Singleton v. Cannizzaro FILED 10 17 17
Singleton v. Cannizzaro FILED 10 17 17
RENATA SINGLETON,
MARC MITCHELL,
LAZONIA BAHAM,
JANE DOE,
TIFFANY LACROIX,
FAYONA BAILEY, and
SILENCE IS VIOLENCE; Case No. ________________________
Plaintiffs,
v.
DAVID PIPES,
IAIN DOVER,
JASON NAPOLI,
ARTHUR MITCHELL,
TIFFANY TUCKER,
MICHAEL TRUMMEL,
MATTHEW HAMILTON,
INGA PETROVICH,
LAURA RODRIGUE, and
JOHN DOE,
in their individual capacities;
Defendants.
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PRELIMINARY STATEMENT
This civil rights action challenges the Orleans Parish District Attorneys Offices
unconstitutional policy of using extrajudicial and unlawful means to coerce, arrest, and imprison
crime victims and witnesses. The plaintiffs in this action are victims and witnesses of crime and
a non-profit organization that advocates for victims in Orleans Parish. Each has been harmed by
Pursuant to official policies, practices, and customs of Defendant Orleans Parish District
Attorney Leon Cannizzaro, prosecutors routinely issue their own fabricated subpoenas directly
from the District Attorneys Officewithout any judicial approval or oversightin order to
coerce victims and witnesses into submitting to interrogations by prosecutors outside of court.
These fraudulent documents create the false impression that meeting with the District Attorney is
required by law, and they threaten crime victims and witnesses with fines, arrest, and
imprisonment if they do not obey. If that unlawful coercion does not succeed, Defendants
routinely obtain arrest warrants to put crime victims and witnesses in jail.
In the past five years alone, Defendants have sought material witness warrants at least
150 times. In a significant number of applications for these warrants, Defendants make false
statements, omit material facts, and rely on plainly insufficient allegations no reasonable
prosecutor would believe could justify the arrest of a witness or a victim of crime. If prosecutors
In addition, Defendants ensure crime victims and witnesses languish in jail. Defendants
habitually seek and obtain extraordinarily high secured money bonds for victims and witnesses,
ranging up to $500,000, and sometimes no bond at all. These amounts often dwarf the bond
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amounts set for criminal defendants themselvesand they ensure these victims and witnesses
are trapped in jail, even when the defendant in the criminal case may be released.
Defendants then deny victims a prompt court appearance, where the victim could
challenge her detention or the conditions of her release. As a result, victims and witnesses
routinely wait weeks or even months in jail before they are brought before a judge. One rape
victim spent 12 days in jail before her first court appearance. A victim of child sex trafficking
was jailed for 89 daysincluding Christmas and New Years Daybefore she had an
Defendants policies are designed to create a culture of fear and intimidation that chills
crime victims and witnesses from asserting their constitutional rights. As a result of these
policies, crime victims and witnesses in Orleans Parish know that if they exercise their right not
to speak with an investigating prosecutor, they will face harassment, threats, arrest, and jail.
For instance, when Plaintiff Renata Singleton, an accountant for a charter school system
and the victim in a domestic violence case, declined to speak to Defendants, they arrested and
jailed her for five days on a $100,000 bond. Upon being booked into jail, Ms. Singletons clothes
were taken, and she was given an orange jumpsuit. When she appeared in court, she was
shackled at her hands and feet. Metal chains tethered her to the other prisoners. The defendant,
her former boyfriend and alleged abuser, had paid his $3,500 secured bond at arraignment and
was released. He came to court from home in his own clothes. He pled guilty to two
Ms. Singletons experience is but one example of the practices challenged in this action.
Other crime victims have been threatened and arrested in front of their friends and family. Their
names now appear online in publicly accessible arrest databases. They have had to expend
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limited incomes on lawyers to protect themselves against Defendants unlawful practices. They
have had to bear the toll of Defendants threats when they are often already dealing with trauma
Defendants actions violate the United States Constitution and Louisiana law. Plaintiffs
seek declaratory and injunctive relief requiring Defendant Cannizzaro to permanently end these
unconstitutional and illegal policies, and monetary damages against all individual Defendants
1. Plaintiffs bring this action under the First, Fourth, and Fourteenth Amendments to
2. The Court has jurisdiction over Plaintiffs federal claims pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
1331 (federal question jurisdiction). The Court has jurisdiction over Plaintiffs Louisiana law
the events or omissions giving rise to Plaintiffs claims occurred in this district.
JURY DEMAND
4. Plaintiffs demand a trial by jury on all issues and claims set forth in this
Complaint, pursuant to the Seventh Amendment of the United States Constitution and Federal
PARTIES
A. Plaintiffs
domestic violence case. The prosecutor attempted to coerce Ms. Singleton into a private meeting
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at the District Attorneys Office by sending her two fraudulent subpoenas. After Ms. Singleton
declined to attend the private meeting, the prosecutor applied for a warrant to jail Ms. Singleton,
relying on false, misleading, and plainly insufficient factual assertions in the warrant application.
Ms. Singleton was jailed for five days because she could not pay the $100,000 bond the
prosecutor recommended based on his factual allegations. The defendant in the case pled guilty
to two misdemeanors and was sentenced to inactive probation with no jail time.
6. Plaintiff Marc Mitchell, a 41-year-old black man, was shot multiple times while
playing basketball with his nephews. After several negative experiences with the District
Attorneys Office, including a meeting at which Mr. Mitchell felt pressured by prosecutors to
testify in a way that was inconsistent with his recollection of events, Mr. Mitchell told
prosecutors that he no longer wished to meet with them outside of court. Two days later,
Assistant District Attorney Michael Trummel applied for an arrest warrant to jail Mr. Mitchell as
a material witness, relying on false and misleading factual assertions. Mr. Mitchell was arrested
and jailed unless he paid the $50,000 bond sought by the prosecutor based on his factual
allegations.
education and was in special education classes, received a fraudulent subpoena from the District
Attorneys Office after her daughters boyfriend was murdered. When Ms. Baham declined to
meet privately with prosecutors as the fraudulent subpoena demanded, Assistant District
Attorney Jason Napoli made an application for an arrest warrant to jail her as a material witness.
The application relied solely on the allegation that Ms. Baham would not communicate with
prosecutors. Ms. Baham was jailed for eight days because she could not pay the $100,000 bond
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juvenile under the age of 13. When Ms. Doe was 17 years old, Assistant District Attorney Iain
Dover threatened to jail her if she refused to comply with two fraudulent subpoenas demanding
that she meet with him privately at the District Attorneys Office. As a result of these threats,
Ms. Doe reluctantly attended a meeting with Defendant Dover. The criminal case involving Ms.
Doe remains pending, and Ms. Doe faces an imminent risk of future harm.
subpoena to appear at a private meeting at the District Attorneys Office in connection with a
murder case. Assistant District Attorney Inga Petrovich and other representatives of the District
Attorneys Office threatened Ms. Bailey with a criminal fine or jail time if she did not attend the
private meeting. Ms. Bailey was forced to retain and pay for a private attorney to fight the
fraudulent subpoena.
subpoena issued by Defendant Laura Rodrigue. In the document, Defendant Rodrigue demanded
that Ms. LaCroix meet her privately at the District Attorneys Office before trial to discuss a case
in which Ms. LaCroix was a witness. The document threatened a fine and jail time if she did not
comply. Ms. LaCroix retained and paid for a private attorney to fight the fraudulent subpoena.
Silence Is Violence advocates for, represents, and provides services to victims of violent crime in
the New Orleans community. The organization was founded to conduct public advocacy to
protect New Orleans residents from violent crime. Under Defendant Cannizzaros
administration, it has been forced to focus instead on protecting crime victims from the coercive
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B. Defendants
12. Defendant Leon Cannizzaro is the Orleans Parish District Attorney. Defendant
Cannizzaro is, and at all relevant times has been, the final policymaker with respect to criminal
prosecutions and the treatment of victims and witnesses by the District Attorneys Office in
Orleans Parish. Since being sworn into office on January 11, 2009, Defendant Cannizzaro has
been responsible for the supervision, administration, policies, practices, and customs of the
Orleans Parish District Attorneys Office. Defendant Cannizzaro has been responsible for the
hiring, training, discipline, supervision, and control of the Assistant District Attorneys identified
in this lawsuit, including the Defendants below. Defendant Cannizzaro is sued in his individual
13. Defendant David Pipes is an Assistant District Attorney and Chief of Trials in the
Orleans Parish District Attorneys Office. Defendant Pipes is sued in his individual capacity.
14. Defendant Iain Dover is an Assistant District Attorney in the Orleans Parish
15. Defendant Jason Napoli is an Assistant District Attorney in the Orleans Parish
16. Defendant Arthur Mitchell is an Assistant District Attorney in the Orleans Parish
17. Defendant Tiffany Tucker is an Assistant District Attorney in the Orleans Parish
Parish District Attorneys Office. Defendant Trummel is sued in his individual capacity.
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Parish District Attorneys Office. Defendant Hamilton is sued in his individual capacity.
20. Defendant Inga Petrovich is an Assistant District Attorney in the Orleans Parish
21. Defendant Laura Rodrigue is an Assistant District Attorney in the Orleans Parish
22. Defendant John Doe, an Assistant District Attorney in the Orleans Parish District
Attorneys Office, is an individual presently unknown to Plaintiffs despite diligent search and
inquiry. Defendant Doe participated in the meeting with Plaintiff Singleton at the Orleans Parish
District Attorneys Office, further described herein. Defendant Doe is sued in his individual
capacity.
STATEMENT OF FACTS
I. The Unlawful Policies, Practices, and Customs of the Orleans Parish District
Attorneys Office
powers that are immense but not limitless, and they are constrained in at least three critical
under the threat of depriving that person of bodily liberty, the prosecutor must first apply to a
neutral judge who will decide whether or not a subpoena should be issued pursuant to
requirement of obtaining a valid court order. For example, prosecutors cannot exploit this power
as a pre-trial preparation tool in a manner that corrupts the adversarial system. As a result, the
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situations in which such a private interview can be compelled are narrow and governed by
appropriate legal and constitutional standards, none of which can be applied if a judge is not
25. Second, if the government officials want to cause the arrest or imprisonment of a
crime victim or witness, they must apply to a judge to get an arrest warrant. In the warrant
application, the official must accurately present all material facts so that the judge can determine
whether or not the government has provided sufficient grounds to issue the warrant.
26. Third, if an arrest warrant is issued and a crime victim or witness is jailed on that
warrant, she must be brought before a neutral judicial officer in an expeditious manner for a
post-deprivation hearing and opportunity to be heard to ensure that the ongoing detention is
necessary to serve the governments compelling interests and that any conditions for release, like
27. For years, Defendants have been routinely flouting these well-established
constitutional and legal requirements, pursuant to an official policy, practice, and custom
enforced by Defendant Cannizzaro: prosecutors demand that witnesses meet with them privately
and outside of court, and then enforce these demands by seeking material witness warrants for
28. Defendants routinely fabricate and then issue their own subpoenas directly from
the District Attorneys Office, without any judicial or clerk approval. These documents threaten
individuals with arrest and imprisonment in order to coerce victims and witnesses to submit to a
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29. When that unlawful coercion does not work, Defendants routinely obtain
material witness arrest warrants by relying on false and misleading facts, by omitting material
facts from their warrant applications, and by relying on plainly insufficient factual assertions.
30. Finally, after individuals have been unlawfully jailed pursuant to these warrants,
Defendants seek and obtain extraordinarily high monetary bond amounts and leave victims and
witnesses to languish in jail without timely access to a judge or an attorney until the Office
31. The District Attorneys Office under Defendant Cannizzaro has a policy, practice,
and custom of coercing private meetings between prosecutors and witnesses by creating the false
32. To carry out this practice, the Office has systematically created and manipulated
documents, styled as subpoenas, that command witnesses to appear at the District Attorneys
Office for private interrogations. The documents take at least three forms: standardized pre-
printed subpoena forms, unauthorized forms from the electronic CourtNotify system, and
35. First, the District Attorneys Office created its own pre-printed forms that demand
the witness appear in person at the Office at a certain time and date to be questioned by
36. This pre-printed document, which bears the official seal of the District Attorneys
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37. The office-wide template document includes blank spaces for the witnesss name,
the case name, and the time and date the witness is commanded to appear at the District
Attorneys Office. This template allowed prosecutors to adapt the fraudulent form for use in
38. The prosecutors and investigators employed by the District Attorneys Office who
deliver these documents regularly made verbal threats that witnesses who do not obey
fraudulent subpoenas will be arrested and jailed. These threats were often reiterated both in
39. The District Attorneys Office has explicitly conceded that the use of these
40. In addition to the pre-printed form, the District Attorneys Office also has a policy
and practice of using a government-run computer program called CourtNotify to generate altered
1
Charles Maldonado, Orleans Parish Prosecutors Are Using Fake Subpoenas To Pressure Witnesses To Talk To
Them, THE LENS, http://thelensnola.org/2017/04/26/orleans-parish-prosecutors-are-using-fake-subpoenas-to-
pressure-witnesses-to-talk-to-them (Apr. 26, 2017) (quoting Assistant District Attorney Chris Bowman, acting as
spokesman for the District Attorneys Office, as stating, The district attorney sees no legal issues with this policy.)
(emphasis added).
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41. CourtNotify is a computer program that prosecutors and public defenders use to
request subpoenas for witnesses to appear for formal judicial proceedings in court.
42. The District Attorneys Office, however, has altered the subpoenas generated by
CourtNotify so that, instead of ordering the witness to testify in court, the subpoenas purport to
demand that the witness submit to questioning at the District Attorneys Office.
practice. On February 24, 2017, a representative of the District Attorneys Office delivered a
fraudulent CourtNotify subpoena to K.M., a 60-year-old homeless man who was the victim of
a battery.
44. The document demanded that K.M. appear at the District Attorneys Officenot
46. Based on CourtNotify records, Assistant District Attorney Tucker was the last
person to access the March 6th subpoena before the forged document was delivered to K.M. by
District Attorneys Office under her direction took a CourtNotify subpoena that had previously
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ordered K.M. to appear in court on March 6, 2017, and altered it so that it instructed him to
48. This forgery is apparent because the individual who altered the document
neglected to change the text at the bottom of the subpoena marking the appearance date: on the
March 3rd document, the appearance date is still listed as March 6th.
49. This individual also neglected to remove each of the multiple references to the
court and replace them with references to the District Attorneys Office.
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50. In addition to the pre-printed forms and the altered CourtNotify subpoenas
described above, Defendant has shown reporters a third type of fraudulent subpoena.2
51. Like a lawful subpoena, the document includes the trappings of an official
summons, stating that the witness is hereby notified to appear at the District Attorneys Office
to discuss such matters as may be required of you, and including a return on service so that a
52. Like the other types of unlawful subpoenas discussed above, however, this
53. The full scope of these practices has yet to be uncovered, in part because, unlike
lawful subpoenas, the fraudulent documents usually are not intentionally introduced by
54. But the evidence demonstrates that this policy is entrenched and its harms are
the use of fraudulent subpoenas in a wide variety of criminal cases, with charges ranging from
2
Paul Murphy, Practice of fake subpoenas to be stopped by Orleans DA, WWLTV (Apr. 27, 2017),
http://www.wwltv.com/news/local/orleans/practice-of-fake-subpoenas-to-be-stopped-by-orleans-da/434702306.
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55. They have been signed by at least 12 different prosecutors, nine of whom are
currently still employed at the District Attorneys Office: (1) Laura Rodrigue, (2) Jason Napoli,
(3) William Dieters, (4) Tiffany Tucker, (5) Mike Trummel, (6) Arthur Mitchell, (7) Sarah
Dawkins, (8) Zachary Popovich, (9) Iain Dover, (10) Robert Moore, (11) Michael Heier, and
56. At least two of these prosecutorsDefendants Iain Dover and Jason Napoli
57. The number of prosecutors involved and the wide variety of cases in which
fraudulent subpoenas were employed evidence a persistent pattern of violations carried out by
58. Members of the criminal defense bar in Orleans Parish and former Assistant
District Attorneys who worked under Defendant Cannizzaro confirm what this initial
investigation suggests: the use of these fraudulent subpoenas has been widespread and systemic.
59. On April 26, 2017, an investigative journalist at The Lens published an article
60. Defendant Cannizzaro initially defended the practice. Chris Bowman, the official
spokesman for the District Attorneys Office told The Lens, The district attorney does not see
61. Bowman further explained that misleading reluctant witnesses into meeting with
prosecutors was precisely the reason that the Office had created the documents to look as they
do: Maybe in some places if you send a letter on the DAs letterhead that says, You need to
3
Charles Maldonado, Orleans Parish prosecutors are using fake subpoenas to pressure witnesses to go talk to them,
The Lens (Apr. 26, 2017), http://thelensnola.org/2017/04/26/orleans-parish-prosecutors-are-using-fake-subpoenas-
to-pressure-witnesses-to-talk-to-them.
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come in and talk to us that is sufficient. It isnt here. That is why it looks as formal as it does
(emphasis added).4
62. After facing public criticism from legal and ethical experts and the general public,
Defendant Cannizzaro promised to remove the word subpoena from documents that were not
63. The newly-titled Notice to Appear documents inform witnesses they are
hereby notified to report to the DAs Office to speak privately with prosecutors about such
64. The format of the newly proposed notices resembles official court documents,
and like lawful subpoenas, they include a return on service. The documents misleadingly refer
65. Thus, although they do not include the word subpoena, the notice documents
continue to create the false impression that the witness is required by law to meet privately
with prosecutors.
4
Id.
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66. After facing public criticism for using fraudulent subpoenas, Defendant
Cannizzaro claimed, There are no consequences, there are no legal consequences for the person
who is the subject of that notice if they do not show up No case has been presented to me
where someone was arrested because they failed to honor a District Attorneys notice.5
repeated this claim, and he challenged councilmembers to show me one person who was ever
68. In fact, based on an initial investigation, in the past three years, Orleans Parish
prosecutors applied for arrest warrants for at least ten witnesses explicitly relying on an assertion
that the witness did not obey a fraudulent subpoenawithout informing the court the
69. All ten warrants were issued. Six of these witnesses were jailedincluding
Plaintiff Singleton.7
70. In their applications for these warrants, prosecutors represented to the court that
witnesses had been served valid subpoenas, when, in fact, they had been served fraudulent
5
Paul Murphy, Practice of fake subpoenas to be stopped by Orleans DA, WWLTV,
http://www.wwltv.com/news/local/orleans/practice-of-fake-subpoenas-to-be-stopped-by-orleans-da/434702306
(Apr. 27, 2017).
6
Remarks of Leon Cannizzaro, Hearing on the Budget of the District Attorneys Office, New Orleans City Council
(Sept. 20, 2017).
7
Ms. Singletons experience is detailed in Part II of this Complaint.
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71. Prosecutors relied on allegations that witnesses did not do as these subpoenas
demanded, even though the allegation that a witness exercised her constitutional right to decline
72. And consistent with their broader policy and practice when seeking material
witness arrest warrants, prosecutors routinely omitted critical facts in these applications in order
to obtain a warrantfor example, prosecutors omit that the witness had agreed to appear in court
pursuant to a subpoena and had only declined to communicate with them in private.
73. J.B. and I.E. In December 2015, two alleged victims of aggravated assault with a
firearm approached public defender Thomas Frampton and informed him that they wanted to
provide favorable exculpatory statements for the defendant charged in the assault case. Both
victims gave Frampton signed statements exculpating the defendant. Frampton emailed the
74. Soon afterwards, Frampton and Dawkins discussed the signed statements. As
Frampton recalls, Dawkins told him, You know how it goes in our office. Recantations mean
75. Dawkins then sent fraudulent subpoenas to both victims demanding that they
appear at her office for a private meeting and threatening them with fines or jailing if they did
not obey.
76. When the two women declined to attend the private meetings with prosecutors,
Dawkins made an application for a material witness warrant for each of the women. Dawkins
asked the court to jail each victim unless she paid a $250,000 secured money bond. The sole
factual allegation in both warrant applications was that the women had not obeyed subpoenas
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demanding private, out-of-court meetings at the District Attorneys Office. Dawkins did not
inform the court that the subpoenas she referenced in her applications were fraudulent and had
77. The judge granted Dawkinss request based on her factual assertions, and J.B.
78. K.M. In March 2017, Assistant District Attorney Tiffany Tucker made an
application for a material witness warrant to arrest K.M., the victim of a battery. The warrant
exhibit. Defendant Tucker falsely represented to the court that the document was a subpoena,
as that term is defined under Louisiana law. Based on these representations, the court issued the
79. K.M. was arrested that afternoon. He remained in the Orleans Parish Prison for
eight days because he could not pay the $100,000 bond that Tucker requested based on her
factual assertions.
demanding that he appear at a private meeting at the District Attorneys Office on February 20,
2014.
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81. When B.B. did not go to the District Attorneys Office on February 20th,
Assistant District Attorney Robert Moore sent a text message to a member of B.B.s family.
Moore threatened the family member that he would seek a warrant to arrest B.B if he did not
82. Moore applied for a material witness warrant for B.B. Moore asserted in the
warrant application that B.B. should be jailed because he would not appear pursuant to a
subpoena issued by a District Attorney investigator. Moore asked the court to jail B.B. unless he
paid a $500,000 bond. The court granted Moores motion. B.B. was arrested and kept in jail for
five days.
83. S.B. On January 25, 2017, Assistant District Attorney Michael Trummel made an
application for a material witness warrant for S.B., the alleged victim of an aggravated battery.
Defendant Trummel alleged that a subpoena was left in S.B.s door instructing her to report
84. This document was not a lawful subpoena. Like each of the other subpoenas
described here, it had never been presented to or issued by a judge. Nonetheless, based on
Trummels misrepresentation, the court issued a warrant for S.B.s arrest. Six days later, the
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defendant in the underlying criminal case pled guilty, and the court vacated the material witness
85. C.R. In March 2015, Assistant District Attorney Michael Heier made an
application for the court to jail C.R. on a material witness warrant because C.R. had failed to
appear at the District Attorneys Office subject to subpoena. Heier did not inform the court that
the document he called a subpoena was not a valid subpoena. The warrant application also
asserted that C.R. had missed scheduled appointments with the District Attorneys Office. Heier
86. C.R. appeared in court, and the court agreed to release him on a $5,000 bond.
Prosecutors objected to releasing C.R. instead of jailing him or placing him on ankle monitoring.
87. The defendant in the case was charged with simple criminal damage to property
and disturbing the peace. She ultimately pled guilty and was given a suspended sentence and six
material witness because Assistant District Attorney Jason Napoli asserted in an application for
an arrest warrant that S.S. did not obey a fraudulent subpoena ordering him to appear at a
89. Defendant Napoli attached an affidavit to his application for a material witness
warrant. The affidavit asserted that his Offices investigator would leave an Orleans Parish
District Attorney Office Subpoena along with his card in the hands of [S.S.s] Mother or
Grandmother after each visit but to no avail, [S.S.] never appeared in the District Attorney[s]
Office on the dates listed on his subpoenas. Defendant Napoli did not inform the court that
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90. S.S. was arrested and kept in jail for 14 days. At Defendant Napolis request, and
91. T.J. On January 27, 2017, Assistant District Attorney Williams Dieters requested
a material witness warrant for an alleged domestic violence victim because she did not obey a
fraudulent subpoena. As a factual basis for the request, Dieters alleged, [W]hat I did serve her
with was, in fact, a DA subpoena and that is a subpoena. Dieters did not inform the court that
the subpoena was not lawful. No judge had been presented with the subpoena as required by law
before issuing such a document. The court granted Dieters motion and a warrant was issued for
T.J.s arrest.
92. Chief Judge White, who presided over the case, later learned of Dieters
misrepresentations; she stated the she did not know the subpoena was fraudulent when she issued
the warrant and would not have issued the warrant had she known.
93. Q.J. On August 12, 2014, Assistant District Attorney Sarah Dawkins submitted a
warrant application for Q.J. Dawkins alleged in the application that Q.J. had not complied with a
subpoena and that he did not answer prosecutors phone calls. Dawkins recommended that Q.J.
be kept in jail unless he paid a bond of $250,000. Her application was approved by the Chief of
Trials, Defendant David Pipes. Dawkins did not inform the court that the subpoena was
fraudulent. The court then granted the application on the same day it was filed.
94. In June 2015, the defendant in the criminal case pled guilty to the illegal carrying
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95. The District Attorneys Office relies on fraudulent subpoenas in its warrant
applications as part of a larger policy and practice: submitting material witness warrant
prosecutors.
96. No reasonable prosecutor would believe that a witness or crime victim can be
arrested and jailed because she declines to meet with prosecutors outside of court or to submit
97. But in the last three years, Orleans Parish prosecutors have sought and secured
98. For example, in one representative material witness warrant application, which
resulted in the issuance of an arrest warrant, the prosecutor alleged that the witness ha[d] failed
to respond to letters, telephone calls, voicemails, emails, and Facebook messages from
prosecutors.
99. In another warrant application, the prosecutor asked the court to jail a victim of an
armed robbery who informed the District Attorneys Office that she would not speak to
100. One such allegationthat [t]he State has reason to fear that [the witness] will
not appear in Court pursuant to a subpoena as he has failed to appear pursuant to previous
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101. In December 2014, Assistant District Attorney Corey Moll relied on this
allegation when he applied for a material witness warrant for the victim, J.C. The defendant in
102. J.C. was jailed for eight days based on Molls factual assertions because J.C.
could not pay the $100,000 money bond that Moll requested.
103. In June 2015, Assistant District Attorney Mark Lopez used this same phrase as
the sole allegation in a warrant application for the arrest of D.B., the victim of aggravated
criminal damage to property. The defendant in the case was accused of damaging D.Bs Pontiac
Firebird.
104. Based on his factual assertions, Lopez asked that D.B. be jailed unless he paid a
105. The defendant in the case had been released on a $5,000 money bond. He pled
guilty and was sentenced to a one-year suspended sentence and active probation.
106. In June 2016, the same factual basis appeared again in a warrant application for
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107. Prosecutors also routinely base material witness warrants on allegations that are
entirely irrelevant to whether the witness will appear in court pursuant to a valid subpoena. These
108. For example, in the material witness warrant application for M.C., the prosecutor
recommended that M.C. be jailed because she had no place to live and no means of support.
109. Assistant District Attorney Matthew Payne applied for a warrant to jail H.J., the
victim of an aggravated battery, because she does not have a current address.
110. Assistant District Attorney Louis Russo sought and secured a material witness
warrant for D.E., the victim of armed robbery with a firearm, before the defendant in the case
had even been arraigned. In support of his application, Russo asserted to the court that D.E.
likely had no stable place to live because she was an exotic dancer.
111. Prosecutors in the District Attorneys Office routinely base material witness
administration have based dozens of warrant applications on false allegations, including: (1) that
the witness was properly served with a subpoena; (2) that the witness refused to testify; and (3)
that the Office did not know how to find the witness.
113. These misrepresentations frequently supplement allegations that the witness has
simply exercised her right to decline to speak voluntarily with prosecutors. For example, the
material witness warrant for Plaintiff Marc Mitchell came on the heels of his decision not to
speak privately with prosecutors anymore. The prosecutors motion explicitly and
inappropriately relied on Mitchells decision to exercise his First Amendment rights, and alleged
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in support of Mr. Mitchells arrest that he indicated this would be the last meeting he would
have with the District Attorneys Office and did not want to move forward with the case.
114. Prosecutors also told the court that Mr. Mitchell had refused to sign a subpoena
for court and had bought a bus ticket to leave town. Neither of these allegations were true. The
prosecutors omitted the fact that Mr. Mitchell had actually signed a subpoena to testify at trial.
Based on the prosecutors representations in the warrant application, Mitchell was arrested and
115. Critical information is also routinely omitted from material witness warrant
applications. For example, prosecutors know that many witnesses refusals to speak to them are
the predictable result of prosecutors strong-arm tactics to secure favorable testimony. But they
omit accounts of the coercive tactics that have alienated the witness and led the witness to
exercise her right to decline to meet privately with prosecutors outside formal court supervision
witnessesif they fail, the witness can be arrested and put in jail, which gives prosecutors an
do not accurately represent the efforts that they have made when they describe them to judges,
creating a false impression that an arrest warrant is the only reasonable way to find and ensure
117. At a City Council hearing on September 20, 2017, Defendant Cannizzaro made
clear that his policy is to use material witness warrants when initial outreach by the District
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Attorneys Office does not satisfy prosecutors that the person will communicate sufficiently with
118. When a councilmember criticized Defendant Cannizzaro for jailing rape victims,
Defendant Cannizzaro warned that if the Council cut his budget, prosecutors would not [be]
able to work [with victims] as closely. He threatened that the Office would increase their use of
material witness warrants instead if cuts were made to his budget: I dont want any of you to be
119. Not surprisingly, under Defendant Cannizzaros direction, the unlawful use of
120. A pre-discovery review of publicly availably documents has identified more than
30 prosecutors working under Defendant Cannizzaro who have personally signed or approved
material witness warrant applications based on materially false allegations, material omissions,
Cannizzaro makes decisions about whether to jail the victim or witness in particular cases.
Cannizzaro said, I instructed my ADAs to obtain an indictment and, if necessary, secure the
testimony of the witnesses through the use of material witness warrants, which we were
8
Dont let reluctant witnesses derail justice: DA Leon Cannizzaro, NOLA.com (June 7, 2017),
http://www.nola.com/opinions/index.ssf/2017/06/material_witness_warrants.html.
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123. This behavior is consistent with Defendant Cannizzaros reputation in the New
Orleans legal community as a micromanager, often weighing in on even the smallest decisions in
124. Defendant Cannizzaro also publicly defended an Assistant District Attorney who
engaged in the unlawful conduct that is the subject of this lawsuit: after Assistant District
Attorney William Dieters obtained an arrest warrant for a domestic violence victim based on a
fraudulent subpoena, Defendant Cannizzaro told the press those actions were justified because
prosecutors routinely leave that person to languish in jailwithout access to judge or counsel
until the prosecutor decides to alert the court of the arrest and requests that a hearing be
scheduled. Because prosecutors are able to control the length of a persons post-arrest detention,
they are able to create and manipulate that detention as a tool to credibly threaten witnesses and
witnesses that the federal Constitution imposes under these specific circumstances, prosecutors
also routinely violate state law protections. Under Louisiana law, an arrested person must be
brought before a judge within 72 hours of arrest, excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and holidays.
See Art. 230.1, La. C. Crim. P; see State v. Chaney, 384 So. 2d 442, 444 (La. 1980).
9
Charles Maldonado, Prosecutor tried to jail victim of alleged domestic violence after she didnt obey fake
subpoena, THE LENS, http://thelensnola.org/2017/06/14/new-orleans-prosecutor-used-fake-subpoena-to-seek-arrest-
warrant-for-victim-of-alleged-domestic-violence (JUNE 14, 2017).
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127. Yet people jailed as material witnesses in Orleans Parish regularly remain in jail
128. In general, prosecutors are responsible for decisions about when a witness or
victim will come to court. Because a material witness has no right to counsel and is not brought
through the magistrate process like criminal arrestees, an incarcerated witness or victim is
usually brought before a judge only when the prosecutor asks the court to set a hearing for the
witness.
129. The District Attorneys Office knows when a witness is incarcerated; the Office
requests the arrest warrant and bond amount and is informed when the arrest is made. Therefore,
prosecutors in the District Attorneys Office know when a witness has been kept in jail for more
130. However, on information and belief, the District Attorneys Office has no
131. The District Attorneys Office lacks such a procedure even though the Office has
been held liable for the prolonged incarceration of material witnesses before. See Mairena v.
132. Based on a limited review of publicly available records, within the last five years,
at least 50 victims and witnesses were confined in jail for more than 72 hours before seeing a
judge after being arrested pursuant to material witness warrants that Defendant Cannizzaros
Office sought.
133. For example, P.M., a victim of child sex trafficking, was arrested pursuant to a
material witness warrant obtained based on the prosecutors factual representations. She was
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confined in the Orleans Parish Prison for 89 days before she was brought to a neutral judicial
officer.
134. She was arrested on Thanksgiving Day and spent Christmas and New Years Day
135. P.M. ultimately remained in the jail for 109 days before she was released. When
P.M. left the jail, she had lost her housing and began living on the street. Shortly thereafter, P.M.
136. As another example, E.B., the victim of first degree rape, was jailed for 12 days
137. Yet another example is K.C., a witness in a murder case who was jailed for 18
days before she was brought to a neutral judicial officer. In total, K.C. spent 32 days in jail,
138. Despite its persistent over-incarceration problem, the District Attorneys Office
still lacks an effective procedure to ensure that witnesses and victims who are not accused of any
crime do not languish in jail with no prompt opportunity to challenge their detention.
139. To the contrary, prosecutors exploit these prolonged detentions. They regularly
make their decisions about when to bring material witnesses to court for a hearing on
considerations relating to the underlying prosecution, without regard to the constitutional rights
140. In many cases, the material witness does not receive a hearing at all. The
prosecutor simply requests the witnesss presence on the date of trial. Prosecutors have used the
custodial status of the witness to force the shackled witness to speak privately about her
testimony. The witness is released if the prosecutor decides to no longer use her testimony.
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141. Unless a prosecutor complies with the requirements above and secures a subpoena
obligation to speak with a prosecutor conducting an investigation. The right to freely decline
142. Defendants unlawful practices, however, have been effective in widely chilling
the exercise of the constitutional right to decline private questioning from prosecutors outside of
143. Plaintiffs Renata Singleton, Lazonia Baham, and Jane Doe each had exercised
their right to decline to speak voluntarily with the District Attorneys Office after receiving
fraudulent subpoenas insisting that they do so. But prosecutors ultimately secured private
interrogations with each of these Plaintiffs by using or threatening to use a material witness
warrant, overcoming Plaintiffs attempts to exercise their legal rights not to speak with
144. Plaintiff Marc Mitchell, the victim of an attempted murder, told Assistant District
Attorney Michael Trummel that he wanted no further out-of-court contact with prosecutors about
the case.
145. Two days later, Defendant Trummel asked the court to jail Mr. Mitchell as a
material witness, alleging that Mr. Mitchell refused to meet with prosecutors. After Mr. Mitchell
was released, Mr. Mitchell met with Defendant Trummel twice to discuss his testimony because
he feared being jailed again if he did not agree to the private meetings.
146. The chilling impact of prosecutors unlawful practices extends beyond the victims
and witnesses who have personally been jailed or threatened. The practice is so commonplace
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that the possibility that a witness or victim could be jailed colors local attorneys strategic
147. When a client is a victim or witness in a criminal case, many defense lawyers
advise the client to comply with prosecutors requests for out-of-court meetings, even if the
client is adamantly against it and wishes to exercise her First Amendment rights. Any other
148. One attorney whose client had been jailed for several months as a material
witness considered challenging the legality of her clients detention, but instead arranged a
meeting for her to speak with prosecutors because it was the faster way to get her out of jail.
149. Plaintiff Silence Is Violence has suffered a similar and even more acute chilling
effect; the organization never advises victims to decline meetings with prosecutorseven if the
victim wishes to do sofor fear that prosecutors will jail the victim on a material witness
warrant. In this manner, the unlawful practices challenged in this case determine how the
organization itself chooses to exercise its core right to communicate in private with its members
150. The District Attorneys Office has compounded these effects by threatening
attorneys and other professionals with criminal charges for complaining about these practices.
151. Defendant Cannizzaro twice threatened Tamara Jackson, the Executive Director
of Silence Is Violence. In 2016, Ms. Jackson submitted a formal complaint to the National
District Attorneys Association. The complaint expressed concerns about the inadequate
protections the District Attorneys Office provides to crime victims. After filing the complaint,
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152. Shortly after the complaint was filed, Defendant Cannizzaro called Ms. Jackson
and told her to be careful: if it appeared that she was encouraging victims not to communicate
153. This was not the first time Defendant Cannizzaro had made these threats. Three
years earlier, Defendant Cannizzaro called Ms. Jackson after she stated in the press that the
District Attorneys Office failed to protect victims from violent retaliation. Defendant
Cannizzaro told Ms. Jackson that if she dissuaded victims from assisting prosecutors, she could
154. In December 2014, the District Attorneys Office brought felony charges against
an investigator for the Public Defenders Office based on her interaction with a witness. In the
same time period, prosecutors at the District Attorneys Office had also threatened two public
defenders with prosecution. As a result, although public defenders know that witnesses do not
have to meet with prosecutors, they often will not tell witnesses about their constitutional right
A. Renata Singleton
155. On November 2, 2014, Renata Singleton had an argument with her boyfriend,
Vernon Crossley. According to the Police Incident Report, the two tussled over [the] phone.
Mr. Crossley grabbed Ms. Singletons cell phone out of her hand and shattered it. Ms.
Singletons daughter called 911 on their landline and put her mother on the phone. Mr. Crossley
156. Shortly after the incident, Ms. Singleton was contacted by a victim-witness
advocate from the District Attorneys Office. Ms. Singleton told her that she had three children
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and that her job paid by the hour; she did not want to miss work or time with her children to
pursue the charges. Ms. Singleton had ended her relationship with Mr. Crossley and considered
the situation resolved. She told the advocate that she just wanted to move on.
157. On Tuesday, April 21, 2015, an investigator from the District Attorneys Office
came to Ms. Singletons home to deliver two documents, styled as subpoenas that demanded
she appear for questioning at the District Attorneys Office on April 24th. The documents were
158. The subpoenas were fraudulent. They had never been presented to or approved
by a court.
159. Ms. Singleton asked a friend in law enforcement about these documents. Like Ms.
Singleton, her friend assumed the subpoenas were lawful. But she told Ms. Singleton that,
since the documents were left in the door, she had not been validly served and did not have to
160. On April 24, Singleton did not go to the District Attorneys Office to speak
161. On the same day, Assistant District Attorney Arthur Mitchell applied for a
material witness warrant asking the court to put Ms. Singleton in jail. As a factual basis for his
request, Defendant Mitchell relied on Ms. Singletons failure to appear at the District Attorneys
Office pursuant to the two documents, which Defendant Mitchell told the court were
subpoenas.
162. Defendant David Pipes, an Assistant District Attorney and Chief of Trials,
reviewed and approved Defendant Mitchells application for the arrest warrant.
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163. Based on Defendant Mitchells factual assertions, Judge Robin Pittman issued the
arrest warrant for Ms. Singletons arrest. At Defendant Mitchells request, and based on his
164. On the evening of Thursday, May 28, 2015, and unaware of the outstanding arrest
warrant, Singleton returned home to find that a new subpoena, requiring her appearance in court
the following day, had been delivered. Ms. Singletons teenage son had accepted and signed it.
Ms. Singleton planned to comply with the subpoena because it told her to go to the courthouse
165. Later that night, police officers knocked on Ms. Singletons front door. The
officers said they had a warrant for her arrest. Ms. Singleton pulled the subpoena her son had
signed out of her purse and showed it to the officers, explaining to them that she had just been
166. One of the officers said that he had to arrest Ms. Singleton anyway because the
167. Ms. Singletons police officer friend came to her house. The friend promised the
officers that she would accompany Ms. Singleton to the District Attorneys Office the following
morning. One of the officers made a phone call to the District Attorneys Office for approval.
After the call, the officers agreed to leave without arresting Ms. Singleton, notwithstanding the
168. The next morning, accompanied by her friend from the police department, Ms.
Singleton went to the District Attorneys Office. She was greeted by Defendant Mitchell, who
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point Assistant District Attorney Tiffany Tucker and another attorney who introduced himself as
170. Defendant Mitchell began to ask Ms. Singleton about the incident with Mr.
Crossley. Ms. Singleton told him that she was more concerned about why she had almost been
arrested. She told Defendant Mitchell that she did not want to answer questions without a lawyer
present. Defendant Mitchell told her she did not need a lawyer because she was not the criminal.
171. Frightened, Ms. Singleton still refused to answer any questions without an
attorney present.
172. Ms. Singleton heard Defendant Doe give an instruction to call a unit, and a police
173. As the officer walked Ms. Singleton out of the building in handcuffs, still
accompanied by the people who had been in the meeting, Ms. Singleton passed by her friend, the
police officer who had accompanied her to the meeting. Defendant Doe turned to Ms.
Singletons friend and warned her that she might want to stay out of this before she lost her job.
174. The arresting officer brought Ms. Singleton to the Orleans Parish Prison.
175. Ms. Singleton had never been arrested before. She began to sob.
176. Ms. Singleton contacted her sister to let her know that she needed her to take care
of her three children. Officers at the jail took Ms. Singletons clothes and gave her an orange
jumpsuit.
177. Ms. Singleton was worried about her children. She asked her sister to tell them
she was away for business. Ms. Singleton had just started work as a payroll accountant at KIPP
New Orleans Schools. She was terrified that she would lose her job.
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178. Ms. Singleton could not afford the $100,000 bond that prosecutors had requested
and spent the next five nights at the Orleans Parish Prison away from her children and her job.
179. On June 2, 2015, Ms. Singleton was brought to court from the jail for the first
court appearance since her arrest. She wore an orange jumpsuit and was shackled at her hands
and feet. Metal chains tied her to all of the other prisoners who had court dates that day.
180. In contrast, Mr. Crossley, the alleged perpetrator, had been released months
earlier on a $3,500 secured bond. He paid it on the day of his arraignment and came to court
181. Ms. Singletons mother hired a lawyer for her. The lawyer argued for a bond
reduction, which was granted, and Ms. Singletons mother posted $5,000 for bond.
182. Ms. Singleton was released with an 8:00 p.m. curfew and an ankle monitor. Ms.
Singleton wore bell-bottom jeans to hide the ankle monitor from her younger children. During
183. Mr. Crossley pled guilty to two misdemeanors and was sentenced to one year of
inactive probation with no jail time. Once Ms. Singleton had been jailed, the District Attorneys
184. Ms. Singletons arrest as a material witness has been a persistent source of
humiliation and shame. Ms. Singletons mugshot can be found online. There is an entry for Ms.
Singleton at policearrests.com, listing Ms. Singleton as a suspect and stating that she was
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185. Ms. Singleton, who has a masters degree in Business Administration, is currently
looking for a new job as an accountant. She is anxious that her arrest will prevent her from being
hired.
186. Her arrest has left another mark as well: Ms. Singleton is afraid to ever call the
police again.
B. Marc Mitchell
187. In July 2014, Marc Mitchell and his cousin, Christopher Chambers, took their
188. A man approached Mr. Mitchell, wanting to use the court. When Mr. Mitchell
told the man that his team was going to play the next game, the man argued with him. A few
moments later, another man fired 28 bullets at Mr. Mitchell and his cousin. Both men were shot
multiple times. Mr. Mitchell spent two months in the hospital with life-threatening injuries.
189. The District Attorneys Office charged both men at the court, Jonterry Bernard
and Gerard Gray, with attempted murder of Mr. Mitchell and his cousin. Mr. Bernard was tried
first. The prosecutions theory was that Bernard was the triggerman, but that Gray had directed
the shooting.
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190. Mr. Mitchell assisted the District Attorneys Office in the prosecution against Mr.
Bernard.
191. He signed a medical release form authorizing prosecutors to obtain his medical
records. He met with prosecutors at their offices. In October 2015, he testified in the
prosecutions case against Bernard, identifying Bernard as the man who shot him. Mr. Bernard
192. As Grays trial approached, Mr. Mitchell met with Defendant Michael Trummel
to prepare. Defendant Trummel told Mr. Mitchell that Gray was in a gang, and that Gray had
193. Defendant Trummel repeatedly asked Mr. Mitchell if he had seen Gray gesture to
Bernard to order him to shoot. Mr. Mitchell repeatedly told Defendant Trummel that he had not.
194. Mr. Mitchell was uncomfortable with how this meeting had gone. Defendant
Trummel seemed more intent on telling him what had happened than actually listening to Mr.
195. Mr. Mitchell also did not believe the District Attorneys Office was taking
196. For example, after Bernards trial, a man made a gesture of a gun and
pantomimed shooting Mr. Mitchell on the steps of the courthouse. Frightened, Mr. Mitchell told
prosecutors what had happened, but they did not investigate the threat, and they never followed
197. On April 4, 2016, Mr. Mitchell set a meeting with Defendant Trummel to inform
him that he wanted no further private contact with the District Attorneys Office.
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198. During that same meeting, Mitchell signed a subpoena to come to court to testify
against Gray.
199. Two days later, Defendant Trummel submitted a motion to jail Mr. Mitchell as a
material witness. The motion specifically relied on the April 4th meeting, when Mr. Mitchell told
200. Defendant Trummel also told the court that Mr. Mitchell had a bus ticket to leave
201. Defendant Trummels motion did not explain that, after telling prosecutors he no
longer wished to speak with them in private, Mr. Mitchell had signed a subpoena to appear in
202. Relying on Defendant Trummels representations, the court issued the arrest
warrant.
203. The following day, two police officers came in a marked police car to the high-
end hotel where Mr. Mitchell worked. Mr. Mitchell was wearing his uniform: a white dinner-
204. The police officers arrested Mr. Mitchell in the ornate hotel lobby, and placed him
in handcuffs, in full view of his coworkers and the guests checking in.
205. When Mr. Mitchell asked why he was being arrested, one of the officers said that
he did not know, but the prosecutor had told them to come and pick him up.
206. Mr. Mitchell was jailed at the Orleans Parish Prison on a $50,000 bond, set by the
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207. While Mr. Mitchell was confined in jail, his family sought assistance from Silence
Is Violence. Its Executive Director, Tamara Jackson, immediately advocated for Mr. Mitchells
release. The following morning, the court released Mitchell on his own recognizance.
208. The day before Grays trial, Mr. Mitchell was again called to meet privately with
prosecutors. This time, fearful of being arrested again, Mr. Mitchell came reluctantly to the
private meeting, accompanied by Ms. Jackson. Again, Defendant Trummel told Mr. Mitchell
about Mr. Grays gang affiliation and suggested that Mr. Gray had ordered Mr. Mitchells
shooting.
209. Mr. Mitchell once again told Defendant Trummel that he knew only one thing: he
got into an argument with Mr. Gray, and another man had shot him.
210. Mr. Mitchell testified truthfully at trial that he never heard Mr. Gray order
211. Shortly after the trial, Mr. Mitchell was called in to meet with Chief Judge White
in her chambers. Ms. Jackson accompanied Mr. Mitchell to the meeting on behalf of Silence Is
Violence.
212. Chief Judge White told Mr. Mitchell that she wanted to apologize for what had
happened to him, and said that prosecutors in the case had misled her.
213. After his experiences with the District Attorneys Office, Mr. Mitchell repeatedly
woke up panicking and soaked in sweat. He eventually sought treatment for his trauma
symptoms. Mr. Mitchells therapy, which was arranged by Plaintiff Silence Is Violence,
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C. Lazonia Baham
214. Lazonia Bahams daughters boyfriend was murdered in February 2013. The
District Attorneys Office charged a man named Isaac Jones with committing the murder.
215. Two investigators from the District Attorneys Office came to Ms. Bahams home
to interview her about the case. Ms. Baham told the investigators that she had seen Mr. Jones
around the corner on the day of the murder. By around the corner, Ms. Baham meant around
216. After this conversation at her home, Ms. Baham spoke several times to
investigator Michael Kitchens of the District Attorneys Office. Repeatedly, Kitchens asked Ms.
Baham questions about seeing Jones Uptown near Baudin Street. Each time Ms. Baham said that
she did not see Jones near Baudin Street; she saw him around the corner from her house.
217. Ms. Baham told Kitchens that this was all she knew about the case. She could not
understand why Kitchens continued to ask her about seeing the defendant uptown.
218. On one call, Kitchens told Ms. Baham that if she refused to tell prosecutors what
219. After this threat, Ms. Baham stopped taking calls from Kitchens.
220. Ms. Baham told the District Attorneys Office that she would come to court if
subpoenaed, but she was adamant that she would not change her story.
221. In the months that followed, Ms. Baham received several unlawful subpoenas
222. Ms. Baham did not go to the private meetings at the District Attorneys Office.
223. On October 13, 2015, Defendant Jason Napoli made an application for a warrant
asking the court to jail Ms. Baham as a material witness. In setting forth the factual basis for the
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warrant application, Defendant Napoli alleged that Ms. Baham refused to meet with ADA Jason
Napoli and cut off all communication with the District Attorneys Office.
224. The application did not allege that Ms. Baham had ever missed any court
appearances nor told the District Attorneys Office she would not come to court. Defendant
Napoli withheld from the court that Ms. Baham had talked with him on multiple occasions, and
he omitted that she had told him that she planned to attend court. Based on Defendant Napolis
225. On December 29, 2015, officers from the New Orleans Police Department
arrested Ms. Baham at her home. Ms. Baham was sick with a flu, and she was dressed in a
226. Ms. Baham spent the next eight days in jail. At Defendant Napolis request, and
based on his representations, she was held without bond. Ms. Baham, who has an eighth-grade
education and was in special education classes in school, did not understand why she had been
arrested. She did not know whom to ask about why she was in jail or how to secure her release.
227. On January 6th, Ms. Baham was brought to court for the first time since she was
arrested. Ms. Baham wore an orange jumpsuit and was shackled at her hands and feet.
228. Defendant Napoli brought Ms. Baham to a small room behind the Section A
229. Once Ms. Baham and Defendant Napoli were alone, Defendant Napoli repeatedly
asked Ms. Baham about seeing Jones near the scene of the murder. Ms. Baham repeated that she
had not seen Jones near the scene of the murder; she had seen him around the corner from her
home.
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230. Ms. Baham told Defendant Napoli that she was willing to testify, but the only
thing she knew was that she had seen Jones near her home on the day that her daughters
231. Defendant Napoli seemed to want her to testify to something that she knew was
not true.
232. Defendant Napoli then asked Ms. Baham if she knew what perjury was.
234. Ms. Baham has since testified twice in pretrial proceedings in the Jones case. On
both occasions, Ms. Baham stated that she had seen Jones near her home at the time of the
murder, and not in Mid-City as Defendant Napoli had insisted to her in private.
235. The Isaac Jones case has not yet gone to trial. Ms. Baham has appeared in court
D. Jane Doe
236. Jane Doe is the victim of molestation of a juvenile and child pornography
237. In September 2016, Assistant District Attorney Iain Dover brought a fraudulent
subpoena to her home, where Ms. Doe lives with her mother. The document demanded that she
238. After Defendant Dover came to Ms. Does home, an attorney for Ms. Doe faxed
him a letter: Please honor their right to privacy, their right to be left alone. They do not want to
be badgered, bothered or harassed by anyone from law enforcement in any way. The letter
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239. Defendant Dover did not leave Ms. Doe alone. Instead, even though Defendant
Dover knew that the teenage victim was represented by counsel, an investigator from the District
Attorneys Office working for Defendant Dover and accompanied by a uniformed police officer,
appeared at the Ms. Does high school, brandishing another document10 that demanded she
appear for questioning at the District Attorneys Office the next morning.
240. Ms. Doe was called out of class to accept the document in the principals office.
Her fellow students were at lunch, and they stared as the uniformed police officer approached
her. Ms. Doe tried not to cry in front of the other teenagers.
241. Embarrassed and exhausted, Ms. Doe asked her mother to pick her up early from
school. Ms. Doe stayed home for the rest of the day.
242. When Ms. Doe did not come to the District Attorneys Office on the following
morning, Defendant Dover called her attorney and left a voicemail threatening that, if the victim
did not arrive by 11 a.m., he would seek her arrest on a material witness warrant.
243. A hearing in the case was held that same day. Defendant Dover arrived at the
hearing with a completed material witness warrant application asking the court to jail Ms. Doe.
244. Defendant Dover told the court that the Louisiana Crime Victims Bill of Rights
required that he speak privately and outside of court with Ms. Doe. Ms. Does attorney, David
Anderson, feared that if his client did not attend the meeting, Defendant Dover would follow
through on his repeated threats to secure a warrant for Ms. Does arrest. The court ordered
10
Defendant Dover contends this document was a valid subpoena. No formal request for the subpoenaa
requirement under Louisiana lawis included in the clerks record in the case. The record also does not include a
signed order from the judge granting the subpoena.
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245. Later that day, Ms. Doe went to the District Attorneys Office to meet with
Defendant Dover. After she arrived, Defendant Dover humiliated and mocked her. Defendant
Dover interrogated her about the offenses that victimized her, including a number of intimate
246. Despite the difficult and personal nature of the inquiry, Defendant Dover mocked
Ms. Doe when she did not answer his questions. He mimicked what she said in a whiny-
sounding voice. Ms. Doe was shaken and upset by the questioning and experience.
247. Ms. Doe and her mother considered filing a formal ethics complaint about
Defendant Dovers behavior. They have decided not to, however, for one reason: if they do,
Defendant Dover might follow through on his threats to seek an arrest warrant to put the teenage
victim in jail.
248. The child pornography and child molestation case is still pending in Orleans
Parish Criminal District Court. Trial is currently set for October 23, 2017. Ms. Doe still does not
wish to meet privately with prosecutors again unless lawfully compelled to do so.
249. As a result of her experiences with Defendant Dover, Ms. Doe is terrified to speak
to law enforcement for any reason. She becomes anxious when she sees a police car or police
uniform. When Ms. Doe hears an unexpected knock at her door, she runs into her mothers room
to hide.
250. Fayona Bailey and Tiffany LaCroix were potential witnesses in two different
murder cases.
251. Each received a fraudulent subpoena demanding a private meeting at the District
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252. Defendant Inga Petrovich issued a fraudulent subpoena demanding Ms. Bailey
appear at the District Attorneys Office on March 16, 2017 for private interrogation in
253. Two investigators from the District Attorneys Office came to Ms. Baileys home
to deliver the document. The document that the investigators handed to Ms. Bailey was titled
SUBPOENA, and it ordered her to come to the District Attorneys Office on March 16, 2017
for a private meeting. The document threatened jail and fines for failure to obey.
254. One of the investigators told Ms. Bailey that if she did not come to the private
255. Ms. Bailey was terrified. She had never been to jail before.
256. The investigators asked Ms. Bailey to sign the document to acknowledge that she
had received it. Ms. Bailey told them that she did not want to sign anything without consulting
her attorney.
257. Ms. Bailey then retained and paid for a private attorney, Anthony J. Ibert, to
258. Shortly after Ms. Bailey retained Mr. Ibert, a representative from Defendant
Cannizzaros Office called Ms. Bailey and again threatened her with jail time if she did not
259. Ms. Bailey told the representative on the phone that she was represented by a
lawyer, and that her lawyer had informed her that the subpoena was not legal.
260. The representative continued speaking to her even though she was represented by
counsel. The representative told her that her lawyer was wrong, and that the only way she could
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avoid the appearance required by the subpoena was with a valid medical excuse, supported by
documentation.
262. The document was identical to the one that Ms. Bailey received, including the
threat of fines or imprisonment for failure to obey. The fraudulent subpoena that Ms. LaCroix
263. Ms. LaCroix did not want to report to the District Attorneys Office for a private
interrogation. The defendant in the criminal case was the father of Ms. LaCroixs child. She did
not want to be pressured to reveal private information about him unless she was compelled by
law to do so.
264. Ms. Lacroix was scared at the possibility of going to jail. She had never been
265. The designated time that the fraudulent subpoena directed Ms. Lacroix to appear
at the District Attorneys Office was also a problem. She works as a school teacher, and she was
one of the few teachers certified to administer statewide standardized testing to students with
special needs. The appointment demanded by the fraudulent subpoena would have required her
266. Like Ms. Bailey, Ms. LaCroix retained Anthony J. Ibert to challenge the
fraudulent subpoena.
267. In both cases, Mr. Ibert filed motions to quash the fraudulent subpoenas.
Because the documents were not legal documents, however, there was nothing to quash. In
response to Mr. Iberts motions, which described the fraudulent nature of the documents,
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268. The defendants in both cases were ultimately convicted at trial. Prosecutors never
F. Silence Is Violence
269. Silence Is Violence was founded in January 2007 with a mission to advocate for
crime victims and safer communities. As its inaugural act, Silence Is Violence organized a march
to New Orleans City Hall demanding better policy and leadership on the issue of violent crime.
270. In the two years that followed, Silence Is Violence offered programming focused
on local policy advocacy and community engagement. The organization sponsored letter-writing
campaigns, held forums for candidates for office to discuss criminal justice issues, and offered
music classes for youth to create a peaceful, non-violent activity for children and their families to
share.
271. Silence Is Violence hosted regular walks through New Orleans neighborhoods to
build support against violent crime, and it hosted programs for awareness events, like the
272. Since Defendant Cannizzaro took office in 2009, Silence Is Violence leaders
repeatedly received reports from victims and families that the prosecutors, investigators, and
victim-witness advocates working for Defendant Cannizzaro use strong-arm tactics to pressure
victims to speak outside of court with the prosecution and to corroborate the prosecutions theory
273. The new Cannizzaro administrations practices dramatically reduced the number
of victims who were willing to meet with prosecutors in private out-of-court settings. When
numerous Silence Is Violence clients and community members explained to its staff how the
District Attorneys Office had damaged their trust, common themes emerged.
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274. Victims who feared violent retaliation for assisting prosecutors frequently felt that
their concerns fell on deaf ears when they shared them at the District Attorneys Office.
275. The District Attorneys Office was reckless with witnesses names and identities,
and its promises to provide physical protection and assistance frequently fell through.
276. Victims felt menaced and harassed by prosecutors, investigators, and victim-
witness advocates from the District Attorneys Office. The prosecutors, investigators, and
advocates had shown up at their homes, jobs, and schools, raising questions about sensitive
277. Plaintiff Marc Mitchell, a client of Silence Is Violence, received a call from a
victim-witness advocate asking for the location of his uncles funeral. Mr. Mitchells cousin had
also been a victim of the attempted murder, and the advocate wanted to find him at the funeral to
ask him questions. Mr. Mitchell learned for the first time on the call that with the advocate his
Silence Is Violence clients were jailed or threatened with jail for declining to meet with
279. When that happens, Silence Is Violence responds by securing legal protection for
the client and, if the client is jailed, advocating for and securing her release.
280. For example, Plaintiff Marc Mitchells family contacted Silence Is Violence when
Mr. Mitchell was arrested and jailed as a material witness. Silence Is Violence advocated for
281. After Mr. Mitchell was released, the Executive Director of Silence Is Violence
accompanied Mitchell to a meeting with the judge. Silence Is Violence staff advised Mr.
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Mitchell about his future dealings with the District Attorneys Office to protect him from further
harm, communicated with the District Attorneys Office on Mr. Mitchells behalf, and
282. After Mr. Mitchells case had concluded, Silence Is Violence helped him secure
treatment for the trauma that he experienced. The treatment addressed Mr. Mitchells
prosecutors had obtained a warrant for her arrest. A Silence Is Violence staff member contacted
the District Attorneys Office. The organization was assured that the warrant would be recalled
284. As a result of that assurance, the victim agreed to make a statement. The victim
was afraid to stay in her own neighborhood in case of violent retaliation against her as a witness
to a serious crime; Silence Is Violence rented a hotel room for her and informed the victim-
witness advocate from the District Attorneys Office where the victim was staying so that they
285. Shortly after disclosing the victims location to the District Attorneys Office,
police arrived at the hotel room and arrested the victim, who was pregnant at the time. Silence Is
Violence spent the next several days advocating for the victims release.
286. Silence Is Violence recently assisted the alleged victim of a robbery and battery.
The victim, who was an immigrant, identified a suspect in a police line-up. She later told the
Assistant District Attorney on the case that she was not sure she had identified the right person.
The prosecutor told the victim that if she recanted the identification, she could be deported.
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Shortly after this conversation, two people from the District Attorneys Office came to the
287. The victim approached Silence Is Violence for help. Silence Is Violence secured
pro bono counsel to protect her from the deportation threats. Silence Is Violence also hired an
288. As a result of these experiences, the possibility that prosecutors may seek a
material witness warrant through fraudulent means and engage in other forms of retaliation for
the exercise of a victims First Amendment rights is now a major concern that has forced Silence
Is Violence to change the way it structures its operations, allocates its resources, and manages
289. For instance, Silence Is Violence does not recommend that victims or their family
members appear at the District Attorneys Office without a Silence Is Violence representative
present. This representatives role is not only to advocate for the victim, but to serve as a witness
if the victim is threatened, including with perjury, obstruction, or a material witness warrant for
290. Silence Is Violence recommends to victims that before they meet with
prosecutors, they ensure that they have no open criminal chargesincluding unpaid traffic
tickets. Silence Is Violence makes this recommendation because, based on its observations,
Defendant Cannizzaros administration routinely uses unrelated cases as leverage to coerce out-
of-court meetings with prosecutors and testimony favorable to the prosecutions theory of the
case.
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291. When clients do have criminal records, Silence Is Violence takes the lead in
communicating with the District Attorneys Office to insulate the victim or witness from
potential threats.
abuses of the subpoena and material witness warrant process by the District Attorneys Office
has become a significant and outsized portion of Silence Is Violences work during the
to protect victims and combat violent crimemust instead be devoted to ensuring that victims of
294. At all times relevant to this Complaint, the above Defendants were acting under
COUNT I:
Reliance on False Statements, Material Omissions, and Plainly Insufficient Facts in
Applications for Material Witness Warrants in Violation of the Fourth Amendment
42 U.S.C. 1983
295. Defendant Cannizzaros official policy, practice, and custom of relying on false
allegations, material omissions, and plainly insufficient factual allegations in applications for
material witness warrants violated the Fourth Amendment rights of Plaintiffs Singleton, Baham,
and Mitchell, and the rights of Plaintiff Silence Is Violences clients. It poses an ongoing risk of
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violating the Fourth Amendment rights of Plaintiffs Baham and Doe, and the rights of Silence Is
Violences clients.
296. Acting pursuant to this policy, practice, and custom, Defendants Mitchell, Tucker,
Pipes, and Doe violated the clearly established Fourth Amendment rights of Plaintiff Singleton;
Defendant Napoli violated the clearly established Fourth Amendment rights of Plaintiff Baham;
and Defendants Trummel and Hamilton violated the clearly established Fourth Amendment
rights of Plaintiff Mitchell. Plaintiff Baham faces an ongoing risk that Defendant Napoli will
297. The Defendants included these false statements, material omissions, and plainly
reckless disregard for the truth. The warrants for Plaintiffs arrest would not have issued but for
Defendants false statements and material omissions. Moreover, no reasonable prosecutor would
believe that the clearly insufficient grounds stated in arrest warrant applications could justify the
COUNT II:
Unlawful Subpoenas Used to Seize Plaintiffs in Violation of the Fourth Amendment
42 U.S.C. 1983
witnesses to attend private meetings at the District Attorneys Office by using unlawful
subpoenas, accompanied by threats of arrest and imprisonment, violated the Fourth Amendment
rights of Plaintiffs Bailey, Lacroix, and Doe, and the rights of Plaintiff Silence Is Violences
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clients. It poses an ongoing risk of violating the Fourth Amendment rights of Plaintiff Doe and
300. Acting pursuant to this official policy, practice or custom, Defendant Petrovich
acted with deliberate indifference when violating the clearly established Fourth Amendment
rights of Plaintiff Bailey; Defendant Rodrigue acted with deliberate indifference when violating
the clearly established Fourth Amendment rights of Plaintiff Lacroix; and Defendant Dover acted
with deliberate indifference when violating the clearly established Fourth Amendment rights of
Plaintiff Doe. Plaintiff Doe and Plaintiff Baham face an ongoing risk that Defendants will
COUNT III:
Retaliation for Constitutionally Protected Speech and Association
in Violation of First Amendment
42 U.S.C. 1983
302. Defendant Cannizzaros official policy, practice, and custom of threatening and
retaliating against crime victims, witnesses and advocates who engage in constitutionally
protected free speech, including the right to decline to speak voluntarily with investigating
prosecutors, violated the First Amendment rights of all Plaintiffs and poses an ongoing risk of
303. Acting pursuant to this official policy, practice, and custom, Defendants Mitchell
Tucker, Pipes, and Doe acted with deliberate indifference when violating the clearly established
First Amendment rights of Plaintiff Singleton; Defendants Trummel and Hamilton acted with
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deliberate indifference when violating the clearly established First Amendment rights of Plaintiff
Mitchell; Defendant Napoli acted with deliberate indifference when violating the clearly
established First Amendment rights of Plaintiff Baham; Defendant Dover acted with deliberate
indifference when violating the clearly established First Amendment rights of Plaintiff Doe;
Defendant Petrovich acted with deliberate indifference when violating the clearly established
First Amendment rights of Plaintiff Bailey; and Defendant Rodrigue acted with deliberate
indifference when violating the clearly established First Amendment rights of Plaintiff Lacroix.
Plaintiff Baham and Plaintiff Doe face an ongoing risk that Defendants will violate their rights in
indifference when violating the clearly established First Amendment rights of Silence Is
Violence by threatening its Executive Director with prosecution for her public statements on
behalf of the organization and chilling the organizations expression of core political speech and
burdening its decisions about how to advise its individual clients about communications with
actions, and it faces an ongoing risk that Defendant Cannizzaro will violate its First Amendments
rights again.
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COUNT IV:
Prolonged Detention in Violation of the Fourteenth Amendment
42 U.S.C. 1983
individuals to be jailed without a prompt court appearance after an arrest on a material witness
warrant violated the Fourteenth Amendment due process rights of Plaintiff Baham, and violated
and poses and ongoing risk of violating the Fourteenth Amendment rights of Plaintiff Baham and
307. Acting pursuant to policy, practice, and custom, Defendant Napoli acted with
Amendment rights. Plaintiff Baham faces a risk that Defendants will violate her rights in this
way again.
Bahams injuries.
COUNT V:
Violation of Fourteenth Amendment Substantive Due Process
42 U.S.C. 1983
309. Each of Defendant Cannizzaros official policies, practices and customs described
above, separately and in combination, shocks the conscience and violated the Fourteenth
Amendment rights of all Plaintiffs and poses an ongoing risk of violating the Fourteenth
Amendment rights of Plaintiff Baham and Plaintiff Doe, and the rights of Plaintiff Silence Is
Violences clients.
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injury to Plaintiffs.
311. Defendant Cannizzaro, acting in his individual capacity and official capacity as
District Attorney of Orleans Parish, and under color of state law, failed to adequately train,
supervise, and/or discipline Assistant District Attorneys and other agents District Attorneys
Office under his supervision, including all other Defendants, as to the unlawful conduct
312. Defendant Cannizzaro acted and failed to act with gross negligence, recklessness,
313. Defendant Cannizzaros conduct directly and proximately caused the deprivations
of Plaintiffs clearly established constitutional rights, and also directly and proximately caused
314. Defendants, acting under color of state law and within the scope of their
employment, knew or should have known that they and others within the District Attorneys
315. Defendants each had opportunities to intervene and prevent these violations but,
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constitutional rights.
317. Through their failure to intervene, Defendants directly and proximately caused
Plaintiffs injuries.
318. Defendants willfully and maliciously abused the material witness statute for a
purpose for which it was not designed: to coerce private, out-of-court meetings with prosecutors
and to coerce testimony consistent with the prosecutions theory of the case.
319. Defendants also willfully and maliciously abused the process for investigative
investigative subpoenas, and they used them not to investigate crimes pre-indictment, but to
intimidate, coerce, and threaten witnesses after criminal proceedings have already been initiated.
320. Plaintiffs Singleton, Mitchell, Baham, Doe, Bailey, and Lacroix were injured by
Defendants unlawful actions. Plaintiffs Baham and Doe face a risk that Defendants will harm
321. Plaintiff Silence Is Violence was injured because it had to redirect its resources to
remedy and prevent harms to its clients caused by the abuse of the material witness statute and
the Article 66 investigative subpoena by the District Attorneys Office. Plaintiff Silence Is
Violence faces a risk that Defendants will harm it in this way again.
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322. Defendants acts and omissions directly and proximately caused Plaintiffs
injuries. These injuries were the reasonably foreseeable consequences of the abuse of process
described herein.
323. Defendants engaged in these wrongful acts and omissions in the scope of their
324. As pled with specificity above, by creating, serving, and/or approving official-
seeming subpoenas, Defendants conveyed the material misrepresentation that the subpoenas
were real, had been obtained legitimately, and had to be honored by certain Plaintiffs under
Plaintiffs, including insertion of false and misleading information in, and omitting other relevant,
326. The Defendants made these misrepresentations with the intent to deceive
Plaintiffs.
327. Plaintiffs reasonably and justifiably relied on the authenticity, truthfulness, and
lawfulness of the fraudulent subpoenas, and they were also harmed when courts justifiably relied
328. All plaintiffs were injured by Defendants unlawful actions. Plaintiffs Baham,
Doe, and Silence Is Violence face a risk that Defendants will harm them in this way again.
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329. Defendants acts and omissions directly and proximately caused Plaintiffs
injuries. These injuries were the reasonably foreseeable consequences of the fraudulent acts
decribed herein.
330. Defendants engaged in these wrongful acts and omissions in the scope of their
A. Award compensatory damages to Plaintiffs and against all Defendants, jointly and
E. Order expungement of all records of the material witness warrants for Plaintiffs
F. For any and all other relief to which Plaintiffs may be entitled and that the Court
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/s/Bruce Hamilton
Bruce Hamilton
La. Bar No. 33170
ACLU Foundation of Louisiana
P.O. Box 56157
New Orleans, LA 70156
Tel. (504) 522-0628
[email protected]
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