Opinion ID: 20749
Heading Depth: 2
Heading Rank: 1

Heading: Detective Saidler

Text: 7 Freeman contends that Saidler acted unreasonably in his swearing of the probable cause affidavit recommending her first arrest. She alleges that Saidler both included false information in his affidavit and excluded exculpatory information from it. 8 Saidler based his affidavit upon: the sworn statements of bank tellers Susan Rios and Joey King that the woman pictured in an FBI surveillance picture shown to them was the one who had committed the first robbery; Robert Marley's confidential disclosure that he had worked with Freeman and recognized her from a local broadcast of the FBI picture on a crime stoppers segment; the affidavit of Christina Hansen, Freeman's former co-worker, in which she stated that she recognized the girl as Lillian Freeman and that Freeman had sunglasses like the one[s] in the pictures; the affidavit of Matthew Huizar, Freeman's former co-worker, who looked at a series of surveillance pictures and stated in his affidavit that he told [Saidler] it was Lillian Freeman; and the fact that the police seized from Freeman's house a sweatshirt, pants, sunglasses and a wig similar to those pictured in the FBI surveillance photo. On the whole, this information is sufficient to support a reasonable officer's belief that probable cause existed. Still, we must determine whether Freeman's allegations create a material issue of fact as to the truthfulness of any of the information and/or whether Saidler excluded allegedly exculpatory material that might call into question the reasonableness of his probable cause determination.
9 Freeman alleges that Saidler falsely stated that Rios and King had positively identified her as the robber. This allegation is wholly without merit. Saidler's affidavit reads simply that the black female in the photograph developed by the FBI was the individual that robbed the San Antonio Credit Union at gunpoint on 6-4-91. The record clearly indicates that both Rios and King stated that the unnamed person in the picture looked like the person that had robbed them. They did not indicate that the robber was Freeman, and Saidler did not suggest that they did.
10 Freeman contends that under Aguilar v. Texas, 378 U.S. 108, 110-114 (1964) abrogated on other grounds by Gates, 462 U.S. at 238-39, Marley's confidential identification of her as the robber lacked sufficient supporting facts to establish probable cause. Freeman's reliance on Aguilar is misplaced. Unlike Saidler's affidavit, the affidavit in question in Aguilar contained only unsupported allegations of a confidential informant. See id. at 109, n.1. Saidler listed Marley's testimony as but one factor in his probable cause determination. Moreover, Marley informed the police that he had worked with Freeman and thus provided some indication that his information was credible. Accordingly, we cannot read Aguilar to suggest that Saidler's partial reliance upon Marley's testimony was unreasonable.
11 Freeman insists that Saidler coerced Hansen and Huizar into identifying her and misstated the strength of their testimony in his affidavit. Freeman's alleged evidence of coercion consists of each witnesses' subsequent statements that Saidler appealed to his or her civic duty to testify and Hansen's references to Saidler's size and physical build. While evidenceof reliance upon coerced testimony may be enough to defeat a summary judgment grant of immunity, see Geter v. Fortenberry, 882 F.2d 167, 170-71 (5th Cir. 1989), Freeman's allegations do not permit any inference of coercion. Both Hansen and Huizar admitted to being reluctant to testify in this matter. There is no evidence that Saidler did anything more than request that each reluctant witness testify. Appealing to an uncooperative witness' civic duty to testify is fundamentally different from coercing a witness to testify to a certain fact. Cf. Coolidge v. New Hampshire, 403 U.S. 443, 488 (1971) (But it is no part of the policy underlying the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments to discourage citizens from aiding to the utmost of their ability in the apprehension of criminals.). Neither Hansen's nor Huizar's testimony suggests that Saidler appealed to their civic duty specifically to implicate Freeman. Moreover, the mere fact that Detective Saidler is a large man does not permit a reasonable inference of coercion. 12 As there is no credible evidence of coercion, Saidler's reliance upon the exact wording of Hansen's and Huizar's sworn statements is undoubtedly reasonable. He simply could not have predicted their later recanting. 3 Because we look to the totality of circumstances as they existed at the time that the officer determines whether probable cause exists, Hansen's and Huizar's subsequent disavowals do not create an issue of material fact as to the truthfulness of Saidler's affidavit.
13 Freeman insists that the items seized from her house are so common that they cannot form the basis of probable cause. Again, while the seized items alone may not provide probable cause, when taken as a whole the information included in Saidler's affidavit is sufficient to permit a reasonable officer to infer that probable cause existed for Freeman's arrest.
14 Freeman alleges that Saidler was aware of exculpatory information that he did not include in his affidavit. Freeman cites first to Saidler's alleged awareness of the United States Attorney's and the FBI's respective determinations that they did not have probable cause to arrest her. This evidence demonstrates little more than that reasonable officers disagreed. It does nothing to show that Saidler acted unreasonably. Next, Freeman notes that the results of a latent fingerprint analysis did not implicate her. As the district court reasoned, this evidence is inconclusive at best. It neither implicated, nor exonerated Freeman and we cannot read it to do either. 15 Freeman's final assertions of error concern Saidler's failure to investigate another anonymous tip given to the crime stoppers program and the failure of any police officer to identify Freeman as the robber by comparing the surveillance photos with other photos of Freeman. We agree with the district court that there is no evidence to suggest that either of these allegations calls into question the reasonableness of Saidler's actions.