This document is a brief in support of a motion to compel the production of body camera footage and related records from a 2013 police incident. It alleges that key exculpatory footage was withheld from the plaintiff during criminal proceedings, in violation of discovery obligations and his civil rights. It requests that the court order the defendants to produce unedited body camera footage and audit records to identify all footage from the named officers involved in the incident.
ORDER MOTION TO COMPEL Doc.90 05-10-2016
READS and part:After discussing these issues with Plaintiff and Defendants’ counsel, and in part with Defendants’ counsel’s consent, the motion to compel is GRANTED in part and it is hereby
ORDRED that:
(1) Defendants shall produce a digital log of the history of the videos as well as relevant metadata for each video that may indicate the identity of the officer who was wearing the camera and any other relevant information, such as the time, date, and location of the video’s creation.
(2) Defendants shall produce an affidavit from Captain Haley stating whether any of the interviews he conducted with Plaintiff were not recorded and, if not, explaining why any interview was not recorded.
(3) Defendants shall produce any written reports prepared by the officers in attendance at the execution of the search warrant. If any officers did not prepare a written report, Defendants have agreed to provide an affidavit stating which officers did not prepare reports. If any officers were not wearing a body camera at the time of the execution of the warrant, Defendants will include this fact in the affidavit and state which officers had no cameras.
(4) Plaintiff may re-issue his subpoena to Taser, International. This new subpoena shall be limited in scope to the date and time of the execution of the warrant and to the named defendant officers who were present during the search of Plaintiff’s residence. Plaintiff shall not include any request for any video footage from Captain Haley in this subpoena.
Defendants are to comply with the terms of this order within 21 days of the date of this order.
Any other relief requested in Plaintiff’s motions to compel is DENIED.
The Clerk is directed to mail a copy of this order to the pro se plaintiff at his address of
record.
It is so ORDERED.
Entered: May 5, 2016
ORDER MOTION TO COMPEL Doc.90 05-10-2016
READS and part:After discussing these issues with Plaintiff and Defendants’ counsel, and in part with Defendants’ counsel’s consent, the motion to compel is GRANTED in part and it is hereby
ORDRED that:
(1) Defendants shall produce a digital log of the history of the videos as well as relevant metadata for each video that may indicate the identity of the officer who was wearing the camera and any other relevant information, such as the time, date, and location of the video’s creation.
(2) Defendants shall produce an affidavit from Captain Haley stating whether any of the interviews he conducted with Plaintiff were not recorded and, if not, explaining why any interview was not recorded.
(3) Defendants shall produce any written reports prepared by the officers in attendance at the execution of the search warrant. If any officers did not prepare a written report, Defendants have agreed to provide an affidavit stating which officers did not prepare reports. If any officers were not wearing a body camera at the time of the execution of the warrant, Defendants will include this fact in the affidavit and state which officers had no cameras.
(4) Plaintiff may re-issue his subpoena to Taser, International. This new subpoena shall be limited in scope to the date and time of the execution of the warrant and to the named defendant officers who were present during the search of Plaintiff’s residence. Plaintiff shall not include any request for any video footage from Captain Haley in this subpoena.
Defendants are to comply with the terms of this order within 21 days of the date of this order.
Any other relief requested in Plaintiff’s motions to compel is DENIED.
The Clerk is directed to mail a copy of this order to the pro se plaintiff at his address of
record.
It is so ORDERED.
Entered: May 5, 2016
Darren Chaker, opinion by federal court on privacy issues, and in federal case. Important issues in privacy and internet are addressed in lawsuit, very useful cases discussed.
Opposition To Motion To Dismiss S Gerard Ange V Templer FGérard Angé
THE END GAME...
WHEN CORPORATIONS AND CEO'S CAN PAY TO SUBVERT THE FABRIC OF OUR CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS THAT PROTECT ALL CITIZENS. THEN... WE ALL LOSE.
THESE ARE THE OFFICIAL COURT TRANSCRIPTS & COURT DOCUMENTS:
After SIX YEARS and $100,000.00 in legal fees... OUR CASE DAMAGES WERE THROWN OUT BY A "SURPRISE SUBSTITUTED JUDGE" & ON A TRUMPED UP PHONY MISSING "Assignment of Claims" DOCUMENTS THAT WERE NEVER MISSING AT ALL.
READ THE SHOCKING OFFICIAL COURT TRANSCRIPTS AND THEN DECIDE FOR YOURSELF WHY OUR CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT TO TRIAL WAS DENIED BY A SUBSTITUTED JUDGE.
http://www.win-tv.net/GAP_WINTV_Site/GAP_WIN-Tv_Website_Theft.html
Sample motion to compel deposition subpoena in californiaLegalDocsPro
This sample motion to compel compliance with a deposition subpoena in California is designed to be used when one party to a legal action has served a deposition subpoena for production of business records on a NON-PARTY to the action pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure Section 2020.510 and requested both their attendance at the deposition and production of documents and they failed to appear for the deposition, yet the NON-PARTY failed to appear at the deposition. This sample motion to compel is made pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure Section 2025.450 and requests that the court compel the non-party deponent to appear for deposition and produce the documents requested in the deposition subpoena for production of business records. The sample on which this preview is based is 16 pages and includes brief instructions, a memorandum of points and authorities with citations to case law and statutory authority, sample meet and confer declaration and proof of service.
STATEMENT OF UNDISPUTED FACTS.
=========================
ANTHONY TEMPLER /
CURRENTLY RESIDING AT:
Zille Str. 69, 10575
BERLIN, GERMANY
LAST KNOWN USA ADDRESS: ANTHONY TEMPLER/
ATANDA WEB PRESENCE SERVICES
939 61ST STREET, SUITE #13
OAKLAND, CA 94608-1301
-------------------------------------------------------------
GAP INTERNATIONAL INC. 700 OLD MARPLE ROAD, SPRINGFIELD, PENNSYLVANIA
----------------------------------------------------------
MORE INFORMATION ON THE THEFT:
http://www.win-tv.net/GAP_WINTV_Site/GAP_WIN-Tv_Website_Theft.html
----------------------------------------------------------
Darren Chaker, opinion by federal court on privacy issues, and in federal case. Important issues in privacy and internet are addressed in lawsuit, very useful cases discussed.
Opposition To Motion To Dismiss S Gerard Ange V Templer FGérard Angé
THE END GAME...
WHEN CORPORATIONS AND CEO'S CAN PAY TO SUBVERT THE FABRIC OF OUR CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS THAT PROTECT ALL CITIZENS. THEN... WE ALL LOSE.
THESE ARE THE OFFICIAL COURT TRANSCRIPTS & COURT DOCUMENTS:
After SIX YEARS and $100,000.00 in legal fees... OUR CASE DAMAGES WERE THROWN OUT BY A "SURPRISE SUBSTITUTED JUDGE" & ON A TRUMPED UP PHONY MISSING "Assignment of Claims" DOCUMENTS THAT WERE NEVER MISSING AT ALL.
READ THE SHOCKING OFFICIAL COURT TRANSCRIPTS AND THEN DECIDE FOR YOURSELF WHY OUR CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT TO TRIAL WAS DENIED BY A SUBSTITUTED JUDGE.
http://www.win-tv.net/GAP_WINTV_Site/GAP_WIN-Tv_Website_Theft.html
Sample motion to compel deposition subpoena in californiaLegalDocsPro
This sample motion to compel compliance with a deposition subpoena in California is designed to be used when one party to a legal action has served a deposition subpoena for production of business records on a NON-PARTY to the action pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure Section 2020.510 and requested both their attendance at the deposition and production of documents and they failed to appear for the deposition, yet the NON-PARTY failed to appear at the deposition. This sample motion to compel is made pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure Section 2025.450 and requests that the court compel the non-party deponent to appear for deposition and produce the documents requested in the deposition subpoena for production of business records. The sample on which this preview is based is 16 pages and includes brief instructions, a memorandum of points and authorities with citations to case law and statutory authority, sample meet and confer declaration and proof of service.
STATEMENT OF UNDISPUTED FACTS.
=========================
ANTHONY TEMPLER /
CURRENTLY RESIDING AT:
Zille Str. 69, 10575
BERLIN, GERMANY
LAST KNOWN USA ADDRESS: ANTHONY TEMPLER/
ATANDA WEB PRESENCE SERVICES
939 61ST STREET, SUITE #13
OAKLAND, CA 94608-1301
-------------------------------------------------------------
GAP INTERNATIONAL INC. 700 OLD MARPLE ROAD, SPRINGFIELD, PENNSYLVANIA
----------------------------------------------------------
MORE INFORMATION ON THE THEFT:
http://www.win-tv.net/GAP_WINTV_Site/GAP_WIN-Tv_Website_Theft.html
----------------------------------------------------------
Case Brief InstructionsYou will prepare a Case Brief on th.docxmichelljubborjudd
Case Brief Instructions
You will prepare a Case Brief on the provided judicial opinion regarding a criminal justice topic included below , CAVITT v. STATE. DO NOT USE INFORMATION FROM THE CASE BRIEF SAMPLE. The judicial opinion that you will prepare a Case Brief on can be found below. The Case Brief must include the following sections: Caption, Facts, Procedural History, Issue, Rule of Law, Holding, and Rationale. The Case Brief must be 1 page. A heading must be provided for each section of the Case Brief. Save your work as a Microsoft Word document and review the Sample Case Brief provided below.
CAVITT v. STATE Miss. 1199 Cite as 159 So.3d 1199 (Miss.App. 2015) preme court’s notation in Bounds, Bounds asserts that the judge, not the jury, set his sentence at life in prison. Id. Hence, he claims that the imposition of a life sentence by the circuit court judge created an illegal sentence that defeats the statute of limitations on his appeal. ¶ 3. In its order dated January 7, 2014, the circuit court summarily dismissed Bounds’s PCR motion—in part because Bounds failed to seek leave from the supreme court to file the PCR motion and in part because the circuit court found that his case is not excepted from the statute of limitations. On January 21, 2014, Bounds, having reviewed the circuit court’s order, filed a motion for leave from the supreme court to proceed with his PCR motion. On January 27, 2014, Bounds filed the instant appeal. Nonetheless, on June 25, 2014, the supreme court denied Bounds’s request for leave, stating: In the application for leave before this panel, Bounds merely states that his sentence was illegal. He offers no argument and does not support his contention. Bounds’s conviction and sentence were affirmed by this Court, and the mandate issued in 1972. Accordingly, we find that Bounds has failed to make a substantial showing of the denial of a state or federal right, and his application for leave should be dismissed as timebarred. Despite the supreme court’s denial of Bounds’s motion for leave to proceed with his PCR motion, Bounds has continued in his appeal of the matter. DISCUSSION [1, 2] ¶ 4. Mississippi law requires that a movant must obtain permission from the supreme court to file a PCR motion in a circuit court if the movant’s conviction has been affirmed by the appellate court on direct appeal or if the direct appeal has been dismissed. Miss.Code Ann. § 99–39– 7 (Supp.2014). ‘‘This procedure is not merely advisory, but jurisdictional.’’ Bownes v. State, 963 So.2d 1277, 1278 (¶ 3) (Miss.Ct.App.2007) (citation omitted). We have consistently held that when a movant fails to obtain the requisite permission from the supreme court, all other courts lack the jurisdiction necessary to review the movant’s PCR motion. See Doss v. State, 757 So.2d 1016, 1017 (¶ 7) (Miss.Ct. App.2000); Bownes, 963 So.2d at 1279 (¶ 4). Accordingly, both the circuit court and this Court are without jurisdiction to review Bounds’s appeal. As ...
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BRIEF IN SUPPORT OF AMENDED PLAINTIFF’S MOTION TO COMPEL WITH SANCTIONS
1. 1
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF
VIRGINIA DANVILLE DIVISION
ALVIN L. SUTHERLIN, JR.,
Plaintiff,
Civil Action No. 4:15CV00037
v.
LIEUTENANT J. W. SMITH, and
SERGEANT H. S. RICHARDSON, and
OFFICER N. M. SLOVER, and
OFFICER M. C. PACE, and
OFFICER R. C. LANDRUM, and
OFFICER D. C. LANCASTER, and
OFFICER W. C. SHIVELY, and
OFFICER W. R. MERRILL, and
OFFICER J. D. DIXON, and
OFFICER L. D. LAND,
Defendants.
BRIEF IN SUPPORT OF AMENDED PLAINTIFF’S MOTION TO COMPEL WITH
SANCTIONS
NOW COMES Plaintiff, Alvin L. Sutherlin, Jr. (Pro Se) requests that this Honorable court
accepts this brief in support of the plaintiffs "AMENDED PLAINTIFF’S MOTION TO
COMPEL WITH SANCTIONS"
2. 2
BACKGROUND AND STATEMENTS OF FACTS
The plaintiff has to date made a multiple Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests by email
for the release and access to body-worn camera (BWC) videos/audio and documentation of any
kind relating to the incident at 505 Jefferson street Danville Virginia on September 25th, 2013 by
the defendants.
The first was on February 3rd, 2014. (Dkt No. 11-1, Pageid# : 99). The second was made on
July 8th, 2014 and the only documentation that was made available the plaintiff were
corresponding emails only. (See attached emails from Major C. K. Wiles, Services Division)
The plaintiff again is seeking access to suppressed exculpatory video data evidence and its Meta
data through Evidence.com and its complete audit report trail by subpoena (Dkt No. 30). (Please
see:River City Blue - Danville, Va - River City TV- Published on Oct 3, 2014, 26m:24s
attached, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3jei8nZHsHg ) On this episode of River City
Blue the Danville Police Department discusses the implementation of new body-worn cameras
to all officers from Taser International with all evidence uploaded to Evidence.com and some
information from GENERAL ORDER: OPR. 169 POLICY AND PROCEDURES
hosted by Major C.K. Wiles, Services Division)
There should be an independent audit report trail for each defendant's body-worn camera (BWC)
on September 25th, 2013. All uploaded data from defendants body-worn camera (BWC) in
following with GENERAL ORDER: OPR. 169 POLICY AND PROCEDURES (IV., E. 4), but
access to this data has been denied through GENERAL ORDER: OPR. 169 POLICY
ANDPROCEDURES (IV., E. 9) which is in direct conflict (IV., E. 11)and in direct defiance of
Judge's Order by your Honorable Robert S. Ballou. The application and the use of this policy
have led to the denial of exculpatory evidence to the plaintiff at the beginning of his criminal
indictments to the present. GENERAL ORDER: OPR. 169 POLICY AND PROCEDURES
(IV, E. 9-12 ). The moving parties here are the Chief of Police Defendants, City of Danville
Virginia and the Commonwealth Attorney's Office (See: The GENERAL ORDER: OPR.
169 POLICY AND PROCEDURE and Memorandum Of Understanding (MOU)s
(Dkt. No. 42-2) attached)
The plaintiff would respectfully ask the court to consider adding these parties as defendants in
this case. If requires the plaintiff must file a separate motion for this action. The plaintiff well
files the appropriate motion to add additional defendants to that case with its supporting brief.
Following GENERAL ORDER: OPR. 169 POLICY ANDPROCEDURES (IV., E.1-6) the
defendants has a duty and responsibility to properly categorize video evidence established within
evidence.com. Noting that any "Uncharacterized" video recording will be automatically deleted
after 180 days. GENERAL ORDER: OPR. 169 POLICY ANDPROCEDURES (IV., E.4)
3. 3
Giving the defendants the ability to have any video evidence automatically deleted after 180 days
which can lead to the spoliation of video evidence of by simply allowing any piece of video
evidence to be listed as "Uncharacterized" than by granting full autonomy to the superiors having
full and final decision-making has allowed the spoilage and the violation of the plaintiffs due
process rights by the denial the plaintiff evidence within their possession following GENERAL
ORDER: OPR. 169 POLICY ANDPROCEDURES (IV., E. 9) has allowed of multiple civil
rights violations to have taken place against the plaintiff. ( Bradley S. TANNER, et al. v. CITY
OF VIRGINIA BEACH - See more at http://caselaw.findlaw.com/va-supreme-
court/1281336.html#sthash.MEtryq2G.aIjm50cE.dpuf)
The request was denied pursuant to § 2.2-3706 (A)(2)(a) and GENERAL ORDER: OPR. 169
POLICY AND PROCEDURES (IV., E. 9), at this time the plaintiff and Ms. Brittney C. Logan,
were both being tried jointly and equally on criminal felony charges in City of Danville Circuit
Court. Both plaintiff's and Ms. Brittney C. Logan attorneys filed separate Motions of Discovery
for same videos and information and two completely different sets of videos sets edited videos of
the original videos were given records have yet to have been made available to identify if the
editing was done by the city of Danville police department or the commonwealth attorney's
office. This information is found within the audit records for each video uploaded to
Evidence.com within the City of Danville Police Department's Evidence.com database or from
Taser International. This is created for each officer's body-worn camera (BWC) from each
defendant at the end of each officer's shift.
On December 8th & 22nd, 2015 the plaintiff filed two subpoenas served on the City of Danville
Police Department (Dkt No. 23&30) in an effort to have the defendants make available
suppressed exculpatory evidence that was not made available during the plaintiff's civil and
criminal proceedings in Danville Circuit Court. A first small set of edited police camera videos
were made available under discovery on January 21th, 2016 before the Motion to Suppress
during the plaintiff's criminal proceedings. During this hearing is when Officer L. D. land first
committed perjury during the plaintiff's criminal proceeding. The displaying of the video
evidence "Landrum One" was in full control at all times by the Assistant Commonwealth
Attorney Mrs. P. Haskins during the Motion to Suppress Hearing in this way she made sure that
the Honorable Chief Justice Judge J. Milam Jr. was not able to review the beginning part of the
video showing the illegal no-knock entry of the defendants into the plaintiff's home. The
plaintiff's Attorney Ms. Sharron Ashby having little or any knowledge or experience relating to
the use or control of electronic devices with the assistance Attorney Mr. Marvin L. Smallwood,
(Office Of The Public Defender) She truthfully express her ignorance in this area to Honorable
Chief Justice Judge J. Milam Jr. during the hearing to remove her as the plaintiff's counsel (See:
Transcripts p145, line 24- p146, line 5). This Motion to Dismiss hearing was requested by the
plaintiff "Alvin L. Sutherlin Jr." (See: Transcripts from motion to dismiss on march 26th,
2014 in the Circuit Court of Danville Virginia pages 132-157)
4. 4
In a successful effect to covering up the illegal actions and no-knock entry by the defendants into
the plaintiff's residence (505 Jefferson St., 1st Floor, Danville Virginia 24541) on September
25th, 2013 and allowing her first and only witness the defendant Officer L. D. Land an
opportunity to offer his perjured testimony unchallenged. The Assistant Commonwealth
Attorney Mrs. P. Haskins also delayed disclosure of a second set exculpatory video evidence
until February 18th, 2016 (Dkt. No.42) after the Motion to Suppress Hearing finalized.
All of the video evidence in the first set of videos were identified by the name of the officers
within the title. The disclosure of the second set of videos was made without any means of
identification within the titles with the officer's name used for identification purposes. This
information should have been made available when the videos were edited and made available to
the plaintiff during his criminal proceedings as was done to the first set of videos that were
edited and made available under discovery to the plaintiff.
The plaintiff requests that the court compels the defendants to clearly identify each and all body-
worn camera videos including any and all of Metadata. In this way, each video in this data can be
identified to each defendant's present at the plaintiff's residence on September 25th, 2013 and
including each audit trail for each defendant's body-worn camera (BWC). If for any reason the
defendants are unable or unwilling to provide this necessary information.
The plaintiff respectfully asks this court to Order Taser International to provide all relevant data
in their possession from the City of Danville, Police Department from all of the defendants
present at the plaintiff's home on September 25th , 2013.
The video titled: "AXON_Flex_Video_2013-09-25_1448" from the second set of video evidence
is from the body-worn camera (BWC) of the defendant Officer W. R. Merrill. He was the very
first officer to illegally enter the plaintiff residence. In this video, it is clearly shown that it was
an illegal no-knock entry into the plaintiff's residence violating the plaintiff's civil rights under
the 4th Amendment. If this second set of videos were made available before the Motion to
Suppress Hearing it would have been able to challenge the perjured testimony given the
defendant Officer L. D. Land. This very important exculpatory video evidence was never made
available to Attorney Ms. S. Ashby before the Motion to Suppress Hearing. This exculpatory
video evidence would have clearly challenged the perjured testimony of the defendant Officer
L.D. Land and others defendants during the plaintiff's criminal proceedings. having exculpatory
video evidence was purposely withheld and purposely suppressed by the defendants and did not
disclose the fact that the videos had been edited from the original. The fact that Assistant
Commonwealth Attorney Mrs. P. Haskins obvious review the evidence before trial simply means
she was fully aware that the officers never knocked and announced their presence before entering
the residence. With this fact, the Assistant Commonwealth Attorney can't take the position of
plausible deniability and deny having no knowledge of the first civil rights violations by the
defendants. The knowledgeable and willful withholding of evidence and knowledge from the
5. 5
court and the plaintiff in itself is a clear civil rights violation.( See: Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S.
83 (1963))
The Assistant Commonwealth Attorney Mrs. P. Haskins in her actions violated Virginia State
Law § 19.2-265.4. Failure to provide discovery of exculpatory evidence is a direct violation of
the plaintiff 's under the 14th Amendment.
§ 19.2-265.4. Failure to provide, reads as follows:
A. In any criminal prosecution for a felony in a circuit court or for a misdemeanor brought on
direct indictment, the attorney for the Commonwealth shall have a duty to adequately and fully
provide discovery as provided under Rule 3A:11 of the Rules of the Supreme Court. Rule 3A:11
shall be construed to apply to such felony and misdemeanor prosecutions. This duty to disclose
shall be continuing and shall apply to any additional evidence or material discovered by the
Commonwealth prior to or during the trial which is subject to discovery or inspection and has
been previously requested by the accused. In any criminal prosecution for a misdemeanor by trial
de novo in the circuit court, the attorney for the Commonwealth shall have a duty to adequately
and fully provide discovery as provided under Rule 7C:5 of the Rules of the Supreme Court.
B. If at any time during the course of the proceedings it is brought to the attention of the court
that the attorney for the Commonwealth has failed to comply with this section, the court may
order the Commonwealth to permit the discovery or inspection, grant a continuance, or prohibit
the Commonwealth from introducing evidence not disclosed, or the court may enter such other
order as it deems just under the circumstances.
Under the Exclusionary Doctrine, several pieces of evidence should have been suppressed
before the plaintiff's criminal proceeding because they were obtained through and after illegally
police misconduct. This places evidence within the criteria of "fruit of the poisonous tree".
Went the number of civil rights violations and violations of state law by the defendants. This act
of Judicial Misconduct by the withholding and manipulation of exculpatory evidence during the
trial by the Assistant Commonwealth Attorney Mrs. P. Haskins and perjured testimony by the
defendants against the plaintiff . Is what was used to gain a ruling against the plaintiff at the
conclusion of the Motion to Suppress in the Circuit Court of Danville Virginia resulting in a
complete cover up of all illegal civil rights violations and perjured testimony by the defendants at
that time.
The one video that was submitted into as an exhibit of evidence "Landrum 1". This piece of
evidence was not properly maintained as an exhibit of evidence for appeal to the Virginia Court
of Appeals. Violating the plaintiff's civil rights under the 14th amendment. The plaintiff appealed
his case to the Virginia Court of appeals being found not being able to afford his own Attorney.
The Honorable Chief Justice Judge J. Milam Jr. assigned Attorney Mr. James Martin to represent
6. 6
the plaintiff in his appeal from the trial court and ordered copies of the transcripts for trial
pursuant to §§ 19.2-165 and 19.2-326. Shortly after receiving copies of these transcripts Attorney
Mr. James Martin was notified that a key piece exculpatory of evidence video "Landrum-1" was
not maintained as an exhibit of evidence by the Circuit Court Clerk's Office of Danville Virginia
for his case under appeal by the plaintiff. (See: Correspondence by Emails and Letters with
Attorney Mr. James Martin)
The withholding of this or any exculpatory evidence is a violation of 14th amendment denial of
due process rights and a violation of state law. This withholding of exculpatory evidence from
the plaintiff's case under appeal did cause a violation of the plaintiff's civil rights. Without this
key piece of exculpatory evidence his appeal was denied by the Virginia Court of Appeals and is
now has been appealed to the Supreme Court of Virginia. This video was not made available as
an exhibit of evidence to the Virginia Court of Appeals at the beginning and was only considered
at the end with the filing of a Writ of Certiorari was filed on October 9th, 2015 by Attorney.
James Martin. This was first requested at a hearing on June 29tth, 2015 after being rescheduled
from June 9th, 2015 by the Honorable Chief Justice Judge J. Milam Jr. and the plaintiff's behalf.
(See copy attached: Letter to the Honorable Chief Justice Judge J. Milam Jr., Per Curiam
& Writ of Certiorari)
The subpoena (Dkt No. 23) December 8th, 2015 reads as follows:
" YOU ARE COMMANDED to produce at the time, date, and place set forth below the
following documents, electronically stored information, or objects, and to permit inspection,
copying, testing, or sampling of the material. ANY and All UNEDITED body warm cameras
(BWC) VIDEO AND/OR AUDIO FOOTAGE, STRED IN WHATEVER MEDIUM, OF
INTERVIEW, STATEMENTS, ECT. ON ANY MEDIUM from the following officers named:
(SERGEANT H. S. RICHARDSON, OFFICER N.M. SLOVER, OFFICER M.C. PACE,
OFFICER RC. LANDRUM, OFFICER D.C. LANCASTER, OFFICER W.C. SHIVELY,
OFFICER W.R MERRILL, OFFICER J.D. DIXON, LIEUTENANT J. W. SMITH, OFFICER
L. D. LAND, and/or CAPTAIN D. HALEY) OF, ALVIN L. SUTHERLIN, JR and/or
MICHELLE OWENS, WHO RESIDED at 505 JEFFERSON STREET, 1ST FLOOR and Unit
#5, DANVILLE, VIRGINIA 24541 and BRITTNEY C. LOGAN from September 25th , 2013
through and to the PRESENT.
The defendants respondent to this subpoena (Dkt. No 23) filed on December 8th , 2015 with a
motion DEFENDANTS’ MOTION TO QUASH SUBPOENAS DUCES TECUM ISSUED TO
THE DANVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT AND THE CIRCUIT COURT CLERK’S OFFICE
OF DANVILLE, VIRGINIA and BRIEF IN SUPPORT OF DEFENDANTS’ MOTION TO
QUASH SUBPOENAS DUCES TECUM ISSUED TO THE DANVILLE POLICE
DEPARTMENT AND THE CIRCUIT COURT CLERK’S OFFICE OF DANVILLE,
VIRGINIA (Dkt. No. 27-28) on December 15th, 2015.The defendants have chosen to the defy
this Court's order (Dkt No. 68) by not fully disclosing all the body-worn camera videos
7. 7
(BWC)'s. This is a pattern of not provide and withholding exculpatory evidence by the City of
Danville Police Department (See: Elder v. City of Danville, Va et al, No. 4:2013cv00047 (W.D.
Va. 2014) and not provide all of the unedited videos from all of the defendants present at 505
Jefferson street, Danville Virginia for the September 25th, 2013 as Order filed on 04/01/2016
(Dkt No. 68). The Order reads in part as follows:
Motion to Quash
"Plaintiffs subpoena to the Danville Police Department seeks “[a]ny and all body warm [sic]
camera (BWC) documentation filed within the Danville Police Department’s records and/or
Evidence.com. Including, but not limited to any officers [sic] failure to activate his or hers [sic]
BWC, failure of any BWC . . . any written authorization to edit, alter, erase, duplicate, copy
and/or share any BWC video and/or audio.” (Dkt. No. 30). The subpoena requests information
about footage obtained from an officer who is not named in Plaintiffs complaint as well as
information about footage from September 25, 2013, and thereafter. The Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure require that information requested in discovery be relevant to a claim or defense and
proportional to the needs of the case. Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1). Plaintiffs request for information
about the footage obtained by any officer not involved in the search of plaintiff 's residence or for
any period of relevant nor proportional to his claims. Accordingly, the subpoena shall be limited
in scope to the footage from cameras worn by officers who were present during the execution of
the warrant described in Plaintiffs complaint. The scope of the subpoena shall also be limited to
the date and time period of the events described in the complaint and to the officers who are
named as defendants in this case. Defendants’ motion to quash is therefore GRANTED in part.
Defendants are directed to provide Plaintiff with the information requested in the subpoena (as
limited by this order) within twenty-one (21) days of the date of this order." The defendants have
not produced any of the supporting body warm camera (BWC) video documentation including
from Evidence.com outlined within the subpoena (Dkt No. 30) reads as follows filed on
December 18th , 2015:
" YOU ARE COMMANDED to produce at the time, date, and place set forth below the
following documents, electronically stored information, or objects, and to permit inspection,
copying, testing, or sampling of the material. Any and all body warm camera (BWC)
documentation filed within the Danville Police Department's records and/or Evidence.com.
Including, but not limited to any officers failure to activate his or hers BWC, failure of any BWC
at the beginning or during their shift, any written authorization to edit, alter, erase, duplicate,
copy and/or share any BWC • video and/or audio from the following officers named:
(SERGEANT H. S. RICHARDSON, OFFICER N.M. SLOVER, OFFICER M.C. PACE,
OFFICER RC. LANDRUM, OFFICER D.C. LANCASTER, OFFICER W.C. SHIVELY,
OFFICER W.R MERRILL, OFFICER J.D. DIXON, LIEUTENANT J. W. SMITH, OFFICER
L. D. LAND, and/or CAPTAIN D. HALEY) in relating to any and all incidents at the location
505 Jefferson Street, Danville, Virginia 24541 on and after September 25th , 2013 involving
Alvin L. Sutherlin Jr., Michelle Owens, and Brittney C. Logan."
8. 8
All requested documentation by the plaintiff outlined within the subpoena (Dkt No. 30) is in the
possession of the City of Danville Police Department's records and under the exclusive control
of the Chief of Police or his designee GENERAL ORDER: OPR. 169 POLICY AND
PROCEDURES (IV, E. 8-12). Also none of the officers failure to activate his or hers BWC,
failure of any BWC at the beginning subpoena. Under Rule 26 the defendants have only made
available edited versions of the original body-worn camera (BWC) videos. The plaintiff has
only received some edited body-worn camera (BWC) that have clearly been edited. Listening to
the audio portion of the videos you can clearly hear multiple the activate on indicators as
different defendants turn their body-worn cameras will back home after being turned off. These
videos have already been submitted in as exhibits of evidence to the court. The plaintiff also still
has not been given any of the body-worn camera (BWC) videos edited or original versions from
OFFICER N. M. SLOVER, OFFICER D.C. LANCASTER, OFFICER L. D. LAND and/or
LIEUTENANT J. W. SMITH of the defendants. All of the defendants, in this case, were present
at 505 Jefferson street Danville Virginia 24541on September 25th, 2013 and all were issued
working body-worn cameras (BWC) on that day at the beginning of their shift following the
Danville Police Department's (BWC)'s GENERAL ORDER: OPR. 169 POLICY AND
PROCEDURES (IV., B. 1-2) and all defendants body-worn camera (BWC)'s were active and
functioning properly during the entire event that the plaintiff's residence on 505 Jefferson street,
Danville Virginia 24541on September 25th, 2013 following the Danville Police Department's
(BWC)'s GENERAL ORDER: OPR. 169 POLICY AND PROCEDURES (IV., C. 1-4 & IV.,
F. 1-2). No sworn affidavits or official documents has been provided to the plaintiff or this court
showing that the officers did not properly assigned the correct category to the body-worn camera
(BWC) videos using Evidence.com, Evidence Sync, or Mobile App to ensure that the data is
retained for the appropriate time period associated with its criminal justice purpose on the day.
Following the Police Department's (BWC)'s GENERAL ORDER: OPR. 169 POLICY AND
PROCEDURES (IV, E. 1-6).
The defendants to date have not provided any written documentation showing that any of the
defendants present 505 Jefferson street, Danville Virginia 24541on September 25th, 2013 failed
to activate he or her following the Police Department's (BWC)'s GENERAL ORDER: OPR.
169 POLICY AND PROCEDURES (IV, C. 4.).
The defendants having acknowledged that they have none of the information requested on the
subpoena in their possession The plaintiff respectfully asks the court to allow the plaintiff to
reissue the subpoena (Dkt. No. 38). to Taser International in line when of items and information
sought for in (Dkt. No 30). Taser International will not provide the requested items and
information on the subpoena without an Order from this court to Taser International. (Please see:
Order (Dkt. No. 32 &38) Taser international has stated in their response to the subpoena that the
requested information can be retrieved from City of Danville Police Department. (Please see:
response letter from Taser international in regards to subpoena. The Spoliation Doctrine
9. 9
interplays with the duty to preserve, a duty which stems from the common law obligation to
preserve evidence when a party “has stated that the evidence is relevant to litigation or when a
party should have known that the evidence may be relevant to the future litigation.” GENERAL
ORDER: OPR. 169 POLICY AND PROCEDURES (IV, C. 2-4), (IV, E. 1-13). (See copy
attached: Taser International's response letter to subpoena (Dkt. No. 38))
The plaintiff claims damages under the Spoliation Doctrine,
Spoliation is defined as “the intentional destruction of evidence and when it is established, [the]
fact finder may draw [an] inference that [the] evidence destroyed was unfavorable to [the] party
responsible for its spoliation.” Black's Law Dictionary 1401 (6?th ed.1990).1 Our research
reflects that few jurisdictions have acknowledged spoliation as an independent tort. In those few
states which have recognized the tort, several courts have likened the harm arising from the
destruction of evidence to that suffered by plaintiffs in cases involving intentional interference
with prospective economic advantage. This reasoning was first employed in Smith v. Superior
Court, 151 Cal.App.3d 491, 198 Cal.Rptr. 829 (1984), where the California court of appeals
acknowledged the new cause of action for the first time. Noting that “for every wrong there is a
remedy,” the California court held that a prospective civil action in a products liability case was
a valuable probable expectancy to the plaintiff, and as such, the court could and should protect
that interest from the kind of interference posed by the destruction of evidence necessary to
prove such a claim. Smith, 198 Cal.Rptr. at 837. Several other jurisdictions adopted this
approach to the tort. See Bondu v. Gurvich, 473 So.2d 1307 (Fla.App.1985); ?Hazen v.
Municipality of Anchorage, 718 P.2d 456 (Alaska 1986); ?Hirsch v. General Motors Corp., 266
N.J.Super. 222, 628 A.2d 1108 (1993) (New Jersey recognizes intentional spoliation of evidence
as a tort, but not negligent spoliation of evidence); ?Holmes v. Amerex Rent-A-Car, 180 F.3d
294 (D.C.Cir.1999) (holding that negligent or reckless spoliation of evidence is an independent
and actionable tort); ?Smith v. Howard Johnson Co., 67 Ohio St.3d 28, 615 N.E.2d 1037 (1993)
(holding without explanation that a “cause of action exists in tort for interference with or
destruction of evidence”); ?and Coleman v. Eddy Potash, 120 N.M. 645, 905 P.2d 185 (1995).
These states, however, represent what we have determined to be the minority view. We find it
instructive that California, the first state to adopt spoliation as an independent tort, has changed
course and, more recently, that state's highest court has held specifically that the tort would no
longer be recognized. Cedars-Sinai Medical Center v. Superior Court, 18 Cal.4th 1, 74
Cal.Rptr.2d 248, 954 P.2d 511 (1998). In rejecting the logic of the Smith case, the California
Supreme Court noted that while “[n]o one doubts that the intentional destruction of evidence
should be condemned, ? that alone, however, is not enough to justify creating tort liability for
such conduct.” Cedars-Sinai, 74 Cal.Rptr.2d 248, 954 P.2d at 515.
10. 10
The California Supreme Court based its decision on a number of public policy concerns, noting
primarily the “strong policy favoring the use of nontort remedies rather than derivative tort
causes of action to punish and correct litigation misconduct and the prohibition against attacking
adjudications on the ground that evidence was falsified or destroyed.” Id. at 517. Chief among
these nontort remedies is the evidentiary inference, often quoted in its Latin form, “omnia
praesumuntur contra spoliatorem,” meaning “all things are presumed against a spoliator.” This
inference, embodied in California's rules of evidence and its standard jury instructions, allows a
fact-finder to infer from the destruction of evidence that whatever was contained in that evidence
was unfavorable to the party that destroyed it. Id.2 There is at least one Arkansas federal district
court decision which recognized this presumption. Carr v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 384
F.Supp. 821 (W.D.Ark.1974).
In addition to this evidentiary inference or presumption, the California Supreme Court noted the
“broad range of [discovery] sanctions for conduct that amounts to a misuse of the discovery
process.” Cedars-Sinai, 74 Cal.Rptr.2d 248, 954 P.2d at 517 (internal quotations omitted). In
California, these sanctions include “monetary sanctions, contempt sanctions, issue sanctions ?
evidentiary sanctions ? and terminating sanctions that include striking part or all of the pleadings,
dismissing part or all of the action, or granting a default judgment against the offending party.”
Id. at 517-18. Arkansas has similar sanctions, in the form of Ark. R. Civ. P. 37(b)(2), which
provides as follows:
(2)Sanctions By Court In Which Action Is Pending. If a person ? fails to obey an order to
provide or permit discovery, ? the court in which the action is pending may make such orders in
regard to the failure as are just, and among others the following:
(A)An order that the matters regarding which the order was made or any other designated facts
shall be taken to be established for the purposes of the action in accordance with the claim of the
party obtaining the order;
(B)An order refusing to allow the disobedient party to support or oppose designated claims or
defenses, or prohibiting him from introducing designated matters in evidence;
11. 11
(C)An order striking out pleadings or parts thereof, or staying further proceedings until the order
is obeyed, or dismissing the action or proceeding or any part thereof, or rendering a judgment by
default against the disobedient party;
(D)In lieu of any of the foregoing orders or in addition thereto, an order treating as a contempt of
court the failure to obey any orders except an order to submit to a physical or mental
examination;
In lieu of any of the foregoing orders or in addition thereto, the court shall require the party
failing to obey the order or the attorney advising him or both to pay the reasonable expenses,
including attorney's fees, caused by the failure, unless the court finds that the failure was
substantially justified or that other circumstances make an award of expenses unjust.
It is clear from the facts the that the defendants had a Duty to Preserve under the Spoliation
Doctrine, "a party’s duty to preserve potentially relevant documents is paramount for the
opposing party to receive a fair trial", under Rule 37(b)(2) explicitly authorizes courts to impose
sanctions on a party for failure to comply with a discovery order. The defendants have caused for
crucial pieces of evidence to be unavailable. Spoliation is “the intentional destruction,
mutilation, alteration, or concealment of evidence, usually a document in this case the evidence
consists of documents and videos/audios .” The Spoliation of evidence has occurred through the
implication and following of GENERAL ORDER: OPR. 169 POLICY AND PROCEDURE
and its Memorandum Of Understanding (MOU).
The defendants and their supervisors, in this case, had a reasonably anticipates of litigation and
were fully aware of their duty to preserve all evidence including exculpatory evidence from
destruction with the multiple signs of imminent litigation present.
1. The affidavit for the second search warrant and the execution of second search warrant on
September 25th, 2013.
2. The indictment and charges brought against Mr. Alvin L. Sutherlin Jr. and Ms. Brittney
C. Logan by the Commonwealth Attorney's Office in October of 2013.
3. The filing of the Civil Forfeiture and the felony charges filed by the Commonwealth
Attorney's Office against the plaintiff in October of 2013.
4. The submitting of the Citizens Complaint with Captain D. Haley of the Department of
Professional Standards.
Captain D. Haley first tried to contact the plaintiff at his place of employment (Woods
Menswear, LTD.), but the plaintiff was not working on that day. He then contacted the plaintiff
12. 12
on his cell phone. At the time, the plaintiff received a phone call from Captain D. Haley, where
he had just concluded a meeting with the Honorable Gerald A. Gibson at the City of Danville
Circuit Court Clerk's Office. The plaintiff had sent a complaint by e-mail to his office
concerning the actions one of his clerks. Within the e-mail (See attach a copy of the email:
Virginia freedom of Information Act (FOIA), Complaint) to the Honorable Gerald A. Gibson, the
plaintiff chose to mention that an unknown police officer had come to the plaintiff's place of
employment. At the time, the plaintiff did not know the identity of this officer inquiry for him at
his place of employment. Only after receiving the phone call from Captain D. Haley is went the
plaintiff did the identity of the unknown police officer. Captain D. Haley identify the unknown
also has himself to the plaintiff . Captain D. Haley requested that the plaintiff comes to his office
to file a Citizens Complaint Form. The plaintiff completed this complaint form on March 3rd,
2014 in regards to the illegal actions of the defendants on September 25th, 2013 at 505 Jefferson
street Danville Virginia the plaintiff late in the day and did not have adequate time to complete
the citizens complaint form on that one day. Captain D. Haley inquired if why the plaintiffs did
not come to his office first before releasing the information to the WSET-13 NEWS. In my
interview with Captain D. Haley, I found out that he became aware of the incident at my home
on September 25th, 2013 by one of the reporters from WSET-13 NEWS: I had given a copy of
the police worn-camera videos and an interview. The plaintiff earlier had contacted WSET-13
NEWS at this time the plaintiffs had already acquired a copy of the of videos from Attorney Mr.
Marvin L. Smallwood. Plaintiff admitted he did not know about the Department of Professional
Standards within the City of Danville, Police Department. Captain D. Haley told plaintiff that he
would allow him to file a Citizens Complaint Form despite the lapse of time did pass. It appeared
that Captain Haley had already viewed the police misconduct shown in the video by the
defendants. Not having enough time because the late start the plaintiff and Captain D. Haley
scheduled a second meeting to complete the Citizens Complaint Form. A copy of plaintiff's
interview with WSET-13 NEWS is in the possession of the defendants granted by way of a
subpoena. WSET-13 NEWS not given a copy of this interview with the plaintiff. (Dkt. No. 11-5,
Pageid# :113-115)
Through Captain D. Haley's investigation having full unfettered access to all unedited body-worn
camera (BWC) videos and Metadata from all of the defendants through Evidence.com,
including unedited body-worn camera (BWC) videos and Metadata from Officer N.M. Slover,
Lieutenant J.W. Smith, Officer D.C. Lancaster and Officer L.D. Land. He had the unique
opportunity and ability to view all video evidence including that video evidence which was
withheld from the plaintiff's criminal proceedings. Captain D. Haley's did make it known to the
plaintiff that he had personally reviewed all of the officers videos present at 505 Jefferson street
on September 25th, 2013, this included video evidence from Lieutenant J.W. Smith, Officer
D.C. Lancaster, and Officer L.D. Land. To date, the plaintiff still has not been given access to
these officer body-worn camera (BWC) videos of any accompanied Metadata from
13. 13
evidence.com as described within the Judge's Order (Dkt No. 68) and subpoenas (Dkt No.
25&30). 1711 more teens to seven
The defendants have chosen to violation of all discovery laws Federal and State Law.
Pursuant to Rule 26 the plaintiff respectfully requests that the court Orders the defendants to
make available all have only made some of the police narratives available. There should be one
police narrative reports for each officer present at 505 Jefferson Street, Danville ,Virginia on
September 25th, 2013. The plaintiff has only received a restricted small number of narrative
reports. Through examination of the second set of videos, there also was an unknown female
officer on the scene. She is in the yard facing toward the street standing in the front yard having a
conversation with inquiring as they are coming into the room and house in asking what
apartment are they visiting. (See: AXON_Flex_Video_2013-09-25_1247) and she is observed
having a conversation with Officer W.C. Shivley . (See: (Shivley 1-Sutherlin)
AXON_Flex_Video_2013-09-25_2009 (video-Logan ))
This indicates that the officers were present with the intention of serving the warrant on the
Rooming House which is located on the second floor, not the first floor. This inference is
supported by statements by the Commonwealth Attorney's Office " The residence was a rooming
house with a common area at the entrance. (T/52). Upon arriving at the residence, police officers
entered the common area and made their way to the Appellant’s apartment which was the first
one on the left. (See: Brief in opposition to petition for appeal Supreme Court Record No.
151849 Court of Appeals Record No. Danville Circuit Court Nos. 13-1459 & 1460, Pg 4-5)
The identity of each individual defendant was obtained from the information provided by the
City of Danville, Police Department from the plaintiff's FOIA request. Through additional
observation, a police cruiser is parked in front of the plaintiff's residence and defendant Sergeant
H.S. Richardson is seen standing on the passenger side of the vehicle having a conversation with
the officer within the cruise. (See: (Landrum 1- Sutherlin) AXON_Flex_Video_2013-09-
25_2039 (video-Logan). The identity of these unknown officers should be made available under
discovery.
My interview with Captain Haley was recorded in full as policy dictates, but only half of the
interview has been made available under Rule 26 the second day meeting with Captain Haley.
The first part of the interview is omitted from Disc that was provided by the defendants under
Rule 26 Initial Disclosure. The plaintiff made two visits to Captain Haley's office to complete
14. 14
the interview and filling out the citizen complaint form. The first part of the interview should
also be made available to the plaintiff under
Rule 26. On June 9, 2014, the plaintiff receive a letter from the Chief of Police, Colonel Philip
A. Broadfoot. (See: Response Letter from Chief of Police, Colonel Philip A. Broadfoot attached
).
Taser International does conduct regular daily business with the City of Danville, Police
Department through Evidence.com interfacing with the Axon Cameras used by their officers
who a upload data through their Computer Network on a daily basis. Taser International is seen
as a third party in this case and is subject to all rules governing discovery.
The plaintiff is providing the most up to date information possible about available from Taser
International from their website on April 29th, 2016, to provides the most accurate and up to date
information about Evidence.com data management software and its interface with the Axon
Cameras body-worn cameras into all company equipment to all of its features and its
capabilities.
Evidence.Com
"Digital Evidence Management"
Information provided from Taser international's website:
(http://www.axon.io/products/evidence)
Evidence.Com "Digital Evidence Management"
Evidence.com: Digital Evidence Management, Simplified
As the sources of digital evidence expand, storage alone isn't enough to keep track of the body-
worn camera videos, photos, audio recordings, and other data that is overwhelming agency
servers and systems. Evidence.com is a robust end-to-end solution that not only allows agencies
to store all that data, but also enables new workflows for managing and sharing that data.
Officers and command staff can upload content from Axon and TASER devices or other systems
easily, manage it simply with search and retrieval features, and then collaborate effortlessly with
prosecutors by using powerful sharing features. When storage needs increase, the cloud-based
system allows agencies to scale instantly and cost-effectively.
Evidence.com Features
Evidence Search
Avoid paper pushing with simple online searches. Find evidence by date, title or key words.
15. 15
Cases
Group evidence by case for easy lookup and effective collaboration with the DA.
Sharing
Spend less time as a courier of evidence and more time on the street. Share evidence internally or
externally by sending a secure link.
Chain of Custody Tracking
When it comes to protecting the truth, data integrity is our top priority. Ensure chain of custody
with evidence data hashing (SHA1) and detailed audit logs.
CAD/RMS Integration
CAD/RMS Integration automatically tag your Axon videos with the correct information, saving
your agency time and money.
Roles and Permissions
Configure Evidence.com to a structure that works best for your agency. Customize permissions
to ensure responsibility is appropriately distributed.
Axon Capture: Evidence Management for iOS and Android Devices
Information provided from Taser international's website:
(http://www.axon.io/products/capture)
Axon Capture is an application built specifically for law enforcement that allows officers to
capture digital evidence right from the field. The app eliminates the need to carry three separate
devices for photo, video, and audio recording. Instead, it builds upon the capabilities already in
your pocket with the security and organization needed to protect truth. You can add tags, titles or
GPS coordinates to any recordings before you upload the data to Evidence.com.
Mobile Media Management
Until today, officers have had two options: sacrifice security for convenience, or convenience for
security. With Axon Capture, recording evidence is easy and managing it is secure. Photos and
videos are automatically tagged with GPS locations, and metadata can be added and synced to
16. 16
your Evidence.com profile without leaving the scene. And evidence is secured by pin to prevent
unauthorized access in the event of phone loss or theft.
Leverages smartphone features for digital evidence recording
Photos and videos are automatically tagged with GPS data
Metadata can be added directly from the scene
Integration with desktop Evidence.com platform is seamless
Data plans, deletion policies, and security protocols are fully customizable
Axon Body 2: Unlimited HD. No Distractions.
Information provided from Taser international's website:
(http://www.axon.io/products/body2)
Axon Body 2 builds upon its predecessor's powerful simplicity to bring you advanced
technology with the same low maintenance. The single-unit on-officer camera now features
upgraded capabilities like unlimited HD video, Wi-Fi video offload and industry-leading security
enhancements.
Beyond a Camera and Beyond Compare
Behind the simple camera design lies a platform capable of performing virtually anything you
can imagine. The hardware supports full wireless connectivity for triggering, streaming, and
integration with the industry-leading suite of mobile and cloud applications. With feature
improvements and updates every 30 days, Axon Body 2 is a scalable, future-proofed video
solution for police officers.
Retina HD Video: The industry's best low-light video now records in HD.
Dual Audio Channels: Make voices much more distinct with audio tuning and noise reduction.
Full-Shift Battery: Lasts for over 12 hours.
Pre-Event Buffer: Capture up to 2 minutes before an event.
Wi-Fi Video Offload: Axon Body 2 is capable of wireless offload to the cloud.
Wireless Activation: Axon Signal starts the camera with light bar and other sensor activation.
Mobile App: Stream, tag, and replay videos right on your phone with Axon View.
Optional Mute: Ability to disable audio in the field to support dual-party consent.
In-Field Tagging: Mark any important points in your video.
17. 17
Unmatched Durability: Built to withstand extreme weather and brutal conditions.
Advanced Security: Evidence is encrypted at rest on the camera to protect data at all times.
Axon RapidLock Mounts: Versatile mounts keep the camera steady during tough situations.
The subpoena (Dkt. No. 30) was first filed December 22nd, 2015, 18 weeks/126 days ago as of
April 26th. The second subpoena served on the City of Danville, Police Department specified
evidence only from officers presence at 505 Jefferson street on September 25, 2013, in line with
the court's Order. (Dkt. No. 68)
An adequate amount of time has been granted to the defendants to produce the requested
information this is one more reason for the application of sanctions in this case.
The plaintiff respectfully requests that the defendants bear the cost of any and all expenses
arising from delivery, execution, serving and fulfillment of subpoena to Taser International. In
light of the fact that Taser international will be providing any or all of the missing evidence that
is no longer in the possession of the City of Danville, Police Department for whatever reason the
responsibility should be on the defendants in light of the Spoliation in this case.
Plaintiff respectfully asks this court to grant an Order to compel Taser International to comply
with the subpoena the team and 1/2. (Dkt. No. 38)
Plaintiff respectfully asks this court to grant this motion for sanctions against the defendants and
to find a defendant's in contempt of court.
DVD attached contents list: BRIEF IN SUPPORT OF AMENDED PLAINTIFF’S MOTION
TO COMPEL WITH SANCTIONS, Attachments-BRIEF IN SUPPORT OF AMENDED
PLAINTIFF’S MOTION TO COMPEL WITH SANCTIONS and Letter To the Honorable Judge
(all in word fomat .doc) andMilam and River City Blue - Danville, Va - River City TV (video
.mp4 format)
X
Mr. Alvin L.Sutherlin,Jr. (pro se)
Alvin L. Sutherlin, Jr. (Pro Se)
505 Jefferson Street, 1st, Floor
18. 18
Danville, Virginia 24541-2037
434-728-2673 (Cell phone)
Sutherlin.jr@gmail.com
I hereby certify that the foregoing notice of lawsuit was sent by regular mail, postal paid or
hand delivered, this 29th, day of April, 2016 to Clerk of Court of The United States District
Court For Western District of Virginia Danville Division and I also hereby certify that I have
mailed or hand delivered a copy of the foregoing to the office of Daniel, Medley & Kirby, P.C,
110 North Union Street P. O. Box 720, Danville, VA 24543-0720
X
Mr.Alvin L.Sutherlin,Jr. (pro se)