7th Circuit: Officer entitled to qualified immunity

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Because Indiana's conversion statute doesn't appear to have an implied-consent defense, the 7th Circuit Court of
Appeals ruled a couple's excuse for possessing another person's camping gear was irrelevant to the probable-cause
determination to arrest them.

In Jo Whitlock and Jesse Whitlock v. Shawn A. Brown, individually and as an Officer for the Indiana Department of Natural
Resources
, No. 08-2800, the Whitlocks appealed summary judgment for Officer Shawn Brown in their suit alleging he
violated their Fourth Amendment rights by omitting exculpatory facts from his warrant application to arrest the couple.

The Whitlocks had been camping in 2005 and found several items at a campsite. Believing they were left behind, they put them
in their car to return them to the park office, but ran errands and forgot to turn them in until several hours later. While
gone, the owner reported his belongings missing.

Brown thought there was probable cause for conversion charges and applied for an arrest warrant. The Whitlocks were arrested
later, but the charges were eventually dropped.

The District Court granted summary judgment for Brown, holding he was entitled to qualified immunity because a reasonable
officer would have believed there was probable cause. The 7th Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed, but based on a different
analysis. Instead of focusing on whether Brown had probable cause, the Circuit Court examined whether he intentionally or
recklessly withheld material information from the warrant application.

The Whitlocks claimed Brown only sent an affidavit with scant information on the incident to the prosecutor and didn't
send the more detailed case report. That report did leave out the Whitlocks' explanation that because of an argument in
the car with their daughter, they forgot to turn the bags in as they were leaving the park.

Brown testified he provided his case report to the prosecutor; the prosecutor's file was destroyed in 2006 for space
reasons. There's no evidence that Brown withheld his case report from the prosecutor and it's just pure speculation
on the part of the Whitlocks, wrote Judge Diane Sykes.

The Circuit judges also had to decide whether the omitted explanation was material to the warrant-issuing judge's probable-cause
determination. They supposed that an Indiana court might hold that finders of lost property have implied consent from the
owner to exert control for the limited purpose of returning it. If that was the case, then leaving out the Whitlocks'
explanation may have been a material omission, wrote the judge, and would support they didn't exercise unauthorized control
over the bags.

But there aren't any Indiana cases the judges could find establishing an implied-consent defense to a charge of criminal
conversion.

"Given the breadth of Indiana's criminal-conversion statute and the apparent absence of an implied consent defense,
the Whitlocks' excuse was irrelevant to the probable-cause determination – or at least of such questionable relevance
that Brown is entitled to qualified immunity. At best, Indiana law is undeveloped in this area," she wrote.

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