Darla MOTLEY; Juan Jamerson, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
Bernard PARKS; Daryl Gates; Gerald Chaleff; Herbert Boeckman; T. Warren Jackson; Robert M. Talcott; Raymond C. Fisher; Guadalupe Sanchez; Gregory Kading; Al Ruegg; James Black; Lawrence Webster; Dean Hansell, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 02-56648.
United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted February 11, 2004.
Filed September 21, 2004.
COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED Stephen Yagman, Marion R. Yagman, Joseph Reichmann, Kathryn S. Bloomfield, Yagman & Yagman & Reichmann, for plaintiffs-appellants Darla Motley and Juan Jamerson.
Rockard J. Delgadillo, Los Angeles City Attorney and Janet G. Bogigian, Los Angeles Deputy City Attorney for defendants-appellees Bernard Parks, Daryl Gates, Gregory Kading, and Albert Ruegg.
Robert F. Helfand, Elizabeth A. Keech, Deputy Attorneys General, State of California for defendant-appellee Guadalupe Sanchez.
David Pinchas, Assistant United States Attorney for defendants-appellees James Black and Larry Webster.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Central District of California, Margaret M. Morrow, District Judge, Presiding. D.C. No.CV-00-01472-MMM.
Before: B. FLETCHER, PREGERSON, and BRUNETTI, Circuit Judges.
BETTY B. FLETCHER, Circuit Judge:
Darla Motley brings this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action on behalf of herself and her infant son Juan Jamerson, claiming that the defendants unlawfully searched her home and used excessive force against her infant son. The defendants-appellees are Albert Ruegg, Gregory Kading, Daryl Gates, and Bernard Parks of the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD); Guadalupe Sanchez, a California Parole Officer; and James Black and Larry Webster, who are federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms (ATF) agents (collectively, "the officers"). The officers claim qualified immunity for their actions, and Motley appeals from two district court orders granting summary judgment on that basis. We reverse the district court's grant of qualified immunity to Ruegg, Sanchez, Kading, and Black on the search and excessive force claims. We affirm the grant of summary judgment to Webster, Gates, and Parks.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Janae Jamerson, a member of the Four Trey Crips gang, was released on parole on February 20, 1998, but was rearrested on February 3, 1999. On March 18, 1999, while Jamerson was in custody, LAPD supervisor Ruegg held a briefing for LAPD officers, federal ATF officers, and state parole officers regarding ten planned searches of parolees' residences in the Newton Street area. Jamerson's last known residence was on the list. The officers admit they had no reasonable suspicion to believe that Jamerson was involved in any crime; they were simply searching parolees as a way to "clean up" the Newton Street neighborhood.
The address information for the searches may have been compiled as early as November 1998, while the search took place in March 1999. Jamerson's in-custody status was listed on the state parole system, and Jamerson's parole officer knew he was in custody, but none of the officers assigned to conduct a parole search of Jamerson's last known residence checked to see if he was in custody on March 18, 1999.
At 10:00 or 10:30 that morning, four officers from the various agencies went to search what was allegedly Jamerson's residence. James Black and Larry Webster, the two ATF officers, went behind the house, and Parole Officer Guadalupe Sanchez and LAPD officer Gregory Kading went to the front door. One of the officers knocked on the door, and awakened Motley, Jamerson's girlfriend, who was asleep with their infant son, Juan Jamerson. Black joined Kading and Sanchez at the front of the house as soon as Motley answered the door.1
Motley testified that when she came to the door in her pajamas, Kading identified himself as an LAPD officer, said that he was there with Jamerson's parole officer, and asserted that they had a warrant to search the apartment. In fact, the officers had no warrant, and Jamerson's parole officer was neither present nor even aware of the planned search. Motley told the searching officers that Jamerson did not live there and that he was in custody.2 One of the officers told Motley that Jamerson had been released three days earlier. Motley countered that she knew Jamerson was still in custody. The searching officers asked who was inside with her, and Motley replied that only she and her five-week-old son were at home. Kading told Motley that if she did not let them in, they would arrest her and put her baby in foster care. Once the searching officers threatened to place her son in foster care, Motley unlocked the security gate. Kading pushed her against the door and out of his way as he went into the house.3
The searching officers went into the apartment with their guns drawn, and Sanchez, the parole officer, stayed in the living room while Kading and Black searched the apartment. Motley testified that during the search, the officers were "going through things," including closets and a file box, and that they "pulled out" a lot of things.
Before the officers searched the bedrooms, Motley told the officers that her son was in the back bedroom. When Kading entered this bedroom, he pointed his gun at Motley's baby, who was on his back on the bed, looking toward the bedroom door. When Motley heard her five-week-old son start screaming, she ran into the room, where Kading was still pointing the gun at the baby. According to Motley, Kading kept his gun trained on the baby while he searched the room, and only put his gun away when another officer came in and helped him examine a box at the foot of the bed. Motley testified that the search of this bedroom alone took twenty minutes.
During the officers' search of the apartment, Motley called Rasheed Davis, Jamerson's brother, and told Davis that the officers had threatened her and were searching her home. She asked Davis to come over to help her, and he arrived as the searching officers were leaving.4
The officers appeared to be mocking Motley during the search. One of the officers asked to whom the baby belonged, and when Motley told them that Janae Jamerson was the baby's father, the officers laughed at her. While searching one of the rooms, Kading asked where "that really nice ping pong table" was, as though he wanted to take Motley's things. As the officers were leaving, Kading shouted that Motley should "let them know that Newton Street had been here."
After the officers left, Motley called Jamerson's parole officer, Ms. Smith, and told her that officers had come and searched her entire home. Ms. Smith stated that she did not authorize the search and confirmed that Jamerson was still in custody. A few weeks after the search of her residence, Motley moved to San Pedro, because she was afraid to stay in the Newton Street area with her son.
Motley, on behalf of herself and her son Juan, filed a § 1983 action alleging that the officers violated their Fourth Amendment rights, used excessive force, conspired to violate their Fourth Amendment and equal protection rights, and that the law enforcement agencies were liable for the officers' actions under Monell v. Dep't of Social Services,
ANALYSIS
We review de novo the district court's decision regarding qualified immunity. Mena v. City of Simi Valley,
To determine whether law enforcement officers are entitled to qualified immunity, we first ask whether, "[t]aken in the light most favorable to the party asserting the injury, ... the facts alleged show the officer's conduct violated a constitutional right." Saucier v. Katz,
I. Fourth Amendment Violation: Unconstitutional Search
"The Fourth Amendment's touchstone is reasonableness, and the reasonableness of a search is determined by assessing, on the one hand, the degree to which it intrudes upon an individual's privacy and, on the other, the degree to which it is needed for the promotion of legitimate governmental interests." United States v. Knights,
The officers in this case set out to conduct a parole search. Instead, assuming that Motley's account is true, the officers used duress to gain access to the home of an innocent mother and her baby and conducted a warrantless search in a harassing manner. It is clear that if no parolee lived at Motley's residence at the time of the search, the search violated Motley's Fourth Amendment right to be free from warrantless searches. Cf. Steagald v. United States,
The less stringent Fourth Amendment requirements for a parole search are the only justification the officers here have offered for why this search was constitutional. However, Jamerson had been incarcerated for six weeks at the time of the search, and Motley testified that her apartment was no longer Jamerson's residence. Without requiring a close temporal connection between a parolee and the residence to be searched, officers would have carte blanche to search, without probable cause, any place where a parolee used to live. Eventually, as in this case, these searches would not affect the incarcerated "parolee" at all, only violate the privacy of the people he left behind.
The dissent asserts that we previously have held constitutional parole searches that took place after the parolee was incarcerated, as though those cases support the constitutionality of the search of Motley's home. However, in each of the cases he cites, the parole search took place the same day as the arrest, and the officers had at least reasonable suspicion that the parolee's home contained contraband. United States v. Dally,
Finally, the purpose of allowing parole searches without a warrant is "to assure that the [parole] serves as a period of genuine rehabilitation and that the community is not harmed by the [parolee's] being at large." Griffin v. Wisconsin,
II. Violation of Clearly Established Law: Unconstitutional Search
The officers assert that because they reasonably believed they were conducting a parole search of Jamerson's residence, they are entitled to qualified immunity. It is true that a parolee subject to a search condition has a diminished expectation of privacy, and therefore the Supreme Court has held that "[w]hen an officer has reasonable suspicion that a [parolee]... is engaged in criminal activity, there is enough likelihood that criminal conduct is occurring that an intrusion on the probationer's significantly diminished privacy interests is reasonable." Knights,
A. Reasonable Grounds to Believe that Jamerson Lived with Motley
To execute an arrest warrant inside a particular residence, law enforcement officers must have reason to believe that the person to be arrested lives at the address to be searched. United States v. Gorman,
Although we did not explicitly equate the "reasonable belief" standard with probable cause until 2002, it was clear when the officers searched Motley's home in 1999 that substantial evidence of residence was required. In 1991, we held that the police may only execute an arrest warrant issued by the parole board for a parole violation inside a home "if the [officers] have probable cause to believe the person named in the warrant resides there." Harper,
The difference between the "reasonable belief" language in Dally and the "probable cause" language in Harper caused confusion in our Circuit, because some judges interpreted "reasonable belief" to be equivalent to "reasonable suspicion." See United States v. Conway,
Regardless of how the standard was expressed, we have found no Ninth Circuit case in which the Court equated "reason to believe" with "reasonable suspicion" and held that a parole search was constitutional where officers had only a reasonable suspicion that the parolee lived at the address. For example, in Dally, which the dissent implies is the only Ninth Circuit case on point, the officers had the following evidence that the parolee, Holiday, lived at the residence they later searched: (1) a federal agent who was also investigating Holiday informed the parole officer that Holiday was living at the address; (2) during a stake-out, officers photographed Holiday taking out the trash, bringing in his laundry, and chatting with the neighbors; (3) a week later, officers returned to find Holiday's car parked near the house with fogged windows, indicating it had been parked overnight; (4) the next day, Holiday left the house in the morning and got in a car that had been parked overnight; (5) Holiday returned with dry cleaning, changed his clothes, and left the house again, carrying laundry; and (6) Holiday later returned with more dry cleaning, and officers observed him use a key to open the door. Dally,
The question, then, is whether based on substantial, trustworthy evidence, a reasonable officer would have believed that Jamerson resided at Motley's apartment. The officers involved had different knowledge and levels of responsibility: Ruegg supervised the search team; Kading, Sanchez, and Black conducted the search, and Webster was an agent in training who remained behind the house during the search.
1. Supervisor Ruegg
Ruegg was responsible for compiling information on the parolees to be searched. He had been collecting information on parolees since November 1998 — over four months before the search of Motley's home — the time when the Newton Street Station started a new "Career Criminal Unit." The only function of the Career Criminal Unit was to conduct parole searches of Newton Street residents. Although Ruegg testified that he did not himself compile the address information of parolees, he had reason to know that the parolee information was stale.
Further, Ruegg organized and supervised the search team. A supervisor can be liable under section 1983 if he "set[s] in motion a series of acts by others ..., which he knew or reasonably should have known, would cause others to inflict the constitutional injury." Graves v. City of Coeur D'Alene,
Just as a warrant must be supported by probable cause, in March 1999 it was clearly established that officers must have reason to believe that a parolee lives at a certain address; without the requisite cause, the officers cannot constitutionally conduct a parole search. As the supervisor in charge of the search, Ruegg was responsible for ensuring that the searching officers had that substantial evidence. Instead, Ruegg delegated the task of checking Jamerson's parole status to some unnamed person at least six weeks before the search took place. Ruegg then relied on the stale information, without using any of three easily available methods of checking Jamerson's parole status on or anytime near the day of the search.7 Ruegg admitted he knew that parolees did not always live at the addresses they listed when they were first released, [ER 166] yet he did not even contact Jamerson's parole officer to obtain any current information about where Jamerson actually lived. In short, Ruegg dispatched officers to conduct a parole search without any evidence that Jamerson was connected to a specific criminal activity and without sufficient evidence to support probable cause, let alone a reasonable suspicion that Jamerson lived at the given address at the time of the search.
Under these circumstances, as the supervisor of the Unit and the search in question, it was not reasonable for Ruegg to simply assume that the information about Jamerson was accurate. See Ramirez,
2. Searching Officers: Kading, Sanchez, and Black
At the time of the search, the officers who conducted the search had the following information about Jamerson's residence and parole status: at the LAPD briefing, they were informed that Jamerson was on parole and that his last known address was 416 East 40th Place. However, when they arrived at Motley's residence, she told them that Jamerson did not live there and that he was incarcerated. Other than Kading,8 none of the officers had any independent information that Jamerson lived at the address to be searched. Nor did any of them attempt to confirm the information they were given, even after one of the searching officers lied to Motley, saying Jamerson had been released, and even after Motley emphatically repeated that she knew Jamerson was in custody.
"It is incumbent on the officer[s] executing a search warrant to ensure the search is lawfully authorized and lawfully conducted." Groh,
The searching officers' responsibilities include a duty to conduct a reasonable investigation: "Although a police officer is entitled to rely on information obtained from fellow law enforcement officers, ... this in no way negates a police officer's duty to reasonably inquire or investigate these reported facts." Mendocino Envtl. Ctr. v. Mendocino County,
Here, the searching officers did not know whether the parolees' addresses were current; in fact, it appears that they had no information about the searches except the names and last known addresses of the parolees. Several of the officers testified that the purpose of the parole "searches" was to determine if they had current addresses for the parolees, not to force entry and search the homes, because they did not have even reasonable suspicion that the parolees were involved in criminal activity. Given this purpose, and knowing the residence information they had was not necessarily current, a reasonable officer would have called to check Jamerson's parole status once Motley stated with certainty that Jamerson was in jail.
Instead, the searching officers lied to Motley about Jamerson's parole officer being present, their possession of a search warrant, and Jamerson's custody status. In Harper, we held that the following facts about a parolee's residence "barely" constituted probable cause: the parolee's family leased the house and two of his brothers lived there; the parolee had lived with his family before his incarceration; a source told the officers the parolee lived there; the police conducted repeated surveillance and saw the parolee enter the house with his own key once or twice; and several of the parolee's known associates had their cars parked outside the home. Harper,
3. Agent Webster
Webster was an officer in training and did not participate in the search of Motley's home. He was behind the house with Black when the other officers approached the door, and remained behind the house even when Motley came to the door and Black went to the front. Webster's actions were reasonable under the circumstances, and we affirm the district court's grant of summary judgment in his favor.
B. Parole Search Conducted in a Harassing Manner
Even if the officers had substantial reason to believe that Jamerson lived in Motley's home, Kading, Sanchez, and Black would be liable for violating Motley's Fourth Amendment rights, because they conducted — or allowed the search to be conducted — in an unconstitutional manner. It has long been clear that a parole search is unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment if it is conducted in a harassing manner. See United States v. Consuelo-Gonzalez,
In some parole search cases before 2001, courts held that a parole search was unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment because it was conducted for an improper or harassing purpose that did not serve the interests of parole or probation supervision. See, e.g., United States v. Johnson,
The officers who searched Motley's residence for purported parolee Janae Jamerson conducted the search in a harassing manner. When Motley came to the door in her pajamas, the officers told her several falsehoods. Kading said that he was there with Jamerson's parole officer and that they had a warrant to search the apartment, neither of which was true. Motley told the searching officers that Jamerson did not live there and was in custody. One of the officers then told her that Jamerson had been released three days earlier, another lie. When the officers then asked Motley who else was inside the house with her, she said that only she and her five-week-old son were there. Kading told Motley that if she did not let them in, they would arrest her and put her son in foster care. Faced with Kading's threat to take her son away, Motley unlocked the security gate. Kading pushed her out of the way and against the wall with his forearm as he went into the house. The officers all entered the apartment with their guns drawn. During the search, the officers were "going through things," including closets and a file box, a search that was completely unauthorized.
Kading knew that the baby was in the back bedroom, and as soon as he entered that room he pointed his gun directly at the five-week-old infant. The baby was on his back on the bed looking toward the bedroom door. The baby began screaming as soon as Kading entered, and so Motley ran to the room, where Kading was still pointing the gun at the baby. Kading did not move his gun when Motley entered, and he kept it pointed at Motley's tiny son while he searched the room.
The officers searched for over twenty minutes when it could have been ascertained much more quickly that Jamerson was not present.
During the course of the search, they questioned Motley about her baby's father and laughed at her when she revealed that it was Jamerson. The officers appeared to ogle the belongings in the two-bedroom apartment: Kading inquired about the whereabouts of "that really nice ping pong table." Even though the officers found neither Jamerson nor contraband, for which they had no authority to search, one of them felt it necessary to issue a parting threat: "Tell them that Newton Street was here." The searching officers showed no respect for Motley, her baby, her home, or her privacy. They lied to her, shoved her, made fun of her, and pointed a gun at her five-week-old baby.
Of the four officers who went to Motley's apartment, only Webster never entered the home. Each of the other officers either participated in harassing and intimidating Motley and her child during the search, or failed to intervene to stop the harassment. See United States v. Koon,
III. Qualified Immunity for Use of Excessive Force
Additionally, we reverse the district court's grant of qualified immunity to Kading on the excessive force claim. Use of a weapon against someone who is helpless constitutes excessive force. Headwaters Forest Defense v. County of Humboldt,
IV. Monell Claims
We agree with the district court that Motley has not presented evidence sufficient to establish Monell liability for her excessive force and unconstitutional search claims. We therefore affirm the dismissal of her claims against former LAPD police chiefs Parks and Gates.
CONCLUSION
We reverse the district court's decision that Kading, Black, Sanchez, and Ruegg are entitled to qualified immunity. We affirm the district court's grant of summary judgment to Parks, Gates, and Webster. We also affirm the district court's decision on the Monell claims. Appellants are entitled to costs.
REVERSED IN PART; AFFIRMED IN PART.
Notes:
Notes
As Black, Kading, and Sanchez were the only officers who participated in the search of Motley's home, they are referred to as the "searching officers" throughout
She also testified that "everything" was in her name, that she paid all the rent and all the bills and that soon after the search she and her son moved, without Jamerson
The searching officers dispute Motley's account of their verbal exchange on her doorstep. Sanchez testified that Motley did tell them that Jamerson was not there, but that she voluntarily said, "Go ahead. Look yourself," and let the officers into the apartment. However, we recite Motley's version of the facts because for purposes of summary judgment we must take the facts in the light most favorable to the non-movant
Sanchez testified that Davis was already there when the officers arrived
The officers admit that they did not have reasonable suspicion that Jamerson was involved in criminal activity, but assert that reasonable suspicion is not necessary before conducting a parole search. The Court inKnights left an open question about whether reasonable suspicion of criminal activity is required before conducting a parole search. Knights,
However, we need not decide whether reasonable suspicion of criminal activity is required, because the search was not a parole search and was unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment: the officers did not have reasonable grounds to believe that Jamerson lived at Motley's home, and the search was conducted in a harassing manner.
The dissent makes much of the fact that inHarper, the searching officers had a warrant for the arrest of the parolee, based on parole violations, and here, the only possible legal justification for the search was Jamerson's parole status. The dissent relies on a distinction without a difference: in both circumstances, the officers have legal justification to search a house only if the parolee resides there. The difference is merely factual, and the qualified immunity standard does not require that a constitutional principle be clearly established in every factual context before officers can be held liable for violating it. See Hope,
Ruegg testified that there were three ways to check the status of a parolee: (1) check the computerized parole records, to which both LAPD and parole officers had access; (2) check the records room at the state parole office; and (3) call the parolee's parole officer. It is undisputed that Jamerson's parole officer knew he was in custody, and that his in-custody status was listed on the computerized parole system
Kading testified that he had been to that address before and seen Jamerson there, and knew that Jamerson had been on parole. However, Kading testified that he did not know whether that address was Jamerson's residence. Further, there is no evidence that he told the other officers about his previous experience at the residenceSee United States v. Del Vizo,
Knights also ended a line of cases holding that only parole officers could conduct parole searches, and not for the purpose of conducting general criminal investigations. See United States v. Stokes,
We hold thatKnights did not affect the continuing validity of the rule that parole searches conducted in a harassing manner are unreasonable. However, even if Knights appeared to muddy the applicability of this rule, it was not decided until 2001, two years after the search here occurred. In 1999, there was no doubt that it was unreasonable for police officers to conduct a parole search in a harassing manner.
BRUNETTI, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
It is well settled that a police officer is entitled to qualified immunity unless the facts alleged demonstrate that the officer's conduct violated a clearly established constitutional right and that the officer did not make a reasonable mistake of law or fact. Saucier v. Katz,
* Standard Governing Summary Judgment Motions
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(c) provides that a motion for summary judgment must be granted when "the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law." FED.R.CIV.P. 56(c).
We have noted that "[w]here disputed facts exists ... we can determine whether the denial of qualified immunity was appropriate by assuming that the version of the material facts asserted by the non-moving party is correct." Jeffers v. Gomez,
II
Facts and Proceedings Below
On March 18, 1999, Los Angeles Police Department officer Gregory Kading ("Kading"), California State parole agent Guadalupe Sanchez ("Sanchez"), and Federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms agents Larry Webster ("Webster") and James Black ("Black") were assigned to a joint task force in Los Angeles to assist the California Department of Corrections in conducting parole searches. During a morning briefing by Los Angeles Police Department detective Al Ruegg ("Ruegg"), this team of four was told they were to make contact with about ten parolees to see if the parolees were complying with the terms of their release. Detective Ruegg told them that these contacts should be "non-confrontational" and that they should try to gain consent to enter the residence if they had no additional information that the parolee resided at the location.
During the morning briefing, Agent Black was given a list of the parolees to be contacted and their addresses. The list was compiled by an officer at the direction of Ruegg. Ruegg, however, did not verify the accuracy of the list, nor could he remember the specific officer to whom he delegated the task. No member of the four-person search team compiled the list or confirmed the parole statuses or addresses of the people named.
Janae Jamerson ("Jamerson"), a reputed member of a Los Angeles street gang, was one of the individuals named on the search team's list. Jamerson had been released on parole on February 20, 1998, and as a condition of his release Jamerson agreed that he, his residence, and any property under his control could be searched at any time without a warrant, and with or without probable cause, by an agent of the California Department of Corrections or any peace officer. The search team's list noted Jamerson's residence as 416 E. 40th Place in Los Angeles. One member of the search team, Officer Kading, knew Jamerson and independently believed he was on parole and residing at the 40th Place address. Later investigation revealed, however, that Jamerson had resided at the 40th Place address until February 3, 1999, when he was arrested and incarcerated on a parole violation.
Between 10:00 and 10:30 in the morning, Sanchez, Kading, Black and Webster arrived at 416 E. 40th Place to speak with Jamerson. Officer Kading and Agent Sanchez went to the front of the house while Agents Black and Webster walked to the rear. Darla Motley ("Motley"), Jamerson's girlfriend who was living in the apartment, alleges that she was awakened that morning by a hard knock at her door. When she answered the knock, Officer Kading allegedly told her that he and fellow officers were conducting a parole search on her boyfriend, Jamerson. Motley responded that Jamerson was not there, he was in jail, and that she wouldn't allow the officers into her apartment. Motley alleges that after she refused the officers entry, Kading told her that if she did not allow them access, the officers would arrest her and put her son in foster care. Reluctantly, Motley allowed the officers to search her apartment. It was at about this time that Agent Black came around from the back of the house and heard Motley give her consent. Motley testified at her deposition that upon entering the apartment, Kading pushed her out of the way with his forearm.
After the officers had entered the house, Agent Webster walked to the front of the apartment and saw the front door open. He realized that the other officers had entered the apartment and concluded that they had been granted permission to enter.
Once inside, Kading and Black began searching the apartment while Sanchez and Webster stood just inside the door. Neither Sanchez nor Webster said anything to Motley and neither searched the apartment. After searching one bedroom of the apartment, Officer Kading moved to a second bedroom where Motley and Jamerson's five-week-old son was lying on his back. Motley alleges that upon entering the room Kading pointed his gun at the infant. Motley said that Kading then called Black to assist in searching the second bedroom. Motley testified that the search of this second room took twenty minutes.
Motley testified in her deposition that at no time was she or her son handcuffed and at no time was she or her son frisked. The only time Motley said she could not freely move about her residence was when the officers first entered the residence and motioned for her to stay where she was.
Upon leaving the residence, Kading told Motley, "Let Judy know that [Los Angeles Police] Newton Street[Division] had been here." Judy is parolee Jamerson's mother. Motley stated that she just thought the officer was "being funny" when he said that to her.
Motley filed a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action on behalf of herself and her son, alleging that the officers violated their Fourth Amendment and equal protection rights, used excessive force, conspired to violate their Fourth Amendment and equal protection rights, and that the law enforcement agencies were liable under Monell v. Dep't of Social Services,
III
Qualified Immunity
In Saucier v. Katz, the Supreme Court established a two-step framework courts must follow when determining whether officers are entitled to a qualified immunity defense.
IV
Defendants Black, Webster, and Sanchez
A. Constitutional Violation
To determine if officers are entitled to qualified immunity this court must first ascertain whether the officers committed a constitutional violation when they searched Motley's residence. Saucier,
As an initial matter, I note that the majority correctly assumes that officers can conduct a constitutionally acceptable parole search without reasonable suspicion the parolee has participated in criminal activity. Indeed, four members of this court recently concluded that permitting parole searches without any suspicion of criminal activity is not arbitrary, not capricious, not harassing, and not unreasonable. United States v. Crawford,
But while the majority correctly assumes that officers can conduct a parole search without reasonable suspicion that the parolee has participated in criminal activity, it erroneously concludes that Sanchez, Kading, and Black are not entitled to qualified immunity because they violated Motley's constitutional rights by searching 416 E. 40th Place without probable cause to believe that Jamerson was residing at the location and that Sanchez and Black are not entitled to qualified immunity because they violated Motley's constitutional rights by conducting, or failing to prevent others from conducting, the search in a harassing manner.
1. Reasonable Basis to Believe Jamerson Resided in the Apartment
While it is generally true that a search of a home must be accompanied by a warrant, law enforcement does not need a warrant when conducting a reasonable parole search. Griffin v. Wisconsin,
Here, the uncontroverted facts demonstrate that when the officers received instruction during the morning briefing they had "a reasonable basis for the belief" that Jamerson lived at the location. First, Jamerson informed law enforcement that the apartment the officers searched was his residence. And second, on at least one prior occasion, Officer Kading had made contact with Jamerson at the residence. Moreover, even when Motley told the officers that Jamerson no longer lived at the residence they were still reasonable in their belief that Jamerson resided at the location. See Ramirez v. Butte-Silver Bow County,
The majority, by contrast, concludes that Sanchez and Black violated Motley's Fourth Amendment rights because they conducted a parole search of the residence without probable cause that Jamerson lived at the location. The two cases the majority cites for support are unpersuasive in the parole search context. Neither United States v. Gorman,
a. The Law Was Not Clearly Established That Officers Needed Probable Cause
An officer is immune from § 1983 liability if the constitutional violation upon which the claim is based was not "clearly established" at the time the official took action. Saucier,
The majority's confusion is understandable. Over the last twenty-five years our court has created confusion by not defining terms and by supporting some of our opinions with contradicting caselaw. The roots of this confusion date back to 1979 when we held that officers must have "a reasonable basis for the belief" that the parolee lives at a particular residence before officers can conduct a reasonable parole search of a residence. Dally,
The following year the Supreme Court held that officers can execute an arrest warrant at a dwelling "when there is reason to believe the suspect is within." Payton v. New York,
Three years after Payton was decided, we held that "[i]f an arrest warrant and reason to believe the person named in the warrant is present are sufficient to protect that person's fourth amendment privacy rights in his own home, they necessarily suffice to protect his privacy rights in the home of another." United States v. Underwood,
Then, in 1991, we briefly addressed this issue, albeit in an immensely confusing way. United States v. Harper,
While at first glance Harper appears to clarify the confusion in the arrest warrant context, it actually confounded the issue even more because the two cases we cited for support actually contradicted our holding. As previously noted, Dally was a case dealing with parole searches and stated that officers must have "a reasonable basis for the belief" that the parolee is residing at the location to be searched, while in Perez we stated that "if the officers did not have reasonable grounds for believing that Albert resided in the apartment, the search was illegal ..."
We appeared to first recognize the lack of clarity in our "reason to believe" language, and the confusion it was causing, in United States v. Watts,
The majority makes the unpersuasive argument that because Harper was decided after Dally, Harper's probable cause standard in the arrest warrant context clearly established the level of suspicion required in the parole search context. Indeed, in Watts, we correctly noted this sequence of cases did not eliminate confusion because (1) Harper cited Dally with apparent approval and (2) after we decided Harper we decided United States v. Davis wherein we stated that "[t]he permissible bounds of a probation search are governed by a reasonable suspicion standard." Id. (quoting United States v. Davis,
It was not until 2002, a full three years after the officers awoke Motley on the morning of March 18, 1999, and only after we recognized the uncertainty in this area for the third time, that we clarified what was meant by "reason to believe" in the arrest warrant context. In United States v. Gorman, we held that
The `reason to believe' standard first espoused by the Supreme Court in Payton v. New York was not defined in Payton or in subsequent cases. Nor have we explicitly defined the `reason to believe' standard. We now hold that the `reason to believe,' or reasonable belief, standard of Payton and Underwood embodies the same standard of reasonableness inherent in probable cause.
b. The Agents Were Reasonable
But even if the majority is correct that it was clearly established in 1999 that officers must have probable cause to believe that Jamerson resided at 416 E. 40th Place, and that they did not have probable cause, the officers are still entitled to qualified immunity if they were reasonable in believing that they only needed reasonable suspicion that Jamerson resided at the location. Saucier,
As discussed above, our court has noted that there was a conflict within our cases over whether officers need reasonable suspicion or probable cause to believe that a subject of an arrest warrant is at a location before executing the warrant. Gorman,
The officers were also reasonable in believing that they had at least reasonable suspicion that Jamerson was located at the residence. Members of the search team received a briefing from their supervisor giving them the location of Jamerson's residence. Moreover, one of the officers even knew that location to be Jamerson's residence from personal experience. Officers in this situation are entitled to rely on the statements of their fellow officers so long as those statements are not facially wrong. See Mendocino Envtl. Ctr. v. Mendocino County,
The majority's assertion that once Motley told the officers that Jamerson was "in the pen," they were unreasonable in searching the location without conducting further research is contrary to our precedence. Indeed, on numerous occasions we have held that an officer is entitled to rely on information obtained from fellow officers even in the face of contradictory information. Guerra v. Sutton,
The cases the majority cites to support its conclusion of unreasonableness are inapposite. In Fuller v. M.G. Jewelry,
2. Alleged Harassment
The majority rightly notes that it was clear in 1999 that a parole search conducted in a harassing manner is unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment. Latta,
a. The Law Was Not Clearly Established
Assuming that the majority's holding that all officers present when one officer harasses is a constitutional violation, whether or not an officer knows of the harassment, it was not clearly established in 1999 that such inaction is a constitutional violation. The only case the majority cites to support its claim is Robins v. Meecham,
In Robins, we did not establish the broad rule that the majority adopts today. Robins can most accurately be understood to mean what we said, "a prison official can violate a prisoner's Eighth Amendment rights by failing to intervene." Indeed, in Robins we even noted that Robins himself specifically relied on the Eighth Amendment in his suit. Id. at 1442. To conclude that the defendants are not entitled to qualified immunity because of Robins, effectively undermines the Supreme Court's dictate in Saucier by stretching our court's precedence beyond the bounds of the Robins opinion.
Because of the foregoing analysis, I would hold that Agents Sanchez, Webster, and Black are entitled to qualified immunity for their actions.
V
Defendant Ruegg
It is well established in this circuit that our law does not impose liability on supervising officers under a respondeat superior theory of liability. Rise v. Oregon,
Here, as best I can discern, the majority reverses the district court's grant of Detective Albert Ruegg's summary judgment motion because Ruegg relied on the work of one of his subordinates and sent officers to Jamerson's last known address without verifying his subordinate's work. I find no constitutional violation in Ruegg's actions.
None of the facts alleged support the majority's conclusion that Ruegg "set in motion a series of acts by others ..., which he knew or reasonably should have known, would cause others to inflict the constitutional injury" as is required for § 1983 liability. Indeed, all of the facts alleged and presented show that Ruegg instructed the officers he sent on the parole searches to obtain consent before entering a parolee's residence. Moreover, to assist in ensuring entry was obtained only through consent, Ruegg did not provide the officers with any tools to make forced entry. Lastly, Ruegg testified that every officer present at the briefing knew there would be negative consequences, such as an internal affairs complaint initiated by Ruegg himself, if they failed to follow these orders. With these instructions, Ruegg did not set in motion a series of acts which he knew or reasonably should have known would cause officers to inflict a constitutional injury. The district court's grant of Ruegg's summary judgment motion should be affirmed.
VI
Defendant Kading
I agree with the majority that Officer Kading is not entitled to qualified immunity. Motley has alleged that Kading conducted the search of her apartment in a terrorizing manner by threatening to take her child away from her if she did not consent to the search, by shoving her out of the way with his forearm when he entered the apartment, and by pointing his gun at her baby. Motley also alleges that by pointing his gun at her baby Kading used excessive force.
As explained above, I disagree with the majority's assertion that Kading committed a constitutional violation by searching 416 E. 40th Place without probable cause that Jamerson resided at the address. I do, however, agree with the majority's conclusion that, as alleged, Kading (1) conducted the search in a harassing manner and (2) used excessive force when he pointed his gun on the five week old baby.
VII
Conclusion
Because on the date the officers searched 416 E. 40th Place the officers did not violate a clearly established constitutional right, I respectfully dissent in part and would hold that defendants Sanchez, Webster, Black, and Ruegg are entitled to qualified immunity.
