Monson v. Detroit, City of et al
Filing
293
ORDER on Plaintiff's Partial Motion for Summary Judgment 237 and Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment 241 . Signed by District Judge Laurie J. Michelson. (EPar)
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
SOUTHERN DIVISION
LAMARR MONSON,
Plaintiff,
Case No. 18-10638
Honorable Laurie J. Michelson
v.
JOAN GHOUGOIAN, et al.,
Defendants.
ORDER ON PLAINTIFF’S PARTIAL MOTION FOR SUMMARY
JUDGMENT [237] AND DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR
SUMMARY JUDGMENT [241]
The Court heard argument on the parties’ cross-motions for summary
judgment on October 28, 2022. And, as explained in more detail on the record and
below, the Court granted Lamarr Monson’s partial motion for summary judgment
(ECF No. 237) and granted in part and denied in part Defendants’ motion for
summary judgment (ECF No. 241).
Although the Court ruled on the two summary-judgment motions at the
hearing, in the interest of completeness and to aid the parties’ efforts going forward,
the Court will set out the facts and then restate its ruling. As the Court noted on the
record, the factual landscape post-discovery is not so different than the factual
allegations in the pleadings. (See ECF Nos. 43, 187.)
Background
Monson claims that his constitutional rights were violated when he was
investigated for and convicted of the murder of 12-year-old Christina Brown in 1997.
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The factual bases of his claims thus center on the investigation into her death and
his eventual conviction.
But before proceeding, a brief word on the standard. When there are crossmotions for summary judgment, as there are here, the Court must consider each
motion separately and take the facts in the light most favorable to the non-moving
party. See Ohio State Univ. v. Redbubble, Inc., 989 F.3d 435, 442 (6th Cir. 2021). But,
helpfully, the cross-motions here focus on different points of the investigation into
Brown’s murder. Monson’s summary-judgment motion focused on his arrest at the
crime scene. (See generally ECF No. 237.) While Defendants’ motion focused on claims
pertaining to the investigation into Brown’s death and Monson’s eventual
prosecution, which generally started when Monson arrived at the police station. (See
generally ECF No. 241.) So the Court takes the facts related to Monson’s arrest at the
scene in the light most favorable to Defendants (to the limited extent they are
disputed), but it takes the post-arrest facts in the light most favorable to Monson.
1995
In October or November of 1995, a fire broke out at an apartment building on
Boston Street in Detroit. (ECF No. 269-2, PageID.19225–19227.) Rather than repair
the building, the landlord told all of the tenants to move out. (Id.) But a few tenants
stayed, including Shellena Bentley, Kenneth Brown, and Linda Woods. (Id.; ECF No.
241-4, PageID.12901, 12965.)
Sometime after the fire, 22-year-old Lamarr Monson began selling drugs out
of Apartment 7A. (ECF No. 241-8, PageID.13315.) Monson says he only “conduct[ed]
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business” there, otherwise preferring to stay with the mother of his daughter or with
his parents. (Id. at PageID.13315, 13263, 13354.)
And around this time, Monson met 12-year-old Christina Brown and
periodically saw her around the neighborhood. (ECF No. 241-8, PageID.13312–
13313.) Monson believed Brown to be 17 or 18 years old. (Id. at PageID.13314.)
Brown’s childhood friend, Cynthia Stewart, recalls that she and Brown looked mature
for their age and that they would frequently tell others that they were 18 or 19. (ECF
No. 269-14, PageID.19792.)
1996
Brown ran away from home in early January 1996. (ECF No. 269-13,
PageID.19774.) Needing somewhere to go, she would sometimes stay in Apartment
7A because, according to Monson, “that was a convenient place for her . . . It was
wintertime, it was cold; that place was warm, it had people around that she
knew . . . [and at] times I would go get food for everybody.” (ECF No. 241-8,
PageID.13349.) While staying there, Brown occasionally sold drugs for Monson. (Id.
at PageID.13344–13345.) But Monson says their relationship was “like brother and
sister,” and he denies ever having a sexual relationship with her. (Id. at
PageID.13320.)
On January 19, 1996, Shellena Bentley was still living in the semi-abandoned
apartment building. (ECF No. 269-2, PageID.19231.) After work that day, she invited
her boyfriend, Robert Lewis, over. (Id.) The two planned to “just lay back and get
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high.” (Id.) According to Bentley, Lewis visited Apartment 7A about three times to
purchase drugs throughout the night. (Id. at PageID.19234.) Lewis’ 1996 statement
to the Detroit Police Department noted that he had purchased drugs from Brown
around 10 or 11 p.m. and that Monson was not there. (ECF No. 269-6, PageID.19454.)
For his part, Monson says that he left the apartment shortly before midnight
to spend the night with the mother of his daughter. (ECF No. 241-8, PageID.13357;
see also ECF No. 269-3, PageID.19399, 19414 (testimony of Monson’s daughter’s
mother agreeing that he spent the night with her).) He says Brown was alive when
he left. (ECF No. 241-8, PageID.13357.)
Sometime around 4 or 5 a.m. on January 20, 1996, Bentley and Lewis ran out
of both drugs and money. (ECF No. 269-2, PageID.19229.) So Lewis returned to 7A
to see if he could buy drugs on credit. (Id. at PageID.19234.) According to Bentley,
when Lewis returned, he was “dripping with blood. Blood was dripping off his
fingernails . . . there was blood on his jacket, blood on his boots, blood on his
pants . . . [and he said,] ‘I think I killed that bitch.’” (Id. at PageID.19234–19239,
19270.) Bentley and Lewis fled. (Id. at PageID.19235.)
Around 10 a.m., Monson woke up at his daughter’s mother’s house. (ECF No.
241-8, PageID.13351.) He left the house around noon, briefly visited his parents’
home, and then headed to the apartment building on Boston. (Id.; ECF No. 269-3,
PageID.19418 (Monson’s daughter’s mother agreeing that he woke up around 10 am
and left her home around noon).)
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Monson arrived at the apartment building around 1:30 or 2 p.m. (ECF No. 2418, PageID.13372; ECF No. 241-4, PageID.12913; ECF No. 237-11, PageID.12571.)
When he arrived, Lewis (who had apparently returned) and another neighbor, Linda
Woods, were standing outside the building chatting. (ECF No. 241-8, PageID.13373.)
Woods told Monson that she had tried to check on Brown earlier in the day and—
though the door was partially open—she got no answer. (Id.; ECF No. 241-4,
PageID.12910 (Woods’ testimony); ECF No. 269-6, PageID.19450 (Lewis’ statement).)
So Monson, Lewis, and Woods went to Apartment 7A to investigate. (ECF No.
241-8, PageID.13373, 13384; ECF No. 269-6, PageID.19450.) Upon their arrival,
Monson immediately noticed that “everything [in the apartment] was in disarray.”
(ECF No. 241-8, PageID.13373.) Then he saw a badly beaten Brown “laying on the
floor [of the bathroom] . . . alive, waving her hands at [him].” (Id. at PageID.13375.)
There was blood “everywhere: walls, floor, everywhere” in the bathroom. (Id. at
PageID.13385; see also ECF No. 241-12, PageID.14116–14119, 14128 (crime scene
photos).) He recalled, “she was gargling blood, I told her to turn her head to the side
to allow the blood to release, and I was going to get help.” (ECF No. 241-8,
PageID.13375.)
Hysterical, Monson asked another neighbor, Kenneth Brown (no apparent
relation to Christina Brown), to call 911. (ECF No. 241-8, PageID.13376; ECF No.
241-4, PageID.12971 (Kenneth Brown’s testimony).) And Monson quickly drove to his
sister’s house, which was nearby, to call 911. (ECF No. 241-8, PageID.13376.) Monson
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returned, placed a blanket over Christina Brown, and—when he noticed she was
unresponsive—started doing chest compressions. (Id. at PageID.13376.)
Around 2:10 p.m., Detroit Police Officers Vincent Crockett and Jerome Wilson,
who are Defendants in this case, arrived on the scene. (ECF Nos. 234-8, 237-3.)
Despite noting that “everyone wanted to walk out,” Crockett told Monson, Woods, and
Lewis to “sit on the bed” and that “everyone is going to stay here.” (ECF No. 237-2,
PageID.12105–12106.) In time, the trio was put in police cars and transported to the
police station. (ECF No. 241-8, PageID.13394–13395; ECF Nos. 234-8, 237-3.) While
Defendants are correct that Monson was not handcuffed and that there is “no
evidence that officers physically forced him into the car” (ECF No. 242,
PageID.14383), Monson says he was “forced” to go “against his will” (ECF No. 237-2,
PageID.12116; ECF No. 241-8, PageID.13395). And several officers testified that in
1996, it was customary for police to detain and transport homicide witnesses to the
police station for questioning. (ECF No. 269-23, PageID.20296 (Braxton); ECF No.
269-10, PageID.19672 (Gallant); ECF No. 269-20, PageID.20102 (Ghougoian).)
EMTs arrived at the building shortly thereafter and transported Brown to the
hospital, where she was pronounced dead. (ECF No. 272-2, PageID.20933; ECF No.
241-12, PageID.14093, 14107.)
Based on the amount of blood at the scene and Brown’s wounds, the police and
EMTs believed that Brown had been stabbed to death. (ECF Nos. 234-8, 237-3, 2722, 272-3.) Indeed, the crime scene was processed as a “fatal stabbing.” (ECF No. 2312, PageID.10992.) The Evidence Technician Report noted that there was blood on
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virtually every surface in the bathroom, that the bathroom window was broken from
the inside, and that there was a bent, bloody kitchen knife in the sink. (Id. at
PageID.10992.) It also noted that, on the floor of the bedroom, “wrapped in a white
Wards mattress cover is the toilet tank top which is bloody.” (Id.) The knife, toilettank top, and a few other items were tagged for evidence, and a technician lifted a
number of prints for identification. (Id. at PageID.10993–10994.)
Monson, Woods, and Lewis arrived at the police station with Officers Crockett
and Wilson. The witnesses were placed in separate rooms. (ECF No. 241-8,
PageID.13396.) And Monson noticed that, while he waited, the other officers “just
kind of repeatedly talked as if I was the person that committed the crime.” (Id. at
PageID.13399.)
Around 3 p.m., Crockett and Wilson filled out their preliminary complaint
reports. (ECF Nos. 234-8, 237-3.) Both reports indicated that Monson was a witness
rather than a suspect. (ECF Nos. 234-8, 237-3.) According to Crockett’s testimony
during Monson’s criminal trial and his deposition in this case, Robert Lewis spoke to
him as he filled out his report. (ECF No. 241-13, PageID.14231, 14287; ECF No. 2372, PageID.12120–12123.) Lewis apparently told Crockett that Monson and Brown
were dating and having sex. (ECF No. 237-2, PageID.12120, 12126.) Crockett, in turn,
told Investigator Barbara Simon, who is also a Defendant in this case. (ECF No. 24113, PageID.14231, 14287; ECF No. 237-2, PageID.12120–12123.)
Around 3:30 p.m., Simon read Monson his Miranda rights and had him sign a
“Constitutional Rights Certificate of Notification.” (ECF No. 241-14, PageID.14359.)
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Monson “asked to use the phone after the reading of my rights.” (ECF No. 241-8,
PageID.13404.) Simon apparently refused. (See id.)
Meanwhile, the police collected statements from the residents of the semiabandoned apartment building (Kenneth Brown, Robert Lewis, and Linda Woods)
and Brown’s childhood friend, Cynthia Stewart. Monson believes that two of these
statements were exculpatory and that the other two were falsified or otherwise
unreliable.
First, at 4 p.m., Kenneth Brown (the neighbor who called 911) gave a
statement. (ECF No. 241-9, PageID.13646.) His statement said that Monson was
Brown’s boyfriend, but it also said that Monson “was out all night, I seen him come
in from my window just before he came and knocked on my door” following the
discovery of her body. (Id.) At his deposition years later, Kenneth Brown said he had
no actual knowledge that Monson was Brown’s boyfriend, and he could not recall if
he or the police officer provided that information. (ECF No. 241-9, PageID.13604.) He
said, “I was mainly telling them that [Monson] wasn’t there. That he was gone when
that was happening, you know. And the one detective talking about I can’t afford to
tell them that.” (Id. at PageID.13558.) Monson believes that statement was
exculpatory because it supported his story that he was not at the building on the
night of the murder. (ECF No. 269, PageID.19169.)
Next, around 4:05 p.m., Lewis gave a statement to the police that largely
aligned with Monson’s story. (ECF No. 269-6, PageID.19450.) He said that Monson
arrived at the apartment building that afternoon, that Woods told Monson that the
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door of 7A was open, and that the trio went into the apartment to investigate. (Id. at
PageID.19451.) He noted that they found Brown, that Monson started “pumping her
chest,” and that the EMTs and police soon arrived on the scene. (Id.) His statement
also said that Lewis had purchased drugs from Brown around 10 or 11 p.m. the night
prior, and that Monson was not there. (Id.) Monson argues that this statement was
exculpatory because it noted that he had “attempted to aid and comfort the injured
Christina Brown when he discovered her severely injured.” (ECF No. 269,
PageID.19192.)
Around 5:45 p.m., the police took a statement from Cynthia Stewart (also
known as Paris Thompson), Brown’s 13-year-old friend. (ECF No. 269-12,
PageID.19770; ECF No. 269-14, PageID.19813.) The statement—which was
purportedly taken by Barbara Simon—says that Monson had threatened Brown’s life
about one month prior to her death, that they were “boyfriend and girlfriend,” and
that Monson routinely carried a knife. (ECF No. 269-12, PageID.19771–19772.) But
in her deposition in this case, Stewart told a different story. She said that in 1996,
two or three police officers found her, “handcuffed [her,] and put [her] in the back of
the [police] car.” (ECF No. 269-14, PageID.19809.) After they arrived at the station,
the officers told her that Brown had been murdered, showed her a clear bag of
Brown’s blood-stained clothes, and kept asking her “if [she] wanted to go to jail maybe
or end up like that, like [her] friend.” (Id. at PageID.19820.) Brown took that to mean
that the police would be “mad” at her and that Monson might hurt her if she did not
cooperate. (Id. at PageID.19908.) She continued, “they told me [Brown] was
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with . . . Lamarr Monson selling drugs somewhere. I did not even know [Brown and
Monson] were together . . . this was all told to me by the[ police]. I did not know that
stuff. We had not seen each other for so long. . . . I didn’t really know nothing about
nothing.” (Id. at PageID.19820–19821.) She denied that the signature on the
statement was hers. (Id. at PageID.19833.) And Stewart did not recall speaking to
any female officers, suggesting that perhaps Simon did not take her statement. (Id.
at PageID.19899.) (At Monson’s criminal trial, Crockett identified himself as one of
the officers who interrogated Stewart. (ECF No. 241-13, PageID.14297–14298; ECF
No. 241-5, PageID.13154.))
Finally, around 7:45 p.m., non-party Sergeant Gallant took Woods’ statement.
(ECF No. 269-9, PageID.19473.) Woods said that she saw Monson’s car pull up to the
building around 7:30 a.m., and that the car “pulled out fast” about forty-five minutes
later. (Id.) Woods’ statement also said that Monson and Brown were dating, but it
otherwise largely conformed to Monson’s account of his arrival at the apartment that
afternoon. (Id. at PageID.19473–19474.) At his deposition, Sgt. Gallant recalled that
he thought Woods was lying and on drugs as he took her statement. (ECF No. 26910, PageID.19664.)
Also around 7:45 p.m., Monson signed his First Statement to the police. (ECF
No. 241-14.) But before he did so, Simon interrogated him for “hours,” apparently
insisting that he and Brown had had a sexual relationship. (ECF No. 241-8,
PageID.13406.) Monson consistently denied it. (Id. at PageID.13439–13441.) In any
case, according to Monson, his First Statement contained a mix of truthful and
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fictitious statements. (Id. at PageID.13410–13442.) For example, he says the First
Statement truthfully conveyed most of his statements to Simon regarding the past
24 hours, including his denial of being at the building at 7:30 a.m. and his denial of
any involvement in Brown’s murder. (Id.) But it omitted the fact that Monson had
spent the night with the mother of his daughter. (Id.) And it included allegedly
fabricated statements that Brown was his girlfriend and that he and Brown had had
sex in the days preceding her death. (Id. at PageID.13417–13437; 13439–13442.)
Monson claims that he did not realize he was endorsing the information in the First
Statement when he signed it, arguing that he only did so because Simon “instructed
[him] to sign [his] signature.” (Id. at PageID.13425.) At her deposition, Simon said
she took the First Statement in question-and-answer format and that she “wrote
down what he told [her].” (ECF No. 237-10, PageID.12472, 12476.)
Only after signing the First Statement was Monson permitted to use the
phone. (Id. at PageID.13442.)
At some point during the day, Monson also signed a consent form permitting
the police to search his car. (ECF No. 269-10, PageID.19574–19575.) No blood was
found in the car. (Id. at PageID.19577.)
Around 11 p.m., Monson was fingerprinted and taken to lock-up. (ECF No. 23716, PageID.12702; ECF No. 241-8, PageID.13443.) He did not sleep that night. (ECF
No. 241-8, PageID.13443, 13446.)
* * *
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To summarize the events of the day, in the early morning hours of January 20,
1996, Robert Lewis came to his girlfriend, Shellena Bentley, covered in blood and
admitted that he killed Christina Brown in the semi-abandoned apartment building.
Then around 1:30 or 2 p.m., Monson went to the building, met up with Lewis and
another neighbor (Linda Woods), and the three discovered a severely injured Brown.
Monson and yet another neighbor (Kenneth Brown) both called 911. The police
arrived and conveyed Monson, Woods, Lewis, and Brown to the police station for
questioning. The police took statements from each of the witnesses, but Monson says
some of the statements—including his own—were at least partially fabricated.
Another was exculpatory but suppressed. And, toward the end of the day, Monson
signed his First Statement to police, which “admitted” to having a sexual relationship
with Brown, though it denied any connection to her murder. Monson was held
overnight.
Around 5 or 5:30 the next morning, on January 21, 1996, Monson was taken to
see Joan Ghougoian, then the Chief Inspector of the Detroit Police Department. (ECF
No. 241-8, PageID.13443, 13446.) (Ghougoian is a Defendant in this case.) Once in
her office, Monson says Ghougoian told him that she “didn’t believe that I did
it. . . . She told me that they had a stack of evidence against me, and she placed her
hand on a stack of files on her desk.” (Id. at PageID.13446.) But then Ghougoian
extended an olive branch: “she . . . told me that she wanted to help me, but they’re
going to charge me with first degree murder; but if I were to do another statement,
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or sign [an] information summary, as she put it, that she could have me home by that
time tomorrow.” (Id.) And then, “she continued to attempt to convince me to do a
statement or sign another statement. She gave me references as to possibly the need
for a self-defense scenario, and she would ramble a story about self-defense.” (Id. at
PageID.13447.) One such scenario was as follows: “she gave me a scenario of me
coming home drunk or high, and getting into an argument with [Brown] to the point
where she tried to stab me, and I took the knife from her, and we had a—a scuffle or
whatever.” (Id. at PageID.13448.) Then she said: “Now do you want to get charged,
or do you want to go home[?] So I said, I want to go home. And she said, So you’re
going to sign? And I say, Yeah, I agreed to, and that’s when she contacted the other
officer to come in.” (Id. at PageID.13447–13448.)
For her part, Ghougoian denies ever falsely promising any suspects that they
could go home if they signed statements. (ECF No. 269-20, PageID.20011.) And in her
deposition, she agreed that, in 1996, “it was unlawful for a police officer to promise a
suspect they could go home if they gave a statement implicating themselves in the
commission of a crime where the police officer had neither the intention nor the
authority to make good on that promise.” (Id. at PageID.20097.)
After about three hours with Ghougoian, at around 8:25 a.m., Defendant
Sergeant Charles Braxton entered the room and took Monson’s Second Statement,
which “admitted” to stabbing Brown in self-defense. (ECF No. 241-2.) Specifically, it
says that Monson “had been out drinking all night” and came home in the early
morning. (ECF No. 241-2, PageID.12801.) And it says that Monson removed some
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condoms from his pocket and went to the bathroom to remove a condom from his penis
when Brown “charged” him with a butcher knife in a jealous rage. (Id.) The two
struggled over the knife, and “as [Monson] was pushing her back the knife was bent
in her hand and it struck her in the neck.” (Id.) It says he left the apartment for a few
hours only to return in the afternoon to call 911. (Id.)
Monson and Braxton dispute how the Second Statement came to be. Monson
says: “I was sitting there ’sleep, half ’sleep, laying on the desk, somebody is typing,
telling me to sign. Only thing on my mind is what I’ve been told, that I’d be going
home at this time tomorrow. I’m being caught up in all this mix of stuff that I don’t
want to be involved in for something that I didn’t do[.]” (ECF No. 241-8,
PageID.13460–13461.) And he says that Braxton was “reading off of another piece of
paper as he was typing in some occasions . . . [And Ghougoian] would come in and out
of the room that they would confer with—even though I couldn’t hear what they were
saying, I know it was applying to the second statement.” (Id. at PageId.13461.) And
Monson noted the similarity between the statement Braxton typed and the selfdefense scenario Ghougoian had described earlier. (ECF No. 241-8, PageID.13465
(“Q: Somebody made this up, correct? A. Yes. Part of it was the scenario that was
given to me in the beginning when I talked with Ms. Ghougoian. That’s why I know
where—where it’s from.”).)
But Braxton remembers things differently. Take, for example, this exchange
from his deposition: “Q: But now after 22 years, you’re able to remember that
[Ghougoian] was only in the room for a minute, she never looked over your shoulder,
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she never proofed what you were typing; that’s your testimony, correct? A: Yes.” (ECF
No. 269-23, PageID.20439.) And Braxton testified that he took Monson’s statement
in a question-and-answer format. (Id. at PageID.20432.)
After signing the Second Statement, Monson did not get to go home. Instead,
he was returned to lock-up. (ECF No. 241-8, PageID.13474.)
At some point on the same day, the Medical Examiner’s report came in. (ECF
No. 241-12, PageID.14093.) Although the ME found numerous stab wounds
consistent with the police department’s theory, he also noted that she had suffered a
severe skull fracture and ultimately concluded that Brown’s death was caused by
“craniocerebral injuries which were the result of a beating.” (Id. at PageID.14093–
14105, 14113–14115.) This report was made available to police “the same day.” (ECF
No. 241-12, PageID.14065.)
And at some point the same day, Barbara Simon became the officer-in-charge
of the investigation into Brown’s death. (ECF No. 237-10, PageID.12349.) As she later
recalled, this required her to “put the case together. You do the lab work. . . . [Y]ou’re
supposed to go to the Wayne County Morgue. You have to sit in on the autopsy. I don’t
think I did that, though, that particular time. You prepare everything. You take it to
the prosecutor. You talk to the prosecutor. You give them their package. You leave
the file with them, and they will, you know, see what that person is charged with,
murder 1, murder 2.” (Id. at PageID.12349–12350.)
In accordance with her duties as the officer-in-charge, Simon sent an
Investigator’s Report to the prosecutor that very day. (ECF No. 237-19,
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PageID.12726.) She recommended that the prosecutor charge Monson with firstdegree murder. (Id.) The report notes that Brown was Monson’s girlfriend and that
an autopsy revealed that the “cause of death was a result of multiple stab wounds.”
(Id.) The report also included the following details: (1) that Stewart (Brown’s friend)
would testify that Monson had previously threatened Brown’s life; (2) that Woods (the
neighbor who entered the apartment with Monson and Lewis) saw Monson arrive at
the building and depart 45 minutes later on the morning of the murder; (3) that
Kenneth Brown (the neighbor who called 911) would testify that Monson and Brown
were dating; and (4) that Braxton (the officer who took Monson’s Second Statement)
would testify that Monson admitted to stabbing Brown. (Id. at PageID.12726–12727.)
The report omitted Kenneth Brown’s statement that Monson was not home the
morning of the murder, and it omitted Robert Lewis entirely. (ECF No. 269,
PageID.19192.) At the bottom, the report said: “Statement/Confession: See Def.
Monson Statement,” indicating that one or both of his statements were submitted to
the prosecutor. (Id.)
Based on the Report, the prosecutor charged Monson with first-degree
premeditated homicide that day. (Id. at PageID.12726.) Monson was arraigned the
following day, January 22, 1996. (ECF No. 241-8, PageID.13474.)
* * *
To summarize the events of February 21, 1996, the day after Brown’s murder:
early that morning, Ghougoian interrogated Monson and promised him that he could
go home if he signed a Second Statement. He agreed to the deal, and Braxton typed
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up the self-defense story that Ghougoian had contrived, where Monson “admitted” to
stabbing Brown in self-defense during a lovers’ quarrel. Monson signed it.
Meanwhile, the Medical Examiner’s report concluded that Brown died of
craniocerebral injuries, not from being stabbed. Nonetheless, Simon submitted an
Investigator’s Report to the prosecutor indicating that Monson was Brown’s
boyfriend, that he admitted to stabbing her, and that she had died from the stab
wounds. The report (according to Monson) also included fabricated information and
omitted exculpatory information from various witnesses at the scene. Based on
Simon’s report, the prosecutor charged Monson with first-degree murder.
On January 25, 1996, Simon received the results of the latent print
examination. (ECF No. 269-24, PageID.20460.) The lab matched Monson’s prints
with a print found on the bathroom mirror. (Id.) But his prints did not match either
set of useable prints recovered from the bloody toilet-tank top. (Id.) One set matched
Brown, but the lab noted that “there is still an unidentified usable print and
palmprint left.” (Id.)
About a week later, on February 2, 1996, Monson had his preliminary exam
(i.e., his probable-cause hearing). Dr. Jeff Harkey, the pathologist who performed
Brown’s autopsy, testified. (ECF No. 237-11, PageID.12531.) He said the cause of
death was “extensive injuries to [Brown’s] brain and skull.” (Id. at PageID.13531–
13546.) He noted that, while an ordinary glass window could not have caused the
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fatal blow, a “toilet tank top is a heavy enough object.” (Id.) Braxton and Simon also
testified, and Monson’s First and Second Statements were read aloud and entered
into the record. (Id. at PageID.12580, 12591–12595, 12599, 12609, 12610–12614.)
The judge found probable cause to believe Monson committed first-degree
murder. (Id. at PageID.12628–12631.) After relaying much of the information
contained in the First and Second Statements, the court concluded that “the person
inflicting these injuries was Defendant Lamarr Monson and both of his statements—
although there was an attempt to exculpatory[—]there’s clearly no indication of
anyone else. The Court believes that there is probable cause to believe that the crime
of First Degree Murder has been established. There is probable cause to believe that
the Defendant committed the offense.” (Id. at PageID.12631.)
Monson was bound over for trial. (Id.)
Meanwhile, more evidence came in. On February 7, 1996, Simon received tapes
of the calls Monson and Kenneth Brown made to 911. (ECF No. 237-18,
PageID.12712; ECF No. 269-35, PageID.20595.)
And on February 14, the forensic analysis of the knife was completed. (ECF
No. 269-28, PageID.20573.) The report indicated that a “print [was] raised and
a[ ]photograph [was] taken of the raised print. Evidence turned over to the Property
Section. Photograph and negative turned over to latent print section.” (Id.) The report
noted that Simon was the “case officer[.]” (Id.)
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Monson claims that this—and other—exculpatory evidence was never
disclosed to him. (See ECF No. 269, PageID.19196, 19207.) Monson says the 911 tapes
were exculpatory because, without them, the prosecutor was able to make this
argument in closing at his trial: “[T]he defendant makes himself the person that’s so
concerned, he goes and he calls 9-1-1 . . . I went back to the apartment building, and
then I got a blanket and I put it over [Brown] . . . But, no, this is a blatant fabrication.
You have heard no witness come in here and say that they saw that, or any evidence
consistent with that.” (ECF No. 241-5, PageID.13158–13159.) And Monson says the
report on the knife “has never been produced[,]” and presumably the print on the
knife would have matched Lewis. (See ECF No. 269, PageID.19195.)
On May 17, 1996, Monson challenged the voluntariness of the Second
Statement at a Walker hearing. (ECF No. 241-3.) Both Braxton and Monson testified.
(Id.) Braxton testified that he took the statement in question-and-answer format, and
he denied making Monson any promises. (ECF No. 241-3, PageID.12812, 12816.)
At the Walker hearing, Monson agreed that the First Statement he made to
Simon was “true and voluntarily given.” (Id. at PageID.12826.) (At his deposition,
Monson clarified: “My answer of yes to that question [at the hearing] was pertaining
to the fact that I had no involvement in the murder of Christina Brown.” (ECF No.
241-8, PageID.13326.)) But when Monson was asked if anyone had promised him
anything in exchange for signing the Second Statement, he said yes. (Id.) He
continued, Ghougoian “told me if I went with another statement, not a statement, but
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if I went with another—she called it an information summary, I signed this, and that
I would be at home by this time tomorrow, and then that I would probably get out on
personal bond, but as right now I was arrested, I was held under Murder I.” (Id. at
PageID.12832.) And when asked if he supplied the information in the Second
Statement to Braxton, he said: “It was already theorized to me, the words. Like he
asked questions . . . its like he asked some questions, but it was like I was laying
down half asleep; a little bit . . . all I heard was typing.” (Id.) And he said, “I was given
an opportunity to read [the Statement], but I didn’t. I just went by thinking I could
trust what was going on, and just sign.” (Id. at PageID.12838.)
The judge denied the motion to suppress, noting: “this is a matter of credibility,
so far as my decision is concerned, and I think that the testimony of Sergeant Braxton
outweighed the testimony of the defendant; the officer I would consider to be
credible.” (Id. at PageID.12846.) She continued: “If you have a person who has been
killed in an unnatural manner . . . and the defendant said he had something to do
with it . . . that would certainly be sufficient for the People to file a charge . . . some
sort of homicide.” (Id. at PageID.12847.)
Monson spent a year in jail awaiting trial. (See ECF Nos. 241-4, 241-13.)
During that time, Shellena Bentley, Robert Lewis’ now-former girlfriend,
called the police at least twice to tell them that they had the wrong person in jail for
Brown’s murder. (ECF No. 269-2, PageID.19271–19273, 19294.) The police never took
Bentley’s statement.
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1997
In early 1997, about a year after Brown’s murder and just before Monson’s
trial, the Detroit Free Press ran three articles on Chief Inspector Ghougoian. (ECF
No. 269-23, PageID.20324.) For example, on February 27, 1997, a front-page story
indicated that Ghougoian was being sued by a homicide investigator who claimed
that Ghougoian pressured her to lie under oath about an illegally-obtained
confession. (Id. at PageID.20329.) The article said “Ghougoian got . . . two men to
confess after promising they could go home after giving their statements. Ghougoian
then ordered [the officer] to take statements from the suspects and testify that
Ghougoian had never spoken to them. When [the officer] resisted, Ghougoian told her
it was homicide protocol to keep her out of it.” (Id.)
Monson’s three-day criminal trial began on March 3, 1997. (See ECF Nos. 2414, 241-13, 241-5.)
At the start of the trial, the prosecutor sought to introduce Monson’s
fingerprint that was found on the bathroom mirror. (ECF No. 241-4, PageID.12858.)
She said, “I had asked Barbara Simon if there had been any prints because I knew
prints had been taken, and her representation was that there were no usable prints.
That was true as to one form, but on another form, there is usable prints.” (Id.) After
the prosecutor said she had shared the fingerprint evidence with Monson’s defense
counsel that morning, the Court admitted it. (Id. at PageID.12861.) The report noting
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the “unidentified, usable print” on the toilet-tank top was read into evidence the
following day. (ECF No. 241-13, PageID.14333–14334.)
At trial, Stewart (Brown’s friend) and Woods (the neighbor who discovered
Brown with Monson and Lewis) testified. (ECF No. 241-4, PageID.12853.)
Stewart, then 14 years old, testified largely in line with her statement to police
the prior year. (ECF No. 241-4, PageID.12879–12896.) When Stewart was later asked
at her deposition if she testified truthfully during Monson’s trial, she said she just
parroted what the police told her to say. (ECF No. 269-14, PageID.19848, 19851 (“Q:
Did anybody tell you what to say on the stand?” A: They did. Q: Who? A: . . . The cops.
Q: Okay. Describe to me why you say that they made you say something on the
stand? . . . . A: Because if I did not want to go to jail or end up like [Brown], I need to
say that I seen things that I didn’t . . . It was them that told me all of these things.
She never said nothing to me.”).)
Woods—whose 1996 statement to police indicated that she saw Monson arrive
at the building at 7:30 a.m. on the day of the murder and leave in a hurry about 45
minutes later—changed her account. (ECF No. 241-4, PageID.12896–12936.) After
equivocating about whether she saw or heard Monson’s car, she said she both saw
and heard it. (Id. at PageID.12909, 12927, 12932.) But on cross-examination, she
admitted that it would have been impossible to see the building’s parking lot from
her apartment. (Id. at PageID.12946.) And she admitted she had been nervous and
on drugs when she gave her statement to police. (Id. at PageID.12947.)
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Kenneth Brown (the neighbor who called 911), a medical examiner, an
evidence technician, a DNA expert, Simon, Crockett, and Braxton also testified. (ECF
No. 241-4, PageID.12853; ECF No. 241-13, PageID.14142.)
At the end of the second day of trial, Monson’s defense counsel made an oral
motion for a directed verdict, arguing that the only real evidence tying Monson to
Brown’s death was the Second Statement. (ECF No. 241-13, PageID.14335–14345.)
The Court denied the motion the following day. (ECF No. 241-5, PageID.13071.)
Monson was convicted on March 7, 1997. (ECF No. 187, PageID.8942.)
In August 1997, a Detroit Police Department Review Board investigation
found, among other things, that Joan Ghougoian “promised two murder subjects that
they would be allowed to go home in exchange for their statements” and that she
“directed [an officer] to give false testimony in court concerning the statements taken
from [the suspects].” (ECF No. 269-21, PageID.20150–20156.) In her deposition in
this case, Ghougoian disagreed with most of the report’s findings. (ECF No. 269-20,
PageID.20034–20041.)
In time, Ghougoian retired from the force, and the review board case against
her was dismissed. (ECF No. 269-20, PageID.20048.)
Post-Conviction
Over the following years, Monson appealed his conviction and sought various
forms of post-conviction relief. (ECF No. 241-8, PageID.13489–13490.) And Shellena
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Bentley told the DPD that Monson was innocent and Lewis was guilty in 2005 and
again in 2012. (ECF No. 269-2, PageID.19241, 19243, 19279.)
The Michigan Innocence Project became involved in Monson’s case in 2012,
about 16 years after Brown’s death. (ECF No. 187, PageID.8935.) With its help and
Bentley’s assistance, the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office agreed to compare the
unmatched print on the toilet-tank top to Robert Lewis’. (ECF No. 232-4,
PageID.11188.) It matched. (Id.) And more prints were discovered on the toilet-tank
top. So the DPD sent it out for reexamination, noting that “[t]he victim was killed by
blunt force trauma, and there was a bloody toilet tank lid at the scene, with prints on
it. Two print lifts were taken from the lid and analyzed, and one of them matched to
an alternative suspect, Robert Lewis. But it is apparent from visual inspection of the
tank lid that other prints are on it, including at least one that is bloody. Elimination
is required.” (ECF No. 269-30, PageID.20583.) These newly discovered prints also
matched Lewis. (ECF No. 269-32.)
Armed with this evidence, the Clinic filed a motion for a new trial, which was
granted in 2017. (ECF No. 166-9.) Later that year, the prosecutor’s office dismissed
the criminal case against Monson. (ECF No. 85-8, PageID.3104.)
Monson was released from prison in February 2017 after serving more than 20
years. (ECF No. 241-8, PageID.13275.)
Post-Release
Less than a year later, Monson brought suit against the City of Detroit, the
DPD, the Chief of Police, Barbara Simon, Joan Ghougoian, Charles Braxton, Vincent
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Crockett, and Jerome Wilson, alleging that many of his constitutional rights had been
violated in 1996 and 1997 and that he had been maliciously prosecuted under
Michigan law. (ECF Nos. 1, 187.) In an opinion on Defendants’ motion to dismiss, the
Court dismissed the City, DPD, and the Chief of Police, but many of Monson’s claims
against the other Defendants survived. (See ECF No. 43.)
After extensive discovery, both parties filed summary judgment motions. (ECF
Nos. 237, 241.) As explained, the Court heard argument on the parties’ cross-motions
for summary judgment on October 28, 2022.
Order
For the reasons set forth in the oral ruling on the record, Monson’s partial
motion for summary judgment (ECF No. 237) is GRANTED insofar as the jury will
be advised that Monson was arrested without probable cause. However, a limiting
instruction will also be given that this finding is not relevant to any of the remaining
claims and is being shared merely to give the jury the full factual background of
Monson’s prosecution.
And for the reasons set forth in the oral ruling on the record, Defendants’
motion for summary judgment (ECF No. 241) is DENIED IN PART and GRANTED
IN PART.
Defendants’ motion on Monson’s malicious-prosecution claims against
Crockett, Simon, Ghougoian, and Braxton is DENIED, with certain limitations noted
on the record. The motion is GRANTED as to Wilson.
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Defendants’ motion on Monson’s Brady claim against Simon is also DENIED,
with certain limitations noted on the record.
Defendants’ motion on Monson’s coerced-confession claim against Ghougoian
is DENIED, but the motion against Braxton is GRANTED.
Defendants’ motion on Monson’s fabrication-of-evidence claims against Simon,
Ghougoian, and Braxton is DENIED, except insofar as this claim relates to Stewart’s
statement or trial testimony. (However, as explained on the record, if Monson can
provide a citation to the record showing that Stewart’s 1996 statement to police was
introduced at trial, the Court may reconsider this portion of the ruling.)
However, Defendants’ motion on Monson’s coerced-testimony claim against
Crockett and Wilson is GRANTED because there is no evidence that these officers
were involved in coercing Stewart’s trial testimony. (However, as explained on the
record, if Monson can provide a citation to the record showing that Stewart’s 1996
statement to police was introduced at trial, the Court may reconsider this portion of
the ruling.)
And the Court DECLINES supplemental jurisdiction over Monson’s state-law
malicious-prosecution claim.
In sum, with the limits noted above and on the record, the following claims
remain against each Defendant: (1) a federal malicious-prosecution claim against
Crockett; (2) a federal malicious-prosecution claim, a claim for violations of Brady v.
Maryland, and a fabrication-of-evidence claim against Simon; (3) a federal maliciousprosecution claim, a coerced-confession claim, and a fabrication-of-evidence claim
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against Ghougoian; and (4) a federal malicious-prosecution claim and a fabricationof-evidence claim against Braxton. As no claims against Wilson survive, he will be
DISMISSED.
SO ORDERED.
Dated: November 9, 2022
s/Laurie J. Michelson
LAURIE J. MICHELSON
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
27
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