ALAN NEWTON, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. CITY OF NEW YORK, Defendant-Appellee.
Docket No. 11-2610-cv
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
Decided: February 26, 2015
August Term, 2012 (Argued: October 3, 2012)
Before: LYNCH, LOHIER, and DRONEY, Circuit Judges.
JOHN FRANCIS SCHUTTY, III, Law Office of John F. Schutty, P.C., New York, NY; David T. Goldberg, Donahue & Goldberg, LLP, New York, NY; Eric J. Hecker, Cuti Hecker Wang LLP, New York, NY, for Plaintiff-Appellant.
DRAKE A. COLLEY, Edward F.X. Hart, Arthur G. Larkin, for Michael A. Cardozo, Corporation Counsel for the City of New York, New York, NY, for Defendant-Appellee.
James W. Quinn, Karin S. Portlock, Devin M. Cain, Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP, New York, NY; Keith A. Findley, Innocence Network, University of Wisconsin Law
Andrew H. Schapiro, Molly A. Karlin, Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan, LLP, New York, NY, for amici curiae Evidence-Management Professionals Bruce Adams, Kolene Dean, Ron K. Peterson, John San Agustin, John Vasquez.
LOHIER, Circuit Judge:
Nearly thirty years ago, Alan Newton was wrongly convicted of a crime he didn‘t commit. He served over twenty years in prison. Had he been given access to exonerating DNA evidence that the City of New York long misplaced and mishandled, Newton very likely would have been a free man years earlier. Newton and his attorneys procured his freedom, and a New York State court vacated his conviction, only after countless efforts to access that evidence finally came to fruition in 2006. Once freed, Newton sued the City and various officials in the New York City Police Department (“NYPD“), claiming that the City‘s evidence management system was inadequate and had deprived him of his rights to due process and access to the courts in violation of the
BACKGROUND
A. Alan Newton‘s Conviction
On June 23, 1984, a woman, V.J., was assaulted, raped, and robbed after leaving a convenience store in the Bronx. V.J. lost her left eye and suffered four broken ribs. She described her attacker to a police detective as a black male who identified himself as “Willie,” approximately five feet, nine inches tall, from twenty-five to twenty-seven years old, with a moustache and short, neat afro. The NYPD collected a rape kit from V.J. that contained pubic and head hair, three cotton swabs, and four microscope slides. Based on photo arrays and later an in-person line-up, V.J. identified Newton as her assailant. A store clerk, too, identified Newton from a photo array and a line-up.
B. Attempts to Obtain DNA Testing and Exoneration
In 1988 Newton moved for an order authorizing an expert to inspect the rape kit and conduct forensic tests to permit him to move to set aside his verdict pursuant to
Six years later, in 1994, the New York State legislature enacted
[W]here the defendant‘s motion requests the performance of a forensic DNA test on specified evidence, and upon the court‘s determination that any evidence containing deoxyribonucleic acid (“DNA“) was secured in connection with the trial resulting in the judgment, the court shall grant the application for forensic DNA testing of such evidence upon its determination that if a DNA test had been conducted on such evidence, and if the results had been admitted in the trial resulting in the judgment, there exists a reasonable probability that the verdict would have been more favorable to the defendant.
In 1995 Newton filed a habeas corpus petition under
In 2005 Newton, through counsel, asked an Assistant District Attorney (“ADA“) who was then Chief of the Sex Crimes Bureau of the Bronx County District Attorney‘s Office and who had previously not been directly responsible for handling Newton‘s case whether the PCD would search once more for the rape kit. Attaching a copy of the voucher that had previously been reported lost, the ADA asked Inspector Jack Trabitz at the PCD to retrieve the rape kit.3 Based on the barrel number for the rape kit that appeared on the voucher, the PCD was able to find the rape kit in a barrel located in the PCD‘s Pearson Place Warehouse in Queens.
In June 2006 the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner concluded that the DNA profile derived from the rape kit did not match Newton‘s DNA profile. Within a month, Newton and the District Attorney‘s Office jointly moved to vacate his conviction. The next day, the New York State Supreme Court vacated Newton‘s conviction pursuant to Newton was immediately released from prison and filed his lawsuit a year later. His complaint asserted twenty-one causes of action against the City and individual defendants. As relevant to this appeal, Newton alleged that the City‘s evidence management system “deprive[d] [him] of important and well established rights under the Relying on Osborne, however, the District Court allowed Newton to continue his claim against the City for violating his due process rights.4 In Osborne, the Supreme Court ruled that an Alaska statute that permitted a prisoner to challenge his conviction when newly discovered evidence requires vacatur of the conviction gave the plaintiff “a liberty interest in demonstrating his innocence with new evidence.” 557 U.S. at 68. The District Court concluded that Before trial, discovery in the case uncovered the original voucher for the rape kit, which in turn revealed that the PCD had received a photocopy of an “out-to-court” log from the City‘s Corporation Counsel in 2009 indicating that the rape kit had last been removed in 1988. The photocopy had prompted the PCD to review the file of out-to-court vouchers for 1988 and led to the discovery of the original voucher in that file. The defendants moved to set aside the verdict pursuant to The District Court also held that Newton‘s constitutional due process claim failed because there was not enough evidence that City officials had acted with a culpable state of mind. Id. at 480-81. It concluded that although Newton had demonstrated that the City‘s evidence management system was deficient, he had failed to prove that a specific person had acted with anything more than negligence. In addition, relying on the failure of his underlying Fourteenth Amendment claim, the District Court granted the City‘s motion to set aside the verdict as to Newton‘s First Amendment claim. Newton appealed. “We review de novo a district court‘s decision to grant a We review Newton‘s Fourteenth Amendment Due Process claim “according to the familiar two-part test for analyzing alleged deprivations of procedural due process rights: (1) whether [Newton] has a cognizable liberty or property interest under state or federal law . . .; and (2) if so, whether [Newton] was afforded the process he was due under the Constitution.” McKithen, 626 F.3d at 151. To determine whether New York law conferred on Newton a liberty interest in demonstrating his innocence with newly discovered evidence, we start with Osborne. William Osborne was convicted by an Alaska jury of kidnapping, assault, and sexual assault and sentenced to twenty-six years in prison. 557 U.S. at 58. In a federal post-conviction proceeding, Osborne sued State officials under The Supreme Court reversed on the ground that there was no freestanding substantive due process right to DNA evidence. 557 U.S. at 72. Citing the progress of individual States in passing DNA-testing statutes, the Court expressed its reluctance to expand the scope of substantive due process or to embroil federal courts in questions of State-based policy – for example, questions such as “how long” a State must “preserve forensic evidence that might later be tested,” or whether a State would be obligated to collect evidence before trial. Id. at 73-74. Despite its reservations about expanding the scope of the substantive due process right, the Court located a liberty interest grounded in a general post-conviction relief statute enacted by the Alaska legislature that made A person who has been convicted of, or sentenced for, a crime may institute a proceeding for post-conviction relief if the person claims . . . (4) that there exists evidence of material facts, not previously presented and heard by the court, that requires vacation of the conviction or sentence in the interest of justice . . . . (b) . . . a court may hear a claim [brought under The City does not genuinely dispute that New York law conferred on Newton “a liberty interest in demonstrating his innocence with new evidence.” McKithen, 626 F.3d at 152. Newton retains such an interest even without the City‘s concession. For the purpose of determining whether a liberty interest exists in this case, we think the New York statute that Newton invokes is materially indistinguishable from the Alaska statute upon which Osborne relied. We turn next to determine what process was due to vindicate Newton‘s State-created liberty interest in demonstrating his innocence with new evidence, mindful of Osborne‘s related pronouncement that “[t]his ‘state-created right can, As the Supreme Court explained, “[a] criminal defendant proved guilty after a fair trial does not have the same liberty interests as a free man.” Id. In identifying any “other” procedural rights that may exist in this case, therefore, we start with the principle that a defendant who has been convicted after a fair trial “has only a limited interest in postconviction relief” and that the State may flexibly fashion and limit procedures to offer such relief. Id. at 69. We have explained that “the . . . deferential standard of Medina v. California, 505 U.S. 437 (1992), governs the process due a prisoner seeking evidence for the purpose of obtaining post-conviction relief.” McKithen, 626 F.3d at 152. In keeping with that standard, “which the Medina Court described as applying to ‘state procedural rules which . . . are part of the criminal process,‘” we evaluate New York‘s procedures for fundamental adequacy. Id. at 152-53 (quoting Medina, 505 U.S. at 443). Fundamental adequacy does not mean that State procedures must be flawless or that every prisoner may access the DNA evidence collected in his case. Nor does it mean that DNA evidence must be stored indefinitely. It means only that when State law confers a liberty interest in proving a prisoner‘s innocence with DNA evidence, there must be an adequate system in place for accessing that evidence that does not “offend[] some principle of justice so rooted in the traditions and conscience of our people as to be ranked as fundamental,” or Before turning to New York law (both in McKithen and in this case), we consider how these principles applied to the Alaska statute in Osborne. The procedures Alaska implemented to vindicate a defendant‘s right to post-conviction relief could not plausibly be described as inadequate under the Medina standard: with caveats not relevant here, Alaska law provided for discovery of newly available DNA evidence in post-conviction proceedings, 557 U.S. at 69-70, and the Alaska courts reinforced the statutory protection with a prophylactic measure that permitted defendants to access DNA evidence if they could demonstrate that (1) the conviction rested primarily on eyewitness identification evidence, (2) there was a demonstrable doubt concerning the identification of the defendant, and (3) scientific testing was likely to resolve the doubt, id. at 65 (citing Osborne v. State, 110 P.3d 986, 995 (Alaska Ct. App. 2005)). Moreover, in concluding that the Alaska State “procedures [we]re adequate on their face,” the Supreme Court emphasized that “without trying them, Osborne [could] hardly complain that they do not work in practice,” id. at 71, and that Osborne‘s decision to file a Although, as we have pointed out, the New York statute at issue in this case, In asking us in effect to condone its evidence management procedures in this case, the City invokes our decision in McKithen, on which the District Court also relied to dismiss Newton‘s Fourteenth Amendment claim. McKithen had been convicted by a Queens jury of a number of serious crimes. He moved pursuant to McKithen resolved an issue different from the one that this appeal compels us to consider. Unlike McKithen, Newton readily concedes that the State‘s statutory procedures are adequate. Instead, he contends that the City, not the State, provided him with fundamentally inadequate process by undermining the State‘s procedures by its recklessly chaotic evidence management system. Having demonstrated that (in contrast to Osborne and McKithen) he diligently and repeatedly tried the State‘s procedures for obtaining the necessary DNA evidence, Newton claims that the NYPD‘s evidence management system was so inadequate as to nullify those procedures. This appeal and Newton‘s arguments thus present an issue that we have yet to address relating to the interaction between State law and local government in the context of post-conviction relief. The procedures created by This is hardly a new concept. In other contexts we have permitted plaintiffs to pursue claims against municipalities for deprivations of State-created interests. See, e.g., Kapps v. Wing, 404 F.3d 105, 112, 118-26 (2d Cir. 2005) (City administration of State Home Energy Assistance Program was constitutionally inadequate to vindicate plaintiffs’ property interest in program benefits); Winston v. City of New York, 759 F.2d 242, 247-49 (2d Cir. 1985) (provision of City Administrative Code violated teachers’ due process rights by depriving them of a property interest in their contractual right to a pension, derived from the State Constitution); see also Goldberg v. Kelly, 397 U.S. 254, 260-66 (1970) (City procedures inadequate to vindicate rights created by State and federal programs). If procedures followed by a municipality rather than a State prove to be constitutionally inadequate, even in the context of facially adequate State procedures, then a defendant may sue the municipality for violating his due process rights on the ground that the municipality’s implementation of State procedures is inadequate. Even in the realm of municipal (rather than State) inadequacy, however, we must take care to avoid “suddenly constitutionaliz[ing]” the area of DNA testing First, reinstating the § 1983 verdict against the City will not impair the validity of, or expand the rights provided by, Second, when, as here, a municipality promulgates policies or practices that affect the criminal procedure laws of the State, those policies or practices may fail to reflect the considered judgment of the State legislature. A local pattern, custom, or practice may frustrate or even obstruct otherwise adequate State law procedures. In those instances, it seems to us, neither Osborne nor Medina Third, the procedural right at issue here is quite narrow: Newton was not entitled to the preservation of evidence under State law, but only to a faithful accounting of the evidence in the City’s possession. We do not decide what specific City procedure is necessary to manage and track evidence. We simply reinstate a jury verdict that found that the then-existing system was inadequate and that the City, through its agents, servants, or employees, intentionally or recklessly administered an evidence management system that was constitutionally inadequate and that prevented Newton from vindicating his liberty interest in violation of his The addition in 2004 of [T]he court may direct the people to provide the defendant with information in the possession of the people concerning the current physical location of the specified evidence and if the specified evidence no longer exists or the physical location of the specified evidence is unknown, a representation to that effect and information and documentary evidence in the possession of the people concerning the last known physical location of such specified evidence. If there is a finding by the court that the specified evidence no longer exists or the physical location of such specified evidence is unknown, such information in and of itself shall not be a factor from which any inference unfavorable to the To impose liability on a municipality under § 1983, a plaintiff must “identify a municipal ‘policy’ or ‘custom’ that caused the plaintiff’s injury.” Bd. of Cnty. Comm’rs of Bryan Cnty. Okla. v. Brown, 520 U.S. 397, 403 (1997) (citing Monell v. Dep’t of Soc. Servs. of the City of N.Y., 436 U.S. 658, 694 (1978)). The City acknowledges that the District Court correctly instructed the jury that in order to find the City liable it was required to find that the “municipality itself directly cause[d] the constitutional violation by a policy, custom or practice,” that is, “a persistent, widespread course of conduct by municipal officials or employees that has become the usual and accepted way of carrying out policy, and has acquired the force of law, even though the municipality has not necessarily formally adopted or announced the custom.” Joint App’x 2672. Nevertheless, the City argues that there was insufficient evidence to support the jury’s findings that the City’s evidence management system was fundamentally inadequate, and that the City officials’ failures and misconduct relating to that system reflected a practice or custom. A careful review of the record demonstrates otherwise. The PCD Property Guide describes the NYPD’s official evidence management system and also The NYPD’s evidence management system failed miserably in Newton’s case. When Newton moved for DNA testing under Of course, as Sergeant O’Connor’s experience suggested, the problem of lost invoices and evidence was by no means isolated to Newton’s case: Sergeant O’Connor was aware of other evidence that had been lost, Joint App’x 2401, and the NYPD’s failure to track evidence appears to have been pervasive. Around the time of Newton’s trial, the Bronx property clerk’s office had hundreds of “out-to-court yellows” folders, dating back to the 1970s, that contained thousands of yellow invoices; the property reflected on those invoices had never been returned to the PCD or, like the rape kit in Newton’s case, had been returned but not properly recorded. Joint App’x 2403. Inspector Jack Trabitz, the PCD’s commanding officer at the time of the 2010 jury trial, testified that between approximately 1800 and 3200 invoices went out to court from the Bronx borough The failures of the NYPD’s evidence management and retrieval system directly affected the offices of the District Attorneys, as well as certain non-governmental entities. From 2005 to 2009, requests from the District Attorney’s offices for post-conviction evidence frequently went unanswered because logbooks contained inaccurate information and in “[n]umerous” cases Newton also adduced evidence that, prior to his release, the PCD had no reliable system to determine what evidence had been destroyed and that, as a result, evidence may have been improperly destroyed, or, as in Newton’s case, reported destroyed when it had not been. Prior to 2000, for example, the PCD routinely disposed of rape kits,13 Joint App’x 2171-73, as well as so-called “white” Newton’s expert witness, an “evidence specialist” who consulted with police departments throughout the United States regarding evidence management, also described the inadequacy of the NYPD’s evidence management system. The expert concluded that the City’s evidence management system, as it existed from 1994 to 2005, was “sporadic at best.” Joint App’x 2497. Aspects of the system, including chain-of-custody procedures and practices, were “weak, if not nonexistent” and failed to meet the most widely accepted professional or “industry standards” in the field of evidence management.14 Joint App’x 2490; see also Joint App’x 2491. We acknowledge the City’s argument that a § 1983 plaintiff seeking to hold a municipality liable must “show that the municipal action was taken with the requisite degree of culpability and must demonstrate a direct causal link between the municipal action and the deprivation of federal rights.” Brown, 520 U.S. at 404. There must be “proof that the municipality’s decision was unconstitutional” to “establish that the municipality itself [i]s liable for the plaintiff’s constitutional injury.” Brown, 520 U.S. at 406 (emphasis added). The Supreme Court has declined to consider “whether something less than intentional conduct, such as recklessness or gross negligence, is enough to trigger the protections of the Due Process Clause.”15 Daniels v. Williams, 474 U.S. 327, 334 n.3 (1986) (quotation marks omitted). But in Brown it held that “a plaintiff seeking to establish municipal liability on the theory that a facially lawful municipal action has led an employee to violate a plaintiff’s rights must demonstrate that the municipal action was taken with deliberate indifference as to its known or obvious consequences.” Brown, 520 U.S. at 407 (quotation marks omitted). Although we have not explicitly addressed this question in our In keeping with Brown and Morales, we conclude that under the circumstances presented here Newton at most needed to demonstrate that the City acted with recklessness or deliberate indifference17 toward his constitutional rights.18 Here, of course, the jury actually found that the City had “acted with an Our conclusion is consistent with Arizona v. Youngblood, 488 U.S. 51 (1988). In Youngblood, the Supreme Court held that “unless a criminal defendant can show bad faith on the part of the police, failure to preserve potentially useful evidence does not constitute a denial of due process of law.” Id. at 58. “The presence or absence of bad faith by the police for purposes of the Due Process Clause must necessarily turn on the police’s knowledge of the exculpatory value of the evidence at the time it was lost or destroyed,” id. at 56 n.*, and is relevant “when we deal with the failure of the State to preserve evidentiary material of which no more can be said than that it could have been In light of Youngblood, we must again recognize that a fundamentally adequate system for permitting defendants to access evidence may be, and will be, imperfect – one where evidence is sometimes lost or inadvertently destroyed. Largely because this is not a “failure to preserve” case, however (the DNA evidence that Newton sought was preserved, after all), our holding falls outside the scope of Youngblood and reflects the limited prescription of Our view that Youngblood does not control the disposition of this appeal is fortified when we consider the two concerns that appear to have animated Youngblood’s requirement that the plaintiff show bad faith on the part of the police under these circumstances. First, the requirement relieves courts from undertaking “the treacherous task of divining the import of materials whose contents are unknown and, very often, disputed.” Id. at 58 (quotation marks omitted). Second, the Court was “unwilling[] to read the ‘fundamental fairness’ Neither concern exists in this case.19 As an initial matter, Newton may recover under § 1983 for inadequate evidence management because the DNA evidence had already exonerated him. The District Court did not need to “divine” the exculpatory import of the DNA evidence; its import was clear by the time Newton started this action with the benefit of that evidence. In addition, we neither discern nor impose an “absolute” duty on the police to preserve evidence based on a freestanding constitutional due process right. To the contrary, Lastly, the City also challenges the jury instructions relating to Newton’s due process claim. The District Court instructed the jury that it could find that the City had violated Newton’s Newton also claims that the City is liable under § 1983 for violating his In any event, the District Court’s decision to grant the City’s motion to set aside the jury’s verdict on this claim appears to have rested almost entirely on its We are confident that the evidence management failures identified in this case have been or will soon be remedied with the help of modern technological advances and stronger recordkeeping practices. For the foregoing reasons, however, we VACATE the judgment of the District Court and REMAND the case with instructions to reinstate the jury verdict with respect to Newton’s DISCUSSION
A. Fourteenth Amendment Due Process Claim
1. Newton‘s Liberty Interest
2. What Process Was Due
3. Whether the Evidence Was Sufficient for a Reasonable Jury to Find that the City Denied Newton the Process He Was Due
4. Arizona v. Youngblood
5. Jury Instructions Regarding Newton’s Due Process Claim
B. First Amendment Court-Access Claim
CONCLUSION
Notes
At any time after the entry of a judgment, the court in which it was entered may, upon motion of the defendant, vacate such judgment upon the ground that . . . [n]ew evidence has been discovered since the entry of a judgment based upon a verdict of guilty after trial, which could not have been produced by the defendant at the trial even with due diligence on his part and which is of such character as to create a probability that had such evidence been received at the trial the verdict would have been more favorable to the defendant; provided that a motion based upon such ground must be made with due diligence after the discovery of such alleged new evidence . . . .
