Acks v. City and County of Denver

  • Filed: August 25, 2008
  • Status: Victory!
  • Court: U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado
  • Latest Update: Jul 27, 2011
In the Courts, ACLU of Colorado logo on a blue background with a woman holding the scales of justice.

This lawsuit focuses on events of the evening of August 25, 2008, during the Democratic National Convention. During the early evening hours of the first day of the DNC, a solid line of riot-equipped police shut down a protest march as it proceeded on 15th Street and the adjoining sidewalks in downtown Denver. A second line of police quickly closed in from behind, confining hundreds of persons in a one-block stretch of 15th Street between Court and Cleveland.


The encircled group included participants who had been marching legally on the public sidewalks as well as persons who had been marching in the street without the required permit. It also included legal observers, curious onlookers, members of the press, and other nonparticipants.

The lawsuit asserts that Denver carried out an arbitrary and groundless mass arrest, without probable cause, of 96 individuals, knowing that the group included numerous innocent persons, including the eight individual Plaintiffs in this case.

Arrestees were locked into holding cells at a Denver warehouse converted into a detention facility for DNC-related arrests. At that detention facility, Denver refused to allow attorneys to meet with or speak with any of the arrestees.

All Plaintiffs were charged with failing to obey a lawful order to disperse. After Denver finally acknowledged that no such dispersal order had ever been issued, Denver nevertheless persisted in prosecuting the plaintiffs for “obstructing” a public right of way by allegedly marching in the street without a permit. All cases eventually resulted in acquittals after jury trials or dismissal of charges.

The lawsuit seeks damages for the eight Plaintiffs who were falsely arrested in violation of their rights under the First and Fourth Amendments. Pursuant to a Colorado statute that requires jailers to allow arrestees to meet with attorneys, C.R.S. § 16-3-404, the ACLU lawyers also litigated a class action claim on behalf of all individuals who were ensnared in the mass arrest on 15th Street and detained at Denver’s detention facility.

The lawsuit resolved with a $200,000 payment and improvements to the Denver Police Department's crowd control policies.

Videos:
Chase Goll DNC Arrest Probable Cause Statement
Eli Hardy DNC Arrest Probable Cause Statement


Media:

Case Number:
2009-CV-8007; 1:09-cv-02197-RPM
Judge:
Hon. Richard P. Matsch
Attorney(s):
Taylor Pendergrass and Mark Silverstein
Pro Bono Firm:
John Culver and Seth Benezra of Benezra & Cculver, LLC; Lonn Heymann of Rosenthal & Heymann, LLC

Denver to Pay $200,000 for Indiscriminate Mass Arrest at DNC

Settlement Terms Include Improvement in Police Policy on Crowd Control

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Aug 16, 2011
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Denver to Pay $200,000 for Indiscriminate Mass Arrest at DNC

Settlement Terms Include Improvement in Police Policy on Crowd Control