Lead Opinion
While on the lookout for a serial bank robber, Chicago police officers misidentified Rashad Swanigan as the perpetrator, arrested him, and detained him for approximately 51 hours without a probable-cause hearing. He was released when the state prosecutor decided not to press charges, and police later found the true culprit.
Swanigan sued the officers involved in his arrest and detention under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging various constitutional violаtions. He later filed a related suit against the City raising Monell claims. The suits were consolidated but maintained separate case numbers and dockets, and the district judge stayed the Monell suit to allow the suit against the officers to proceed on its own. A jury found for Swanigan on a single claim—for unconstitutionally prolonging his detention—and awarded $60,000 in damages. Swanigan then moved to lift the stay on his suit against the City. The judge denied the motion and dismissed the suit entirely, ruling that Swanigan waived mоst of his claims and that the others were not justiciable. We vacated the dismissal order as premature and remanded with instructions to allow Swanigan to amend his complaint. Swanigan v. City of Chicago,
With the stay lifted, Swanigan filed an amended complaint alleging constitutional injuries stemming from three police-department policies: (1) a “hold” policy by which the officers kept him in custody; (2) a policy of requiring detainees to participate in police linеups; and (3) a policy regarding the contents of the closed case file that continued to label him as the bank robber. The judge dismissed the Monell suit in its entirety.
We affirm. Swanigan cannot recover twice for the prolonged detention, and his other claims have no basis in federal law. The Constitution has nothing to say about unreliable police lineups that don’t taint a trial. Neither does the Constitution address reputational harm from false or misleading police reports. And Swanigan lacks standing to pursue injunctive or declaratory relief because the challenged policies are unlikely to harm him in the future.
I. Background
Our earlier opinion contains a more complete description of the facts and procedural history of the case; the following is a condensed version. After cashing checks at a Chicago bank in August 2006, Swanigan was stopped by two Chicago police officers looking for the “Hard Hat Bandit,” whо was known to rob banks while wearing a yellow hard hat. After learning that Swani-gan’s automobile registration was suspended, the officers searched the car and found a knife—and a yellow hard hat. (Swanigan kept the knife in his car to peel produce, and the hard hat was required for his job as a construction worker.) Thinking Swani-gan was the Hard Hat Bandit, the officers arrested him for traffic violations and unlawful use of a weapon and took him to the police station.
Thrеe hours into the detention, officers placed a “hold” on Swanigan in order to keep him at the station while detectives investigated him for a robbery linked to the Hard Hat Bandit. While in custody the police used Swanigan as a filler in lineups for other investigations and as the target in lineups investigating the Hard Hat Bandit robbery. Several witnesses identified Swanigan as the robber.
On the second full day after Swanigan’s arrest, a state prosecutor assessed the case. She decided not to charge Swanigan for the robbery after concluding that the identifications were suspect. After 51 hours of detention without a probable-cause hearing, Swanigan was released.
A month later police entered a final notation into Swanigan’s case file: “Cleared—closed other exceptional.” Swanigan contends that because the police department assigns the cleared-closed notation to the offender’s file after solving a crime, the designation labels him as the Hard Hat Bandit. Although “other exceptional” conveys that he wasn’t prosecuted, the file’s narrative account lists the reasons that the police initially thought he was the perpetrator. And no change was made to Swanigan’s file after the police arrested the real Hard Hat Bandit. Swani-gan contends that the case file continues to cast suspicion on him as the Hard Hat Bandit, giving rise to pоssible reputational harm and police bias against him.
Swanigan’s first lawsuit named 20 officers and the City as defendants and alleged nine separate constitutional and state-law claims. Late in the litigation Swanigan tried to add a Monell claim against the City, but the judge wouldn’t allow the amendment. So he filed a new freestanding Monell action against the City, which was promptly consolidated with the first suit and stayed pending the disposition of the claims against the officers. Partial summary judgment narrowed the scope of the litigation, and a jury eventually found that the officers had probable cause to arrest Swanigan at the bank but that they unconstitutionally prolonged his detention. See County of Riverside v. McLaughlin,
In the related Monell suit against the City, Swanigan alleged constitutional injuries arising from nine separate policies. After our remand, Swanigan trimmed his complaint in light of the jury’s verdict. The amended version centered on the police department’s hold policy, its lineup policy, and its policy regarding cleared-closed case reports. The City moved to dismiss under Rules 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6), of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The judge granted thе motion, and the case now returns to us for further review.
. II. Discussion
We review the judge’s dismissal order de novo.
Section 1983 provides a claim against a person acting under color of law who deprives another of a federal right. 42 U.S.C. § 1983. A municipality is subject to § 1983 liability if one of its policies caused the plaintiffs harm. Monell v. Dep’t of Soc. Servs. of New York,
A. Hold Policy
Federal common law prevents § 1983 plaintiffs from recovering twice for the same injury. Janusz v. City of Chicago,
■ Attempting to evade the double-recovery rule, Swanigan cоntends that his detention occurred in three distinct stages: (1) the arrest; (2) the three hours at the police- station before the hold was issued; and (3) the two'days at the station after the hold was-placed. Because the seven officers found liable for the detention each arrived during the third stage, Swanigan argues that he hasn’t been compensated for the arrest and first three hours.
That argument falls flat. First, a jury found that the officers lawfully arrested Swanigan, and the City can’t bе liable “based on the actions of one of its officers when in fact the jury has concluded that the officer inflicted no constitutional harm.” City of Los Angeles v. Heller,
The City isn’t liable for the first three hours at the station either. Swanigan cannot carve out particular hours from his detention as separately compensable. Hе faced a single detention, not multiple detentions, and he’s entitled to only one recovery though different constitutional theories support liability and different officers were involved. See Bosco v. Serhant,
Moreover, even if Swanigan could split the detention into separate segments, he’d still encounter two problems. First, nothing suggests that the City’s hold policy caused the prehold detention. That’s fatal: In a Monell case, “[t]he central question is always whether an official policy ... caused the constitutional deprivation.” Glisson v. Ind. Dep’t of Corr.,
That rules out monetary relief, but Swanigan also seeks an injunction against the hold policy. That request additionally fails for lack of standing, which is “an essential and unchanging' part of the case-or-controversy rеquirement of Article III.” Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
The injury Swanigan forecasts— he says he might be pulled over, arrested, and again subjected to an unconstitutionally long detention—is layered with hypothetical and nowhere near certain. That’s particularly true because we assume that Swanigan will conform his conduct to the requirements of the law and avoid arrest altogether. See O’Shea v. Littleton, 414 U.S, 488, 497,
B. Lineup Policy
During ’ his detention, Swanigan was placed in several lineups, and four eyewitnesses misidentified him as the' Hard Hat Bandit. His claim for damages against the City rests on the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. He alleges that the lineups were conducted improperly and led to unreliable identifications.
This argument goes nowhere because the mistaken identifications were never admitted in a trial. “[T]he constitutional interest implicated in challenges to police identification procedures is eviden-tiary in nature.” Alexander v. City of South Bend,
Trying a different route, Swan-igan inventively describes his coerced participation in lineups as an unconstitutional “seizure within a seizure.” There’s no such thing. A Fourth Amendment seizure occurs “when there is a governmental termination of freedom of movement through means intentionally applied.” Scott v. Harris,
C. Cleared-Closed Case Policy
Finally, Swanigan claims that the police department’s policy regarding сleared-closed case files violates his constitutional rights by continuing to label him as the Hard Hat Bandit. He alleges that the policy harms him in two ways. First, because the public can access the record with a Freedom of Information Act request, he might suffer reputational harm. Second, if he is stopped by police, even for a routine traffic matter, the officer might use the misleading case report against him. Swanigan grounds this claim in the Due Process Clause and seeks damages and an injunction expunging the record.
The City responds that the case file doesn’t actually label Swanigan as the Hard Hat Bandit because it accurately reports that the prosecutor declined to pursue charges based on the unreliable identifications. This argument overlooks the difference between “not guilty” and “innocent.” If Swanigan is correct that the record could be read as continuing to link him to the Hard Hat Bandit robbеry, a reader could reasonably surmise that he committed the crime but the prosecutor simply couldn’t prove it beyond a reasonable doubt. That, of course, isn’t the truth.
Swanigan’s real problem is that the claim has no legal anchor. The potential for public stigma isn’t cognizable as a due-process violation because reputa-tional harm doesn’t deprive a person of life, liberty, or property. See Paul v. Davis,
Affirmed.
Notes
. We reject Swanigan’s contention that the judge abused her discretion by taking judicial notice of the facts recited in our first Swani-gan opinion. Our factual narrative rested on the trial record, and Swanigan doesn't dispute any part of it. If "the finding taken from the prior proceeding is not subject to reasonable dispute, then the court has satisfied the evidentiary criteri[on] for judicial notice.” Gen. Elec. Capital Corp. v. Lease Resolution Corp.,
. Swanigan’s claim for declaratory relief fails for the same reason. See Feit v. Ward,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part and dissenting in part.
The good news for рlaintiff Swanigan came several years ago, when a jury awarded him $60,000 for the violation of his constitutional rights by his prolonged detention after his arrest, which had been lawful but mistaken. The issue in this separate Monell suit is whether Swanigan should be allowed to seek further relief in the form of additional damages or an injunction. I agree with my colleagues that Swanigan is not entitled to additional damages based on what has been called the “hold past court call” policy or on his having been included in line-ups while he was in custody.
I also agree that Swanigan does not have standing to seek an injunction against the “hold past court call” policy. Versions of this policy have been under constitutional attack for a generation. After a district judge declared the policy unconstitutional in 1986, the city immediately rescinded the policy, at least formally. Robinson v. City of Chicago,
Swanigan cannot obtain an injunction against future application of the “hold past court call” policy or practice to him. He has not shown а substantial risk that the city will apply this policy or practice to him in the future, at least not without relying on an “attenuated chain of inferences” that impermissibly assumes future illegal state action. See Clapper v. Amnesty Int’l USA,
I respectfully dissent, however, from the decision to affirm dismissal of Swanigan’s challenge to the “cleared-closed case” policy. He alleges that the Chicago Police Department maintains a file on him that effectively—but falsely—identifies him as the “Hard Hat Bandit.” This is not a case where the police suspected him of those crimes but were unable to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. There is no doubt here, as my colleagues acknowledge. Swanigan was not the Hard Hat Bandit. In my view, he has standing to raise this claim, and on the merits he should be allowed to proceed past the pleadings.
On this issue of standing, Swanigan can show that he is at “substantial risk” of being harmed by the “cleared-clоsed” policy. “Substantial risk” is the correct standard. See Susan B. Anthony List v. Driehaus, — U.S. —,
To begin with, the chances that Swani-gan will be subjected to just a routine traffic stop are actually quite high. Over a period of several years, the same is true for any random civilian driver. In just one year, police stopped more than ten percent of all drivers nаtionwide. U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, Police Behavior During Traffic and Street Stops, 2011, at 3, tbl. 1, https://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/pbtssll.pdf. For all black drivers, that percentage was higher, at 12.8 percent. Id. Over a five-year period, the chance that a given black driver will be pulled over is approximately 50 percent. (0.8725 = .504).
Next, consider how any traffic stop of Swanigari in Chicago is likely to unfold as long as the false information is in his police file. When the police carry out a traffic stop, they are entitled to demand the driver’s identification, of course, and it is routine to check the driver’s record for active warrants, driving history, and criminal history. Those checks are done for important reasons, including officer safety.
If the files are. checked, the officer checking Swanigan may well be told that the police department believes he committed a series of armed robberies. At that point, an officer’s normal caution will give way immediately to extreme caution, putting Swanigan at a much higher risk that any movement might be misinterpreted as dangerous. And note that this scenario assumes lawful аnd reasonable actions by both Swanigan and a police officer. How many cases have we seen in this country of unarmed subjects, especially men of color, being shot and even killed by police based on hair-trigger responses to innocent actions? In my view, these risks for Swani-gan—today—are not speculative but substantial. He has alleged, and should be allowed to prove, that he has standing to challenge the “cleared-closed case” policy as applied to him.
On the merits of this claim, Swanigan would face a challenge. Ordinarily a civilian has no cognizable legal interest in what police investigative files say about him. Paul v. Davis,
Constitutional law (not to mention common sense) establishes that the police are entitled to rely on such information in their files, e.g., DeLuna v. City of Rockford,
Based on Swanigan’s allegations, it is hard to understand how the false information that is still in his police file is the product of anything other than knowing falsity or deliberate indifference to the truth. Why not allow a civilian who faces substantial risk of harm due to false police information an opportunity to have that information corrected?
And on the other side of the scales, what harm would the Chicago police or public suffer if the plainly false, information were corrected? Again, that information is not just unproven or contestable—it is false. I cannot think of any harm such a correction would cause the police, and it might well help avoid a tragedy. I would allow Swani-gan to pursue this claim on .the merits beyond the pleadings so that the courts could address it and its potential ramifications based on real evidence rather than allegations and theoretical arguments.
. These rough calculations assume that no variable would cause certain drivers to be pulled over more than others. I am under no illusions that these ''ideal" conditions prevail in the real world, but I doubt that any such variables would alter these estimates so dramatically as to make Swanigan’s risks insubstantial.
. In Chicago, the racial disparity may be . higher. According to a State of Illinois study of traffic stop data, more than 76 percent of all traffic stops conducted by Chicago police involve minority ' drivers, Illinois Dep’t of Transp., Illinois Traffic Stop Study Statewide & Agency Reports 2015, at 146, https://idot. ■illinois.gov/transportation-system/local-transportationpartners/law-enforcement/ illinois-traffic-stop-study. Nearly half of all traffic stops in the city involve black drivers. Id.
