INDIRA TALWANI, District Judge.
Before the court are Defendant
The district court "may accept, reject, or modify, in whole or in part, the findings or recommendations made by the magistrate judge," having made a "de novo determination of those portions of the report or specified proposed findings or recommendations to which objection is made." 28 U.S.C. § 636(b); Fed. R. Civ. P. 72(b)(3).
Plaintiff has no dispute as to the Magistrate Judge's statements of the background of the case and they are adopted by the court.
Defendant Keane is named only twice in the complaint: he is identified as a supervisor in paragraph four, and alleged to have "consented to [Defendant Zanoli and Defendant Colby's] illegal seizure, assault and battery and kidnapping of the plaintiff" in paragraph nine. As the Magistrate Judge noted, these allegations are insufficient to claim that Defendant Keane's actions were "affirmatively linked" to Plaintiff's constitutional injury, such that they may be characterized either as "supervisory encouragement, condonation, or acquiescence," or as "deliberate difference" such that it would be "manifest to any reasonable official" that the actions were "very likely to violate" Plaintiff's rights.
Plaintiff objects, stating "there were several policies and customs established from Racial and gender profiling," an allegation supported with cites to two Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court opinions:
Plaintiff further objects that Defendant Keane failed to "properly review the report and the facts," choosing instead to "rubber stam[p]" the incident report. Even if Plaintiff had alleged that Defendant Keane failed to scrutinize the report, the Magistrate Judge's observation would still be correct that no facts alleged "suggest that [Defendant Keane] encouraged his subordinates to file improper incident reports or that he knew or should have known that the incident report filed in this case was deficient in any respect." Accordingly,
Plaintiff does not object to the Magistrate Judge's reading of his complaint as potentially alleging four theories of relief against the City of Boston: a Section 1983 claim under
As observed by the Magistrate Judge, "municipalities can be held liable only if municipal employees commit unconstitutional acts and those actions are shown to have been caused by a `policy or custom' of the government,"
Plaintiff objects with further facts regarding the City of Boston's alleged "custom or policy" of racial profiling and racist police tactics. These facts are not in the complaint and therefore do not prevent granting a motion to dismiss. Plaintiff has moved to amend his complaint with further facts regarding the City of Boson's customs or practices,
The remaining objections are of little moment. To the extent Plaintiff seeks to impose liability on the City of Boston for the officer defendants' intentional torts, he is precluded by Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 258, § 10(c); to the extent he alleges common law negligence against the city, he has pleaded insufficiently specific facts, as described supra, showing the "municipality knew or should have known about an underlying, identifiable tort which was committed by named or unnamed public employees."
Finally, after review of Plaintiff's objections, the court agrees with the Magistrate Judge's conclusion that the City of Boston cannot be liable for conspiring with its own employees— acting as the complaint describes: in the course of their employment—because "an entity cannot conspire with itself."
For the foregoing reasons, Plaintiff's complaint as to Defendant Keane and the City of Boston is DISMISSED. Whether Plaintiff may amend his claims will be addressed in connection with his pending
IT IS SO ORDERED.