Ayers v. City of Cleveland, et al.
Filing
80
Amended Opinion and Order signed by Judge James S. Gwin on 2/25/13 and entered for the sole purpose of correcting the the ruling on the motion for summary judgment of only Defendant Cleveland Metropolitan Housing Authority. Said defendant's motion for summary judgment is granted in full. The Court's ruling on all other dispositive motions set forth in the original Opinion and Order entered this date remain the same. (Related Doc. 79 ) (M,G)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO
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David Ayers,
:
:
Plaintiff,
:
:
vs.
:
:
City of Cleveland, et al.
:
:
Defendants.
:
:
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CASE NO. 1:12-CV-753
AMENDED OPINION & ORDER
[Resolving Docs. No. 19, 20, 28, 39, 40, 43,
53, 54, and 55.]
JAMES S. GWIN, UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE:
David Ayers spent twelve years in prison for a rape and murder that he says he did not
commit. Recently, the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the City of Cleveland’s detectives
violated Plaintiff Ayers’s Sixth Amendment rights by creating a situation likely to violate Ayers’s
right to counsel. That Court granted Ayers’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus, setting Ayers free.
Ohio chose to dismiss the case and decided not to try Ayers again.
Ayers now sues.
He alleges violations of the federal Constitution and Ohio law.
Specifically, Ayers says that Defendants fabricated a confession that never took place and was never
described in the extensive notes that Defendants kept of their contacts with Ayers; coerced a key
witness to perjure himself to say that Ayers described the victim’s death before she had been found;
lied in affidavits; intentionally withheld exculpatory evidence; and violated his right to counsel.
Responding to Ayers’s claims, the Defendants move to dismiss the suit, or in the alternative, for
summary judgment. For the reasons that follow, the Court DENIES Defendants’ motions to
dismiss,1/ and DENIES IN PART and GRANTS IN PART Defendants’ motions for summary
1/
Docs. 39, 40, and 43.
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judgment.2/3/ Further, Defendants’ prior motions to dismiss4/ are DENIED AS MOOT.
I. BACKGROUND
A. Factual Background
The Sixth Circuit adopted an Ohio Court of Appeals’ opinion that discussed the background
of Ayres’s case. This Court repeats that discussion:
The victim in this case, Dorothy Brown, was seventy-six years old at the time that
she was murdered. The victim was a resident of the LaRonde apartment complex on
Shaker Boulevard in Cleveland. The LaRonde apartment complex is a facility which
was owned and managed by the Cuyahoga Metropolitan Housing Authority (CMHA)
and which primarily serves elderly and disabled residents. The victim’s body was
discovered at approximately 2:45 p.m. on the afternoon of December 17, 1999 and
showed signs of numerous serious injuries including a fractured skull, trauma to the
brain, fractures of the face, a broken finger on each hand as well as multiple bruises
and scrapes. The coroner’s assistant who testified at trial stated that there were a
total of 24–27 different wounds enumerated in the autopsy report. Several of these
wounds were characterized as defensive wounds, most likely received by the victim
while trying to fend off an attacker.
[David Ayers] although not elderly or disabled, was also a resident of the LaRonde
apartments. The appellant was employed by CMHA as a special police officer
(SPO), the function of which is to provide security at CMHA complexes. As part of
his compensation for serving as an SPO, the appellant was permitted to live at the
LaRonde apartments for a reduced rent of approximately $50 per month. This
program was adopted by CMHA to provide additional security and law enforcement
visibility at CMHA buildings.
It is not disputed that the [Ayers] knew the victim fairly well as the result of
providing security in the building and that he had been in her apartment on several
occasions prior to December 17, 1999. It is also not disputed that in the early
morning hours of December 17, 1999, at approximately 2:00 a.m., [Ayers,]
accompanied by another resident of the complex, went to the victim’s apartment for
the purpose of assisting her from off of the floor where she had fallen and had been
unable to get up. This other resident was Sarah Harris, who the next afternoon
2/
Docs. 53, 54, and 55.
3/
A more detailed listing of which claims survive summary judgment is listed in Part III, infra.
4/
Doc. 19, 20, and 28.
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discovered the victim's body when she went to check on the victim. At the time that
Harris discovered the victim's body, the door to the victim's apartment was closed but
not locked.
The Cleveland police were notified of the apparent homicide at 2:44 p.m. on
December 17, 1999 and responded to the scene at approximately 3:13 p.m. At the
time that law enforcement initially responded, [Ayers] was observed outside of the
victim’s unit on the fifth floor of the complex (the appellant lived on the first floor)
with a group of other residents, as well as in the building lobby, in a highly agitated
state. One of the officers who testified at trial stated that the appellant was “bawling”
sporadically in the lobby of the building during the time period in which police
initially responded to the scene and that his hands were extremely shaky while
answering questions.5/
Over the next few months, Cleveland Police Detectives Michael Cipo and Denise Kovach
investigated Brown’s murder. They focused first on Darrin Ward, who had previously been
convicted of a sex offense. Detective Kovach found this important because victim Brown was
discovered without pants on.6/ The detectives deemed Ward a “primary suspect.”7/ For the weeks
following the murder, Ward could not be found.8/
During this same period, CMHA officers became suspicious of Ayers. Near January 26,
2000, Imes conducted a “voice stress test” on Ayers. This test seeks to measure psychophysiological
stress responses in a human voice A voice stress test should be conducted in a non-confrontational
and in a relaxed manner and setting.9/
Imes testified that before the test began he told Ayers, “you are the last person we know of
that saw her alive,” and “we all make mistakes and do things that are completely out of character and
5/
Ayers v. Hudson, 623 F.3d 301, 304-05 (6th Cir. 2010) (quoting State v. Ayers, N o. 79134, 2002 W L
31031675, at *1-2 (Ohio Ct. App. 2002) (Corrigan, P.J., lead opinion)).
6/
Doc. 65-15.
7/
Id.
8/
Doc. 65-16.
9/
Doc. 65-12, at 3.
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we are at a loss to explain why it happened.”10/ Imes informed Cipo and Kovach that Ayers
“exhibited deception during this test. He was unable to determine exactly what he was being
deceitful about, but he was deceptive during his answers.”11/
Detectives Cipo and Kovach also sought victim Brown’s phone records from the evening she
was murdered. Those records seemed to show that no outgoing calls were made from Brown’s
telephone that evening.12/ This conflicted with statements from five to six persons who stated that
they received calls from Brown that evening.13/ The Brown phone call records also conflicted with
Ayers’s statement that Brown had called him on the night of her murder to request assistance. Faced
with the inconsistency between the phone records and numerous unrelated witnesses, the detectives
responded that the witnesses’ memories were wrong due to “alcohol,”14/ and because “most of those
people that lived in that building were either senile or they were winos, so we couldn’t believe
anything anyone told us. All of them said they got a call from the victim, and we were sort of
laughing about it, going, ‘Boy, these people have really got an imagination.’”15/
Ayers quickly became a primary suspect.
On February 3, 2000, Cipo and Kovach
interrogated Ayers. Kovach said that when confronted with the voice stress test results, Ayers
“made excuses that he was nervous.” She further wrote in a supplemental police report that “all the
way through the interview it was certain Ayers was lying either to cover himself or someone else.
10/
Id. at 5-8.
11/
Doc. 65-17.
12/
Doc. 65-23.
13/
Doc. 65-3.
14/
Doc. 65-25;
15/
Doc. 65-10, at 44.
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Ayers was a very peculiar man.”16/
A few days later, Cipo and Kovach interviewed a friend of Ayers, Ken Smith. Detective
Kovach noted that Smith “appeared very gay like . . . [he] is also a hairdresser and dressed and sat
like a gay male. Note: David Ayres [sic] gives quite the impression of also being gay.”17/ Smith later
wrote a statement stating that he received a call from Ayers at around noon, and again around 2:00
PM the afternoon after the murder.18/ Smith wrote that Ayers told him that a resident had died.
Detectives Cipo and Kovach seized upon this, noting that “the suspect called Smith at 1354 hours
and told him about the victim’s death[, but] the victim was not found until 1445 hours by Sarah
Harris.”19/
On February 25, 2000, Kovach wrote that she had received a call from CMHA Defendant
Donaldson, “who stated they viewed the tape of the lobby the morning of victim’s death and the time
span in which David Ayres [sic] said he went downstairs to get keys to lock victim’s room after
helping her up from the floor. We were informed never on this tape did Ayres [sic] appear.
Obviously, Ayres [sic] was lying again.”20/ In fact, Ayers did appear on the videotape.21/
On March 14, 2000, Detectives Cipo and Kovach again interrogated Ayers. Both detectives
testified that during this interview, Ayers said something to the effect of, “if I say I hit her, can I go
home?”22/ The entirety of Detective Kovach’s notes pertaining to the interview are “we interviewed
16/
Doc. 65-21.
17/
Doc. 65-25.
18/
Doc. 65-35.
19/
Doc. 65-34.
20/
Doc. 65-28.
21/
Doc. 65-40.
22/
Doc. 65-10, at 20.
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Ayres [sic] and upon completion, he was booked for this homicide and conveyed to City Jail.”23/
During an interrogation two days later, Detective Kovach took extensive notes of their conversation
with Ayers. Again, there was no mention of the statement.24/
On March 17, 2000, Detective Cipo signed an affidavit in search of a search warrant for
Ayers’s home. In the affidavit Cipo stated that other CMHA tenants complained that “Ayers spent
an inordinate amount of time at the victim’s apartment,” that he had viewed the security tape and that
“Ayers does not appear at the time stated or thereafter,” and that phone records between Ken Smith
and Ayers show that the calls were made prior to the discovery of the body.”25/
While
awaiting trial, Ayers became acquainted with another inmate named Donald Hutchinson.26/ The
parties dispute how many times Ayers and Hutchinson spoke, but they agree that Hutchinson spoke
with Detectives Cipo and Kovach at some point. On November 25, 2000, “Hutchinson met with the
two detectives assigned to investigate Brown’s murder [and] conveyed . . . Ayers’s purported
confession.”27/ Hutchinson also told the detectives that he would be willing to testify at Ayers’s trial.
The detectives informed Hutchinson that “the prosecutor would likely contact him and sent him back
to his jail pod that he shared with Ayers and other inmates.”28/
The police report of their meeting specifically referenced Hutchinson’s failure to include
details about the murder weapon and any money taken from Brown’s apartment.29/ Hutchinson,
23/
Doc. 65-32. CMHA Officer Christopher Jakub also apparently wrote up a report of that evening’s
interrogation [see doc. 65-33], though that report was not included in the record. It is referenced in his deposition.
24/
Doc. 65-34.
25/
Doc. 65-31.
26/
Ayers, 623 F.3d at 305.
27/
Id.
28/
Id.
29/
Id. at 305-06.
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however, apparently re-questioned Ayers,30/ at which point Ayers allegedly confessed to using a
small, black iron to kill Brown and to stealing $700 from her.31/ “The next day, Hutchinson
telephoned his wife and asked her to contact the police on his behalf.”32/ He was then placed in
protective custody.
“After discovery delays, caused in significant part by the State’s untimely disclosure of
evidence, a jury was sworn on November 22, 2000. The following Monday, November 27, the State
disclosed for the first time that it intended to call Hutchinson . . . .”33/ The trial overruled Ayers’s
motion to suppress Hutchinson’s testimony.34/
According to the Sixth Circuit, the jury convicted Ayers of Brown’s murder “based largely
on Hutchinson’s testimony and Smith’s written statement . . . .”35/ During his testimony, Smith
sought to recant his statement, saying that Detectives Cipo and Kovach “pressured him into stating
that Ayers phoned him regarding Brown’s death prior to the discovery of her body.”36/ A panel of
the Ohio Court of Appeals issued a divided opinion affirming Ayers’s conviction but remanded for
re-sentencing.37/ On remand, Ayers was again sentenced to life in prison.38/ The Ohio Supreme
Court denied him leave to appeal.
30/
In his deposition testimony, Ayers states he only spoke with Hutchinson once. Doc. 56-3, at 8-10.
31/
Ayers, 623 F.3d at 306.
32/
Id.
33/
Id. at 305.
34/
Id. at 306.
35/
Id. (noting that the jury was initially deadlocked).
36/
Id.
37/
Id.
38/
Id.
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B. Ayers’s Petition for Habeas Corpus
In January 2004, Ayers filed his § 2254 petition for a writ of habeas corpus. The district
court denied the petition. After granting a certificate of appealability, the Sixth Circuit reversed after
finding that police violated Ayers’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel. Centrally, the Sixth Circuit
found that police used a jailhouse informant to interrogate Ayers outside the presence of Ayers’s
attorney.
The gist of the Sixth Circuit’s reasoning is as follows:
The parties do not dispute that, at the time of the statements at issue, Ayers’ Sixth
Amendment right to counsel had attached. Moreover, contrary to the state appellate
court’s lead opinion’s factual determination, [informant] Hutchinson clearly testified
that he deliberately elicited information from Ayers after meeting with Detectives
Cipo and Kovach. In fact, the State acknowledges in its appellate brief that . . .
Hutchinson did ask Ayers about the details of the murder.” Thus, the sole question
presented in this appeal is whether the State intentionally created a situation likely
to induce Ayers to make incriminating statements without the assistance of counsel,
when it returned Hutchinson to Ayers’ jail pod and he thereafter deliberately elicited
information from Ayers regarding the murder weapon and the amount of money
taken from the victim. We hold that it did and that the state court’s conclusion to the
contrary was not only wrong, but involved an unreasonable application of clearly
established federal law.39/
On October 5, 2010, the Sixth Circuit conditionally granted the writ of habeas corpus petition
with instructions that Ohio provides Ayers with a new trial within 180 days or release Ayers.40/ Ohio
chose to drop the case. Ayers was released from prison on September 12, 2011.41/
C. The Instant Case
On March 27, 2012, Ayers filed a complaint in this Court.42/ With his complaint, Ayers
39/
Id. at 310.
40/
Id.
41/
Doc. 38, at 11.
42/
Doc. 1.
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alleges federal and state law claims against Detectives Michael Cipo and Denise Kovach and the City
of Cleveland (together, “the Cleveland Defendants”) as well as against CMHA officers Patrick
Donaldson, Raymond Morgan, Thomas Imes, and Chris Jakub and CMHA (“together, “the CMHA
Defendants”).43/ On July 20, 2012, Ayers filed an amended complaint.44/ With his complaints and
consistent with the Sixth Circuit opinion, Ayers generally alleges that the Defendants violated his
Sixth Amendment right to counsel by using informant Hutchinson to interrogate Ayers. But Ayers
goes beyond this to say that Defendants fabricated evidence and perjured themselves to convict
Ayers.
Defendants have filed these dispositive motions, which are now ripe for decision .
II. LAW & ANALYSIS
Three sets of defendants have each filed motions to dismiss and for summary judgment. To
the extent that an argument raised in a motion to dismiss is raised in a motion for summary
judgment, this Court will consider the argument in its summary judgment posture. Arguments that
are raised only in a motion to dismiss are considered separately.
Title 42, section 1983 gives this Court jurisdiction over actions seeking damages resulting
from constitutional deprivations under the color of law.45/ While Section 1983 allows an action for
a constitutional violation, certain state officials are qualifiedly immune from liability under § 1983
so long as “their conduct does not violated clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of
which a reasonable person would have known.”46/
43/
Id.
44/
Doc. 38.
45/
42 U.S.C. § 1983.
46/
Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 800, 818 (1982).
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To determine whether a government official enjoys qualified immunity, this Court applies
the two-pronged Saucier test and asks (1) whether the officer violated a constitutional right and (2)
if so, whether that constitutional right was clearly established such that a “reasonable official would
understand that what he is doing violates that right.”47/ To be “clearly established,” the “contours
of the right must be sufficiently clear that a reasonable official would understand that what he is
doing violates that right.”48/ This Court may exercise its discretion “in deciding which of the two
prongs of the qualified immunity analysis should be addressed first in light of the circumstances in
the particular case at hand.”49/
Once a defendant raises the defense of qualified immunity, Ayers must show that the
defendant is not entitled to it.50/ Ayers may do so by coming forward with evidence “sufficient to
indicate that the [government official’s] act in question violated clearly established law at the time
the act was committed.”51/ The evidence must be “sufficient to create a genuine issue as to whether
the defendant committed the acts that violated the law.”52/ In considering the qualified immunity
issue, all reasonable inferences are viewed in Ayers’s favor.53/
As guidance for where this opinion will go, this Court first considers whether Ayers alleges
facts showing if there has been a constitutional violation. If so, the Court then considers whether
Ayers shows evidence sufficient to raise material issues that such constitutional violation occurred
47/
Id. (quoting Saucier v. Katz, 533 U.S. 194, 202 (2001)).
48/
Anderson v. Creighton, 483 U.S. 635, 640 (1987).
49/
Pearson v. Callahan, 555 U.S. 223, 236 (2009).
50/
Simmonds, 682 F.3d at 444.
51/
Russo v. City of Cincinnati, 953 F.2d 1036, 1043 (6th Cir.1992).
52/
Adams v. Metiva, 31 F.3d 375, 386 (6th Cir. 1994).
53/
See v. City of Elyria, 502 F.3d 484, 491 (6th Cir. 2007).
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to Ayers. If both of these criterion are met, the Court will then determine whether that constitutional
right was clearly established. Lastly, the Court will consider whether Ayers has produced sufficient
evidence in support of his Monell claims against the municipal defendants.
A. Count 1: Violation of Due Process
Ayers alleges that the individual defendants deprived him of his constitutional right to a fair
trial by not disclosing exculpatory evidence and by giving false reports, giving false testimony, and
by giving other false evidence.54/ Ayers originally made this claim against the Cleveland Defendants
and the individual CMHA Defendants, but now makes these claims against the Cleveland
Defendants.55/
Ayers points to three acts that are the basis for his due process claim. First, he says that
Cleveland Defendant Detectives Cipo and Kovach coerced Ken Smith to give false testimony. The
Defendants interviewed Smith, and Smith then signed a statement saying that Ayers called him and
spoke about Brown’s murder before Brown’s body had even been discovered.56/ Actually, police
had records showing that Smith called Ayers, and not that Ayers had called Smith.57/ During the
trial, Smith said the written statement was false and testified that Cipo and Kovach pressured him
to say that Ayers phoned him prior to the discovery of Brown’s body.58/ Witness Smith now gives
an affidavit that states:
the detectives showed me a statement they wanted me to sign. I didn’t want to sign
it because I was not sure that it was the truth. The detectives told me that the
54/
Doc. 38, at 12.
55/
Doc. 64, at 29.
56/
Doc. 65-35.
57/
Ayers, 623 F.3d at 306 (citation omitted).
58/
Doc. 64, at 27. See also Ayers, 623 F.3d at 306.
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statement was what I said yesterday, and that if I changed what I said I could be
charged with a crime, I think it was perjury. . . . I was afraid to say anything else
because they had threatened to charge me with a crime.59/
Ken Smith thus says that Detectives Cipo and Kovach pressured him to falsely say that Ayers knew
about victim Brown’s death before her body was discovered.
Next, Ayers says that Defendants Cipo and Kovach concealed T. Johnnie Williams’s
statements about Lawrence Reid, which could have been exculpatory. Williams, a neighbor of
Brown’s, testified at the trial that he had seen Brown the day she was murdered. In a deposition in
this case, he says that Brown told him that her nephew, Lawrence Reid, had been stealing money
from her.60/ Williams conveyed this information to Defendants Cipo and Kovach, but that
information was not included in any police report and was not given to Ayers’s defense.
Finally, Ayers says that Defendants Cipo and Kovach fed details regarding the murder to
Donald Hutchinson. As already explained, the Sixth Circuit has noted that the underlying facts of
this case “strongly suggest[], at a minimum, that the police shared information with Hutchinson.”61/
By giving information to Hutchinson, Plaintiff Ayers says police enabled Hutchinson to later say that
Ayers had confessed the specific details of Brown’s murder to Hutchinson. Ayers says police joined
this facilitating with benefits to Hutchinson that motivated Hutchinson to falsely testify that Ayers
had confessed. Combined with the above allegations, Ayers says that Defendants Cipo and Kovach
so bungled their investigation as to deprive Ayers of his fundamental right to receive a fair trial.
In response, Defendants Cipo and Kovach state that Ayers “has failed to demonstrate that
59/
Doc. 65-26, at 1-2.
60/
Doc. 65-9, at 6.
61/
Ayers, 623 F.3d at 314.
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[they] coerced any false testimony from Mr. Smith.”62/ They also say that witness Williams’s
information that Brown’s nephew had been stealing money from the victim was not material, and
even if it was, that the nephew had passed a polygraph regarding the Brown murder.63/ Finally,
Defendants challenge whether they gave details of the murder to Hutchinson and whether any
information they gave Hutchinson allowed Hutchinson to falsely create a confession from Ayers.
Because the Sixth Circuit has already ruled on Ayers’s habeas corpus petition, we have some
of its reasoning. At least regarding the background law, the Sixth Circuit’s reasoning controls this
Court.64/
Although his argument is somewhat unclear, Ayers seems to make a Brady claim. That is,
that Detectives Cipo and Kovach withheld evidence that was material and potentially exculpatory.
In Brady v. Maryland,65/ the United States Supreme Court held that “the suppression by the
prosecution of evidence favorable to an accused upon request violates due process where the
evidence is material either to guilt or to punishment, irrespective of the good faith or bad faith of the
prosecution.” In a later case, the Court explained, “[t]he evidence is material only if there is a
reasonable probability that, had the evidence been disclosed to the defense, the result of the
proceeding would have been different. A ‘reasonable probability’ is a probability sufficient to
undermine confidence in the outcome.”66/ This responsibility to disclose material evidence extends
to the police in the sense that to comply with Brady, a prosecutor has an obligation to “learn of any
62/
Doc. 67, at 9.
63/
Id.
64/
6th Cir. R. 32.1(b).
65/
373 U.S. 83, 87 (1963). See also United States v. Agurs, 427 U.S. 97 (1976).
66/
United States v. Bagley, 473 U.S. 667, 682 (1985).
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favorable evidence known to the others acting on the government’s behalf in this case, including the
police.”67/ Police officers who withhold material exculpatory evidence from the prosecution, thereby
preventing the evidence from being turned over to the defense, can be held personally liable
under § 1983 for the Brady violation.68/ No showing of bad faith is required.69/
The Court finds that Ayers has alleged sufficient facts to show that Defendants Cipo and
Kovach failed to disclose material evidence that could have resulted in a different verdict. Williams
told Cipo and Kovach that victim Brown had complained that her nephew, Lawrence Reid, had been
stealing money from her. Witness Smith would testify that Defendants Cipo and Kovach pressured
him to falsely testify that Ayers made statements about Brown’s death before her body was found.
Assuming the truth of Williams’s and Smith’s statements, as this Court must, Brady required
disclosure of the circumstances of Smith’s statement and required disclosure of Williams’s
statement.
Williams’s testimony and Smith’s sworn statement raise genuine issues of a Brady violation
since that evidence was not disclosed to Ayers.
Finally, this Court has previously held that Brady’s application against police officers who
fail to disclose material and potentially exculpatory evidence is clearly established law.70/
Defendants do not contend otherwise. Therefore, Defendants Cipo and Kovach do not enjoy
qualified immunity as to Plaintiff Ayers’s due process Brady claim, and the claim survives summary
67/
Kyles v. Whitley, 514 U.S. 419, 437 (1995).
68/
See, e.g., Elkins v. Summit Cnty., 2009 W L 1150114 (N.D. Ohio Apr. 28, 2009) (collecting cases).
69/
Id.
70/
See Elkins, 2009 W L 1150114, at *3. See also Moldowan v. City of Warren, 578 F.3d 351, 382 (6th Cir.
2009) (“Decisions from other circuits recognizing the type of ‘Brady-derived’ claims that Moldowan asserts here date
back as far as 1964.”).
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judgment.
B. Count 2: Malicious prosecution
Ayers says that the individual defendants—the Cleveland Police Department detectives and
the CMHA officers—“made, influenced, and/or participated in the decision to prosecute [him] for
murder, for which prosecution there was no probable cause and which caused [him] to suffer a
deprivation of liberty.”71/ The officers’ misconduct allegedly included “falsifying evidence and
withholding exculpatory evidence.”72/ Ayers also alleges that the officers’ actions was undertaken
pursuant to the policy and practice of the Cleveland Police Department.73/
A § 1983 claim for malicious prosecution is cognizable, although “the contours of such a
claim remain uncertain.”74/ To succeed on such a claim, Ayers must prove the following: first, that
a criminal prosecution was initiated against him and that the defendants made, influenced, or
participated in the decision to prosecute; second, that there was a lack of probable cause for the
criminal prosecution; third, that as a consequence of the proceeding, Ayers suffered a deprivation
of liberty; and fourth, that the criminal proceeding was resolved in Ayers’s favor.75/ Neither a lack
of malice, nor the intervention of a prosecutor, works to absolve an individual officer of liability.76/
1. Participation
The initial question is whether the individual CPD and CMHA officers are accountable for
71/
Doc. 38, at 14.
72/
Id.
73/
Id.
74/
Stricker v. Twp. of Cambridge, 2013 W L 141695, at *12 (6th Cir. Jan. 14, 2013) (published) (quoting Fox
v. DeSoto, 489 F.3d 227, 237 (6th Cir. 2007)).
75/
Sykes v. Anderson, 625 F.3d 294, 308-09 (6th Cir. 2010).
76/
Id. at 309.
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the prosecution. When there has been a grand jury has made a probable cause finding, this Court
considers whether the officer “(1) stated a deliberate falsehood or showed reckless disregard for the
truth,” and “(2) that the allegedly false or omitted information was material to the finding of probable
cause.”77/ Ayers says that Defendant Cipo swore to an affidavit containing false testimony. In his
affidavit, Cipo testified that he had “reviewed the [security] video tape and Ayers does not appear
at the time stated or thereafter [returning Brown’s key to the lockbox];” and that “phone records
subpoenaed show the call [between Ayers and Smith] was made” prior to the discovery of Brown’s
body.78/
In contrast to Cipo’s affidavit, Cipo had never seen the videotape before signing the
affidavit and the videotape actually shows that Ayers returned Brown’s key to the lockbox after
going to her room with Sarah Harris.79/ This, along with the previously discussed coercion of Ken
Smith, satisfies Ayers’s burden to show that Defendants Cipo and Kovach80/ acted in reckless
disregard of the truth when providing information material to the finding of probable cause. Police
knew Ayers had gotten a key to Brown’s apartment when he and Sarah Harris went to her apartment.
Cipo’s statement that video tapes did not show Ayers returning the key after leaving Brown’s
apartment was necessarily important to finding probable cause. Similarly, Cipo’s testimony that
Ayers had called Smith before Brown’s death was discovered was important, especially given
Smith’s arguably perjured testimony that Ayers described Brown’s death before it was known.
Ayers’s alleged confession also raises questions. In her deposition, Detective Kovach
testified that on March 14, 2000, Ayers said something to the effect of, “if I say I hit her, can I go
77/
Id. at 312 (quotation marks, citation, and alterations omitted).
78/
Doc. 65-31.
79/
Doc. 65-6, at 103.
80/
Although Detective Kovach did not sign the affidavit, she was a party to the interrogation of Ken Smith. See
doc. 65-35 (including Detective Kovach as a witness to Smith’s statement).
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home?”81/ Inexplicably, neither Detective Cipo nor Kovach made mention of Ayer’s incriminating
question in their contemporaneous report. Then neither Cipo or Kovach mentioned anything about
the confession to a prosecutor until shortly before Ayers’s trial was set to begin. Then, two days
after the confession, Defendants Cipo and Kovach again interviewed Ayers yet their notes and
reports show no mention of the previous confession, and the interrogation notes suggest that Ayers
maintained his innocence.82/ And perhaps most concerning: Defendant Cipo did not mention the
confession in his March 17, 2000, affidavit for a search warrant. The inference that the confession
was concocted grows even stronger after considering what did make its way into the police reports.
Defendants consistently made notes about Ayers’s sexual orientation, his friends’ sexual
orientations, and whether people they questioned appeared “gay like.”83/ They noted that certain
witnesses “sat like a gay male.”84/ Whatever the police officers meant to imply by sitting “like a gay
male,” it surely is less material than an extremely inculpatory statement that Cipo and Kovach say
was made by the investigation’s primary suspect during an early interrogation.
Ayers also includes CMHA officers Imes, Morgan, Donaldson, and Jakub in his malicious
prosecution claim. In their motion for summary judgment, the CMHA individual defendants say that
they cannot be held liable because they did not participate in the decision to prosecute. This is
incorrect. An officer may be held liable if there is a reasonably foreseeable causal chain connecting
81/
Doc. 65-10, at 20.
82/
Doc. 65-34 (“On Thurs Mar. 16 we again brought the suspect, AYERS, to our office where he was
interviewed. . . . He again said he isn’t know [sic] why he flunked the voice stress test, other than being
nervous . . . . Neither could he explain why the surveillance video did not show him getting the keys from the key box.).
83/
Doc. 65-25, at 3.
84/
Id.
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his actions and the decision to prosecute.85/ Here, Ayers puts forth evidence that Officer Donaldson
lied to Detective Cipo about whether Ayers appeared on the surveillance video.86/ That information
found its way into Cipo’s affidavit, which led to the decision to prosecute. Ayers also says that
Officer Imes improperly administered the voice stress test by acting in a confrontational manner.87/
Be that as it may, Ayers goes too far in saying that Imes lied about the result of the test. That the
test’s administration might have been flawed does not lead to a finding of deliberate falsehoods or
reckless disregard for the truth. Officer Imes, therefore, did not participate in the decision to
prosecute.
Ayers also cannot produce sufficient evidence to show that Officers Jakub and Morgan
engaged in such deception. Ayers lists “Defendant Jakub’s falsification of a document alleging
Plaintiff had (whatever the motive) admitted guilt” as the basis for the claim.88/ But, nowhere in the
response to the motion for summary judgment does Ayers indicate what that document is or where
it appears in the record.89/ Similarly, Ayers states that Defendant Morgan “falsified information
regarding video surveillance footage.” As already noted, the person responsible for conveying
improper information to Detective Cipo was Donaldson, nor Morgan. Therefore, Ayers has
produced sufficient evidence of participation against only CMHA Officer Donaldson.
85/
See Sykes, 625 F.3d at 316 (concluding that for liability to accrue, “the consequences of the officer’s actions
must be reasonably foreseeable [and] that the officer’s action must have influenced the continued detention”).
86/
Doc. 65-6, at 103 (“Q: You now know that the information that Sergeant Donaldson gave you is false, right?
A: Correct.”).
87/
Doc. 64, at 13; see doc. 65-12, at 8 (Imes saying that he was confrontational during the voice stress test even
though his training required him to be non-confrontational).
88/
Doc. 64, at 27.
89/
Plaintiff’s counsel showed Ayers the Jakub report during Ayer’s deposition in this case. See doc. 65-7, at
30. This Court, however, has not found the report in the submitted record. Rather, the only evidence directly relevant
to Officer Jakub in the exhibits accompanying Ayer’s omnibus response to Defendants’ motions for summary judgment
is Jakub’s deposition transcript.
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2. Probable Cause
Defendants point out the Sixth Circuit has held that “it has been long settled that the finding
of an indictment, fair upon its face, by a properly constituted grand jury, conclusively determines the
existence of probable cause for the purpose of holding the accused to answer.”90/ Ayers does not
respond to this argument, but instead cites to a case from this Court addressing a state-law malicious
prosecution claim.91/ Subsequent Sixth Circuit decisions have clarified that officers “cannot escape
liability by pointing to the decisions of prosecutors or grand jurors or magistrates to confine or
prosecute” the plaintiff.92/
The prosecution included Cipo’s testimony that “several complaints had been made by other
tenants that Ayers had spent an inordinate amount of time at the victim’s apartment,” that Ayers had
lied about returning Brown’s key to the lockbox, the statement from Ken Smith that Ayers knew of
Brown’s death before her body had been discovered, the voice stress test analysis, and the alleged
confession. Of these, the video, Smith’s statement, and the confession are already suspect. Given
the remaining items—that Ayers spent time with Brown and that he exhibited deception on an
improperly administered voice stress test—there was insufficient cause to arrest and prosecute Ayers.
Recall, Brown had been sexually molested. Ayers was gay. Recall, Brown was found with a foreign
pubic hair in her mouth that did not match Ayers.
3. Deprivation of liberty
The parties do not dispute that Ayers suffered a deprivation of liberty due to the prosecution.
90/
Barnes v. Wright, 449 F.3d 709, 716 (6th Cir. 2006).
91/
Doc. 64, at 25 (citing Elkins, 2009 W L 1150114).
92/
Sykes, 625 F.3d at 317 (quoting Jones v. City of Chicago, 856 F.2d 985, 994 (7th Cir. 1988)).
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4. End of criminal proceedings
The final element of a § 1983 malicious prosecution claim that must be alleged and proven
“is termination of the prior criminal proceeding in favor of the accused.”93/ The Cleveland
Defendants note that the charges against Ayers were dismissed without prejudice following the Sixth
Circuit’s grant of Ayers’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus.94/ Neither the Defendants nor Ayers
provides a citation to any federal case discussing whether Ayers’s situation qualifies as an “end” to
a criminal proceeding.
Section 1983 suits of this sort are, in some sense, considered collateral attacks on prior
prosecutions and convictions.95/ To require an end to the prior criminal proceedings “avoids parallel
litigation over the issues of probable cause and guilt and it precludes the possibility of the claimant
succeeding in the tort action after having been convicted in the underlying criminal
prosecution . . . .”96/ But in Heck, where this requirement finds its origin, the Court specifically noted
that a claimant may pursue a § 1983 claim when a conviction is “called into question by a federal
court’s issuance of a writ of habeas corpus.”97/ This Court finds that Ayers’s habeas relief satisfies
this element, especially where Ohio has not brought Ayers to trial within Ohio’s Speedy Trial Act
ends any chance of conviction.98/
The Court therefore finds that, viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to Ayers, there
93/
Heck v. Humphrey, 512 U.S. 477, 484 (1994).
94/
Doc. 56, at 18.
95/
Heck, 512 U.S. at 484-487.
96/
Id. at 484 (quotation marks and alterations omitted).
97/
Id. at 487.
98/
Ohio Rev. Code § 2945.71 (“A person against whom a charge of felony is pending: (2) Shall be brought to
trial within two hundred seventy days after the person’s arrest.”); State v. Reeser, 407 N.E.2d 25, 26 (Ohio 1980) (“In
a series of cases, this court has imposed upon the prosecution and the trial courts the mandatory duty of complying with
[Ohio’s Speedy Trial Act].”).
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is sufficient evidence that Defendants Cipo, Kovach, and Donaldson violated Ayers’s constitutional
right to be free of malicious prosecution under the Fourth Amendment. Further, the Court finds that
through deposition testimony and affidavits, Ayers has created a genuine issue of material fact.
Finally, the Court finds that the acts in question—stating falsehoods in warrant affidavits and
mischaracterizing key evidence—is well-understood by reasonable officers to be violative of a
suspect’s rights.
C. Count 3: Interference with Sixth Amendment rights
Ayers says that Defendants Cipo and Kovach violated his Sixth Amendment rights by
interfering with his right to counsel. Defendants say that Ayers’s deposition testimony precludes this
claim. Essentially, they argue that because Ayers testified that he spoke with informant Hutchinson
only once, there was no way that Defendants Cipo and Kovach could have been feeding information
to Hutchinson. Ayers responds by saying that the relevant question is not whether Cipo and Kovach
fed information to Hutchinson, but whether Hutchinson met with Ayers’ on the detectives’ behalf.
“In order to state a § 1983 cognizable claim for deprivation of right to counsel, there must
be some allegation indicating an interference with the [plaintiff’s] relationship with counsel.”99/ The
Sixth Circuit outlined the contours of the Sixth Amendment’s right to counsel guarantee in Ayers’s
habeas case. The right “has been accorded, not for its own sake, but because of the effect it has on
the ability of the accused to receive a fair trial.”100/ A criminal defendant has the right to have
counsel present at all critical stages of the criminal proceeding, of which interrogation is one.101/
99/
Stanley v. Vining, 602 F.3d 767, 770 (6th Cir. 2010).
100/
Ayers, 623 F.3d at 308 (quoting Mickens v. Taylor, 535 U.S. 162, 166 (2002)).
101/
Id. (quotation omitted).
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“The right to counsel applies not only to direct confrontations by known government officers, but
also to ‘indirect and surreptitious interrogations.’”102/ Most importantly for the instant purposes, “a
Sixth Amendment violation occurs whenever the State ‘intentionally creates a situation likely to
induce a defendant to make incriminating statements without the assistance of counsel.”103/
The Sixth Circuit has already answered that question. “Thus, the sole question presented in
this appeal is whether the State intentionally created a situation likely to induce Ayers to make
incriminating statements without the assistance of counsel . . . . We hold that it did.”104/ Even if
Defendants Cipo and Kovach did not tell Hutchinson to solicit information, a constitutional violation
can still occur.105/
Even so, Defendants point to the chronology of events as outlined in the Sixth Circuit’s
opinion. The Sixth Circuit noted that a November 25, 2000, police report detailed informant
Hutchinson’s first statements to Cipo and Kovach. In that report, Cipo and Kovach documented that
Ayers told Hutchinson that he had returned to Brown’s apartment around 3:00 AM, but did not
reveal what weapon was used to kill Brown or how much money he had taken.106/ In another report
penned on November 27, 2000, the detectives wrote that they again interviewed Hutchinson, who
now says that Ayers detailed the weapon used and the money stolen.107/ This, of course, conflicts
with Ayers’s testimony that he only spoke once with Hutchinson.108/
102/
Id. (quoting United States v. Henry, 447 U.S. 264, 273 (1980)).
103/
Id. (quoting Henry, 447 U.S. at 274).
104/
Id. at 310.
105/
Id. (“W e agree with those courts that do not limit agency in the Massiah context to cases where the State
gave the informant instructions to obtain evidence from the defendant.”).
106/
Id. at 312.
107/
Doc. 61-39.
108/
Doc. 56-3, at 8-10.
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But at this stage of the proceedings, all inferences must be drawn in favor of Ayers. In her
deposition, Detective Kovach recounts that after her initial meeting with Hutchinson, she returned
him to the prison and said that they could not speak again.109/ But on November 27, 2000, only two
days after the initial meeting, Hutchinson’s wife paged Detective Kovach.110/ The Court obviously
infers that Kovach or Cipo gave Hutchinson a pager number for the purposes of gathering more
evidence. Even if Ayers only spoke to Hutchinson once, the pager information casts doubt on
Kovach and Cipo’s deposition statements. If true, this action “intentionally created a situation likely
to induce Ayers to make incriminating statements without the assistance of counsel.”111/
Further, the right in question, articulated perhaps most forcefully by the Supreme Court in
its 1980 Henry decision, is well-established. The Sixth Circuit relied upon this right in its decision
granting habeas relief. But more importantly, both Defendants Cipo and Kovach testified that they
knew that they were not supposed to place prison informants alongside suspects for the purposes of
gathering information. Therefore, Ayers has produced evidence creating a genuine issue that a
constitutional right has been violated, and that the right in question was clearly established at the
time of the Defendants’ actions.
D. Count 4: Failure to intervene
Ayers alleges that Detectives Cipo and Kovach violated his constitutional rights when they
stood by without intervening to prevent the misconduct, and that they did so pursuant to the policy
109/
Doc. 65-10, at 62-63. Detective Cipo stated a similar concern in his deposition. See doc. 65-6, at 133.
110/
Doc. 61-39.
111/
Ayers, 623 F.3d at 310.
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and practice of the Cleveland Police Department.112/ Cipo and Kovach say they are qualifiedly
immune from this claim.
In conducting the qualified immunity analysis, sufficient evidence suggests that constitutional
violations occurred. Certainly, the right to Brady material, to a constitutionally sufficient indictment,
or to counsel during important criminal proceedings is clearly established. But with the failure to
intervene claim, the Court must ask whether there was a clearly established constitutional right that
a law enforcement officer was required to intervene to prevent another law enforcement officer from
violating these rights. For there to be a failure to intervene, there must be a corresponding duty.
There is ample Sixth Circuit caselaw regarding police officers’ duty to intervene in excessive force
cases.113/ But the Court finds no such caselaw (nor does Ayers provide any) regarding a duty to
intervene in the situations described in Ayers’s complaint.114/ “[G]iven the absence of any case law
that has imposed a duty of protection under even roughly analogous circumstances,”115/ it could not
be “clear to a reasonable officer that his conduct was unlawful in the situation he confronted.”116/
Therefore, the Court concludes that the failure to intervene claim is independent of the other claims
and that there is insufficient authority to show that Detectives Cipo and Kovach violated clearly
established law.
112/
Doc. 38, at 15. Ayers originally brought this claim against both the CPD and CMHA individual defendants.
He waived it against the CMHA defendants in his response to Defendants’ motions for summary judgment. Doc. 64,
at 32.
113/
See e.g., Smoak v. Hall, 460 F.3d 768, 784-85 (6th Cir. 2006); Turner v. Scott, 119 F.3d 425, 429 (6th Cir.
1997); Durham v. Nu‘Man, 97 F.3d 862, 866-68 (6th Cir. 1996).
114/
Cf. Jones v. Cannon, 174 F.3d 1271, 1286 (11th Cir.1999) (finding no clearly established law that a police
officer who knows another police officer fabricated a confession in a police report for a warrantless arrest has a
constitutional duty to intervene).
115/
Ontha v. Rutherford Cnty., 222 F. App’x 498, 507 (6th Cir. 2007).
116/
Saucier, 533 U.S. at 207.
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E. Count 5: Conspiracy
Ayers alleges that the individual defendants conspired to deprive him of his constitutional
rights, and that they did so pursuant to a policy or practice of the City of Cleveland.117/ In his
omnibus response to Defendants motions for summary judgment, he waives this claim against
CMHA Defendants Donaldson and Jakub.118/
The standard for proving a civil conspiracy claim in the Sixth Circuit is as follows:
A civil conspiracy is an agreement between two or more persons to injure another by
unlawful action. Express agreement among all the conspirators is not necessary to
find the existence of a civil conspiracy. Each conspirator need not have known all
of the details of the illegal plan or all of the participants involved. All that must be
shown is that there was a single plan, that the alleged coconspirator shared in the
general conspiratorial objective, and that an overt act was committed in furtherance
of the conspiracy that caused injury to the complainant.119/
Ayers says that Defendants Cipo, Kovach, Imes, and Morgan “worked in concert to gather
false evidence, through fraudulent means, in order to implicate Plaintiff in the murder.”120/ The
Court finds that Ayers does not identify sufficient record evidence to support an inference that
Detectives Imes and Morgan conspired to deprive Ayers of his constitutional rights. Even assuming
that Imes administered the stress test improperly, his actions could just as easily have been the result
of individual, and not conspiratorial, conduct. In the facts section of his summary judgment
response, Ayers notes only that Imes gave the test results to Cipo and Kovach, and that Cipo put
great weight on Imes’s report. But this, by itself, does not suggest concert. Similarly, the record
does not support a finding that Defendant Morgan engaged in any conspiracy, as the police reports
117/
Doc. 38, at 16.
118/
Doc. 64, at 32 n.1.
119/
Hensley v. Gassman, 693 F.3d 681, 695 (6th Cir. 2012) (quoting Hooks v. Hooks, 771 F.2d 935, 943-44 (6th
Cir. 1985)).
120/
Doc. 64, at 32.
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indicate only that he was present at certain interrogations.121/
Evidence in the record does suggest, however, that Defendants Cipo and Kovach worked in
concert to violate Ayers’s constitutional rights. Both testified that they were present when Ayers
supposedly confessed to the crime, yet neither memorialized that event or informed the prosecutor
of it.122/ If, as Ayers alleges, the confession never occurred, then it is logical to infer from the
peculiar circumstances that Cipo and Kovach acted in concert. And, according to Smith (and the
Sixth Circuit’s understanding of the facts), both Cipo and Kovach coerced Smith into making a false
statement.123/
Ayers has produced sufficient allegations and evidence that Detectives Cipo and Kovach
conspired to violate his constitutional rights. While the underlying rights were clearly established,
this Court must now determine whether the act of improperly conspiring was similarly established.124/
Prior cases provide minimal guidance on how to treat these types of inchoate allegations in
§ 1983 claims. Regardless of whether the relevant question is if the underlying right was clearly
established, or if the act of conspiring was clearly established, the outcome in the instant case is the
same. A reasonable officer would know that commission of the alleged acts—withholding
potentially exculpatory evidence, coercing perjury, false attestation, or inventing a
confession—would violate constitutional rights. But the act of conspiring to do any of those things
is also clearly established. A right is clearly established by more than just prior caselaw saying that
121/
Doc. 65-16; doc. 65-21.
122/
Doc. 65-6, at 129; doc. 65-10, at 13.
123/
Doc. 65-26.
124/
See, e.g., Windson v. The Tennessean, 719 F.2d 155, 165 (6th Cir. 1983) (“Consequently, we hold that a
reasonable person would not have known in 1980 that an agreement to defame a federal official in order to effect that
person's discharge from federal employment violated section 1985(1).”).
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it is so. It can also be clearly established if a reasonable official would understand that what she is
doing violates a constitutional right.125/ To say that Defendants Cipo and Kovach could be held liable
for acting alone, but not for creating a plan to accomplish the same ends, is unreasonable. Plaintiff’s
conspiracy claim against Defendants Cipo and Kovach survives summary judgment, as there is
sufficient evidence that the partner detectives worked in concert.
F. Ayers’s State Law Claims Against Individual Defendants
Ayers raises three state law claims against individual defendants. He raises an intentional
misrepresentation claim against Defendants Cipo and Kovach,126/ a malicious prosecution claim
against all individual defendants,127/ and an intentional infliction of emotional distress claim against
all individual defendants.128/
Each individual defendant raises an affirmative defense of statutory immunity under Ohio
Revised Code § 2744.03(A)(6). This section provides immunity to employees of Ohio political
subdivisions except where (a) the employee’s acts or omissions were manifestly outside the scope
of the employee’s employment or official responsibilities; (b) the employee’s acts or omissions were
with malicious purpose, in bad faith, or in a wanton or reckless manner; or (c) civil liability is
expressly imposed upon the employee by a section of the Revised Code.129/
1. Intentional misrepresentation
Ayers alleges that Defendants Cipo and Kovach made representations to the prosecution that
125/
Hoover v. Radabaugh, 307 F.3d 460, 468 (6th Cir. 2002).
126/
Ayers waived this claim as to the CMHA individual defendants in his omnibus response to Defendants’
motions for summary judgment. The claim therefore is now only against Defendants Cipo and Kovach.
127/
Doc. 38, at 18.
128/
Id.
129/
Campbell v. City of Springboro, Ohio, 700 F.3d 779, 791 (6th Cir. 2012).
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there was physical and testimonial evidence inculpating Ayers.130/ Under Ohio law, a claim for fraud
requires:
(1) a representation (or concealment of a fact when there is a duty to disclose) (2) that
is material to the transaction at hand, (3) made falsely, with knowledge of its falsity
or with such utter disregard and recklessness as to whether it is true or false that
knowledge may be inferred, and (4) with intent to mislead another into relying upon
it, (5) justifiable reliance, and (6) resulting injury proximately caused by the
reliance.131/
Even assuming that Ayers can prove each requirement, this claim fails as a matter of law. Under
Ohio law, “a claim in fraud cannot be predicated upon statements or representations made to a third
party; i.e., the communication must have been directly with the person who has brought the
action.”132/ Ayers therefore lacks standing to raise this claim.
2. Malicious prosecution
Ayers alleges that the individual defendants caused him to be improperly subjected to a
prosecution for which there was no cause.133/ Malicious prosecution under Ohio law requires the
following: (1) malicious institution or continuance of an earlier proceeding; (2) lack of probable
cause for the earlier proceeding; and (3) termination of the prior lawsuit in favor of the claimant.
As already discussed in Part II.B, supra, this Court already determined that CMHA
defendants Imes, Morgan, and Jakub did not engage in the institution or continuance of the
proceedings. Therefore, a statutory immunity analysis need only be conducted as to Defendants
130/
Doc. 38, at 17.
131/
Volbers-Klarich v. Middletown Mgmt., 929 N.E.2d 434 (Ohio 2010).
132/
McWreath v. Cortland Bank, 2012 W L 2522933, at *11 (Ohio Ct. App. June 29, 2012) (citing Edwards v.
Owen, 15 Ohio 500 (1846)). See also 51 Ohio Jr. 3d Fraud & Deceit § 118 (2012) (“To secure relief from fraudulent
representations, a plaintiff must have been intended to act upon the fraudulent representations, whether they were made
directly or indirectly.”).
133/
Doc. 38, at 17.
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Cipo, Kovach, and Donaldson.
“Based upon the facts presented, a jury could reasonably conclude that [these defendants]
acted in bad faith or in a wanton or reckless manner.”134/ Defendants Cipo and Kovach are alleged
to have coerced Ken Smith into perjuring himself to say that Ayers had described Brown’s death
before her death had been discovered, lest he risk prosecution. They also are alleged to have
withheld exculpatory evidence, and to have, at the very least, mischaracterized the contents of their
interrogation sessions. Defendant Cipo did not tell the truth in his affidavit supporting the search
warrant. At the very least, he falsely said that he had reviewed CMHA videotapes and that those
videotapes did not show Ayers returning any key to Brown’s apartment to the lockbox. Finally,
Defendant Donaldson told Defendant Cipo that Ayers did not appear on the security camera video,
when Ayers in fact did. Ayers alleges more than simply a negligent investigation—he alleges an
investigation that was at best deeply flawed, and at worst, deceptive.
The first and third conditions of the cause of action—malicious institution and cessation of
the prior lawsuit, respectively—have been met.135/ Under Ohio law, probable cause is defined as “a
reasonable ground of suspicion, supported by circumstances sufficiently strong in themselves to
warrant a cautious individual in the belief that the person accused is guilty of the offense with which
he or she is charged.” Viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to Ayers, the only non-suspect
evidence supporting a reasonable ground of suspicion included irregular results on the voice stress
test and reports from neighbors that Ayers spent a lot of time in Dorothy Brown’s apartment.
Viewing this evidence from the perspective of a “cautious individual,” this Court cannot say that
134/
Campbell, 700 F.3d at 791.
135/
See Part II.B, supra.
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probable cause existed to pursue Ayers’s prosecution. Therefore, Ayers has produced sufficient
evidence supporting his malicious prosecution claim under Ohio law against Defendants Cipo,
Kovach, and Donaldson.
3. Intentional infliction of emotional distress (IIED)
Ayers says that the individual defendants engaged in a course of conduct such that they
“intended to cause emotional distress, or know or should have known that their actions would result
in serious emotional distress.”136/ Under Ohio law, a plaintiff must present evidence creating a
genuine issue of material fact:
(1) that the actor either intended to cause emotional distress or knew or should have
known that actions taken would result in serious emotional distress to the plaintiff,
(2) that the actor’s conduct was so extreme and outrageous as to go beyond all
possible bounds of decency and was such that it can be considered as utterly
intolerable in a civilized community, (3) that the actor’s actions were the proximate
cause of the plaintiff’s psychic injury, and (4) that the mental anguish suffered by the
plaintiff is serious and of a nature that no reasonable man could be expected to endure
it.137/
The emotional injury must be both severe and debilitating.138/ The Ohio Supreme Court has clarified
that a successful IIED claim “is one in which the recitation of the facts to an average member of the
community would arouse his resentment against the actor, and lead him to explain, ‘Outrageous!’”139/
Defendants Cipo and Kovach do not respond directly to this claim, but the CMHA individual
defendants do. They say that under Ohio law, an IIED claim must be filed within four years of the
136/
Doc. 38, at 19.
137/
Rosebrough v. Buckeye Valley High School, 690 F.3d 427, 433 (6th Cir. 2012) (quoting Burkes v. Stidham,
668 N.E.2d 982, 989 (Ohio Ct. App. 1995)).
138/
Banford v. Aldrich Chem. Co., 932 N.E.2d 313, 319 (Ohio 2010).
139/
Yeager v. Local Union 20, Teamsters, Chaffeurs, Warehousemen & Helpers of America, et al., 453 N.E.2d
666, 671 (Ohio 1983) (quotation omitted) (abrogated on other grounds by Welling v. Weinfeld, 866 N.E.2d 1051 (Ohio
2007)).
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actions’ accrual.140/ Therefore, they argue, the action accrued when Ayers was incarcerated in 2001
and the claim must have been filed by 2005.141/ In support, they cite to a decision from this district.142/
That citation is misleading.
In Lee, Judge Wells analyzed Ohio’s statute of limitation for IIED claims and found that
“when the acts underlying the claim would support another tort, the statute of limitations for that tort
governs the claim for” IIED.143/ In that case, the IIED claim arose out of a false arrest, which accrued
at the time of arraignment.144/ Here, the primary accompanying tort is arguably the malicious
prosecution tort. As Judge Wells noted in Lee, the statute of limitations for malicious prosecution
requires that the action be commenced within one year after the termination of the prosecution in
favor of the accused.145/ The claim is therefore timely.
In support of his IIED claim, Ayers puts forth the affidavit of Dr. Thomas Swales, a licensed
psychologist and an Assistant Professor of Psychiatry, Psychology, and Pediatrics at Case Western
Reserve University in Cleveland.146/ According to Dr. Swales, Ayers suffers from “Posttraumatic
Stress Disorder and Major Depressive Order. . . . These injuries are a direct result of his wrongful
incarceration for nearly eleven years.”147/
This Court finds that Ayers has presented sufficient allegations of wrongdoing to support his
claim against Defendants Cipo, Kovach, and Donaldson. According to Ayers, those defendants
140/
Doc. 54-1, at 23.
141/
Id.
142/
Lee v. Lucas, 2011 W L 5361509, at*4 (N.D. Ohio Oct. 31, 2011).
143/
Id.
144/
Id. at *5.
145/
Id. (citing Ohio Rev. Code § 2305.11(A)).
146/
Doc. 65-39.
147/
Id.
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engaged in conduct intended to inculpate a man for which there was insufficient evidence of guilt.
Arguably, these defendants misrepresented key facts, as well as potentially coerced witnesses to utter
falsehoods under oath. The Court does not doubt that presentment of the facts, as alleged by Ayers,
would be shocking and outrageous to average members of the community.
The CMHA Defendants dispute that their actions caused Ayers’s emotional distress; rather,
they argue, it was the conviction and incarceration that led to that distress.148/ But the relevant
analysis is whether the actions proximately caused the distress, which a jury could reasonably find
based on the facts alleged here. The causal chain is not broken simply because a jury decided to
convict.
The Court also finds that Defendants Cipo, Kovach, and Donaldson have not met their burden
under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56 to show “that there is no genuine dispute as to any material
fact . . . .”149/ Rather, Ayers has presented testimonial and documentary evidence that creates a
genuine dispute as to whether these defendants acted in a particularly reckless manner. As all
inferences must be drawn in Ayers’s favor when considering a motion for summary judgment, the
Court finds that this claim should proceed to trial.
G. Counts 8 & 10: Negligent supervision & respondeat superior, respectively
Ayers says that Defendants City of Cleveland and CMHA negligently supervised and retained
police officers, resulting in the previously discussed violations of his constitutional rights.150/ He also
says that the municipal defendants are liable as principals for all torts committed by their agents.”
148/
Doc. 54-1, at 17.
149/
Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a).
150/
Doc. 38, at 18.
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In his omnibus response to Defendants’ motions for summary judgment, he says that he “does not
object to the entry of summary judgment on Counts VIII and X as to Defendants City of Cleveland
and CMHA.” These claims are therefore waived and dismissed.
H. Count 11: Indemnification
Ayers says that “Ohio law provides that public entities are directed to pay any tort judgment
for compensatory damages for which employees are liable within the scope of their employment
activities.”151/ He therefore brings an indemnification claim against the municipal defendants.
Defendants City of Cleveland and CMHA raise the following arguments: (1) an
indemnification claim is misplaced, as only the employee may sue a sovereign employer for defense
or indemnity;152/ and (2) that such a claim must fail because the individual defendants are not
liable.153/ As the claims against some of the individual defendants are allowed to proceed, this second
argument need not be considered.
Ohio Revised Code § 2744.07(A)(1) states that “a political subdivision shall provide for the
defense of an employee, in any state or federal court, in any civil action or proceeding which contains
an allegation for damages for injury, death or loss to person or property caused by an act or omission
of the employee . . . .” The duty to defend accrues if “the act or omission occurred while the
employee was acting both in good faith and not manifestly outside the scope of employment or
official responsibilities.”154/ The duty to indemnify accrues upon issuance of a judgment against the
employee for compensatory damages caused by an act or omission in connection with a governmental
151/
Id. at 20.
152/
Doc. 43, at 12 (citing Buckeye Union Insurance Company v. Arlington Bd. of Ed., 638 N.E.2d 170 (Ohio
Ct. App. 1984)).
153/
Doc. 56, at 34.
154/
Ohio Rev. Code § 2744.07(A)(1).
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function.155/ Should the political subdivision fail to uphold its duty, the statute outlines a mechanism
for Ohio courts to consider the employee’s claims and to “order the political subdivision to defend
the employee in the action.”156/
Therefore, the indemnification claim does not survive.
I. Ayers’s Monell claims against the municipal defendants
To raise a claim against a municipality for a constitutional violation under § 1983, Ayers must
show that the municipality’s policy or custom caused the alleged injury.157/ To show an unlawful
policy or custom, Ayers can show, among other things, a policy of inadequate training or
supervision.158/ To do so, Ayers must prove the following: “(1) the training or supervision was
inadequate for the tasks performed; (2) the inadequacy was the result of the municipality’s deliberate
indifference; and (3) the inadequacy was closely related to or actually caused the injury.”159/
Deliberate indifference must reflect a deliberate or conscious choice by the municipality.160/ A
municipality may be deliberately indifferent when “in light of the duties assigned to specific officers
or employees the need for more or different training is so obvious, and the inadequacy so likely to
result in the violation of constitutional rights. . . .”161/
In this case, Ayers presents no evidence of inadequate training or supervision attributable to
the City of Cleveland. Ayers has presented evidence that the individual defendants’ investigation
155/
Id. § 2744.07(A)(2).
156/
Id. § 2744.07(C).
157/
Monell v. Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 436 U.S 658, 690-97 (1978).
158/
City of Canton v. Harris, 489 U.S. 378, 387 (1989).
159/
Ellis ex rel. Pendergrass v. Cleveland Mun. Sch. Dist., 455 F.3d 690 (6th Cir. 2006) (quoting Russo v. City
of Cincinnati, 953 F.2d 1036, 1046 (6th Cir. 1992)).
160/
City of Canton v. Harris, 489 U.S. 378 (1989).
161/
Id. at 390.
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was flawed, but there is no evidence that these alleged errors, even if committed, were a result of
inadequate training or supervision. Further, even if the alleged investigative failures were the result
of inadequate training or supervision, Ayers has not shown that the inadequacy was the result of the
City of Cleveland’s “deliberate indifference.” Ayers can only point to Defendant Kovach’s “99%
confession rate,”162/ but this by itself is insufficient to lead a jury to find that inadequacy in training
or supervision was closely related to Ayers’ other federal claims. The Court therefore grants
summary judgment to the City of Cleveland as to Ayers’s Monell claim.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons:
•
Defendants’ motions to dismiss163/ are DENIED;
•
Defendants City of Cleveland, Cipo, and Kovach’s motion for summary judgment164/ is
GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART;
•
Defendant CMHA’s motion for summary judgment165/ is GRANTED;
•
Defendants Imes, Morgan, Jakub, and Donaldson’s motion for summary judgment166/ is
GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART; and
•
Defendants’ prior motions to dismiss167/ are DENIED AS MOOT.
Therefore, Count I (due process), Count III (Sixth Amendment), and Count V (conspiracy) survive
against Defendants Cipo and Kovach; Count II (malicious prosecution), Count VII (state-law
162/
Doc. 65-10, at 61.
163/
Docs. 39, 40, and 43.
164/
Doc. 55.
165/
Doc. 53.
166/
Doc. 54.
167/
Doc. 19, 20, and 28.
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malicious prosecution), and Count IX (IIED) survive against Defendants Cipo, Kovach, and
Donaldson. All other claims are dismissed. The case will proceed to trial as assigned on March 4,
2013.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
s/
James S. Gwin
JAMES S. GWIN
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
Dated: February 25, 2013
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