial where a defendant alleges a Brady violation.
United States v. Baker, 453 F.3d 419, 422 (7th Cir. 2006) (quoting Strickler v. Greene, 527 U.S. 263, 281 (1999)) (citation omitted).
Harris first claims that Officer Kuba, who was in charge of the Caseyville Shell Station investigation, failed to turn оver three pieces of evidence to the prosecutors, and thus to Harris: (1) Harris’s alibi for the Mexico City Café shooting, (2) a victim’s identification of Harris as the perpetrator of the Mexico City Café shooting, and (3) Chamberlain’s confession to the Mexico City Café shooting. As discussed below, we conclude that this evidence was not suppressed and has limited, if any, favorability. Therefore, thеre is no Brady violation that could support a section 1983 claim. As the evidence does not meet these two requirements, we need not address its prejudice or materiality.
First of all, Harris was not charged in the Mexico City Café shooting and no evidence in the charged Caseyville Shell Station crime was suppressed. Evidence is suppressed “if (1) the prosecution failed to disclosе the evidence before it was too late for the defendant to make use of the evidence, and [relevant here] (2) the evidence was not otherwise available to the defendant through the exercise of reasonable diligence.” O’Hara, 301 F.3d at 569 (citation omitted). The fact that Harris had an alibi for the Mexico City Café shooting was “otherwise available” to Harris. Id. The file turned ovеr to Harris’s counsel contained a ballistics report indicating that the Mexico City Café shooting occurred in December 1978. With minimal research, Harris’s attorney could have ascertained the date of the Mexico City Café crime and could have checked
Similarly, the defense had evidence that the same weapon was used in the three crimes. Harris’s attоrney could have sought information about those other crimes to show that Harris did not commit those crimes, and therefore was not guilty of this crime. The evidence of the Mexico City Café victim’s identification of Harris and Chamberlain’s confession were therefore available to
Furthermore, the pieces of evidence he cites are hardly favorable. To be favorable, evidence must be either exculpatory or impeaching. Strickler, 527 U.S. at 281-82. None of the pieces of evidence that Harris points to, when considered at face value, is exculpatory of Harris with respect to the Caseyville Shell Station shooting or impeaches Resmann’s identification of Harris. Rather, the evidence is arguably favorable only after several inferences are made. For example, the fact that a victim identified Harris in a photo array as the perpetrator of the Mexico City Café shooting was favorable only to the extent that his workplace alibi kept him from being charged in that incident. The fact that ballistics evidence indicated that the same gun was used at the Mexico City Café and the Caseyville Shell Station does not help Harris. At best, a photograph of him looked like the person who used the same gun at Mexico City Café that later was used at the Caseyville Shell Station where the victim, Resmann, testified that he watched Harris shoot him six times at point-blank range. The facts that Chamberlain confessed to the Mexico City Café shooting and that Harris had an alibi for that shooting are not relevant to the charged Caseyville Shell Station shooting. Those facts do not direсtly bear on Harris’s guilt for the Caseyville Shell Station shooting, and are therefore not exculpatory or
Finally, Harris claims that both Officers Kuba and Muzzey lied to the prosecutors to preserve the conviction by telling the prosecutors that Davis and Harris associated on the street and that this must be the basis for the false confession. The prosecutors apрarently defended the
Nor can Brady serve as the basis of a cause of action against the officers for failing to disclose these circumstances [a coerced confession] to the prosecutor. . . . The Constitution does not require that police testify truthfully; rather “the constitutional rule is that the defendant is entitled to a trial that will enable jurors to determine where the truth lies.”
Furthermore, in Gauger v. Hendle, 349 F.3d 354, 360 (7th Cir. 2003) (internal citations omitted) overruled in part on other grounds by Wallace v. City of Chicago, 440 F.3d 421, 423 (7th Cir. 2006), we noted that:
We find the proposed extension of Brady [to require the police to render truthful records of interrogations to thе prosecutors] difficult even to understand. It implies that the state has a duty not merely to disclose but also to create truthful exculpatory evidence. Indeed the duty to disclose falls out, because Gauger knew what he had said at the interrogation. The problem was not that evidence useful to him was being concealed; the problem was that the detectives were giving false evidence. Gauger wants to make every false statement by a prosecution witness the basis for a civil rights suit, on the theory that by failing to correct the state-
ment the prosecution deprived the defendant of Brady material, that is, the correction itself.
Like Gauger, Harris knew about his relationship, or lack thereof, with Davis. He was fully capable of challenging the officers’ and prosecutors’ contention to the contrary. Accordingly, Harris’s theory does not constitute a viable сlaim under Brady, the only form of constitutional claim he propounds, and therefore his section 1983 claim is without merit.
III.
Because the evidence pointed to by Harris was neither favorable nor suppressed, and because there is no relief available under Brady for an officer’s false statement, Harris is not entitled to relief and we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
A true Copy:
Teste:
_____________________________
Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
USCA-02-C-0072—5-18-07
