Tobey v. Napolitano et al
Filing
80
SECOND AMENDED COMPLAINT filed as directed pursuant to the November 15, 2011 Memorandum Order against Jane Doe, Terri Jones, Jeffrey Kandler, Anthony Mason, Rebecca Smith, Quentin Trice, Calvin Vann, filed by Aaron Tobey.(Knicely, James). Modified docket entry on 11/30/2011. (walk, ).
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
EASTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA
Richmond Division
____________________________________
AARON TOBEY,
)
)
Plaintiff,
)
)
v.
)
CIVIL ACTION No.: 3:11cv154-HEH
)
QUENTIN TRICE,
)
SECOND AMENDED COMPLAINT
1 Richard E. Byrd Terminal Drive
)
FOR COMPENSATORY
Richmond International Airport
)
DAMAGES, INJUNCTIVE AND
Richmond, Virginia, 23250
)
DECLARATORY RELIEF,
)
AND DEMAND FOR JURY
and
)
TRIAL
)
CALVIN VANN,
)
(Filed as directed per November 15,
6324 Oakland Chase Pl.
)
2011 Memorandum Order)
Richmond, VA 23231-5746
)
)
and
)
)
ANTHONY MASON,
)
1 Richard E. Byrd Terminal Drive
)
Richmond International Airport
)
Richmond, Virginia, 23250
)
)
and
)
)
JEFFREY KANDLER,
)
1 Richard E. Byrd Terminal Drive
)
Richmond International Airport
)
Richmond, Virginia, 23250
)
)
and
)
)
REBECCA SMITH,
)
c/o Transportation Security Administration )
601 South 12th Street
)
Arlington, Virginia 20598
)
)
and
)
)
TERRI JONES,
)
c/o Transportation Security Administration )
)
601 South 12th Street
Arlington, Virginia 20598
)
)
and
)
)
JANE DOE,
)
c/o Transportation Security Administration )
601 South 12th Street
)
Arlington, Virginia 20598
)
)
Defendants.
)
SECOND AMENDED COMPLAINT
COMES NOW Plaintiff AARON TOBEY, by counsel, and hereby alleges as
follows:
PRELIMINARY STATEMENT
This action seeks vindication of the First, Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights
of Plaintiff Aaron Tobey (hereinafter referred to as "Plaintiff"), who, in the exercise of his
rights to Free Speech and to Petition the United States government for the redress of
grievances, was arrested without probable cause, falsely imprisoned and maliciously
prosecuted for the partial removal of his clothing and display of the text of the Fourth
Amendment on his chest during enhanced screening procedures on December 30, 2010 at
the Richmond International Airport. The fundamental guarantees of the First, Fourth and
Fourteenth Amendments forbid discrimination against the Plaintiff's peaceful expression
opposing screening policies that he believes infringe on the constitutional rights of
American citizens, as well as the overbearing, heavy-handed and unfounded actions of
security personnel taken against Plaintiff as he sought to cooperate peacefully with the
enhanced screening procedure in a manner that was wholly within the law. Accordingly,
2
Plaintiff requests that this Court grant the relief requested herein in order to protect and
uphold precious constitutional freedoms that citizens should not be forced to sacrifice in the
name of misguided, broad and indiscriminate notions of security.
I. JURISDICTION
1.
Jurisdiction in this Court is founded on the existence of a federal question
pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1331 and the deprivation of civil rights pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §
1343(a)(3), as this is an action for relief under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, 28 U.S.C. § 2201, and
pursuant to the decision in Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of the Federal Bureau of
Narcotics, 403 U.S. 388 (1971).
2.
Plaintiff also invokes this Court’s supplemental jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C.
§ 1367, as to the claims based upon the laws of the Commonwealth of Virginia, as such
claims form part of the same case or controversy that is the basis for the claims within this
Court’s original jurisdiction.
II. VENUE
3.
Venue in the Eastern District of Virginia is proper pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §
1391 because (a) Defendants reside in this judicial district and in the Commonwealth of
Virginia, and (b) all or a substantial part of the events or omissions which give rise to the
present claims occurred in this judicial district, and more specifically within Henrico
County, Virginia.
3
III. PARTIES
4.
Plaintiff AARON TOBEY is an adult individual who is, and at all relevant
times herein was, a citizen of the United States of America and the Commonwealth of
Virginia, with his principal place of residence in Charlottesville, Albemarle County,
Virginia.
5.
[REMOVED]
6.
[REMOVED]
7.
[REMOVED]
8.
[REMOVED]
9.
Defendants REBECCA SMITH, TERRI JONES and JANE DOE (the
identities of Defendants SMITH, JONES and DOE are known to attorneys of record in the
case, and are contained in the Second Amended Complaint filed under seal with the
Court)were at all relevant times herein employed by and acting under the authority of the
Transportation Security Administration, a division and/or sub-department of the United
States Department of Homeland Security (“TSA”). Defendant SMITH is a Transportation
Security Officer responsible for passenger and baggage screening at the Richmond
International
Airport (“RIC”).
Upon information and belief, Defendant JONES is a
Supervisory Transportation Security Officer responsible for the management, direction and
supervision of TSA passenger and baggage screening at the RIC airport, including
supervising Transportation Security Officers at passenger and baggage screening
checkpoints, overseeing passenger and baggage security and screening operations at such
checkpoints, ensuring that TSA and Capital Region Airport Commission (the
“Commission”) operating procedures are implemented and followed, resolving screening
4
and security issues at checkpoints, interfacing with law enforcement personnel at RIC
airport, and carrying out agreed procedures, protocols, and security plays in accordance
with policies reflected in TSA regulations and operating procedures, and in operating
agreements between TSA and the Commission. Upon information and belief, on December
30, 2011, Defendant DOE was the manager of TSA security checkpoint “B” at the RIC
airport.
Defendants SMITH, JONES and DOE are sued herein in their individual
capacities.
10.
Defendant CALVIN VANN is, and at all relevant times herein was, a law
enforcement officer employed by the Commission as an officer with the Richmond
International Airport Police (“RIC Police”) and acting under the authority thereof.
Defendant VANN is sued herein in his individual capacity.
11.
At all relevant times herein, Defendant QUENTIN TRICE was a Colonel
and Chief of Police of the RIC Police force; Defendant JEFFREY KANDLER was a
Captain in the RIC Police force; and Defendant ANTHONY MASON was a Sergeant in
the RIC Police force. At all relevant times, Defendants TRICE, KANDLER AND MASON
were employed by and acting as law enforcement officers under the authority of the
Commission and the RIC Police. Upon information and belief, Defendant TRICE was at all
relevant times the highest uniformed officer of the RIC Police force and responsible for the
management, direction and supervision of the RIC Police and all police officers in the
employ of the Commission, and, upon information and belief, shared with Victor Williams,
the Commission’s Director of Security, responsibilities in connection with the training and
supervision of its police officers, and the operations and interactions of the RIC Police with
other security personnel and agencies exercising security functions at RIC. Defendants
5
TRICE, MASON and KANDLER are sued herein in their individual capacities.
Defendants TRICE, MASON and KANDLER, and Defendant CALVIN VANN are
referred to collectively in this Second Amended Complaint as the “Defendant Officers.”
IV. FACTUAL ALLEGATIONS
12.
Plaintiff is, and was at all relevant times, a student at the University of
Cincinnati who maintains a permanent residence with his family in Charlottesville,
Virginia.
13.
TSA is the government agency charged with and empowered by law to
maintain and monitor the security of commercial air travel in the United States.
14.
In connection with its duties, TSA conducts screening and searches of
airline passengers at airports, including RIC.
15.
In the aforesaid screening activities, TSA has implemented a policy of
selecting, at random, passengers for enhanced secondary screening.
16.
Under TSA’s enhanced secondary screening policy, passengers are offered a
choice of submitting to either (a) an Advanced Imaging Technology scan (AIT), which
produces a highly detailed picture of the passenger’s unclothed body; or (b) a full-body patdown search, which involves TSA agents using the front of their hands to feel the
passenger’s body.
17.
Airport screenings at airports like RIC are conducted pursuant to a policy
implemented by TSA and/or personnel under its supervision and control, known as TSA
Management Directive No. 100.4 dated September 1, 2009, the explicit purposes of which
are “to prevent, protect against or respond to acts of terrorism and to protect persons,
facilities and critical infrastructure as part of a layered security system in all modes of
6
transportation,” including checkpoint screening “to find explosives, incendiaries, weapons
or other items and screening to ensure that an individuals identity is appropriately verified
and checked against government watch lists.”
18.
TSA Management Directive No. 100.4 authorizes administrative and special
needs searches to include “checkpoint screening” and “ADASP/Playbook Screening.”
19.
Under TSA Management Directive No. 100.4, “[a]ll administrative and
special needs searches should be conducted according to established procedures to ensure
that searches will be confined in good faith to their intended purpose” which include the
objectives of enhancing “the security of persons and critical infrastructure,” eliminating
“the threat item(s) that are the target of the search,” as well as tailoring searches “to protect
personal privacy.”
20.
TSA and the Commission have entered into agreements under which the
Commission agrees to make law enforcement officers of the Commission available to TSA
to be stationed at RIC to enforce the regulations, policies, practices, customs and/or
protocols of TSA and the Commission and/or other applicable law.
21.
The agreements between TSA and the Commission include a Memorandum
of Agreement between TSA and the Commission which by its terms creates responsibility
for TSA “[t]o provide guidance as to the process and procedures necessary to implement
the Playbook Concept,” and
further establishes a process by which TSA and the
Commission “will act collaboratively for the purpose of combining layers of security and
coordinating the assets of TSA, law enforcement, and other security partners at the airport
to improve the overall airport security posture.”
7
22.
The TSA/Commission Memorandum of Agreement provides that it is the
responsibility of the Commission “to actively participate in the collaborative coordination
of security countermeasures” and “to assign airport resources, when available and
appropriate, to execute agreed upon Plays.”
23.
Under TSA/Commission Memorandum of Agreement and other agreements,
TSA, RIC Police and Henrico County, Virginia, Police law enforcement officers work
collaboratively for the purpose of providing security at RIC.
24.
TSA has agreed to provide compensation to the COMMISSION for the
provision of law enforcement officers at security screening areas at RIC.
A. Facts Regarding December 30, 2010 Incident at RIC
25.
On December 30, 2010, at approximately 2:00 p.m., Plaintiff entered the
security checkpoint at RIC for a scheduled flight to Wisconsin, to attend his grandfather’s
funeral.
26.
In anticipation of the possibility that he would be randomly selected for
enhanced secondary screening, Plaintiff had written the following message in black marker
on his chest to communicate his objection to the enhanced secondary screening
implemented by TSA: “AMENDMENT 4: THE RIGHT OF THE PEOPLE TO BE
SECURE AGAINST UNREASONABLE SEARCHES AND SEIZURES SHALL NOT
BE VIOLATED.”
27.
To avoid the possibility of causing delay for his fellow passengers, Plaintiff
waited for the number of people in line to diminish before entering the area at RIC
established for TSA security screening.
8
28.
Plaintiff entered the area for security screening and submitted his boarding
pass and identification to the pre-screening agent.
29.
Upon being cleared by the pre-screening agent, Plaintiff proceeded to the
conveyor belt area and as directed placed his belt, shoes, wallet, phone, computer, carry-on
bag and sweatshirt on the conveyor belt.
30.
Upon reaching the passenger screening location, upon information and
belief, Defendant SMITH directed Plaintiff away from the magnetometer (a metal detector
used by TSA as the primary screening apparatus) and toward an AIT unit.
31.
Before entering the AIT unit, Plaintiff removed his T-shirt and sweatpants,
and placed them on the conveyor belt and stood in athletic running shorts, revealing a
message written on his chest to TSA screening agents and other persons present while he
awaited enhanced screening.
32.
Upon information and belief, Defendant SMITH then informed Plaintiff that
removal of clothing was not necessary, but Plaintiff responded that he wished to do so to
express his view that enhanced screening procedures were not constitutional.
33.
Upon information and belief, Defendant SMITH radioed for assistance and,
upon information and belief, was ordered by Defendant JONES and/or another supervisory
TSA officer to direct Plaintiff to stay where he was in front of the AIT unit, whereupon,
Defendants JONES and DOE then sought intervention by the RIC Police with Plaintiff.
Upon further information and belief, Defendant DOE approached Defendants CALVIN
VANN and ANTHONY MASON to inform them of the incident involving Plaintiff and
request that they take action against him.
9
34.
Shortly thereafter, Defendants VANN and MASON arrived at the area
where Plaintiff had been ordered detained by Defendant SMITH and approached Plaintiff
from behind his field of vision.
35.
Without warning and without questioning the Plaintiff, upon information
and belief, Defendant VANN, at the urging and direction of Defendant MASON,
immediately seized and handcuffed Plaintiff from behind and forced him through the AIT
unit, escorting him to a side area where the handcuffs were adjusted with Plaintiff’s arms
behind his back and he was informed that he was being placed under arrest for allegedly
“creating a public disturbance.” Upon further information and belief, shortly thereafter,
Defendant DOE searched Plaintiff’s belongings at the security checkpoint, removing an
unidentified item from those belongings.
36.
Upon information and belief, Defendant MASON then collected Plaintiff’s
belongings with assistance from Defendant SMITH, DOE or other TSA agents.
37.
Upon information and belief, at no time did Defendants SMITH, JONES or
DOE, or any other TSA agent, intervene and/or communicate with the Officers to explain
the extent of the screening conducted with regard to Plaintiff, and/or to explain the limited
purposes and/or permissible limits of the TSA screening procedure, and/or to provide
exculpatory information to said Defendants VANN or MASON that Plaintiff had not
engaged in any criminal conduct or in any conduct that would require his arrest and/or
imprisonment and/or prosecution under TSA Management Directive No. 100.4 or any other
law.
38.
Upon information and belief, Defendants SMITH, JONES or DOE did not
seek assistance from any Federal Air Marshall or TSA law enforcement officer for
10
appropriate follow-up, if any, including conducting a screening interview of Plaintiff based
upon the screening that had occurred to the time of Plaintiff’s arrest by the Defendants
VANN and MASON.
39.
After informing Plaintiff that he was under arrest, upon information and
belief, Defendant VANN took Plaintiff in handcuffs to the airport police station located
under the center of the main RIC concourse.
40.
At the airport police station, upon information and belief, Defendants
TRICE, KANDLER, VANN and MASON proceeded from time to time to question
Plaintiff.
41.
Upon information and belief, Defendant JEFFREY KANDLER questioned
Plaintiff concerning his age, residency, and education, and in the process the sought to
intimidate Plaintiff, accusing him of being inconsiderate of other travelers, suggesting that
his conduct would blow up in his face and have repercussions, and informing him that the
police would make sure that he would have a permanent criminal record as a result of his
actions.
42
[Paragraph 42 was inadvertently omitted from the original Complaint and is
omitted here]
43.
Upon information and belief, after learning that Plaintiff was a student at the
University of Cincinnati, Defendant QUENTIN TRICE continued the pattern of
intimidation and threatened that the police would inform the University of Cincinnati
police department that one of its students had been arrested.
11
44.
Upon information and belief, during the questioning, Defendant KANDLER
told Plaintiff that by purchasing a ticket and commencing the screening procedure, he had
surrendered his Fourth Amendment rights and consented to a search of his person.
45.
Upon information and belief, Defendant MASON then indicated to Plaintiff
that they were doing a background check on Plaintiff.
46.
Defendant MASON also took photographs of Plaintiff and the message he
had written on his chest.
47.
Upon information and belief, Defendant KANDLER informed Plaintiff that
he would be held at the RIC police station until he could be transported to the Henrico
County jail to meet with the local magistrate.
48.
In the interim, one of Defendant Officers conducted a complete search of
Plaintiff’s belongings.
49.
Upon information and belief, Defendant TRICE directed Plaintiff to
surrender his student identification card, advising him that the RIC police would be
informing the University of Cincinnati Police of his arrest.
50.
Upon information and belief, Defendant TRICE contacted the University of
Cincinnati Police and informed them of Plaintiff’s arrest and prosecution and suggested
that the University Police notify the Dean of Students in an attempt to defame the name and
good reputation of Plaintiff in his academic pursuits and within the University community.
51.
Upon information and belief, Defendant VANN searched Plaintiff’s
belongings a second time and catalogued items to be held while he was transported to the
Henrico County Jail.
12
52.
Upon information and belief, Defendant VANN then sorted through
Plaintiff’s belongings, selected out his toothbrush, deodorant, the t-shirt Plaintiff had
removed prior to AIT screening, pens, and a highlighter, and stated that these items would
be considered contraband at the Henrico County Jail, and thereafter unilaterally discarded
them into a trash bin.
53.
Upon information and belief, after another ten minutes, Defendant
KANDLER informed Plaintiff that he had spoken with the magistrate and Plaintiff would
not have to be transported to the jail, but Plaintiff would be given a court date in the near
future when he would be arraigned.
54.
After spending approximately one and one-half hours in handcuffs with
arms behind his back, and wearing only running shorts and socks in the cold environment
of the police station, without any relief, one of Defendant Officers removed the handcuffs
and directed Plaintiff to put his clothing back on.
55.
One of Defendant Officers told him that he would be allowed to leave for
his flight after he spoke with an Air Marshal from the Federal Air Marshal’s Joint
Terrorism Task Force.
56.
At this time, Defendant VANN delivered Plaintiff’s summons form
charging Plaintiff with disorderly conduct in a public place in violation of Va. Code §
18.2-415.
57.
Defendant VANN explained the summons to Plaintiff, along with the nature
of the crime with which he was being charged, and the consequences of failing to appear in
court.
13
58.
At Defendant VANN’s command, Plaintiff signed the summons statement,
which required that he be present in Henrico General District Court at 9:00 a.m. on January
10, 2011.
59.
Plaintiff was then ordered by one of Defendant Officers to repack his
belongings, though none of the Defendant Officers ever retrieved or returned to Plaintiff
the alleged “contraband” items Defendant VANN discarded into the trash.
60.
Shortly thereafter, a Federal Air Marshal, arrived and, after speaking with
the other officers for several minutes, met with Plaintiff in a small room.
61.
The Federal Air Marshal asked Plaintiff about his affiliation with, or
knowledge of, any terrorist organizations, if he had been asked to do what he did by any
third party, and what his intentions and goals were.
62.
The Federal Air Marshal discussed with Plaintiff the necessity of current
screening procedures.
63.
After questioning by the Federal Air Marshall, Plaintiff was directed by the
Defendant Officers to take his belongings and was released into the terminal to go through
security a second time.
64.
This time, TSA officers directed Plaintiff through the magnetometer and he
boarded his flight without incident.
65.
At all times on December 30, 2010, during the separate screening
procedures and while in custody and during police questioning, Plaintiff remained quiet,
composed, polite, cooperative and complied with the requests of agents and officers.
14
66.
At all times on December 30, 2010, Plaintiff never observed any visible
agitation among or disruption of the other passengers during any of the separate screening
procedures and/or while in custody in public view at RIC.
B. Airport Rules and Regulations and
the Virginia Disorderly Conduct Statute
67.
Plaintiff’s silent, nonviolent protest against TSA security proceedings was
not contrary to rules and regulations promulgated by the Commission governing activity at
RIC.
68.
Such rules and regulations authorize the exercise of First Amendment
expression, including political expression, by allowing picketing and hand billing to take
place at RIC.
69.
Additionally, such rules and regulations permit persons to engage in
solicitation of funds from the general public, so long as there is not a face-to-face request
for an immediate donation.
70.
Additionally, at the time of the incident, and at other times approximate
thereto, the Commission permitted a variety of speech activities at RIC, including without
limitation, airport and non-airport related speech, individual symbolic speech, individual
speech, including speech on clothing, and commercial speech, including without limitation
numerous large advertisements and other pictorial and graphic displays and publications in
and around the RIC terminal, concourse and screening areas, of bare-chested persons,
persons in bathing suits, and persons dressed in running shorts and other athletic apparel.
71.
Va. Code § 18.2-415 provides, in pertinent part, that a person is guilty of
disorderly conduct, punishable as a Class I misdemeanor, if in any public building or public
place, “with the intent to cause public inconvenience, annoyance or alarm, or recklessly
15
creating a risk thereof,” he “engages in conduct having a direct tendency to cause acts of
violence by the person or persons at whom, individually, such conduct is directed[.]”
(emphasis added). Section 18.2-415 also provides that disorderly conduct “shall not be
deemed to include the utterance or display of any words[.]” (emphasis added).
72.
At all times at RIC during the events described in this Second Amended
Complaint, Plaintiff did not engage in any conduct having any tendency to cause any acts
of violence by any reasonable person or persons at RIC, nor did he intend to cause, or
cause, any public inconvenience, annoyance or alarm, or recklessly creat[e] a risk thereof.
C. Henrico County Court Proceedings
73.
On January 10, 2010, Plaintiff appeared in Henrico General District Court as
required by the summons issued him at RIC on December 30, 2010.
74.
At that hearing, the Commonwealth Attorney for the County of Henrico
moved that a nolle prosequi be entered on the charge against Plaintiff.
75.
Upon information and belief, the Commonwealth Attorney admitted that
there was insufficient evidence to sustain a charge under Va. Code § 18.2-415 against
Plaintiff on the basis of the incident that occurred at RIC on December 30.
76.
The Court granted the request of the Commonwealth Attorney and entered a
nolle prosequi on the charge set forth in the summons.
D. The Defendants' Policies And Actions Taken Pursuant Thereto
77.
In all respects set forth in this Second Amended Complaint the Defendants
acted under color of the law of the Commonwealth of Virginia and/or the law of the United
States of America.
16
78.
Plaintiff's message regarding the Fourth Amendment of the United States
Constitution is clearly within the confines of protected speech under the First Amendment.
79.
By removing unnecessary clothing prior to entering the AIT device, Plaintiff
displayed the text of the Fourth Amendment painted on his chest, thereby facilitating and
highlighting his objection to the search ordered by TSA by engaging in legitimate political
expression to protest peacefully airport screening which he believed violated the Fourth
and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution, and further, petitioning
TSA, in an area within the jurisdiction of that agency, to take action to implement less
intrusive screening policies and procedures that respect the constitutional rights of
American citizens.
80.
The discrimination against Plaintiff's expression and display of the message
regarding the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution is unreasonable and
constitutes unlawful viewpoint discrimination as against expressive activity permitted at
RIC.
81.
Plaintiff alleges, upon information and belief, that Defendants and/or their
agents knowingly, willfully and intentionally, and/or carelessly and negligently, failed to
prevent, and continue to fail to prevent, the Defendant Officers from prohibiting or
interfering with Plaintiff in the exercise of his First Amendment rights.
82.
The message and the various media through which Plaintiff sought to
communicate his message was, and is, unique to the location in question and alternate
methods were and are inadequate and unavailable for communicating this message to the
intended audience on the day in question.
17
83.
Plaintiff’s expressive activity was compatible with the uses of RIC and the
nature of the forum was compatible with such expressive activity.
84.
By policy, custom and/or practice, Defendants unlawfully drew, or by
failing to properly supervise train and instruction, permitted the other Defendants to draw,
distinctions among the content and/or viewpoint(s) of various types of speech in the forum
in question.
85.
By policy, custom and/or practice, the Defendants and/or their subordinates,
have engaged in, or permitted and/or authorized the uniformed officers and agents under
their authority to enforce, or permit the enforcement of, or to request collaborative
assistance in the enforcement of, the disorderly conduct and other inappropriate laws
against Plaintiff for the purpose of discriminating as to Plaintiff’s speech, and/or threaten to
do so in the future.
86.
By the implementation of the aforesaid policies, customs and/or practices,
the Defendants, and each of them, were deliberately indifferent with respect to the proper
enforcement of the disorderly conduct statute and other laws in a manner which would
avoid violating constitutionally protected rights of expression and/or in establishing
protocols between and among the layered security and law enforcement services with
jurisdiction at RIC in a manner that would sufficiently guarantee the protection of the
constitutional rights of American citizens.
87.
By policy, custom and/or practice, the Defendants, and each of them,
exercised standardless discretion in the enforcement of the Commission’s rules and
regulations based upon personal predilections and whim, and/or the personal predilections
and whims of others by making unlawful distinctions based on the content or viewpoint of
18
speech and/or by substantially burdening Plaintiff’s exercise of his speech without any
compelling governmental interest.
88.
The actions of Defendants were taken pursuant to the policies, customs
and/or practices of TSA and/or the Commission and were authorized, sanctioned,
implemented, permitted and ratified by officials functioning at a policy making level.
E. Collateral Allegations
89.
Defendants and their agents, under color of law and of the policies, customs
and practices of the TSA and/or the Commission have knowingly, willfully and
intentionally threatened and continue to threaten Plaintiff’s exercise of his constitutional
rights and have arbitrarily and capriciously discriminated against Plaintiff and his ideas,
concepts and viewpoints, in violation of his rights to Free Speech and Equal Protection of
the law guaranteed by the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States
Constitution.
90.
The willful and wanton actions of Defendants indicated a reckless or callous
disregard of, or deliberate indifference to, the rights of others as to constitute gross
negligence.
91.
The actions of Defendants violated clearly established constitutional rights
of which a reasonable person would have known and constituted an abuse of government
power.
92.
The actions of the Defendants Officers were done in collaboration with, and
with the active participation, knowledge and/or acquiescence of all Defendants, or
otherwise in breach of their duty.
19
93.
As written and applied, the policies, customs and/or practices of the TSA
and/or the Commission permit the exercise of standardless discretion by individual police
officers resulting in impermissible content and/or viewpoint discrimination among different
forms of ideological, social, economic, philosophical, political and religious speech.
94.
As written and as applied, the policies, customs and/or practices of the TSA
and/or the Commission do not further any important, substantial or compelling
governmental interests and fail to employ the least restrictive means of restricting First
Amendment interests while furthering whatever governmental interests, if any, Defendants
seek to advance.
95.
Plaintiff has no plain, adequate or complete remedy at law to redress these
wrongs, and this suit is the only means of securing adequate relief.
96.
Plaintiff anticipates taking flights from RIC and/or other major United
States airports and is now suffering and will continue to suffer irreparable injury based on
the improper and undue chilling of his rights under the First Amendment, and his unequal
treatment under the Fourteenth Amendment, of the United States Constitution, from the
exercise by the Defendants of actions based on the aforesaid policies, practices, customs,
usages and actions as set forth herein until enjoined by the court.
97.
As a direct and proximate result of the actions of Defendants, Plaintiff has
suffered personal injury for which compensatory damages are due and has been denied his
constitutional rights.
V. CLAIMS
First Claim
Deprivation of Fourth Amendment Rights
42 U.S.C. § 1983
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98.
Plaintiff realleges and incorporates by reference the allegations in
paragraphs 1 through 97 set forth above.
99.
Defendants VANN, MASON, KANDLER, and TRICE, acting individually
or in concert, arrested Plaintiff, and/or collaborated in causing his arrest and seizure,
without probable cause to believe he had violated any law and in so doing deprived
Plaintiff of his right to be free of unreasonable searches and seizures guaranteed by the
Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution.
100.
[REMOVED]
101.
In depriving Plaintiff of his rights under the Fourth Amendment, Defendants
acted under color of state law and/or federal law.
102.
As a direct and proximate result of Defendants’ deprivation of Plaintiff’s
Fourth Amendment rights, Plaintiff suffered unnecessary physical discomfort, humiliation,
embarrassment, and mental suffering.
103.
For this deprivation of his constitutional rights under color of law, Plaintiff
is entitled to appropriate relief under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for the damage caused by such
deprivation.
Second Claim
Deprivation of First and Fourteenth Amendment Rights
42 U.S.C. § 1983 and Bivens
104.
Plaintiff realleges and incorporates by reference the allegations in paragraphs 1
through 103 set forth above.
105.
Defendants SMITH, JONES, DOE, VANN, MASON, KANDLER, and
TRICE, acting individually or in concert, seized Plaintiff, or in collaboration with others
caused his seizure, without probable cause because of the message conveyed by Plaintiff’s
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silent, nonviolent expression of objection to the TSA’s screening policies that involve
random application of AIT or enhanced pat-down procedures, and thereby engaged in
content and/or viewpoint discrimination and deprived Plaintiff of his fundamental right to
engage in free speech on an equal basis with other citizens, to petition the government for
the redress of grievance, and to engage freely in political expression as guaranteed by the
First and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution.
106.
[REMOVED]
107.
In depriving Plaintiff of his rights under the First and Fourteenth
Amendments, Defendants acted under color of state law and/or federal law.
108.
As a direct and proximate result of Defendants’ deprivation of Plaintiff’s
First and Fourteenth Amendment rights, Plaintiff suffered unnecessary physical discomfort,
humiliation, embarrassment, and mental suffering.
109.
For this deprivation of his constitutional rights under color of law, Plaintiff
is entitled to relief under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and/or Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of
the Federal Bureau of Narcotics, 403 U.S. 388 (1971), for the damage caused by such
deprivation.
Third Claim
Deprivation of Fifth and Fourteenth Amendment Equal Protection Rights
42 U.S.C. § 1983
110.
Plaintiff realleges and incorporates by reference the allegations in paragraphs 1
through 109 set forth above.
111.
Defendants VANN, MASON, KANDLER, and TRICE, exceeded the
authority granted by TSA Management Directive No. 100.4, and authorizing statutes and
regulations, concerning the limited purpose of administrative and special needs searches
22
conducted in airport screenings and thereby arbitrarily, capriciously and without rational
basis, treated Plaintiff differently from other air travelers subject to the same screening
process, by failing to follow applicable security Plays, and to prevent Plaintiff’s unlawful
arrest and false imprisonment without probable cause by Defendants VANN, MASON,
KANDLER, and TRICE, thereby denying Plaintiff his right to equal protection of the law
under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution.
112.
The application of TSA Management Directive No. 100.4, and authorizing
statutes and regulations, to Plaintiff by Defendants VANN, MASON, KANDLER, and
TRICE, exceeded the authorized purposes of said directive, statutes and regulations and
thereby denied Plaintiff his right to equal protection of the law under the Fifth and
Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution.
113.
[REMOVED]
114.
In depriving Plaintiff of his rights under the Fifth and Fourteenth
Amendments, Defendants acted under color of state law and/or federal law.
115.
As a direct and proximate result of Defendants’ deprivation of Plaintiff’s
Fifth and Fourteenth Amendment rights, Plaintiff suffered unnecessary physical
discomfort, humiliation, embarrassment, and mental suffering.
116.
For this deprivation of his constitutional rights under color of law, Plaintiff
is entitled to relief under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for the damage caused by such deprivation.
Fourth Claim
False Imprisonment
117.
Plaintiff realleges and incorporates by reference the allegations in
paragraphs 1 through 116 set forth above.
23
118.
Defendants VANN, MASON, KANDLER, and TRICE, arrested, and/or
physically restrained and detained, Plaintiff by force and/or threats continuously, and
without probable cause or other legal justification.
119.
Plaintiff was thereby falsely imprisoned by Defendants VANN, MASON,
KANDLER, and TRICE.
120.
As a direct and proximate result of Defendants tortious conduct, Plaintiff
suffered unnecessary physical discomfort, humiliation, embarrassment, and mental
suffering for which he is entitled to recover damages under the laws of the Commonwealth
of Virginia.
Fifth Claim
Malicious Prosecution
121.
Plaintiff realleges and incorporates by reference the allegations in
paragraphs 1 thorough 120 set forth above.
122.
Defendants VANN, VANN, MASON, KANDLER, and TRICE, procured
and/or instituted, and/or or collaborated in procuring or instituting, the prosecution of
Plaintiff for disorderly conduct without probable cause and with malice based on the said
Defendants’ actions taken against Plaintiff, including without limitation Plaintiff’s
expression of opposition to TSA enhanced screening procedures and his rights under the
First, Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution.
123.
The prosecution of Plaintiff for disorderly conduct terminated in a manner
not unfavorable to Plaintiff when the Commonwealth Attorney procured the entry of a
nolle prosequi evidencing the Commonwealth’s unwillingness to proceed on the charge.
124.
Plaintiff was thereby subjected to a malicious prosecution instituted by
Defendants VANN, VANN, MASON, KANDLER, and TRICE.
24
125.
As a direct and proximate result of Defendants tortious conduct, Plaintiff
suffered unnecessary physical discomfort, humiliation, embarrassment, and mental
suffering for which he is entitled to recover damages under the laws of the Commonwealth
of Virginia.
VI. NEED FOR RELIEF
126.
Plaintiff seeks a declaratory judgment pursuant to the Declaratory Judgment
Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2202, declaring the rights of the parties hereto, including specifically,
without limitation, a declaratory judgment (a) that the application of TSA Management
Directive No. 100.4, and authorizing statutes and regulations, to Plaintiff exceeded the
authorized purposes of said directive, statutes and regulations, and thereby denied Plaintiff
his right to equal protection of the law under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments of the
United States Constitution, and (b) that the aforementioned application and the unlawful
search and seizure and false imprisonment of Plaintiff denied Plaintiff the exercise of his
constitutional rights under the First Amendment of the United States Constitution and the
Constitution of Virginia.
127.
Plaintiff alleges and avers that the granting of a declaratory judgment and
the aforesaid injunction will serve a useful purpose in clarifying and settling the legal
relations in issue, will terminate the uncertainty, insecurity and controversy giving rise to
this action and to the lawful exercise of Plaintiff's and others constitutional rights and will
eliminate the threat and fear or events of arrest, incarceration, criminal prosecution and/or
conviction for the exercise of such rights.
25
128.
Plaintiff is entitled to nominal and compensatory damages for the intentional
or negligent violation of his constitutional rights by Defendants, as well as his reasonable
attorney's fees and costs.
PRAYER FOR RELIEF
WHEREFORE, Plaintiff prays for judgment against Defendants as follows:
A.
That judgment be entered finding in favor of Plaintiff on each of the claims
set forth above.
B.
That the Court declare the rights of the parties hereto, including without
limitation a declaratory judgment pursuant to the Declaratory Judgment Act, 28 U.S.C. §
2201 et seq., declaring, specifically, that (a) the arbitrary, capricious and unreasonable
application of TSA Management Directive No. 100.4, and authorizing statutes and
regulations, to Plaintiff by Defendants SMITH, JONES and DOE, and collaboratively by
Defendants VANN, MASON, KANDLER, and TRICE, exceeded the authorized purposes
of said directive, statutes and regulations, and thereby denied Plaintiff his right to equal
protection of the law under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States
Constitution, and (b) the aforementioned application of TSA Management Directive No.
100.4, and the unlawful search and seizure and false imprisonment of Plaintiff by
Defendants VANN, MASON, KANDLER, and TRICE denied Plaintiff the exercise of his
constitutional rights under the First Amendment of the United States Constitution and the
Constitution of Virginia because it fosters impermissible content and viewpoint
discrimination and unlawfully chills Plaintiff’s rights to Free Speech and to Petition the
Government for the redress of grievances under the First Amendment.
26
C.
That the Court grant a permanent injunction prohibiting Defendants, and
those persons in active concert or participation with them from interfering with Plaintiff’s
First Amendment rights of Free Speech and to Petition the Government for the redress of
grievances, and his Fourteenth Amendment rights to Equal Protection of the law, and
accordingly, that Defendants, be forthwith:
1) enjoined and restrained from interfering with the exercise of the Free Speech
rights of Plaintiff and others who desire to engage in lawful expressive
activity at RIC;
2) enjoined and restrained from enforcing TSA Management Directive No.
100.4, and authorizing statutes and regulations, in a manner that denies
Plaintiff’s rights thereunder and/or under applicable constitutional standards;
and
3) [REMOVED]
D.
That upon an appropriate hearing or hearings to cause a permanent
injunction to issue incorporating the injunctions set forth in Sub-Paragraph C of this Prayer
and further prohibiting Defendants and those persons in active concert or participation with
them, from taking any adverse action against Plaintiff for exercising his constitutional
rights of Free Speech and to Petition the Government for the redress of grievances, and his
constitutional right to Equal Protection of the law and his right to be fully admitted to and
to enjoy the use of the services, facilities, privileges, advantages, and accommodations of
the airport terminal at RIC on the same basis as other citizens without discrimination as to
the content or viewpoint of his speech.
27
E.
That Plaintiff be awarded compensatory damages in the amount of
$250,000.00 against Defendants SMITH, JONES, DOE, VANN, MASON, KANDLER,
and TRICE, in their individual capacities.
F.
That Plaintiff be awarded his attorneys’ fees pursuant to 42 U.S.C § 1988,
together with costs of this litigation.
G.
That the Court grant such other and further relief as it may deem proper.
DEMAND FOR JURY TRIAL
Pursuant to Rule 38 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, Plaintiff hereby demands a
trial by jury.
Dated: November 29, 2011.
Respectfully Submitted,
By:
/s/ James J. Knicely___________________
James J. Knicely (VSB #19356)
Robert Luther III (VSB #78766)
KNICELY & ASSOCIATES, P.C.
487 McLaws Circle, Suite 2
Williamsburg, Virginia 23185
(757) 253-0026 (phone)
(757) 253-5825 (fax)
jjk@knicelylaw.com
Anand Agneshwar
Alan C. Veronick
ARNOLD & PORTER, LLP
399 Park Avenue
New York, New York 10022-4690
(212) 715-1000 (phone)
(212) 212-715.1399 (fax)
anand.agneshwar@aporter.com
Of Counsel
John W. Whitehead (VSB # 20361)
Douglas R. McKusick (VSB # 72201)
The Rutherford Institute
28
1440 Sachem Place
Charlottesville, Virginia 22906
Of Counsel
Participating Attorneys for
THE RUTHERFORD INSTITUTE
Attorneys for Plaintiff, AARON TOBEY
29
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