JOAN G. MARGOLIS, Magistrate Judge.
On June 12, 2009, plaintiff, Craig Wilson, commenced this action
On May 24, 2012, counsel was appointed for plaintiff (Dkt. #41;
For the reasons set forth below, judgment shall enter in favor of
The following constitutes the Court's findings of fact pursuant to FED. R. CIV. P. 52(a)(1):
Plaintiff is incarcerated in Suffield, Connecticut at MacDougall-Walker Correctional Institution. His current incarceration arose out of the arrest that gave rise to this current litigation.
On June 26, 2006, defendant Martin, a detective with the Bridgeport Police Department for the past twenty years and who has been on the police force for twenty-five years, went to the home of Mabel Daniels on Chestnut Street in Fairfield, Connecticut, with the intent of finding plaintiff, or obtaining information that would lead to his arrest; plaintiff and Daniels are friends. Detective Martin had outstanding warrants for plaintiff's arrest and he went to Daniels' home in his role as a member of the fugitive task force. Plaintiff and Detective Martin were "familiar" with one another prior to this encounter; plaintiff testified that Daniels was also familiar with Detective Martin. When Detective Martin arrived at Daniel's duplex, plaintiff was inside with Daniels, his mother, and a few friends, including children. Plaintiff was upstairs when Detective Martin first knocked on Daniels' door and plaintiff had come to the top of the stairs to look who was there; before Daniels opened her front door, she told plaintiff that the police were there and he then tried to try to hide on the second floor.
Detective Martin asked Daniels if he could search the premises but she refused to permit him to enter without a warrant, which he did not have. Detective Martin assumed someone was upstairs as he had heard noises from there, and according to plaintiff, when he was walking around upstairs, the floor squeaked. Plaintiff "peeked" out the window and he could see police officers standing outside, including Detective Martin, who was the only officer he recognized. While he was looking out the window, he was planning his escape route, and as soon as he saw some of the other officers walk down the driveway, he saw his "best chance" to escape, by pushing the screen out of the open window, stepping on the landing of the roof below and then jumping to the ground. As he went out the window, Detective Martin saw him, yelled "he's out the window," and removed his gun from the holster. Detective Martin was pointing the gun at plaintiff when plaintiff jumped to the ground, and he immediately gave chase. Plaintiff and Detective Martin were approximately twelve feet apart, with Detective Martin chasing right behind plaintiff as he ran toward the back of the house where there was marshland; plaintiff was well aware that Detective Martin was right behind him. Plaintiff could hear Detective Martin yelling, as he recognized his voice, but with his adrenaline pumping, he could not hear what he was saying. Plaintiff heard gunshots fire (which he described as "pop, pop, pop"); Detective Martin, who was running with his hand on the trigger, discharged two bullets from his forty-caliber semi-automatic Sig Sauer service revolver.
When plaintiff heard the gunfire, he laid down on the ground and placed his hands behind his head in order to protect himself. The entire chase lasted, at most, sixty seconds before plaintiff was apprehended. Plaintiff was unarmed. He was placed under arrest and picked up, and he then walked over to cement steps by the front of Daniel's house where he sat down. While plaintiff was sitting on the steps, he described having a "burning" feeling on his neck, and his leg "felt funny" but he thought it was from the chase and from being "roughed up a little bit." According to plaintiff, there was blood "all over" the white t-shirt he was wearing, and Detective Martin looked at the back of his neck
At that point, Detective Alex Fucci from the Fairfield Police Department arrived on the scene and recognized plaintiff in handcuffs. Detective Fucci witnessed another officer search plaintiff before placing him in the back of Detective Fucci's cruiser so that Detective Fucci could transport plaintiff to be booked. Plaintiff was not limping, he did not appear to be in pain, and Detective Fucci did not see any blood on him. When Detective Fucci arrived at Troop G of the Connecticut State Police,
Once inside, Sergeant Eddie Correa from the Bridgeport Police Department was responsible for booking plaintiff. Booking involves patting down the arrestee several times, during which time, if blood is seen, the officer automatically calls a medic and transports the arrestee to the hospital for the safety of both the suspect and of the officers. Sergeant Correa was clear that "any" amount of blood, no matter how small, triggers this obligation to contact a medic and transport the suspect. Additionally, when an arrestee has a high bond, like the $1,000,000 bond set for plaintiff, a second officer stands in close proximity to the officer conducting the booking process. Thus, two people would have been standing close to plaintiff during this process. Once the arrestee is fingerprinted, read his or her charges, and given the opportunity to make a phone call, the officer on duty asks if the arrestee has any medical conditions, has any injuries, or needs any medications, before returning the arrestee to the cell. Sergeant Correa testified that he would have remembered if a suspect had come in covered in blood and suffering from gunshot wounds, and he has no recollection of the scenario plaintiff described. Additionally, although plaintiff claims that his white t-shirt was "dripping with" and was "covered in" blood, he conceded upon his cross-examination that in his booking photo, there is no blood on plaintiff's white t-shirt. (Exh. G).
Plaintiff claims the bullet wound in his leg was such that the bullet entered in the back of his leg and exited on the side of his left leg near the back of his knee (described by defense counsel as a "through and through" bullet wound); he lifted his pant leg in the courtroom to show the entry and exit scars. (
The medical records from his intake health screening from the DOC completed the next day, on June 27, 2006, reveals that he had no significant medical injuries. (Exh. H, DOC49-52).
The following constitutes this Court's conclusions of law pursuant to FED. R. CIV. P. 52(a)(1):
The use of excessive force by police officers prior to arraignment violates the Fourth Amendment's prohibition against unreasonable seizures.
In this case, the Court need not address whether the use of deadly force was excessive force and unreasonable under the circumstances because plaintiff cannot establish that he was in fact shot by Detective Martin. Detective Martin admits that he discharged his service revolver twice while in pursuit of plaintiff. However, other than plaintiff's testimony, there is no evidence establishing that plaintiff was in fact shot in his neck and leg. Not one person who encountered plaintiff during or after this incident noticed any blood on plaintiff's t-shirt, or noticed that he was in any pain or was limping, and his booking photograph shows plaintiff in a white t-shirt, without any sign of blood. Additionally, the scars shown in Court were on his left leg, the same leg where he received bullet wounds in or around 2000. In light of plaintiff's previous gunshot wounds, both of which required in-patient hospitalizations, this Court finds incredible plaintiff's claim that he had these large bullet wounds but chose not to tell anyone and chose not to seek any treatment.
Accordingly, for the reasons stated above, the Clerk shall enter judgment in favor of defendant.
Detective Martin also acknowledged that he never retrieved the two bullets or shells from the ground, nor did he ask another colleague to pick them up.