DeLeon-Reyes v. Guevara et al
Filing
350
MEMORANDUM Opinion and Order Signed by the Honorable Sunil R. Harjani on 6/8/2020. Mailed notice(lxs, )
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS
EASTERN DIVISION
ARTURO DeLEON-REYES,
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Case No. 1:18-cv-01028
Plaintiff,
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v.
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Magistrate Judge Sunil R. Harjani
REYNALDO GUEVARA, et al.,
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Defendants.
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______________________________________________________________________________
GABRIEL SOLACHE,
Plaintiff,
v.
CITY OF CHICAGO, et al.,
Defendants.
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Case No. 1:18-cv-02312
Magistrate Judge Sunil R. Harjani
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Defendants City of Chicago, Cook County and the individual defendant officers and
prosecutors in this case have brought a joint motion to quash four third-party subpoenas issued by
Plaintiffs Arturo DeLeon-Reyes and Gabriel Solache. [DeLeon-Reyes 320; Solache 215]. 1 For the
reasons stated below, the Court construes the Defendants’ motion to quash as a motion for a
protective order, and grants the motion.
1
The remainder of this Memorandum Opinion and Order cites to documents from the DeLeon-Reyes
docket, Case No. 1:18-cv-01028, unless otherwise noted.
Background
In these separate lawsuits, consolidated for purposes of discovery, see Doc. [49], Plaintiffs
Arturo DeLeon-Reyes and Gabriel Solache claim that they were wrongfully convicted and that
they served almost 20 years in prison for the 1998 double murder of Mariano and Jacinta Soto.
Solache Doc. [171] at 4. Plaintiffs assert that their convictions were the result of constitutional
violations committed by Chicago police officers during the investigation of the Soto homicide. Id.
Specifically, Plaintiffs bring claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for coerced confession, fabrication of
false witness statements, deprivation of liberty without probable cause, violations of due process,
failure to intervene, and conspiracy. Id.
Plaintiff DeLeon-Reyes additionally asserts
42 U.S.C. § 1983 claims against certain state prosecutors for coerced confession and fabrication
of false witness statements. Id. Both Plaintiffs allege Monell policy and practice claims, as well
as state law claims for malicious prosecution, intentional infliction of emotional distress, civil
conspiracy, respondeat superior, and indemnification. Id.
Defendants deny Plaintiffs were wrongfully convicted, deny the claims against them, and
assert various affirmative defenses, such as qualified immunity, absolute immunity, a bar under
Heck v. Humphrey, estoppel, statute of limitations, Illinois Tort Immunity Act, and failure to
mitigate damages. Solache Doc. [171] at 4.
Discussion
I.
The Court Construes Defendant’s Motion to Quash as a Motion for a
Protective Order
A.
The Subpoenas
On December 12, 2019, Plaintiffs notified Defendants of their intent to subpoena: (1) the
Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office (“CCSAO”); (2) the Federal Bureau of Investigation,
Chicago Division (“FBI”); (3) the United States Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of
2
Illinois (“USAO”); and (4) the United States Department of Justice, Civil Rights Division, Special
Litigation Section (“DOJ”). Doc. [320] at 2.
Taking the subpoenas in turn, the CCSAO subpoena seeks “[a]ll Communications between
any agents or employees of the City of Chicago and any agents or employees of the Cook County
State’s Attorney’s Office during the time periods of 2013 to the present and 2001 to 2013 that refer
or relate to former Chicago Police officers Reynaldo Guevara, Ernest Halvorsen, Edward Mingey,
Joseph Miedzianowski, and/or John Galligan[.]” Doc. [320-1] at 5. Two of these police officers—
Joseph Miedzianowski and John Galligan—are not defendants in this case, but rather convicted
felons who engaged in wide-scale corruption and narcotics trafficking during their time as police
officers. More specifically, Miedzianowski and his former partner, Galligan, were involved in a
Chicago-to-Miami drug conspiracy. In 2001, Miedzianowski was convicted for racketeering and
drug conspiracy in connection with several crimes he committed while acting as a rogue cop,
including revealing the identity of undercover police officers to gang members, distributing crack
cocaine, and supplying gang members with ammunition. “Rogue cop gets life,” Chicago Tribune,
January 25, 2003, www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-2003-01-25-0301250139-story.html.
Later in 2002, Galligan was convicted for fabricating a search warrant and giving false court
testimony in the 1990s to cover up one of Miedzianowski’s numerous crimes. “Cop who aided
corrupt
partner
gets
57
months,”
Chicago
Tribune,
April
13,
2002,
www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-2002-04-13-0204130276-story,amp.html.
The next two subpoenas, to the FBI and USAO, seek all documents relating to any
investigation or inquiries conducted by the FBI or USAO on Miedzianowski. Doc. [320-1] at 11,
16.
3
Finally, the subpoena directed to the DOJ seeks information gathered during a pattern or
practice investigation conducted from 2015 to 2017 on the Chicago Police Department, which
examined information relating to police misconduct. Doc. [320] at 3; Doc. [320-1] at 21-22.
In the joint motion before the Court, Defendants have moved to quash each of the thirdparty subpoenas. Defendants claim deliberative process privilege and common interest privilege
over the information and documents sought by the CCSAO subpoena. Doc. [320] at 5-8.
Defendants additionally assert that the CCSAO subpoena seeks irrelevant information and is
unduly burdensome. Id. at 8-12. With respect to the FBI, USAO, and DOJ subpoenas, the
Defendants argue that the documents sought are irrelevant to resolving the issues of this case. Id.
at 12-15.
B.
Standing
Because Defendants are moving to quash subpoenas directed to third parties, the Court first
addresses the threshold issue of standing. A party generally does not have standing to quash a
subpoena to a nonparty. Parker v. Four Seasons Hotels, Ltd., 291 F.R.D. 181, 186 (N.D. Ill. 2013).
A party may have standing, however, “if the subpoena infringes upon the movant’s legitimate
interests.” United States v. Raineri, 670 F.2d 702, 712 (7th Cir. 1982); see also Kessel v. Cook
County, No. 00 C 3980, 2002 WL 398506, at *2 (N.D. Ill. Mar. 14, 2002). Examples of such
legitimate interests have included the assertion of privilege, interference with business
relationships, and the production of private information. Allstate Ins. Co. v. Electrolux Home
Prod., Inc., No. 16-CV-4161, 2017 WL 5478297, at *3 (N.D. Ill. Nov. 15, 2017) (citation omitted).
Here, Defendants have invoked the deliberative process and common interest privileges
with respect to the CCSAO subpoena, but their primary objections to the nonparty subpoenas
involve issues of relevancy and proportionality under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(b)(1).
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As courts in this district have made clear, non-recipients do not have standing to quash subpoenas
on relevance and proportionality grounds. See, e.g., Parker, 291 F.R.D. at 187 (N.D. Ill 2013)
(citations omitted) (“Relevance, burden or service objections fall to the subpoena’s recipient to
make[.]”); Buonavolanto v. LG Chem, Ltd., No. 18 C 2802, 2019 WL 8301068, at *2 (N.D. Ill.
Mar. 8, 2019) (internal quotation marks omitted) (defendants did not have standing to quash
nonparty subpoena on basis that the subpoenas went “beyond the scope of discovery as outlined
by Rule 26”). Defendants therefore do not have standing to quash the nonparty subpoenas with
relevance or proportionality challenges. 2
At the same time, Defendants do have standing to seek a protective order under Rule 26 to
limit discovery from a third party, see Buonavolanto, 2019 WL 8301068, at *2, and the relevance
and proportionality limits in Rule 26 that guide the proper scope of discovery apply with equal
force to nonparty discovery under Rule 45. Noble Roman’s, Inc. v. Hattenhauer Distrib. Co., 314
F.R.D. 304, 307-08 (S.D. Ind. 2016). Indeed, it is the “power—and duty—of the district courts
[to] actively [] manage discovery and to limit discovery that exceeds its proportional and proper
bounds.” Id. at 306 (emphasis in original). In that same vein, the Court “must limit the frequency
or extent of discovery otherwise allowed by [the] rules” if “the discovery sought is unreasonably
cumulative or duplicative” or “the proposed discovery is outside the scope permitted by Rule
26(b)(1).” Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(2)(C).
The Court, moreover, “enjoy[s] extremely broad
discretion” in managing discovery. Jones v. City of Elkhart, Ind., 737 F.3d 1107, 1115 (7th Cir.
2013). See Hunt v. DaVita, Inc., 680 F.3d 775, 780 (7th Cir. 2012) (citations omitted) (“District
2
After Plaintiffs filed their response brief, the CCSAO adopted Defendants’ motion in full and joined
Defendants’ reply brief. Doc. [329] at 3. Certainly, the CCSAO has standing to quash the subpoena directed
to it on relevance, burden, or privilege grounds. Yet, as discussed further below, the Court is construing
Defendants’ motion as a motion for a protective order, so the CCSAO’s recent joining to Defendants’
motion is of no import to the Court.
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courts have broad discretion in supervising discovery . . . for they are much closer to the
management of the case and the host of intangible and equitable factors that may be relevant in
exercising such discretion.”). The Court could, of course, wait for the subpoenas to be served, and
then address the parties and nonparties’ relevancy and proportionality arguments. But that would
result in judicial inefficiency, as the parties have extensively briefed the arguments relating to the
alleged relevancy of the subpoenas. Moreover, the very reason Rule 45(a)(4) requires notice to
the opposing party before serving the subpoena is to ensure that important issues to the discovery
process can be addressed prior to the service. Fed. R. Civ. P. 45(a)(4). And Rule 45(d)(1) requires
the Court to enforce the issuing party’s duty to take “reasonable steps to avoid imposing undue
burden or expense on a person subject to the subpoena.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 45(d)(1). Allowing service
of the subpoena would merely result in the parties and nonparties coming back to this Court and
raising the very same arguments. As the court did in Buonavolanto, this Court exercises its
discretion and construes the current motion as a motion for a protective order to enforce the limits
on discovery provided by Rule 26(b), and to effectuate the principles identified in Rule 1.
2019 WL 8301068, at *2; Fed. R. Civ. P. 1 (“[Federal Rules of Civil Procedure] should be
construed, administered, and employed by the court and the parties to secure the just, speedy, and
inexpensive determination of every action and proceeding.”)
II.
The Proper Scope of Discovery under Fed. R. Civ. P. 26
The Court next considers whether the four nonparty subpoenas properly seek information
falling within the bounds of Rule 26(b). That subdivision provides that parties “may obtain
discovery regarding any nonprivileged matter that is relevant to any party’s claim or defense and
proportional to the needs of the case, considering the importance of the issues at stake in the action,
the amount in controversy, the parties’ relative access to relevant information, the parties’
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resources, the importance of the discovery in resolving the issues, and whether the burden or
expense of the proposed discovery outweighs its likely benefit.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1) (emphasis
added). Simply put, Rule 26(b)(1) limits discovery to matters that are relevant, proportional, and
nonprivileged.
A.
The Court Does Not Have Enough Information to Rule on Defendants’
Proportionality and Privilege Arguments
In this case, Defendants argue that the four nonparty subpoenas exceed each of
Rule 26(b)(1)’s limits. That is, they challenge the subpoenas on relevancy, proportionality, and
privilege grounds. The latter two issues, proportionality and privilege, do not merit any significant
discussion at this time. In terms of proportionality, while the subpoenas are broad in both scope
and timeframe, the breadth of documents that will be responsive to the subpoenas is currently
unknown; the third-parties have not been served with the subpoenas and therefore have not attested
to the actual burdens and costs associated with the production of the documents. 3 Doc. [320] at 2.
See Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1) advisory committee’s note to 2015 amendment (“A party claiming
undue burden or expense ordinarily has far better information -- perhaps the only information -with respect to that part of the determination.”).
The claims of privilege are also premature.
Defendants cannot just assert that all
documents responsive to the subpoena are privileged without providing more particularized
information from the agencies invoking the privilege, such as a declaration about the nature of the
documents and why the privilege applies. Rule 26 mandates that a withholding party make a claim
of privilege expressly and “describe the nature of the documents, communications, or tangible
things not produced or disclosed . . . in a manner that, without revealing information itself
3
The exception here is the CCSAO, which could have, but did not, elaborate on the burdens and costs
associated with the subpoena directed to it, as discussed further below.
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privileged or protected, will enable other parties to assess the claim.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(5)(A).
In the same way, it is well-accepted that a party seeking to withhold material from discovery based
on the attorney/client or work-product privileges carries the burden “to demonstrate by competent
evidence and with particularity” that a privilege applies to each document that is claimed to be
privileged. Slaven v. Great Am. Ins. Co., 83 F. Supp. 3d 789, 796 (N.D. Ill. 2015) (collecting
cases). In general, “blanket claim[s]” of privilege are “unacceptable.” Acosta v. Target Corp., 281
F.R.D. 314, 320 (N.D. Ill. 2012) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
Generic privilege claims are inadequate in part because of the fact-intensive nature of
privilege claims. See In re Grand Jury Proceedings, 220 F.3d 568, 571 (7th Cir. 2000) (“The
inquiry into whether documents are subject to a privilege is a highly fact-specific one.”). That is
why, in the attorney-client relationship context, it is “[o]nly when the district court has been
exposed to the contested documents and the specific facts which support a finding of privilege,”
that a court can “make a principled determination” as to privilege. Holifield v. United States, 909
F.2d 201, 204 (7th Cir.1990).
Parties can provide the necessary facts for their privilege claims through affidavits or other
sufficiently clear and detailed submissions. See Mader v. Motorola Inc., 1995 WL 678507 (N.D.
Ill. 1995) (inviting submission of affidavits in support of privilege claims). Cf. Leybold-Heraeus
Techs., Inc. v. Midwest Instrument Co., 118 F.R.D. 609, 612-13 (E.D. Wis. 1987) (parties claiming
privilege need not submit documents under affidavit but attorney claiming privilege “must make
submissions with clarity, buttressed by argument and citation sufficient for the court to make a
decision as to each submission for which the privilege is claimed”). Regardless of form, the Court
has to be provided with enough information about the privilege claims and the documents at issue
to make the privilege determination.
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At this stage, equipped only with Defendants’ blanket privilege assertions, the Court does
not have enough information to make the privilege call. It is impossible to know now whether all
of the documents in the nonparty recipients’ possession are privileged, or if there are documents
that would not be subject to the privileges. As Defendants concede, the CCSAO has not prepared
an affidavit in support of its claim of deliberative process privilege, and that before it could do so,
it would need to know “exactly what documents are responsive to the subpoena.” Doc. [329]
at 6-7.
Significantly, the asserted privileges in this case are rebuttable, meaning more detail would
be needed about Plaintiffs’ need for the documents, as well as the CCSAO’s need for secrecy. For
instance, once a prima facie case for deliberative process privilege is made, a court has to balance
the discovering party’s need for disclosure against the government’s need for secrecy, considering
such factors as: “(1) the relevance of the documents to the litigation; (2) the availability of other
evidence that would serve the same purpose as the documents sought; (3) the government’s role
in the litigation; (4) the seriousness of the litigation and the issues involved in it; and (5) the degree
to which disclosure of the documents sought would tend to chill future deliberations within
government agencies.” Evans v. City of Chicago, 231 F.R.D. 302, 316 (N.D. Ill. 2005). In a similar
fashion, Defendants’ common interest privilege assertion is based on the work product privilege,
which can be rebutted with a showing that the discovering party has a substantial need for the
materials and an inability to, without undue hardship, obtain the substantial equivalent by other
means. Doc. [320] at 8; Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(3)(A)(ii). Thus, the information necessary to decide
whether the asserted privileges have been rebutted has also not been addressed by the parties in
any detail sufficient to issue a ruling on this matter. As a result, the Court does not have the
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requisite facts at this time to grant or deny a protective order based on the privilege issues raised
by Defendants.
While the CCSAO joined in this dispute at the reply brief stage, the information they have
provided is barebones and insufficient to make a firm determination that all documents are
privileged, or that production is not proportional to the needs of the case. In particular, the CCSAO
failed to provide a declaration or affidavit about the nature of the privilege or why the documents
would be privileged. Doc. [329] at 6-7. The CCSAO moreover ambiguously concedes that the
subpoena could call for some factual information—not protected by the deliberative process
privilege 4—as well, which leads the Court to wonder why the entire subpoena must be quashed
on privilege grounds. Id. at 5-6. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 45(d)(3) (allowing court to modify subpoena
as alternative to quashing). The CCSAO’s unsupported assertions of the deliberative process and
common interest privileges, coupled with a concession that some of the documents may fall outside
the scope of the deliberative process privilege, fail to invoke a privilege. See Fed. R. Civ. P.
26(b)(5)(A); Evans v. City of Chicago, 231 F.R.D. 302 (N.D. Ill. 2005) (motion to quash by Illinois
Prisoner Review Board which did not include affidavit establishing prima facie case of deliberative
process privilege failed to invoke privilege). See also Rodriguez v. City of Chicago, 329 F.R.D.
182, 186 (N.D. Ill. 2019) (government asserting deliberative process privilege must demonstrate
“typically by affidavit, precise and certain reasons for preserving the confidentiality of the
documents in question,” and must “specifically identify and describe the documents”).
Even if the CCSAO is correct that an affidavit is not per se required for the invocation of
the deliberative process privilege, the information sought and the CCSAO’s reasons for asserting
4
See Enviro Tech Int'l, Inc. v. U.S. E.P.A., 371 F.3d 370, 374-75 (7th Cir. 2004) (citations omitted)
(“Consistent with its purpose, the deliberative process privilege typically does not justify the withholding
of purely factual material, nor of documents reflecting an agency’s final policy decisions, but it does apply
to predecisional policy discussions, and to factual matters inextricably intertwined with such discussions.”).
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privilege are not “readily apparent to the Court.” Doc. [329] at 6 (citing Tumas v. Bd. of Educ. of
Lyons Twp. High Sch. Dist. No. 204, Cook Cty. Ill., No. 06 C 1943, 2007 WL 2228695, at *3 (N.D.
Ill. July 31, 2007)). Thus, the Court cannot find that the CCSAO has successfully invoked the
deliberative process or common interest privileges simply by joining in Defendants’ reply brief.
Along those same lines, the CCSAO failed to provide detailed information regarding the
burdens it would suffer in responding to the subpoena. Instead, the CCSAO merely describes the
burden as “astronomical,” and guesses that the process of responding to the CCSAO subpoena
would “likely take years to complete.” Doc. [329] at 7.
That is not the way to address
proportionality concerns. Instead, “[a]n objecting party must specifically establish the nature of
any alleged burden, usually by affidavit or other reliable evidence.” Burton Mech. Contractors,
Inc. v. Foreman, 148 F.R.D. 230, 233 (N.D. Ind. 1992). See Boyer v. Gildea, No. 1:05-CV-129,
2008 WL 4911267, at *4-*5 (N.D. Ind. Nov. 13, 2008). Beyond that, the burden of responding to
a discovery request is just one of the many proportionality factors to be considered in Rule
26(b)(1). The CCSAO has said nothing regarding the importance of the issues at stake in the
action, the parties’ relative access to relevant information, or the other proportionality factors.
Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1). In sum, the issues of burden and privilege have not been sufficiently
addressed by Defendants or the CCSAO for this Court to make a determination.
B.
The Court Finds that the Four Nonparty Subpoenas Seek Irrelevant
Information
In any event, the four nonparty subpoenas can be decided solely on relevance, which is
properly before the Court now. Under Rule 401 of the Federal Rules of Evidence, evidence is
relevant if it “has any tendency” to make a fact of consequence “more or less probable than it
would be without the evidence.” Fed. R. Evid. 401(a)-(b). In determining the scope of discovery
11
under Rule 26, relevance is construed broadly. Oppenheimer Fund, Inc. v. Sanders, 437 U.S. 340,
351 (1978).
Nevertheless, the requests in these particular subpoenas far exceed the bounds of relevancy
under Rule 26(b)(1), making it appropriate for this Court to prevent Plaintiffs from serving the
four nonparty subpoenas. See, e.g., United States v. Hamdan, 910 F.3d 351, 358 (7th Cir. 2018)
(holding district court did not err in quashing subpoenas of Wisconsin state troopers where
proposed testimony was irrelevant and could have caused confusion and prejudice); Uppal v.
Rosalind Franklin Univ. of Med. & Sci., 124 F. Supp. 3d 811 (N.D. Ill. 2015) (granting motion to
quash subpoena calling for testimony of hospital director who was not likely to possess any
relevant information).
1.
The CCSAO Subpoena
The CCSAO subpoena seeks “All Communications between any agents or employees of
the City of Chicago and any agents or employees of the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office
during the time periods of 2013 to the present and 2001 to 2013 that refer or relate to former
Chicago Police officers Reynaldo Guevara, Ernest Halvorsen, Edward Mingey, Joseph
Miedzianowski, and/or John Galligan[.]” Doc. [320-1] at 5. Plaintiffs have agreed to narrow the
timeframe of the CCSAO subpoena to 2010 through the present. Doc. [323] at 14.
Defendants first take issue with the request for communications relating to former Chicago
Police officers Miedzianowski and Galligan.
Defendants point out, persuasively, that
Miedzianowski and Galligan: (1) are not defendants in this case; and (2) were not involved at all
with the investigation of the Soto murders and kidnappings at the heart of this lawsuit. Doc. [320]
at 10. Beyond that, Defendant Guevara was not charged by the government as a result of its wideranging investigation and indictment of Miedzianowski’s corrupt activities, nor does Plaintiff
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provide any evidence of a connection to Guevara from Miedzianowski’s three-month jury trial or
from any of the other 23 defendants who were convicted with him. It is also important to recognize
that these document requests are directed to third-parties through a Rule 45 subpoena, and thus
imposing the burden of production on a nonparty to this lawsuit requires more careful
consideration. Uppal, 124 F. Supp. 3d at 813-14. These are significant hurdles to overcome in
order to demonstrate the relevancy of the information to this wrongful conviction case. Plaintiffs
argue that Defendant Guevara was a fellow gang crimes officer and direct the Court to four pieces
of evidence that Plaintiffs claim demonstrate that Guevara, Miedzianowski, and Galligan were
essentially partners in crime.
First, Plaintiffs offer an FBI report regarding Mohammed Omar’s 2001, post-conviction
interview statements. Doc. [323] at 3. Omar, a former member of the Spanish Cobras street gang,
told federal law enforcement that Miedzianowski and Galligan were involved in a drug conspiracy
with the Spanish Cobras for over a decade beginning in 1987. Id. at 2. Apparently, Omar also
discussed Defendant Guevara in his statement to law enforcement. Id. at 3. According to Plaintiffs,
the Omar FBI report “revealed that Guevara, too, participated in that conspiracy, and accepted
bribes to release suspects in murder cases.” Id. Omar claimed that Guevara’s policy was to “catch
a person with drugs or guns, but let them buy their way out of trouble,” and that he “was also said
to have accepted bribes to change positive or negative identifications during line-ups for murder
cases.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
The Omar FBI report fails to demonstrate the relevance of the CCSAO’s communications
regarding Miedzianowski and Galligan. As an initial matter, Omar’s statements in the report do
not actually connect Defendant Guevara to Miedzianowski, Galligan, or their drug conspiracy.
Instead, the majority of the fifteen-plus page report details Miedzianowski’s bad acts. Near the
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end of that report, it is apparent that Omar was asked for his knowledge on other police officers
and individuals. There, only three paragraphs discuss Guevara. See Doc. [320-1] at 37-38. Those
three paragraphs indicate that Omar knew Guevara from the neighborhood where Omar was raised,
and that Guevara accepted bribes to help drug dealers and murderers beat charges. Id. At no point
in the interview, as detailed by the report, did Omar say or even hint that Guevara was working in
concert with Miedzianowski or Galligan.
Plaintiffs’ second and third pieces of evidence, the affidavits of Jondalyn Fields and
Frederick Rock, similarly fall short in terms of showing the relevance of the CCSAO’s
communications referring to Miedzianowski or Galligan. In the Fields affidavit, Fields stated that
her roommate in 1998, Rock, was working with Miedzianowski and other police officers in the
drug business. Doc. [323-1] at 1. She also stated that in 1994, she encountered Guevara and
Galligan when they, along with several other Chicago police officers, came to her home to arrest
her then boyfriend, Peter Cotto. Id. Finally, Fields said that Guevara would call her residence to
speak with Rock, and that she saw him at Omar’s restaurant at the Mega Mall in approximately
February 1998, a location in which she had also separately observed Miedzianowski. Id. at 2. In
Rock’s affidavit, he stated that he worked for Miedzianowski, who introduced Guevara as “a ‘very
close friend’ of his [] in charge of homicides at Grand and Central.” Doc. [323-2] at 2. According
to Rock, Miedzianowski made comments about a drug dealer known as “Poochie” in front of Rock
and Guevara, which led Rock to believe that Miedzianowski wanted Guevara to help arrest
Poochie, and that Miedzianowski was going to frame Poochie. Id. at 2-3.
The Fields affidavit and Rock affidavit do not demonstrate what light the CCSAO’s
communications about Miedzianowski or Galligan could shed on this case. The Fields affidavit
does not establish that Guevara engaged in any of the alleged bad acts in the Miedzianowski-
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Galligan conspiracy. And, although Rock interpreted Miedzianowski’s comments in front of
Guevara to mean that Miedzianowski wanted to frame a drug dealer, Rock’s interpretation of a
threat made in Guevara’s presence is insufficient to indicate a relevant “other act” by Guevara.
Plaintiffs have not provided any evidence that Poochie was actually framed, or that Guevara played
a role in any of those activities.
Plaintiffs’ final piece of evidence to attempt to highlight the relevance of the CCSAO’s
communications regarding Miedzianowski and Galligan is the testimony of Sargent Mingey, a
supervisor assigned to Gang Crimes. In short, Mingey testified that there was a period of time
when Guevara, Galligan, and Miedzianowski overlapped at Area 6. See Doc. [323] at 3; Doc. [329]
at 11. However, the fact that Miedzianowski, Galligan, and Guevara worked in the same police
facility for a time does not make the CCSAO’s communications regarding Miedzianowski and
Galligan relevant. In fact, a closer look at Sargent Mingey’s testimony shows Miedzianowski and
Guevara were quite separate during their workplace overlap. Sargent Mingey testified that the two
worked for different supervisors, that they did not really like each other, and that Miedzianowski
was a loner who only worked with his partner, Galligan. See Doc. [329] at 11. Sargent Mingey’s
testimony accordingly does not establish a nexus between Guevara and Miedzianowski’s criminal
activity, or otherwise show that the CCSAO’s communications about Miedzianowski and Galligan
would have any tendency to make a fact in this case more or less likely.
In a last ditch effort, Plaintiffs argue that Sargent Mingey’s testimony indicating that
Guevara and Miedzianowski worked separately actually proves the relevance of discovery
regarding Miedzianowski. To that end, Plaintiffs speculate: “If they were not working together as
part of their official duties, it is a reasonable conclusion that Guevara was working with
Miedzianowski in some other capacity—perhaps his illicit activity.” Doc. [339] at 5. Yet, such
15
guesswork does not establish relevance, nor does it provide an example of why the requested
information is relevant. Without more information from Plaintiffs, their speculation amounts to
an impermissible fishing expedition in this case. See, e.g., Batchelor v. Merck & Co., No. 3:05CV-791 JTM, 2007 WL 4179015, at *3 (N.D. Ind. Nov. 20, 2007) (denying motion to compel
where requesting party appeared to be “merely ‘fishing’ for discovery and hoping that discovery
does exist to support their speculative and possible theory”); Jones v. Union Pac. R.R. Co., No. 12
C 771, 2014 WL 1715450, at *2 (N.D. Ill. May 1, 2014). While some amount of fishing is
generally necessary in the pretrial discovery process, see Nw. Mem'l Hosp. v. Ashcroft, 362 F.3d
923, 931 (7th Cir. 2004), discovery is not “a ticket to an unlimited, never-ending exploration of
every conceivable matter that captures an attorney's interest.” Vakharia v. Swedish Covenant
Hosp., No. 90 C 6548, 1994 WL 75055, at *2 (N.D. Ill. Mar. 9, 1994). And while it is true that
relevance in discovery is a low bar to meet—the requesting party still needs to clear the proverbial
relevancy limbo bar. Here, Plaintiffs’ conjectures about Sargent Mingey’s testimony fail to
persuade the Court that the CCSAO’s communications about Miedzianowski or Galligan are
relevant.
However, even if Plaintiffs’ proffered evidence did connect Guevara’s accepting bribes to
Miedzianowski and Galligan, bribing criminals and/or involvement in a drug conspiracy is a far
cry from the allegations of the complaints in this case. 5 In a nutshell, Plaintiffs here accuse the
individual defendant officers of causing their wrongful convictions for the 1998 double murder of
Mariano and Jacinta Soto. See, e.g., Doc. [328]; Solache Doc. [224]. Within that overarching
5
The Court acknowledges that Plaintiffs mention Guevara’s alleged connection with Miedzianowski in
their complaints. See Doc. [328] ¶ 122(b); Solache Doc. [224] ¶ 63. However, that mention is nestled
within a 40+ paragraph list of Guevara’s purported misdeeds preceding the counts and is never later
specifically connected to any of the counts of the complaints. The mere mention of Miedzianowski in the
complaints does not establish relevance in this case.
16
framing claim, Plaintiffs’ complaint alleges various unconstitutional acts by the individual officers,
including the use of physical violence, psychological abuse, and coercion to secure false
confessions from Plaintiffs for the 1998 double murder of Mariano and Jacinta Soto. Doc. [328]
¶ 53; Solache Doc. [224] ¶ 62. Discovery into Guevara’s accepting of bribes to help guilty drug
dealers and murderers avoid conviction would not help Plaintiffs prove that Guevara and the other
individual officers framed the purportedly innocent Plaintiffs to ensure their convictions. Put
another way, the alleged acts are too dissimilar to the allegations of the Complaint and the elements
of the asserted claims that Plaintiffs must prove to constitute relevant, discoverable evidence in
this case.
Plaintiffs further argue that the Miedzianowski information is relevant as Rule 404(b)
evidence. Doc. [323] at 11. Plaintiffs remind the Court of its previous holding that the past crimes,
wrongs, or other acts of the defendant officers, if sufficiently similar to the acts described in
Plaintiffs’ complaints, may be relevant. Id. (citing Doc. [313] at 8). Plaintiffs also hark back the
Court’s finding that the mere possibility that the trial court will eventually limit Rule 404(b)
evidence is not a reason to limit discovery into Rule 404(b) evidence. Id. (citing Doc. [313] at 6).
All true. However, the Court issued those rulings in the context of Plaintiffs’ previous motion for
404(b) evidence, which was reasonably grounded in “other acts” sufficiently similar to the bad
acts pleaded in the complaints. Plaintiffs represented that the 404(b) evidence there would “show
that Guevara and the other Defendants used physical abuse to extract false confessions, fabricated
police reports, and suppressed exculpatory evidence in numerous other cases,” for the relevant
Rule 404(b)(2) purposes of “demonstrating their intent, opportunity, preparation, and plan.” Doc.
[308] at 7. Whereas here, Defendant Guevara’s other acts, as described by Plaintiffs’ proffered
Miedzianowski evidence, are not sufficiently similar to the acts described in Plaintiffs’ complaints
17
to establish a modus operandi in homicide interrogations. Nor would the Miedzianowski drug
conspiracy evidence be relevant to the defendant officers’ intent, opportunity, preparation, or plan
to frame innocent people for murder. At most, the Miedzianowski evidence shows Guevara taking
bribes to help drug dealers beat charges and being in the vicinity of Miedzianowski when he made
threatening comments about a drug dealer named “Poochie.” Those acts are unlike the alleged
acts of Guevara in Plaintiffs’ complaints, in which they claim he used violent interrogation tactics,
falsified evidence, and took other steps to ensure that Plaintiffs were wrongfully prosecuted and
convicted for the Soto homicides. The Court accordingly finds that the Miedzianowski evidence
is irrelevant on a Rule 404(b) basis as well. See Wofford v. Celani, No. 11 C 3543, 2012 WL
2847549, at *4 (N.D. Ill. July 11, 2012) (denying plaintiff’s motion to compel 404(b) evidence on
relevance grounds where citizen complaints sought did not appear to involve claims of excessive
force, unlawful arrest, malicious prosecution, or any of the other bad acts alleged by plaintiff).
Finally, Plaintiffs contend that the evidence is relevant to their Monell claims. However,
Plaintiffs now frame their Monell claims broadly as the “failure to supervise and discipline rogue
police officers,” Doc. [323] at 4, but that is not what they pleaded in their complaints. Nor is it
what Plaintiffs have represented to the Court. In fact, on numerous occasions, Plaintiffs have
framed their Monell claims more narrowly as pertaining to the practice of physical violence and
coercion to obtain false confessions; the fabrication and suppression of evidence; the failure to
train, supervise, and discipline its officers leading to wrongful convictions, and the secrecy of
“street files.” See, e.g., Doc. [166] at 4-5; Doc. [173] at 8, Doc. [178] at 3; Doc. [212] at 3-11.
Moreover, construing their Monell claims with that breadth would open the door to any
matter involving any Chicago police officer who acted outside of his or her authority. Before
liability can be imposed under Monell, Plaintiffs will have to show that the Chicago Police
18
Department’s policies and practices were the “moving force behind” any constitutional violations.
Thomas v. Cook Cty. Sheriff's Dep't, 604 F.3d 293, 306 (7th Cir. 2010) (citation omitted) (emphasis
in original). As the Seventh Circuit has observed, “the Supreme Court has been especially
concerned with the broad application of causation principles in a way that would render
municipalities vicariously liable for their officers’ actions.” Id. In Wright v. City of Chicago, the
plaintiff alleged Monell claims in connection with numerous arrests and property seizures he was
subjected to over a two-year span. No. 09 C 3489, 2010 WL 4875580, at *1 (N.D. Ill. Nov. 23,
2010). In discovery, the plaintiff served “very broad discovery requests,” including a request for
“all investigative files from 2004 to 2009 for all civilian abuse complaints against City of Chicago
police officers.” Id. at *2. When the defendants moved to limit the plaintiff’s Monell discovery,
the plaintiff argued that the evidence sought was relevant because his Monell claims “attack the
‘widespread custom and practice of police misconduct and code of silence which has been allowed
to continue despite numerous lawsuits.’” Id. The Wright Court rejected the plaintiff’s broad
reading of his Monell claims, holding: “Wright's claims against the City cannot be as broad as
alleging failure to supervise or discipline police officers in general, because that would be, in
effect, alleging a negligence claim against the City, which is unavailable under Monell . . . Instead,
Wright’s Monell claims must be limited to policies and practices that are the moving force behind
the specific constitutional violations allegedly inflicted on Wright.” Id. at *3.
Plaintiffs here, like the plaintiff in Wright, are attempting to grow their Monell claims into
general claims regarding the City’s failure to discipline or supervise police officers. However, the
law requires that Monell claims be based on the policies and practices that were the “moving force”
behind the specific constitutional violations alleged by Plaintiffs. The law does not allow vicarious
liability cases. In this case, Plaintiffs allege that the individual defendant officers used various
19
tactics in order to secure Plaintiffs’ wrongful prosecutions and convictions, including using
physically and psychologically coercive tactics to obtain false confessions; fabricating witness
statements; concealing exculpatory evidence; and manipulating witnesses to influence their
testimony. See, e.g., Doc. [328] ¶ 98, 177; Solache Doc. [224] ¶ 66. Plaintiffs’ Monell claims are
therefore limited to the policies, procedures, and practices of the City relating to those and the
other actions allegedly taken by the police officers to secure Plaintiffs’ wrongful convictions. They
are not so broad as the City’s failure to discipline officers for any bad conduct.
The final reasons to reject Plaintiffs’ alleged relevancy basis are (1) the timeframe for the
requested information and (2) the nature of the materials requested.
Plaintiffs request
communications between the City and the CCSAO about Miedzianowski and Galligan, but do not
explain why communications from 2010 through the present will reveal Rule 404(b) “other acts”
evidence or Monell-related information from an alleged wrongful conviction dating back to a 1998
incident. Communications from over a decade later between two government bodies do not bear
a temporal relationship to the allegations in the Complaint. What is more, Plaintiffs do not explain
why communications between the City and the CCSAO would shed light about Guevara’s other
acts evidence, as opposed to the underlying source material about the alleged GuevaraMiedzianowski connection, such as documents from investigations into these individuals. These
issues are further addressed below. For these plethora of reasons, CCSAO communications
regarding Miedzianowski and Galligan are irrelevant and thus outside the proper scope of
discovery.
That leaves only the CCSAO subpoena’s request for communications with the Chicago
Police Department involving Defendants Guevara, Halvorsen, and Mingey from the last ten years.
Plaintiffs assert that the request with respect to Halvorsen, Mingey, and Guevara seeks information
20
directly related to Plaintiffs’ Monell claims and Rule 404(b) discovery. Doc. [323] at 12. In
support, Plaintiffs state, “these communications may lead to the discovery of evidence showing
the City was aware that Defendants and their colleagues engaged in misconduct in other cases,
which would help Plaintiffs satisfy the notice element of their Monell claims.” Id.
More
specifically in terms of notice, Plaintiffs state that the communications could reveal the
information shared between the City and the CCSAO during investigations into Guevara’s
criminal activity. Id.
Plaintiffs also surmise that the communications regarding Guevara,
Halvorsen and Mingey “may explain the reasons that various of the Defendants have and have not
asserted their Fifth Amendment right to remain silent in response to questions in these and related
cases.” Id. Finally, Plaintiffs claim that the communications regarding the individual defendant
officers could “show important information about Defendants’ motivation and bias,” such as “the
closeness of the police and the prosecutors and pressure exerted from one entity to another[.]” Id.
at 12-13. Plaintiffs’ reasons for asserting relevance of the CCSAO’s communications about
Halvorsen, Mingey, and Guevara, too, lack merit.
First, there is a significant temporal problem. The investigation of the Soto murders took
place in 1998. It is unclear how communications starting in 2010 between the City and the CCSAO
could show that the City was on notice in 1998 for misconduct occurring then. Plaintiffs say that
the 2010-present timeframe is appropriate because it covers the period in which Scott Lassar of
Sidley Austin LLP was conducting an internal investigation on behalf of the City into the
allegations of misconduct regarding Guevara, which included allegations regarding the 1998 Soto
homicide investigation. Doc. [339] at 3. Even so, the Court is still at a loss as to how the CCSAO’s
communications with the City would be relevant to this case, and Plaintiffs have not met their
burden in demonstrating the relevancy of such communications. The City’s documents regarding
21
Lassar’s investigation and findings, the non-privileged of which have already been produced, are
the documents relevant to the case, not the CCSAO’s communications to the City from the last ten
years. Doc. [329] at 13. 6 At any rate, the CCSAO’s communications with the City from 2010 to
the present certainly do not have a tendency to make it more likely that the City was on notice of
any 1998 misconduct. The Plaintiffs’ notice reason therefore flops.
So too, does Plaintiffs’ Fifth Amendment articulation. Plaintiffs hypothesize that the
CCSAO’s communications with the City may reveal the reasons various defendants have or have
not taken the Fifth. Doc. [323] at 12. Yet Plaintiffs provide no explanation for why the CCSAO
and the City would be discussing the officers’ invocation or non-invocation of the Fifth
amendment, nor why those discussions would be relevant to the case. Moreover, in the Court’s
view, the only plausible relevancy basis as to why certain officers would be invoking the Fifth
Amendment would be to test whether the defendant officers truly believe their testimony may selfincriminate them, see Ruiz-Cortez v. City of Chicago, 931 F.3d 592, 603 (7th Cir. 2019) (“The
only valid reason to invoke the Fifth Amendment is a reasonable fear that truthful answers may
incriminate the witness”), but Plaintiffs have not offered any support for their conjecture that the
communications between the CCSAO and the City of Chicago could contain information about
the officers’ beliefs. Plaintiffs’ Fifth Amendment reason is consequently deficient.
Plaintiffs’ final supporting basis for the relevance of the CCSAO communications, that
they might portray the closeness between the CCSAO and the City and any pressures exerted
between the entities, suffers from the same temporal problem as Plaintiffs’ notice argument.
6
For this same reason, Plaintiffs’ speculation that communications relating to Guevara, Halvorsen, and
Mingey “likely include relevant 404(b) evidence with respect to Lassar’s investigations into other cases
involving allegations of abuse or coerced confessions” fails. Doc. [339] at 3. Plaintiffs have received the
non-privileged Lassar investigation documents, yet they point to none of those documents (nor anything
else) to indicate that the CCSAO communications they seek would encompass relevant other-acts evidence.
22
Communications between the CCSAO and City, taking place more than ten years after the 1998
Soto investigation, do not make any fact in this case more or less likely. The alleged “closeness”
and “pressure” from 2010 to the present are not relevant to conduct that was purported to have
taken place prior to 1998.
In conclusion, for the reasons stated above, the Court, having construed Defendants’
motion to quash as a motion for a protective order, grants the motion with respect to the CCSAO
subpoena because the subpoena calls for irrelevant information, outside of the scope of Rule
26(b)(1).
2.
The FBI and USAO Subpoenas
The FBI and USAO subpoenas contain identical document requests and can be dispensed
with together and quickly for the reasons discussed above. The riders of the FBI and USAO
subpoenas both call for:
All Documents relating to any investigations or inquiries conducted
by the Federal Bureau of Investigation or the United States
Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Illinois into former
Chicago police officer Joseph Miedzianowski, including but not
limited to investigative notes, investigative reports, notes and
records of witness interviews, and FBI forms FD-209, FD- 302, FD472, FD-473, and FD-888 prepared as part of the investigation. This
request seeks all Documents in your possession, custody, or control,
including within the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the United
States Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Illinois.
Doc. [320-1] at 11, 16 (emphasis added).
Because the Court has already determined that
information on Miedzianowski is irrelevant and therefore outside the scope of discovery permitted
by Rule 26(b)(1), the Court has no trouble in granting Defendants’ (construed) protective order
with respect to the FBI and USAO subpoenas.
23
3.
The DOJ Subpoena
Plaintiffs’ final nonparty subpoena is to the DOJ and requests documents relating to the
investigation of the Chicago Police Department undertaken by the DOJ in the years 2015 to 2017
in order to ascertain whether the Chicago Police Department was engaging in a pattern or practice
of unlawful conduct. Doc. [320-1] at 21-22. Plaintiffs frame the DOJ subpoena as a request for
complaint register (“CR files”) and emphasize that the Court has already found such files to be
relevant to Plaintiffs’ Monell claims. Doc. [323] at 11-12. While it is true that the Court did
previously order the City to produce all Area Five homicide CR files, that production was limited
to the years 1995 through 1998. Doc. [224] at 24. In stark contrast, the DOJ subpoena calls for
CR files and data collected from an investigation that took place from 2015 to 2017. Doc. [320]
at 14. Importantly, in the 2015-2017 investigation, the DOJ reviewed Chicago Police Department
data from the time period of January 2011 to March 2016. Id. Chicago Police Department data
and CR files from more than ten years after the Soto investigation in 1998 have no bearing on this
case. Plaintiffs must demonstrate that the failure to train and supervise the officers prior to 1998
was the motivating factor that led to the Plaintiff’s alleged constitution violations. Recent data of
alleged CPD misconduct is not relevant to the Monell claims as alleged in the Complaint. Thus,
the DOJ subpoena, like the CCSAO, FBI, and USAO subpoenas, improperly calls for irrelevant
information. The Court, having construed Defendants’ motion to quash as a motion for a
protective order, grants the motion with respect to the DOJ subpoena.
Conclusion
For the reasons discussed above, the Court construes Defendants’ motion to quash
[DeLeon-Reyes 320; Solache 215] as a motion for protective order, and grants the motion.
24
Plaintiffs shall not serve any of the four nonparty subpoenas discussed in this Memorandum
Opinion and Order.
SO ORDERED.
Dated: June 8, 2020
______________________
Sunil R. Harjani
United States Magistrate Judge
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