Howard Suit
Howard Suit
Howard Suit
DARRYL HOWARD,
Plaintiff,
v.
COMPLAINT AND JURY DEMAND
CITY OF DURHAM; DARRELL DOWDY, in
his individual and official capacities; E.E.
SARVIS, in his individual and official
capacities; MICHELE SOUCIE, in her
individual and official capacities; SCOTT
PENNICA, in his individual and official
capacities; MILTON SMITH in his individual
and official capacities; and OTHER AS-YET-
UNKNOWN JOHN AND JANE DOE
OFFICERS & SUPERVISORS 1-10, in their
individual and official capacities.
Defendants.
Plaintiff Darryl Howard, through his attorneys at the law firms of Neufeld Scheck &
INTRODUCTION
1. In the early morning hours of November 27, 1991, 29-year-old Doris Washington and her
13-year-old daughter, Nishonda, were found raped and murdered inside their apartment in the
2. The crimes were drug-related and committed by members of the New York Boys gang,
but the Durham Police Department (DPD) decided to focus on an easier target who had nothing
Darrell Dowdy engaged in a pattern of witness tampering and other misconduct designed to build
a false case against Howard and bury the truth of his innocence. For example:
a. Dowdy ignored and suppressed early evidence that the New York Boys were
responsible for the crimes.
b. Dowdy repeatedly fed information to various people and pressured them into signing
or otherwise making false statements to bolster the false narrative of Howards guilt.
c. Despite recognizing obvious signs that Doris and Nishonda were sexually assaulted,
Dowdy falsely told the prosecution that sexual assault was never suspected in the
investigation. He later provided similar false testimony to the jury.
d. When pre-trial analysis revealed male DNA in 13-year-old Nishondas vagina and
rectum that excluded Howard, Dowdy understood that it was powerful evidence of
Howards innocence. He countered that exculpatory evidence by falsely telling
prosecutors that his investigation confirmed that Nishonda spent the week before the
murders with her boyfriend. Dowdy later provided similar false testimony to the jury,
allowing the prosecution to argue that the unidentified male DNA found in Nishonda
was the result of consensual sex with a boyfriend.
4. Howards testimony, his alibi witness, and his effort to persuade the jury that the physical
evidence (and lack thereof) proved his innocence were insufficient to overcome DPDs mountain
of false evidence and other misconduct that robbed him of a fair trial. Howard was wrongfully
5. While in prison, Darryl Howard continued to fight to prove his innocence. In 2010,
previously undetected semen was identified on the vaginal swabs taken from Doris, and DNA
testing excluded Howard as her rapist. The DNA was a match to Jermeck Jonesa member or
associate of the New York Boys who had no connection to Darryl Howard.
6. Despite the new DNA evidence, DPD continued its pattern of suppressing evidence of
Howards innocence, causing him to spend four-and-a-half more years in prison fighting for his
freedom.
Investigator Michele Soucie questioned Jones about the Washington crimes. Jones made multiple
statements that were inculpatory, contradictory, and inconsistent with the DNA evidence. All of
the statements were recorded. But despite a September 2011 Superior Court order to disclose all
information related to Jones, DPD did not reveal the recording of Jones to prosecutors and
8. Shortly after receiving the Jones recording, Howards counsel presented it to the Superior
Court, along with the DNA evidence. After a hearing in August 2016, the Superior Court
overturned Howards conviction. The Court found that Howard was innocent and released him
from prison.
9. Howard spent 23 and a half years incarcerated for crimes he did not commit. Through
this civil rights action, Mr. Howard seeks justice and redress for the years of his life that he lost
10. This action is brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. 1983 to redress the deprivation under color
11. This Court has federal question jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 1331 and 1343.
12. Supplemental jurisdiction over Mr. Howards state law claims exists pursuant to 28
U.S.C. 1367(a).
13. Venue is properly laid in the Middle District of North Carolina under U.S.C. 1391(b),
14. Plaintiff respectfully demands a trial by jury on all issues and claims set forth in this
Complaint, pursuant to the Seventh Amendment of the United States Constitution and Fed. R.
Civ. P. 38(b).
PARTIES
15. Plaintiff Darryl Howard is and was at all times relevant to this complaint a citizen and
resident of the State of North Carolina. On March 31, 1995, Mr. Howard was wrongfully
convicted of the murders of Doris and Nishonda Washington and a related arson. As a result, Mr.
Howard spent over 23 years in jail and prison until newly discovered evidence led to his
16. Defendant Darrell Dowdy was at all times relevant to this Complaint a duly appointed
and acting police investigator and corporal of DPD, acting under color of law and in his
individual capacity within the scope of employment, pursuant to the statues, ordinances,
regulations, customs, and usage of the City of Durham and DPD. He is sued in his individual and
official capacities.
17. Defendant Michele Soucie was at all times relevant to this Complaint a duly appointed
and acting police investigator of DPD, acting under color of law and in her individual capacity
within the scope of employment, pursuant to the statues, ordinances, regulations, customs, and
usage of the City of Durham and DPD. She is sued in her individual and official capacities.
18. Defendant Scott Pennica was at all times relevant to this Complaint a duly appointed and
acting sergeant of DPD, acting under color of law and in his individual capacity within the scope
of employment, pursuant to the statues, ordinances, regulations, customs, and usage of the City
acting fire marshal and investigator for the Durham Fire Department, acting under color of law
and in his individual capacity within the scope of employment, pursuant to the statues,
ordinances, regulations, customs, and usage of the City of Durham and the Durham Fire
20. Defendant Captain E.E. Sarvis was at all times relevant to this Complaint a duly
appointed and acting captain of the DPD, acting under color of law and in his individual capacity
within the scope of employment, pursuant to the statues, ordinances, regulations, customs, and
usage of the City of Durham and DPD. He is sued in his individual and official capacities.
21. Defendant City of Durham is a municipal entity organized under the laws of the State of
North Carolina.
22. Defendant Does #1 through 10, whose actual names Plaintiff has been unable to ascertain
notwithstanding reasonable efforts to do so, but who are sued herein by the fictitious
designations John Doe and Jane Doe, represent those officers, investigators, supervisors,
and/or other agents and employees of DPD, acting under color of law and in their individual and
official capacities within the scope of employment pursuant to the statutes, ordinances,
regulations, policies, customs, and usage of the City of Durham, who participated in the
23. Upon information and belief, Defendants are insured by one or more policies of liability
insurance purchased pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. 153A-435, 160A-485, or other applicable
state law with respect to all acts and omissions complained of herein, or participate in a
government risk pool pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. 58-23-5, or maintain a funded reserve and to
such extent, Defendants have waived any official, sovereign, qualified or governmental
may be required by law, Plaintiff hereby waives the right to a jury trial on all issues of law or
FACTS
Doris Washington and her daughter Nishonda are brutally raped and murdered.
24. Between midnight and 1 a.m. on November 27, 1991, Jermeck Jones and an additional
unknown perpetrator sexually assaulted and killed 29-year-old Doris Washington and her 13-
year-old daughter, Nishonda, in their home in Few Gardens, a public housing complex in
Durham. Doris was raped, forcefully sexually assaulted with an object, strangled, and ultimately
killed by a blunt force hit to her stomach that ruptured her liver. Nishondas death was equally
heinous: the 13-year-old was sodomized, raped, beaten, and strangled to death by ligature. After
killing Doris and Nishonda, Jones and his co-assailant lit a fire in the apartment and fled the
scene.
25. When news spread of the killings, Few Gardens community members were outraged. A
gang known as the New York Boys had taken over the housing project and was running an
organized crime and drug-dealing operation there. The Washington homicides were a breaking
point. Few Gardens residents planned a rally to protest DPDs lackluster response to the
26. In the face of this considerable external pressure, DPD was motivated to solve the
Washington homicides quickly. The department immediately offered a $1200 reward to anyone
27. Defendant Darrell Dowdy was the lead investigator in charge of the Washington
homicide investigation and had a decade of experience with the DPD at the time he was assigned
to the case. Defendant E.E. Sarvis was a DPD captain at the time of the investigation; Dowdy
updated Sarvis on developments throughout the course of the investigation and Sarvis served as
28. From the outset, it was obvious that the crimes included sexual assaults. The bodies were
found nude and face-down on the same bed. Recently deposited sperm heads were identified in
Nishondas rectum. The pathologist also found redness at Nishondas vaginal opening and a
cream-colored fluid in her vagina. At Doriss autopsy, the pathologist noted blood-tinged fluid in
her vagina and a -inch vaginal tear caused by the insertion of an object or instrument in the
29. Dowdy received the autopsy results within 12 hours of the crimes and, that same day,
requested that rape kits be prepared for each victim and transferred to the state crime lab.
30. The first day of the investigation also included processing of the crime scene. DPD
investigators noted a console TV pulled away from the wall and a dust pattern suggesting that a
VCR or similar appliance had been taken from atop the TV.
Defendants immediately develop reliable leads implicating the New York Boys.
31. At the time of the crimes, the New York Boys were a gang that brought drugs from New
York and distributed them in Durham. DPD investigators knew the New York Boys were
32. Early in the investigation, Dowdy and other DPD investigators developed reliable
information that the New York Boys were responsible for the crimes. A few days after the
Boys: drug dealers from either Philadelphia or New York offered some Few Gardens residents
$2,000 a week to use their apartments; they had raped and killed Doris Washington because
$8,000 worth of drug packages had gone missing from her apartment; and they killed Doriss
33. Defendant Captain E.E. Sarvis transferred the tip to Dowdy with the following note:
Dowdy, there may be something to this. I dont remember any public info on the rape.
34. The tip was consistent with other early leads Dowdy had developed that pointed to the
New York Boys as the perpetrators. Multiple witnesses told DPD investigators that Doris sold
crack cocaine for the New York Boys and allowed them to use her apartment for their drug
operation. A friend who had been with Doris the day of the murders told Dowdy that Doris had
been expecting a drug package delivery the night she was killed.
35. Because Dowdy later falsely reported to prosecutors that his investigation proved the
victims had engaged in unrelated consensual sex before they were murdered, the tip was never
disclosed to the defense, the court, or the jury at Howards criminal trial.
Darryl Howard is arrested on unrelated charges and questioned about the Washington
homicides.
36. At the time of the crimes, Plaintiff Darryl Howard was friendly with some residents of
37. The evening of November 26, 1991, Howard was at another friends apartment in Few
Gardens, a short walk from Doriss building, with one of his brothers and his girlfriend, Natasha
Mayo. Late that nightat around 4 a.m. on November 27, 1991a neighbor informed everyone
at the apartment, including Howard, that Doris and Nishonda had been found dead.
38. The next morning, while driving in Few Gardens, DPD Officer Robby Davis stopped
arrest, Howard initiated a conversation with Officer Davis about Doris and Nishondas deaths.
Officer Davis charged him with trespass and driving without a license and took him into custody.
39. Howard was released, but Davis informed Dowdy that Howard had made suspicious
40. A few hours later, around 12:30 p.m., DPD officers again arrested Howard on unrelated
charges and brought him to the police station, where investigators, including Dowdy,
interrogated Howard regarding the Washington crimes. Howard truthfully denied involvement in
the crimes, reported his whereabouts the night before, and shared his belief that Doris was
involved with a member of the New York Boys. After the interrogation, Howard was released
without charge.
41. DPD officers found no evidence connecting Howard to the crimes in the vehicle Howard
was driving that morning, at the crime scene, or in the Few Gardens apartment where he had
42. Within the first few days of his investigation, Dowdy spoke with Roneka Jackson about
the Washington crimes. Jackson was 17 years old and lived in Few Gardens. She served as a
DPD informant and was known to associate with the New York Boys, one of whom later
43. Jacksons connections to the New York Boys are beyond dispute: after Howards
wrongful conviction, in retaliation for Jacksons cooperation with the police in an unrelated
murder, the New York Boys murdered Jackson by strangling her. They also lit her on fire, as
Magistrates Office after midnight. There, Dowdy used coercion and other improper tactics to
manipulate the 17-year-old into making a tape-recorded statement falsely incriminating Darryl
Howard.
45. Dowdy knew Jacksons statement was unreliable, false, and insufficient to close the case,
so he met with other malleable people to obtain similarly manufactured witness statements
46. For example, Dowdy met with Dwight Moody Moss and Kevin Best, two men who had
been standing outside in Few Gardens around the time of the crimes, and again used improper
tactics, including suggestion and coercion with Moss, to induce them to sign fabricated
statements that Dowdy himself had written for them in his own handwriting. In exchange for
their signatures, Dowdy promised Moss and, upon information and belief, Best that they would
receive reward money and favorable treatment with respect to their own pending criminal
charges. Consistent with that promise, the State dismissed a murder charge against Moss before
47. To make the fabricated statements from Moss and Best appear more reliable, Dowdy
included details that were not in Jacksons statement, but which he knew or otherwise believed to
be true, and inserted Howard into those details. For example, because he knew Doris had likely
been killed because of a drug dispute, he wrote that Howard was arguing with Doris over money
and drugs. Because Dowdy knew that Howard had been near Doriss building with his girlfriend
around the time of the crimes, he wrote that Howard and his brother had entered Doriss
48. Orally and in writing, Dowdy affirmatively misrepresented that Jackson, Moss, and Best
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his misconduct with respect to the statements from prosecutors, the defense, and the court. But
these witnesses were so obviously unreliable that Dowdy knew he could not move forward with
49. After Dowdy secured the fabricated statements implicating Howard from Jackson, Moss,
and Best, Dowdy attempted to obtain a statement incriminating Howard from Howards
50. Dowdy twice interrogated Mayo about her and Howards whereabouts on the night of the
crimes. He prepared fake arrest warrants for murder and arson and laid them on the table for
Mayo to view. He badgered her, claiming he knew she was present when Howard killed Doris
and Nishonda. Mayo repeatedly and honestly told Dowdy the truth: she and Howard were
together in Few Gardens that night, and neither of them had anything to do with the murders or
the fire. Dowdy intentionally omitted his interrogations of Mayo from his investigative report,
thus withholding evidence of Howards innocence and concealing evidence of his own coercive
treatment of witnesses, and only disclosed them to the prosecution after being caught by the
defense at trial.
51. Shortly after Dowdys failed attempts to coerce a false statement from Mayo, his
52. On February 13, 1992, DPD Chief Trevor Hampton formally requested that the State
Bureau of Investigation (SBI) establish a $5,000 or $10,000 reward for information related to the
Washington crimes. Chief Hampton wrote that, after three months of extensive investigation, no
leads have been developed in reference to a possible suspect. The Governor granted the request
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54. In June 1992, Dowdy contacted Howard, who at the time was in the hospital recovering
from serious injuries, ostensibly to see if Howard had information relating to two other
homicides.
55. Dowdy and Howard had a conversation in Howards hospital room. Having heard that
Dowdy was trying to pin the Washington crimes on him, Howard truthfully told Dowdy that he
had nothing to do with them and was in Few Gardens that night with his girlfriend, Natasha
Mayo. Howard also told Dowdy that, on the night of the murders, a member of the New York
Boys named June Bug came by the apartment where Howard was and traded a VCR and other
56. Four months after his bedside interview with Howardand eleven months into the
investigationDowdy still lacked sufficient basis to close the case. Knowing the fabricated
witness statements were not enough to charge Howard, Dowdy turned his attention to another
57. Angela Oliver, a prostitute with a lengthy history of prior arrests and aliases, was in
custody at the Durham County Jail on solicitation charges when DPD investigators approached
her to talk about the Washington crimes. Dowdy and other DPD investigators used
implicating Howard in the crimes, including details consistent with the DPDs theory of the
crimes:
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58. Motivated to cooperate and receive favorable treatment on her pending charges, Oliver
agreed to make a recorded statement that Dowdy started taping shortly after midnight on October
10, 1992.
59. Olivers recorded statement was false, and her allegations about Howard were
manufactured by Dowdy. Dowdy stopped and restarted the tape several times to feed Oliver
60. Although Olivers aggregate statement was only seven to ten minutes long, Dowdy took
forty-six minutes to make the tape recording, which then went missing after Howards trial.
61. Dowdy understood that Olivers taped statement was still not enough to proceed with
charges against Howard. Not only did Oliver have a lengthy criminal history and every incentive
to exchange her statement against Howard for leniency in her pending charges, but not a single
witness had identified Oliver as having been with Darryl Howard in Few Gardens, or at or near
62. So Dowdy re-contacted his witnesses and used coercion, suggestion, or other improper
tactics to secure new false statements from them that contradicted their earlier fabricated
statements, but corroborated the story he had secured from Angela Oliver.
63. For example, Dowdy re-contacted Roneka Jackson, the unreliable DPD informant and
New York Boys associate whom he had pressured to implicate Howard nearly a year before.
This time, Dowdy used improper tactics to induce Jackson to identify a photo of Oliver from a
photo array, even though Jacksons previous statement made no reference to seeing Howard with
statement indicated she had seen Howard with a different brother, Jackson changed her account
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64. Dowdy affirmatively misrepresented in oral and written reports that Olivers taped
statement and Jacksons identifications were obtained without coercion or suggestion. Dowdy
and other investigators hid his misconduct from prosecutors, the defense, and the court.
65. On the evening of November 12, 1992, nearly a year after the Washington crimes, on the
basis of the evidence fabricated by Dowdy, Howard was arrested on first-degree murder and
arson charges.
66. At the police station, DPD officers, including Dowdy, questioned Howard about the
crimes. He maintained his innocence and said he had nothing to do with them.
67. Later that night, Howard told Defendant Milton Smith, a fire marshal and investigator,
that he had been in Few Gardens with his brother Kenney, not his brother Harvey, on the night of
the Washington crimes. In written and oral reports, Smith mischaracterized that clarification as
an admission by Howard that Kenney had been with him when he committed the crimes.
68. On information and belief, DPD supervisors, investigators, and officers, including Does
#1 through #10, played an active role in the investigation of the Washington homicides, were
aware of the misconduct of the officers in the investigation, including Dowdy and Smith, and
knowingly participated in that misconduct or knowingly ignored their duty to intervene. Upon
further information and belief, the Doe supervisors misconduct included signing off on oral and
When post-arrest, pre-trial DNA testing excludes Howard as the source of the sperm in
Nishonda Washington, Dowdy fabricates more evidence to ensure a conviction.
69. Despite recognizing obvious signs of sexual assault of both victimse.g., they were
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in Nishondas rectum, and rape kit items were collectedDowdy did not seek DNA testing of
70. In February 1993, Howards trial counsel requested DNA testing of the rape kits.
71. In response to the request for DNA testing by Howards defense counsel, the SBI
laboratory identified sperm-fraction DNA on Nishondas vaginal and rectal smears and
72. At that time, the SBI did not detect the sperm that would later be identified on Doris
73. Following the exculpatory DNA test results, the Durham County District Attorneys
Office authorized a bond reduction to $10,000, conceding that the State did not have sufficient
evidence to prosecute first-degree murder. While Howard was out on bond, the State reduced the
74. Dowdy fully understood the powerfully exculpatory nature of the post-arrest DNA test
results and that it risked exposing his pattern of fabricating inculpatory evidence during the pre-
charge investigation. So he fabricated a false story to account for the exculpatory results of the
75. To cover up his own misconduct and ensure a wrongful conviction of Darryl Howard,
Dowdy fabricated and misrepresented to prosecutors, and later falsely testified at trial, that he
had investigated 13-year-old Nishondas whereabouts before the crimes and found out that she
had been away from home with an alleged boyfriend for a week before the murders, having only
returned home the night she was killed. On information and belief, Dowdy also fabricated and
falsely reported to prosecutors that the sperm found in Nishonda at the time of her death was
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76. In truth, Nishonda spent the days before her murder at a friends house and was afraid to
return home, because she knew her mother was in trouble with drug dealers. She also contacted
social services and pleaded for help, saying she feared for her life. Dowdy either knew these
facts and deliberately lied to prosecutors about them, or he intentionally failed to investigate
Nishondas whereabouts and entirely manufactured the boyfriend story to account for the
exculpatory DNA.
77. Defendant Captain E.E. Sarvis and, on information and belief, other DPD Supervisors,
including Defendant Does #1 and #2, played an active role in the investigation of the
Washington homicides, were aware that Dowdy fabricated evidence regarding Nishondas
whereabouts before her death, and were aware of their duty to intervene, but did not.
78. Relying on Dowdys fabrication that 13-year-old Nishonda Washington had been away
with a boyfriend having anal and vaginal sex up until the night of her death, the prosecution went
forward with the trial of Darryl Howard for the Washington murders and arson.
79. Howards jury trial began on March 27, 1995, and lasted five days.
80. The State presented the testimonies of the witnesses Dowdy had recruited to make false
statements against Howard, including Dwight Moss, who testified that he did not remember
making some of the statements attributed to him by DPD, and Roneka Jackson, whose status as a
DPD informant and New York Boys associate was never disclosed to the defense or prosecution.
Rhonda Davis, a friend of Doris interviewed by Dowdy early in the investigation, added a
dramatic false statement to her trial testimony that, upon information and belief, Dowdy
suggested, fabricated, or coerced: that she actually saw Darryl Howard in the window of the
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threatened to charge her with accessory to murder and obtained a material witness order,
recanted her incriminating statements on the stand and was declared an adverse witness, allowing
the State to introduce her prior false and fabricated tape-recorded statement. The State also called
Milton Smith, who falsely testified that Howard had made an inculpatory statement on the night
of his arrest.
81. To explain away the obviously exculpatory pre-trial DNA testing, Dowdy falsely testified
that the murders were never investigated as involving sexual assaults and that Nishonda had been
away with a boyfriend for almost a week before her death. Based on Dowdys untruthful
statements and testimony, the prosecution argued in closing that the case was never about sexual
assault and that the sperm and DNA in Nishondas rape kit belonged to a boyfriend.
82. Darryl Howard testified in his own defense, denied (as he had all along) involvement in
the Washington crimes, and presented Natasha Mayo as an alibi witness. His counsel argued that
the case did involve a sexual assault, and the evidence of that assault, as well as the lack of any
evidence connecting Howard to the crimes, proved Howards innocence. But it was not enough
to overcome the fabrications and misconduct by Dowdy and the DPD upon which the State built
its case.
83. Because DPD investigators never disclosed the critical exculpatory and impeachment
evidence to the prosecution or Howards defense counsel, the jury never learned that: witness
statements and photo identifications were fabricated and/or the products of suggestion or
coercion; Roneka Jackson was a DPD informant and known associate of the New York Boys;
Dowdys testimony about Nishondas whereabouts preceding her death was false; and DPD
investigators, including Sarvis and Dowdy, had suspected and investigated the homicides as
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84. On March 31, 1995, lacking this critical information, the jury convicted Howard of two
counts of second-degree murder and one count of first-degree arson. He was sentenced to 80
years in prison.
DNA Testing in 2010 and 2011 shows that the victims were sexually assaulted by two different
men, neither of whom was Darryl Howard.
85. After his wrongful conviction, Howard always maintained his innocence and never
86. Howard filed a direct appeal, but the North Carolina Court of Appeals affirmed his
87. In 1997, Howard filed a pro se motion for appropriate relief (MAR) in North Carolina
Superior Court. The petition was denied, as was Howards petition for discretionary review to
88. In 2009, after North Carolina created a statutory right to post-conviction DNA testing,
Howard, represented by counsel from the Innocence Project, filed an unopposed motion for
DNA testing on Doris and Nishondas rape kits, which the Superior Court granted in 2010.
89. LabCorp, a private DNA lab, conducted the testing on the biological evidence from the
rape kits, including the vaginal and rectal samples collected from Doris and Nishonda
Washington at autopsy.
90. LabCorp identified a partial male DNA profile from sperm found on Nishondas vaginal
and rectal smears. Consistent with the pre-trial DNA testing, Howard was conclusively excluded
91. LabCorp also, for the first time, identified on Doriss vaginal swabs sperm that had not
previously been detected at the time of Howards trial. DNA testing on the sperm resulted in the
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rectal smears. Howard was again excluded as the source of the DNA.
92. The male DNA profile identified on Doris Washingtons vaginal swabs was eligible for
submission and comparison to the FBIs national convicted offender DNA database (CODIS).
93. The CODIS search identified Jermeck Jones, a convicted felon, as a match for the DNA.
Subsequent lab testing on a known DNA sample from Jones would later confirm that he was a
conclusive match.
94. On August 25, 2011, the SBI crime lab informed DPD Sergeant Scott Pennica that
95. On September 15, 2011, the Superior Court entered an order directing the Durham Police
Department to immediately share with counsel for Mr. Howard any information it possesses
about the man whose DNA was detected in Doris W.s sexual assault kit.
96. On December 14, 2011, as directed by Sergeant Pennica, Investigator Michele Soucie
obtained a search warrant to take Jones into custody for the purpose of obtaining a DNA sample.
Soucie swore under oath that there was probable cause to believe Joness DNA constituted
evidence of the crime of murder and the identity of a participant in that murder. She provided
details about the Washington crimes, the subsequent investigation, the arrest and conviction of
Darryl Howard, and the post-conviction DNA testing and CODIS hit on Jones. She swore that
her effort to obtain a DNA sample from Jones, and the need to test it against the Washington
rape kits, were part of this ongoing investigation into violations of North Carolina General
Statutes. She even sought the right to use force to take a sample from Jones if he refused to
provide one voluntarily. With that authority, Soucie arranged for Jones to be taken into custody
so that his DNA sample could be collected for the confirmatory DNA testing.
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an interview room to question him with respect to the Washington crimes. While in custody,
Jones made a series of inculpatory and false statements demonstrating that he was involved in
the crimes.
98. When Jones learned that his DNA was being collected in connection with the 1991
murder of Doris Washington, Jones told Pennica that Doris had been his girlfriend, but denied
killing her. After further discussion with the investigators, Jones changed his story and told
Pennica that he did not know Doris at all, even though his DNA had been found inside of her.
Later, Jones changed his story again and told Soucie that he had consensual sex with Nishonda,
even though his DNA was not in Nishonda. In a subsequent written report, Soucie
misrepresented the investigators interactions with Jones, intentionally failing to report Joness
contradictory statements.
99. Additionally, when Jones was in the interview room alone, he made a series of cell phone
calls in which he made inculpatory statements implicating himself in the crimes and
demonstrating that he had just lied to Pennica and Soucie. In particular, despite his statement to
Pennica that he did not know Doris, Jones said on a call that he not only knew Doris and
Nishonda, but had also visited their apartment. In a different call, Jones made statements
showing guilty knowledge of the crimes: he did not want to rat on anybody; I aint said
100. Unknown to Jones, there was a digital recording device hidden in the interview room that
captured audio and video of his interactions with Soucie and Pennica, as well his inculpatory
statements on the phone while he was alone in the room. Pennica and Soucie knew the device
was recording, and they could monitor the recording in real time in a different room.
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truthful when they questioned him, they conducted no follow-up investigation regarding Joness
false and incriminating statements. They did not seek Joness cell phone records to identify the
individual(s) Jones reassured that he would not rat on anybody. Despite swearing under oath in
December 2011 that DPD needed Joness DNA for an investigation that was ongoing, Soucie
swore under oath in August 2016 that DPD conducted no follow-up on Jones because the
investigation was not active. In the latter testimony, Soucie also acknowledged that, based on
her training, false exculpatory statements could be powerful evidence of guilty knowledge.
102. Concealing new evidence that would have confirmed Howards innocence, DPD
withheld the Jones recording for four-and-a-half years. In violation of the Superior Court order
entered on September 15, 2011, DPD did not disclose the recording to the Durham County
103. Because DPD investigators, including Pennica and Soucie, suppressed the Jones
recording, Howard was deprived of critical exculpatory evidence that would have led to an
earlier exoneration.
104. During the four-and-a-half-year delay, Howards only son died, and the true perpetrators
of the Washington rapes and murders remained free, as they do to this day.
105. On March 19, 2014, Howards defense counsel filed an MAR in Superior Court
requesting a new trial based on newly discovered evidence, including but not limited to: (1)
exculpatory DNA evidence that the sperm of two men, neither of whom was Darryl Howard, was
found inside the Washingtons at the time of their deaths, (2) a sworn affidavit from Dwight
Moody Moss, one of the witnesses Dowdy had created against Howard, attesting that Dowdy
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Howards trial, corroborating that the murders had been committed by multiple perpetrators and
106. On May 27, 2014, in light of the substantial evidence of innocence in the record, the
Superior Court granted the MAR and ordered that Darryl Howard receive a new trial on the basis
of the briefings alone. The State appealed the ruling, and Howard remained in custody pending
appeal.
107. On April 19, 2016, the North Carolina Court of Appeals vacated the Superior Court
108. Following remand, Howards counsel filed a separate motion for a new trial, arguing that
North Carolinas DNA statute, N.C.G.S. 15A-270, entitled Howard to a new trial.
109. In August 2016, the Superior Court conducted an evidentiary hearing on the intervening
110. At the DNA hearing, Howards counsel presented the results of the DNA testing on the
rape kits that exonerated Howard and implicated Jermeck Jones and another unidentified man.
Howards counsel also presented the 2011 Jones recording, which had only been disclosed to
counsel the month before the hearing. Jones was also called as a witness, but he refused to
111. At the end of the hearing, the Superior Court ruled in favor of Howard from the bench. In
a subsequent written order, the Superior Court found that the DNA test results show that Darryl
Howard is innocent of the murders of Doris Washington and N[ishonda Washington] and the
subsequent arson. Additionally, all of the physical evidence indicates that the crimes were
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DAMAGES
113. Defendants unlawful, intentional, willful, deliberately indifferent, reckless, and/or bad-
faith acts and omissions caused Darryl Howard to be falsely arrested and imprisoned, unfairly
tried, wrongfully convicted, and forced to spend over 23 years of his life imprisoned.
114. As a direct result of Defendants intentional, bad faith, willful, wanton, reckless, and/or
deliberately indifferent acts and omissions, Howard sustained injuries and damages, which
continue to date and will continue into the future, including: loss of freedom for more than 23
years; physical pain and suffering; severe mental anguish; emotional distress; loss of family
relationships; severe psychological damage; loss of property; legal expenses; loss of income and
natural psychological development; and restrictions on all forms of personal freedom including
but not limited to diet, sleep, personal contact, educational opportunity, vocational opportunity,
athletic opportunity, personal fulfillment, sexual activity, family relations, reading, television,
movies, travel, enjoyment, and expression, for which he is entitled to monetary relief.
115. As a direct result of Defendants intentional, bad faith, willful, wanton, reckless, and/or
deliberately indifferent acts and omissions, Howard was also deprived of his familial
relationships, including relationships with his children. While Howard languished unjustly in
prison, he lost a son, a sister, two brothers, a stepfather, and numerous aunts and uncles, and his
116. As a direct result of Defendants intentional, bad faith, willful, wanton, reckless, and/or
deliberately indifferent acts and omissions, Howard sustained physical injuries and damages,
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117. Howard continues to suffer physical, emotional, mental, and psychological damage as a
118. These injuries and damages to Howard were foreseeable to Defendants at the time of
119. All of the acts and omissions committed by Defendants were done intentionally,
unlawfully, maliciously, wantonly, recklessly, negligently, and/or with bad faith, and said acts
CAUSES OF ACTION
121. This claim is brought against Defendants Dowdy, Sarvis, Smith, and Does #1-10 in their
individual capacities.
122. Beginning in 1991, Defendants intentionally and in bad faith fabricated inculpatory
evidence, including but not limited to false reports regarding Nishonda Washingtons
whereabouts in the days leading up to her death, false reports regarding the status of their
investigation, false reports concerning statements made by Howard, and the false statements of
Roneka Jackson, Angela Oliver, Kevin Best, Dwight Moody Moss, and Rhonda Davis.
123. Defendants failed to disclose material exculpatory evidence to Howard, his counsel, or
the prosecutor, including but not limited to information indicating that the perpetrators were
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Defendants deliberately and/or recklessly failed to investigate information and leads that they
knew, or in the absence of deliberate or reckless indifference should have known, tended to
prove Howards innocence. The investigative failures of Defendants included but were not
provided by informants and other witnesses and failing to pursue evidence and leads concerning
other suspects, including members and associates of the New York Boys gang.
125. Defendants, with malice and knowing that probable cause did not exist to prosecute
Howard for the murders of Doris and Nishonda Washington, intentionally caused Howard to be
arrested, charged, and prosecuted for those crimes by fabricating inculpatory evidence and
failing to disclose exculpatory evidence. The criminal proceedings against Howard terminated in
126. By engaging in this conduct, Defendants acted with deliberate and/or reckless
indifference to Howards constitutional rights. Defendants could reasonably foresee that their
127. Defendants acted jointly in agreement to deprive Howard of his constitutional rights.
Each defendant performed overt acts in furtherance of that agreement and in furtherance of their
intent to deprive Howard of his constitutional rights, including manufacturing false evidence,
regarding their investigation, committing perjury during hearings and trials, failing to intervene
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129. Defendants misconduct deprived Howard of his liberty without due process of law,
deprived Howard of his right to be free from prosecution absent probable cause, deprived
Howard of his right to a fair trial, and deprived Howard of his access to the courts, in violation of
130. Defendants were at all relevant times acting within the scope of their employment and
131. Defendants are liable to Howard for damages under 42 U.S.C. 1983.
133. This claim is brought against Defendant City of Durham and Defendants Dowdy, Sarvis,
134. Defendant City of Durham was at all times relevant to this Complaint responsible for the
135. As of 1991, there was a persistent and widespread policy and practice at the DPD of
adequate investigations.
136. This practice is evidenced in the multiple withheld pieces of evidence in this case, the
multiple pieces of fabricated evidence in this case, and similar misconduct in other criminal
investigations.
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evidence from the prosecution, manufacturing false evidence, and failing to conduct
supervise, discipline and train officers at the DPD about their obligations to disclose exculpatory
material, not to fabricate evidence, and to conduct adequate investigations. As a result of this
failure, officers at the DPD repeatedly failed to disclose exculpatory material in multiple cases
139. As a direct result of Defendants foregoing policies and practices, Defendants condoning
the officers failure to disclose exculpatory material, fabrication of evidence, and conducting
inadequate investigations and Defendants failure to adequately supervise, discipline and train
officers about their obligations, Howard suffered injuries, including his wrongful arrest,
140. Defendants are liable to Howard for damages under 42 U.S.C. 1983.
142. This claim is brought against Defendants Soucie and Pennica in their individual
capacities.
143. From 2011 to 2016, Defendants intentionally and in bad faith, or with deliberate
indifference, withheld material exculpatory evidence, violated a state court order mandating that
they provide Howard exculpatory evidence, and manufactured false reports about evidence in
their possession.
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145. Defendants misconduct deprived Howard of powerful new evidence of innocence under
N.C. Gen. Stat. 15A-1411 et. seq. and 15A-270 that he did not have until its belated
disclosure in July 2016. With that critical evidence, an earlier motion for post-conviction relief
146. Defendants misconduct deprived Howard of his liberty without due process of law and
deprived Howard access to the courts in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United
States Constitution.
148. Defendants are liable to Howard for damages pursuant to 42 U.S.C. 1983.
150. This claim is brought against Defendants Dowdy, Sarvis, Smith, Soucie, Pennica and
justice, including the clearing of Howard and the identification and prosecution of the actual
152. As a direct and proximate result of the obstruction of justice by Defendants, Howard was
wrongfully arrested, prosecuted, convicted, and incarcerated, and Howard suffered physical,
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154. This claim is brought against Defendants Dowdy, Sarvis, Smith, Soucie, Pennica and
a. to ensure that citizens were not wrongfully arrested and charged with crimes they
did not commit;
f. to fully comply with judicial orders regarding evidence held in their possession;
and
156. Defendants were negligent and breached duties owed to Howard in the following
respects:
c. Defendants failed to use reasonable care when investigating the Washington rapes
and murders;
d. Defendants failed to disclose exculpatory evidence and failed to use this evidence
to conduct an adequate investigation;
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g. Defendants provided false information to Howard, his attorney, and the Durham
County District Attorney regarding evidence in their possession; and
157. As a direct and proximate result of Defendants negligence, Howard was wrongfully
arrested, prosecuted, convicted, and incarcerated, and Howard suffered physical, emotional, and
pecuniary damages.
SIXTH_CAUSE OF ACTION
(Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress Dowdy, Sarvis, Smith,
Soucie, Pennica, Does #1-10)
159. This claim is brought against Defendants Dowdy, Sarvis, Smith, Soucie, Pennica and
160. Defendants Dowdy, Sarvis, Smith, and Does #1-10 deliberately abused their authority as
public officials to maintain the appearance of probable cause where none existed, to deny
Howard the opportunity to demonstrate his innocence, to deny Howard a fair trial, and to convict
161. Defendants Soucie, Pennica, and Does #1-10 deliberately abused their authority as public
officials to deny Howard access to exculpatory evidence for the purpose of preventing him from
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arrested, prosecuted, convicted, and incarcerated, and Howard suffered severe emotional distress
as described above.
164. This claim is brought against Defendants Dowdy, Sarvis, Smith, and Does #1-10 in their
Howard.
166. Defendants lacked probable cause for initiating the proceedings against Howard.
Defendants lacked probable cause for instituting and participating in criminal proceedings
167. If probable cause did exist at the initiation of the proceedings against Howard,
Defendants are liable under a continuation theory given that they subsequently discovered
information that caused the probable cause to dissipate and evaporate, and nevertheless
continued to pursue and participate in the criminal proceedings against Howard in bad faith.
168. The criminal proceedings against Howard terminated in Howards favor upon his
exoneration.
169. As a direct and proximate result of the malicious prosecution by Defendants, Howard was
wrongfully arrested, prosecuted, convicted, and incarcerated, and Howard suffered physical,
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171. This claim is brought against the City of Durham and Defendants Dowdy, Sarvis, Smith,
Soucie, Pennica, and Does #1-10 in their official capacities. This claim is brought to the extent
Plaintiff lacks an adequate state remedy for the abridgment of any right under the North Carolina
Constitution.
172. In committing the foregoing acts and omissions, Defendants violated Howards
constitutional rights under the North Carolina Constitution, including but not limited to his rights
173. Defendants were acting under color of state law, and their acts were undertaken with
174. As a direct and proximate result of Defendants unconstitutional acts and omissions,
Howard was wrongfully arrested, prosecuted, convicted, and incarcerated, and Howard suffered
175. As a direct and proximate result of Defendants unconstitutional acts and omissions,
Howard was prevented from having access to evidence that would have exonerated him, was
prevented from benefiting from state statutes that afforded him the right to prove his innocence,
endured a wrongful extension of his wrongful incarceration, and suffered physical, emotional,
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be determined at trial;
determined at trial;
U.S.C. 1988;
6. Such other and further relief as the Court may deem just and proper.
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