Court Declines To Revisit Newsome Malicious Prosecution Holding

PARISH v. CHICAGO (February 3, 2010)

Michael Parish was arrested in May of 2005 and held in custody until June of 2007, when he was acquitted of a murder charge. Parish brought suit against the City of Chicago and several police officers under § 1983, claiming malicious prosecution in violation of the Fourth Amendment. He alleged, among other findings, that the officers suppressed favorable evidence, prepared false reports, and fabricated evidence. Parish conceded in the district court that the prevailing Seventh Circuit precedent of Newsome precluded his claim. The district court dismissed. Parish appeals

In their opinion, Judges Coffey, Evans, and Williams affirmed. In Newsome, the Seventh Circuit held that the existence of a state law malicious prosecution claim precludes a constitutional tort under the due process clause. Parish concedes as much but seeks reconsideration of Newsome in light of a footnote in the Supreme Court's subsequent opinion in Wallace. In that footnote, the Supreme Court stated that it had never and was not evaluating a §1983 Fourth Amendment malicious prosecution claim. The Court noted that it had already once rejected an invitation to revisit Newsome in Johnson v. Saville. It saw no reason to do so now. However, as an aside, the Court stated that Newsome did not preclude a Brady-type due process claim. Given Parish's allegations, he may well have had such a claim after his acquittal.

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