ROBERT W. PRATT, District Judge.
Before the Court are the following motions by Curtis W. McGhee, Jr. ("McGhee") and Terry Harrington
Plaintiffs move that the Court take judicial notice of the following two facts: (1)
Id. at 525. Although McGhee was not a party to Harrington v. State, he maintains that he "suffered the same due process violations as Harrington [and that] the State never contended otherwise." See Clerk's No. 271-1 at 2.
Defendants raise four arguments in resistance to Plaintiffs Motion: (1) whether the Gates reports were material and whether they were disclosed to Harrington and McGhee are non-adjudicative facts; (2) taking judicial notice of these two facts will violate the law of the case; (3) the facts at issue are irrelevant and unfairly prejudicial; and (4) these facts relate to "Brady violations ... for which [Defendants] are immune."
Defendants' arguments are unavailing. First, adjudicative facts are "`facts that normally go to the jury in a jury case. They relate to the parties, their activities, their businesses.'" Qualley v. Clo-Tex Int'l Inc., 212 F.3d 1123, 1128 (8th Cir.2000). Though Defendants claim that the proposed facts are "nonadjudicative," in that they do not relate to the Defendants, Plaintiffs correctly counter this argument when they point out that the facts are "adjudicative in nature because [they] relate to what happened to plaintiff themselves. It makes no sense to consume court time to prove these matters to a jury when they have already been litigated to an indisputable conclusion." Pl.'s Reply at 2.
Second, Defendants are incorrect in their assertion that taking judicial notice of these facts will violate the law of the case. Defendants claim that this Court previously determined that the police Defendants disclosed all allegedly exculpatory information to the prosecutors. See Defs.' Resistance at 5 (citing McGhee v. Pottawattamie Cnty., 475 F.Supp.2d 862, 913 (S.D.Iowa 2007) and Harrington v. Wilber, 670 F.Supp.2d 958, 966 (S.D.Iowa 2009)). The Court made no such independent factual determination. Rather, it found that Plaintiffs had repeatedly alleged in their Complaints that the prosecutors were aware of all exculpatory information.
Third, the proposed facts are neither irrelevant to the Plaintiffs' remaining claims against the Defendants nor are they unfairly prejudicial to Defendants. Plaintiffs have asserted that the Defendants, along with the Pottawattamie County prosecutors, engaged in a conspiracy to deprive the Plaintiffs of their constitutional rights. Although various overt acts are alleged in furtherance of this conspiracy, it is indisputable that when the case against Plaintiffs culminated in trial, the material, exculpatory Gates reports were not provided to Plaintiffs. A reasonable jury could conclude that this failure was but one small part of an overarching conspiracy to intentionally deprive Plaintiffs of due process, equal protection, and ultimately of a fair trial. See Villasana v. Wilhoit, 368 F.3d 976, 980-81 (8th Cir.2004) (stating that § 1983 damages can be recovered against a non-prosecutor for actions intended to deprive a defendant of a fair trial). Indeed, the mere fact that Defendants may be immune from liability specifically for withholding Brady evidence from Plaintiffs or from lying about the existence of such evidence during trial does not mean that evidence regarding the fact of the Brady violation is inadmissible for all purposes. Thus, Defendants' protestations that admission of this evidence would deprive them of the benefits of their qualified immunity is simply without merit.
Finally, the Court notes that who violated Brady is irrelevant for purposes of the present motion. Even accepting as true that the prosecutors were aware of the undisclosed Gates reports, the Court would still find it proper to take judicial notice of the materiality of the reports and the fact that Harrington and McGhee did not know about them when they stood trial in 1978. Even beyond the fact that Plaintiffs have alleged a conspiracy, the fact of the Brady violations is relevant to how Plaintiffs got out of prison, and to ensure that the jury has a complete story of the events giving rise to Plaintiffs incarceration and present claims.
Plaintiffs petition the Court "to find that evidence of how the non-disclosure of the Gates reports occurred in 1978 is admissible at ... trial." Clerk's No. 272-1 at 1. In resisting the Motion, Defendants argue that the doctrines of the law of the case and qualified immunity bar the evidence at issue. See Clerk's No. 291 at 8-14. Specifically, Defendants assert, as they did with respect to the prior Motion, that "this Court ha[s] already held that Defendants (Larsen and Brown) indisputably disclosed all exculpatory evidence to the former County Attorney Defendants, including the purportedly missing reports regarding Charles Gates." Id. at 9 (citing McGhee v. Pottawattamie County, 475 F.Supp.2d 862, 913 (S.D.Iowa 2007)). Since the Court has already made this determination, Defendants argue, it is now the law of the case. See id. Defendants also contend that "[p]resenting [the evidence at issue] ... to a jury would ... impermissibly force
The Court addressed both Defendants' law of the case and immunity arguments in ruling on the prior Motion for judicial notice. Thus, at this juncture, the Court believes that Plaintiffs generally are free to present evidence regarding how the alleged nondisclosures occurred, at least to the extent that such evidence is consistent with their conspiracy claims. More specifically, the Court emphasizes that the evidence would not be permissible to show that the Brady violations themselves violated any particular constitutional right of Plaintiffs, because Defendants are immune from such a claim. However, Plaintiffs should be permitted to offer the fact of the violations and evidence as to how the violations occurred as support for their claim that Defendants conspired with prosecutors to intentionally deprive Plaintiffs of due process, equal protection, and fair trials.
The parties agree that the jury should be instructed on how McGhee and Harrington were released from prison. See Clerk's No. 275-1 at 1-2; Clerk's No. 291 at 25. They, however, disagree on the contents of the jury instruction. Compare Clerk's No. 275-1 at 2-3 (Plaintiffs' proposed instruction) with Clerk's No. 291 at 26-27 (Defendants' own proposed instruction and criticism of Plaintiffs' proposed instruction). The Court finds neither version appropriate and concludes that the following jury instruction will sufficiently inform the jury on the issue without prejudicing the interests of either party:
For the reasons above, Plaintiff's Motions (Clerk's Nos. 271, 272, 275) are GRANTED, to the extent articulated in this Order.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
McGhee, 475 F.Supp.2d at 913 (emphasis added).