Emil Jutrowski v. Township of Riverdale , 904 F.3d 280 ( 2018 )


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  •                                           PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    _______________
    No. 17-2594
    _______________
    EMIL JUTROWSKI,
    Appellant
    v.
    TOWNSHIP OF RIVERDALE; STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    by and through the New Jersey State Police; JEFFREY
    HEIMBACH, New Jersey State Police Trooper, individually
    and in his representative capacity as a State Police Officer;
    JAMES FRANCHINO, individually and in his representative
    capacity as a new Jersey State Police Officer; TRAVIS
    ROEMMELE, individually and in his representative capacity
    as a Riverdale Police Officer; CHRISTOPHER BIRO,
    individually and in his representative capacity as a Riverdale
    Police Officer; JOHN DOES (1-20); COL. RICK FUENTES,
    in his representative capacity as a commanding and Chief
    Executive Officer of the New Jersey State Police; CHIEF
    THOMAS SOULES, in his representative capacity as Chief
    of the Riverdale Police Department,
    _______________
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of New Jersey
    (D.N.J. Civil Action No. 2-13-cv-07351)
    District Judge: Honorable John M. Vazquez
    _______________
    Argued: March 12, 2018
    Before: JORDAN, KRAUSE, and
    GREENBERG, Circuit Judges
    (Opinion Filed: September 12, 2018)
    Robert J. Degroot [Argued]
    Ole Nekritin
    56 Park Place
    Newark, NJ 07102
    Counsel for Appellant Emil Jutrowski
    Anthony P. Seijas    [Argued]
    Cleary Giacobbe Alfieri & Jacobs
    169 Ramapo Valley Road
    Upper Level 105
    Oakland, NJ 07436
    Counsel for Appellees Township of Riverdale,
    Christopher Biro, Travis Roemmele, and Chief
    Thomas Soules
    2
    Matthew J. Lynch [Argued]
    Office of Attorney General of New Jersey
    Division of Law
    25 Market Street
    Richard J. Hughes Justice Complex
    Trenton, NJ 08625
    Robert P. Preuss
    Office of Attorney General of New Jersey
    Division of Law Tort Litigation and Judiciary
    25 Market Street
    P.O. Box 116
    Trenton, NJ 08625
    Christopher S. Porrino
    Office of Attorney General of New Jersey
    Melissa H. Raksa, Assistant Attorney General
    Kai W. Marshall-Otto
    Richard J. Hughes Justice Complex
    25 Market Street
    P.O. Box 112
    Trenton, NJ 08625
    Counsel for Appellees State of New Jersey,
    Jeffrey Heimbach, James Franchino, and
    Col. Rick Fuentes
    3
    _______________
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    _______________
    KRAUSE, Circuit Judge.
    This case arises from an undisputed constitutional
    violation: an act of excessive force committed during the arrest
    of Appellant Emil Jutrowski in which he was kicked in the
    face, breaking his eye socket. Appellees—consisting of two
    Riverdale, New Jersey Police Officers and two New Jersey
    State Troopers involved in the arrest (the “Individual
    Defendants”), and their respective employers, the Township of
    Riverdale and the State of New Jersey (collectively, the
    “Defendants”)—do not dispute that one of the officers kicked
    Jutrowski. But each of the Individual Defendants asserts he
    neither inflicted the blow himself nor saw anyone else do so,
    and Jutrowski, whose face was pinned to the pavement when
    the excessive force occurred, is unable to identify his assailant.
    He therefore brought excessive force claims against all
    Defendants and conspiracy claims against the four Individual
    4
    Defendants under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    . The District Court,
    however, relying on our precedent that a defendant in a civil
    rights action must have “personal involvement” in the alleged
    wrongs, Rode v. Dellarciprete, 
    845 F.2d 1195
    , 1207–08 (3d
    Cir. 1988), determined that Jutrowski’s inability to identify his
    attacker was fatal to his claims and granted summary judgment
    in Defendants’ favor.
    We are now called upon to outline the contours of this
    “personal involvement” requirement in § 1983 cases and to
    consider its application when a plaintiff who indisputably
    suffered a constitutional injury at the hands of one officer
    comes up against to the proverbial “blue wall of silence.”
    Despite the unfortunate situation created for plaintiffs like
    Jutrowski who are unable to identify their attackers through no
    fault of their own, we hold that a plaintiff alleging that one or
    more officers engaged in unconstitutional conduct must
    establish the “personal involvement” of each named defendant
    to survive summary judgment and take that defendant to trial.
    Nonetheless, where a plaintiff adduces sufficient evidence of
    an after-the-fact conspiracy to cover up misconduct, even of an
    unidentified officer, he may be able to state a claim under
    § 1983 for the violation of a different constitutional right: the
    due process right of access to the courts. Such is the case here.
    Accordingly, we will affirm the District Court as to Jutrowski’s
    excessive force claim but will reverse and remand as to his
    conspiracy claim.
    5
    I.   Background
    A.   Factual Background1
    On June 23, 2010, Emil Jutrowski, after drinking
    several vodka sodas at a bar in East Hanover, NJ, crashed his
    sport utility vehicle along the shoulder of the highway. Other
    than a small cut above his right eye, Jutrowski suffered no
    injuries from the accident. Because his car was pinned up
    against the left guardrail, however, he could not exit from the
    driver’s side door and was still attempting to “pull away” when
    police arrived. App. 285. The first two officers to arrive on the
    scene were Officer Travis Roemmele and Officer Christopher
    Biro of the Riverdale, New Jersey Police Department (the
    “Riverdale Defendants”). Moments later, three State Troopers
    arrived, including Appellees Jeffrey Heimbach and James
    Franchino (the “State Trooper Defendants”).
    The officers quickly deduced that Jutrowski was heavily
    intoxicated. Heimbach, who first approached Jutrowski,
    immediately detected “an overwhelming odor of an alcoholic
    beverage emanating from the interior of [the] vehicle,” and
    asked Jutrowski to produce his license and registration.
    App. 285. Instead, Jutrowski attempted to light a cigarette and
    1
    The factual summary below draws from record
    evidence and because the District Court granted summary
    judgment in the defendants’ favor, we view the facts in the light
    most favorable to Jutrowski. See, e.g., Pellegrino v. U.S.
    Transp. Sec. Admin, No. 15-3047, 
    2018 WL 3371699
    , at *2 n.2
    (3d Cir. 2018).
    6
    proceeded to rub liquid hand sanitizer on his face.2 As the smell
    of alcohol became “stronger,” Heimbach determined that “it
    was emanating directly from [Jutrowski’s] breath.” App. 285.
    He also observed that Jutrowski’s eyes were bloodshot and his
    pupils extremely dilated, and that, although Jutrowski was still
    seated in his vehicle, he was disoriented and moving slowly.
    Id.3
    It was also apparent that Jutrowski needed medical
    attention. Heimbach noticed the cut above his right eye, and
    Jutrowski told Heimbach that he was injured, that he had a
    heart condition, and that he wanted to go to the hospital. Soon
    after, emergency medical personnel arrived and administered
    first aid while Jutrowski remained seated in his SUV. At the
    point Jutrowski verbally refused further medical treatment but
    also refused to sign a written waiver of further treatment,
    Heimbach asked Jutrowski to exit his vehicle. Jutrowski
    initially refused but eventually, because the driver’s side door
    was inoperable, he climbed over the seat and exited the
    passenger door without assistance. The officers acquiesced to
    Jutrowski’s request not to be handcuffed on account of his
    heart condition, and Troopers Heimbach and Franchino began
    escorting him towards the ambulance on the other side of the
    highway. Jutrowski, however, was unsteady on his feet and
    2
    According to the officers, Jutrowski took “liquid hand
    sanitizer and rubbed it all over his face and head and attempted
    to swallow s[o]me.” App. 285. Jutrowski testified that he was
    merely trying to apply hand sanitizer to the gash over his eye.
    3
    Under the circumstances, Heimbach normally would
    have performed a field sobriety test, but he declined to do so
    on account of Jutrowski’s injuries.
    7
    wobbled, so Trooper Franchino, concerned about “the roadway
    conditions and the proximity to traffic,” reached out for
    Jutrowski’s right wrist to steady him.
    4 App. 281
    . In reaction,
    Jutrowski “pulled his hand away in an upward fashion,
    subsequently striking [Franchino] in the forehead with his
    forearm,” App. 281, and Franchino, in turn, promptly executed
    a “front leg sweep” maneuver that took Jutrowski to the
    ground, App. 281, 424. Jutrowski fell “straight ahead,”
    App. 425, with “some force,” App. 426, and “just kind of face-
    planted, just like a tower falling over,” App. 336.
    Lying on the ground on his stomach, Jutrowski’s face
    was turned to his right, with his left cheek on the pavement.
    With Troopers Franchino and Heimbach on Jutrowski’s right
    side and a third trooper on his left, the officers attempted to
    handcuff him—a difficult task because Jutrowski’s hands were
    tucked underneath him and he was a “very strong, very big
    man,” allegedly weighing over 300 pounds at the time.
    App. 375, 427, 462. As Franchino used his baton to pry
    Jutrowski’s arms from underneath him, Riverdale Officers
    Biro and Roemmele ran over to assist. Biro knelt down at
    Jutrowski’s feet to hold his legs, and Roemmele “assisted by
    holding [Jutrowski’s] legs while the officers were finally able
    to remove [his] hands from under his body.” App. 288.
    Heimbach put his knee in the small of Jutrowski’s back to
    subdue him and with Jutrowski still lying face down,
    4
    Jutrowski testified he was unsteady because he was
    struck in the crotch by the stick shift when he climbed out of
    the car and was therefore in severe pain, but Trooper Franchino
    testified that Jutrowski was “stumbling and kind of staggering
    . . . walking closer to the lane of traffic.” App. 435.
    8
    Heimbach began to search him. Franchino was positioned near
    Jutrowski’s shoulders, and was thus “closest to his head.” App.
    438.
    At some point in the midst of this scuffle, one of the
    officers kicked Jutrowski hard on the right side of his face,5
    hard enough to inflict a “blow out fracture,” that is, a broken
    nose and broken eye socket, requiring surgery. App. 262–63.6
    After the kick, the officers turned Jutrowski over on his
    back and Trooper Heimbach continued searching him. As
    Heimbach was patting him down, however, Jutrowski
    “kick[ed] his left leg up striking . . . Trooper [Heimbach] in the
    face with his left foot.” App. 288. At that point, Jutrowski was
    handcuffed and taken to the hospital. He ultimately pleaded
    guilty to driving under the influence.
    5
    On appeal, the State Trooper Defendants concede that
    Jutrowski was kicked, see State Trooper Br. 5. While the
    Riverdale Defendants do not make this concession as
    explicitly, they “d[id] not contest that Plaintiff was kicked”
    before the District Court, App. 24, nor do they on appeal, see
    Riverdale Br. 12.
    6
    A medical expert report indicates that it is unlikely
    Jutrowski’s injury was the “result merely from a fall face first,”
    but instead that it “would take either a kick or punch of
    significant force to create the type” of injuries he suffered.
    App. 262–62. To this day, Jutrowski’s injury causes him pain,
    and he suffers from “frequent headaches, vertigo, dizziness,
    vision problems, sinusitis, difficult concentrating, [and]
    discharge from his nose . . . .” Appellant’s Br. 7.
    9
    B.    Procedural History
    Because he was unable to identify which of the officers
    in his immediate vicinity was the one that kicked him,
    Jutrowski filed suit against Officers Biro and Roemmele and
    Troopers Franchino and Heimbach, along with the Township
    of Riverdale and State of New Jersey (collectively, the
    “Defendants”).7 His complaint, as relevant here, included in
    Count I a claim for the use of excessive force, in violation of
    the Fourth Amendment and 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    , and, in Counts
    V and VI, claims of conspiracy, in violation of § 1983 and New
    Jersey law, respectively, to violate federal and state civil rights
    by using excessive force, by filing false and misleading police
    reports, and by giving misleading grand jury testimony.8
    7
    The operative complaint here was originally filed in
    state court and was removed by Defendants to the District
    Court. Emil Jutrowski v. Township of Riverdale, et al., No. 13-
    7351, 
    2017 WL 1395484
    , at *3 (D.N.J. Apr. 17, 2017).
    8
    All told, Jutrowski’s complaint included seven counts:
    (I) a § 1983 claim for excessive force (against the Individual
    Defendants); (II) a § 1983 claim for failure to properly train,
    supervise and control officers (against the police departments);
    (III) a state law tort claim for excessive force, assault and
    battery (against all Defendants); (IV) a state law tort claim for
    failure to properly train, supervise and control officers (against
    the police departments); (V) an alleged conspiracy to violate
    federal civil rights (against the Individual Defendants); (VI) an
    alleged conspiracy to violate state civil rights (against the
    Individual Defendants); and (VII) a claim for assault and
    battery (against the Individual Defendants). Counts II, III, IV,
    10
    After Defendants unsuccessfully moved for dismissal,
    the case proceeded to discovery, where it was established that
    Biro, Roemmele, Franchino, and Heimbach were each in
    Jutrowski’s immediate presence when he was kicked. But
    Jutrowski was not able in the course of the discovery to identify
    which of these law enforcement officers inflicted the blow, and
    none of the officers admitted to being either the perpetrator or
    a witness. Even Heimbach—who testified that he had his knee
    in Jutrowski’s back between his shoulder blades, that his “sole
    focus” for “the entire time” was on Jutrowski’s head, and that
    “if anything . . . struck [Jutrowski] in the face, he would
    know”—allegedly saw nothing. App. 344. Likewise, Trooper
    Franchino testified that he was the officer “closest to
    [Jutrowski’s] head” and was “more than six inches [but] less
    than three feet” away when Jutrowski was taken to the ground,
    but he too saw nothing. App. 438.
    Nor did any of the dashboard cameras (“dashcams”) on
    the officers’ vehicles capture the incident. Officer Biro’s car
    was parked closest to Jutrowski’s, and his dashcam presumably
    would have had the best view of Jutrowski being escorted from
    his car across the highway—except that it allegedly did not
    record. According to Biro’s testimony, he did not manually
    switch on the camera because he believed he was pulling over
    to investigate a traffic accident, not to effectuate a vehicle stop.
    Emil Jutrowski v. Township of Riverdale, et al., No. 13-7351,
    
    2017 WL 1395484
    , at *1 (D.N.J. Apr. 17, 2017). Biro also
    and VII are not at issue as Jutrowski does not challenge the
    District Court’s entry of summary judgment on those counts on
    appeal. Jutrowski, 
    2017 WL 1395474
    , at *6–7.
    11
    indicated that the camera should record automatically when the
    emergency lights are activated, as they were here, but his
    testimony was ambiguous as to whether that was true at the
    time of the incident or was a more recent development, and
    Jutrowski’s counsel did not seek clarification. For their part,
    the State Troopers’ dashcams were activated but “did not
    capture any of the critical alleged events” due to their poor
    vantage points. 
    Id.
    In the absence of evidence identifying the perpetrator,
    the District Court granted summary judgment on all counts for
    all Defendants. 
    Id.
     As for the use of excessive force, although
    the Defendants “d[id] not contest that Plaintiff was kicked,” the
    District Court reasoned that because Jutrowski could not
    “identify which Defendant kicked him,” he was essentially
    asking “the Court to guess which individual Officer Defendant
    committed the alleged wrong.” 
    Id. at *4
    . In its thorough and
    thoughtful opinions granting summary judgment and denying
    reconsideration, the District Court relied on this Court’s
    precedents to conclude that absent an “evidentiary basis on
    which to hold” any individual defendant liable, Defendants
    were all entitled to judgment as a matter of law. 
    Id.
     The District
    Court also rejected Jutrowski’s request to fill the evidentiary
    void with an adverse spoliation inference from the failure to
    produce Officer Biro’s dashcam video because Jutrowski had
    not made “a request for inspection pursuant to Federal Rule of
    Civil Procedure 34(a)” or taken other steps to obtain evidence
    of the video, and thus he failed “to provide sufficient evidence
    demonstrating that the video actually existed.” 
    Id. at *5
    .
    As for the federal and state civil conspiracy counts, the
    District Court found “no facts suggesting that [Individual]
    Defendants spoke to each other concerning the alleged kick
    12
    before the incident occurred” and that it could not infer any
    “after-the-fact” conspiracy because Jutrowski had not
    identified specific facts to support the contention “that the
    officers from Riverdale and the State Police colluded before
    writing their reports or testifying before the grand jury.” 
    Id. at *8
    . It therefore granted summary judgment on these counts,
    both to the extent they asserted a conspiracy to use excessive
    force and to the extent they asserted a conspiracy to violate
    Jutrowski’s rights afterwards.
    Jutrowski now appeals, arguing that the District Court
    erred in granting summary judgment on his claims of excessive
    force and civil conspiracy.
    II. Jurisdiction and Standard of Review9
    We review the District Court’s grant of summary
    judgment de novo. Faush v. Tuesday Morning, Inc., 
    808 F.3d 208
    , 215 (3d Cir. 2015). To warrant summary judgment, the
    moving party must establish “that there is no genuine dispute
    as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment
    as a matter of law,” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a), and all facts should
    be viewed “in the light most favorable to the non-moving
    party,” with “all reasonable inferences [drawn] in that party’s
    favor,” Scheidemantle v. Slippery Rock Univ. State Sys. of
    Higher Educ., 
    470 F.3d 535
    , 538 (3d Cir. 2006). For its part,
    “[t]he non-moving party must oppose the motion and, in doing
    so, may not rest upon the mere allegations or denials of his
    pleadings” but, instead, “must set forth specific facts showing
    that there is a genuine issue for trial. Bare assertions,
    9
    The District Court had jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1331
    ; we have jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    .
    13
    conclusory allegations, or suspicions will not suffice.” D.E. v.
    Central Dauphin School Dist., 
    765 F.3d 260
    , 268–69 (3d Cir.
    2014) (citations omitted).
    A factual dispute is genuine “if the evidence is such that
    a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving
    party,” Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 
    477 U.S. 242
    , 248
    (1986), but “[c]onversely, where a non-moving party fails
    sufficiently to establish the existence of an essential element of
    its case on which it bears the burden of proof at trial, there is
    not a genuine dispute with respect to a material fact and thus
    the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
    Goldenstein v. Repossessors Inc., 
    815 F.3d 142
    , 146 (citations
    omitted).
    We review the denial of an adverse spoliation inference
    for abuse of discretion. In re Hechinger Inv. Co. of Del., 
    489 F. 3d 568
    , 574 (3d Cir. 2007). A district court abuses its
    discretion if its decision not to draw the inference rests upon “a
    clearly erroneous finding of fact, an errant conclusion of law
    or an improper application of law to fact.” Meditz v. City of
    Newark, 
    658 F.3d 364
    , 367 n.1 (3d Cir. 2011) (citations
    omitted).
    III. Discussion
    On appeal, Jutrowski argues that the District Court erred
    by granting summary judgment on his excessive force claim
    against all Defendants because he set forth specific facts
    showing a genuine issue for trial in two ways: by establishing
    that excessive force was used and that the Individual
    Defendants were all in close proximity, and by adducing
    sufficient evidence (the absence of a dashcam video from
    14
    Officer Biro) to warrant an adverse inference against the
    Defendants. He also claims error in the grant of summary
    judgment on his claims against the Individual Defendants for
    conspiracy to violate his federal and state civil rights. We
    address these arguments in turn.
    A.   The Excessive Force Claim
    As Jutrowski would have it, so long as a plaintiff can
    show that some officer used excessive force, he may haul
    before a jury all officers who were “in the immediate vicinity
    of where excessive force occurred” without any proof of their
    personal involvement. Appellant’s Br. 13. That is simply not
    the law. Instead, the tenet that a defendant’s § 1983 liability
    must be predicated on his direct and personal involvement in
    the alleged violation has deep historical roots in tort law
    principles, is manifest in our excessive force jurisprudence,
    and is reinforced by persuasive authority from our Sister
    Circuits.
    We begin with principles of tort liability, which
    necessarily inform our interpretation of § 1983 as a statute
    “sounding in tort.” Howell v. Cataldi, 
    464 F.2d 272
    , 278 n.10
    (3d Cir. 1972); see Carey v. Piphus, 
    435 U.S. 247
    , 253 (1978)
    (describing § 1983 as a “species of tort liability”). As the
    Supreme Court has long recognized, a fundamental principle is
    that a tortfeasor’s “liability . . . will only result from his own
    neglect . . . .” Dunlop v. Munroe, 
    11 U.S. 242
    , 269 (1812). That
    is because “[o]ur system of private liability for the
    consequences of a man’s own acts . . . started from the notion
    of actual intent and actual personal culpability.” Oliver
    Wendell Holmes, Jr., The Common Law 4 (Boston, Little,
    Brown, & Co. 1881). And, as a result, “[a]n essential element
    15
    of [a] plaintiff’s cause of action for negligence, or for that
    matter for any other tort, is that there be some reasonable
    connection between the act or omission of the defendant and
    the damage which the plaintiff has suffered.” W. Page Keeton
    et al., Prosser and Keeton on Torts 263 (5th ed., 1984); see
    also Restatement (Second) of Torts § 430 (1965).
    In the § 1983 context, these principles have led the
    Supreme Court to require a “showing of direct responsibility”
    by the named defendant and to eschew any “theory of liability”
    in which defendants played “no affirmative part in depriving
    any[one] . . . of any constitutional rights,” Rizzo v. Goode, 
    423 U.S. 362
    , 376–77 (1976)—including theories of vicarious or
    respondeat superior liability, see Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 
    556 U.S. 662
    , 676 (2009); see also Merklin v. United States, 
    788 F.2d 172
    , 175 (3d Cir. 1986). Instead, “[b]ecause vicarious liability
    is inapplicable to . . . § 1983 suits, a plaintiff must plead that
    each Government-official defendant, through the official’s
    own individual actions, has violated the Constitution.” Iqbal,
    
    556 U.S. at 676
     (emphasis added). “Each Government official,
    his or her title notwithstanding, is only liable for his or her own
    misconduct.” 
    Id. at 677
     (emphasis added). And, a fortiori, if
    entities and supervisors may not be vicariously liable under
    § 1983 for the constitutional violation of a given individual,
    neither may that individual’s cohorts who happen to be in the
    immediate vicinity. See Anela v. City of Wildwood, 
    790 F.2d 1063
    , 1067–68 (3d Cir. 1986) (observing that defendants may
    “not be held liable under section 1983 merely because they
    were members of a group of which some other members were
    guilty of abuses” (citing Rizzo, 
    423 U.S. at
    370–71)).
    We have imported these precepts into the excessive
    force context in a trilogy of cases that squarely foreclose
    16
    Jutrowski’s argument today. In Howell, 
    464 F.2d 272
    , where
    the plaintiff alleged that a single police officer exerted
    excessive force in arresting him and sued two of the six officers
    at the scene, alleging that one was the perpetrator, we affirmed
    a directed verdict for the defendants because “[i]nsofar as the
    two defendants are concerned, one of them is free of liability.”
    
    Id. at 283
    . “At best,” we explained, “there was proof of
    wrongful conduct of one, identified only as one of two possible
    actors, without an explicit identification as to which of the
    two,” and thus, “without more,” there was no way to know
    which of them should be held to answer for the violation. 
    Id. at 283
    .
    In Sharrar v. Felsing, 
    128 F.3d 810
     (3d Cir. 1997),
    where the plaintiff alleged that an officer who handcuffed him
    had dislocated his shoulder but could not identify which, out of
    the 20 officers on the scene, was the perpetrator, we likewise
    concluded that there was “no evidentiary basis on which to
    hold the[] defendants liable” and affirmed the order of
    summary judgment in their favor on that basis. 
    Id. at 821
    .
    In contrast, in Smith v. Mensinger, 
    293 F.3d 641
     (3d Cir.
    2002), we reversed the grant of summary judgment on an
    Eighth Amendment claim where, although the plaintiff-inmate
    conceded he could not see all five of the defendant-correctional
    officers during his alleged beating, he testified that “all of them
    . . . were pushing my head, right, into the cabinets . . . and
    walls,” and “the full force of all the guards [was] behind me .
    . . . I said all of them.” 
    Id. at 650
     (emphasis omitted). In that
    circumstance, we explained, the “fact that Smith . . .
    acknowledged that he could not see those defendants during
    the beating neither negate[d] their involvement nor their
    17
    liability as a matter of law.”10 
    Id.
     Thus, Smith ultimately
    involved nothing more than a dispute about “[t]he extent of
    each officer’s participation,” which “is . . . a classic factual
    dispute to be resolved by the fact finder,” 
    id.
     (emphasis added),
    while Howell and Sharrar involved a dispute about the
    possibility of each officer’s participation, which we held is
    insufficient, “without more,” Howell, 
    464 F.2d at 282
    ; see
    Sharrar, 
    128 F.3d at 821
    , to reach a jury and entitles defendants
    to judgment as a matter of law.
    The line we drew in these cases is consistent with the
    approach of other Courts of Appeals. Indeed, just last year, our
    colleagues on the Seventh Circuit wrestled with the “potential
    tension” between the individual-responsibility requirement of
    § 1983 and “factual scenarios . . . [where] [i]t may be
    problematic to require plaintiffs to specifically identify which
    officers” committed the constitutional violation. Colbert v.
    City of Chicago, 
    851 F.3d 649
    , 657–58 (7th Cir. 2017), cert.
    denied sub nom. Colbert v. City of Chicago, Ill., 
    138 S. Ct. 657
    (2018). In that case, the plaintiff sued four of the ten officers
    who searched his bedroom, causing property damage, though
    he “admitted that he was unable to identify which of the ten
    10
    Jutrowski focuses on other language in Smith—
    specifically, our observation that “it is undisputed that all of
    the named officers were in the vicinity at some point when
    Smith alleges he was beaten,” 
    id.
     at 651—to argue that mere
    presence creates “a sufficient issue of material fact to deny . . .
    summary judgment,” Appellant’s Br. 18, but in context, this
    merely indicated there was objective corroboration for the
    plaintiff’s testimony that “all of them” were involved, Smith,
    
    293 F.3d at 650
    .
    18
    searching officers had caused the alleged property damage
    because he was not allowed in the rooms while the officers
    conducted their search.” 
    Id. at 657
    . Despite the “acceptable
    reasons” for the officers to clear the search area which risked
    “effectively immunizing officers from property-damage
    claims by preventing a plaintiff from observing the person
    responsible for the damage,” the court held that the plaintiff
    was “unable to satisfy § 1983’s personal-responsibility
    requirement at summary judgment.” Id. at 657–68. At the same
    time, it observed that plaintiffs in this situation might have
    recourse “by including in their complaint allegations of
    misconduct that are unaffected at summary judgment by the
    inability to observe the search,” such as “a ‘conspiracy of
    silence among the officers’ in which defendants refuse to
    disclose which of their number has injured the plaintiff.” Id.
    (citations omitted).
    Other Courts of Appeals likewise have held that
    personal involvement of each defendant is a prerequisite to
    liability in § 1983 cases. See, e.g., Burley v. Gagacki, 
    729 F.3d 610
    , 619 (6th Cir. 2013) (“To establish liability against an
    individual defendant acting under color of state law, a plaintiff
    must show that the defendant was ‘personally involved’ in the
    use of excessive force.”); Dodds v. Richardson, 
    614 F.3d 1185
    ,
    1195 (10th Cir. 2010) (“[I]ndividual liability under § 1983
    must be based on personal involvement in the alleged
    constitutional violation.”) (citations omitted); see also Jones v.
    Williams, 
    297 F.3d 930
    , 935 (9th Cir. 2002) (“[A] plaintiff
    could not hold an officer liable because of his membership in
    a group without a showing of individual participation in the
    unlawful conduct.”).
    19
    The authorities on which we rely—tort law principles
    informing § 1983 liability, our own precedent, and the wisdom
    of our Sister Circuits—are thus unanimous that, in the face of
    motion for summary judgment, a § 1983 plaintiff must produce
    evidence supporting each individual defendant’s personal
    involvement in the alleged violation to bring that defendant to
    trial. But Jutrowski has not done so: As he concedes, after
    significant discovery, he has narrowed the potential universe
    of actors to those that were in his immediate vicinity, but he
    filed suit against only four of the five of them and still cannot
    “identify the actor that kicked him.” Appellant’s Br. 12. Put
    another way, he admittedly seeks to proceed to trial against at
    least three defendants who are “free of liability,” Howell, 
    464 F.2d at 283
    , without any “ascertainment of [which] individual
    charged was the perpetrator of the constitutional deprivation,”
    
    id. at 282
    . As the foregoing discussion teaches, that is not a
    sufficient basis to survive summary judgment.
    Nor is that deficiency remedied by the potential adverse
    inference Jutrowski contends should be drawn from Officer
    Biro’s failure to produce his dashcam video. At summary
    judgment, “the trier of fact generally may receive the fact of . .
    . nonproduction or destruction [of relevant materials] as
    evidence that the party that has prevented production did so out
    of the well-founded fear that the contents would harm him,”
    see Brewer v. Quaker State Oil Refining Corp., 
    72 F.3d 326
    ,
    334 (3d Cir. 1995). But a spoliation inference requires, among
    other things, “actual suppression or withholding of evidence,”
    Bull v. United Parcel Serv., Inc., 
    665 F.3d 68
    , 73 (3d Cir.
    2012), and here, the District Court found, it would have to
    “assume[] there was a recording of the incident” because
    Jutrowski “fail[ed] to provide sufficient evidence
    20
    demonstrating that the video actually existed.” Jutrowski, 
    2017 WL 1395474
    , at *5.
    That evidence is indeed starkly absent. On appeal, as at
    summary judgment, Jutrowski posits the existence of an
    automatic recording based entirely on Biro’s statement at his
    deposition that the recording device “activates with [the
    emergency] lights.” App. 396. This statement, however, was in
    the present tense, while moments later, Biro made cryptic
    reference to events “back then” and a “different system.” 
    Id.
    Yet Jutrowski neither asked follow-up questions at that point,11
    nor sought afterwards to confirm the existence of the video
    through “a request for inspection pursuant to Federal Rule of
    11
    Jutrowski’s counsel did not seek to clarify, for
    example, whether Biro’s dashcam was programmed at the time
    of the incident to automatically record upon activation of
    emergency lights or that was only a more recent development;
    whether there were circumstances in which the dashcam would
    not automatically record with the lights activated; whether it
    recorded with the lights activated at other stops that day; or
    whether he had filed any report concerning a malfunction. Nor
    does the record on appeal reflect any interrogatories or requests
    for admission to this effect. Moreover, we have held that “[n]o
    unfavorable inference” is warranted “when the circumstances
    indicate” that the failure to turn over the relevant evidence is
    “otherwise properly accounted for,” Brewer, 
    72 F.3d at 334
    ,
    and Biro “accounted for” his failure to manually record the
    events, testifying that he “wasn’t thinking” about “go[ing] back
    to [his] car to hit a button” and that he was not required to do
    so because he initially considered the incident only as a motor
    vehicle accident. App. 396.
    21
    Civil Procedure 34(a)” or other discovery devices. Jutrowski,
    
    2017 WL 1395474
    , at *5. Having failed to establish the
    existence of the video, Jutrowski necessarily failed to show it
    was “actual[ly] suppress[ed].” Bull, 
    665 F.3d at 73
    . Thus,
    whatever inferences a reasonable jury might draw from the
    absence of this dashcam footage at trial, see infra Section III.B,
    the District Court’s refusal to draw an adverse inference at
    summary judgment was not an abuse of discretion.
    The upshot is a record insufficient for any reasonable
    jury to identify which, if any,12 of the Individual Defendants
    used excessive force. Jutrowski does not contend that all them
    kicked him, only that one did; he does not purport to raise a
    dispute about the extent of each officer’s participation, but
    rather the possibility of it; and what he tenders to fill the
    evidentiary gap—an adverse inference to be drawn from the
    absence of a dashcam video—itself lacks support in the record.
    Laid bare, Jutrowski’s argument is that “an issue of material
    fact as to the identity of the Appellee that kicked,” Appellant’s
    Br. 13, is sufficient to reach a jury, and even if it is not under
    Howell, Sharrar, and Smith, it should be. But in view of those
    cases, the District Court correctly concluded that all
    Defendants were entitled to summary judgment on Count I of
    the complaint. And, though we share the concern expressed by
    the Seventh Circuit in Colbert that our holding could
    “effectively immunize” perpetrators of constitutional
    violations who successfully “prevent[] a plaintiff from
    observing the person responsible for” the harm, 851 F.3d at
    12
    The third State Trooper in the immediate vicinity
    when Jutrowski was being arrested was not named as a
    defendant.
    22
    657–78, ours is not to break from controlling Circuit
    precedent.13
    As the Colbert court also observed, however, there may
    be other “avenue[s] for relief,” like a conspiracy claim, that
    “sufficiently construct[] the necessary causal connection
    between the official and some wrongdoing, regardless of
    whether the plaintiff was able to observe” the constitutional
    violation. See Colbert, 851 F.3d at 658. It is to such a claim
    that we now turn.
    B.    The Conspiracy Claims Against the Individual
    Defendants
    In his complaint, Jutrowski alleges both a conspiracy to
    violate his federal civil rights, in violation of § 1983 (Count V),
    and a conspiracy to violate his state civil rights, in violation of
    New Jersey law (Count VI). Tracking each other nearly
    verbatim, each of those Counts pleads two distinct conspiracies
    among the Individual Defendants: one before he was kicked,
    to arrest him using excessive force, and another after the fact,
    to cover up the use of that force.14 We agree with the District
    13
    “[I]t is the tradition of this court that the holding of a
    panel in a precedential opinion is binding on subsequent
    panels,” Joyce v. Maersk Line Ltd, 
    876 F.3d 502
    , 508 (2017)
    (en banc), and we are not free to overrule a prior precedential
    opinion absent en banc hearing, see Reilly v. City of
    Harrisburg, 
    858 F.3d 173
    , 177 (3d Cir. 2017); 3d Cir. I.O.P.
    9.1.
    14
    Unlike in a criminal indictment, where charging
    multiple conspiracies in the same count is forbidden by the
    doctrine of duplicity, U.S. v. Morrow, 
    717 F.3d 800
    , 804 (3d
    23
    Court that Jutrowski did not proffer sufficient evidence to
    create a triable issue of fact as to whether the officers “reached
    an[y] illicit agreement prior to the alleged kick.” Jutrowski,
    
    2017 WL 1395474
    , at *8. For the reasons explained below,
    however, we cannot agree that he failed to raise a fact issue
    concerning “a conspiracy . . . to violate [his] constitutional
    rights through after-the-fact evidence.” 
    Id.
    i.    Requirements to Establish a § 1983
    Conspiracy
    To prevail on a conspiracy claim under § 1983, a
    plaintiff must prove that persons acting under color of state law
    “reached an understanding” to deprive him of his constitutional
    rights. Adickes v. S.H. Kress & Co., 
    398 U.S. 144
    , 150-52
    (1970).15 Such rights include, of course, those protected by the
    Cir. 1983), multiple conspiracies may be charged in a single
    count of a civil complaint. See, e.g., Hampton v. Hanrahan,
    
    600 F.2d 600
    , 621, 627 n.27 (7th Cir. 1979), rev’d in part on
    other grounds by Hanrahan v. Hampton, 
    466 U.S. 754
     (1980).
    That is because, in the civil context, “[f]ederal pleading rules
    call for ‘a short and plain statement of the claim showing that
    the pleader is entitled to relief,’ Fed. Rule Civ. Proc. 8(a)(2);
    they do not countenance dismissal of a complaint for imperfect
    statement of the legal theory supporting the claim asserted.”
    Johnson v. City of Shelby, Miss., 
    135 S. Ct. 346
    , 346 (2014).
    Jutrowski’s conspiracy claims meet this standard.
    15
    The elements of a claim of conspiracy to violate
    federal civil rights are that “(1) two or more persons conspire
    to deprive any person of [constitutional rights]; (2) one or more
    of the conspirators performs . . . any overt act in furtherance of
    24
    Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, such as the
    “right to be heard in an impartial forum,” Great W. Mining &
    Mineral Co. v. Fox Rothschild LLP, 
    615 F.3d 159
    , 161 (3d Cir.
    2010), and the “right of access to the courts,” Monroe v. Beard,
    
    536 F.3d 198
    , 205 (3d Cir. 2008).16 Those rights “assure[] that
    no person will be denied the opportunity to present to the
    judiciary allegations concerning violations of . . . constitutional
    rights.” Wolff v. McDonnell, 
    418 U.S. 539
    , 579 (1974).
    the conspiracy; and (3) that overt act injures the plaintiff in his
    person or property or deprives the plaintiff of any right or
    privilege of a citizen of the United States,” with the added gloss
    under § 1983 that “the conspirators act ‘under the color of state
    law.’” Barnes Foundation v. Township of Lower Merion, 
    242 F.3d 151
    , 162 (3d Cir. 2001) (quoting 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    ).
    Under New Jersey law, the elements of a claim of conspiracy
    to violate civil rights are essentially the same. See Banco
    Popular N.A. v. Gandi 
    184 N.J. 161
    , 177-78 (2005) (“In New
    Jersey . . . the principal element of [civil conspiracy] is
    agreement between parties to inflict wrong against or injury
    upon another, and an overt act that results in damage.”)
    (citations omitted). Thus, although we focus our discussion
    below on Jutrowski’s § 1983 conspiracy claims, their
    resolution also dictates our disposition of his state conspiracy
    claims.
    16
    See Marshall v. Jerrico, Inc., 
    446 U.S. 238
    , 242
    (1980) (observing that “[t]he Due Process Clause entitles a
    person to an impartial and disinterested tribunal in both civil
    and criminal cases”); Bounds v. Smith, 
    430 U.S. 817
    , 828
    (1977) (describing access to the courts as a “fundamental
    constitutional right”).
    25
    Although deprivations of the right of access to the
    courts arise most often in the prison context,17 see, e.g.,
    Peterkin v. Jeffes, 
    855 F.2d 1021
    , 1036 (3d Cir. 1988), this
    right is also denied when law enforcement officers conspire to
    cover up constitutional violations, see, e.g., Colbert, 851 F.3d
    at 657–58 (holding that the plaintiff could allege under § 1983
    that “the named officers participated in something akin to a
    ‘conspiracy of silence among the officers’ in which defendants
    refuse to disclose which of their number has injured the
    plaintiff”). A “conspiracy of silence” among officers is
    actionable as a § 1983 conspiracy because the coordinated
    officer conduct “impede[s] an individual’s access to courts ”
    and renders “hollow” a victim’s right to redress in a court of
    law. Vasquez v. Hernandez, 
    60 F.3d 325
    , 328–29 (7th Cir.
    1995) (“[W]hen police officers conceal or obscure important
    facts about a crime from its victims rendering hollow the right
    to seek redress, constitutional rights are undoubtedly
    abridged.”); see also Swiggett v. Upper Merion Twp., No. 08-
    2604, 
    2008 WL 4916039
    , at *4 (E.D. Pa. Nov. 17, 2008)
    (“[C]ourts have found that concealing a constitutional
    violation, including use of excessive force, does not amount to
    17
    The right of access to the courts is sourced from both
    “the First and Fourteenth Amendments,” Monroe, 
    536 F.3d at 205
    , and is typically framed as a due process right in the inmate
    context, see 
    id. at 209
    , but in other contexts as “an aspect of the
    First Amendment right to petition the Government for redress
    of grievances,” Bill Johnson’s Rests., Inc. v. NLRB, 
    461 U.S. 731
    , 741 (1983); but see Pennsylvania v. Finley, 
    481 U.S. 551
    ,
    557 (1987) (describing the right to “meaningful access” to the
    courts as an “equal protection guarantee”).
    26
    a separate constitutional violation unless the victim of the
    concealment was deprived of his right of access to the
    courts.”).
    After a plaintiff establishes that the object of the
    conspiracy was the deprivation of a federally protected right,
    “the rule is clear that” the plaintiff “must provide some factual
    basis to support the existence of the elements of a conspiracy:
    agreement and concerted action.” Capogrosso v. Supreme
    Court of N.J., 
    588 F.3d 180
    , 184–85 (3d Cir. 2009) (citing
    Crabtree v. Muchmore, 
    904 F.2d 1475
    , 1481 (10th Cir. 1990)).
    To show agreement, he must demonstrate that “the state actors
    named as defendants in the[] complaint somehow reached an
    understanding to deny [the plaintiff] his rights,” Kost v.
    Kozakiewicz, 
    1 F.3d 176
    , 185 (3d Cir. 1993), and in the absence
    of direct proof, that “meeting of the minds” or “understanding
    or agreement to conspire” can be “infer[red]” from
    circumstantial evidence, Startzell v. City of Philadelphia, 
    533 F.3d 183
    , 205 (3d Cir. 2008). Such circumstantial evidence
    may include that the alleged conspirators “did or said
    something . . . to create an understanding,” “the approximate
    time when the agreement was made, the specific parties to the
    agreement[,] the period of the conspiracy, or the object of the
    conspiracy.” Great W. Mining, 
    615 F.3d at
    178–79 (citations
    omitted). And in the context of an alleged conspiracy among
    police officers, it may manifest as “conversations” between
    officers about the incident, “allegedly distorted” stories that
    “emerged,” an “awareness of conflicting stories” and
    “irregularities in the series of official investigations” into the
    incident. Hampton v. Hanrahan, 
    600 F.2d 600
    , 627–28 (7th
    Cir. 1979), rev’d in part on other grounds by Hanrahan v.
    Hampton, 
    466 U.S. 754
     (1980).
    27
    Because “inferring mental state from circumstantial
    evidence is among the chief tasks of factfinders,” Kedra v.
    Schroeter, 
    876 F.3d 424
    , 444 (3d Cir. 2017) (citing United
    States v. Wright, 
    665 F.3d 560
    , 569 (3d. Cir. 2012)), an
    allegation of conspiracy can only be overcome at summary
    judgment when “the moving parties’ submissions foreclose[]
    the possibility of the existence of certain facts from which ‘it
    would be open to a jury . . . to infer from the circumstances’
    that there had been a meeting of the minds,” Anderson, 
    477 U.S. at
    249 (citing Adickes, 
    398 U.S. 144
    ).
    ii.   The Conspiracy Claims Against the
    Individual Defendants
    We dispense quickly with Jutrowski’s argument that he
    sufficiently established an agreement among the Individual
    Defendants, before the fact, to use excessive force. While this
    claim meets the threshold requirement that the alleged
    conspiracy had the goal of violating a constitutional right,
    Jutrowski’s assertion of a “common plan” among the officers,
    based on (1) an alleged “reloc[ation] [of] the ambulances so
    that EMT personnel would not be able to witness the[] attack,”
    and (2) the officers “simultaneously grabbing” him to take him
    down, is not supported by any specific facts in the record. App.
    276.18 To survive summary judgment, however, “specific facts
    18
    With respect to the moving of the ambulances, the
    record is devoid of discovery from EMT personnel, and neither
    Jutrowski’s summary judgment opposition below nor his brief
    on appeal provide any record support for his allegations. Nor
    does the record support that the officers “simultaneously
    grabb[ed]” him to take him down. App. 276. Franchino, the
    officer who effectuated the take-down, testified that he was the
    28
    showing that there is a genuine issue for trial” are precisely
    what a plaintiff must show, and “[b]are assertions, conclusory
    allegations, or suspicions” will not suffice. D.E., 765 F.3d at
    268–69 (citations omitted). The District Court therefore did not
    err in granting summary judgment on Counts V and VI to the
    extent they allege before-the-fact conspiracies.
    The record paints a different picture, however, for
    Jutrowski’s claims of a conspiracy after the fact. As a threshold
    matter, we reject Defendants’ argument that Jutrowski failed to
    assert a cognizable conspiratorial objective because “[t]he only
    injur[y] [he] alleges is . . . to his eye” so that post-injury
    “actions with regard to [the officers’] paperwork and grand
    jury testimony cannot possibly form the basis of a conspiracy
    that led to [his] injuries.” State Troopers’ Br. 25. The “injury”
    Jutrowski asserts with respect to this conspiracy is not the
    application of excessive force but the denial of “access to the
    courts.” Monroe, 
    536 F.3d at 205
    . And drawing all reasonable
    inferences, as we must, in Jutrowski’s favor, we cannot agree
    with the District Court that there is insufficient evidence of
    “only . . . [one who] took [Jutrowski] to the ground,” App. 437,
    and that not all of the officer-defendants were even near
    Jutrowski when he executed the “front leg sweep” maneuver,
    App. 424. The testimony of other officers was consistent with
    that account. See, e.g., App. 396–97 (Roemmele testifying that
    he “was walking back” to his vehicle when Jutrowski was
    initially apprehended). Further, the deposition testimony
    shows that the takedown “happened instantly,” App. 335, after
    Jutrowski flailed his arm, making it implausible that there was
    time for a proverbial “meeting of the minds” before he was
    kicked moments later.
    29
    “collu[sion]” among “the officers from Riverdale and the State
    Police” to deprive him of that access. Jutrowski, 
    2017 WL 1395474
    , at *8.
    For starters, material omissions in contemporaneous
    police reports can reasonably be seen by a jury as evidence that
    the officers “agreed to abide by [a] claim” about what
    happened and “agreed to represent [it] falsely,” Bell v. City of
    Milwaukee, 
    746 F.2d 1205
    , 1256 (7th Cir. 1984), rev’d on
    other grounds by Russ v. Watts, 
    413 F.3d 783
     (7th Cir. 2005),
    and omissions specifically as to the infliction of an injury or
    “reference to the use of force” that indisputably occurred
    during an arrest “can be as dishonest as an outright lie,” United
    States v. Seymour, 
    472 F.3d 969
    , 970 (7th Cir. 2007) (finding
    the omission, in an arrest report, regarding the use of force
    against a jaywalker to be material because “[t]he test is whether
    what is omitted is something the intended reader would have
    expected to see included if it had occurred . . .”). Here, none
    of the reports by Heimbach, Franchino or Roemmele19
    indicated that Jutrowski suffered significant injuries during the
    course of his arrest, yet several of the officers admitted in their
    depositions that Jutrowski’s injuries noticeably worsened
    during his apprehension.20 Moreover, notwithstanding the
    19
    It appears that Biro did not prepare a separate report,
    as the one report produced by the Riverdale Police Department
    was prepared by Roemmele. The State Troopers produced
    three reports: a Supplemental Investigation Report and
    Reportable Use of Force report, both prepared by Franchino;
    and a Drinking Driving Report, prepared by Heimbach,
    20
    See App. 338 (Heimbach testifying that after his
    arrest, Jutrowski’s “eye was a lot worse than the initial
    30
    District Court’s reasonable rejection of an adverse spoliation
    inference on the summary judgment record, a reasonable jury
    considering the inconsistent accounts of the vantage point from
    Biro’s vehicle21 and the absence of Biro’s dashcam footage
    when “all of the [other] automobiles on scene recorded the
    encounter and all recording[s] but Biro’s were produced,”
    Appellant’s Br. 23, might infer evidence of a cover-up.22
    Jutrowski’s after-the-fact conspiracy allegations also
    find support in the time that was available to reach an
    laceration”); App. 368, 380 (Roemmele testifying that before
    arrest, Jutrowski’s injury was a “[s]mall laceration; nothing
    major” but that afterwards his face looked “different” and it
    was “[s]wollen [with] more abrasions”); App. 402 (Biro
    testifying that after being taken to the ground, “there was blood
    on [Jutrowski’s] face, more than what he had”); App. 429
    (Franchino testifying that he does not “recall looking at
    [Jutrowski’s] face” but that he “would hope [to] notice[]” if the
    injuries had worsened).
    21
    Biro testified in his deposition that he “kn[e]w [he]
    was either one or two cars behind” Jutrowski’s disabled SUV.
    App. 394. However, testimony from Heimbach, who arrived
    on the scene after Biro, as well as dashcam footage from
    Heimbach’s vehicle indicates that Biro was parked behind
    Jutrowski upon arrival.
    22
    Decisions regarding the admissibility and admission
    of such evidence rest in the sound discretion of the District
    Court. See U.S. v. Finley, 
    726 F.3d 483
    , 491 (3d Cir. 2013)
    (noting that “[a] district court is generally afforded broad
    discretion on evidentiary rulings”).
    31
    agreement, see Great W. Mining, 
    615 F.3d at 178
    , and evidence
    of “conversations” between officers before the filing of reports,
    Hampton, 
    600 F.2d at 627
    . That is, there was undoubtedly time
    in the unhurried period after the incident and before the
    finalization of reports and deposition appearances for a
    “meeting of the minds,” Startzell, 
    533 F.3d at 205
    , and
    Heimbach acknowledged at his deposition that he “discussed”
    Jutrowski’s case with Franchino and the third trooper involved
    in the arrest “while . . . going over the reports,” and that “prior
    to writing the narrative report,” he “discussed [with them]
    everything that happened” concerning “the scene and the arrest
    and subduing of Mr. Jutrowski” in order to straighten out the
    “sequence of events,” App. 341. Franchino also testified that
    he “remember[ed] speaking about” Jutrowski’s injuries with
    Heimbach within a few weeks of the incident, App. 429, and
    that before submitting his report, it was “possible” that he
    discussed the “facts of the case” with Heimbach, App. 431.
    Moreover, what emerged from these conversations
    might well be viewed by a reasonable jury as “irregularities”
    and “distorted” or “conflicting” accounts that suggest “a
    concerted effort to suppress facts.” Hampton, 
    600 F.2d at 628
    .
    For example, Roemmele’s report, the lone Riverdale Police
    report as none was produced by Biro, makes reference to the
    presence of State Troopers, but it does not mention the
    presence of Biro, who not only participated in the arrest but
    was also Roemmele’s supervisor. Heimbach’s report omits any
    reference to the use of excessive force, although he does not
    dispute that someone kicked Jutrowski and that his “sole
    focus” for “the entire time” was on Jutrowski’s head, so that
    “if any[one] . . . struck [Jutrowski] in the face, [he] would
    [have] know[n].” App. 344. For his part, Trooper Franchino
    testified that he was the officer “closest to [Jutrowski’s] head,”
    32
    and was “less than three feet” away when Jutrowski was taken
    to the ground, App. 438, but professed that he did not ever
    “look[] at [Jutrowski’s] face,” App. 432, and that he checked
    the box for “moderate injury” on his use of force report only
    because “possib[ly] someone told” him to do it, App. 434. The
    Riverdale officers, who were also in Jutrowski’s immediate
    vicinity, likewise do not contest that a kick occurred, but
    Roemmele made no reference to it in the one report produced
    by the Riverdale Police Department, and both officers contend
    that they did not see it. Furthermore, all of this may be
    considered against the backdrop of the other evidence in the
    record on summary judgment, including the report of a medical
    expert, who averred that Jutrowski’s injury most likely resulted
    from “either a kick or punch of significant force.” App. 263.
    In short, what Jutrowski put forward concerning alleged
    federal and state conspiracies to deprive him of access to the
    courts was sufficient to create a genuine issue of material fact.
    And he did so, consistent with Smith, for each of the Individual
    Defendants. That is, Jutrowski alleged that “all” of “Defendant
    officers . . . did act together and in concert” to conspire to
    violate his civil rights, App. 269, that all “[t]he police officers”
    are implicated in a cover-up, App. 493, and that each of them
    “perjured themselves,” App. 492, in “covering up” the use of
    excessive force and “protecting each other,” App. 495.
    Because he adduced evidence to support those allegations
    “such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict” in his favor,
    Anderson, 
    477 U.S. at 248
    , we will reverse District Court’s
    entry of summary judgment on Counts V and VI to the extent
    they allege after-the-fact conspiracies, and we will remand for
    further proceedings on those claims against the Individual
    Defendants.
    33
    IV. Conclusion
    For the foregoing reasons, we will affirm in part and
    reverse in part and will remand for proceedings consistent with
    this opinion.
    34
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 17-2594

Citation Numbers: 904 F.3d 280

Filed Date: 9/12/2018

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

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