Colorado Woman Was Wrongly Arrested, Jailed and Strip Searched, ACLU Charges (10/17/2006)
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org DENVER -- The American Civil
Liberties Union of Colorado today filed a lawsuit charging that the Lakewood
police wrongly and groundlessly put out a warrant for Mercedes Archuleta, a
Thornton mother of nine children with no criminal record, as a suspect in a
misdemeanor harassment case.
According to the complaint, a
state trooper found the erroneous warrant when he stopped Archuleta’s husband
for a minor traffic violation. The
officer pulled her rudely from the car while she was nursing her baby,
handcuffed her without providing her any opportunity to tie up her blouse, and
took her to the Jefferson County Jail.
The ACLU further states in the complaint that a police employee in charge
of booking realized that Archuleta was not the suspect police intended to
arrest, but nevertheless subjected her to a humiliating strip search and locked
her in a cell to wait for her husband to pay her bail. “Our
client has described these events as the worst day of her life,” said ACLU
cooperating attorney Timothy Macdonald of the law firm Arnold and Porter. “The arresting officer treated our
client shamefully. Even worse, the
Jefferson County jailer knew that the warrant named the wrong person, but
nevertheless subjected our client to a degrading and unconstitutional strip
search and then locked her in a cell.”
According to the complaint,
Lakewood detective Michelle Wagner reviewed police reports written by patrol
officers about an incident that violated Lakewood’s ordinance against
harassment. The victim stated that
the perpetrator’s name was “Mercedes Archuleta,” but she provided almost no
additional information. A woman who
matched the suspect’s general description is listed in the state’s criminal
database as sometimes using that name.
Instead of pursuing that lead, however, the detective instead located the
ACLU’s client in a database of motor vehicle records. “The
detective did not have probable cause to believe that our client was the
suspect,” said Mark Silverstein, ACLU Legal Director. “Had the detective
contacted our client, the matter could have been cleared up quickly. Instead, the officer obtained a warrant
for our client’s arrest. Such
reckless police practices pose a risk to everyone in our community, particularly
those with a somewhat common name.”
Defendants in the lawsuit are
Detective Wagner; Shayne Butler, the state trooper who made the arrest; and D.L.
Mandelko, the Jefferson County jailer who booked Archuleta and ordered the strip
search. The complaint also names Jefferson County Sheriff Ted Mink and
challenges the constitutionality of the jail’s strip search policy. Today’s
complaint is online at http://www.aclu-co.org/docket/200511/archuleta%20complaint.pdf
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