MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff brings this action for damages against two police officers and the City of New York for alleged violations of 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for false arrest and imprisonment, for use of excessive force and for related violations of state law. Discovery in this matter has closed, and defendants have moved for partial summary judgment pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 56 as to the state and federal claims for false arrest and imprisonment on the grounds that such claims are barred by plaintiffs plea of guilty to disorderly conduct. Plaintiff acknowledges his plea of guilty, but argues that his plea was not voluntary and should not bar his claims for false arrest and imprisonment.
BACKGROUND
Plaintiff was arrested by officers Cohen and Freedman on July 1, 1985 for Assault in the Second Degree, Assault in the Third Degree, Resisting Arrest and Disorderly Conduct. Though the circumstances of the arrest are not precisely clear, Unger explains that Officer Freedman, who was accompanied by Officer Cohen, had told him to move the car parked in front of Unger’s place of business. Unger Deposition at 29, attached as Exhibit A to Affidavit of Leon Friedman. Unger told the officers that the car was not his, and the officer left. When Freedman and Cohen returned, Freedman again instructed Unger to move the car, and Unger again told him that the car was not his. Freedman then asked to see Un-ger’s license, which Unger did not have in his immediate possession. The officers proceeded to arrest him by grabbing him, throwing him against the side of the patrol car and handcuffing him from behind. Id. at 31-33. Freedman stated at his deposition that Unger began shouting obscenities prior to his arrest. Freedman Deposition at 47, attached as Exhibit 2 to Trachten-berg Affidavit. The officers then took Un-ger to the 44th Precinct. The circumstances of his trip to the police station are also in dispute, with Unger claiming that the officers travelled a circuitous route in order to delay his arrival such that he would necessarily spend the night in jail. The facts surrounding his trip to the precinct and his treatment there are not directly relevant to this motion, however, which concerns only Unger’s claims stemming from the alleged false arrest and imprisonment.
Unger, who had not been arrested previously, spent the night in jail, and was arraigned the next morning before the Honorable Ronald Garnett, Justice of the Supreme Court of New York. Unger claims that he was not allowed to phone an attorney or anyone else while he was in custody, despite repeated requests. Unger Deposition at 41-44. He also refused to eat or drink. After spending the night in jail, in conditions Unger considered horrifying, he met with a public defender from the Legal Aid Society, Alma Cordova. She instructed him to plead guilty to “whatever the judge says”. Id. at 44. At the arraignment, Cordova stated that she was appearing for the arraignment only. Transcript (“Tr.”) at 2 (attached as Exhibit 5 to Trachtenberg Affidavit). She then informed the court that Unger intended to plead guilty to disorderly conduct as a violation to cover all the charges. Unger declined to make any comment to the judge before sentencing, and the judge sentenced him to a conditional discharge, with the record to be sealed upon completion of the discharge. Tr. at 3. The court instructed counsel to advise Un-ger of his right to appeal, and she handed him written notice of his right to appeal. Unger did not appeal, however.
DISCUSSION
Defendants argue that plaintiff cannot maintain an action for false arrest or imprisonment, or a section 1983 action based *187 on that false arrest, since Unger plead guilty to disorderly conduct. Plaintiff agrees that a valid, voluntary plea of guilty to a criminal charge would preclude a later action, based on that charge, for false arrest or violation of section 1983 based on false arrest.
A claim of false arrest is premised on a lack of probable cause for the arrest.
Cameron v. Fogarty,
Plaintiff contends that the defense is not available in this case since his plea was not voluntary. Plaintiff is correct that an invalid judgment of conviction would not support the defense.
See Pouncey v. Ryan,
Defendants argue first, that plaintiff cannot attack his conviction here without initially exhausting state remedies and filing a writ of habeas corpus, and second, that the plea was voluntary. Defendants’ first argument is without merit. The habe-as corpus statute, 28 U.S.C. § 2254, requires a petitioner to have exhausted all federal constitutional claims at the state level before seeking collateral relief. Defendants, however, overlook the fact that Unger is not incarcerated, or otherwise “in custody”; consequently, habeas relief is not available to him. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(a) (limiting remedy to those persons “in custody” at time petition is filed);
see Maleng v. Cook, - U.S. -,
Having decided that habeas relief is unavailable, the Court notes that plaintiff nonetheless attacks the validity of his conviction. Plaintiff neither appealed his guilty plea conviction nor sought collateral habeas relief.
3
Plaintiff nonetheless has the right to rebut defendant’s proffered “conviction” defense by demonstrating to the Court, in furtherance of his civil rights claim, that the guilty plea was invalid and thus does not conclusively establish the existence of probable cause for his arrest.
See Smith, supra,
Plaintiff’s argument is as follows:
Granted this is not a case where a defendant was held for many days in a police station and deprived of food or water while the police pressured him to confess. But a law abiding citizen, arrested for failure to show identification over a parking ticket, held overnight in a jail cell with drug addicts, where he was abused and could not sleep and told by a Legal Aid lawyer that he can walk out the door immediately if he pleads guilty to a violation, is subject to the type of pressure that renders his plea involuntary.
Plaintiff’s Memorandum at 5. Plaintiff also argues that the plea procedure was faulty in that the “court, hearing the case at an arraignment part immediately after the events in question, after defendant had no chance to call his lawyer the night before, never addressed the defendant, never asked the defendant if his plea was voluntary or correct, never asked for the factual basis for the plea, but simply accepted the lawyer’s statement that the defendant was pleading to disorderly conduct.” Id. at 6.
The Supreme Court has recognized that the guilty plea and plea bargaining process are important elements of our criminal justice system.
Allyn v. Comm.
*189
of Corr. Services,
The only evidence before the Court concerning counsel’s representation comes from Unger’s deposition and the plea record. According to his deposition, Unger was not allowed to contact the counsel of his choice. After spending a night in jail, a Legal Aid attorney met with him briefly at the courthouse, whose advice was to plead guilty to whatever the judge said. Unger states that his only concern at the time was to avoid returning to jail. Neither counsel nor the judge mentioned the possibility of bail.
The Court has reviewed the sparse minutes of the plea proceeding. Plaintiff’s characterization of the proceeding as “assembly-line justice” is certainly appropriate. Counsel for Unger waived the reading of the charges, the reading of Unger’s rights, and the allocution on the guilty plea. 5 The only time the court addressed Unger was to ask him if he had anything to say prior to imposition of sentence. Unger indicated that he did not. The record indicates that the judge, counsel and Unger had a discussion off the record. This discussion occurred immediately before Un-ger’s counsel indicated his intention to plead guilty, and the substance of that conversation is not known.
From the record before the Court, it appears that counsel did not discuss the charges in detail nor the circumstances of plaintiff’s arrest. The record does not indicate an admission of factual guilt on Un-ger’s part; Unger’s counsel merely informed the court after the side bar conference that her client intended to plead guilty. It is fairly evident that counsel was *190 able to negotiate a conditional discharge for Unger, but absent some indication that Unger knew he was admitting wrongdoing, the Court believes it manifestly unfair to assume that he understood the consequences of the plea. Although Unger may have known that by allowing his attorney to enter a guilty plea he was in fact admitting his own criminal conduct, it is equally possible that he had no real idea what was happening and only understood that his appointed counsel was arranging for him to leave jail and not have to return.
The Court concludes that summary judgment in favor of defendants is not appropriate on the record now before the Court. First, the Court is not satisfied that plaintiff received effective assistance of counsel. Plaintiff claims that his plea was not voluntarily and intelligently made because of the coercive setting, the trauma he was experiencing and his lack of full understanding of the situation. Absent effective representation by counsel, and the considered judgment of the defendant in light of that representation, the conviction based on the plea is circumspect and does not constitute a defense to the false arrest claims. Counsel’s actions are to be evaluated in light of all the circumstances surrounding the proceeding.
Kimmelman, supra,
The evidence suggests that counsel may or may not have adequately discussed the case with her client, and may or may not have informed him of the consequences of the plea or the fact that the plea involved an admission of criminal wrongdoing. Counsel did not suggest the possibility of bail or other measures short of a guilty plea to secure defendant’s release. The record does not indicate that counsel made any investigation into the facts of the case. Counsel also did not indicate that Unger had not eaten since being arrested, that he was traumatized or that he believed he had been falsely arrested and wrongly abused. Counsel also waived all of defendant’s rights, without any indication in this record that she did so after consulting her client. Counsel thus waived the procedures by which Unger was to understand more fully what was occurring. In light of these facts, the Court finds that judgment in favor of defendants on this issue is not appropriate. Due process requires that the record affirmatively disclose that a guilty plea was entered voluntarily and intelligently.
Salisbury, supra,
The lack of an allocution by the state judge, and counsel’s willingness to waive one, is not insignificant. Although a defendant may waive rights through counsel, the court must be satisfied that the defendant has done so voluntarily. The facts of this case demonstrate that a complete waiver of allocution is ill-advised. A record devoid of an allocution makes review particularly difficult, and in the absence of other evidence, the silent record calls the fundamental fairness of the plea proceeding into question.
Boykin v. Alabama,
In order to challenge the effectiveness of counsel, plaintiff must also establish that he would not have plead guilty but for the errors made. The Court concludes on this record that if Unger had received effective assistance of counsel he would not have reasonably entered the guilty plea. A better understanding of the consequences of the plea and that the plea involved a conclusive finding of criminal conduct under these circumstances would have motivated Unger not to enter the plea, at least in the manner it was done and without consulting his own counsel. Unger has thus satisfied on this record the “prejudice” requirement.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, the Court denies defendants’ motion for partial summary judgment.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Other circuits have criticized the conclusions and policy assumptions of
Cameron. See Rose v. Bartle,
. This Court, in the past, and courts in other jurisdictions have analyzed the issue in terms of collateral estoppel, rather than in terms of a common law defense, ruling that a conviction, by plea or trial, collaterally estops a plaintiff from relitigating the existence of lack of existence of probable cause, on the theory that his guilt has been conclusively established.
See Camarano v. City of New York,
. It is not clear that plaintiff ever was "in custody” such that habeas relief would have been available.
. Proof of ineffective assistance of counsel is not the exclusive means to challenge a plea of guilty. In Miller, supra, the Court of Appeals held that a guilty plea, even if "knowing” and "intelligent”, would not be valid if the prosecutor failed to reveal material evidence. Id. at 1320. Thus, a failure of process can invalidate what would otherwise be a valid plea.
. If this plea had been taken in federal court, Fed.R.Crim.P. 11 would have required an extensive allocution. Rule 11, however, does not represent the constitutional minimum and is not binding on the state courts. Gaddy v. Linahan, 780 F.2d 935, 943 n. 8 (11th Cir.1986).
