Anderson Jones v. Elena Perez ( 2019 )


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  •      Case: 17-11242      Document: 00515160517         Page: 1    Date Filed: 10/16/2019
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    No. 17-11242
    FILED
    October 16, 2019
    Lyle W. Cayce
    ANDERSON JONES,                                                                Clerk
    Plaintiff - Appellant
    v.
    ELENA PEREZ,
    Defendant - Appellee
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Texas
    USDC No. 3:16-CV-2835
    Before DAVIS, COSTA, and OLDHAM, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:*
    Dallas Police Detective Elena Perez obtained a warrant to arrest
    Anderson Jones for murder. In seeking the warrant, Perez did not inform the
    magistrate about significant problems with the reliability of the eyewitness
    who had identified Jones.         After the charge was dropped based on those
    reliability doubts, Jones sued Perez. We must determine whether the arrest
    violated Jones’s Fourth Amendment rights.
    * Pursuant to 5TH CIR. R. 47.5, the court has determined that this opinion should not
    be published and is not precedent except under the limited circumstances set forth in 5TH
    CIR. R. 47.5.4.
    Case: 17-11242    Document: 00515160517     Page: 2   Date Filed: 10/16/2019
    No. 17-11242
    I.
    Leonardo Ortega was closing up the Subway sandwich shop where he
    worked when two men entered with their faces covered. One aimed a gun at
    Ortega while the other took cash from the register. After a struggle, Ortega
    was shot. He was pronounced dead when he arrived at the hospital.
    Detective Perez was assigned to the case. Two eyewitnesses told her
    about a third man involved in the murder—a lookout who stood across from
    the shop and ran off with the other suspects. Perez’s investigation stalled until
    an anonymous tipster called with information about the third suspect’s
    identity. According to the tipster, Christopher Miller was bragging about being
    the lookout. Perez brought him in for questioning.
    It soon became clear that Miller might not be the most reliable of
    witnesses. It appeared to Perez that he had “a low IQ,” and Miller explained
    that he had smoked synthetic marijuana and drunk a few beers before coming
    to the station. Miller initially said he had nothing to do with the murder but
    soon began to waffle. He admitted—occasionally backtracking—that he was
    there that night. He told Perez that two men he often saw selling drugs at an
    apartment complex near the murder scene had asked him to watch while they
    robbed the Subway. Miller knew them only by their nicknames: K.T. and
    Weezy. It was K.T., he said, who pulled the trigger. Miller’s description of the
    murder was consistent with what three witnesses had said the night of the
    crime. He left the police station that night.
    The next morning, a few officers took Miller and his brother to the
    apartment complex to see if they could find K.T. It is unclear who ultimately
    made the identification, but the officers soon learned that K.T. was Anderson
    Jones, the plaintiff in this case. A few officers took Miller back to meet again
    with Detective Perez while a few others tailed Jones.
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    Those officers say Jones committed a Texas Transportation Code
    violation when he walked in the street instead of using a sidewalk. So when
    Jones got in a friend’s car, the officers pulled him over. The officers could smell
    marijuana during the stop, and a search of Jones’s backpack uncovered some,
    along with a scale and some baggies. They arrested Jones for marijuana
    possession and brought him in.
    While detained, Jones admitted that his nickname was K.T. but denied
    any involvement in Ortega’s murder.         He said he was with his girlfriend
    throughout that evening. But when Perez contacted Jones’s supposed alibi,
    she told a different story. She said she picked Jones up that night from a bus
    stop near the Subway. Jones was jailed on the drug charge.
    Perez returned to questioning Miller. He was obviously distressed and
    threatened to commit suicide several times. He even attempted to strangle
    himself with his own shirt and had to be restrained.          But he eventually
    repeated the story he had told Perez the previous night, albeit with some
    difficulty and with the aid of a few prompts from Perez. Perez decided that she
    should conduct a photo lineup to see if Miller could identify Jones as K.T.
    Another D.P.D. officer showed Miller six photographs, one at a time, and asked
    whether the person pictured killed Ortega. Miller answered “yes” to three of
    the photographs—one of Jones and two of uninvolved individuals.                He
    explained that he thought the three he picked out all looked like the same
    person. Perez returned with a single photo of Jones and asked “Who’s that?”
    Miller answered, “That’s K.T.”
    Over the course of the two interviews, a number of inconsistencies
    appeared in Miller’s story. He first said he was by the sidewalk directly in
    front of a store adjacent to the murder scene. But after Perez informed Miller
    that video evidence contradicted him, he said he was in the parking lot by a
    tree. Though he ultimately told Perez that K.T. and Weezy fled on foot, he
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    initially claimed that they drove away from the scene. At one point he even
    suggested his mother was at the scene of the crime.          And some of his
    statements were contradicted by other evidence. He recalled that K.T. and
    Weezy were wearing t-shirts, while the official incident report explains that
    the suspects were wearing black hoodies. He said K.T. and Weezy dragged
    Ortega out of the store and shot him there, but the evidence suggests they shot
    Ortega inside the store. He said the murder weapon was a 9mm pistol, when
    it was a revolver.
    Despite these inconsistencies, Perez used Miller’s statements to obtain
    an arrest warrant against Jones for capital murder. In her probable cause
    affidavit, Perez explained that Miller had confessed to participating in and
    planning the offense, that Miller stated that “Jones shot and killed” Ortega,
    and that Miller “picked . . . Jones from a photo line up as the person with the
    gun[] who planned and participated in the offense.” She also said that she had
    interviewed Jones and that he was “uncooperative.” The warrant was issued
    and Jones, already detained the day before on the marijuana charge, was
    booked on the murder charge. His bail was set at $1,000,000.
    Several days later, a few of Perez’s superiors learned about her handling
    of the case. They were particularly concerned that Miller had selected three of
    the six photos he was shown in the initial lineup and that Perez had
    corroborated that lineup by showing Miller a single photo of Jones. After
    reviewing her interviews of Miller, they recommended that the capital murder
    charge be dropped. It was. Four days later, Jones was released from jail on a
    personal recognizance bond for his marijuana charge.
    The Dallas Police Department investigated Perez’s handling of the case.
    It determined that she had improperly conducted a one-photograph lineup and
    that she had “entered inaccurate and incomplete information” in her probable
    cause affidavit.     The Deputy Chief testified that a lineup in which the
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    informant selects half of the pictures is “basically null and void.” Ultimately,
    Perez was suspended from the force for ten days and removed from the
    homicide division.
    Jones then filed this suit against Perez, alleging that his Fourth and
    Fourteenth Amendment rights were violated when he was arrested for capital
    murder. Perez claimed that, even if Jones’s rights had been violated, she was
    entitled to qualified immunity. The district court determined that Jones had
    not suffered a violation of his constitutional rights and granted Perez summary
    judgment.
    II.
    This court reviews a “district court’s grant of summary judgment de
    novo, applying the same standard as the trial court.” Brewer v. Hayne, 
    860 F.3d 819
    , 822 (5th Cir. 2017). The two-step qualified immunity inquiry is
    familiar: First we determine whether the facts, taken in the light most
    favorable to the plaintiff establish a violation of a constitutional right. Saucier
    v. Katz, 
    533 U.S. 194
    , 201 (2001). We then ask whether the defendant’s actions
    were nonetheless reasonable in light of the clearly established law at the time
    of her conduct. Pearson v. Callahan, 
    555 U.S. 223
    , 243–44 (2009). Once the
    defense is asserted, it is the plaintiff’s burden to show that the defendant is not
    entitled to it. Hathaway v. Bazany, 
    507 F.3d 312
    , 319 (5th Cir. 2007).
    A.
    On his Fourth Amendment claim, Jones argues that by glossing over the
    dubious nature of Miller’s identification of Jones in her probable cause affidavit
    and by failing to alert the magistrate that Miller’s reliability was seriously in
    doubt, Perez violated his Fourth Amendment rights when she arrested him for
    capital murder.      The parties agree that the typical analysis in these
    circumstances would require Jones to show genuine issues of material fact on
    1) whether Perez knowingly, or with reckless disregard for the truth, provided
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    the magistrate with false information; and 2) whether after reconstructing
    Perez’s probable cause affidavit by excising the falsehoods and inserting the
    material omissions, the warrant would be unsupported by probable cause. In
    other words, did Perez lie to the magistrate and, if so, were those lies necessary
    to obtain the warrant?
    That test is taken from Franks v. Delaware, 
    438 U.S. 154
    (1978).
    Although that case announced a standard for determining when evidence
    should be suppressed because it was uncovered during the execution of a
    search warrant obtained by misleading the magistrate, it has been applied
    outside the suppression and search warrant contexts to cases like this one. See
    Freeman v. Cty. of Bexar, 
    210 F.3d 550
    , 553 (5th Cir. 2000). The district court
    thus dutifully marched through the Franks inquiry. It agreed with Jones that
    Perez’s probable cause affidavit was problematic and assumed that certain
    facts she omitted should have been included. Step one done, the court set out
    to determine whether Perez’s misleading statements were necessary to get the
    arrest warrant. As Franks instructs, the court reconstructed the affidavit to
    contain six material facts: 1) Perez received a tip suggesting Miller’s
    involvement; 2) Miller confessed to planning and participating in the offense;
    3) Miller said “K.T.” shot Ortega; 4) Miller has a low I.Q. and had a beer and
    smoked synthetic marijuana prior to his initial interview; 5) “Miller’s account
    of the crime was inconsistent and, at times, inaccurate”; and 6) Miller picked
    three photos, including Jones’s, out of a six-photo lineup as the person who shot
    and killed Ortega, and later identified Jones in a single-photo lineup. The
    district court then concluded that this was enough to create probable cause.
    But this whole process is a bit academic when Franks is applied to civil
    cases. Because “a warrant is not a prerequisite to a lawful arrest,” the ultimate
    inquiry for a Fourth Amendment false arrest claim is whether the arrest was
    reasonable. United States v. Morris, 
    477 F.2d 657
    , 663 (5th Cir. 1973); see also
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    Graves v. Mahoning Cty., 
    821 F.3d 772
    , 775 (6th Cir. 2016) (“To establish a
    cognizable Fourth Amendment claim, the plaintiff[] must show a violation not
    of the Warrant Clause but of the Reasonableness Clause.”). And an arrest is
    reasonable when “there is probable cause to believe that a criminal offense has
    been or is being committed,” warrant or no warrant. Devenpeck v. Alford, 
    543 U.S. 146
    , 152 (2004). That is why our court has, in civil suits challenging
    arrests, 1 applied a third step after completing the traditional Franks analysis.
    It asks whether “any reasonably competent officer possessing the information
    each officer had at the time [s]he swore [her] affidavit could have concluded
    that a warrant should issue.” 
    Freeman, 210 F.3d at 553
    . This inquiry is the
    ultimate liability question in a false arrest case: Did the officer have
    information establishing probable cause, whether or not that information was
    included in the warrant?
    So whether the district court properly reconstructed the affidavit or
    correctly determined that the reconstruction supported a finding of probable
    cause is beside the point if Perez, at the time she swore out her affidavit, had
    probable cause to believe Jones had committed the murder. She did. Perez
    knew that Miller, who said he had witnessed the murder, pointed the finger at
    someone named K.T. Other witnesses corroborated some of the information he
    provided about how the murder occurred. And Jones admitted his nickname
    was K.T., which reduced the importance of the photo identification and put the
    focus on whether Miller reliably identified K.T. as the murderer. Perez also
    knew that Jones gave a false alibi. In addition to showing that Jones had been
    1 Civil “Franks” cases involving search warrants are different and remain focused on
    the warrant because the Supreme Court has read the Fourth Amendment to require a
    warrant for many searches. The Constitution does not require a warrant for an arrest. See,
    e.g., Atwater v. City of Lago Vista, 
    532 U.S. 318
    (2001).
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    dishonest about where he was on the night of the murder, his girlfriend
    statement’s placed Jones near the crime scene.
    These facts are enough to clear the probable cause bar. That standard
    does not require that the officer believe that it is more likely than not that the
    suspect committed the offense. See United States v. Watson, 
    273 F.3d 599
    , 602
    (5th Cir. 2001). Instead, the officer must reasonably believe there was a “fair
    probability” he did. Piazza v. Mayne, 
    217 F.3d 239
    , 246 (5th Cir. 2000) (per
    curiam) (quotation omitted). That fair probability of criminal conduct usually
    exists just from the statement of a single eyewitness, assuming no reliability
    concerns. 2    See Phillips v. Allen, 
    668 F.3d 912
    , 915 (7th Cir. 2012)
    (“Identification by a single eyewitness who lacks an apparent grudge against
    the accused person supplies probable cause for arrest.”); Curley v. Village of
    Suffern, 
    268 F.3d 65
    , 70 (2d Cir. 2001) (“When information is received from a
    putative victim or an eyewitness, probable cause exists, unless the
    circumstances raise doubt as to the person’s veracity[.]” (citation omitted)).
    The numerous problems with Miller’s statement may well have reduced its
    reliability below the probable cause threshold, though that is a close call as the
    district judge believed it was still sufficient to establish probable cause. But
    then there is the false alibi and Jones’s girlfriend’s placing him near the crime.
    A false alibi is, of course, quite suspicious. See House v. Bell, 
    547 U.S. 518
    , 551
    (2006). This other evidence at least partially corroborated Miller’s statement
    and put the overall evidentiary mix back at the level of probable cause even if
    the information in a reconstructed affidavit would not have sufficed.
    2 A separate body of law governs the probable cause inquiry when information comes
    from a confidential informant. See Illinois v. Gates, 
    462 U.S. 213
    , 238–39 (1983).
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    Because Perez could have reasonably believed probable cause existed
    when she obtained the warrant for Jones’s arrest, that arrest did not violate
    his Fourth Amendment rights. 3
    B.
    Jones also argues that the arrest violated his right to substantive due
    process. But the Supreme Court has warned that there is no right under the
    Fourteenth Amendment “to be free from criminal prosecution except upon
    probable cause.” Albright v. Oliver, 
    510 U.S. 266
    , 268 (1994). Even supposing
    that Albright might not have eliminated all due process protection against an
    officer’s allegedly unconstitutional conduct, the situations in which the
    Fourteenth Amendment could conceivably provide an avenue to relief would
    be limited. See Cole v. Carson, 
    802 F.3d 752
    , 771–72 (5th Cir. 2015), vacated
    on other grounds sub nom. Hunter v. Cole, 
    137 S. Ct. 497
    (2016); see also
    Manuel v. City of Joliet, 
    137 S. Ct. 911
    , 917–18, 920 n.8 (2017). This case does
    not fall in that narrow class. There is no evidence, for instance, that Perez
    deliberately framed Jones. As we noted above, Perez reasonably believed
    probable cause existed to charge him with Ortega’s murder. Perez may have
    presented the evidence against Jones in far too rosy a light, but she did not
    make it up out of whole cloth such that her attempt to obtain the warrant
    would “shock the conscience.” 
    Cole, 802 F.3d at 771
    .
    3  As an alternative ground for summary judgment, Perez argues that the murder
    warrant and arrest did not cause Jones any injury because he was already detained on the
    drug charge. Jones does not challenge the validity of the first arrest and he remained in jail
    on the drug charge for a brief time after the murder charge was dropped. Jones’s response
    to this in the district was to point out that the murder charge resulted in a bond of $1 million,
    though he did not produce evidence about what the bond would have been just for the drug
    charge (the record does indicate that Jones was ultimately released on a personal recognize
    bond). Because we find Perez had probable cause for the second arrest, we need not address
    this alternative argument.
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    Because the Fourth Amendment, although ultimately unavailing,
    “provides an explicit textual source of constitutional protection” for the
    allegations in this case, Jones may not resort to the more nebulous Fourteenth
    Amendment right. Graham v. Connor, 
    490 U.S. 386
    , 395 (1989). His claim
    based on that amendment also fails.
    ***
    The outcome of this civil suit may seem inconsistent with the deterrence
    rationale of Franks. See Williams v. Brown, 
    609 F.2d 216
    , 220 (5th Cir. 1980)
    (“The conduct sought to be deterred in Franks is the knowing, intentional, or
    reckless use by law enforcement personnel of false statements in affidavits
    tendered in support of search warrants.”). But it is a product of a false arrest
    claim ultimately being about whether probable cause existed rather than the
    validity of a warrant. And this case also shows that civil litigation is not the
    only way to hold officers accountable for misconduct. Police departments can
    play a role too, as Dallas’s did in suspending Perez and removing her from
    homicide investigations based on her conduct in obtaining the warrant
    charging Jones with murder.
    The judgment is AFFIRMED.
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