Anthony Floyd v. The City of New York, The NYPD, and Detective David Terrell

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Case 1:16-cv-08655-LAP Document 1 Filed 11/08/16 Page 1 of 17

NWOKORO & SCOLA, ESQUIRES


44 Wall Street, Suite 1218
New York, NY 10005
Tel.: (212) 785-1060
Attorneys for plaintiff

-------------------------------X----------------------------
ANTHONY FLOYD, :UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
:SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
Plaintiff, :
: CASE No.:
against :
: CIVIL ACTION
:
THE CITY OF NEW YORK, and : COMPLAINT
DETECTIVE DAVID TERRELL, :
:
: PLAINTIFF DEMANDS
: TRIAL BY JURY
Defendant(s). :
-----------------------------------X----------------------------

TAKE NOTICE, the Plaintiff, Anthony Floyd, hereby appears


in this action by his attorneys, Nwokoro & Scola, Esquires, and
demands that all papers be served upon them, at the address
below, in this matter.

Plaintiff, Anthony Floyd, by his attorneys, Nwokoro &


Scola, Esquires, complaining of the defendants, The City of New
York, and Detective David Terrell, collectively referred to as
the Defendants, upon information and belief alleges as follows:

NATURE OF THE ACTION


1. This is an action at law to redress the deprivation of
rights secured to the plaintiff under color of statute,
ordinance, regulation, custom, and or to redress the
deprivation of rights, privileges, and immunities secured
to the plaintiff by the Fourth, and Fourteenth Amendments

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to the Constitution of the United States, and by Title 42


U.S.C. 1983.

JURISDICTION
2. The jurisdiction of this Court is invoked under 28 U.S.C.
1343(3), this being an action authorized by law to redress
the deprivation of rights secured under color of state and
city law, statute, ordinance, regulation, custom and usage
of a right, privilege and immunity secured to the plaintiff
by the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the
United States. Jurisdiction of this court exists pursuant
to 42 USC 1983 and under the Fourth, and Fourteenth
Amendments to the United States Constitution.
3. As the deprivation of rights complained of herein occurred
within the Southern District of New York, venue is proper
in this district pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 1391 (b) and (c).

PARTIES
4. Plaintiff resides in Bronx, New York and is a resident of
the State of New York.
5. The actions which form the underlying basis for this case
all took place in the County of Bronx, within the
jurisdiction of the Southern District of New York.
6. Defendant Detective David Terrell is a police officer for
the City of New York acting under color of state law. He is
being sued in both his individual and official capacities.
7. The Defendant, City of New York is a municipality in the
State of New York and employs the Defendant Detective David
Terrell.

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FACTUAL ALLEGATIONS COMMON TO ALL CAUSES OF ACTION

8. On or about April 5, 2014, plaintiff was arrested by police


officers from the 42nd precint of the New York City Police
Department (NYPD), including Detective David Terrell, and
was taken to the 42nd precint. Plaintiff was told that he
was under arrest for disorderly conduct, however, defendant
was not acting in a disorderly manner, and upon information
and belief, Detective Terrell arrested the plaintiff as
part of an operation which involved arresting teenage
members of the community on false pretences in order to ask
them about guns while they were in detention.
9. That in the cause of the aforesaid arrest, Mr. Floyd was
detained, manhandled, restrained and handcuffed by
Detective David Terrell and other police officers whose
names are not known to the plaintiff.
10. That at no time prior to or during the above events was
there probable cause to arrest the plaintiff, nor was it
reasonable for the defendants to believe that probable
cause existed.
11. At the 42nd precint, plaintiff was placed in a cell where he
was interrogated by Detective David Terrell and two other
police officers in white shirts. Detective Terrell
repeatedly asked plaintiff if he knew who was dealing guns
in the neighborhood, when the plaintiff protested that he
didnt know anything about guns, Detective Terrell told him
shut up or I will break your face.
12. Although plaintiff complied with this directive, Detective
Terrell became very angry at plaintiffs lack of
information about guns, and started to beat the plaintiff
about the head and the face although plaintiff offered no

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physical threat to the detective whatsoever.


13. Two other police officers in white shirts, who were
present, also hit the plaintiff while asking him questions
about guns.
14. Detective David Terrell beat the plaintiff in the head and
the face until the plaintiff was barely conscious and
unable to move. Detective Terrell beat the plaintiff so
badly that plaintiff sustained a fractured eye socket and a
broken nose.
15. After realizing how badly he had hurt the plaintiff,
Detective Terrell, did not call for any medical assistance,
but rather issued Mr. Floyd a desk appearance ticket and
released him.
16 As a direct and proximate result of defendants actions,
plaintiff suffered and continue to suffer injuries,
including but not limited to physical trauma to his face,
eyes, ears, nose, and teeth, bleeding, bruises and
lacerations to his face, mouth, nose and ear, a nasal
fracture, a fracture of the orbital floor,(blow out
fracture); pain and suffering; emotional distress,
nightmares, and unwarranted severe anger bouts some or all
of which may be permanent.
17. The false arrest of plaintiffs, and plaintiffs wrongful
imprisonment, because of defendants knowledge of a lack of
any legitimate cause or justification, were intentional,
malicious, reckless and in bad faith.
18. As a direct and proximate result of defendants actions,
plaintiff was deprived of rights, privileges and immunities
under the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United
States Constitution and the laws of the City of New York
and the State of New York.
19. Defendant City of New York, as a matter of policy and

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practice, has with deliberate indifference failed to


properly sanction or discipline police officers including
the defendants in this case, for violations of the
constitutional rights of citizens, thereby causing police
officers including defendants in this case, to engage in
unlawful conduct.
20. Defendant City of New York, as a matter of policy and
practice, has with deliberate indifference failed to
sanction or discipline police officers including the
defendants in this case, who are aware of and subsequently
conceal violations of the constitutional rights of citizens
by other police officers thereby causing and encouraging
police officers including defendants in this case, to
engage in unlawful conduct.
21. That the defendant City of New York was responsible for
ensuring that reasonable and appropriate levels of
supervision were in place within and over the New York City
Police Department (NYPD).
22. Defendant New York City had actual or constructive
knowledge that there was inadequate supervision over and
/or within the NYPD with respect to its members abuse of
their authority, abuse of arrest powers and other blatant
violations of the United States Constitution and rules and
regulations of the NYPD. Despite ample notice and/or
knowledge of inadequate supervision, defendants took no
steps to ensure that reasonable and appropriate levels of
supervision were put in place to ensure that NYPD members
engaged in law enforcement conduct themselves in a lawful
and proper manner, inclusive of use of their authority as
law enforcement officers with respect to the general public
and specifically the plaintiff herein.
23. The defendant City of New York deliberately and

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intentionally chose not to take action to correct the


chronic, systemic and institutional misuse and abuse of
police authority by its NYPD employees and thereby
deliberately and intentionally adopted, condoned and
otherwise created through deliberate inaction and negligent
supervision and NYPD policy, practice and custom of
utilizing illegal and impermissible searches, arrests and
detentions, and the manufacturing of evidence, in the
ordinary course of NYPD business in flagrant disregard of
the state and federal constitutions, as well as the Patrol
Guide, up to and beyond plaintiffs arrest.
24. That all of the acts and omissions by the defendant
officers described above were carried out pursuant to
overlapping policies and practices of the municipal
defendant in their capacities as police officers and
officials pursuant to customs, policies, usages, practices,
procedures and rules of the City and the NYPD, all under
the supervision of ranking officers of the NYPD.
25. The existence of the unconstitutional customs and policies
may be inferred from repeated occurrences of similar
wrongful conduct, as documented in a long history of civil
actions in state and federal courts.
26. In an Order dated November 25, 2009, in Colon v. City of
New York, 09 CV 0008 (EDNY), the court held that:
Informal inquiry by the court and among the judges of
this court, as well as knowledge of cases in other
federal and state courts, has revealed anecdotal
evidence of repeated, widespread falsification by
arresting police officers of the New York City Police
Department. Despite numerous inquiries by commissions
and strong reported efforts by the present
administrationthrough selection of candidates for the

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police force stressing academic and other


qualifications, serious training to avoid
constitutional violations, and strong disciplinary
action within the departmentthere is some evidence of
an attitude among officers that is sufficiently
widespread to constitute a custom or policy by the
city approving illegal conduct of the kind now
charged.
27. That on more than half of the occasions where the Civilian
Complaint Review Board refers substantiated complaints
against officers to the NYPD for disciplinary action, the
NYPD either simply issues a verbal warning or drops the
charges altogether.
28. That the defendant New York City has not only tolerated,
but actively fostered a lawless atmosphere within the NYPD
and that the City of New York was deliberately indifferent
to the risk and the inadequate level of supervision would
lead to violation of individuals constitutional rights in
general, and caused the violation of plaintiffs rights in
particular.
29. The actions of all defendants, acting under color of State
law, deprived plaintiff of his rights, privileges and
immunities under the laws and Constitution of the United
States; in particular, the rights to be secure in his
person and property, to be free from the excessive use of
force and from malicious prosecution, abuse of process, and
the right to due process.
30. By these actions, defendants have deprived plaintiff of
rights secured by the Fourth, Fifth, and Fourteenth
Amendments to the United States Constitution, in violation
of 42 U.S.C. Section 1983.

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AS A FIRST CAUSE OF ACTION: AGAINST DETECTIVE DAVID TERRELL AND


THE CITY OF NEW YORK: OFFICER FALSE ARREST AND FALSE
IMPRISONMENT/UNLAWFUL SEARCH AND SEIZURE IN VIOLATION OF THE 4TH
AND 14TH AMENDMENTS BROUGHT UNDER 42 U.S.C 1983
31. By this reference, plaintiffs incorporates each and every
allegation and averment set forth in paragraphs 1 through
30 of this complaint as though fully set forth herein.
32. The arrest, detention and imprisonment of plaintiff was
without just or probable cause and without any warrant or
legal process directing or authorizing the plaintiffs
arrest or subsequent detention.
33. In the arrest, detention and imprisonment of the plaintiff
on or about April 5, 2014, defendants Terrell and the City
of New York, acting under color of state law, deprived the
plaintiff of his right to be free from unreasonable search
and seizure and arrest without probable cause as required
by the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments, therefore are
liable in violation of 42 U.S.C. Section 1983, which
prohibits the deprivation under color of state law, of
rights secured under the United States Constitution.
34. As a result of the aforesaid violation, plaintiff has been
caused to suffer humiliation, great mental and physical
anguish, embarrassment and scorn among those who know him,
and was prevented from attending to his necessary affairs,
and has been caused to incur legal expenses, and has been
otherwise damaged in his character and reputation.
35. Consequently, plaintiff has been damaged and hereby demands
compensatory and punitive damages in an amount to be proven
at trial against each of the defendants, individually and
severally.
36. The defendant officers were at all material times acting
within the scope of their employment, and as such, the

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defendant City is vicariously liable for the defendant


officers acts as described above.

AS A SECOND CAUSE OF ACTION: AGAINST DETECTIVE DAVID TERRELL AND


THE CITY OF NEW YORK: EXCESSIVE USE OF FORCE IN VIOLATION OF THE
4TH AND 14TH AMENDMENTS, BROUGHT PURSUANT TO 42 U.S.C. SECTION
1983
37. By this reference, the plaintiffs incorporates each and
every allegation and averment set forth in paragraphs 1
through 36 of this complaint as though fully set forth
herein.
38. The conduct and actions of Detective David Terrel, in
beating the plaintiff until he was unresponsive and barely
conscious, breaking his nose, and fracturing his eye socket
was excessive and unreasonable, was done intentionally,
willfully, maliciously, with a deliberate indifference
and/or with a reckless disregard for the natural and
probable consequences of their acts, was done without
lawful justification or reason, and was designed to and did
cause specific and serious physical and emotional pain and
suffering in violation of plaintiffs rights as guaranteed
under 42 U.S.C. 1983, and the fourth and fourteenth
amendments to the United States Constitution, including the
right to be free from the use of excessive, unreasonable
and unjustified force.
39. As a direct and proximate result of the foregoing,
plaintiff was subjected to great physical and emotional
pain and humiliation, was deprived of his liberty, and was
otherwise damaged and injured.

AS A THIRD CAUSE OF ACTION AGAINST THE DEFENDANTS DETECTIVE


DAVID TERRELL AND THE CITY OF NEW YORK: DEPRIVATION OF RIGHTS

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UNDER THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT AND 42 U.S.C 1983


40. By this reference, plaintiffs incorporates each and every
allegation and averment set forth in paragraphs 1 through
39 of this complaint as though fully set forth herein.
41. Members of the NYPD have an affirmative duty to seek
medical attention for persons who are injured in the course
of being apprehended by the police.
42. Defendant Detective David Terrell beat plaintiff until he
was barely conscious, broke his nose and fractured his eye
socket.
43. Defendant Terrell was aware that plaintiff sustained the
aforementioned injuries and was experiencing extreme
physical pain as a result, but took no action to provide or
request medical care for the plaintiff.
44. Upon information and belief, if Detective Terrell had
summoned medical assistance for the plaintiff, this may
have led to an internal departmental investigation as
nd
plaintiff entered the 42 precint on that day with no such
injuries as recorded in the command log and in the log book
of Detective David Terrell. Both logs would show that
plaintiff did not have such traumatic injuries when he was
brought to the 42nd precint on or about April 5, 2014.
45. Upon information and belief, plaintiff was not taken to
central booking and charged with disorderly conduct as he
was told that he would be, because such a charge would have
involved a record of the serious injuries inflicted by
defendant Terrell on the plaintiff and defendant Terrell
sought to avoid such a record therefore, he issued a desk
warrant and released the plaintiff.
46. After his release, plaintiff immediately sought and
received emergency medical treatment from Bronx-Lebanon
Hospital Center where he was diagnosed with a nasal

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fracture, and an orbital blow out fracture of the eye


socket caused by direct (blunt) trauma to the region of the
eye.
47. Detective Terrells failure to summon immediate medical
assistance for the plaintiff caused the plaintiff several
hours of delay in receiving necessary emergency treatment,
and un-necessary pain and suffering as well as consequent
damage.
48. The conduct and actions of Defendant Terrell, acting under
color of state law, in failing to request medical attention
for Anthony Floyd, was unreasonable, ill motivated, was
done intentionally, willfully, maliciously, with a
deliberate indifference and/or with a reckless disregard
for plaintiffs serious medical needs, and was designed to
and did cause specific and serious physical and emotional
pain and suffering in violation of plaintiffs substantive
due process rights as guaranteed under 42 U.S.C. 1983,
and the fourteenth Amendment to the United States
Constitution.
49. As a direct and proximate result of the foregoing,
plaintiff was subjected to great physical and emotional
pain and suffering, and was otherwise damaged and injured.
50. Plaintiff specifically references and incorporates in this
complaint, the command logs of the 42nd precint, the log
book of Detective David Terrell for the appropriate dates,
and plaintiffs medical records from Bronx-Lebanon Hospital
Center from April 5, 2014.

AS A FOURTH CAUSE OF ACTION AGAINST THE DEFENDANT CITY OF NEW


YORK: MUNICIPAL LIABILITY UNDER 42 U.S.C 1983
51. By this reference, plaintiffs incorporates each and every

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allegation and averment set forth in paragraphs 1 through


50 of this complaint as though fully set forth herein.
52. Detective Terrell arrested and incarcerated the plaintiff
in the absence of any evidence of criminal wrongdoing,
notwithstanding their knowledge that said arrest and
incarceration would jeopardize the plaintiff's liberty,
well-being, safety and constitutional rights.
53. The acts complained of were carried out by the individual
defendant in his capacity as a police officer and official,
with all the actual and/or apparent authority attendant
thereto.
54. Defendant Terrell acted under color of law, in his official
capacity, and his acts were performed pursuant to the
customs, policies, usages, practices, procedures and rules
of the City of New York and its police department.
55. The aforementioned customs, policies, usages, practices,
procedures and rules of the City of New York and its police
department include, but are not limited to the following
unconstitutional practices:
a. Wrongfully arresting individuals on the pretext that
they are engaged in illegal or criminal conduct;
b. manufacturing evidence against individuals allegedly
involved in illegal or criminal conduct;
c. unlawfully searching detainees and/or their property in
the absence of any reasonable suspicion that said
individuals were concealing weapons or contraband;
d. arresting innocent persons in order to meet
"productivity" goals (i.e. arrest quotas); and
e. wrongfully and unreasonably brutalizing innocent members
of the public, despite the lack of probable cause to do so.
56. The aforesaid event was not an isolated incident. The City
and its police commissioner has been aware for some time,

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from lawsuits, notices of claim, complaints filed with the


Civilian Complaint Review Board, and judicial rulings
suppressing evidence and finding officers incredible as a
matter of law, that a disturbing number of their police
officers unlawfully search and seize citizens, bring
charges against citizens with no legal basis, perjure
themselves in charging instruments and testimony, and fail
to intervene in and report the obviously illegal actions of
their fellow officers. Nevertheless, the City and its
police commissioner have allowed policies and practices
that allow the aforementioned to persist.
57. For example, the well documented failures of the Civilian
Complaint Review Board (the CCRB), a City agency, to
substantiate obviously meritorious citizen complaints have
gone uncorrected. The CCRB regularly finds complainants
lack credibility based on the fact that such complainants
have also brought lawsuits to remedy the wrongs they have
experienced, a practice that often results in not
substantiating the most serious charges brought to them. In
addition, the CCRB virtually never initiates their own
findings of false statements against officers who have made
false statements to the CCRB in their own defense, nor do
they initiate findings that officers have failed to report
their fellow officers misconduct; thus, officers have no
real incentive to come forward, or to testify truthfully at
the CCRB. The CCRB has no enforcement mechanisms once
making a finding against an officer; it can only make
recommendations to the NYPD, once finding misconduct by an
officer.
58. The NYPD, once receiving a substantiated complaint by the
CCRB, fails to adequately discipline officers for
misconduct. The NYPD Department Advocate, which is endowed

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with the responsibility of following up on substantiated


CCRB charges, is understaffed and under-utilized.
Furthermore, in the extraordinarily rare event, such as the
matter at bar, that the CCRB substantiates a complaint and
the Department Advocate proves the case in an internal
trial against an officer, the police commissioner still
maintains the power to reduce the discipline against such
an officer, which has been done on many occasions.
59. Further, the City and its police commissioner have no
procedure to notify individual officers or their
supervisors of unfavorable judicial review of their
conduct. Without this notification, improper search and
seizure practices and incredible testimony go uncorrected.
60. Additionally, according to a report of the New York City
Bar Association issued in 2000, the City has isolated their
law department from the discipline of police officers, so
that civil suits against police officers for actions taken
in their capacity as police officers have no impact on the
officers careers, regardless of the outcome of the civil
actions. Alan Hevesi, as New York City Comptroller, in 1999
reported that there was a a total disconnect" between the
settlements of even substantial civil claims and police
department action against officers.
61. The existence of the aforesaid unconstitutional customs and
policies may also be inferred from the admission by Deputy
Commissioner Paul J. Browne, as reported by the media on
January 20, 2006, that commanders are permitted to set
"productivity goals".
62. Furthermore, the existence of the aforesaid
unconstitutional customs and policies may also be inferred
from the ruling (Docket entry 32) of the Court (Eastern
District of New York), in the case(s) of Jose Colon v. City

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of New York, et al (09-cv-8) and Maximo Colon v. City of


New York, et al (09-cv-9), wherein the Court stated, inter
alia, that "Informal inquiry by the court and among the
judges of this court, as well as knowledge of cases in
other federal and state courts, has revealed anecdotal
evidence of repeated, widespread falsification by
arresting officers of the New York City Police Department",
and that "there is some evidence of an attitude among
officers that is sufficiently widespread to constitute a
custom or policy by the city approving the illegal conduct
of the kind now charged".
63. The aforementioned customs, policies, usages, practices,
procedures and rules of the City of New York, constituted a
deliberate indifference to the safety, well-being and
constitutional rights of all defendants, including but not
limited to the plaintiff; were the proximate cause of, and
moving force behind, the constitutional violations suffered
by the plaintiff as alleged herein, and deprived plaintiff
of the following rights, privileges and immunities secured
to him by the Constitution of the United States:

(a) The right of the plaintiff to be secure in his person and


effects against unreasonable search and seizure under the
Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution of
the United States.
(b) The right of the plaintiff not to be deprived of life,
liberty, or property without due process of law, and the
right to the equal protection of the laws, secured to him
by the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the
Constitution of the United States.
(c) The right to be free from unreasonable detention and/or
continued detention without probable cause in that the

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plaintiff was detained.


(d) The right to be free from the use of excessive force.
64. As a result of the actions of the defendants, the plaintiff
was deprived of his rights, privileges, and immunities
secured by the United States Constitution, in particular,
the Fourth, Fifth, and Fourteenth Amendments, in
contravention of 42 USC 1983 and the laws of New York
State, and New York City without just or legal cause when
defendant City, by its employees and/or agents unlawfully
arrested and imprisoned the plaintiff thereby depriving him
of his liberty without due process of law.
65. The defendant officer was the actual agent of the defendant
City of New York and was following the customs, practices,
ordinances and/or regulations of the City of New York when
they violated the plaintiffs constitutional and civil
rights, and the City of New York is therefore responsible
for their acts, and liable to the plaintiff for the damages
he suffered.
66. The actual principal/agent relationship between defendant
City and the defendant officer was created by the fact that
he was an employee of defendant City, and the City had the
right to, and it did indeed regulate and control the
activities and conduct of the defendant officer.
67. Defendant Terrells actions were vicious, wicked, cold-
hearted, intentional, malicious, unwarranted and in
violation of the law. The individual defendant had full
knowledge that the charges made before the Court against
the plaintiff were false and untrue.

WHEREFORE, plaintiff respectfully requests judgment


against the Defendants as follows:

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1. For compensatory damages against all defendants in an


amount to be proven at trial;
2. For exemplary and punitive damages against all defendants
in an amount to be proven at trial;
3. For costs of suit herein, including plaintiff's reasonable
attorney's fees; and;
4. For such other and further relief as the court deems
proper.

Dated: November __7___, 2016,


New York, New York

-
Chukwuemeka Nwokoro, Esq.
Nwokoro & Scola, Esquires
Attorney for Plaintiff
44 Wall Street, Suite 1218
New York, New York 10005
Tel. (212) 785-1060

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