                      UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
                      FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
_______________________________________
                                        )
                                        )
LINDSAY HUTHNANCE,                     )
      Plaintiff,                       )
                                       )
             v.                        )    Civil Action No. 06-1871 (RCL)
                                       )
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, et al.,          )
      Defendants.                      )
                                       )
_______________________________________)


                                 MEMORANDUM OPINION

       On March 25, 2011 the jury returned a verdict in favor of Lindsay Huthnance, the

plaintiff in this case. Specifically, the jury found that Metropolitan Police Department Officers

Liliana Acebal and James Antonio falsely arrested Huthnance; that Acebal committed the tort of

assault and battery against Huthnance; that Acebal and Antonio violated Huthnance’s First,

Fourth, and Fifth Amendment rights under the United States Constitution; that the District of

Columbia violated Huthnance’s Fifth Amendment rights; that the District of Columbia was

deliberately indifferent to the constitutional First, Fourth, and Fifth Amendment rights of citizens

and that this deliberate indifference was a proximate cause of Huthnance’s injuries. Verdict

Form, Mar. 25, 2011, ECF No. 229. The jury awarded Huthnance $90,000 compensatory

damages and $7,500 punitive damages—$5,000 punitive damages against Acebal and $2,500

against Antonio. Currently before the Court is Defendants’ District of Columbia, Liliana Acebal,

and James Antonio’s Motion for Judgment As a Matter of Law, or for a New Trial, or for

Remittitur (“Motion for Judgment As a Matter of Law”). Apr. 28, 2011, ECF No. 241. Having

considered the Motion, the Opposition, the Reply, the record in this case—including the



                                                 1
evidence produced at trial—and the applicable law at length, the Court will grant the motion for

judgment as a matter of law in part and deny it in part, and it will deny the motion for a new trial

or remittitur for the reasons that follow.

       I.      Facts

       Officers Acebal and Antonio arrested Huthnance on November 16, 2005 1 for disorderly

conduct, loud and boisterous. Huthnance claims that she was a victim of “contempt of cop,”

meaning the officers didn’t have probable cause to believe she had committed any crime and

instead arrested her merely because she had criticized the police. After her arrest, officers

transported her to the station and locked her in a cell while her arrest was processed. She

resolved her arrest through the District’s “post and forfeiture” procedure, meaning she posted

$25 collateral and was released from custody several hours later. After posting and forfeiting, no

criminal charges were ever brought against Huthnance, so no one ever reviewed her arrest. As a

result of her arrest, Huthnance spent several hours in jail, paid $25 to secure her release, claims

she experienced mental anguish, fear, and humiliation, and was saddled with a permanent arrest

record she claims she didn’t deserve.

       Huthnance filed suit against Officers Acebal and Antonio 2 and the district of Columbia

asserting claims of false imprisonment, intentional infliction of emotional distress, assault and

battery, violations of her constitutional First, Fourth, Fifth, and Eighth Amendment rights, and



1
  Huthnance testified that she was arrested at “approximately midnight” on “November 15,
2005.” Mar. 7, 2011 P.M. Trial Tr. 48. At times, Huthnance contended that her arrest was
actually at 11:55 p.m. on November 15th. The District claimed that she was arrested at around
2:00 a.m. on the morning of the 16th. The Court’s reference to November 16th as the arrest date
isn’t meant to take a side in that debate. Instead, because even Huthnance’s earliest estimate of
the time of her arrest is within five minutes of November 16th, the Court simply picks that date
for convenience’s sake.
2
  Huthnance also sued Officer J. Morales, but the jury did not find him liable for any of her
claims. For that reason, the Court limits its discussion to Officers Acebal and Antonio.
                                                  2
violations of the Code of the District of Columbia, arising from her arrest and detention on

November 15th and 16th, 2005. Am. Compl. 2, May 7, 2007, ECF No. 13. By the time the case

went to the jury, several of Huthnance’s original claims had been dismissed or abandoned,

leaving the lay of the land at the time the jury was instructed:

       -   Claims against Officer Acebal: assault and battery; false arrest; and violations of
           Huthnance’s constitutional First, Fourth, and Fifth Amendment Rights. Jury
           Instructions 7, Mar. 24, 2011, ECF No. 222.

       -   Claims against Officer Antonio: false arrest and violations of her First, Fourth, and
           Fifth Amendment rights. Id.

       -   Claims against the District of Columbia: violation of her Fifth Amendment rights
           associated with differential treatment in its official policy regarding whether or not to
           offer citizens citation release; violation of her First, Fourth, and Fifth Amendment
           rights due to inadequate training and supervision. Id. at 13–17.

               a. The Evidence at Trial

       Huthnance testified that on the night of her arrest, she was having friends over for dinner

at her apartment at around 8:00 p.m. Mar. 7, 2011 P.M. Trial Tr. 49. She testified that she and

her three dinner companions split a bottle of wine between the four of them and that dinner

ended at 10:00 p.m. Id. After dinner, she and her guests decided to take a ten-minute walk to a

local bar called the Raven for drinks. Id. at 49–50. Huthnance testified that she had “a couple of

beers” at the Raven and later clarified her testimony to specify that she had exactly two beers. Id.

at 50. As midnight approached, Huthnance felt that it was time to return home because she had to

go to work the next morning. Id. She and her boyfriend, Adrien Marsoni, left the Raven at

around 11:45 p.m. Id. On their way home, Huthnance and Marsoni stopped at a 7-Eleven

convenience store about half a block away from the Raven to buy cigarettes and noticed a slew

of police officers and police vehicles outside the 7-Eleven. Id. at 51. She testified that she said




                                                  3
nothing to the police officers outside the 7-Eleven and proceeded inside to make her purchase.

Id.

        Once inside the store, Huthnance saw more police officers inside and asked “what was

going on.” Id. at 52. She testified that the police officers told her it was “none of [her] business

and to move on.” Id. at 52. What she didn’t know was that MPD had recently made that 7-Eleven

into a police substation in response to a rash of robberies in the Mount Pleasant neighborhood.

There was a sign posted on the door to alert citizens and brigands alike to the convenience

store’s substation status, but Huthnance never noticed the sign. Id.

        This is where, according to Huthnance, things get dicey. She testified that after being told

to mind her own business, she turned to her boyfriend and said, “Wow, nice use of my tax

dollars.” Id. That observation prompted one of the officers—according to Huthnance—to

respond confrontationally, demanding that she repeat what she had just said. Id. Huthnance

declined that invitation and simply said, “I wasn’t talking to you,” and left the store. Id.

        Huthnance claims her tax-dollars comment wasn’t meant to goad the officers. She

explained that this was her neighborhood, and she was naturally concerned to see such a heavy

police presence there. She only asked why they were there out of that natural concern. Id. at 53.

Huthnance testified that she didn’t know which officer told her to mind her own business

because she wasn’t looking in their direction at the time that they said it. Id. Although she didn’t

take note of the officer’s identity, she did testify that she was “quite shocked . . . and frustrated

that they would talk to [her] that way.” Id. at 54. Nevertheless, despite that frustration, she

“didn’t respond” and left. Id.

        After exiting the 7-Eleven, Huthnance heard her boyfriend talking to someone and turned

around just in time to hear him say “fuck off” to a police officer. Id. at 55. She testified that she



                                                   4
and Marsoni continued to walk up the street until they realized they were being followed and two

officers told them to stop. Id. The officers asked for identification, and Huthnance asked why she

was being stopped and whether she was under arrest. Id. at 54–55. The officers never responded

to her questions. Huthnance testified that after continuously asking why they were being stopped

and receiving no answer, she demanded one of the officer’s badge numbers. Id. at 55. Huthnance

testified that immediately after she requested the officer’s badge number, she was “told to place

[her] hands up against the wall and put in handcuffs.” Id.

       Huthnance testified that the officer her boyfriend had told to “fuck off” was Antonio. Id.

at 57. She testified that she heard Marsoni say nothing else to Antonio and that it was her

intention to continue walking home and not to have any more interactions with the police that

night. They didn’t get far, however, before they realized they were being followed and were told

to stop by Officers Antonio and Acebal. Id. at 58. Acebal asked the couple for their

identification. Id. at 59. Huthnance didn’t give Acebal her license and instead asked why she

was being stopped. Id. at 60. Officer Acebal didn’t respond to Huthnance’s questions, and after

several rounds of this to-and-fro, Huthnance asked for Officer Acebal’s badge number. Id.

“That’s when [she] was told to place [her] hands against the wall and [she] was put in

handcuffs.” Id.

       Although Huthnance testified that she refused to hand over her identification, she also

testified that she didn’t refuse to place her hands against the wall when Officer Acebal ordered

her to do so. Id. After Huthnance was told to place her hands against the wall, Officer Acebal

patted her down. Id. at 61. Huthnance testified that she continued to ask why she had been

stopped and if she was being arrested, but to no avail. Id. In fact, she testified that “at no time

during any of this that happened was I told that I was arrested.” Id. She testified that virtually all



                                                   5
of her interactions were with Officer Acebal. Id. Importantly, Huthnance concedes that she was

“upset,” and described her tone of voice throughout the encounter as follows:

        At first it was probably close to a normal tone of voice, but as I asked questions
        and got absolutely no answer or even was told that I was being arrested, I did
        raise my voice when I asked for the officer’s badge number. . . . At no time was I
        screaming at the top of my lungs.

Id. at 61–62.

        Huthnance testified that while she “can’t be a hundred percent sure” because her head

was against a brick wall and Marsoni was behind her “in [her] peripheral vision,” she believed he

was talking with Officer Antonio and had given him his identification. Id. at 62–63. She testified

that she was not deferential to the officers, but Marsoni—who wasn’t arrested that night—was.

Id. at 63. After being placed in handcuffs, Huthnance was led to a police car and was driven to

the station. Id. at 64.

        Huthnance testified that although she did raise her voice when she demanded Officer

Acebal’s badge number, she neither yelled at nor cursed any of the officers at any point from the

time she left the 7-Eleven until she was put into the squad car. Id. She also testified that she

never saw any lights coming on in the apartment buildings across the street, people peering out

of windows, or anyone gathering on the street to see what all the hubbub was about. Id. at 65.

        Huthnance also testified to several problems with the narrative of her arrest contained in

the PD-163 filled out at the station afterwards. She testified that it was inaccurate in several

respects, including the following:

        -   The PD-163 said she was arrested at 1:45 a.m. on November 16, 2005, but she claims
            she was arrested around midnight. Id. at 69.

        -   The PD-163 claims she was yelling while inside the 7-Eleven, which she denies. Id.
            at 69.




                                                  6
-   The PD-163 says that after she exited the 7-Eleven, she turned around, faced the
    store, extended her middle finger, and yelled to the officers: “Fuck you, mother
    fuckers!” Huthnance denies (1) turning around, (2) extending her middle finger, and
    (3) saying—much less yelling—any of those words. Id. at 70.

-   The PD-163 says that after officers told Huthnance to move along, she continued to
    curse at officers. She denies that she cursed at any point. Id.

-   The PD-163 says that Huthnance was stopped for identification purposes so she could
    be issued a 61D citation, but she claims that no one ever told her that she would get a
    ticket that night. Id.

-   The PD-163 says that Huthnance turned around and yelled at the officer: “I want your
    fucking badge number.” Huthnance concedes that she demanded the badge number
    but insists that she never yelled in anyone’s face and never cursed. Id.

-   The PD-163 says that the officer told her to place her hands on the wall and refrain
    from screaming, but Huthnance says she was never told to refrain from screaming
    because she never screamed. Id. at 72.

-   The PD-163 says that Huthnance refused the officer’s commands, yelled again in the
    officer’s face, and refused to place her hands on the wall for safety. Huthnance,
    though, contends that she didn’t yell in the officer’s face and did put her hands on the
    wall when she was told to do so. That said, she admits that she didn’t hand over her
    identification when it was requested. Id.

-   The PD-163 says that the officer advised Huthnance for a third time to refrain from
    screaming, and her response was: “Fuck you, little bitch.” Huthnance denies
    screaming, being told to stop screaming, and using the referenced abusive language.
    Id.

-   The PD-163 says that Huthnance said several things that she denies ever saying,
    including: “Fuck you, bitch”; “I’m a citizen of this country”; and “What are you
    going to arrest me for, being drunk with a burrito?” She admits to saying “What a
    waste of my tax dollars” and “I know my rights.” Id. at 72–73.

-   The PD-163 also says that Huthnance was unemployed but (1) she wasn’t, and (2) she
    never said she was. Id.

-   The PD-163 misspelled Marsoni’s name and gave an incorrect address for him. Id.

-   The PD-163 reported that Huthnance hadn’t made a telephone call, but she says that
    she did. Id.

-   The PD-163 reported her telephone number incorrectly. Id. at 75.



                                         7
        -   The PD-163 said Huthnance was a “female impersonator.” Huthnance says she
            wasn’t a female impersonator and was offended that the PD-163 said so. Id.

        Huthnance was placed in a squad car in handcuffs and driven to the police station. Id. at

78. She testified that once she arrived at the station, she was handcuffed to a chair and left by

herself. Id. at 79. She remained there for forty-five minutes, asking everyone she saw if she had

been arrested. Id. Eventually, she needed to use the bathroom and was handed a roll of toilet

paper, led to a cell, and told she could use a toilet in the cell. Id. The door was then closed and

she was locked in the cell. Id. About an hour later Officer Antonio came back and offered her a

phone call. Id. After that officer left, she was alone in the cell for another hour before she finally

saw Officer Acebal. Id. at 80. Huthnance testified that Officer Acebal returned her identification

and handed her a piece of paper. Id. Officer Acebal told Huthnance that if she signed it, she was

free to go. Id.

         Huthnance testified that she didn’t read the piece of paper (nor was she told anything

else about it) before she signed it because she “just wanted to get out of jail.” Id. After she signed

the form, she put it in her pocket thinking she was about to be released from jail, but she wasn’t

actually released until 7:00 a.m. Id. at 87. Huthnance testified that she never read the entire form

and instead only read the part that said what she was charged with. Id. She testified that she

“didn’t know what it meant, to be honest.” Id. She testified that she never told anyone that she

wanted to pay a fine and have her case dropped, never asked for post and forfeit, never paid a

fine, neither told nor asked anyone to pay a fine for her, and was never offered any alternative to

the way she was released. Id. at 88. She testified that she wasn’t offered citation release and

didn’t know what that was. Id. at 88–89. When asked if she would have preferred an option like

citation release had it been offered, she testified that she would have. Id. at 89.




                                                  8
         After Huthnance finished testifying, she called Philip Eure, the Executive Director of the

D.C. Government’s Office of Police Complaints. Mar. 8, 2011 A.M. Trial Tr. 14. He described

the OPC’s role as an independent agency tasked with advising MPD on identifying problems

based on the complaints that come into its office and making new policy recommendations, id. at

19, and one of those recommendations in particular—the 2003 CCRB Report (technically titled

“Disorderly Conduct Arrests Made by Metropolitan Police Department Officers”), which dealt

with MPD disorderly conduct arrests. Id. at 42. He testified that this report described OPC’s

extensive study of disorderly conduct arrests in the District and made policy recommendations

that went to the Mayor and the City Council. Id. at 43. The purpose of the study and the report

was to

         bring primarily to MPD’s attention the fact that [OPC] had received a number of
         complaints from citizens believing they had been wrongfully arrested for
         disorderly conduct, and [OPC] wanted to cite some of this anecdotal evidence,
         and really let MPD—bring to their attention and let them know that there was a
         problem that needed to be addressed.

Id. at 58. After extensive study, the OPC had concluded that a significant number of improper or

unlawful disorderly conduct arrests might be going unnoticed and recommended several policy

changes for MPD to address the problem. See, e.g., id. at 101; Mar. 8, 2011 P.M. Trial Tr. 6.

         Next, Huthnance’s boyfriend, Adrien Marsoni, testified and corroborated much of her

story. Mar. 8, 2011 P.M. Trial Tr. 63. Then Huthnance called Lieutenant Ralph A. Neal, who

had served as an MPD officer for 32 years, to testify regarding MPD’s training and supervision

policies regarding disorderly conduct arrests and about Huthnance’s arrest. Mar. 9, 2011 P.M.

Trial Tr. 5. He was the supervising officer who had signed off on Huthnance’s PD-163, and he

testified as to why he believed that her arrest was based on probable cause.




                                                  9
       After Lieutenant Neal’s testimony, Huthnance called Inspector Michael I. Eldridge, the

Director of MPD’s Disciplinary Review Branch. Id. at 73. His office reviews and processes

officer misconduct cases and proposes and carries out the disciplinary actions against officers, up

to and including termination. Id. He testified about how complaints are filed and processed and

discussed Huthnance’s arrest and its documentation specifically. He testified that if he were the

supervising officer reviewing Huthnance’s PD-163, he wouldn’t have found that it stated

probable cause for a disorderly conduct arrest. Id. at 83.

       Next, Sergeant Michael Smith testified by deposition designation. Id. at 114. He testified

about his training on disorderly conduct arrests, how MPD higher-ups review PD-163s, and

about his memory of what happened at the 7-Eleven the night of Huthnance’s arrest. He recalled

arriving at the 7-Eleven at approximately midnight and seeing officers Acebal and Antonio

talking with a man and a woman about fifty feet away from the store. Id. at 128. He purchased a

cup of coffee and left, but remembered that the woman wasn’t in handcuffs when he saw her and

wasn’t screaming. Id. at 129. He testified that he was about fifty feet from them and couldn’t

hear their voices. Id. He also testified that at the time that he left, no crowd had formed on the

street, and he didn’t remember any cars slowing down to see what was going on. Id. at 130. He

confirmed Inspector Eldridge’s testimony that Huthnance’s PD-163 was insufficient and too

vague to state probable cause for a disorderly conduct arrest. Id. at 131–34.

       Finally, Huthnance called Timothy J. Longo, her expert witness. Mar. 10, 2011 A.M.

Trial Tr. 4. Mr. Longo is the Chief of Police for the City of Charlottesville, Virginia, but

Huthnance called him to testify as her police practices expert. Id. at 5. Like Eldridge and Smith,

Longo testified that there wasn’t sufficient evidence for an officer to reasonably believe there

was probable cause to arrest Huthnance for disorderly conduct. Id. at 49. Instead, he testified that



                                                 10
she was actually arrested “for challenging the police.” Id. He also testified that the District was

on notice of a potential problem with disorderly conduct arrests. Id. at 50. He went on to testify

that “the post and forfeit process allows for potentially bad disorderly conduct arrests going

undetected. They are not being reviewed for judicial scrutiny, if nothing else. A determination is

not being made by a prosecutor to determine whether something is viable for prosecution. So I

think that leads to a foreseeable risk of constitutional violations.” Id. at 52. He also testified that

MPD’s response to this problem was inadequate. Id. at 52–53. Moreover, he testified that MPD

has a practice of conducting and condoning unlawful contempt of cop arrests under the guise of

disorderly conduct arrests. Id. at 53.

          Longo explained that he felt that MPD was inadequately training its officers and cited

Lieutenant Neal’s testimony as proof of that opinion. Id. at 53–54. Specifically, he testified that

Lieutenant Neal “failed to notice . . . glaring deficiencies in a document that is supposed to set

out probable cause for arrest.” Id. at 54. In fact, Longo testified that it was hard for him to

believe Neal—the supervisor who signed off on Huthnance’s PD-163—“had any training

whatsoever in supervising PD 163s or in understanding the applicable rule of law as it pertains to

disorderly conduct.” Id. He even testified that “there is a tremendous possibility that had there

been adequate training, that had supervision been in place, that not only would [Huthnance’s]

arrest been avoided, but this procedure.” Id. at 55. He went on to testify in detail about exactly

how he came to the conclusions discussed above. Once Longo’s testimony finished, Huthnance

rested her case.

          With Huthnance’s case complete, the District and the officer defendants orally moved for

judgment as a matter of law under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 50(a). 3 Mar. 11, 2011 P.M.



3
    Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 50(a) provides:
                                                  11
Trial Tr. 138. Defense counsel’s first argument was that “[t]hese individual officers, Acebal and

Antonio and Morales, are shielded from liability because their alleged actions, or in the case of

Officer Morales, lack thereof, were objectively reasonable.” Id. at 139. 4 Huthnance testified that

she was unaware whether Antonio actually did anything with respect to her arrest. Thus, there

was no evidence upon which a jury could conclude that he should be held liable on any of

Huthnance’s allegations. Id. at 140. Also, defense counsel argued, with regard to the First

Amendment claim, “there’s a lack of evidence with respect to Officers Antonio and Acebal, that

they were inside the 7-Eleven when she made these alleged provocative claims. . . . They can’t

be held liable for arresting her for something that they did not hear.” Id.

       As to Acebal, defense counsel argued:

       The arrest by Officer Acebal was reasonable, even if later determined to be
       incorrect, given the facts that we’ve heard, the time of the occurrence, the
       proximity to the residential apartment buildings across the street, testimony that
       spectators were observed outside the 7-Eleven, Mr. Marsoni testified to that. And
       also to Mr. Marsoni’s testimony that Ms. Huthnance was loud, that she was
       yelling, that she was argumentative. That he told her to calm down repeatedly.
       And her own admission that she did not present her ID when instructed to do so.

Id. at 140–41.



(a) Judgment as a Matter of Law
(1) In General. If a party has been fully heard on an issue during a jury trial and the court finds
    that a reasonable jury would not have a legally sufficient evidentiary basis to find for the
    party on that issue, the court may:
(A) resolve the issue against the party; and
(B) grant a motion for judgment as a matter of law against the party on a claim or defense that,
    under the controlling law, can be maintained or defeated only with a favorable finding on
    that issue.
(2) Motion. A motion for judgment as a matter of law may be made at any time before the case
    is submitted to the jury. The motion must specify the judgment sought and the law and facts
    that entitle the movant to the judgment.
4
 The Court doesn’t consider arguments made with regard to Morales because the jury didn’t find
him liable for anything, and therefore, the motion for judgment as a matter of law is moot as to
him.
                                                 12
       Regarding Huthnance’s claims of post-arrest deprivations, “There’s been no evidence

that she had a constitutional right to citation release, which appears to be one of her claims or a

claim central to her due process claim.” Id. at 141. Moreover, defense counsel insisted that there

was no evidence to suggest that Officers Acebal or Antonio were obligated to advise her of her

right to citation release or to any other type of release. Id. Officer Antonio wasn’t even placed at

the police station by any of the witnesses presented during Huthnance’s case in chief, according

to defense counsel. Id.

       Defense counsel went on to request judgment as a matter of law for the District on

Huthnance’s First, Fourth, and Fifth Amendment claims. First, defense counsel argued that

Huthnance had failed to establish that a custom, policy, or practice of the District was the

motivating force behind the alleged impingement of her constitutional right. Id. Defense counsel

went on to argue that the district couldn’t have been placed on notice by the CCRB report and

cited case law as support. Id. at 141–42.

       Next, defense counsel argued that Longo’s testimony regarding the adequacy of the

District’s post-and-forfeit training was anecdotal and insufficient. He was required to come

forward with “some study, some report, something that shows that he’s looked cross-

jurisdictionally at what others are doing with respect to training for disorderly conduct.” Id. at

151.

       Regarding respondeat superior liability against the District for the false arrest claim,

defense counsel argued that “[t]here was 12-309 notice filed by the plaintiff so that any claim

resounding in tort of this sort is improper.” Id. at 152. This Court denied the Rule 50(a) motion,




                                                 13
and the defendants put on their case. Once all the evidence was in, 5 defense counsel moved for

judgment as a matter of law under Rule 50(a) once again. Counsel repeated most of the

arguments they had made after Huthnance rested but did raise a few additional arguments that

must be addressed.

        First, defense counsel insisted that qualified immunity shielded Officers Antonio and

Acebal from liability for Huthnance’s allegations. Mar. 23, 2011 A.M. Trial Tr. 129. Earlier,

defense counsel had argued that Officer Acebal’s probable cause determination was reasonable

and extended that argument here, contending that Officer Antonio’s probable cause

determination was similarly reasonable. Id. at 132. Next, defense counsel argued that the

officers are “entitled to judgment as to the common law claim, the false arrest, based on the

partially subjective test, her false arrest claim fails as a matter of law because the officers’

testimony that they operated in good faith remains unrebutted.” Id. They argued that this “good

faith” defense extends to the assault and battery claim against Officer Acebal. Id. Finally,

defense counsel argued that neither Officer Antonio nor Officer Acebal was involved in the

decision to determine Huthnance’s eligibility for various release options. Id.

        Counsel also expounded upon their Rule 50(a) motion in favor of the District. First, they

argued that Longo’s testimony should be rejected because he didn’t consider much of the

evidence in the defendants’ case in drawing his conclusions. Id. at 134–35. But because all



5
 The Supreme Court has made clear that at the Rule 50 stage, “although the court should review
the record as a whole, it must disregard all evidence favorable to the moving party that the jury is
not required to believe. That is, the court should give credence to the evidence favoring the
nonmovant as well as that evidence supporting the moving party that is uncontradicted and
unimpeached, at least to the extent that the evidence comes from disinterested witnesses.” Reeves
v. Sanderson Plumbing Prods., Inc., 530 U.S. 133, 151 (2000) (internal quotation marks and
citations omitted). Therefore, the Court won’t describe the defendants’ evidence in detail and
will only mention defense evidence as necessary in its analysis below, meaning when that
evidence was uncontradicted, unimpeached, and from a disinterested witness.
                                                  14
inferences must be drawn in Huthnance’s favor, and because the defense testimony at issue was

contradicted, impeached, or from an interested witness, this argument is a non-starter. Reeves v.

Sanderson Plumbing Prods., Inc., 530 U.S. 133, 151 (2000) (“[A]lthough the court should

review the record as a whole, it must disregard all evidence favorable to the moving party that

the jury is not required to believe. That is, the court should give credence to the evidence

favoring the nonmovant as well as that evidence supporting the moving party that is

uncontradicted and unimpeached, at least to the extent that the evidence comes from

disinterested witnesses.”) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).

            Next, defense counsel argued that assuming the CCRB Report provided notice of a

widespread constitutional problem, there was evidence that the District made affirmative changes

in response to that report, rendering Huthnance’s deliberate indifference argument insufficient.

They also argued that Huthnance abandoned her due process right by failing to read the form that

the officers presented to her. Id. at 137. Because those options were presented to her, she

received due process, and her Fifth Amendment claim against the District on that score should

fail. Id.

            After closing arguments and deliberation, the jury returned the verdict discussed above.

Defense counsel then timely renewed its Rule 50 motion—this time in writing and under Rule

50(b)—and moved in the alternative for a new trial and remittitur. Rule 50(b) provides:

            (b) Renewing the Motion After Trial; Alternative Motion for a New Trial
            If the court does not grant a motion for judgment as a matter of law made under
            Rule 50(a), the court is considered to have submitted the action to the jury subject
            to the court’s later deciding the legal questions raised by the motion. No later than
            28 days after the entry of judgment—or if the motion addresses a jury issue not
            decided by a verdict, no later than 28 days after the jury was discharged—the
            movant may file a renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law and may
            include an alternative or joint request for a new trial under Rule 59. In ruling on
            the renewed motion, the court may:



                                                     15
   (1) allow judgment on the verdict, if the jury returned a verdict;
   (2) order a new trial; or
   (3) direct the entry of judgment as a matter of law.

       (c) Granting the Renewed Motion; Conditional Ruling on a Motion for a New
       Trial.

       (1) In General
       If the court grants a renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law, it must also
       conditionally rule on any motion for a new trial by determining whether a new
       trial should be granted if the judgment is later vacated or reversed. The court must
       state the grounds for conditionally granting or denying the motion for a new trial.

       (2) Effect of a Conditional Ruling
       Conditionally granting the motion for a new trial does not affect the judgment’s
       finality; if the judgment is reversed, the new trial must proceed unless the
       appellate court orders otherwise. If the motion for a new trial is conditionally
       denied, the appellee may assert error in that denial; if the judgment is reversed,
       the case must proceed as the appellate court orders.

       II.     Legal Standard

       After a jury trial, the Court may grant a motion for judgment as a matter of law under

Rule 50 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure only if it finds that “a reasonable jury would not

have had a legally sufficient evidentiary basis to find for the party on that issue[.]” Fed. R. Civ.

P. 50(a)(1). Judgment as a matter of law is proper, “considering the evidence in the light most

favorable to the [non-movants] and making all reasonable inferences in their favor,” if the Court

concludes that there is no legally sufficient evidentiary basis for a reasonable jury to have found

in their favor under controlling law. Henry v. Pelland, 73 F.3d 397 (D.C. Cir. 1996); see Fox v.

District of Columbia, 990 F. Supp. 13, 19 (D.D.C. 1997). The jury’s verdict must stand “unless

the evidence, together with all inferences that can be reasonably drawn therefrom is so one-sided

[in favor of the moving party] that reasonable persons could not disagree on the verdict,” Milone

v. Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Auth., 91 F.3d 229, 231 (D.C. Cir. 1996), that is,

unless the nonmovant’s evidence is so insufficient that a reasonable finder of fact “could not



                                                 16
possibly find for the nonmovant.” 9 Moore’s Federal Practice § 50.60[1] at 50–87 (3d ed. 2002);

accord Muldrow ex rel. Estate of Muldrow v. Re-Direct, Inc., 493 F.3d 160, 165 (D.C. Cir.

2007).

         In deciding a motion for judgment as a matter of law, the Court is not to resolve

legitimately disputed issues of fact already decided by the jury. Even if the Court finds the

evidence that led to the jury verdict unpersuasive, or that it would have reached a different result

if it were sitting as the fact-finder, that is not a basis for overturning the jury’s verdict and

granting judgment as a matter of law. Id. The Court may not grant the motion unless “the

evidence is such that, without weighing the credibility of the witnesses or otherwise considering

the weight of the evidence, there can be but one conclusion as to the verdict that reasonable

[persons] could have reached.” Me, Inc. v. Taylor, 157 F.3d 139, 142 (2d Cir. 1998).

         Importantly, the Supreme Court has made clear that at the Rule 50 stage, “although the

court should review the record as a whole, it must disregard all evidence favorable to the moving

party that the jury is not required to believe. That is, the court should give credence to the

evidence favoring the nonmovant as well as that evidence supporting the moving party that is

uncontradicted and unimpeached, at least to the extent that the evidence comes from

disinterested witnesses.” Reeves v. Sanderson Plumbing Prods., Inc., 530 U.S. 133, 151 (2000)

(internal quotation marks and citations omitted).

         Finally, because a post-trial Rule 50(b) motion is limited to a renewal of a Rule 50(a)

motion for judgment as a matter of law, the post-trial motion is limited to those grounds that

were specifically raised in the prior motion. Thomas v. Mineta, 310 F. Supp. 2d 198, 204 (D.D.C.

2004) (citing Tolbert v. Queens College, 242 F.3d 58, 70 (2d Cir. 2001)); see also Whelan v.




                                                   17
Abell, 48 F.3d 1247, 1251 (D.C. Cir. 1995) (holding that a movant who omits a theory from his

Rule 50(a) motion waives the theory as the basis for a Rule 50(b) motion).

        III.    Analysis

                a. Judgment As a Matter of Law

        The District first argues that it’s entitled to judgment as a matter of law on Huthnance’s

First and Fourth Amendment claims because she “did not establish deliberate indifference to a

known problem by District policymakers.” Mot. Judgment Matter of Law 9–10, Apr. 28, 011,

ECF No. 241. Section 1 of the Civil Rights Act of 1871, now codified at 42 U.S.C. § 1983,

provides a cause of action for monetary damages and injunctive relief against “[e]very person

who, under color of [law] . . . subjects or caused to be subjected, any person . . . to the

deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution . . . .” In Monell

v. Dep’t of Social Services, 436 U.S. 658 (1978), the Supreme Court ruled that a municipality is a

“person” who can be held liable under section 1983, but only when the municipality’s “policy or

custom . . . inflicts the injury.” Id. at 694. In subsequent cases, the Supreme Court and the D.C.

Circuit have held that a city’s inaction, including its failure to train or supervise its employees

adequately, constitutes a “policy or custom” under Monell when it can be said that the failure

amounts to “‘deliberate indifference’ towards the constitutional rights of persons in its domain.’”

City of Canton v. Harris, 489 U.S. 378, 388–89 & n.7 (1989) (recognizing municipal liability

under section 1983 for failure to train adequately); see Rogala v. District of Columbia, 161 F.3d

44, 56 (D.C. Cir. 1998) (recognizing liability for failure to train or supervise); Triplett v. District

of Columbia, 108 F.3d 1450, 1453 (D.C. Cir. 1997) (noting that “inaction giving rise to or

endorsing a custom” can be the basis for section 1983 liability).




                                                  18
       The District makes three arguments against the deliberate indifference verdict. First, it

argues that Huthnance presented insufficient evidence of a known problem of constitutional

magnitude. Mot Judgment Matter of Law 9. Second, it argues that Huthnance presented

insufficient evidence that the district was deliberately indifferent to a known problem. Id. at 11.

Third, it argues that the District’s failure to take specific steps was not the moving force behind

Huthnance’s constitutional deprivations. The Court will take these arguments up in turn.

       The District argues that Huthnance failed to show that it was on notice of a widespread

problem of improper disorderly conduct arrests by MPD officers. Relying on Carter v. District of

Columbia, 795 F.2d 116, 124 (D.C. Cir. 1986), the District argues that the CCRB report didn’t

put it on notice. Mot. Judgment Matter of Law 10. In Carter, plaintiffs asserted constitutional

and common law claims against five police officers, the police chief, and the District of

Columbia. The trial judge directed verdicts for the police chief and two of the officers on all

claims, and for the city on the constitutional tort claim asserted against it. The jury found liability

and awarded damages on the remaining claims, and the district court entered judgments for

plaintiffs. Carter, 795 F.2d at 118.

       The Carter plaintiffs charged that the city and the police chief so neglected to train,

supervise, investigate, and discipline police officers as to acquiesce in pervasive misconduct—

including use of excessive force—that caused their constitutional deprivations. Id. at 122. To

make their case, the plaintiffs offered, among other things, “21 citizen complaints, out of 1315

filed, sustained by the Civilian Complaint Review Board (CCRB) during the period August 1982

to February 1984, and referred to Police Chief Turner for action.” Id. at n.6. The Court of

Appeals found this evidence insufficient because it “does not show . . . which, if any, of the 21

complaints involved misconduct similar to the abuses alleged by plaintiffs; it reveals only—and



                                                  19
without detail—that some 428 of the 1315 complaints alleged the use of excessive force.” Id.

The plaintiffs also presented testimony and evidence of six isolated incidents of District police

using excessive force. Id. at 123. It concluded that “the assorted actual instances of misconduct

demonstrated in this case do not line up to compose a common or widespread pattern of police

misbehavior adequate to establish § 1983 liability.”

       The District argues that, like Carter, “the four sustained complaints identified by the

CCRB were scattered during the period FY 2001 through FY 2003, and did not evidence a

widespread problem with disorderly conduct arrests.” Mot. J. Matter of Law 13. It points out that

the CCRB report only concluded that there was a potential problem with disorderly conduct

arrests based on its comparison of MPD’s total arrests rates for disorderly conduct with other

jurisdictions. Pl.’s Ex. 4. Moreover, those statistics were drawn from 1995–2000, and plaintiff

introduced no evidence to suggest that the difference in rates continued in the years immediately

preceding her arrest in November 2005. Id.

       The District’s Carter argument fails for several reasons. First, the District assumes,

without citation to authority, that to provide “notice,” the CCRB report must comprehensively

document a “widespread” problem of constitutional dimension. That assumption can’t withstand

scrutiny for two reasons: (1) the CCRB report could provide the District notice simply by giving

it enough information that it “should have known” about the underlying constitutional problem;

(2) the CCRB report wasn’t the only evidence of this problem available to the District. The Court

will explain each of these points in turn.

        Deliberate indifference liability may “be premised on obliviousness or constructive

notice.” Farmer v. Brennan, 511 U.S. 825, 841 (1994); see also Connick v. Thompson, 131 S.Ct.

1350, 1360 (2011) (“[W]hen city policymakers are on actual or constructive notice that a



                                                20
particular omission in their training program causes city employees to violate citizens’

constitutional rights, the city may be deemed deliberately indifferent if the policymakers choose

to retain that program.”); Bd. of County Comm’rs of Bryan County v. Brown, 520 U.S. 397, 407

(1997) (“[C]ontinued adherence to an approach that they know or should know has failed to

prevent tortious conduct by employees may establish the conscious disregard for the

consequences of their action—the ‘deliberate indifference’—necessary to trigger municipal

liability.”) (emphasis added and citations omitted). In light of the CCRB report’s discussion of

several violations, the post and forfeit procedure’s tendency to render citizens’ constitutional

rights vulnerable, its conclusion that “a significant number of improper or unlawful disorderly

conduct arrests might be going unnoticed,” and its recommendations to MPD to address the

problem, the District can’t put the blinders on and pretend that it didn’t know there was a

problem.

       The District’s argument invites this Court to ignore the reality of the CCRB’s function as

a notice-providing entity. Its very job is to continuously evaluate MPD’s track record to identify

problems just like the one it found here and to make recommendations for resolving those

problems. The District makes the argument that if the CCRB report’s conclusions about a few

bad arrests put it on notice, then “‘practically every large metropolitan police force, it would

seem, could be targeted for liability,’” Mot. J. Matter Law 10 (quoting Carter, 795 F.2d at 123),

but that gets it backwards; if a large metropolitan police force can ignore the thorough study and

recommendations of an independent agency it created specifically to notify it of potential

problems, then no large metropolitan police force—it would seem—could ever be “targeted” for

liability. The Supreme Court has made clear that “notice” doesn’t require actual knowledge of

the precise extent and specific contours of a constitutional problem. It refers instead to a



                                                 21
municipality’s possession of enough information that it “should have known” of a constitutional

problem. The CCRB report provided the District with enough information that it should have

known of the constitutional problem that resulted in violation of Huthnance’s constitutional

rights.

          It’s true that in Carter the Court of Appeals held that evidence from the CCRB report was

insufficient to support a jury’s verdict because it “does not show . . . which, if any, of the 21

complaints involved misconduct similar to the abuses alleged by plaintiffs; it reveals only—and

without detail—that some 428 of the 1315 complaints alleged the use of excessive force.” Id. But

just because the Court of Appeals found particular CCRB evidence insufficient in one situation

decades ago doesn’t mean that all CCRB evidence is forever blackballed and incapable of

putting the District on notice of a problem. The Court of Appeals in Carter had particular gripes

with the CCRB evidence before it: (1) lack of detail, and (2) lack of evidence of similarity

between the problems reported in the CCRB evidence and the plaintiffs’ concerns. Id.

          Here, the there are no such problems. Huthnance was the victim of the exact same

problem the CCRB report warned about. Nor was the CCRB report based on only a handful of

“scattered” incidents of the type Carter found “not [to] coalesce into a discernable ‘policy.’” Id.

at 123. It also rested on (1) the disproportionately high percentage of the agency’s initial group

of police complaints that involved wrongful disorderly conduct arrests, (2) that all fully-

adjudicated complaints of wrongly disorderly conduct were sustained, (3) the existence of “a

significant number” of yet-to-be adjudicated complaints that appeared consistent with the four

unlawful and retaliatory disorderly conduct arrests the CCRB did adjudicate, (4) the possibility

that the “challenging” subjective judgments called for by the disorderly conduct statute permit it

to be used as a tool for retaliatory arrests, (5) the danger that the overwhelming use of post-and-



                                                  22
forfeit for disorderly conduct arrests shields them from review, thereby tacitly encouraging

retaliatory arrests, and (6) the considerable unexplained disparity in arrest rates between the

District and comparable jurisdictions. Pl.’s Ex. 4. These details separate this CCRB report

evidence from that the Court of Appeals rejected in Carter and support the report’s conclusion

that “a significant number of improper or unlawful disorderly conduct arrests” might be going

unnoticed, and that those thus far identified “are an important warning sign that requires action.”

Pl.’s Ex. 4 at 10, 21. The CCRB report thus provided the District with constructive notice of

widespread constitutional violations.

       As mentioned above, the CCRB Report wasn’t the only source of notice to the District.

Both experts testified about a study performed by Dr. James Ginger that found over 34% of

disorderly conduct arrest reports from the first six months of 2005 failed to state probable cause

for arrest. Mar. 10, 2011 P.M. Trial Tr. 75; Mar. 21, 2011 PM Trial Tr. 115–22. Both experts

agreed that, had the District reviewed the PD-163s in a systematic fashion, these deficiencies—

and the larger problem of unconstitutional arrests that they indicate—would have been identified.

Mar. 10, 2011 A.M. Trial Tr. 50; Mar. 22, 2011 A.M. Trial Tr. 47–48. Both experts also testified

that even without the CCRB Report, the District was on constructive notice because it should

have been reviewing or sampling disorderly conduct arrest reports. Mar. 10, 2011 A.M. Trial Tr.

50; Mar. 10, 2011 P.M. Trial Tr. 81; Mar. 22, 2011 A.M. Trial Tr. 44, 47–48. This testimony was

uncontradicted. The Court wants to be clear that it isn’t saying that the District should have been

on notice because of this expert testimony. Instead, the expert testimony reveals that had the

District fulfilled its obligation to review its own arrest reports as the CCRB report recommended,

it would have seen indisputable evidence of widespread constitutional violations. In short, it

should have known of these problems even without the CCRB report. That said, the CCRB report



                                                 23
did a lot of the work for the District and put it in front of the Mayor, the City Council, and MPD

on a silver platter. Thus, the jury plainly had sufficient evidence to conclude that the District was

on notice of widespread constitutional violations related to the post-and-forfeit procedure.

       Next, the District argues that Huthnance presented insufficient evidence that the District

was deliberately indifferent to a known problem. It argues that in response to the CCRB Report,

and prior to Huthnance’s arrest, the District improved its training materials and modified its

arrest procedure to ensure that citizens were provided with written notice about the collateral

forfeiture process and that arrestees sign an acknowledgment of their choice to forfeit collateral.

Mot. J. Matter Law 14. Thus, there was no basis for a finding of deliberate indifference. Id. The

District cites the D.C. Circuit’s decision in Warren v. District of Columbia, 353 F.3d 36, 39

(D.C. Cir. 2004), for the proposition that deliberate indifference “simply means” that “faced with

actual or constructive knowledge that its agents will probably violate constitutional rights, a

municipality may not adopt a policy of inaction.” Because it took some affirmative steps in

response to the CCRB report’s recommendations, the District argues that it clearly didn’t adopt a

“policy of inaction” and thus there was insufficient evidence to prove that it was deliberately

indifferent. This argument fails as well.

       The District bases its argument on an overly-narrow reading of “policy of inaction.” The

term “policy of inaction” doesn’t refer exclusively to those municipalities that do literally

nothing in response to a known problem. Instead, as the D.C. Circuit made clear in Daskalea,

once the District and its policymakers “were on notice,” “substantial intervention” was required

to prevent liability for deliberate indifference. Daskalea, 227 F.3d at 441. In that case, like this

one, the District argued that it couldn’t be held liable for deliberate indifference because it had

issued a policy in response to the problem. Id. at 442–43. The Court of Appeals rejected that



                                                  24
argument, holding that “a paper policy cannot insulate a municipality from liability where there

is evidence, as there was here, that the municipality was deliberately indifferent to the policy’s

violation.” Id. (citations omitted). The “affirmative steps” the District points to in this case are

the same sort of “paper policy” that Daskalea makes clear doesn’t—on its own—do the trick.

Mot. J. Matter Law 15 (“The passage of a statute, modification of . . . procedures . . . and

revision of . . . training materials . . . demonstrate that the District was not deliberately

indifferent or indifferent at all to the CCRB’s recommendations.”)Thus, it can’t be said that

doing literally anything in response to a known problem is sufficient to avoid deliberate

indifference liability. Indeed, in light of Daskalea, it’s more accurate to equate a “policy of

inaction” with a failure to undertake “substantial intervention.” Id. at 441.

        In this case, Huthnance presented a great deal of evidence at trial of the District’s

deliberate indifference. She demonstrated that the District made numerous representations to the

CCRB about steps it would take to address the concerns raised and recommendations made in

the 2003 Report. See Mar. 9, 2011 A.M. Trial Tr. 66–67, 71; Pl.’s Ex. 10 at 43. Huthnance also

showed that the District in fact took almost none of the steps recommended to the CCRB, and

may well have misrepresented those that it did take. Thus, it was undisputed that, despite the

District’s representations to the contrary:

            •   No sampling study of disorderly conduct arrests was performed, even though the
                CCRB stated that “this review is critical” (Mar. 23, 2011 A.M. Trial Tr. 128; Pl.’s
                Ex. 4 at 21; Pl.’s Ex. 104);

            •   No videotaped message from the MPD chief emphasizing the importance of
                properly applying the disorderly conduct statute was created (Mar. 11, 2011 P.M.
                Trial Tr. at 7–9; Pl.’s Ex. 11 at 39; Pl.’s Ex. 57 at 44 n.20);

            •   The dated and ineffective disorderly conduct training video was not revised (Mar.
                11, 2011 P.M. Trial Tr. 7–9; Pl.’s Ex. 11 at 39);




                                                  25
               •   No roll call module on disorderly conduct was presented to incumbent officers in
                   June 2005 or at any other time (Mar. 10, 2011 P.M. Trial Tr. 42–43; Pl.’s Ex. 11
                   at 39; Pl.’s Ex. 38);

               •   No in-service training on disorderly conduct was provided to incumbent officers
                   until 2007, and the in-service training had no new or different information from
                   what had been in the deficient academy training materials for years (Mar. 10,
                   2011 P.M. Trial Tr. 46–50; Pl.’s Ex. 11 at 39; Pl.’s Ex. 39); and

               •   The District’s touted changes to the disorderly conduct statute occurred before the
                   CCRB Report was issued, and didn’t actually affect the disorderly conduct
                   offense (Mar. 9, 2011 A.M. Trial Tr. 44–46).

The jury also heard evidence that the District’s 30(b)(6) representative falsely testified under

oath that both the revised training video and the video from the chief had been produced and

shown to in-service MPD officers, and that the District didn’t admit that these videos were never

made until mere weeks before the original trial date. Mar. 11, 2011 PM Trial Tr. 3–5, 7–9. Both

experts agreed that these misrepresentations and/or failures to act were strong evidence of the

District’s deliberate indifference. Id. at 18; Mar. 22, 2011 A.M. Trial Tr. 44, 47–48, 50–51. Mr.

Gallagher went so far as to testify that the CCRB would have felt “duped” had it known just how

little MPD actually did. Mar. 22, 2011 P.M. Trial Tr. 68–70. Thus, there was easily sufficient

evidence upon which the jury could base its conclusion that the District was deliberately

indifferent.

        Finally, the District argues that Huthnance failed to prove that its deliberate indifference

caused her wrongful arrest. Mot. J. Matter Law 14. The Court declines to address this argument,

however, because the District failed to raise it in its Rule 50(a) Motion. See Mar. 11, 2011 P.M.

Trial Tr. 138–53; U.S. Indus., Inc. v. Blake Const. Co., Inc., 671 F.2d 539, 548 (D.C. Cir. 1982).

        Next, the District argues that Huthnance’s Fifth Amendment claim fails as a matter of

law. Mot. J. Matter Law 15. Although the defendants raise several arguments, the only argument

that they preserved by raising it at the Rule 50(a) stage was that Huthnance had no constitutional

                                                   26
right to citation release and waived any due process right she might have had by signing the form

presented to her at the police station that contained fine print informing her of her release

options. This argument succeeds, and the Court grants judgment as a matter of law in favor of

the District and the officer defendants on Huthnance’s Fifth Amendment claim for the reasons

that follow.

       The Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution prohibits—among other things—

differential treatment of similarly situated parties absent a sufficient governmental interest. See,

e.g., Tele-Communications of Key West, Inc. V. United States, 757 F.2d 1330, 1340 (D.C. Cir.

1985). The concept of “equal protection” embodied in the Fourteenth Amendment—which

applies only against the states—is reflected in the Fifth Amendment’s Due Process Clause,

which is enforceable against the District of Columbia. Bolling v. Sharpe, 347 U.S. 497, 500

(1954) (holding, through the doctrine that has come to be known as “reverse incorporation,” that

the Fifth Amendment rights of District of Columbia plaintiffs were violated because racial

segregation cannot be justified by a legitimate government interest).

       Huthnance has argued—for years now—that she has been the subject of unjustified

differential treatment by the District in violation of her equal protection rights. She contends that

the District treats citizens arrested with probable cause differently than those arrested without it

and that it does so without a justifying legitimate government interest. MPD officers arrested her,

she insists, without probable cause and then denied her information about her entitlement to

citation release as a means of coercing her to choose the post-and-forfeit procedure. They did

this, she contends, so that they could effectively shield her unlawful arrest from the scrutiny of

later review. See Jury Instructions 12; Amended Compl. ¶¶ 27, 33, 43, 78–80, 101, 103. Not only

is avoiding review not a legitimate government interest to justify this differential treatment, it



                                                 27
actually tends to impinge citizens’ rights to be free from unlawful seizure (Fourth Amendment)

and to protest unlawful arrests and criticize the police (First Amendment).

       The District counters that Huthnance’s argument fails because she was offered citation

release in the fine print of a form she signed to accept the post-and-forfeit procedure at the police

station on the night of her arrest. Huthnance says she never read the form because it was brought

to her filled out with instructions to sign it so that she could go home. The Court need not resolve

the question of whether the fine print provided Huthnance with notice, however, because even if

it did, Huthnance’s Fifth Amendment claim fails. In order to show that the unlawfully arrested

were treated differently than those arrested with probable cause, Huthnance would have to have

produced evidence that those arrested with probable cause were actually given more or better

notice of their citation release option than she was. This is the very heart of differential

treatment. She didn’t produce a shred of such evidence. Therefore, even if this Court were to

agree with her that the fine print on the form didn’t provide her with any opportunity to choose

citation release, without additional evidence that those arrested with probable cause were

actually treated differently in any way, her Fifth Amendment equal protection claim must fail.

       The Court notes that one might argue that—based on the jury instructions and the

Amended Complaint—Huthnance’s Fifth Amendment claim was actually a substantive due

process claim based on violation of her right to citation release. Jury Instructions 12 (“She claims

that because citation release is never presented to arrested citizens as an option, the coercive

effect of possibly spending more time custody tilts the scales heavily in favor of paying the $25

collateral at the police station for many citizens.”); Amended Compl. ¶ 76. Huthnance denies this

characterization: “Nor may Defendants prevail based upon the only argument they did preserve:

that Plaintiff was not constitutionally entitled to citation release. This argument fundamentally



                                                  28
misstates Plaintiff’s Fifth Amendment claim.” Opp’n Mot. J. Matter Law 9. Be that as it may, the

Court—out of an abundance of caution—seeks to show why this claim couldn’t succeed under

the Fifth Amendment either. The reason it couldn’t succeed is simply that there is no authority

for the proposition that arrestees have a constitutional right to citation release. Indeed, the

Supreme Court has established that the government may detain an arrestee for up to forty-eight

hours prior to a probable cause determination. County of Riverside v. McLaughlin, 500 U.S. 44,

56 (1991). In light of that clear rule, it would be odd if the Constitution also required citation

release. It is also clear that the many other jurisdictions that don’t offer citation release aren’t in

standing violation of the Fifth Amendment simply because they don’t offer that option. Thus,

Huthnance can’t persuasively argue that her Fifth Amendment rights were violated because she

wasn’t offered citation release.

        Finally, she might argue that the Court still hasn’t squarely addressed her precise Fifth

Amendment claim. She could argue that she was making neither a differential treatment claim,

nor a claim that she has a constitutional right to citation release. In her opposition, Huthnance

also argues that her “Due Process rights were violated by the practice of covering up ‘contempt

of cop’ arrests by funneling arrestees through the District’s unique post-an-forfeit release

procedure. . . . This practice deprived Plaintiff of the opportunity to make a knowing and

voluntary choice with regard to her rights, and, indirectly, the right to rebut state allegations of

criminal conduct through a trial and obtaining a binding, public judgment of acquittal from the

state itself.” Opp’n Mot. J. Matter Law 9. The problem with this phrasing is that it shows up in

neither the jury instructions nor the Amended Complaint. The Amended Complaint surely can’t

cover this argument because it is clearly and explicitly premised on the equal protection

principles of the Fifth Amendment’s Due Process Clause. Amended Compl. 14. Thus, this novel



                                                   29
phraseology is foreign to this case as it has existed for several years and, more importantly, as it

was presented to the jury. Thus, there wasn’t sufficient evidence for any reasonable jury to have

ruled in Huthnance’s favor on such a theory.

       For these reasons, the Court denies the District’s argument for judgment as a matter of

law in all respects except one. The motion is granted insofar as it applies to Huthnance’s Fifth

Amendment claim against the District and the defendant officers. Because she failed to produce

sufficient evidence of differential treatment, no reasonable jury could have found an equal

protection violation here.

               b. Motion for a New Trial

       The District has five sets of arguments that these defendants are entitled to a new trial: (1)

the verdict was severely tainted by the failure to bifurcate; (2) improper admission of evidence;

(3) improper exclusion of evidence; (4) the submission of erroneous legal theories to the jury;

and (5) the submission of erroneous instructions to the jury. After explaining the legal standard

for a motion for new trial, the Court will consider each of these arguments in turn.

                        i. Legal Standard for A Motion for New Trial

       A district court should deny a motion for new trial unless “the court is convinced that the

jury verdict was a seriously erroneous result where denial of the motion will result in a clear

miscarriage of justice.” Webb v. Hyman, 861 F. Supp. 1094, 1109–10 (D.D.C. 1994) (internal

quotations omitted). Courts hesitate to disturb jury verdicts “to protect the jury’s function in the

judicial system.” Id. at 1109. Indeed, a motion for a new trial asks the judge to “take[] over, if []

not usurp, the prime function of the jury as the trier of the facts.” Langevine v. District of

Columbia, 106 F.3d 1018, 1023 (D.C. Cir. 1997) (citations omitted).




                                                  30
       Each of the bases of defendants’ motion is committed to this Court’s sound discretion as

is the general decision about whether to order a new trial. See, e.g., Muldrow v. Re-Direct, Inc.,

493 F.3d 160, 166 (D.C. Cir. 2007) (new trial and evidentiary rulings); McLaughlin v. State

Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 30 F.3d 861, 870 (7th Cir. 1994) (bifurcation); United States v. Weisz,

718 F.2d 413, 431 (D.C. Cir. 1983) (admission of evidence). Moreover, where an alleged error

could have been cured at trial, but was not, the issue cannot be raised later. See Dorocon, Inc. v.

Burke, NO. 02-2556, 2006 WL 468009, *3 (D.D.C. Feb. 27, 2006); see also Wright & Miller, 11

Federal Practice & Procedure Civ. §2805 (2d ed.). As discussed below, none of the defendants’

many arguments justifies disturbing the jury’s verdict and granting a new trial in this case.

                       ii. Bifurcation

       First defendants argue that the Court’s denial of their motion to bifurcate entitles the

defendant officers to a new trial because evidence relevant only to Huthnance’s claims against

the District unfairly prejudiced their case. The problem with this argument is that the decision

whether to bifurcate a trial is left to this Court’s sound discretion, and defendants have failed to

show that they were actually prejudiced by the failure to bifurcate. Moreover, the defendants

failed to take certain easy steps that would have gone a long way toward curing this error at trial.

They didn’t request limiting instructions with regard to any of the allegedly prejudicial evidence

against the officers arising from the failure to bifurcate. Moreover, they didn’t assign different

lawyers to the officers and the district, thus exacerbating the alleged problem. Finally, while it

may be true that less contempt of cop evidence would have been admissible in a trial against the

individual officers by themselves, a good portion of it surely would have been relevant and

admissible. After all, Huthnance was entitled to establish that she was a victim of that

phenomenon, just as she was entitled to elicit evidence of deficient training and supervision to



                                                 31
prove that it was more likely than not that she was wrongly arrested because the officers were

poorly trained and supervised. Therefore, bifurcation wouldn’t have rendered all or necessarily

even most of this evidence inadmissible. Simply put, the defendants have failed to prove that this

Court’s decision not to allow bifurcation in this case caused the sort of prejudice that requires a

new trial. To the extent that there was any such damage, the District won’t be heard to complain

about it now in light of its failure to take obvious steps to mitigate that damage.

        Relatedly, defendants argue that the District’s discovery responses further unduly

prejudice Antonio and Acebal. During discovery, Huthnance never served any written discovery

on Acebal or Antonio. Instead, all written discovery was served upon the District. During trial,

this Court allowed Huthnance to publish written discovery responses that the defendant officers

argue prejudiced them and require a new trial. This argument fails because the Court allowed

those defendants to testify that they didn’t assist in preparing the District’s written discovery

responses and allowed a limiting jury instruction on this point. In light of those precautions and

the lack of any evidence of actual prejudice, this Court will not disturb the jury’s verdict in this

case.

                      iii. Exclusion of Evidence

        The defendants next argue that they’re entitled to a new trial because this Court

improperly excluded: (1) a 2005 lesson plan used by MPD to train recruits at the Academy on

disorderly conduct; (2) a “radio run log” that purportedly established that Huthnance was

arrested at around 2:00 a.m. on November 16, 2005; and (3) a blank two-sided PD-67 form that

defendants failed to produce until the weekend before trial. This Court finds that these exclusions

were proper, and even if they weren’t, they were harmless errors.




                                                 32
       The defendants’ argument regarding the 2005 lesson plan fails because defendants

introduced a 2005 handout on disorderly conduct that contained almost identical information and

was distributed to MPD recruits at the academy in conjunction with the lesson plan. Def.’s Ex. 3.

Thus, the exclusion of the lesson plan itself couldn’t have been the sort of prejudicial error that

would merit a new trial. Moreover, this issue has already been briefed and argued by the parties

and defendants offer no new reason for this Court to reconsider its decision to exclude the lesson

plan (because of its introduction less than two weeks before trial). Thus, there is no reason to

grant a new trial based on the exclusion of the 2005 lesson plan.

       The exclusion of the radio run log has also already been briefed and argued by the

parties. Emergency Mot. Exclude Purported Dispatcher’s Report, Mar. 14, 2011, ECF No. 214;

Mar. 14, 2011 A.M Trial Tr. 2–7. The defendants add nothing new to the arguments made then,

and the Court rejects them again for the same reasons. The District’s 30(b)(6) witness

affirmatively represented that the log couldn’t be conclusively linked to Huthnance’s arrest.

Emergency Mot. Exclude 4–6. Moreover, the exclusion of the run log—even if it was error—

was harmless. There was no evidence that the call to the dispatch happened contemporaneously

with the arrest, and the time of the arrest wasn’t determinative of liability. Thus, there’s no

reason to believe that this exclusion—even if was error, which it wasn’t—was prejudicial, and it

certainly doesn’t merit a new trial.

       Defendants also complain about this Court’s missing evidence instruction to the jury,

which said:

       There has been testimony about a dispatcher’s report that allegedly shows the
       time that the arresting officers reported Ms. Huthnance’s arrest. However, the
       defendants did not introduce this document into evidence. You may infer that the
       dispatcher’s report was not introduced into evidence because it does not exist or
       because it contains information that would have been unfavorable to the
       defendants’ case.

                                                 33
Jury Instructions 3, ECF No. 222. Defendants fail to show that this instruction was unduly

prejudicial to them. As discussed above, even if the radio run log had been admitted, it wouldn’t

necessarily have meant that Huthnance’s time line was wrong or that defendants’ was correct

because there was no evidence that the call to dispatch happened contemporaneously with her

arrest. Moreover, as mentioned above, the time of arrest wasn’t a dispositive issue in this case.

Thus, even if this instruction was error, which it wasn’t, it was harmless and doesn’t require

disturbing the jury’s verdict in favor of a new trial.

        The exclusion of the blank two-sided PD-67 has also been briefed and argued by the

parties, and defendants offer nothing new here to suggest that the exclusion was erroneous.

Emergency Mot. Strike District’s Amended Discovery Responses, Mar. 6, 2011, ECF No. 208;

Mar. 7, 2011 A.M. Trial Tr. 102–04. Indeed, the defendants admit that there was “some basis for

the exclusion.” Mot. J. Matter Law 27. Moreover, its exclusion was harmless even if it was error.

Defendants argue that “it would have been impossible for [Huthnance] to win” her Fifth

Amendment claim had the two-sided PD-67 been admitted into evidence because the missing

page described the citation release option. Id. But Huthnance testified emphatically that because

Acebal told her that she’d be released if she signed the PD-67, she didn’t read the form

(including any back page that may have existed) and wasn’t advised of her right to citation

release in any other way. Indeed, even if the two-sided form had been produced, the defendants

were unable to prove that the form Huthnance received had two sides. Thus, the exclusion of the

two-sided form wasn’t prejudicial, and the Court declines to grant a new trial on this ground.

        The Court also notes that some of these documents were excluded because of defendants’

discovery misconduct, and it’s clear that the exclusion of relevant and highly probative evidence

is a potential sanction for a litigant’s failure to adhere to the discovery rules. Fed. R. Civ. P. 37.

                                                  34
This isn’t to say that this Court excluded these documents to sanction defendants. Instead, the

Court notes it merely to show that these problems—to the extent there is any problem—were

preventable. All the District had to do in many instances was follow the rules. The new trial

motion can’t be used to fix problems that should have been resolved long before trial ever

started.

                         iv. Inclusion of Evidence

           Conversely, defendants object to testimony regarding the Ginger Report, all of Longo’s

testimony, all evidence relating to the post-and-forfeit procedure, all evidence regarding events

after Huthnance’s arrest, and all CCRB reports. Mot. J. Matter Law 28–38. These points have

already been thoroughly briefed and argued by the parties and ruled on by this Court. Mot.

Limine, Sept. 3, 2010, ECF No. 160; Mot. Limine, Sept. 10, 2010, ECF No. 161; Mot. Limine,

Sept. 10, 2010, ECF No. 162; Mot. Expedite, Sept. 11, 2010, ECF No. 163; Pretrial Conf. Tr.,

Sept. 13, 2010. Defendants provide no new reasons to believe the Court’s decisions on these

matters were incorrect much less that they require a new trial.

           Defendants raise several objections to the testimony regarding the Ginger Report. Mot. J.

Matter Law 28–31: (1) Ginger wasn’t subject to cross-examination; (2) “there was no testimony

of an expert in statistics as to the validity of the methodology used to select the subset of reports”

that he reviewed; (3) if Ginger had been presented as a testifying expert, he wouldn’t have been

allowed to testify; and (4) testimony regarding his report was irrelevant or more prejudicial than

probative. Id.

           The Court has already ruled on these objections and there is no need to go through every

jot and tittle of the parties’ arguments on this score again because it is abundantly clear that—in

this case—even if allowing reliance on Ginger’s report was error, it was harmless. Federal Rule



                                                  35
of Evidence 703 permits a testifying expert to rely on reports prepared by others for the specific

purpose of providing a basis for the testifying expert’s opinions as long as they are “of a type

reasonably relied upon by experts in the particular field.” Both experts testified that Ginger’s

report is of a type reasonably relied upon by experts in the field. Mar. 10, 2011 A.M. Trial Tr.

42; Mar. 21, 2011 P.M. Trial Tr. 123. Moreover, to the extent that the testifying experts

“parroted” Ginger’s conclusions, nothing prevented counsel from challenging those conclusions

by cross-examining the parroting expert witness. True, that would have been difficult for

defendants in light of the fact that their own expert endorsed Dr. Ginger’s report, but that only

shows that the defendants weren’t at all prejudiced by the inclusion of this testimony. In short,

the parties’ reliance on the Ginger report simply doesn’t require a new trial.

       Defendants go on to argue that Longo’s testimony should have been excluded because:

(1) he was merely a “mouthpiece” for Dr. Ginger; (2) his testimony was “rife” with subjective

opinions; (3) he made legal conclusions in violation of Federal Rule of Evidence 702; (4) he

testified as to an ultimate issue; (5) his testimony wasn’t based on a standard of care and/or

wasn’t based on a comparison with the practices of other jurisdictions; (6) his opinions regarding

post-and-forfeit were “impermissibly subjective”; and (7) his testimony’s unfair prejudice

outweighed its probative value.” Mot. J. Matter Law 31–35. These arguments all fail.

       First, although it’s true that Longo testified that he relied upon Ginger’s report, he also

testified that he performed his own independent review of the PD-163 arrest reports and

extensive case materials in forming his opinion. Mar. 10, 2011 A.M. Trial Tr. 46; Mar. 10, 2011

P.M. Trial Tr. 9; Mar. 11, 2011 A.M. Trial Tr. 85. Moreover, his testimony was extensive and

covered more ground than just Dr. Ginger’s report.




                                                 36
         Second, defendants provide no examples of Dr. Ginger’s “subjective” opinions, nor any

explanation of how those opinions had an impermissible effect on the jury. Mot. J. Matter Law

31. Without more, this bare bones conclusory argument is simply insufficient to merit a new

trial.

         Third, defendants’ argument that Longo testified as to legal conclusions is unpersuasive.

Although it’s true that experts shouldn’t testify as to legal conclusions, an expert may use terms

such as “probable cause” or “deliberate indifference,” as long as he or she uses them in a manner

that is readily understood by the jury and not likely to cause confusion or lead the jury to an

incorrect view of the law. Burkhart v. WMATA, 112 F.3d 1207, 1212–13; see also Hayter v. City

of Castle Rock, 154 F.3d 269, 274 (5th Cir. 1998) (allowing police practices expert to conclude

“that no reasonable officer could believe that he or she had probable cause” to make arrest at

issue). Defendants fail to point to any instance in which Longo’s testimony could have possibly

led the jury to an incorrect legal conclusion or a conclusion inconsistent with the jury

instructions. Indeed, it’s hard to imagine how a plaintiff could ever make a case for a violation of

the type alleged here without offering such testimony. Finally, to the extent there was error here

despite the arguments above, that error was harmless, especially in light of the fact that

defendants elicited the same sort of testimony from their own expert. Mar. 14, 2011 P.M. Trial

Tr. 114–20.

         Fourth, defendants also fail to cite any instance of Longo testifying to an ultimate issue,

but even if they had, this argument would fail. Federal Rule of Evidence 704(a) makes clear that

experts may testify to ultimate issues. Moreover, defendants fail to show how any such testimony

was so prejudicial as to require a new trial.




                                                  37
       Fifth, defendants argue that Longo’s testimony was inadmissible because it wasn’t based

on a standard of care or grounded in a comparison of the District’s practices with those of other

jurisdictions. But Longo clearly had an adequate basis for his testimony: he had three decades of

personal experience as a police officer, trainer, supervisor, and he was familiar with generally

accepted police practices. Expertise gained through personal experience is a valid basis for

expert testimony. See, e.g., United States v. Parra, 402 F.3d 752, 758–60 (7th Cir. 2005). This

Court accepted Longo’s qualifications and admitted him as an expert to testify following defense

counsel’s voir dire. Mar. 10, 2011 A.M. Trial Tr. 41. Thus, defendants can’t argue that Longo’s

testimony was without basis.

       Moreover, the requirement that an expert articulate a “standard of care” applies to

negligence cases, not § 1983 municipal liability cases under Monell and its progeny. The two

cases defendants cite for the proposition that expert testimony must be based on a standard of

care address negligence claims. Mot. J. Matter Law 32 (citing Nat’l Tel. Coop. Ass’n v. Exxon

Mobil Corp., 244 F.3d 153, 154, 157 (D.C. Cir. 2001); Butera v. District of Columbia, 235 F.3d

637, 659 & n.29 (D.C. Cir. 2001). Even if this weren’t the case, nothing about this objection

indicates the sort of serious prejudice that would require a new trial.

       Defendants also argue that Longo’s testimony should have been excluded because “he

had not done any studies or any analyses to figure out what other jurisdictions did to train on

either disorderly conduct or post-and-forfeit.” Mot. J. Matter Law 32. But “deliberate

indifference” liability isn’t based on failure to abide by prevailing standards. It is premised on

failing to provide training or supervision that is obviously necessary in light of the particular

facts that are actually known of that should be known to the municipality. City of Canton v.




                                                 38
Harris, 489 U.S. 378, 390 (1989). Defendants’ objection simply has no legal basis and even if it

did, they’re unable to show the sort of undue prejudice necessary to require a new trial.

       Sixth, defendants object to Longo’s testimony regarding the post-and-forfeit procedure

because he had no personal experience with the procedure. Mot. J. Matter Law 32. But Longo

did testify about his extensive experience arresting people, including reviewing arrest reports for

adequacy of probable cause. Mar. 10, 2011 A.M. Trial Tr. 7, 12–13; Mar. 11, 2011 A.M. Trial

Tr. 5–9, 20–27. These experiences and his review of materials explaining the nature of post-and-

forfeit formed an adequate basis for his opinions. Importantly, if defendants were correct, no

expert in police practices, no matter how well-qualified, could opine regarding post-and-forfeit

unless he or she had worked as a police officer in the District of Columbia and used that

procedure personally because the District of Columbia is the only jurisdiction in the country to

use that procedure. Such a rule would insulate the most exotically unjust and newfangled of

police practices from criticism because of the scarcity of police practices experts who had

worked under them. It’s unsurprising, then, that defendants’ proposed rule—and its ironically

unfortunate consequence—isn’t the law.

       Seventh, defendants’ argument that Longo’s testimony should be excluded under Rule

403 is unpersuasive. The only case the defendants cite holds that expert testimony should be

excluded under Rule 403 if it’s “on a subject that is well within the bounds of a jury’s ordinary

experience.” United States v. Montas, 41 F.3d 775, 784 (1st Cir. 1994). In fact, even where that

Court found such objectionable testimony, it still didn’t require a new trial. Id. This Court

concludes that new trial would be inappropriate here where there is no indication of undue

prejudice.




                                                 39
       Defendants go on to argue that all evidence of post-and-forfeit should have been

excluded at trial. Mot. J. Matter Law 35. This argument fails before it gets started because it

could have been cured at trial and was not. Dorocon, Inc. v. Burke, NO. 02-2556, 2006 WL

468009, *3 (D.D.C. Feb. 27, 2006); see also Wright & Miller, 11 Federal Practice & Procedure

Civ. §2805 (2d ed.). Indeed it was never raised at trial. That said, it also fails because defendants

fail to explain how the admission of post-and-forfeit evidence was prejudicial to them.

       Next, defendants argue that evidence of post-2005 occurrences should have been

excluded, and that its admission was prejudicial to them. Mot. J. Matter Law 35–36. There are

several reasons to reject this argument, but the most obvious one is that defendants can’t argue

that this evidence was prejudicial to them because they included similar evidence on their exhibit

list and introduced it at trial. Joint Pretrial Statement 19, Mar. 3, 2010, ECF No. 121; Notice of

Filing, Nov. 3, 2010, ECF No. 186. Moreover, there’s no legal basis for defendants’ argument. A

municipality’s post-incident conduct is relevant and admissible on Monell claims because it can

shed light on what policies existed at the time of the incident. See, e.g., Bordanaro v. McLeod,

871 F.2d 1151 (1st Cir. 1989). Finally, even if defendants were correct, they’ve failed to show

that the admission of this evidence was unduly prejudicial.

       The defendants also argue that the CCRB reports and all testimony regarding them

should have been excluded because the reports “contain hearsay.” Mot. J. Matter Law 37. This

argument is wholly unpersuasive. First, it wasn’t raised before and is therefore barred at this

stage. Dorocon, Inc. v. Burke, NO. 02-2556, 2006 WL 468009, *3 (D.D.C. Feb. 27, 2006); see

also Wright & Miller, 11 Federal Practice & Procedure Civ. §2805 (2d ed.). Second, the hearsay

rule doesn’t bar admission of the CCRB reports because they’re public records of a

governmental agency, setting forth “factual findings resulting from an investigation made



                                                 40
pursuant to authority granted by law.” Fed. R. Evid. 803(8)(C). Third, the reports aren’t hearsay

to the extent they’re offered to show notice. Fed. R. Evid. 801(c).

                        v. Jury Instructions

        Defendants level three objections to the jury instructions. They claim that (1) the

instruction on the disorderly conduct (loud and boisterous) statute is incorrect as a matter of law

or, at the very least, not a “clearly established interpretation of the statute; (2) the Court erred in

denying their proposed jury instruction on probable cause; and (3) the missing witness

instruction was improper. None of these arguments is persuasive.

        Defendants object to the instruction explaining the elements —and thus probable cause

for arrest under—former D.C. Code § 22-1321(3), as interpreted by the D.C. Court of Appeals in

In re T.L., 996 A.2d 805 (D.C. 2010). They first argue that the instructions were wrong to state

that Huthnance’s alleged yelling wasn’t a violation of the law if it was “a reasonable protest of

the defendant officers’ unlawful or improper restrictions” on her liberty. Mot. J. Matter Law 38.

The problem with this argument is that the instruction properly captures, through the words

“reasonable,” “unlawful,” and “improper,” the balance between permitting protests of unlawful

police action and protecting the peace of sleeping residents that the T.L. Court implied must be

struck. 996 A.2d at 812–14.

        Defendants also insist that the statute criminalized more than just “conduct disturbing

those inside their homes,” and that the inclusion of such a limitation in the instructions requires a

new trial. Mot. J. Matter Law 38–39. Defendants raised this argument at the hearing on jury

instructions on March 23, 2011. This Court rejected it then, and the defendants offer no new

argument in support of it. Mar. 23, 2011 A.M. Trial Tr. 18–25. Moreover, there is no reason to

believe that removal of the allegedly objectionable instruction would have altered the jury’s



                                                   41
verdict. Huthnance and her fact witnesses—including one MPD supervisor—testified that she

wasn’t yelling or making loud noises of any kind, at any point. In any case, the jury affirmatively

found that she was arrested because of the content of her speech, not its volume. Jury Instruction

10–11; Verdict Form 2.

       Defendants’ objection that the instruction interpreting D.C. Code § 22-1321 shouldn’t

have been given because it wasn’t “clearly established law” is totally without merit. The “clearly

established law” question has to do with the qualified immunity analysis, not whether

Huthnance’s rights were violated. In any event, defendants waived this objection by not raising it

prior to the charging of the jury. Fed. R. Civ. P. 51(c)(1) & (d)(1)(A); Parker v. District of

Columbia, 850 F.2d 708, 715 (D.C. Cir. 1988); see also See Dorocon, Inc. v. Burke, NO. 02-

2556, 2006 WL 468009, *3 (D.D.C. Feb. 27, 2006); see also Wright & Miller, 11 Federal

Practice & Procedure Civ. §2805 (2d ed.). The same is true of defendant’s objection that this

Court’s failure to give their proposed instruction on probable cause requires a new trial. Fed. R.

Civ. P. 51(c)(1) & (d)(1)(A); Parker v. District of Columbia, 850 F.2d 708, 715 (D.C. Cir. 1988);

see also See Dorocon, Inc. v. Burke, NO. 02-2556, 2006 WL 468009, *3 (D.D.C. Feb. 27, 2006);

see also Wright & Miller, 11 Federal Practice & Procedure Civ. §2805 (2d ed.).

       Finally, defendants claim that a new trial is warranted because of an improper missing

witness instruction. Mot. J. Matter Law 39–40. Antonio testified on cross-examination that two

previously unidentified individuals—an MPD officer named Crowley and a neighborhood

resident named Elena—were present in the vicinity of and witnessed Huthnance’s arrest. Mar.

14, 2011 A.M. Trial Tr. 63–64, 80–81. Because these witnesses hadn’t been disclosed in

discovery, this Court granted a missing witness instruction. Mar. 23, 2011 A.M. Trial Tr. 13–16;

Jury Instructions 3. Defendants claim that the instruction was improper because “the identity of



                                                 42
the person who transported plaintiff was of no (or limited) importance or relevance, and because

plaintiff never sent any written discovery to defendant Antonio.” Mot. J. Matter Law 39. These

arguments fall short.

       First, the fact that Huthnance didn’t serve written discovery on Antonio is irrelevant

because he was questioned during his deposition about MPD and civilian witnesses to the arrest,

and testified that he didn’t recall the names of any such persons. Mar. 23, 2011 A.M. Trial Tr.

14–15. Second, defendants’ claim that Crowley’s identity was of little or no relevance is flat

wrong. Huthnance went to great lengths in discovery to identify and depose every individual

with first-hand knowledge of her arrest because she was convinced that they would corroborate

her position that she broke no law and was unconstitutionally arrested. The testimony of the only

two neutral eyewitnesses in this case—Marsoni and MPD Sgt. Michael Smith—both strongly

corroborated Huthnance’s case, and there is no reason to believe that “Elena” and Crowley

wouldn’t have done the same. Antonio’s testimony prejudiced Huthnance because it implied that

Huthnance didn’t call those witnesses because their testimony would be favorable to the defense,

and because she was deprived of the opportunity to use them to bolster her defense. The missing

witness instruction was therefore appropriate. Moreover, even if it were incorrect, defendants

have failed to show that it caused them undue prejudice requiring this Court to disturb the jury’s

verdict and order a new trial.

                        vi. Remittitur

       Defendants argue that they’re entitled to remittitur on the ground that the compensatory

damages were excessive and that the evidence was insufficient to support punitive damages, but

neither argument is persuasive.




                                                43
       The Court need not tarry long on defendants’ objections to the amount of damages in this

case. A defendant claiming that a jury returned an excessive verdict must show that the amount

is “‘beyond all reason’ or ‘so great as to shock the conscience.’” Langevine v. District of

Columbia, 106 F.3d 1018, 1024 (D.C. Cir. 1997) (citation omitted). It isn’t enough to claim that

the award was “generous”; rather, it must constitute a “miscarriage of justice” to be reversible.

Id. at 1024 (citations omitted). This is a “heavy burden.” Carter v. Duncan-Huggins, Ltd., 727

F.2d 1225, 1239 (D.C. Cir. 1984). As the D.C. Circuit observed, the Court’s role in a remittitur

analysis is sharply limited:

       In reviewing the actual amount of a jury’s award, our task is limited and a
       reluctance to interfere is our touchstone. This limited role reflects the obvious fact
       that we are not privy to the jury’s deliberations. In reviewing the amount of the
       jury’s award, we thus need not—and indeed cannot—reconstruct the precise
       mathematical formula that the jury adopted. Nor need we explore every possible
       quantitative analysis or compute the basis of each penny and dollar in the award.
       Our inquiry ends once we are satisfied that the award is within a reasonable range
       and that the jury did not engage in speculation or other improper activity.

Id. at 1238–39. Moreover, a jury’s verdict is due particular deference “in cases involving

intangible non-economic injuries.” Langevine, 106 F.3d at 1024. Finally, a defendant alleging

that improper considerations influenced the award cannot succeed without “affirmatively

show[ing] . . . specific facts and circumstances from which [the court] may infer that the jury was

influenced by passion, prejudice or bias.” Ortega v. Kansas City, 659 F. Supp. 1201, 1212 (D.

Kan. 1987).

       Defendants here can make no affirmative showing that the jury was inflamed by passion

or prejudice. The fact that the jury found Officer Morales not liable while finding Officers

Antonio and Acebal liable actually indicates that the jury was thoughtful and reflective about its

damages disbursement. If they were really inflamed with passion against the District and the




                                                44
officers, then they would have blindly gone after all of them instead of carefully allotting specific

liability and damages to each officer.

       Defendants argue that “[d]uring closing argument, plaintiff’s counsel impermissibly

asked the jury to award plaintiff $100,000.” Mot. J. Matter Law 40. There are at least two

problems with this argument. First, defendants waived it by failing to timely object or seek a

curative instruction. Hooks v. Wash. Sheraton Corp., 578 F.2d 313, 317 (D.C. Cir. 1977)

(holding that an objection to counsel’s closing argument wasn’t preserved where no timely

objection was made); see also Chicago & N.W. Ry. Co. v. Green, 164 F.2d 55, 64 (8th Cir. 1947)

(“A party is not entitled as a matter of right to seek a reversal for improper argument to the jury,

where he fails to make objections during its course or to take exceptions promptly at its close.”).

       Second, even if the argument wasn’t waived, it lacks merit. At closing argument,

Huthnance’s counsel stated, “you’re going to hear that [Ms. Huthnance] doesn’t care about

whether you give her $1 or $1 million. What she cares about is reclaiming her name and her

reputation and not having an arrest record . . . .” Mar. 23, 2011 P.M. Trial Tr. 11. Later he said:

       [Huthnance] would tell you . . . the money isn’t what matters, the money isn’t
       what matters. If you want to give her a dollar, if you want to give her a hundred
       dollars, if you want to give her $10,000, if you want to give her $100,000. What
       matters is a judgment in her favor for some monetary relief that shows that yes,
       her constitutional rights were violated. Yes, her right to not be falsely arrested
       was violated. We ask you to return a verdict on every single count in her favor. If
       it’s only for a dollar, if it’s for a thousand dollars, I ask you for a hundred
       thousand dollars, cumulatively. And I thank you for all of your attention in this
       case.

Id. at 97–98. Thus, Huthnance’s counsel (1) stressed that the amount of monetary damages

awarded was of minimal importance, (2) named numerous dollar amount ranging from one

million dollars to one dollar, and (3) convinced the jury to award an amount of damages in the

far low end of that range. This is not an indication of a jury that was acting out of inflamed



                                                 45
passions, and it is not an indication of a jury that was improperly influenced by plaintiff’s

counsel.

       Furthermore, the damages award in this case was not excessive. Although Huthnance

presented “no evidence of physical injury or loss in pay,” she did testify to mental anguish

caused by the trauma of the arrest and by her wrongful arrest record, and the burden of having to

travel from New Zealand to the U.S. for the trial. Mot. J. Matter Law 40. The compensatory

damages award is adequately supported by the jury’s evaluation of her mental and emotional

suffering alone. As mentioned above, such an evaluation receives particular deference from

reviewing courts because it depends on the jury’s evaluation of her demeanor and truthfulness.

Edman v. Marano, 177 F. App’x 884, 888 (11th Cir. 2006). In short, this jury’s determination is

reasonable and should not be disturbed. See, e.g., Langevine, 106 F.3d at 1020–21 (upholding a

jury’s award of $200,000 in a 1993 trial under facts strikingly similar to those presented here).

       Regarding the punitive damages award, the evidence was ample to sustain the award. For

example, in finding liability for First Amendment violations, the jury found that the defendant

officers arrested Huthnance for the content of her speech. Defendants cannot, and indeed make

no attempt to, explain how they could have arrested Huthnance based on the content of her

speech and yet not acted with reckless disregard for her constitutional rights. See, e.g., Smith v.

Wade, 461 U.S. 30, 33 (1983) (holding that the standard for punitive damages is “reckless or

callous indifference to the federally protected rights of others” shown by a preponderance of the

evidence). In fact, the jury had ample evidence of actual animus before it. For instance, the arrest

report falsely described Huthnance as a “female impersonator” and said that her modus operandi

was hatred of police. Pl.’s Ex. 1 at 1. Antonio testified that this report was written while all three

officers were present in a room, together, recalling the events of the arrest. Mar. 11, 2011 P.M.



                                                  46
Trial Tr. at 77, 117. The jury could properly infer that these inaccuracies weren’t oversights, but

were instead intentional jokes at Huthnance’s expense by officers who were outraged by her

speech and her challenge to their authority, and who had arrested her for that reason. The jury

could have reasonably rejected the officers’ denials of animus, based on their substantial

impeachment on cross-examination with the inconsistencies between each officer’s testimony

and the changes in each officer’s testimony over time. Mar. 23, 2011 P.M. Trial Tr. at 10–11,

19–21, 28–30. Based on all of the evidence before the jury, it could have reasonably concluded

that the officers knowingly made an illegal arrest because they didn’t like Huthnance’s speech

and her conduct and fabricated their testimony to the contrary. That finding sufficiently justifies

the punitive damages award in this case, which was moderate and calibrated to a reasonable

understanding of each officer’s relative responsibility for Huthnance’s injuries.

        The Court notes that its decision to grant defendants’ judgment as a matter of law on

Huthnance’s equal protection claim doesn’t change its conclusion that the jury’s damages award

in this case was entirely reasonable and doesn’t entitle defendants to any reduction in the amount

of the award. The award in this case was moderate, and it remains unexceptionable even if none

of it may be attributed to Huthnance’s equal protection claim. The gravamen of her damages

award clearly related to her false arrest and the constitutional violations related to it, not

procedural niceties post-arrest.

        IV.     Conclusion

        For the reasons discussed above, the defendants’ Motion for Judgment as a Matter of

Law is granted in part and denied in part, and their Motion for a New Trial or Remittitur is

denied. A separate order memorializing this opinion’s reasoning will issue today.




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Signed by Royce C. Lamberth, Chief Judge, on July 19, 2011.




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