JAMES MCINNIS SR., ET AL, Plaintiffs, Appellants, v. STATE OF MAINE, ET AL, Defendants, Appellees.
No. 10-1437
United States Court of Appeals For the First Circuit
March 7, 2011
Lynch, Chief Judge, Souter, Associate Justice, and Stahl, Circuit Judge.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF MAINE [Hon. D. Brock Hornby, U.S. District Judge]
Janet T. Mills, Attorney General, with whom William R. Fisher, Assistant Attorney General, Peter T. Marchesi, and Cassandra S. Shaffer, were on brief, for the appellee.
The Hon. David H. Souter, Associate Justice (Ret.) of the Supreme Court of the United States, sitting by designation.
This is an appeal from summary judgment in ensuing actions brought by McInnis and the other plaintiffs under
In 2006, after McInnis was released from his earlier custody on completion of his sentence, he spoke by phone with a state
Hatch said that he had spoken with an informant who had previously given information that had never been subject to question and who was known to be acquainted with McInnis. According to the informant, McInnis and his son had “ripped off” someone of twenty-five pounds of marijuana, which was then in McInnis‘s possession at the dwelling of the plaintiff Dee McInnis. Randall confirmed (as he believed) that McInnis was on probation. Hatch had his supervisor‘s approval to pass the infоrmation along to other law enforcement officials as was customary, Randall being the first he called. Hatch also called defendant William Deetjen, an officer of the Maine Drug Enforcement Administration. Deetjen contacted Randall, who gave him authority both to arrest McInnis for violating probation and to search for the drugs, in each instance without a warrant, which the standard probation conditions made unnecessary. Deetjen himself knew that a federal judge had
When Deеtjen and several other defendant state officers went to the McInnis house, McInnis claimed that he was not on probation. Deetjen called Randall, who repeated that he was. The officers then arrested him for violаting probation and searched the premises for the stolen marijuana, though finding only some marijuana seeds and drug paraphernalia.1
It was only after the arrest on January 5, 2007, while McInnis was in custody at the York County jail, that his lawyer spоke with Randall and explained a sentence reduction resulting in a correspondingly earlier conclusion to the probation term. The sentence change had never been entered in the probation department‘s records (for whatever reason), and once Randall learned the new facts he concluded that McInnis was not on probation and withdrew the “hold” (or arrest and custody) authorization he had earlier given to the law enfоrcement officers.2
Thus, liability for McInnis‘s arrest turns entirely on the fact element of the qualified immunity standard, on whether the arresting officer could reasonably have believed that McInnis was violating probation. As to this, the probation officer‘s
Belief in suffiсient grounds to search was likewise “at least arguable.” Here, given good reason to believe that McInnis was on probation, the standard to be met was one of reasonable suspicion that contraband would be found whеre he lived. See United States v. Knights, 534 U.S. 112, 121 (2001). Reasonable suspicion was supplied by the informant, whose past reports had given no cause for skepticism, and underscored by the known previous revocation of McInnis‘s federal supervised release on account of possessing marijuana, among other things.4 The informant‘s reliability was
Two subsidiary matters are left. McInnis wished to contest the defendants’ statements of material fact (in their summary judgement pleadings), to the effect that Deetjen twice conversed with Randall, who each time said that McInnis was on probation. McInnis‘s response to each of those statements was to say this: “Qualified. Mr. McInnis takes the position that conversation not recorded by Mr. Randall did not occur. Mr. McInnis asserts that his is a legitimate inference to be made in his favor on a motion for summary judgment.” The magistrate held these responses insufficient to raise a fact dispute because McInnis failed to support the claimed qualification with a citation to the record, as required by the District of Maine‘s Local Rule 56(c). McInnis now suggests that the citation requirement is inapt by force of
Finally, McInnis says it was error to enter judgment against him on his state tort claims against Hatch, despite his failure to satisfy the requirement of the Maine Tort Claims Act that a notice of a claim against a government employee be given within 180 days of accrual. Hatch, he says, was not acting within the scope of his employment when he called Randall and Deetjen, from which it may be shown that he was acting maliciously and outside the protection of the statute. See
Affirmed.
