MEMORANDUM OPINION
Bеfore the Court is Defendants’ 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss this cause for failure to state a claim for which relief can be granted. Since the parties have introduced material that is outside the pleadings, the motion shall be treated as one for summary judgment undеr Fed.R.Civ.P. 56. 1 Plaintiff, Clarence Von Williams, has brought this case pursuant to 42 U.S.C. Sections 1983, 1985, and 1986, alleging that the City of Bridge City, Texas, its city manager, and two of its police officers deprived him of his civil rights when he was arrested, prosecuted, and convicted for a crime another man later confessed to having committed. Since this Court finds, as a matter of law, that Clarence Von Williams is barred from bringing this Federal cause of action, the Court will order that summary judgment be entered for the defendant City and its officers. The Court’s rеasoning follows:
I. THE FACTS
On April 30, 1979, someone brutally raped a woman and her daughter at gunpoint in the woman’s home, and then sexually abused the woman’s teenaged son. The rapist — who wore a ski mask — blindfolded his victims, but they later testified *1189 that they were able to cаtch glimpses of him underneath their blindfolds. The victims identified the assailant as being a white male approximately five feet ten inches tall, as having either dark brown or black hair with a mustache, and weighing approximately 180 to 200 pounds, and stated that the аssailant looked like Clarence Von Williams.
Bridge City Police arrested Von Williams in May, 1979. Von Williams asserted his innocence of the crime and contended he had been out drinking the night of the incident. Von Williams was charged by the police, and indicted by the Orange County Grand Jury. Von Williams’ case went to trial twice in 1981. The first trial ended in a mistrial when the jury deadlocked at nine to three for conviction. At a second jury trial in October, 1981, a jury convicted Von Williams of aggravated rape and sentenced him to fifty years in prison. At both trials, all three crime victims identified Von Williams as the rapist.
Still protesting his innocence, Von Williams was committed and began serving his sentence. Only a short time later, however, a man named Jon Barry Simonis, known as the “Ski-Mask Rapist” confessed to mоre than 80 rapes, including the ones for which Von Williams had been convicted. All charges against Von Williams were dismissed.
Von Williams then filed this suit in Federal Court, contending that h'ad Bridge City and its police officers conducted a proper investigation and prоsecution, his innocence would have been apparent from the start. Von Williams claimed the police officers failed to discover evidence at the crime scene, manipulated evidence to make him appear guilty, and even destroyed exonerating evidence. These actions, Von Williams asserts, infringed upon his Constitutional rights.
II. ANALYSIS: PROBABLE CAUSE AND THE RULE OF RODRIQUEZ V. RITCHEY
Von Williams’ claim in this case is based on 42 U.S.C. 1983.
2
A claim under this statute requires, as a threshold matter, that the plaintiff establish a deprivation of a right, privilеge, or guarantee secured by the Constitution and laws of the United States.
Flagg Brothers, Inc. v. Brooks,
Not surprisingly, Section 1983 actions involving mistaken identity, unlawful arrest and false imprisonment are not new. Indeed, in 1977, the Fifth Circuit,
en banc,
decided the case
of Rodriquez v. Ritchey,
“____[Jjust because a person validly arrested is later discovered to be innocent does not make the arrest ‘unlawful’ for Fourth Amendment purposes. To the contrary, it has long been settled that an indictment by a properly constituted grand jury conclusively determines the existence of probable cause and provides the authority for an arrest warrant to issue. ”
Rodriquez v. Ritchey,
First, and most basically, an arrest made under authority of a properly issued warrant is simply not a ‘false’ arrest, it is a ‘true’ or valid one. Second, if the facts suppоrting an arrest are put before an intermediate such as a magistrate or grand jury, the intermediate’s decision breaks the causal chain and insulates an initiating party. Third, the general rule is that one who is engaged merely in investigative work is not liable fоr a resulting false arrest, even if he acted maliciously.
Rodriquez v. Ritchey, supra, at 1193-94. Two distinguished judges of the panel, Hill and Gee, concurred in the result, but wrote separately to state that they could not agree that the grand jury indictment conclusively immunized the arresting officеrs from suit. These judges believed that should an officer act maliciously or in bad faith in obtaining a grand jury indictment, then the officer should be liable. Id. at 1194-95.
The Rodriquez decision has not been without its detractors. Indeed, it appears that some other Federal Circuits are at variance with it. Nevertheless, it is the law in this circuit and because of it, Von Williams’ case must be dismissed.
Von Williams’ allegations concerning the police officers are worthy of note insofar as they point up the reason why
Rodriquez
is applicable. Von Williams states the police officers violated his rights because they, among other things: “failed to discover evidence at the scene of the crime ... allowed evidence to be destroyed ... failed to properly investigate the crime ... manipulated evidence to make plaintiff appear guilty ... seized articles of clothing from plaintiff’s home which did not match that identified by complainant ... [and] engaged in identification procedures calculated not to identify the assаilant but to incriminate the plaintiff.” Assuming, arguendo, that these charges are true,
5
the actions can be characterized as either negligent or intentional. If these actions were negligent, then there is still not enough to make out any Constitutional claim. The Constitution does not require police officers to conduct an error-free investigation of a crime.
Baker v. McCollan,
*1191
This leaves the plaintiff’s allegations that the police officers acted maliciously and intentionally — in essence, in bad faith. Even if this were proved,
Rodriquez
states that the grand jury’s indictment of Von Williams meаns conclusively there was probable cause, and thus no Fourth Amendment violation. Furthermore, the officers themselves could be immunized even under a different theory. In
Smith v. Gonzales,
Von Williams has stated to the court that the case of
Smiddy v. Varney,
Von Williams has also cited to the court the case of
Garris v. Rowland,
Furthermore, in
Garris,
the city’s liability was upheld on the basis of its custom and policy, as allowed by
Monell v. Department of Social Services,
In sum, then, there has been no Fourth Amendment violation. Even had there been, the chаin of causation has been broken, insulating the actors from liability. There is sound judicial policy underlying this decision. This Court need only quote Justice Rehnquist’s words in
Baker v. McCollan supra:
“The Constitution does not guarantee that only the guilty will be arrested. If it did, Section 1983 would provide a cause of action for every defendant acquitted — indeed for every suspect released.”
CONCLUSION
As a matter of Federal jurisdiction, Von Williams has no cause of action. The Fifth Circuit's decision in Rodriquez v. Ritchey compels a conclusion that the grand jury indictment conclusively establishes that there was no actionable violation of the Fourth Amendment, and thus no Constitutional infringement. Therefore, Von Williams has not stated a claim for which this Court can grant relief. It is therefore
ORDERED, ADJUDGED, AND DECREED that this cause be and is hereby DISMISSED pursuant to Fed.Rule Civ.P. 56(b).
Notes
. Oral hеaring was held on this motion on June 5th, 1984, pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(d). Approximately a week was given to the parties to further supplement their positions. Plaintiff has now moved to continue the court’s adjudication of the matter until such time as all grand jurors involved in the Vоn Williams' case can be contacted and deposed. The court will deny this motion, since, as stated in the opinion, it believes the testimony of the individual grand jurors would not affect the legal issue in this case.
. For purposes of substantive analysis, this opinion will consider Von Williams’ Section 1985 and Section 1986 claims along with the Section 1983 assertion. These civil rights statutes also require the infringement of a Federally protected right.
See United Brotherhood of Carpenters et al. v. Scott,
- U.S. -,
. Plaintiff’s сomplaint, on file since March 1, 1982 and never amended, raises no independent Sixth Amendment claim. An original defendant in this action was John T. Montford, the special prosecutor who prosecuted Von Williams’ second trial. This court, however, dismissed Mоnt- *1190 ford on the grounds of prosecutorial immunity on April 29, 1982.
. Of course, the Rodriquez opinion was issued by the "old” Fifth Circuit, which has since been divided into the Fifth and Eleventh Circuits.
.
See Marrero v. City of Hialeah,
. Indeed, in dealing with this issue in regard to the police officer’s liability, the Garris court *1192 relegated its discussion of Rodriquez v. Ritchey and Smith v. Gonzales to a footnote. Its main discussion centered on the officers’ qualified "good faith” immunity. Rodriquez and Smith were cited only as "further support ... Garris, supra, at 1273, fn. 6.
