Document ID: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-ca6-19-01451/USCOURTS-ca6-19-01451-0/pdf.json

Parties Involved:
Jason Bergtold
Appellant
Todd Charles Penn
Appellee

Document Text:

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION

File Name: 20a0161n.06

No. 19-1451

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

TODD CHARLES PENN,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.

JASON BERGTOLD,

Defendant-Appellant.

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ON APPEAL FROM THE 

UNITED STATES DISTRICT 

COURT FOR THE EASTERN 

DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN

BEFORE: GUY, SUTTON, and GRIFFIN, Circuit Judges.

GRIFFIN, Circuit Judge.

Defendant police officer appeals the district court’s denial of his motion for summary 

judgment based upon qualified immunity on a malicious prosecution claim. Because the 

prosecution of plaintiff was supported by probable cause, we reverse and remand for entry of 

summary judgment in favor of defendant Bergtold.

On March 21, 2015, an African-American man activated the security system at the exit of 

a Bed Bath & Beyond in Novi, Michigan. The alarm indicated he may not have paid for all of the 

items in his possession. But it “didn’t faze him. He just proceeded to walk out [of the store].” A 

store employee called 911. 

Jacob Leonard and Kathleen Simons, two store employees, followed the man (“the thief”) 

out of the store and confronted him in the parking lot. He “turned around and said, I’m an 

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officer. . . . I’m a police officer; . . . you don’t have the right to ask me [questions].” Another store 

employee, Kelly Gauthier, joined them. The man then left the belongings and walked toward the 

other end of the strip mall.

Defendant Officer Jason Bergtold responded to the scene. He first spoke with Simons and 

Gauthier. Simons conveyed that the thief “identified himself as a police officer” and was “[a]n 

older black male, [wearing a] black Pea coat, gray hat, and . . . blue jeans.” The physical 

description Gauthier gave was similar; she also said the thief was “unusual” and “unstable.” 

Gauthier then told Bergtold that she last saw the thief walking towards the other end of the strip

mall. So Bergtold searched that area. There he noticed a man, plaintiff Todd Penn, whom he 

believed to be similar to the description of the thief. 

Defendant’s dashboard camera recording system captured his first interaction with 

plaintiff. Just a few aspects of that recording are pertinent here. Penn unequivocally denied 

patronizing the Bed Bath & Beyond. When Officer Bergtold asked Penn where he worked, Penn 

replied that he was “one of you all” (he worked for a local sheriff). And in response to whether he 

was armed, Penn responded that he was because he “work[ed] for you guys.”

The description of the thief the store employees had given to defendant, however, did not 

exactly match plaintiff. On the one hand, there were significant similarities. Both were older, 

African American men; were in the same geographic area; were wearing a cap, a black jacket, and 

long pants; and identified themselves as a law enforcement official. But on the other hand, 

dissimilarities existed: Penn was wearing a brown hat, not a “grayish” one; Penn’s pants were 

brownish-green and cargo, not blue jeans; Penn was wearing a “black North Face puffy coat,” not 

a “flat . . . pea coat”; and although Gauthier had described the thief as “unstable,” Officer Bergtold 

considered Penn “relatively calm” and not “aggressive.”

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Penn and Officer Bergtold then went to the Bed Bath & Beyond store. While Penn was 

outside the store, Officer Bergtold went inside and had the three employee eyewitnesses—

Leonard, Gauthier, and Simons—observe Penn through the store window. Leonard and Gauthier 

positively identified Penn as the thief. Leonard was “100% sure that Todd [Penn] [wa]s the suspect 

that took the items.” So too was Gauthier, who was “sure that [Penn] [wa]s the man who stole the 

items.” Simons, however, equivocated. She didn’t “believe that [Penn was] the [thief]” because 

he was “taller and larger” than the thief she had confronted. She told Bergold “I’m not sure but I 

don’t think that’s the guy. I don’t think that’s the guy. The guy I saw, and this is what I told 

[Officer Bergtold], . . . the guy I saw [was] larger, taller, different.”

At about the same time, Ferris Anthony, who had been shopping at the mall, approached 

officers outside the Bed Bath & Beyond. He “told [the officers] you guys arrested the wrong guy.

[Penn] was very clearly different than the man that I saw walking out [of the store].” When Officer 

Bergtold came out of the store, Anthony told him the same thing.

Officer Bergtold arrested Penn for retail fraud nonetheless. Two aspects of his subsequent 

police report are relevant for our purposes. First, Officer Bergtold stated Simons “positively 

identified” Penn as the thief and that Ferris was “positive that [Penn] was the man who had left the 

store.” (The report, it is worth noting, later states that Simons advised that “she was not 100% 

sure that [Penn] was the suspect.”). Second, Officer Bergtold wrote that “one of the first things 

[Penn] told [Officer Bergtold was] that . . . ‘I am one of you.’” On the basis of Officer Bergtold’s 

police report, a detective submitted the case to the Oakland County Prosecutor’s Office. The 

Oakland County Prosecutor ultimately tried Penn for retail fraud, and the jury acquitted Penn.

Following his acquittal, Penn commenced this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action for false arrest and 

malicious prosecution against Bergtold. The district court held defendant was entitled to qualified 

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immunity on the false arrest claim, but not for the malicious prosecution claim. Defendant timely 

appealed.

1

We first briefly address plaintiff’s contention that we lack jurisdiction to adjudicate this 

appeal. We have the authority to resolve an appeal from a “final decision” of a district court of 

the United States. 28 U.S.C § 1291. “[A] district court’s denial of a claim of qualified immunity, 

to the extent that it turns on an issue of law, is an appealable ‘final decision’ within the meaning 

of 28 U.S.C. § 1291 notwithstanding the absence of a final judgment.” Mitchell v. Forsyth, 472 

U.S. 511, 530 (1985).

Defendant’s appeal turns on an issue of law: whether probable cause supported plaintiff’s 

prosecution. See United States v. Coffee, 434 F.3d 887, 892 (6th Cir. 2006); see also Hale v. Kart, 

396 F.3d 721, 728 (6th Cir. 2005) (“[W]here the facts that relate to probable cause are not in 

dispute, the question of probable cause retains its legal character and should be decided by the 

judge.”). Additionally, here, defendant “concede[s] the most favorable view of the facts to the 

plaintiff for purposes of the appeal.” Adams v. Blount County, 946 F.3d 940, 948 (citation 

omitted). Therefore, we possess jurisdiction.

Green v. Throckmorton does not change this conclusion. 681 F.3d 853 (6th Cir. 2012). In 

that case, the qualified-immunity issue involved whether the defendant police officer possessed 

probable cause to arrest the plaintiff and “turn[ed] on disputed facts—namely, on [plaintiff]’s

ambiguous performance on the field sobriety tests and on whether [the police officer] was being 

truthful when he claimed that [the plaintiff] could not follow the pen [during a field sobriety test].” 

1Plaintiff did not cross-appeal the district court’s resolution of his unlawful arrest claim.

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Id. at 866. This case, however, does not turn on competing versions of the facts, and Bergtold has 

conceded Penn’s account of the material events.

Penn offers two more arguments for why we lack jurisdiction. Neither one is convincing. 

First, he argues that because the district court concluded that there were factual disputes for a jury 

to decide, Bergtold’s appeal cannot—as it must—involve only purely legal issues. Although Penn 

accurately describes the district court’s decision, it does not preclude our jurisdiction because 

Bergtold concedes Penn’s version of the facts.

This leads to Penn’s second argument: Bergtold does not actually concede Penn’s version 

of the facts. Penn contends Bergtold fails to make necessary concessions because he: (1) does not 

admit that his police report mischaracterized Penn’s representation about being a law enforcement 

official, and (2) does not accept that the eyewitness identifications were not reasonably reliable 

information because they stemmed from a suggestive show-up. We are unconvinced. Bergtold 

does not dispute Penn’s claim that the report incorrectly described how quickly Penn shared that 

information. And whether the eyewitness identifications were reasonably reliable information is 

a legal question, not a fact question, see Smith v. Perini, 723 F.2d 478, 481 (6th Cir. 1983), so 

Bergtold does not need to concede it.

For these reasons, we have jurisdiction to consider Bergtold’s appeal.

Having concluded we have jurisdiction, we turn to the main issue on appeal: whether the 

district court erred in denying defendant qualified immunity on plaintiff’s malicious prosecution 

claim. Our task, therefore, is to determine whether—on Penn’s version of the facts—Officer 

Bergtold possesses qualified immunity, entitling him to judgment as a matter of law. Under de 

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novo review, Jacobs v. Alam, 915 F.3d 1028, 1039 (6th Cir. 2019), we conclude that he was so 

entitled.

“A plaintiff bears the burden of showing that a defendant is not entitled to qualified 

immunity.” Id. (citation omitted). To overcome a defendant’s assertion of qualified immunity, a 

plaintiff must demonstrate: “(1) that the official violated a statutory or constitutional right, and (2) 

that the right was clearly established at the time of the challenged conduct.” Ashcroft v. al-Kidd, 

563 U.S. 731, 735 (2011). The question here is whether defendant maliciously prosecuted plaintiff 

in violation of the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments.

We focus on one element of that claim, “that there was a lack of probable cause for the 

criminal prosecution.” Sykes v. Anderson, 625 F.3d 294, 308 (6th Cir. 2010). “The substance of 

all the definitions of probable cause is a reasonable ground for belief of guilt.” United States v. 

Romero, 452 F.3d 610, 615–16 (6th Cir. 2006) (citation omitted). There is probable cause to 

prosecute if “the facts and circumstances within [the officer’s] knowledge and of which [he] had 

reasonably trustworthy information were sufficient to warrant a prudent [person] in believing that 

[plaintiff] had committed . . . an offense.” Id. at 615 (third substitution in original) (citation 

omitted). “[A] reviewing court is to take into account the ‘factual and practical considerations of 

everyday life’ that would lead a reasonable person to determine that there is a reasonable 

probability that illegality has occurred or is about to occur.” Id. at 616 (citation omitted). Bergtold 

did not personally make the decision to prosecute Penn and it is unclear how the charging decision 

was made. But the detective who submitted Penn’s case to the prosecutor testified that he did no 

additional investigation beyond reading Bergtold’s report and he assumed the truth of its contents. 

Penn contends that Bergtold’s police report contained material, false information, and without that 

information there was not probable cause to prosecute him.

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Due to the qualified-immunity character of this appeal, we must replace the conceded-asfalse information in Officer Bergtold’s police report with Penn’s version of that information. 

Darrah v. City of Oak Park, 255 F.3d 301, 312 (6th Cir. 2001) That means a few differences in 

the police report: (1) that Anthony said Penn was not the thief; (2) that Simons was not “positive” 

in her identification of Penn, and more specifically “was not sure” but thought Penn was not “the 

guy”; and (3) that Penn did not “immediately” make his “one of you” (i.e., fellow law enforcement 

officer) statement to Officer Bergtold; rather, the statement occurred about sixty seconds after the 

start of their interaction. We disagree these facts show a lack of probable cause to prosecute Penn.

We begin with the arrest itself. It is well established that “[a] law enforcement officer is 

entitled to rely on an eyewitness identification to establish adequate probable cause with which to 

sustain an arrest.” Ahlers v. Schebil, 188 F.3d 365, 370 (6th Cir. 1999). Bergtold had statements 

from two Bed Bath & Beyond employees that unequivocally identified Penn as the thief. Jacob 

Leonard saw the thief leave the store, confronted the thief in the parking lot, and positively 

identified Penn as the thief. Leonard was “100% sure that Todd [Penn] [wa]s the suspect that took 

the items.” The same is true for Kelley Gauthier. She confronted the thief in the parking lot and 

positively identified Penn as the thief. She was “sure” and “certain” about her identification even 

though Penn did not exactly match the description of the thief she had given to Officer Bergtold. 

There being no reason to question these first-hand accounts, Bergtold rightly could presume their 

“reliability and veracity.” Id.

On top of that, Bergtold had other, circumstantial corroborating evidence. Penn was in the 

same general geographic area where the thief had last been seen soon after the alleged theft. Penn’s 

sex, race, and age matched the thief’s. Penn’s clothing was similar to the thief’s clothing. And 

both Penn and the thief held themselves out as law enforcement officials.

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This combination of facts established probable cause for the subsequent prosecution. Most 

importantly, two witnesses positively identifying plaintiff as the thief; plaintiff’s age, sex, and race 

matching those characteristics of the thief; and plaintiff and the thief both self-identifying as law 

enforcement were—when “tak[ing] into account the ‘factual and practical considerations of 

everyday life’”—sufficient to “lead a reasonable person to determine that there [was] a reasonable 

probability” that plaintiff had “committed . . . [the reported] offense.” Romero, 452 F.3d at 615–

16 (citation omitted). The existence of probable cause can of course change as a case develops

after an arrest. See Mills v. Barnard, 869 F.3d 473, 480 (6th Cir. 2017). But Penn asserts that 

without the report’s inaccuracies, there was no probable cause for his prosecution. We disagree. 

Given the undisputed evidence, there were reasonable grounds for a jury to believe Penn was guilty 

and there is “no requirement that the defendant to a malicious-prosecution charge must have 

evidence that will ensure a conviction.” Newman v. Twp. of Hamburg, 773 F.3d 769, 773 (6th Cir. 

2014) (citation omitted).

Accordingly, because there was probable cause to prosecute Penn, his malicious 

prosecution claim fails. Mills, 869 F.3d at 480. Bergtold is therefore entitled to qualified immunity

and summary judgment.

Penn offers a few arguments for why probable cause was absent. They are unpersuasive. 

First, he contends that Gauthier’s and Leonard’s positive identifications of Penn were not 

reasonably reliable pieces of information that could support the existence of probable cause. The 

identifications were unreliable, according to Penn, essentially because the descriptions of the thief 

did not exactly match Penn. But “[a]n eyewitness identification will constitute sufficient probable 

cause unless there is an apparent reason for the officer to believe that the eyewitness was lying, 

did not accurately describe what he had seen, or was in some fashion mistaken regarding his 

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recollection of the confrontation.” France v. Lucas, 836 F.3d 612, 626 (6th Cir. 2016) (ellipsis 

omitted). And an eyewitness’s statement need not be consistent with all other available evidence. 

See Ahlers, 188 F.3d at 371. The minor inconsistencies in their descriptions of the thief, in our 

view, fall short of establishing objective unreliability.

2

Second, Penn argues that because Bergtold’s police report incorrectly stated that Penn 

“immediately” represented that he was a law enforcement official, his representation must be 

removed entirely from the probable-cause analysis. This misunderstands the nature of the inquiry 

we perform regarding the variances between the competing versions of the facts. As we explained 

above, when a plaintiff and defendant disagree about the details of how an event transpired, we 

consider whether plaintiff’s version of the event supports the existence of probable cause. Darrah, 

255 F.3d at 312. We do not, as Penn suggests, pretend that the event simply never occurred. The

dash cam video shows that plaintiff made the law enforcement official comment about sixty 

seconds after starting his interaction with defendant. How quickly plaintiff conveyed that 

information possibly dampens the idea that the thief and Penn had the same modus operandi, but

the conveyance of the information—in and of itself—is the important point because the 

eyewitnesses reported that the thief also made the same representation. Taking “into account the 

‘factual and practical considerations of everyday life,’” two people both making that unusual 

2

Invoking Gregory v. City of Louisville, Penn also argues that Gauthier’s and Leonard’s 

positive identifications were not reasonably reliable pieces of information because they stemmed 

from an unduly suggestive show-up. 444 F.3d 725, 731 (6th Cir. 2006). But as the district court 

ably explained, Gregory concerns admitting potentially unreliable show-up identifications as 

evidence at trial. Id. at 746–47. Gregory does not address whether a police officer may rely on a 

show-up identification in the context of whether there is probable cause to initiate a prosecution. 

And in any event, the evidence needed to establish probable cause is less than the amount needed 

“to establish a prima facie case at trial, [and] less [than the] evidence [needed] to establish guilt 

beyond a reasonable doubt.” Romero, 452 F.3d at 616 (citation omitted).

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representation—along with the other facts described above—“would lead a reasonable person to 

determine that there [was] a reasonable probability” that Penn and the thief were the same person. 

Romero, 452 F.3d at 615 (citation omitted).

For these reasons, we reverse the part of the district court’s order denying Officer 

Bergtold’s motion for summary judgment and we remand for entry of judgment in his favor.

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