ORDER
Claiming that she was arrested without probable cause for trespassing on the main campus of the University of Illinois and that she was jailed for five days on excessive bail, Jane Stoltey sued the university’s board of trustees and two members of the university police department under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The district court granted summary judgment for the defendants. We affirm.
Stoltey has a long and rocky history with the university. Though shе says she is not homeless, she is often seen sleeping on campus and carrying shopping bags holding personal belongings. Since the late 1970s, when she was first arrested for stealing and explоding fireworks on campus, Stoltey has been the subject of numerous complaints based on her behavior in the Illini Union building. Students, visi
Most recently, on three occasions in the spring of 2003, building service workers saw Stoltey tear down “daily event sheets” posted inside the Illini Union. In June 2003, the university served Stoltey with a no-trespass letter listing the dates of those incidents and explaining that her actions had obstructed the day-to-day business of the building. The letter warned Stoltey that she was not authorized to enter the Illini Union and that, if she did, she would be arrested for criminal trespass. Six days later, the university gave Stoltey another letter telling her that the ban would expire on June 2, 2004.
Despite the no-trespass letters, Stoltey was again seen in the building on July 18, 2003. Corporal John Brown and another university police officer were dispatched to remove Stoltey but could not find her. Brown nevertheless wrote a police report after interviewing Susan Sanders, a building-services employee who reportedly saw Stoltey ride an elevator to the second floor and enter a restroom. Sanders told Brown that she had known Stoltey for several years and rеcognized her by sight. Before writing the report, Brown confirmed that the university had issued a valid no-trespass letter to Stoltey. In his report, Brown described Stoltey as “homeless” because, as he explained at summary judgment, he often had seen her on campus carrying shopping bags with personal possessions, and a month earlier he had found her sleeping on campus at 3:00 a.m. Even though the no-trespass letter listed an address for Stoltey, he based his assessment on his experience, explaining that several individuals in the community lived on the streets despite having a mailing address.
A month later, an assistant state’s attorney filed an information charging Stoltey with criminal trespass to real property based on the July 18 incident. A state-court judge found that probable cause existed to arrest Stoltey, issued an arrest warrant, and set bail at $2,500. On July 27, a deputy sheriff arrested Stoltey. Brown was not involved in obtaining the warrant or arresting Stoltey. Stoltey remained in jail until August 1, when she was able to post bond. The charge was dismissed, however, in October 2004.
In October 2005, Stoltey filed an amended complaint naming as defendants the board of trustees, Cоrporal Brown, and Brown’s boss, Krystal Fitzpatrick, who at that time was the assistant director of public safety at the university. The district court was unable to parse any federal claims from this complaint, but dismissed it without prejudice as to the individual defendants so that Stoltey could try again to formulate claims against them personally. The court concluded, however, that soverеign immunity and other hurdles precluded Stoltey from suing the board or bringing official-capacity claims against the other defendants. In her second amended complaint, as interpreted by the defendants without objection, Stoltey claimed that Brown and Fitzpatrick had caused her to be arrested without probable cause in violation of the Fourth Amendment. According to Stoltey, she was arrested and jailed because Brown had “falsely” stated in his police report that she was homeless, and because Brown and Fitzpatrick had not adequately investigated the July 18 incident.
On appеal Stoltey argues that the district court erred in granting summary judgment because, she says, material issues of fact exist. Although Stoltey continues to disagree with some of the content of the defendants’ statement of undisputed facts, the district court did not abuse its discretion in accepting the entire document as true because Stoltey did not comply with Local Rule 7.1. See Koszola v. Bd. of Educ. of the City of Chicago,
The district court correctly granted summary judgment to the defendants because no genuine issue of material fact exists. See Wagner v. Washington County,
Finally, Stoltey alleges that, after she was arrested, the judge required her to post bail rather than release her on her own recognizance because the police report—again, falsely, according to her— said she was homeless. She thus claims that she was 'wrongfully jailed for five days while raising the cash for her bоnd. But there is no evidence in the record that Brown deliberately or recklessly stated that Stoltey was homeless, much less that the representation in the police report that she was homeless affected the judge’s decision to set bail, so no constitutional violation occurred. See Mannoia v. Farrow,
Stoltey alsо argues on appeal that the district court abused its discretion in refusing to enlist pro bono counsel to assist her. In reviewing her three motions, the magistrate judge and district court applied the correct standard and concluded that she could competently litigate the case given its level of complexity, see Pruitt v. Mote,
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
AFFIRMED.
