Summary
granting a motion in limine in an excessive force case to exclude drug paraphernalia the officers discovered after the alleged excessive force occurred, because it was irrelevant and unduly prejudicial under Rule 403
Summary of this case from Pinkney v. ThomasOpinion
No. 00 C 5984
April 8, 2003
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Following this Court's March 7, 2003 entry of the parties' jointly prepared Final Pretrial Order ("FPTO") that brought this action to the state of readiness for trial, each side proceeded to file memoranda in support of the motions in limine that they had telegraphed in the FPTO. With those memoranda having been responded to, the motions have become fully briefed, and this memorandum opinion and order addresses them.
Plaintiff's Motions
None of the three motions in limine filed by plaintiff Marcus Gregory ("Gregory") found their way into the docket, because all of the motions themselves were set up briefly within the FPTO. Gregory's later-filed supporting memorandum is Dkt. 82, while defendants' responsive memorandum is Dkt. 91.
Gregory first moves to exclude evidence as to his prior arrests or convictions, as to which defendants' portion of the FPTO seeks to designate parts of Gregory's deposition on that subject to be read into evidence. Arrests that have not led to convictions are classic candidates for exclusion under Fed.R.Evid. ("Evid.R.") 404(b). And as for Gregory's convictions, the most recent of those took place in 1987, and defendants have shown nothing to overcome their presumptive inadmissibility under Evid.R. 609(b).
Moreover, if this issue were to be examined through the combined lens of Evid.R. 404(b) and Evid.R. 403's balancing formula (in the latter respect, it must be noted that Evid.R. 609(b) reverses the balance scales in Gregory's favor on the old convictions), there is really no contest — exclusion is clearly called for. Accordingly the first motion is granted in its entirety.
Next Gregory seeks to exclude a clinical laboratory report that defendants had designated as a trial exhibit — a report that states only that cocaine and opiates were "detected" in Gregory's system when he was admitted to the hospital after the confrontation with police officers that has given rise to this lawsuit. As in their response to the first motion, here defendants again seek essentially to muddy Gregory up by portraying him as a bad man (something that is wholly at odds with the prohibition on propensity evidence that is taught by Evid.R. 404(b)). This time Defendants' Mem. 3 overstates (really misstates) the situation substantially:
The clinical laboratory report demonstrates that it is likely that the Plaintiff was under the influence of cocaine and opiates at the time of his arrest.
But the report says nothing of the sort, for it gives no indication either as to any likely degree of impairment or as to any information that might bear on that question.
This Court's treatment of the identical issue, under essentially identical circumstances, in Gwin v. Curry, No. 95 C 1438, 1996 W.L. 99898, at *1 (N.D. Ill. Feb. 29) might well have been written for this case by simply changing the parties' names and the date;
In todays climate, any evidence as to a litigant's use of drugs has an obvious potential for being extraordinarily prejudicial — for creating the prospect of deflecting the factfinders' attention from the matters that are really at issue in the case to everyone's universally-shared concerns as to the problems that drug usage is creating for our society. For that reason, where (as here) the subject matter of a trial does not itself concern controlled substances it is particularly appropriate to apply the principle announced in such cases as Jarrett v. United States, 822 F.2d 1438, 1446 (7th Cir. 1987):
A witness's use of drugs may not be used to attack his or her general credibility, but only his or her ability to perceive the underlying events and testify lucidly at the trial.
In this instance the jury will be called upon to decide which of Gwin and Curry is telling the truth about Gwin's claims that Curry used excessive force during the course of arresting Gwin on April 19, 1994 and that his arrest for the possession of cannabis was a false arrest. When after the arrest Gwin was taken to Westlake Hospital for treatment of a broken jaw, he tested positively for the presence of cocaine (and he apparently made statements to hospital personnel admitting to his prior usage of that controlled substance).
From the parties' submissions on the motion in limine, it appears that there is no evidence to suggest that Gwin was impaired at the time of the incident. It is also well known that the type of test that produced a positive reading at the Hospital (a urinalysis screen) is one that reflects the presence of drug residues, giving no indication as to the quantity of any controlled substance that may have been ingested or as to when that took place — and such a reading certainly does not show the existence of any impairment either then or now.
Under those circumstances, the jury would have to build an inference on an inference to find that the prior usage of cocaine indicated by the testing and by Gwin's statements was probative on an issue relevant to the jury's decision. Eased on what the parties have described in their respective memoranda, this Court determines that any possible probative value of the challenged evidence "is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice" to Gwin as well as by the probable "confusion of the issues, or misleading the jury" (these quoted standards are of course drawn from Fed.R.Evid. 403). Accordingly Gwin's motion is granted.
Gregory's second motion is likewise granted.
Lastly, Gregory disputes defendants' designation, as a proposed exhibit, of a drug pipe that was found on Gregory's person after the officers seized him on the occasion in question. Once again that smacks of a bald effort to place Gregory in a bad light with evidence that does not bear directly on what is truly at issue.
As this Court understands the matter, Gregory is not in a position to contest the existence of probable cause to have effected his arrest and seizure — indeed, as the next section of this opinion reflects, defendants are successful in arguing that he cannot dispute his having resisted arrest in light of his guilty plea to that charge. And that being so, what defendants found on Gregory after the asserted imposition of excessive force that is the gravamen of his lawsuit is really not relevant. And this is so even apart from any need to balance under Evid.R. 403, as to which the potential for unfair prejudice would substantially outweigh any probative force (which, as just indicated, is really non-existent). This last motion by plaintiff is also granted.
Defendants' Motions
One puzzling aspect of defendants motions is that even though they were specifically numbered in the FPTO, one of defendants' supporting memoranda is unanchored to any of those numbers. Although the responsive memorandum by counsel for Gregory reasonably suggests that the motion should be denied for that reason alone (Gregory's Mem. 3 n. 4), this opinion will deal with it on the merits, identifying it only by its docket number. All other defense motions will be identified by defendants numbering of the motions and, where they have been docketed, by their respective docket numbers as well.
Not all of defendants motions (which, as stated at the outset of this paragraph, were set out in the FPTO) found their way into the docket.
That unlinked motion (Dkt. 83) seeks to bar Gregory from denying that he resisted arrest and assaulted any of the police officers. As such, the motion will be granted because Gregory did plead guilty to the state court charges asserting those offenses, and Gregory has not suggested the existence of either coercion or any other legal infirmity in connection with the plea.
But as indicated by this Court's earlier memorandum opinion and order that denied defendants' motion for summary judgment in that respect ( 226 F. Supp.2d 943 (N.D. Ill. 2002) ("opinion")), defendants' position continues to reflect their oversimplistic approach to the issues posed by Gregory's claim of excessive force (see Opinion at 949-53). Those convictions have no more than limited relevance to that excessive force claim. And to the extent that information about the convictions may in fact go before the jury (a question that is best resolved at trial), this Court will be obligated to provide careful instructions to dispel the false impressions that lay jurors might otherwise have — such as by a misunderstanding of the fact that the legal concept of "assault" (as contrasted with the ordinary everyday use of that term) does not involve any physical contact (as does a battery), or by a false belief that any type or degree of resistance to a police officer allows the responsive use of excessive force.
Citations to the Opinion will take the form "Opinion at ___," reflecting the page numbers in F. Supp.2d without any need to indicate the volume number.
Now to defendants' numbered motions. Motion No. 1 seeks to bar any reference to Gregory's settlement demands or to any settlement offers by defendants. It is not answered by Gregory, and in any event it conforms to the limitation imposed by Evid.R. 408. It is granted.
Motion No. 2 (Dkt. 76) seeks to bar "any reference to the City of Waukegan's size, financial condition, affiliated entities, parents, subsidiaries or agents." Although the apparent ground for such a motion — to avoid generating sympathy for Gregory, or antipathy toward defendants, on the premise that he is a poor individual who is fighting a city and its police officers — is sound, the motion is stated far too broadly. It is denied, but obviously without prejudice to this Court's ruling on individual matters as they may arise during the trial.
Motion No. 3 asks to "bar and exclude any reference to civil claims and/or lawsuits other than the instant lawsuit made by the Plaintiff." That motion is of course sound to the extent that it may properly bring Evid.R. 404(b) into play, but it does not take into account any potential for exceptions to that rule. It too is therefore denied as a total bar, and as with the prior motion specific issues of that nature will be dealt with if and when they arise at trial.
Motion No. 4 (Dkt. 77) asks to exclude any reference to insurance matters. Gregory has properly not objected (see Evid.R. 411), and the motion is granted.
Motion No. 5 (Dkt. 78) seeks "to bar and exclude any reference or any comment, argument or reference to judgements [sic] orders or rulings which the Judge has made in this case with reference to questions of law other than those contained in the jury instructions." That is also obviously framed with too broad a sweep, for there is no way to know in advance just how previously-ruled-upon matters may arise at trial. Again any such matters are far better dealt with in the matrix of actual trial than in limine, and the motion as such is denied.
Motion No. 6 (Dkt. 79) asks to "bar and exclude any reference to any comment, argument or evidence regarding the conduct of counsel in this case." To the extent that motion speaks to pretrial conduct, it is of course granted (and Gregory's counsel has interposed no objection to that). But this Court must of course retain the ability to address any inappropriate conduct of counsel during trial (something that it trusts will not occur), and the motion should not be misunderstood as having been granted in that limited respect.
Motion No. 7 (Dkt. 80) wishes to "bar and exclude any reference to the method(s) by which the law firm representing any of the parties in this action are being compensated by the parties." No response has been made by Gregory, and the motion is granted in its generic form. But counsel for both sides should be aware that part of the damages instruction that this Court customarily gives to juries in cases that create the potential for an award of fees (and civil rights cases under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 are typical in that regard — see 42 U.S.C. § 1988) tells the jurors that they must not take a plaintiff's attorneys' fees into account in awarding damages if they were to rule in plaintiff's favor.
No memorandum has been tendered in connection with Motion No. 8, which would "bar any statement of the law, other than regarding the (a) burdens of proof and (b) status of parties as plaintiff and defendant, before the Court rules on the law applicable to this case." Even though defendants have failed to follow up with any support for the motion (see the next entry in this opinion), that concept is generally sound, but it is often difficult to translate it into practice — for example, in connection with the opening statement by counsel for each side, which does not get rehearsed before this Court. Thus the motion is simply granted in principle, with counsel being expected to clear with this Court any areas that may be in doubt before addressing them.
Motion No. 9 (Dkt. 81 mistakenly refers to it as Motion No. 8) is unexceptionable, because it simply wants to bar any reference to the fact that defendants have made motions in limine or to this Court's rulings on those motions. No objection has been interposed, and the motion is granted.
Motions 10 and 11 are dealt with in tandem by defendants' memorandum on the subject (Dkt. 86), because both motions seek to keep out of the trial any reference to Gregory's claims that were resolved against him in the Opinion. Although those claims are of course barred as substantive grounds for recovery by Gregory, Gregory's Mem. 3-6 is right in urging that a number of aspects of those claims remain both relevant and probative as to Gregory's surviving contentions. Hence the motions are denied as such because of their overbreadth.
That is equally true as to Motion No. 12, which wishes to bar any reference to certain of Gregory's prior arrests on the premise that those matters were resolved by summary judgment as well. Defendants have supplied no supporting memorandum in any event, but Gregory's Mem. 3-6 is equally applicable to that motion and properly calls for its denial.
Motion Nos. 13, 14 and 16 are also treated by defendants much like an entry in a horse race, for a single memorandum (Dkt. 88) speaks to all three, while an additional memorandum (Dkt. 87) is offered in support of Motion Nos. 13 and 14. All of those motions relate to other charges, investigations or claims against the defendant police officers and are essentially sought to be excluded under Evid.R. 404(b). With no response having been interposed by Gregory's counsel, the motions are granted — but it must of course be recognized that such matters may be potentially available for introduction into evidence if and to the extent that defendants were to attempt to inject (for example) their own character or lack of propensity for violent conduct into the case.
Finally, Motion No. 15 asks to bar "any reference to performance reviews of the Defendant police officers which refer to recruitment of informants and/or controlled buys." As Gregory's Mem, 3-6 correctly points out, the informant recruitment policy used by Waukegan's Police Department in general — and certainly as carried out by defendant police officers — is relevant because it bears upon the officers' motive and intent when they had the challenged confrontation with Gregory. It is certainly for the jury to determine whether the officers' conduct was motivated (or even affected) by that factor. Hence the motion is denied.
Conclusion
Any effort to recapitulate the rulings here in capsule form would necessarily create a risk of mischaracterization, particularly in areas where a ruling has been coupled with a cautionary caveat. Instead this conclusionary summary will simply say that Gregory's motions are granted in their entirety, while defendants' motions are granted in part and denied in part for the reasons stated earlier.