ENEDEO RODRIGUEZ JR, Plaintiff, v. NICK MCCLOUGHEN, Defendant.
Case No. 3:18-CV-899 JD
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF INDIANA SOUTH BEND DIVISION
filed 12/12/22
document 135
OPINION AND ORDER
This case has been remanded by the Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit for reconsideration of Plaintiff Enedeo Rodriguez‘s request to amend his complaint. Mr. Rodriguez is incarcerated and is not represented by counsel. His case arises out of the search of his home and his subsequent arrest by officers from several local, state, and federal agencies. He was prosecuted in state court and is now serving a term of 32 years of imprisonment.
Mr. Rodriguez sued 14 defendants under Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Federal Agents, 403 U.S. 388 (1971), and
A. Background
To give context to the amendments in question, the Court will recap the general allegations from Mr. Rodriguez‘s previous filings. Mr. Rodriguez alleged that ATF Agent UC 3749 obtained a warrant to search his home by making false and misleading statements to a magistrate judge. (DE 2-1 at 3.) To obtain the search warrant, Agent UC 3749 claimed that, on December 12, 2015, Rodriguez drove to a Kmart store located in Peru, Indiana, and parked his silver Ford Expedition next to a four-door sedan in front of the store and met with an unidentified individual. (Id.) Agent UC 3749 then represented to the magistrate judge that Rodriguez sold an ounce of methamphetamine to that unidentified individual. (Id. at 4-5.) However, according to Mr. Rodriguez, EC-ICE Unit Officer 323 produced a police report about the same incident that states the incident occurred a day earlier, and the report of EC-ICE Unit Officer U323 does not mention that he was ever at the Kmart store or met with anyone at the store. (Id. at 3-4.) Furthermore, Rodriguez asserts that the search warrant affidavit did not contain reliable information because two confidential sources merely provided hearsay evidence to EC-ICE unit investigators, who gave that information to ATF Agent UC 3749. (Id. at 4.)
Mr. Rodriguez claims that, eleven months later, on November 2, 2016, just before 6:00 a.m., the South Bend SWAT Team executed a search warrant and conducted a military style assault by forcefully entering his home without a “knock or announce” warning, violently breaking windows, and bashing in the front door. (DE 2-1 at 5.) They then “blindly threw a flash-bang grenade” in the living room striking his upper right arm and causing him injury. (Id.) Rodriguez claimed these events occurred while his one-year old daughter was sleeping in the living room. (Id.) He stated that the Elkhart County Sheriff‘s Department, the Elkhart County
In all, Mr. Rodriguez named the following defendants-
- ATF Agent UC 3749,
- ATF Agent Kyle Lerch,
- ATF Agent Bayne Bennett,
- EC-ICE Unit Officer U323,
- Detective Nick McCloughen,
- the South Bend SWAT Team
- the Elkhart County Sheriff‘s Department,
- the Elkhart County ICE Unit,
- ECSD SWAT,
- DEA 6,
- the Indiana State Police,
- Indiana State Police Officer Aaron Campbell,
- Detective Stutsman, and
- Detective Randy Mockler.
Again, in screening the case pursuant to
B. Discussion
Consistent with
As this Court already ruled and as affirmed by the Court of Appeals, Mr. Rodriguez may not add his daughter as a plaintiff. Id. Rodriguez II, 2022 WL 4534787, at *3 (“A nonlawyer cannot represent another person, even his own child, in most lawsuits.)
Next, the Court has already granted summary judgment for Detective Nick McCloughen. Mr. Rodriguez did not contest the Court‘s ruling on appeal, id. at *2, so Detective McCloughen is permanently out of this case.
Also, “[h]is claim against the Indiana State Police is dead in the water because [Mr.] Rodriguez cannot sue an arm of the State of Indiana, like the state‘s police, as a ‘person’ under
However, it is not futile for Mr. Rodriguez to amend his complaint to substitute ATF Agent Wayne Lessner for code name ATF UC 3749 because the claims against him relate back to the original claims. See Rodriguez I, 49 F.4th at 1123. However, although Mr. Rodriguez is being granted leave for this substitution, there remains a question of whether a federal employee may be sued under Bivens for deliberately misleading a judge to obtain a warrant. The Court will decide this question once Mr. Rodriguez amends his complaint.
In addition, for the same reasons, Mr. Rodriguez may substitute a defendant for EC-ICE Unit Officer 323. However, as the Court of Appeals noted, Mr. Rodriguez‘s initial factual allegations regarding this defendant did not plausibly support entitlement to relief because “[h]e did not specify to whom the officer provided the report, how it affected him, or whether this officer was involved in fabricating the affidavit or knew it was false.” Rodriguez II, 2022 WL 4534787, at *3. “Nevertheless, a constitutional claim is not foreclosed if Rodriguez can provide specifics.” Id.
The current record is insufficient to determine whether the proposed claims against South Bend SWAT Commander Lieutenant Spadasora and Officer Andrew Whitmyer relate back to the original claims as set out in
Same with the agencies. “Rodriguez sued ‘Elkhart County ICE unit,’ ‘ECSD SWAT,’ and ‘South [B]end SWAT,’ none of which is a proper juridical entity for constitutional claims.” Rodriguez II, 2022 WL 4534787, at *2 (citing Sow v. Fortville Police Dep‘t, 636 F.3d 293, 300 (7th Cir. 2011) (in Indiana, only counties, municipalities, municipal corporations, or townships, can be
Finally, in his previous filings, Mr. Rodriguez did not clearly connect the law enforcement agencies at the federal, state, county, and city levels “to his factual allegations of wrongdoing by specific officers.” Rodriguez II, 2022 WL 4534787, at *3. He may amend his allegations against them so long as he “directs his claims at the proper juridical entities.” Id.
C. Conclusion
In conclusion, the Court GRANTS leave to Mr. Rodriguez to amend his complaint as set out in this order and consistent with Rodriguez I, 49 F.4th 1120, and Rodriguez II, 2022 WL 4534787. The Court reminds Mr. Rodriguez “[w]hen a plaintiff files an amended complaint, the new complaint supersedes all previous complaints and controls the case from that point forward.” Massey v. Helman, 196 F.3d 727, 735 (7th Cir. 1999). Put simply, after filing an amended complaint, the original complaint has no importance. As always, and this is especially applicable to unrepresented plaintiffs, Mr. Rodriguez should state who did what, when, and where, and he should present a basis for liability against the defendants.
The deadline for filing an amended complaint is January 17, 2023.
SO ORDERED.
ENTERED:
/s/ JON E. DEGUILIO
Chief Judge
United States District Court
