OPINION AND ORDER
I. INTRODUCTION
This civil rights case is before the Court on Defendants’ Motion for -Summary Judgment. Defendants, City of -Columbus (the “City”), Mayor Michael Coleman, Department of Public Safety, Safety Director Mitchell Brown, Columbus Police Department (the “CPD”), and Chief of Police James Jackson, seek summary judgment in their favor as to the entirety of Plaintiffs’ claims. For the following reasons, the Court GRANTS in part and DENIES in part Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment.
II. FACTS
On Sunday, August 12, 2001, at approximately 10:30 a.m., Columbus Special Weapons and Tactics (“SWAT”) team officers executed a no-knock search warrant at 120 South Dakota Avenue in Columbus. While 120 South Dakota Avenue was the address listed on the search -warrant, it was not the address that had been targeted by investigators. In other words, the SWAT team entered the wrong house.
The search warrant had been obtained based on the affidavit of Robbery Squad Detective Edward Cox. Cox had been investigating a series of home invasion robberies. On August 10, 2001, a confidential informant contacted Cox with information about these ■ robberies. The confidential source provided detailed and accurate information about the robberies, informed Cox that Jason Walker had been talking about having performed the robberies, and stated that she had seen some of the stolen property in Walker’s home, located at 123 Avondale Avenue in Columbus. The confidential source further stated that some of the stolen property was kept at the home of one of Walker’s friends. The informant did not know the address of Walker’s friend’s house, but she told Detective Cox that it was directly behind Walker’s residence. She described it as a multi-unit dwelling with a fire escape, facing the alley, with an awning of some sort over the *800 door and situated between two light colored houses.
The confidential informant told Cox that Walker carried a Ruger handgun on him at all times. She also stated that Walker was very paranoid about anyone watching him and was familiar with unmarked, police-type vehicles. Based on this information, Cox forwarded the information on the second house to the SWAT team to obtain the address. He did not drive by the location himself to verify the address because he did not want to arouse the suspicion of either Walker or his friend. Likewise, the confidential informant was not driven by the location because of the risk that she would be identified by either of the suspects.
On August 11, 2001, the SWAT team scouted the location of the second house. The team informed Cox that the address of the house that matched his description was 120 South Dakota Avenue. The house was described as being a double, with one apartment on the first floor and another apartment' on the second floor, and as having light lime green siding with white trim. Somehow, it was determined that the suspect’s residence was on the first floor.
With the address provided by the SWAT team, Cox, on August 12, 2001, swore out a search warrant affidavit for the search of 120 South Dakota Avenue, as well as for the search of 123 Avondale Avenue. The warrants were signed by Judge Van Der Karr. Cox described 120 South Dakota Avenue as “two story, multi unit dwelling, green siding with white trim.”
On August 12, 2001, at approximately 10:30 a.m., the two search warrants were executed simultaneously. After the location at 123 Avondale Avenue was secured, Cox went into the backyard of that residence. From there, he could see the SWAT team lined up to enter the house at 120 South Dakota Avenue. Looking at the houses, Cox realized that the house described in his search warrant affidavit might not be .the house that was described to him by the confidential informant. He eventually determined that 120 South Dakota Avenue was not the correct location of Walker’s Mend’s residence. From the alley, Cox was able to sée that the brick, multi-unit -structure located directly behind 123 Avondale Avenue and situated between two light colored buildings was the proper location. A SWAT member later informed' Detective Cox that the correct address was 124 South Dakota Avenue.
Meanwhile, however, the SWAT team continued with its execution of the no-knock search warrant on the first floor apartment at 120 South Dakota Avenue. Residing in that apartment and occupying it at the time were Nicole Solis and her daughter Carmen Solis. Nicole Solis was 8/& months pregnant; Carmen Solis was 12 years old. The SWAT team set off a concussive device known as a “flashbang” before conducting' an extensive search of the apartment. Once they burst into the apartment, officers held guns to Nicole and Carmen Solis’s heads, forced them to the ground, handcuffed them, and subjected them to verbal abuse. Carmen became hysterical and developed a nosebleed. When Nicole attempted to comfort her daughter, the police officers taunted her. The officers became so angry that Carmen feared her mother would be hit. The officers made a number of inappropriate statements, such as “Are we making you late for church?” and “You don’t gotta go preach, do you?” The officers otherwise behaved inappropriately while the house was being searched, with one officer putting a Halloween mask on a pole and waving it out of a window, and another officer playing a drum set in the living room. Nicole and Carmen Solis eventually were permitted to kneel, but they were kept in handcuffs for over 45 minutes.
*801 III. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On August 9, 2002, Plaintiffs, Nicole Solis in her individual capacity and as next of friend on behalf of Carmen Solis, filed suit against Defendants, City of Columbus, Mayor Michael Coleman, Department of Public Safety, Safety Director Mitchell Brown, Columbus Police Department, and Chief of Police James Jackson. Plaintiffs sought compensatory damages, punitive damages, and attorney’s fees based on violations of 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and on common law claims for (1) trespass and conspiracy to commit trespass; (2) invasion of privacy; (3) assault and battery; and (4) infliction of emotional distress. Plaintiffs’ § 1983 claim is based on failure adequately to train and/or supervise Columbus police officers in violation of the Fourth' and Ninth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution.
On October 15, 2003, Defendants filed a Motion for Summary Judgment. Plaintiffs, in their Memorandum Contra Defendants’ Motion, ask only that Defendants’ Motion be overruled as to Plaintiffs’ § 1983 claims against Defendant City of Columbus and the individual Defendants in their official capacities. Plaintiffs explicitly abandon (1) their claims against Defendants Department of Public Safety and the CPD based upon sui juris; (2) their claims against the individual Defendants, Coleman, Brown, and Jackson, in their individual capacities; and (3) their state law claims. This matter is before the Court on Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment filed pursuant to Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
IV. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Summary judgment is appropriate “[i]f the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R.Civ.P. 56(c). “[Sjummary judgment will not lie if the dispute is about a material fact that is ‘genuine,’ that is, if the evidence is such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the non-moving party.”
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
In evaluating a motion for summary judgment, the evidence must be viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.
Adickes v. S.H. Kress & Co.,
The non-moving party must present “significant probative evidence” to show that there is more than “some metaphysical doubt as to the material facts.”
Moore v. Philip Morris Cos.,
V. ANALYSIS
Because Plaintiffs have consented to the dismissal of certain claims, the Court, as an initial matter, GRANTS summary judgment (1) as to Defendants Department of Public Safety and the CPD; (2) as to all claims against Defendants Coleman, Brown, and Jackson in their individual capacities; and (3) as to all of Plaintiffs’ state law claims. A suit against Defendants Coleman, Brown, and Jackson solely in their official capacities is the equivalent of a lawsuit directed against the City.
See Kentucky v. Graham,
Section 1983 provides:
Every person who under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State ... subjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States or other person within the jurisdiction thereof to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party injured in an action at law, suit in equity, or other proper proceeding for redress....
42 U.S.C. § 1983. There are two essential elements of a § 1983 claim: (1) there must be a deprivation of the plaintiffs “rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws” of the United States; and (2) the plaintiff must alle'ge that the defendants deprived him of this constitutional right “under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom-, or usage, of any State or Territory.”
Dunn v. Tennessee,
A municipality may be liable under § 1983 only if the municipality itself caused the constitutional deprivation.
Monell v. Dep’t of Social Servs.,
Defendants contend that Plaintiffs have no evidence that the training or supervisory policies of the City exhibit a deliberate indifference to the rights of the City’s inhabitants, as required for municipal lia *803 bility. Defendants assert that mere mistakes by individuals who failed to follow proper procedures do not suffice to hold the City hable for constitutional violations under § 1983. Plaintiffs point to three specific training and operational policies that the City could have chosen to implement but did not: (1) a training policy regarding the necessity of the officer in charge of an investigation personally and visually verifying the accuracy of search warrant addresses; (2) an operational policy regarding visual verification of search warrant addresses by the officer in charge of an investigation; and (3) a policy that provides investigating detectives with a list of the location of available unmarked vehicles with tinted windows so that they may personally drive by targeted search warrant locations to verify addresses. Plaintiffs contend that the failure to implement these policies caused Plaintiffs’ injuries and constitutes deliberate indifference to citizens’ constitutional rights.
The issue for the Court’s decision is whether Plaintiffs have presented sufficient evidence to allow a reasonable jury to find that the City’s failure to implement a certain training regimen or operational policy demonstrated the requisite degree of municipal culpability and caused the violation of Plaintiffs’ Fourth Amendment rights. 1 Defendants seem to concede, at least at this point, that a Fourth Amendment violation occurred when the SWAT team entered Plaintiffs’ home. As the Supreme Court has stated, however,
Proof of a single incident of unconstitutional activity is not sufficient to impose liability under Monell, unless proof of the incident includes proof that it was caused by an existing, unconstitutional municipal policy.... But where the policy relied upon is not itself unconstitutional, considerably more proof than the single incident will be necessary in every case to establish both the requisite fault on the part of the municipality, and the causal connection between the “policy” and the constitutional deprivation.
Tuttle,
A. Operational Policy
As a threshold matter, the Court rejects Plaintiffs’ contention that the City is constitutionally required to have a policy that demands, in all instances, personal visual verification of a search warrant address by the officer in charge of an investigation. The current written policy regarding verification of search warrant addresses requires a supervisor to review a search warrant prior to its submission to the court to “[i]nsure the location list *804 ed on the warrant is correct.” Defendants contend, and Plaintiffs provide no evidence to the contrary, that the CPD has an unwritten policy that allows a case-by-case evaluation. According to this “policy or custom,” while visual verification of addresses by the investigating detective is preferable, there is, in certain instances, a danger that such verification might compromise the investigation. When an -investigating officer, in his discretion, determines that such a situation exists, the officer should contact a SWAT , unit for assistance in obtaining the address. As a general matter, this municipal policy represents a reasonable balancing of the government’s interest in maintaining the secrecy of its investigations and the public’s interest in being free from unreasonable searches. 2
Here, however, the search at issue was not a run-of-the-mill search pursuant to a valid warrant. Rather, a “no-knock warrant” was obtained that allowed a paramilitary SWAT team forcibly to enter the apartment listed on the warrant, without knocking and without any announcement of its identity or purpose. The no-knock warrant removed this search from the realm of the ordinary by legitimizing a search that was far more intrusive than the normal police search of a home, in which the police generally are required to knock at the door, announce their identity and purpose, and give the home’s inhabitants a reasonable opportunity peaceably to accede to the police entry.
See Wilson v. Arkansas,
Execution of a no-knock warrant arguably represents the ultimate government intrusion into “[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects.” U.S. Const, amend. IV.
3
Intrusions into the sanctity of the home have long been viewed as at the very core of the rights protected by the Fourth Amendment.
Oliver v. United States,
This regard for the home has a sound basis in early English common law and in the justifications for the adoption of the Fourth Amendment.
See
Payton
At least as early as 1603, English courts recognized the importance of what modern courts have referred to as the “knock and announce” requirement.
See Semayne’s Case,
5 Co. Rep. 91a, 91b, 77 Eng. Rep. 194, 195 (K.B.1603) (“In all cases when the King is a party, the sheriff (if the doors be not open) may break the party’s house, either to arrest him, or to do other execution of the K[ing]’s process, if otherwise he cannot enter. But before he breaks it, he ought to signify the cause of his coming, and to make request to open doors ....”);
see generally Wilson,
Several purposes for the “knock and announce” rule, all with an historical basis, have been identified. First, requiring police to' announce their purpose minimizes the danger of police entry into the wrong home.
United States v. Ruminer,
Second, providing notice to a home’s inhabitants decreases the danger to police from misinformed citizens who mistake the
*806
police for unlawful intruders and on that basis engage in armed resistance to the intrusion.
4
See, e.g., Miller,
Third, the rule “guards against the needless destruction of private property.”
Lockett,
Finally, announcement protects the privacy interests of occupants. Josephson,
Fourth Amendment,
at 1234-35;
see Lockett,
The City clearly was on notice that officers going to the wrong address is
*807
a recurring problem in the execution of search warrants, particularly no-knock search warrants.
5
As early as 1963, Supreme Court Justice Brennan, speaking on behalf of himself and three other Justices, recognized the “very real” possibility that police would be misinformed as to material information and thus raid the wrong home.
Ker,
More recently, reports of no-knock horror stories continue to emerge. 6 E.g., Nunn, Race, Crime, at 408 (recounting death of California man who was shot 15 times before either he or his wife knew who was breaking into their home or why); Richard E. Burket, The State Law Enforcement Apparatus as America: Authority, Arbitrariness, and the “Force of Law” in Vineland, 24 Okla. City U.L.Rev. 727, 748-49 (1999) (relating several instances of police raiding wrong homes); Josephson, Fourth Amendment, at 1257 (describing how police in no-knock raid shot and killed innocent woman, Robin Pratt); Bostón to Give Victim’s Widow $1 Million in Wrongful Death Suit, N.Y. Times, Apr. 25, 1996, at A17 (documenting 1994 Boston incident in which police targeted wrong house and raid resulted in death by heart attack of 75-year-old minister); Joe Hallinan, Drug Wars: Fervor Often Injures the Innocent, New Orleans Times-Picayune, Sept. 26,' 1993, at A20 (describing ordeal of innocent woman and her 15-year-old daughter who were forced to kneel, in handcuffs, in their underwear for 45 minutes during no-knock raid of their home); American Civil Liberties Union, “No-Knock” Warrant Resulting in Denver Man’s Death Should Not Have Been Issued, ACLU Says (Dec. 6,1999), at http:llwww, aclu. org/news/News Print.cfm?ID=8786 & c=51 (describing no-knock warrant that led to death of innocent man, Ismael Mena); Timothy Lynch; Another Drug War Casualty (Nov. 30, 1998), at http://cato.org/dailys/ll-30-98.-html (reporting death of innocent man, Pedro Oregon Navarro, shot by police 12 times in no-knock raid); James Bovard, OOOPS — YOU’RE DEAD ... The body *808 count from NO-KNOCK DRUG RAIDS is climbing. ARE YOU NEXT?, at http://www.powemet.net/eichl/nok-nockMml (last visited May 21, 2004) (detailing several incidents of no-knock drug raids ending in tragedy); see also Joe Hallinan, Drug Wars: Fervor Often Injures the Innocent, New Orleans Times-Pieayune, Sept. 26, 1993, at A20 (quoting law enforcement officials in North Carolina and New Mexico as saying that raids of incorrect houses happen “every day in this business” and “all the time”).
Both reported and unreported cases have addressed factual situations that bear uncanny resemblance to the facts here.
E.g., Lewis v. City of Mount Vernon,
When such an important right is at issue as the right to be secure in one’s home from an unannounced, forcible official entry and search, and when there is such a potential for mistakes — mistakes, as illustrated above, that so readily can have tragic consequences — then a municipality is required to exercise more than usual care. A search conducted pursuant to a no-knock warrant is a hyper-intrusive search that can be analogized to wiretapping, covert video surveillance, and bodily intrusions to extract evidence. Ric Simmons,
Can
Winston
Save Us from Big Brother? The Need for Judicial Consistency in Regulating Hyper-Intrusive Searches,
55 Rutgers L.Rev. 547 (2003) [hereinafter Simmons,
Can
Winston
Save Us
] (describing these searches as qualitatively different than ordinary searches, and thus requiring higher constitutional standards). These searches are all so invasive of privacy or dignity that courts have held that the government must show more than the standard requirement of probable cause in order to obtain a warrant.
Id.
at 550, 560 (“[W]hen a search technique is extraordinarily intrusive, the reasonableness clause of the Fourth Amendment could impose extra limitations ....”);
see, e.g., Richards,
Just as something more than probable cause is required in order for a hyper-intrusive search to be reasonable, so something more than usual care in the execution of such a search is constitutionally required.
Cf. Holland v. Harrington,
Part of the rationale for the “knock and announce” requirement is that it decreases the chance that police will enter the wrong house. When the police knock at the door and announce their authority, innocent citizens have the opportunity to explain the mistake. When the search is conducted pursuant to a no-knock warrant, however, the invasion'- and any attendant danger, humiliation, and fear has already in large part occurred before an inhabitant has any opportunity meaningfully to protest his innocence. Since a no-knock warrant eliminates this safeguard against the wrong house being invaded, the municipality should provide an additional safeguard to táke its place. Because, under a no-knock warrant, a citizen loses the protection that would prevent the wrong house from being raided, the city should provide the citizen with the alternative protection of greater *810 care being taken to ensure that the targeted address is correct before the warrant issues.
The governmental interest in not having in place some sort of procedural safeguards to prevent terrifying and potentially tragic invasions of the wrong homes seems: to this Court to be slight. When compared with the interest of innocent citizens in not undergoing the sort of ordeal experienced by Nicole and Carmen Sobs, 8 , the Court has no problem in concluding that a jury could find the City to have been deliberately indifferent to the rights of its inhabitants by failing to have such a policy. Some of the same issues are present with regard to confidential informants. The danger of receiving inaccurate information from such sources and the significance of the potential consequences of such information have led many municipalities, including the City of Columbus, to adopt specific policies requiring tips from confidential sources to be confirmed before they are acted upon. The City requires its officers to take particular care in evaluating information received from confidential informants. A similar requirement with regard to the accuracy of information used in obtaining no-knock warrants could well have averted this unfortunate incident.
In determining whether the requisite causal link exists between the City’s deficient policy, as outlined above, and the violation here, the question is whether a reasonable jury could find that the violation occurred because of the policy (or the City’s action in failing to promulgate a necessary policy). The CPD’s conclusion following its internal investigation into this matter was that mistakes were made by individuals who were not following appropriate procedures. The violation of Plaintiffs’ rights apparently occurred because Cox did not relay all identifying information to the SWAT officer who conducted the visual verification and because Cox’s supervisor did not, as per department policy, further scrutinize the warrant because the information came from a confidential source. The Court declines to micromanage the CPD as suggested by Plaintiffs. Plaintiffs argue that there should be policies that require a detective to advise his supervisor that he did not personally perform a visual verification in the event a specific address-is not obtained; that require a written description to be provided to SWAT in the event a requesting officer is unable personally to conduct a drive-by of the location; that insure that SWAT has accurate information in such a situation; and that provide investigating detectives with a list of the location of available unmarked vehicles with tinted windows so that they may personally conduct a drive-by. While some of these proposed policies might be advisable, none of them, standing alone, is constitutionally required. 9
What is required is that the municipality mandate that more than ordinary care be taken when an extraordinarily intrusive *811 search, such as the search at issue here, is contemplated. A reasonable fact finder could find that if either Detective Cox or the SWAT team member who verified the address of the home on South Dakota Avenue, in recognition of the extreme intrusiveness and potential irreversibility of the search, had taken extra care, then the constitutional violation would have ■ been averted. The situation could have been avoided in any number of ways, if the officers had taken certain precautions. Plaintiffs point out some of these possible precautions, but there may have been others. The issue is not as simple as whether Cox verified the address himself, or whether an unmarked vehicle with tinted windows was available. The evidence reveals that Cox simply was not, in several small ways, as careful as he could have been. But why should he'have been more careful, when there was no City policy requiring it? A reasonable jury also could find that, had such a policy been in place, Cox would have given the additional attention to accuracy that would have led to a different result.
For the foregoing reasons, Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment is DENIED as to the City and the individual Defendants in their official capacities based on the City’s failure to have in place an operational policy that would require more than usual care to be taken in the interests of obtaining an accurate address for the no-knock search warrant that led to the violation of Plaintiffs’ rights.
B. Training Policy
The Supreme Court has limited § 1983 actions for the inadequacy of police training, reasoning that “[o]nly where a municipality’s failure to train its employees in a relevant aspect evidences a ‘deliberate indifference’ to the rights of its inhabitants can such shortcoming be properly thought of as a city ‘policy or custom’ that is' actionable under § 1983.”
Shamaeizadeh v. Cu-nigan,
The mere allegation “that a different training program than the one in place -vyould have been more effective” will seldom suffice to survive summary judgment.
Grazier v. City of Phila.,
In addition to being subject to § 1983 liability based on its deficient operational policy, as outlined above, the City also may be liable, for the same reasons, based on its failure to train officers to comply with that policy. In other words, the jury may find the City liable for its failure to train officers to exercise' something more than ordinary care when obtaining addresses for no-knock search warrants. 10
As an alternative ground for § 1983 failure to train liability, a reasonable jury could find a more general deficiency in the City’s training regimen. Plaintiffs have adduced evidence that the relevant Basic Criminal Investigation Class for officer training does not specifically address the visual verification of addresses when obtaining a warrant. 11 There is no specific training policy regarding the issue; it is addressed only when a trainee happens to ask the question during class. Even in that instance, the instructor can not provide the trainees with any specific policy but can only advise the trainees regarding his own practice. In response, Defendants offer two affidavits. Officer James McCoskey, who has conducted training on search warrants for nine years, states that the training emphasizes the Fourth Amendment. Commander Paul Denton states that the CPD trains officers in the procurement and execution of search warrants for the purpose of protecting the constitutional rights and safety of the public as well as to protect the safety of officers and to accomplish the purpose for which the warrants are obtained.
Plaintiffs have presented sufficient evidence from which a reasonable jury could find that the City has shown deliberate indifference by virtue of its failure to train officers regarding the importance of having a correct address on a search warrant and procedures that will provide reasonable assurance that the address is correct. The rights at issue here are so important that the' ad hoc practice of training officers to protect these rights, as described by McCoskey in referencing his training on the visual verification of addresses, is not acceptable.
Defendants attempt with their two affidavits to counter Plaintiffs evidence re
*813
garding the inadequacy of police training. These affidavits, however, offer little more than broad conclusions and therefore are practically useless on summary judgment.
See, e.g., Cincinnati Bell Tel. Co. v. Allnet Commun. Servs., Inc.,
Plaintiffs have adduced evidence from which a reasonable jury, could infer that Detective Cox was given little or no guidance to assist him in understanding the importance of having the correct address on a warrant, particularly when that warrant will be executed by a SWAT team in a no-knock fashion, or to prepare him for making the discretionary judgment call as to when the facts of a situation call for verification of an address by an officer other than himself. More importantly, Cox was apparently provided no training on the steps he should take, once the decision for SWAT team address verification had been made, 'to insure that the SWAT unit had all available information about the location and, once it returned from the scouting mission, to insure that the address obtained was correct based on all known data. A reasonable jury could reach the conclusion that this inadequacy in Cox’s training was the moving force behind the violation of Plaintiffs’ Fourth Amendment rights.
Because an obvious consequence of this failure to train would be officers who, like Cox, are inadequately prepared to oversee' another officer’s address verification, a jury could find that the City was guilty of deliberate indifference based on its failure to provide such training. In
Brown,
the Supreme Court noted that, in certain circumstances, “a violation of federal rights may be a highly predictable consequence of a failure to equip law enforcement officers with specific tools to handle recurring situations.”
Bd. of County Comm’rs v. Brown,
The likelihood that the situation will recur and the predictability that an officer lacking specific tools to handle that situation will violate citizens’ rights could justify a finding that policymakers’ decision not to train the officer reflected “deliberate indifference” to the obvious consequence of the policymakers’ choice — namely, a violation of a specific constitutional or statutory right.
Id. The need occasionally to have another officer complete the visual verification of a search warrant address is a recurring situation in law enforcement. The constitutional violation that occurred here is a predictable result of the failure to give officers the tools to handle this situation by training them in how to insure that information is fully and accurately transmitted and that the final address obtained is correct.
For the foregoing reasons, Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment is DENIED as to Plaintiffs’ § 1983 failure to train claim against the City and the individual Defendants in their official capacities.
YI. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Court DENIES Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment as to Plaintiffs’. § 1983 claims against the City and the individual *814 Defendants in their official capacities and GRANTS Defendants’ Motion as to all other claims.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Defendants are correct that the Ninth Amendment does not confer substantive rights.
Gibson v. Matthews,
. Indeed, the circumstances here exemplify the situation in which obtaining personal visual verification of an address would not have been advisable. Detective Cox had information that the primary suspect in a series of home invasion robberies was not only armed and dangerous but was extremely paranoid and had specific knowledge of police unmarked vehicles. Based on this information, Cox concluded that the risk of the suspect becoming aware of the investigation should he go himself to verify the address justified the use of SWAT specialists to conduct the visual verification.
. The entire Fourth Amendment reads as follows:
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
U.S. Const, amend. IV.
. The reasonableness of resisting police who enter without an announcement of their authority is evidenced by the very string of robberies that was under investigation here. In the series of robberies allegedly perpetrated by Walker and two others, the three men, wearing dark SWAT-type clothing (often labeled with "S.W.A.T.” or "SHERIFF”) would force the door and brandish handguns. They forced the occupants to the floor or held weapons to their heads.
. Lack of notice can be a defense for a municipality in a § 1983 case. See, e.g.,
Brown,
. Listed here are incidents that occurred before the raid at issue in this case; examples of similar incidents occurring after August 12, 2001, also abound.
. Title III of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 ("Title III”) regulates interception of all oral and wire communications. 18 U.S.C. §§ 2510-22. Title IH was enacted in response to
Berger v. New York,
. The facts as alleged by Plaintiffs exemplify "the casual arrogance of those who have the untrammelled power to invade one's home and to seize one’s person,” as decried in
Mapp v. Ohio,
. The issue is not whether the Court can conceive of a better policy; the issue is whether the municipality's current policy is either unconstitutional or is so deliberately indifferent to the constitutional rights of its inhabitants that § 1983 liability is warranted.
See City of Canton v. Harris,
. Because the Court already has held that the City is not subject to liability for its failure to have a policy requiring search warrant addresses always to be personally visually verified by the officer conducting an investigation, the Court rejects 'Plaintiffs’ contention that the City should be liable for its failure to provide training in accordance with such a policy.
. Plaintiffs rely on an email exchange between Sgt. Jeffrey Sharrock, who conducted the internal investigation of this incident, and Officer James McCoskey, who taught the class on search warrants that Cox attended. Shar-rock asked McCoskey for a copy of his lesson plan for the class, stating that he needed to know "if, during this class, you instructed the students at anytime that the officer requesting, completing, and signing a search warrant would have to always personally verify the address listed on a search warrant by their own visual observation before obtaining the search warrant.” If they were not so instructed, then Sharrock wanted to know if "there was any instruction on when or if the students should personally verify the address or when it would be acceptable to obtain the address through other means.” McCoskey responded that he had a lesson plan outline, but that the outline "does not specifically address” the question. McCoskey stated that in the "many times over the years” he has taught the class, "once in awhile” a similar question would arise. McCoskey indicated that when that question is asked, he informs the students of his personal practice, which has been not always personally to view the location but sometimes to ,use reliable information from other detectives or uniformed officers.
