MCCLOSKEY v. White et al
Filing
170
MEMORANDUM OPINION & ORDER denying Plaintiff's motion to compel production of LEADS data (Related Doc # 138 ); granting Ohio State Highway Patrol Motion for protective order (Related Doc # 144 ); denying Plaintiff's motion for protective order (Related Doc # 150 ); Plaintiffs motion to compel production of surveillance records granted in part and denied in part as stated herein (Related Doc # 151 ). Judge David A. Katz on 12/20/11.(G,C)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO
WESTERN DIVISION
MICHAEL MCCLOSKEY,
Plaintiff,
Case No. 3:09 CV 1273
-vsOFFICER THOMAS WHITE, et al.,
MEMORANDUM OPINION
AND ORDER
Defendant.
KATZ, J.
This matter involves Plaintiff Michael McCloskey’s civil rights lawsuit against Defendants
Village of Ottawa Hills (“Ottawa Hills”) and Thomas White, a former Ottawa Hills police officer.
White shot Plaintiff on May 23, 2009, an action for which White was convicted of felonious
assault. Plaintiff subsequently sued Ottawa Hills and White pursuant to 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983, 1988,
and pursuant to the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution. Currently pending
are Plaintiff’s motion to compel non-party Ohio State Highway Patrol (“OSP”) to produce certain
Law Enforcement Automated Data System (“LEADS”) reports, (Doc. 138), OSP’s motion for a
protective order, (Doc. 144), Plaintiff’s motion to compel Ottawa Hills to produce surveillance
records, (Doc. 151), and Plaintiff’s motion for a protective order to preclude certain questioning
during Plaintiff’s second deposition. (Doc. 150).
For the reasons stated herein, Plaintiff’s motion to compel production of LEADS data is
denied, OSP’s motion for a protective order is granted, Plaintiff’s motion to compel production of
surveillance records is granted in part and denied in part, and Plaintiff’s motion for a protective
order is denied.
I. LEADS Reports
LEADS is a multipurpose computer system maintained by OSP that enables authorized
users to “access Ohio Bureau of Motor Vehicle and National Criminal Information Center
(“NCIC”) records.” (Doc. 144 at 11). LEADS users can also employ the system to “run a suspect
in a criminal case, a driver stopped for a traffic offense, an at-fault or not-at-fault motorist
involved in a traffic crash, or to radnomly run a license plate.” (Doc. 144 at 2). A record of any
LEADS query, as well as the information provided in response, can be produced by a “LEADS
scan report.” (Doc. 144 at 2, 11).
Plaintiff alleges that certain members of the Lucas County, Ohio Prosecutor’s Office
provided information that suggests the Ottawa Hills Police Department illegally accessed
Plaintiff’s LEADS information more than thirty times in the months preceding the shooting.
Under Plaintiff’s theory of the case, Defendants accessed the information “without any
investigatory reason or purpose,” and used the information “to impermissibly stalk Plaintiff
because they did not want Plaintiff to reside in the Village of Ottawa Hills.” (Doc. 138 at 8). At
deposition, Ottawa Hills police officers admitted they accessed Plaintiff’s LEADS information,
but deny that they ever did so illegally.
On September 27, 2011 Plaintiff issued OSP a subpoena demanding production of “all
LEADS reports ran by the Ottawa Hills Police Department- ALL USERS, between the time frame
of January 1, 2007 and December 1, 2009.” (Doc. 138-1). On October 6, 2011 OSP sent Plaintiff
a letter objecting to the subpoena on grounds that production of the requested information would
violate Ohio confidentiality laws and constitute a fifth-degree felony. (Doc. 138-2). Plaintiff filed
the instant motion to compel production on November 1, 2011, (Doc. 138), and OSP responded
with a motion for a protective order on November 16, 2011. (Doc. 144).
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OSP cites a number of confidentiality statutes protecting the requested information. The
Ohio Administrative Code specifically restricts use and dissemination of LEADS data to
“authorized users,” which generally include only “duly authorized law enforcement and/or
criminal justice agencies for the administration of criminal justice,” and in any event do not
include private civil litigants. (Doc. 144 at 4) (citing OHIO ADMIN. CODE 4501:2-10-01; 2-10-03).
Moreover, 28 C.F.R. § 20.33(A) forbids disclosure of the FBI’s NCIC data, which is contained in
the LEADS system. Ohio law also makes it a fifth degree felony to disseminate any LEADS data
“without the express or implied consent of the chair of the LEADS steering committee (the
superintendent of the Patrol).” (Doc.144 at 5) (citing OHIO ADMIN. CODE 4501:2-10-06). OSP
also stresses that Plaintiff’s subpoena demands LEADS reports for all data accessed by eighteen
authorized users over a two year period, which would necessarily require disclosure of every
social security number, license plate number, driver’s license number, and NCIC record reviewed
by those users.
Conversely, Plaintiff cites a number of cases holding that confidentiality provisions
contained in a statute do not designate information as privileged under the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure absent a clear legislative intent that such information be privileged. (Doc. 138 at 6)
(citing Baldridge v. Shapiro, 455 U.S. 345, 361 (1982)). Plaintiff therefore argues that OSP has
not asserted a federally recognized privilege and must produce the information pursuant to FED. R.
CIV. P. 26(b)(1). Moreover, Plaintiff asserts that a 1996 Ohio Attorney General Advisory Opinion
allows for dissemination of LEADS data to private individuals. (Doc. 151 at 4) (citing Att’y Gen.
Op. No. 96-049 (1996), Doc. 151-1).
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This Court believes that the confidentiality statutes and regulations cited by OSP
sufficiently indicate an intent that the LEADS data requested by Plaintiff be privileged, and OSP
is therefore not required to produce it.
Plaintiff’s reliance on the Ohio Attorney General’s Advisory Opinion, supra, does not
change this analysis. First, the circumstances contemplated by the Advisory Opinion were limited
to providing a criminal defendant with his criminal record in a criminal proceeding. Nowhere did
the Advisory Opinion contemplate that LEADS data would be disclosed in a civil matter. Second,
the Advisory Opinion did not allow for dissemination of LEADS data directly to the private
individual in that case, as Plaintiff demands be done here. Instead, it provided that LEADS data
could be given to a county humane society prosecuting attorney who was part of an “authorized
criminal justice agency” as defined by the LEADS regulations (Doc. 151-1 at 3). The prosecutor
was in-turn permitted to provide the data to the criminal defendant. Thus, the Advisory Opinion
does not suggest that LEADS data can be disseminated directly to a private civil litigant, but
instead reinforces the requirement in OHIO ADMIN. CODE 4501:2-10-06 that LEADS data be
restricted to use by “law enforcement and/or criminal justice agencies for the administration of
criminal justice.”
Because the LEADS data requested by Plaintiff is privileged, and for good cause shown,
Plaintiffs motion to compel production of the LEADS data is denied, and OSP’s motion for a
protective order is granted.
II. Surveillance Records
On October 4, 2011 Plaintiff served on Defendants a request for “[a]ny and all unredacted
surveillance records including reports, video tapes, audio tapes, photographs and any other
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recordings of Plaintiff, Michael McCloskey, requested or in the possession of Defendants.” (Doc.
158-2 at 4). Defendants deny the existence of such surveillance, and alternatively assert that if
any surveillance exists or is created, it is privileged under the work product doctrine.
The work product doctrine protects documents and tangible items prepared by or for an
attorney in anticipation of litigation. See In re Antritrust Grand Jury, 805 F.2d 155, 163 (6th Cir.
1986). This includes surreptitious investigative videotape surveillance. See Fisher v. Nat’l R.R.
Passenger Corp., 152 F.R.D. 145 (S.D. Ind. 1993) (defendant employer’s videotape surveillance
protected by work product doctrine where created in anticipation of employee injury litigation),
and Ward v. AT Systems, Inc., 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 67990 (E.D. Pa. Sept. 9, 2008) (defendant
bank’s surreptitious videotape surveillance protected by work product doctrine where created in
anticipation of plaintiff customer’s injury lawsuit). Thus, to the extent that any putative
surveillance evidence in this case was created in anticipation of litigation, Defendants’ assertion of
the doctrine is correct and they are not required to produce the evidence.1
Conversely, to the extent that putative surveillance evidence was not created in
anticipation of litigation, Defendants’ assertion of the doctrine is unavailing. For example, work
product created for ordinary business purposes is not privileged. See North Shore Gas Co. v.
Elgin, Joliet & Eastern Ry. Co., 164 F.R.D. 59, 61 (N.D. Ill. 1995). This includes police reports
and surveillance video created during routine traffic stops and during other routine law
1
As conceded in Ottawa Hills’ brief, (Doc. 158 at 2-3; Doc. 158-1 at 3), Defendants may not wait
until trial to provide Plaintiff with otherwise privileged work product that Defendants will
introduce at trial. Defendants shall produce such work product to Plaintiff two-weeks to thirtydays before trial begins.
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enforcement activities. Should such surveillance exist, or be created in the future, it is not
protected by the work product doctrine and Defendants are hereby ordered to produce it.2
III. Plaintiff’s Deposition
On November 1, 2010 Plaintiff was deposed on the issue of damages. Facing a second
deposition on the issue of liability, Plaintiff requests a protective order to prevent duplicative
questioning and harassment. Specifically, Plaintiff claims to have been “grilled” during his first
deposition on such topics as education, residency, work history, IRS income reporting habits, and
drug use. Plaintiff insinuates that defense counsel engaged in abusive conduct, and Plaintiff
therefore requests a protective order for the second deposition.
This Court, which has broad discretion to determine the proper scope of discovery, see
Lewis v. ACB Business Services, Inc., 135 F.3d 389, 402 (6th Cir. 1998), has not seen any evidence
of improper conduct, let alone any conduct warranting a protective order. Plaintiff’s request is
denied.
IV. Conclusion
For the reasons stated herein, Plaintiff’s motion to compel production of LEADS data is
denied, (Doc. 138), OSP’s motion for a protective order is granted, (Doc. 144), Plaintiff’s motion
to compel production of surveillance records is granted in part and denied in part, (Doc. 151), and
Plaintiff’s motion for a protective order is denied. (Doc. 150).
2
Defendant’s reference to Fisher and Ward, supra does not alter the Court’s analysis. In both cases,
the applicability of the work product doctrine was not at issue because it was conceded that the
surveillance videotapes were prepared in anticipation of litigation. Instead, Fisher and Ward
analyzed requirements to produce evidence notwithstanding the applicability of the work product
doctrine. See Fisher, 152 F.R.D. at 149-50 (examining discoverability of non-evidentiary work
product); Ward, 2008 U.S.Dist. LEXIS 67990, at *7-*8 (examining discoverability of work
product based on substantial need).
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IT IS SO ORDERED.
S/ David A. Katz
DAVID A. KATZ
U. S. DISTRICT JUDGE
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