David Camm Complaint
David Camm Complaint
David Camm Complaint
vs.
STANLEY O. FAITH,
IN HIS INDIVIDUAL CAPACITY
and
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and
and
MYRON WILKERSON,
IN HIS INDIVIDUAL CAPACITY
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and
and
and
and
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KEITH HENDERSON,
IN HIS INDIVIDUAL CAPACITY
and
STEVE OWEN,
IN HIS INDIVIDUAL CAPACITY
and
ROBERT STITES,
IN HIS INDIVIDUAL CAPACITY
and
RODNEY ENGLERT,
IN HIS INDIVIDUAL CAPACITY
and
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and
and
and
The Plaintiff, David Camm, by his undersigned counsel, Garry R. Adams, Thomas E.
Clay, Daniel J. Canon, and the law firm of CLAY DANIEL WALTON & ADAMS, PLLC, and
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INTRODUCTION
1. Plaintiff, David Camm, is a resident of the state of Indiana and a former Indiana
State police officer. As set forth below, Defendants framed him for the murder of his wife and
two children.
2. Sometime around 7:30 p.m. on September 28, 2000, Plaintiff’s wife, Kimberly
Camm, a 36-year-old working mother, and Plaintiff’s two minor children, Bradley Camm, age 7,
and Jill Camm, age 5, were inside their garage at their home at 7534 Lockhart Road in
3. Boney, on probation from a 20-year prison sentence, was a notorious felon with at
least 11 prior arrests and/or convictions in Indiana for offenses including: robbery resulting in
bodily injury (4); robbery while armed with a deadly weapon (2); and confinement with a deadly
weapon (3).
4. At least four of Boney’s prior offenses concerned his sexual fetish with the feet
5. Boney entered into the Camm’s garage that evening with the intention of
6. Boney executed the two children, shooting Jill in the head and Bradley in the
chest. Both were still in the family’s Bronco when he fired one shot into each of them.
7. Either prior to or after killing the children Boney physically assaulted Kimberly
8. When Mrs. Camm’s body was found, she had a torn nail on her right hand, and
numerous bruises and abrasions on her neck, face, chest, chin, both elbows, left knee, toes and
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9. In addition, Kimberly Camm’s socks and shoes had been removed and were
10. Mrs. Camm was still wearing her blue sweater, but the only clothing on the lower
half of her body was a pair of black panties, which were not on correctly and partially folded
over.
11. From the crime scene, it was obvious that Kimberly Camm was in a struggle for
her life and fought ferociously with her attacker. Some of Kim’s injuries were defensive in
nature. Other injuries were indicative of an attempt by her attacker to control her.
12. It was further obvious that Mrs. Camm was the victim of a sexual assault. Her
white underwear was missing, and had been replaced with black underwear. This was
13. A female police officer on the scene noted that it was unlikely that any
14. However, the aforementioned officer’s observations and opinions were completely
discounted because they did not fit the conclusion to which Defendants had already rushed, i.e.,
15. Boney, the actual murderer, left behind a trail of evidence demonstrating his
16. The evidence that Boney left was of a nature that any reasonably prudent law
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b) his DNA in the collar of the sweatshirt, along with the DNA of his girlfriend;
c) his handprint prominently displayed on the passenger side of the B-pillar of the
Bronco;
e) his handprints and DNA on Kimberly Camm’s shoes, which were neatly placed
18. In addition, defendants found two hairs on Kimberly Camm’s thighs with root
19. Defendant Stanley O. Faith, acting as the Chief Investigator, immediately took
Hickerson, Vaught, Toran, M. Henderson, Fessel, Stites, along with officers Dave Franklin, Greg
Oeth, Kyle Brewer, Paul Jefferson, and Joe Vetter utterly failed to use the available physical and
eyewitness evidence to investigate the crime properly and apprehend Charles Boney.
21. At that time, Boney was known to Defendants to be a frequent offender who was
22. Instead, under apparent pressure from the public to demonstrate immediate
progress in the investigation of this heinous crime, within less than three days, the Defendants
fixated on 36 year-old David Camm, as the prime (and only) suspect in their investigation,
despite the complete absence of any evidence linking him with the crime, and manufactured a
23. While the Camm family was being murdered, David Camm was approximately
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24. The individuals who witnessed David playing basketball from approximately 7:00
p.m. until approximately 9:22 p.m. on September 28, 2000, included Jeff Lockhart, Martin
Dickey, Jeff Dickey, Jeremy Little, Scott Schrank, Mark Wernecke, Tony Ferguson, Jr., Phillip
25. These eleven eyewitnesses confirmed Plaintiff’s alibi, and were consistent in their
26. During the initial investigation, David Camm was completely cooperative with
a) he gave consent to all officers present to search his home and cars;
27. In short, at no time did Camm behave in a way that was uncooperative or in any
28. Plaintiff submitted to Defendants’ requests for the above-described items despite
the fact that numerous officers told him that they had to “clear him” first.
a) arrested him;
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b) prosecuted him;
c) framed him for the murders of his wife and two children.
30. Compounding the tragedy of Mrs. Camm, Bradley Camm, and Jill Camm's deaths
and David Camm's imprisonment for a crime he did not commit, Defendants allowed the actual
killer, Charles Boney, to remain free and at large for nearly five years.
31. It is unknown to what extent Charles Boney engaged in other criminal acts from
September, 2000 until March 4, 2005, when he was finally arrested. What is known is that
Boney repeatedly attacked his own wife and even solicited help in attempting to kill her.
32. David Camm spent approximately 13 years in prison and fought through three
jury trials in order to prove his innocence and redress the murder of his family.
33. Defendants conspired to ignore the actual evidence linking Boney to the murders,
and to target Camm for crimes that he clearly did not commit.
34. Once Faith took over the investigation and processing of the crime scene, he
notified Indiana State Police (ISP) that he was going to use his own blood expert and crime scene
35. The day after the Camm Family murders, Faith placed a call to Defendant Rodney
Englert who agreed to send his “assistant,” Defendant Robert Stites, to the crime scene.
36. Englert told Stites to go by his house and pick up his forensic analysis equipment
that he kept in a large trunk. Stites did so, and thereafter was flown from Oregon to Louisville,
where he began work on the Camm case at a rate of $250 per hour.
37. Faith’s “investigator,” Defendant Tony Toran, picked up Stites and took him to
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38. Stites was given unlimited and free access to everything on the authority of Faith.
He had access to the Camms’ garage, Bronco, and house. He had access to all the physical
evidence, including the clothing found at the crime scene. Stites even examined the bodies of all
39. No one ever requested Stites’ credentials, made any inquiry into his
40. Upon information and belief, Faith told Clemons, Niemeyer and other members
of the ISP that Stites was an expert on blood stain interpretation and crime scene reconstruction.
b) made detailed notes and sketches of the crime scene, including his
findings regarding blood flow (with the supposed additions of cleaning solutions and
water);
d) tested a shower curtain and trap on the Camms’ septic tank for blood
evidence;
e) walked through and observed the Camms’ breezeway and back deck;
conclusions;
g) conducted luminol tests inside the garage and the Bronco to detect trace
amounts of blood;
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i) examined David Camm’s t-shirt (and was told the shirt belonged to
the shooter);
j) told ISP personnel that he was 90% sure the stains on David’s shirt
were “high velocity impact spatter” or staining. Later after a telephone call with
Englert, he claimed that he was now 100% sure of the high velocity impact spatter;
various items;
office;
42. Stites consulted with Faith regarding his findings, and as a result, Stites’
conclusions were used in the Probable Cause Affidavit that charged David Camm with murder
43. The Probable Cause Affidavit states, “Robert Stites, crime scene reconstructionist.”
44. It was later revealed that every single opinion and/or conclusion of Stites that
45. During David Camm’s first trial in January 2002, Stites perjured himself by lying
about his capabilities and qualifications. His untruthful statements include but are not limited to:
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f) Stites also testified that he had taken chemistry, physics and other hard
sciences.
g) “I, uh, investigate homicides for the U.S. Army and I’m also
working for Naval Intelligence. . . . I worked for the Department of Justice and also
the FBI contracts me directly to work their homicide cases for ‘em.”
testified, “geez, hundreds.” “Uh, lately I’ve been handling about thirty homicides a
year….I think about three years ago it might have been like five. It keeps going
up every year.”
46. During his December 5, 2005, deposition in Portland, Oregon, Stites’ testimony
a) When he was examining David Camm’s T-shirt and jacket they were
b) Prior to the Camm case, Stites had never taken a bloodstain pattern
analysis course.
d) He was just at the Camm scene to “take pictures and notes” and
nothing else.
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that he was “working on” a master’s degree in “fluid dynamics” even though
Portland State University did not offer such a program. He later recanted that assertion.
f). He admitted that prior to the Camm scene, he had never before
processed a homicide scene. He also admitted that the Camm scene was his first, and
that he had only been physically present at one other previous homicide scene (which
he only guarded).
47. During David Camm’s second trial, in January 2006, Robert Stites’ ever-changing
48. The significant statements made by Stites at this trial during his direct
e) Stites testified this was the first crime scene he had documented for
Englert.
a) Stites admitted that had never worked on his Masters or his PhD in Fluid
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c) Stites admitted that he had not taken any classes of any kind from 1993-
2005.
college.
teaching physics classes, he has never even taken a basic course in physics.
September 2000.
h) Stites admitted that he had never taken the basic bloodstain pattern
bloodstain pattern analysis by anyone other than Rod Englert. He also acknowledged
Englert and his father became friends when they were both law enforcement officers.
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m) Stites admitted that his prior testimony from the 2002 trial regarding his
n) Stites testified that he did not know that he was going to Indiana to
analyze the evidence in September 2000, and that his job was just to photograph and take
notes. Allegedly, Englert was not expecting him to come up with any conclusions. Stites
o) Stites admitted that his examination of Kim, Brad and Jill Camm were
the first bodies he had ever examined related to a crime scene. He admitted that prior to
reviewing the bodies he was not told the following crucial pieces of information:
i) Kim’s pants were off and she was found in her underwear;
ii) Jill was found in the back seat of the Bronco and still in her
seatbelt;
iii) Brad had been removed from the Bronco by Plaintiff and
laid on the floor to conduct CPR (Stites testified that he “may or may not”
have been told about Plaintiff and the CPR by the time he examined the t-
shirt);
p) Stites further testified that he did not know the State of Indiana relied on
his opinions as a “crime scene reconstructionist” to justify the arrest of Plaintiff, but was
then impeached based upon the fact that gave a completely contrary response to the same
the day of Camm’s arrest, Stites “Met with Stan Faith, the prosecutor, to discuss probable
cause”;
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r) Stites testified that he never told Clemons that bleach was added to
50. After three days of shoddy and unlawful “investigation” practices, Defendant
52. Defendants knew or should have known that the affidavit contained false
information.
53. Defendants Faith and Clemons relied heavily on the manufactured and false
54. Examples of the clearly erroneous opinions in the affidavit are as follows:
substance.” This was a false deduction by a false expert. No forensic tests, laboratory
tests or analysis had been conducted of any evidence at or from the crime scene on
October 1, 2000. Several evidence technicians and other police officers testified they did
not smell any bleach or other cleaning substance in the garage crime scene. Subsequent
laboratory testing failed to detect any cleaning substance on the garage floor.
b) “The tee shirt worn by David R. Camm on the above-mentioned date had
high velocity blood mist which occurs in the presence of gunshot at the time of the
shooting.” Stites manufactured this opinion either by himself or with the aid of other
Defendants. Stites only had an economics degree and was completely incompetent to
form any opinions on any crime scene. Furthermore, irrespective of his education (or lack
thereof), Stites’ opinion is totally outlandish. There were only 8 droplets of blood from
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Jill Camm on David Camm’s shirt; a fact which would be entirely consistent with blood
transfer as a result of Plaintiff pulling Bradley Camm out of the Bronco in an attempt to
conduct CPR. Stites’ conclusion was that high-velocity blowback from a gunshot wound
had sprayed the interior of a raised garage door. His deduction of purported blowback on
the garage door could therefore have only been from the gunshot wound of Kim Camm,
since the other two victims were inside the vehicle. Plaintiff’s shirt did not have any
blood from Kim Camm on it. The blowback on the garage door was later determined to
be motor oil.
c) “The cleaning substance was thrown over the back deck of the above-
mentioned house also leaving a trail from the garage area, along with a transfer of blood
on the house.” No testing or analysis was done prior to the probable cause affidavit.
These spots, including spots under a flower pot, were later determined to have originated
several months prior to the murders and during the time David Camm was power-
d) “A witness said that between 9:15 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. she heard three
of fact. The witness was Deborah Ter Vree, Plaintiff’s aunt, who lived in the woods
approximately 500 feet from the Camm garage. She was interviewed by the probable
cause affiant (Defendant Clemons). She consistently characterized the sounds she heard
as “thumping noises.” Ter Vree states in her taped interview: “…I couldn’t figure out
what it was and it was like somebody banging on my house and I thought [her husband]
Bob’s banging on the computer.” “It was like you’d take your fist and thump like that”
[Ter Vree then hit the dashboard of Clemons’ ISP vehicle in quick succession]. At no
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time whatsoever did Ter Vree, who was very accustomed to hearing gunshots in the
woods around her rural residence, characterize or refer to the noises as being gunshot
sounds. In fact, she has repeatedly testified they did not sound like gunshots. At no time
during her interview were gunshots even mentioned, and Clemons never asked her if the
sounds she heard could have been gunshots. Furthermore, upon arrival at the scene,
several ISP officers saw and/or heard a grief-stricken David Camm hitting the tailgate of
his vehicle three times with his fist. One officer described the punches as “roundhouse
morning of September 29th and described those same three sounds as though someone
e) “Jill Camm, age 5, had a recent tear in the vaginal area consistent with
sexual intercourse.” According to Jill’s autopsy report, the injuries were “Blunt trauma of
the external genitalia (hymen intact).” A thorough examination of Jill was conducted and
was ISP Evidence Technician, Defendant Sam Sarkisian. Sarkisian and Clemons are
molestation. Over the last 14 years there has been no credible evidence discovered or
presented that Jill Camm was molested by anyone. Defendants completely manufactured
Sarkisian’s later testimony, during a call to Clemons during the autopsy, he said “…there
was a…it appeared that the child had been molested…” Within an hour of receiving that
call and based upon that call, Clemons applied for a search warrant for Camm’s house,
falsely claiming “The female child victim has indicia of sexual molestation.” Two days
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later and with absolutely no other evidence, analysis or examinations to support his
claim, Clemons’ story had morphed into the allegation that Jill had a “recent tear in the
f) “There is a wet mop in a bucket in the utility room of the house at the
above-mentioned address with the strong odor of bleach.” This statement, of course, is
not evidence of any probable cause; most residences have mops, buckets, and bleach. The
statement was yet another contrived allegation intended to manufacture the appearance of
probable cause.
g) “Witnesses playing basketball with David R. Camm said that he left the
game on or around 9:00 p.m. and David R. Camm told them he was headed to his house,
the above-mentioned crime scene.” This was another blatant misstatement of fact. There
were seven witnesses (in addition to David Camm) who played basketball past the
normal quitting time of 9:00 p.m. All were interviewed by the ISP prior to the
presentation of the affidavit. The quitting times were estimated as 9:15 (2 people); 9:15-
20 (1); 9:20 (2); 9:20-25 (1) and 9:30 (1). The Sonitrol alarm for the gym was set at 9:22
p.m., which was the time other witnesses saw David Camm leave the gym. In any event,
the murders happened around 7:30 p.m. and even if Camm left the gym at 9:00 p.m. that
would have no relevance or impact on the crimes committed other than strengthening
Camm’s alibi. Defendants’ shoddy three-day investigation miscalculated the time of the
murders. Their singular focus on Camm interfered with standard investigation practices,
h) “There was a flow of blood from the garage that is inconsistent with the
viscosity of blood and was aided in its flow by the presence of water and cleaning
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substance.” At least three ISP Evidence Technicians at the crime scene recognized the
natural phenomenon of blood-serum separation. Invited to the crime scene by the ISP was
the pathologist who conducted the autopsy of Kimberly Camm, Dr. Donna Hunsaker.
She, too, testified the flow of blood was consistent with blood-serum separation. At the
time of Stites’ false conclusion, there had been no analysis of the blood flow. Subsequent
55. One of the most obvious pieces of evidence left at the scene of the crime was the
56. The sweatshirt was not accounted for at the scene and ended up in the body bag of
Bradley Camm.
57. The sweatshirt was not discovered until Bradley’s body was examined by
59. Lynn Scamahorn, a DNA analyst at the Evansville post of the Indiana State Police
60. Scamahorn determined, through DNA analysis, that some of the stains were from
the victims, some of the stains were from an unknown female, and some of the stains were a
61. Scamahorn ran the unknown female’s blood through the CODIS databank and
found no match.
62. Scamahorn has testified repeatedly that it is procedure to run any unknown DNA
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64. Scamahorn has testified that Defendant Faith threatened her with termination and
prosecution for obstruction of justice if she refused to testify that Camm’s DNA could have been
on the sweatshirt.
65. This testimony regarding Faith’s behavior was known by Defendant Henderson,
who did nothing in response, and in fact continued to aggressively prosecute Plaintiff.
66. The unknown female was later determined to be Mala Singh, Boney’s live-in
67. During the discovery phase of the first trial, the defense team sent the sweatshirt
to a highly accredited private lab, Orchid Cellmark, because Defendant Faith refused to send the
68. In approximately October 2001, Cellmark discovered unknown male DNA on the
collar of the sweatshirt. Faith never told Scamahorn about this finding.
Had Faith told Scamahorn about Cellmark’s finding, she would have followed the
applicable procedure and run the DNA profile through the CODIS system.
70. In fact, Boney’s DNA has been in the CODIS system since 1997.
71. Camm’s original criminal defense attorney, Mike McDaniel, has testified that
after asking Faith to run the DNA profile through the CODIS system, Faith told him that he ran it
72. Paul Misner, the Indiana Director of CODIS previously testified that that there
was no record of the unknown DNA being run through the CODIS databank.
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73. Since the discovery of Boney’s involvement in the Camm murders, Faith has
given multiple inconsistent statements to explain his failure to discover Boney despite the fact
74. One such story is that Faith said that he gave the DNA profile to Detective
Clemons. According to Faith, Clemons allegedly ran it and told Faith there was no match.
75. Clemons denies that he was ever asked to run the DNA profile.
76. After the discovery of Boney’s DNA, finally in March, 2005, ISP matched
77. Faith had previously pressured ISP trace evidence analyst, John Singleton, to
testify that the handprint could have been David Camm’s. Singleton rightfully declined to
perjure himself.
78. Four-and-a-half years after the murders, and after Camm’s first conviction was
reversed, the Camm defense team had to move the court for an Order requiring the prosecution
to run the DNA profile through the CODIS system. The DNA was a perfect match to the
murderer, Charles Boney, who had been given a three-year early release from prison only three
79. For four-and-a-half years, Defendants originally linked this crucial piece of
evidence to David Camm, and then referred to it as an “artifact” even through it had unidentified
DNA throughout.
80. Faith went to great lengths to conceal the DNA on the sweatshirt, which was a
critical piece of exculpatory evidence. When the truth came to light, he lied and created multiple
stories in order to absolve himself of culpability and/or to further the bogus prosecution of the
Plaintiff.
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81. Throughout the thirteen-year saga, Camm’s defense team came to some startling
revelations regarding the connections between Defendant Stan Faith and Charles Boney.
82. Boney’s mother, Barbara Boney, has been a long time political supporter and
83. She often baked pies and cakes and brought them to Faith’s office for his and his
staff’s enjoyment.
84. In addition, Stan Faith was listed as a reference on Barbara Boney’s application
85. After Boney was released from prison on June 19, 2000, he failed to submit to the
guidelines of his probation which had been transferred to Floyd County, Indiana. A warrant was
eventually issued out of Monroe County, the site of his last convictions. Boney was arrested in
86. Boney hired Faith to represent him in that matter, State of Indiana Cause No.
53C04-9210-CF-542.
87. During that representation in open Court, Faith stated, “Boney was a good
88. Nothing was said by Faith during that proceeding about Boney’s estranged wife,
Amber, filing an Emergency Protective Order in Louisville just before he was arrested wherein
89. Boney later related that Faith was a longtime “friend of the family” and that on
the way home from court in Bloomington to New Albany, the two discussed the Camm case at
length.
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90. Boney would not disclose the details of this conversation with Faith because he
91. After Boney was released he went to visit Faith in his office on two or three
occasions.
92. In addition to representing Charles Boney in a criminal capacity, Stan Faith also
93. According to Indiana Court records, Faith filed his entry of appearance in the
94. On October 11, 2005, seven months after Boney was charged with the murder of
the Camm family, Faith filed a Motion to Withdraw on the basis that Boney had been charged
95. Only years later, after Camm’s insistence on running a DNA profile from the
sweatshirt, did Defendants finally start to look into the possibility that Boney had committed the
murders. Unfortunately, the DNA match, the handprint match, and all of the other physical
evidence at the scene that undeniably placed Boney there was not enough for the Defendants to
admit they were wrong and dismiss the charges against David Camm. Instead, a second group of
individuals decided to continue what had already been started, and manufactured “a new case”
against David Camm. This time, Defendants alleged that Plaintiff was acting in concert with
Boney.
96. On February 17, 2005, Defendant Gilbert and Defendant Kessinger interviewed
Charles Boney at Keith Henderson’s office. At that time, Boney admitted that the above-
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98. On February 18, 2005, Defendants Gilbert and Kessinger again interviewed
99. Between February 19th, 2005 and March 4, 2005 (prior to Boney’s arrest), Charles
Boney made 29 telephone calls to the Floyd County Prosecutor’s office, and received four (4)
100. On February 23, 2005, Charles Boney visited the Floyd County Prosecutor’s
101. Defendant Gilbert documented the visit. Per the report, in a visit that lasted 1.5
hours, Boney was only asked one question, “Did you research the Camm case?”
102. On or about February 28, 2005, Defendants held a press conference and
103. This false statement was made despite the fact that no one had investigated
Boney’s story, and in fact Defendants knew that his story did not “check out.”
104. On March 4, 2005, defendants Gilbert and Kessinger conducted a third interview
105. On that same date, Gilbert and Kessinger gave Charles Boney four hours to write
a statement.
106. After Boney wrote his “statement,” Defendants Gilbert and Kessinger interviewed
him again.
107. On or about March 5, 2005, Charles Boney was arrested and charged with 3
counts of murder, possession of firearm by a felon, and being a habitual offender. Absent from
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the charges was any indication of conspiracy between Boney and Camm.
108. On or about March 7, 2005, Charles Boney’s legal counsel withdrew from
109. On the same day Boney’s counsel withdrew (March 7, 2005), at 3:48 P.M.,
Charles Boney) conduct an interview of Charles Boney with the approval of defendants Gilbert
and Kessinger.
110. During the entire interview, Defendant Wilkerson suggested to Boney that in
order to save himself from the death penalty, he needed to inform him of any connection he had
to David Camm.
111. During the interview, Wilkerson suggested various ways Boney might connect
112. On March 7, 2005, at approximately 7:55 P.M., after the Wilkerson interview,
Defendants Gilbert and Kessinger interviewed Boney for the sixth and final time.
113. Gilbert and Kessinger stated that they needed to “straighten out some of the
114. In reality, Gilbert and Kessinger, acting in concert with other Defendants, were
assisting Boney in manufacturing a more convincing story for the purpose of furthering the
115. All the aforementioned interviews were conducted at the direction of and/or in
consultation with Keith Henderson. Henderson also had direct contact with Boney.
116. Keith Henderson provided Boney the contact information for a member of the
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117. In the interviews with Boney, Defendants used unlawful tactics by coercing
Boney into fabricating a false confession that would also implicate David Camm, despite the fact
with Boney, Defendant Kessinger declared Boney’s story to be a “crock of shit” and a “cock and
bull story,” which had clearly been orchestrated to minimize Boney’s involvement.
119. Defendant Gary Gilbert claimed Boney’s story to be one of “convenience,” and
120. Wilkerson added that Boney had “given me nothing to put you with [Plaintiff].”
121. Boney’s story did not match up with the physical evidence, the timing of the
events in question, his fabricated alibi, and the involvement of his fabricated arms dealer, Larry
122. No witness (aside from Boney himself) has ever linked Boney with Camm in any
way.
123. Contrary to Boney’s story, no witness has ever seen the two playing basketball
together, no one saw them together at any location, there were no records of them
communicating telephonically, there were no emails between the two of them and there was no
124. Furthermore, Kim, Brad, and Jill were with Janice Renn at the time that Boney
125. Furthermore, the idea that Plaintiff, a veteran police officer, would have conspired
with Boney, a notorious multiple felon, to do anything – let alone murder his wife and two
children – is ludicrous. Defendants knew this and continued their efforts to use Boney to
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prosecute Plaintiff.
126. Barbara Boney was approached by Defendants for the purpose of suggesting to
her son that he needed to sign a “conspiracy note,” and that signing a conspiracy note would save
127. Despite a total lack of evidence, and without probable cause, on March 9, 2005,
128. The new charges against Camm included the previous charges but added a
conspiracy charge.
129. Henderson also filed a motion to drop the previous charges, which were still at
130. The prior case against Camm had been moved to Warrick County because of the
131. Henderson’s motion to dismiss was a transparent attempt to move the case from
Warrick County back to Floyd County, in order to leverage public prejudice and use it against
Camm. Henderson’s attempt to move the case was ultimately unanimously rejected by the
Supreme Court of Indiana. Nonetheless, Henderson’s actions unnecessarily delayed the trial and
132. Either prior to or during David Camm’s second trial, Defendant Henderson, while
still serving as Floyd County Prosecutor, negotiated a “literary representation agreement” for a
133. At midday on March 3, 2006, hours before the jury reached a verdict in the
second trial, Literary Agency East, Ltd. sent Henderson’s wife an email together with a draft
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134. Upon information and belief, the fact that the agency sent the aforementioned
email to Henderson’s wife (instead of Henderson himself) indicates that Henderson was well
136. On March 28, 2006, at the conclusion of Camm’s second murder trial, the trial
137. Frank Wiemann served as Henderson’s agent and Steve Dougherty acted as his
“co-author.”
138. Together, they wrote a sixty-page proposal for Henderson’s forthcoming book
Penguin Group (“Penguin”) for Henderson’s book tentatively titled, “Sacred Trust: Deadly
Betrayal.” Henderson and his new co-author Damon DiMarco each received an advance of
140. On June 26, 2009, the Supreme Court of Indiana reversed Camm’s conviction
141. Henderson’s zealous prosecution of Camm for crimes which he knew or should
have known were only supported by falsified, exaggerated, and/or manufactured evidence was
142. Following the Supreme Court decision, Henderson filed a petition for rehearing.
143. After the Indiana Supreme Court reversed Camm’s conviction, Penguin decided
to delay any decision to move forward with the book until the outcome of the petition for
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144. On July 30, 2009, Henderson sent an email to Wiemann raising several concerns
he had should the State’s petition for rehearing be denied. Among the concerns were:
b) whether it would jeopardize the case against David Camm if the book
c) whether he could be removed from the case if the book came out; and
d) if, by cashing the check from the publisher, he would be agreeing to a time
frame which would put his future involvement in the prosecution in jeopardy.
145. Henderson also wrote to his literary agent, “. . . this is now a bigger story.”
Penguin believed that the best solution to avoid compromising Henderson was for him and his
co-author to return the advance checks and to cancel the contracts. Penguin suggested the parties
could “always start over again after the completion of the legal process.”
147. On November 30, 2009, the Indiana Supreme Court denied Henderson’s petition
for rehearing. Three days later, Henderson re-filed the murder charges against Camm.
148. Later the same day, Camm filed a verified petition for appointment of a special
prosecutor, seeking the removal of Henderson as prosecutor due to his obvious conflict, i.e., the
pecuniary gain from a book about the “bigger story” of yet another trial.
149. Nonetheless, Henderson refused to step down in the face of a clear conflict of
interest. His refusal elongated David Camm’s incarceration and criminal prosecution for
150. On November 15, 2011, the Indiana Supreme Court determined by clear and
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convincing evidence that Henderson had an actual conflict of interest. The Court found,
“Henderson has established a personal agenda to both write this book and ensure that Camm is
prosecuted. Henderson’s own words are evidence of that agenda.” “As prosecutor, Henderson
should not have a personal interest in this case separate and apart from his professional role as
prosecutor.”
151. Henderson’s personal financial interest and agenda further damaged Camm by
forcing him to endure a third trial, and by elongating his incarceration for an additional two
years.
THE TRIALS
152. On January 14, 2002, Plaintiff’s first murder trial began in Floyd County, Indiana,
using jurors from Johnson County due to the extensive media coverage of the crime in the
Louisville area. The lead attorney for the state in the first trial was Stan Faith, who acted both as
154. On March 17, 2002, the Jury informed the trial court that it was deadlocked. The
trial court instructed the jury to keep deliberating. Later that day, the jury returned guilty
verdicts on all three counts. Camm was sentenced to a total of 195 years in prison. Camm
155. On August 10, 2004, the Court of Appeals of the State of Indiana, reversed the
three convictions of murder because “Camm was unfairly prejudiced by the introduction of
extensive evidence and argument regarding his poor character, where the evidence regarding his
philandering was not reasonably related to any proper purpose under Indiana Rule 404(b),
including proof of motive.” Throughout the Court of Appeals opinion, the term the “State” is a
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156. The Court went on to note that “we are left with the definite possibility that the
jury might have found Camm not guilty of murdering his wife and two children if it had not been
concerning his extramarital affairs and the State’s use of that evidence to portray Camm as a
person of poor character who was more likely to commit murder because of his indiscretions.”
157. The irrelevant evidence of past indiscretions was not the only issue that the Court
of Appeals addressed in the opinion reversing Camm’s convictions. Even though the Court did
not need any additional analysis to overturn the murder convictions for the other evidentiary
errors and abnormalities that were briefed, the Court found it best to analyze additional
inappropriate evidence that was admitted in error to help with the second trial. Unfortunately, it
158. The Court seemed troubled that the State introduced evidence that Jill had
“possibly” been molested hours before her death. The Court noted that the testimony of the
medical examiner who conducted Jill’s autopsy testified that there was trauma to her genital
region consistent with either molestation or a straddle fall; there was no penetration of the
hymen, however. The Court warned the State when it said, “[t]he closer question, it appears to
us, is whether the evidence the State presented on this point was sufficiently probative to be
admissible.” In addition, the Court noted that even if Jill had been molested, there was no
evidence that Plaintiff might have had anything to do with it. The Opinion further warned that in
the next trial, the trial court will need to carefully consider whether the highly inflammatory
nature of this evidence substantially outweighs the probative value of any evidence that Plaintiff
had molested his daughter. This warning would also be ignored in the second trial.
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159. In addition, the Court analyzed the propriety of the State putting on as evidence
the known changed testimony of William Chapin, an expert in microscopy, which were outside
of the opinions disclosed in his report. The Court noted that State had a duty to seasonably
supplement discovery responses through both the trial order and Trial Rule 26(E)(1). The State
160. The fact that the State went to great lengths to adulterate the evidence, suborn
perjury, fabricate evidence, tamper with witnesses, and to introduce prejudicial and or irrelevant
evidence without the proper foundation is a blatant illustration of the lack of probable cause to
charge Camm with these crimes in the first place. Unfortunately for Camm, his prosecution did
161. Following the reversal and remand, the parties agreed to change venue from
Floyd Superior Court to Warrick Superior Court No. 2, and the latter assumed jurisdiction over
Camm’s case.
162. The prosecutor in the second trial was Keith Henderson. Henderson, like his
predecessor Faith, made a calculated choice to poison the jury with inadmissible character
evidence.
163. Also, as discussed supra, prior to the second trial, Henderson dismissed the
charges against Camm without prejudice and recharged Camm in Floyd Circuit Court with the
164. Camm contested the re-filing of the case in Floyd County by filing an original
action in the Indiana Supreme Court, and the Indiana Supreme Court ordered venue transferred
back to Warrick Supreme Court No. 2. The case was then transferred, and the State sought a
sentence of life without the possibility of parole. This highly questionable maneuver by
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166. In the second trial, Camm’s defense was that Boney was the sole perpetrator. In
furtherance of this theory, the defense offered evidence of Boney’s prior assaults on women and
sexual compulsion for feet, his alleged reputation for dishonesty, his failed stipulated polygraph
test, and certain inculpatory out-of-court statements. The trial court excluded all of this
evidence.
167. At the close of the State’s case-in-chief, the Court entered judgment on the
168. Once again the State introduced a plethora of improper evidence and speculation
upon speculation (especially regarding the alleged molestation) in an effort to poison the jury and
get a conviction. The State’s theory – that Camm murdered his family to conceal the molestation
– pervaded the trial from the State’s opening statement to its closing argument. The State
presented this proof and argument without any evidence after being forewarned years before in
the Opinion of the Indiana Court of Appeals. The introduction of improper evidence to get a
conviction at all costs illustrates the lack of probable cause to charge Camm with these crimes, as
169. With the Court allowing improper evidence by the prosecution and hindering the
defense with the introduction of this evidence, Camm once again was convicted of murder.
170. On June 26, 2009, The Supreme Court of Indiana reversed the convictions of
Camm for the second time. The Court correctly identified the primary problem with the State’s
case when it held, “[m]issing from the record in the case is any competent evidence of the
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premise that the defendant molested his child, a hole in the proof that the State admits.” “With no
evidence connecting the defendant to the injuries, the inquiry lacked purpose.” “The erroneous
admission of speculative evidence and argument that the defendant molested his daughter,
combined with the State’s use of this evidence as the foundation of its case, requires the
convictions to be reversed.”
171. As stated previously, Keith Henderson failed to step down as prosecutor in the
face of a clear-cut conflict of interest. On November 15, 2011, Henderson was removed from
172. The third trial began in Boone County, Indiana on August 12, 2013.
173. On October 24, 2013, David Camm was found not guilty of the three murders and
DEFENDANTS’ MISCONDUCT
174. This series of events constitutes a gross miscarriage of justice that was not the
result of innocent or negligent mistakes, but instead was caused by the deliberate, reckless and
practices and clearly established laws. David Camm’s two unjust convictions and years of
wrongful imprisonment were the direct result of a veritable perfect storm of misconduct by
175. Initially, Stan Faith, his investigators, Stites and Indiana State Police officers
investigating the Camm murders targeted David Camm as a suspect without any evidentiary
basis, and then failed to investigate evidence pointing to his innocence and another man's guilt.
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d) delaying investigation into the evidence that should have led to the real
misconduct through the present day, and persisted in covering up evidence of Mr. Camm's
f) not running or concealing the results of the inquiry into the search for the
177. All named defendants fought Mr. Camm's efforts to prove his innocence from
September 28, 2000 until October 24, 2013, the day of his exoneration. The pervasive, systemic
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and unconstitutional official misconduct of defendants that led to Mr. Camm's wrongful
conviction and his continued wrongful imprisonment did not occur in isolation, outside of
official bureaucratic channels. Rather, the actors who deprived Mr. Camm of his constitutional
protections and caused him to be wrongfully arrested, prosecuted, convicted, and imprisoned
were acting with the direct participation, knowledge, and/or acquiescence of supervisors and
policymakers in the County of Floyd, Indiana, and Indiana State Police and pursuant to the
customs, policies, patterns, and/or practices of Floyd County Indiana and the ISP the misconduct
and egregious failures of training, supervision, and oversight within both agencies.
178. This civil rights action seeks accountability for the official misconduct and abuses
of power that led to Mr. Camm's wrongful arrest, prosecution, and convictions, and that robbed
179. This Court has federal question jurisdiction, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1331, over
180. Supplemental jurisdiction over Mr. Camm’s pendent state law claims exists
Indiana, the judicial district in which a substantial part of the events or omissions giving rise to
182. Venue is also proper in the Southern District of Indiana pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §
1391(b)(l), as Mr. Camm currently resides within it and, upon information and belief, the vast
183. Pursuant to the Seventh Amendment of the United States Constitution, Mr. Camm
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requests a jury trial on all issues and claims set forth in this Complaint.
THE PARTIES
184. Plaintiff David Camm, is, and at all times material to this Complaint was, a
citizen and resident of the State of Indiana. He currently still resides in the State of Indiana.
185. Defendant Stan Faith ("Faith") is sued in his individual capacity and at all times
was acting under the color of state law. Faith was the elected Floyd County Attorney, in Floyd
County, Indiana at the time of the Camm murders. Faith immediately stepped outside of his
traditional role of prosecutor and performed “police duties” by taking over and running the
investigation of these murders from the outset, and Faith is at the center of the constitutional
deprivations complained of herein. Upon information and belief, Faith completely lacked police
training. Throughout the Complaint, unless otherwise noted, any reference to “investigators”
186. Defendant Detective Sean Clemons, at all times relevant to this complaint was a
police officer and/or detective with the Indiana State Police, acting under the color of law in his
individual capacity within the scope of his employment pursuant to the statutes, ordinances,
policies, customs, and usage of the state of Indiana. Clemons held the title of “detective.”
Clemons was also provided the title of ISP’s “lead investigator” of the Camm murders, but
Clemons has testified throughout the criminal proceedings that in reality, Stan Faith was “in
charge” of the investigation. Clemons also signed the “probable cause” affidavit even though he
knew or should have known that probable cause did not exist on any of the charges against
David Camm.
187. Defendant Detective Sam Sarkisian at all times relevant to this complaint was a
police officer and/or detective with the Indiana State Police, acting under the color of law in his
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individual capacity within the scope of his employment pursuant to the statutes, ordinances,
policies, customs, and usage of the state of Indiana. Defendant aided in the investigation into,
and malicious prosecution of, the Plaintiff, despite the fact that he knew or should have known of
188. Defendant Sergeant Jim Niemeyer, at all times relevant to this complaint was a
police officer and/or sergeant with the Indiana State Police, acting under the color of law in his
individual capacity within the scope of his employment pursuant to the statutes, ordinances,
policies, customs, and usage of the state of Indiana. Niemeyer had additional duties or
defendants named and unnamable in this Complaint. Defendant aided in the investigation into,
and malicious prosecution of, the Plaintiff, despite the fact that he knew or should have known of
189. Defendant Captain William Walls at all times relevant to this complaint was a
police officer and/or captain with the Indiana State Police, acting under the color of law in his
individual capacity within the scope of his employment pursuant to the statutes, ordinances,
policies, customs, and usage of the state of Indiana. Walls had additional duties or
defendants named and unnamable in this Complaint. Defendant aided in the investigation into,
and malicious prosecution of, the Plaintiff, despite the fact that he knew or should have known of
190. Defendant Sergeant Robert Michael Neal, also known as Mickey Neal at all times
relevant to this complaint was a police officer and/or sergeant with the Indiana State Police,
acting under the color of law in his individual capacity within the scope of his employment
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pursuant to the statutes, ordinances, policies, customs, and usage of the state of Indiana. Neal
had additional duties or responsibilities of hiring, training, and/or supervising ISP officers,
including individual defendants named and unnamable in this Complaint. Defendant aided in the
investigation into, and malicious prosecution of, the Plaintiff, despite the fact that he knew or
191. Defendant Lieutenant Jim Biddle at all times relevant to this complaint was a
police officer and/or lieutenant with the Indiana State Police, acting under the color of law in his
individual capacity within the scope of his employment pursuant to the statutes, ordinances,
policies, customs, and usage of the state of Indiana. Biddle had additional duties or
defendants named and unnamable in this complaint. Defendant aided in the investigation into,
and malicious prosecution of, the Plaintiff, despite the fact that he knew or should have known of
192. Defendant Lieutenant Jim Hickerson at all times relevant to this complaint was a
police officer and/or lieutenant with the Indiana State Police, acting under the color of law in his
individual capacity within the scope of his employment pursuant to the statutes, ordinances,
policies, customs, and usage of the state of Indiana. Hickerson had additional duties or
defendants named and unnamable in this complaint. Defendant aided in the investigation into,
and malicious prosecution of, the Plaintiff, despite the fact that he knew or should have known of
193. Defendant Myron Wilkerson at all times relevant to this complaint was a police
officer with the Indiana State Police, acting under the color of law in his individual capacity
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within the scope of his employment pursuant to the statutes, ordinances, policies, customs, and
usage of the state of Indiana. As discussed supra, Wilkerson aided in the malicious and wrongful
prosecution of Plaintiff in various ways including, but not limited to, assisting Charles Boney in
194. Defendant Detective Gary Gilbert at all times relevant to this complaint was a
police officer and/or sergeant with the Indiana State Police, acting under the color of law in his
individual capacity within the scope of his employment pursuant to the statutes, ordinances,
policies, customs, and usage of the state of Indiana. Defendant aided in the investigation into,
and malicious prosecution of, the Plaintiff, despite the fact that he knew or should have known of
195. Defendant Investigator Jacqueline Vaught at all times relevant to this complaint
was a police officer and/or investigator for Floyd County, Indiana, acting under the color of law
in her individual capacity within the scope of her employment pursuant to the statutes,
ordinances, policies, customs, and usage of the state of Indiana. Upon information and belief,
Vaught did not have a law enforcement background and lacked the necessary training to perform
her job competently. Defendant aided in the investigation into, and malicious prosecution of, the
Plaintiff, despite the fact that she knew or should have known of the Plaintiff’s innocence.
196. Defendant Investigator Tony Toran at all times relevant to this Complaint was a
police officer and/or investigator for Floyd County, Indiana acting under the color of law in his
individual capacity within the scope of his employment pursuant to the statutes, ordinances,
policies, customs, and usage of the state of Indiana. Upon information and belief Defendant
Toran did not have a background in law enforcement and lacked the necessary training to
perform his job competently. Defendant aided in the investigation into, and malicious
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prosecution of, the Plaintiff, despite the fact that he knew or should have known of the Plaintiff’s
innocence.
197. Defendant Investigator Emily Fessel Miller, at all times relevant to this complaint
was a police officer and/or investigator for Floyd County, Indiana, acting under the color of law
in her individual capacity within the scope of her employment pursuant to the statutes,
ordinances, policies, customs, and usage of the state of Indiana. Upon information and belief,
Miller did not have a law enforcement background and completely lacked the necessary training
to perform her job competently. Defendant aided in the investigation into, and malicious
prosecution of, the Plaintiff, despite the fact that she knew or should have known of the
Plaintiff’s innocence.
198. Defendant Keith Henderson, is sued in his individual capacity and at all times was
acting under the color of state law. Henderson was the elected Floyd County Attorney, in Floyd
County, Indiana at the time of his involvement. Upon becoming involved in the case, Henderson
stepped outside of his traditional role of prosecutor and performed “police duties” by taking over
and running the investigation of these murders that led to the second probable cause affidavit. In
addition, Henderson gained a personal financial interest when he signed a book deal that created
a conflict with his role as prosecutor. His personal financial interest interfered with his duties to
the State to faithfully prosecute individuals absent personal interest in the outcome. Defendant
aided in the investigation into, and malicious prosecution of, the Plaintiff, despite the fact that he
knew or should have known of the Plaintiff’s innocence. Throughout the Verified Complaint
199. Defendant Steve L. Owen, is sued in his individual capacity and at all times was
acting under the color of state law. Owen’s traditional role was Assistant Floyd County
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Attorney, in Floyd County, Indiana at the time of his involvement. Upon becoming involved in
the case, Owen stepped outside of his traditional role of prosecutor and performed “police
duties” by taking part in the investigation these murders that led to the second probable cause
affidavit. Specifically, Defendant Owen, made suggestions to Charles Boney to help Boney craft
his out-of-court statements regarding his involvement in the murders. Upon information and
belief, Owen specifically told Boney that nothing of value was taken from the Camm residence.
Defendant aided in the investigation into, and malicious prosecution of, the Plaintiff, despite the
fact that he knew or should have known of the Plaintiff’s innocence. Throughout the Verified
all times relevant to this complaint was a police officer and/or investigator for Floyd County,
Indiana, acting under the color of law in his individual capacity within the scope of his
employment pursuant to the statutes, ordinances, policies, customs, and usage of the state of
Indiana. Defendant aided in the investigation into, and malicious prosecution of, the Plaintiff,
despite the fact that he knew or should have known of the Plaintiff’s innocence.
201. Defendant Robert Stites, was an employee and/or agent of Englert Forensic
Consultants, LLC who was acting under the color of state law by investigating the above-
described murders. Stites operated under the direction of Defendant Faith, Defendant Englert,
and possibly other known and unknown Defendants. Stites lacked credentials to perform his
duties and has admittedly perjured himself regarding his credentials and his “opinions” that led
Consultants, LLC. Englert was directly responsible for the supervision or lack thereof of his
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employee and/or agent Robert Stites. Defendant Englert knowingly sent Stites to the crime
scene to perform duties that Stites knew he did not have the credentials to perform. Englert then
testified consistently with the “opinions” of Stites to cover up the misfeasance and/or
203. Englert Forensic Consultants, LLC, employed and/or was responsible for the
retention and supervision of Stites and Englert. Englert Forensic Consultants, LLC is
responsible under respondeat superior liability for the actions of Stites and Englert in the
204. Defendant Floyd County, Indiana, is a municipality and at all relevant times has
been the employer of some or all of the investigators and/or individual police Defendants named
herein. Floyd County, Indiana is responsible for the policies, practices and customs of all non-
ISP investigators, non-ISP police officers and non-ISP law enforcement personnel that were
involved in this matter. Floyd County, Indiana was responsible for hiring, retaining, and
supervising the fake “expert” Stites and his co-worker Englert. Faith and Floyd County
immediately hired their own “crime scene reconstructionist” even though ISP had its own fully
205. Unknown Defendants John and Jane Does at all times relevant to this complaint
were police officers and/or detectives with the ISP, and/or Floyd County, Indiana, and/or other
law enforcement agencies within the State of Indiana, acting under color of law in their
individual capacities within the scope of their employment pursuant to the statutes, ordinances,
regulations, policies, customs, and usage of the Floyd County, Indiana, the Indiana State Police
206. Unknown Defendants Richard and Roberta Roe supervisors and policymakers
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were at all times relevant to this complaint, police officers, detectives, supervisors, agents,
employees, and/or policymakers with the Indiana State Police, Floyd County, Indiana, or other
law enforcement/state agencies within the State of Indiana, with responsibilities for creating and
implementing policies and/or responsibilities for hiring, training, and supervising ISP officers
and Floyd County officers, including individual defendants named and unnamed in this
complaint, and were acting under color of law in their individual, supervisory and policymaking
capacities within the scope of their employment pursuant to the statutes, ordinances, regulations,
policies, customs, and usage of Floyd County, Indiana and the state of Indiana as a whole.
FACTS
207. Notwithstanding the absence of any evidence linking Mr. Camm to the crimes,
and strong exculpatory evidence, Defendants continued to target Camm as their prime suspect.
Camm’s innocence while using pressure, inducements and lies to create evidence of his guilt.
209. On October 1, 2000, David Camm was arrested and charged on three counts of
murder. David Camm was charged and prosecuted based upon false evidence that was
omissions included, but were not limited to, the failure to investigate the alibi statements
provided by eleven witnesses who told police they were with Mr. Camm when the crime was
committed.
210. As evidence exculpating Mr. Camm mounted, the investigators and/or police
nonetheless failed to follow up on any other possible suspects and performed no further
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investigation.
identifying and prosecuting the true killer, Charles Boney. Charles Boney was a convict and
hardened criminal with at least nine convictions with a pattern of targeting white women. Given
Mr. Boney’s extensive criminal record, the police defendants were in possession of extensive
physical and biographical information about him at the time of the Camm investigation,
including his fingerprints and booking photograph, his DNA, his criminal record and the fact that
he had been released from prison a few months prior and was still under the supervision of Floyd
County authorities.
212. Mr. Boney had further left a trail of physical evidence linking him to the Camm
213. Upon information and belief, had investigators and/or police compared the latent
fingerprints collected from the B-pillar to fingerprint cards from suspects in prior crimes, which
were indexed and could be sorted based on fingerprint characteristics, prior arrests, and address
214. The truth was no match for the defendants' lies and fabrications.
215. From the date of his arrest on October 1, 2000, until his ultimate exoneration on
October 24, 2013, David Camm fought tirelessly to prove his innocence, through the courts on
216. From the date of the crime through the present day, the named defendants, also
failed to come forward with other material, exculpatory, and impeachment evidence conclusively
proving Mr. Camm's innocence, including the truth about their own investigative misconduct.
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Walls, Neal, Biddle, Hickerson, K. Henderson, Chief Deputy Owen and Englert, as well as other
unnamed Richard and Roberta Roe Supervisors, affirmatively concealed or otherwise failed to
come forward with material, exculpatory, and impeachment evidence, including but not limited
to witness statements provided directly to supervisory defendants identified above during the
original investigation, and evidence supervisory defendants knew proved Mr. Camm’s
innocence. Supervisory defendants also participated in and had knowledge of, yet continued to
cover up, the fabrication evidence and coercion of false out of court statements as well as
testimony. The supervisory defendants were aware of their subordinate officers' misconduct in
the Camm investigation due in part to their own direct participation in misconduct that violated
Mr. Camm’s constitutional rights at all stages of the investigation. For example supervisory
defendant Niemeyer knew that “expert” Stites was mishandling evidence and in general did not
know what he was doing at the time the investigation and failed to stop him. Niemeyer allegedly
reported Stites’ incompetence up his chain of command at ISP and ISP supervisor and policy
makers did nothing to stop Stites participation in the investigation of these crimes.
218. Defendants, conspired with each other and concealed evidence of this fabrication
and coercion, despite knowing that probable cause did not exist to arrest and prosecute Mr.
Camm.
officers in the course of the Camm investigation and actively participated in and endorsed the
continued investigation and initiation of a prosecution against Mr. Camm, despite their
awareness that defendants lacked probable cause to prosecute Mr. Camm, engaged in the
improper fabrication, inducement, and coercion detailed above, and participated in and endorsed
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220. Defendant Supervisors also affirmatively, and with deliberate indifference, failed
to undertake any real reinvestigation of the Camm murders despite the fact that they knew
through their direct involvement in every stage of the original investigation and in the
suppression of Boney as the true perpetrator, that defendants had suppressed material,
221. In each and every year since Mr. Camm's wrongful arrest on October 1, 2000,
until his October 24, 2013, exoneration and continuing through the present, defendants have
breached and continue to breach their legal and constitutional duties to disclose the truth.
David Camm.
223. Defendants have violated and continue to violate their clearly established and
ongoing legal and constitutional duties and affirmative obligations to come forward in every year
after Mr. Camm's arrest, specifically including 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007,
2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, and 2014, which conduct actually and proximately caused
Mr. Camm to suffer and endure in each and every one of those years false detention and false
his constitutional rights, and personal and physical injuries, including but not limited to pain and
suffering, severe mental anguish, emotional distress, loss of family relationships, severe
income, infliction of physical illness, inadequate medical care, humiliation, indignities and
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restrictions on all forms of personal freedom including but not limited to diet, sleep, personal
privacy, personal fulfillment, sexual activity, family relations, reading, television, movies, travel,
224. The investigative lapses which led to Mr. Camm's wrongful arrest,
anomaly. Rather, the aforementioned tactics were routine in Floyd County; they were simply the
225. Specifically, before, during, and since the unlawful investigation, prosecution, and
conviction of David Camm, Faith, K. Henderson, and Floyd County by and through their final
policymakers, with deliberate indifference, maintained a policy, custom, or pattern and practice
c. fabricating evidence;
impeachment evidence;
e. destroying evidence;
f. losing evidence;
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and
investigatory misconduct.
226. Before, during and after the unlawful investigation, prosecution, and conviction of
David Camm, the defendants, by and through their final policymakers, with deliberate
indifference, maintained a policy, custom, or pattern and practice of failing to adequately train,
implicating the constitutional rights of witnesses and suspects, including but not limited to the
following:
supervisory defendants abdicated and effectively delegated to detectives, and investigators the
authority and discretion to conduct and supervise investigations with deliberate and reckless
disregard for their constitutional duties and the rights of innocent suspects.
knowingly engaged in investigative misconduct, and condoned and facilitated the misconduct of
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and failure to supervise, train and discipline police and investigators were reflected in the
multiple acts of misconduct and illegality committed by multiple police officers, detectives,
investigators, “experts” and supervisors in relation to multiple suspects and witnesses in the
230. In 2000, police and other law enforcement investigators had a clearly established
criminal defendants' constitutional right to a fair trial pursuant to Brady v Maryland, Giglio v.
United States, and their progeny. Failing to carry out these Brady disclosure duties posed
obvious risks for criminal defendants, yet the defendants utterly failed to train in this regard.
Specifically, the defendants did nothing to ensure that anyone involved understood their Brady
231. As a direct result of the defendants' deliberate indifference to the obvious risk
this endemic Brady confusion posed to criminal defendants — and specifically to innocent
suspects like David Camm — the confusion persisted throughout the 2000 Camm investigation
and indeed for years thereafter without intervention from supervisors or policymakers.
232. For example, pursuant to this unconstitutional custom and practice of suppressing
helpful information and utterly failing to train anyone in their Brady and Giglio duties,
investigators and officers in 2000 arrested, maliciously prosecuted and covered up or withheld
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from innocent suspect, David Camm, who was wrongly convicted twice of murdering his family,
which he did not commit and endured more than 13 years of imprisonment before he was proven
Custom and Practice of Fabricating Inculpatory Evidence and Failure to Supervise and Train
police practices that fabricating evidence to manufacture probable cause to arrest, detain, or
prosecute a suspect violates the suspect's constitutional rights. Nonetheless, the defendants, by
and through agents, failed either to supervise their investigators, “experts” or detectives to ensure
they did not fabricate evidence, or to discipline them when they did. These failures created an
234. These systemic lapses and unconstitutional fabrications of evidence were the
DAMAGES
235. The actions of the named defendants, individually and collectively, deprived
plaintiff David Camm of his civil rights under the First, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Eighth, and
Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution, and under the laws of the State of
Indiana.
236. This action seeks damages for the period from September 28, 2000 through each
and/or bad-faith acts and omissions of the defendants caused David Camm to be wrongly seized,
falsely arrested, indicted without probable cause, maliciously prosecuted, unfairly tried,
wrongfully convicted, subjected to illegal searches as well as cruel and unusual punishment
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during the course of his 13 years for a crime he did not commit.
and/or bad-faith acts and omissions of the defendants caused David Camm the following injuries
and damages, which were foreseeable to the defendants at the time of their acts and omissions,
and which continue to date and will continue into the future: pain and suffering; severe mental
anguish; emotional distress; loss of family relationships; severe psychological damage; loss of
permanent loss of 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, medical care, privacy, personal fulfillment, sexual
activity, family relations, reading, television, movies, travel, enjoyment, and expression, for
239. Specifically, and by way of example, Mr. Camm's liberty was curtailed upon his
arrest and jailing on October 1, 2000. He remained incarcerated following his arrest until he was
exonerated on October 24, 2013, with the exception of a brief period from January 27, 2005
240. All of the acts and omissions committed by the defendants described herein for
which liability is claimed were done intentionally, unlawfully, maliciously, wantonly, recklessly,
with deliberate indifference, negligently and/or with bad faith, and said acts meet all of the
COUNT I
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241. Mr. Camm hereby incorporates by reference all of the foregoing paragraphs and
242. Defendants Faith, Clemons, Sarkisian, Niemeyer, Walls, Neal, Biddle, Hickerson,
Owen, Stites, and Englert as well as John and Jane Doe officers, and Richard and Roberta Roe
supervisors, acting with malice, took steps to initiate and continue the prosecution of Mr. Camm
without probable cause or arguable probable cause to believe he was responsible for the murders
and dismantled credible alibi evidence, suppressed exculpatory evidence including exculpatory
fingerprint and hair exclusions, fabricated evidence, fabricated and pressured inculpatory witness
statements, failed to conduct an adequate investigation of the crime by pursuing leads pointing to
other leads or suspects, and covered up impeachment evidence of their own misconduct.
244. The lack of even arguable probable cause was obvious to defendants. Defendants
knew that the physical evidence exonerated David Camm. Yet defendants disregarded all the
evidence pointing to Mr. Camm's innocence and chose to prosecute him anyway.
245. The only evidence incriminating Mr. Camm, as defendants knew, had been
246. No reasonable police officer or investigator would believe such a fabricated story
as the one they help Boney create, much less their own written and oral records about how it was
elicited, could provide probable cause or even arguable probable cause to arrest, indict or
prosecute.
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provide probable cause to arrest, indict or prosecute Mr. Camm, when all reliable evidence
248. Yet, acting with malice, the defendants covered up the truth about their own
that involved both Camm and Boney, knowing that the truth would have eviscerated probable
249. In fact, Mr. Camm was innocent of all crimes charged with on all occasions.
250. On October 24, 2013, the prosecution terminated in Mr. Camm's favor when his
251. Defendants' actions to deprive Mr. Camm of his liberty without probable cause
were in violation of clearly established constitutional law under the Fourth and Fourteenth
Amendments, and no reasonable investigator or police officer in 2000 or after would have
252. Defendants' actions directly and proximately caused Mr. Camm's arrest,
indictment, malicious prosecution, unfair trial, wrongful conviction, and deprivation of liberty
during his thirteen-year imprisonment, as well as all the ongoing injuries and damages set forth
above.
COUNT II
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253. Mr. Camm hereby incorporates and references all of the foregoing paragraphs
254. Defendants Faith, Clemons, Sarkisian, Niemeyer, Walls, Neal, Biddle, Hickerson,
Owen, Stites, and Englert along with John and Jane Doe Police defendants, and Richard and
Roberta Roe supervisory defendants, deprived Mr. Camm of liberty without due process of law,
and of a fair trial, by deliberately fabricating evidence that was used to arrest, indict, prosecute
helped manufacture Boney’s "confession" which implicated Camm by feeding him non-public
facts about the crime which only the perpetrator and police could have known and them
misrepresenting those facts to charge Camm and re-indict him for not only the murders of his
family members but also conspiracy as to his fictional involvement with Boney.
"confession," their selective and egregiously misleading taping of the interrogation, in their notes
and police reports, and in pre-testimonial oral reports, as well as in perjurious testimony in court,
257. No reasonable officer would have believed this conduct was lawful.
258. Similarly, Defendants Faith, Clemons, Stites, Englert and all supervisory
defendants facilitated, acquiesced, and/or fabricated the “expert” opinions of the camera man,
259. Defendants' fabrications and other dastardly behavior directly and proximately
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caused Mr., Camm's unfair trial, wrongful conviction, and deprivation of liberty without due
process of law during his 13 year imprisonment, as well as all the ongoing injuries and damages
260. Defendants Faith, Clemons, Sarkisian, Niemeyer, Walls, Neal, Biddle, Hickerson,
Owen, Stites, and Englert along with John and Jane Doe Police defendants, and Richard and
Roberta Roe supervisor defendants, deliberately, intentionally or recklessly did not document or
disclose material exculpatory and impeachment information and provide said information to
Camm’s attorneys.
1. At least two electrostatic lifts of a bare footprint taken by New Albany Police
Department Officer Kyle Brewer within hours of the murder in the garage were
destroyed;
2. Two condoms, appearing to have been recently added to the Camm septic tank
were seized by Floyd County Deputy Coroner Becky Balmer on October 1, 2000
were lost and/or destroyed;
3. A shower curtain in the hallway bathroom of the Camm residence which had a
rust-colored stain was lost and/or destroyed;
4. Audio and video records of the gravesite of Kim, Brad and Jill on the February,
2005 day Charles Boney was in the cemetery were allegedly lost;
5. Boney’s list of 10 questions he formulated which were given to the original
polygraph examiner on February 17-18, 2005 weren’t provided and/or lost;
6. GPS records from Boney’s car were incomplete; i.e. the last few days prior to his
arrest on March 4, 2005 weren’t provided and/or lost;
7. The cellular telephone of Kim which was tested for fingerprints was negative after
its unauthorized removal by Sgt. Myron Wilkerson from the ISP Evidence
Locker;
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8. Two hair follicles with root material found on Kim Camm were lost; and
9. There are no written records of:
1. the 33 telephone calls between Boney, Wayne Kessinger and/or Gary Gilbert and
others;
2. the personal contact between Boney, Wayne Kessinger, Keith Henderson and/or
others in the Floyd County Prosecutor’s office just prior to Boney’s arrest;
3. when Charles Boney was told by Steve Owen that nothing of value was taken
from the crime scene;
4. when Boney told investigators and/or prosecutors of his false alibis;
5. when Charles Boney was provided the cellular telephone number of WAVE-TV
reporter Carrie Harned by Keith Henderson and encouraged to call her; and
6. other information passed to/from Charles Boney and from/to the investigators
and/or prosecutors.
Scales, 405 U,S. 150 (1972), California v. Trombetra, 467 U.S. 479 {1984), Arizona v.
Youngblood, 488 U.S. 51 (1988), and their pre-1993 progeny, which imposed a clear
constitutional duty on the defendants not to conceal, suppress or destroy obviously exculpatory
evidence, and rather to document and report exculpatory and impeachment information.
and destroyed in this case was material, and undermined confidence in the outcome of the trial.
of exculpatory and impeachment information directly and proximately caused Mr. Camm’s
unfair trials, wrongful convictions, and deprivation of liberty without due process of law during
his thirteen year imprisonment, as well as all the ongoing injuries and damages set forth above.
Failure to Investigate
265. Defendants Faith, Clemons, Sarkisian, Niemeyer, Walls, Neal, Biddle, Hickerson,
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Owen, Stites, and Englert along with John and Jane Doe Police defendants, and Richard and
Roberta Roe supervisor defendants, further violated Mr. Camm's Fourteenth Amendment rights
adequate investigation of the crime to seek out the true perpetrator, to wit, by:
b. failing to direct the crime lab to compare the fingerprints from Bronco with
indexed fingerprints in the custody of the ISP and Floyd County that shared similar
features with the latent prints and belonged to individuals who were known to frequent
the area of the Camm murders and/or who had been linked to similar crimes previously;
provided by witnesses who were interviewed in connection with the Camm murders,
f. failing to pursue evidence and leads concerning other suspects after their theory of
Mr. Camm’s guilt had been fatally undermined by known exculpatory evidence,
Boney’s vehicle which was in the Camm neighborhood on the afternoon of the murders;
i. failing to check available public and law enforcement databases for leads to help
j. losing and/or destroying the evidence outlined in the preceding paragraphs of this
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complaint; and
determine the truth about and murders of the Camm family violated Mr. Camm's clearly
established rights under the procedural due process component of the Fourteenth Amendment,
including his right to a fair trial and caused his wrongful conviction and the injuries and damages
267. No reasonable “expert,” investigator or police officer in 2000 or after would have
believed that defendants' acts and omissions in this case — fabricating evidence, coercing false
inculpatory statements, failing to document and disclose material, exculpatory evidence, and
failing to investigate exculpatory evidence or leads pointing toward other more viable suspects
— were lawful.
failing to conduct a constitutionally adequate investigation directly and proximately caused Mr.
Camm's unfair trial, wrongful conviction, and deprivation of liberty without due process of law
during his thirteen year imprisonment, as well as all the ongoing injuries and damages set forth
above.
COUNT III
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269. Mr. Camm hereby incorporates by reference all of the foregoing paragraphs and
Kessinger, Owen, Stites, and Englert’s collective drive to secure Mr. Camm's wrongful
conviction, defendants along with John and Jane Doe officers, and Richard and Roberta Roe
fundamental canons of decency and fairness and violated David Camm’s substantive due process
271. Specifically, as set forth above, the defendants engaged in coercion with
witnesses, used undue suggestion with witnesses in hopes of inducing them to identify Mr.
Camm, fabricated Boney’s "story" and other witness statements, concealed and destroyed
evidence that was favorable to the defense, covered up their own misconduct, and refused to
pursue leads implicating other suspects, all in a concerted effort to justify Mr. Camm’s arrest,
prosecution and conviction although every shred of reliable evidence demonstrated his
innocence.
272. The defendants' conduct shocks the conscience, and violated Mr. Camm's clearly
Fourteenth Amendment. No reasonable investigator and or police officer in 2000 or since would
Camm’s arrest, malicious prosecution, unfair trial, wrongful conviction, and deprivation of
liberty without due process of law during his 13-year imprisonment, as well as all the ongoing
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COUNT IV
274. Mr. Camm hereby incorporates by reference all of the foregoing paragraphs and
275. Defendants Faith, Henderson, Owen, Sarkisian, Walls, Neal, Biddle, Hickerson,
and Englert, Unnamed Defendants Richard and Roberta Roe supervisors ("supervisory
defendants"), were, at the relevant times, supervisory personnel with (or acting for) Floyd
County and/or ISP with oversight responsibility for, and personal involvement in, the training,
hiring, screening, instruction, supervision and discipline of investigator and police defendants.
Said failure to train and/or supervise the investigators and police defendants directly led to the
276. The supervisory defendants knew or should have known that their subordinate
evidence pointing to other leads or suspects, fabricating and coercing confessions, fabricating
and pressuring inculpatory witness statements, suppressing and destroying exculpatory evidence,
and depriving civilians of due process of law, and authorized, approved, encouraged, and/or
officers' known pattern of misconduct, defendants and John and Jane Doe officers had deprived
Mr. Camm of his clearly established Constitutional rights through misconduct that included but
was not limited to coercing and fabricating confessions, pressuring and fabricating witness
statements and other evidence, destroying evidence, concealing material, exculpatory and
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Camm murders, including failing to investigate leads likely to lead to the true perpetrator or
definitively exonerate Mr. Camm, and violating their ongoing affirmative obligation to come
forward with the truth of their own misconduct and evidence of Mr. Camm's innocence, and yet
constitutional rights.
278. The supervisory defendants, by deliberately, recklessly, and with gross negligence
failing to supervise their subordinate investigators or police officers and authorizing, approving,
known pattern of such misconduct, caused their subordinates to deprive Mr. Camm of his clearly
established constitutional rights, including but not limited to his rights not to be deprived of
liberty without due process of law, to a fair trial, not to be compelled to be a witness against
279. Moreover, the defendants acted with impunity in an environment in which they
were not supervised, or disciplined by the supervisory defendants, and Richard and Roberta Roe
supervisors, and in which they knew that their violations of Mr. Camm's constitutional rights
280. The deliberately indifferent, reckless, and grossly negligent conduct of the
supervisory defendants violated their clearly established duty, in 2000 and after, to supervise
subordinate detectives, including but not limited to defendant investigators and police officers,
and no reasonable police supervisor in 2000 or since would have believed that deliberately
indifferent, reckless, and grossly negligent supervision in the face of notice of misconduct by
their subordinate officers, much less the supervisory defendants' ratification of and personal
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281. The supervisory defendants' actions and omissions proximately and directly
caused Mr. Camm's arrest, malicious prosecution, unfair trial, wrongful conviction, and
deprivation of liberty without due process of law during his thirteen-year imprisonment, as well
COUNT V
282. Mr. Camm hereby incorporates by reference all of the foregoing paragraphs and
283. Defendants Faith, Clemons, Sarkisian, Niemeyer, Walls, Neal, Biddle, Hickerson,
Owen, Stites, and Englert along with John and Jane Doe officers, and Richard and Roberta Roe
supervisors agreed among themselves and with other individuals, officers and supervisors, and
others both within and outside Stan Faith’s office, Keith Henderson’s office, Floyd County,
Indiana and the ISP, to act in concert in order to deprive Mr. Camm of his clearly established
Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights not to be deprived of his liberty without due process of
law, to a fair criminal trial, not to be compelled to be a witness against himself, and to access to
the courts.
284. In furtherance of the conspiracy to violate Mr. Camm's civil rights, defendants
and others agreed, engaged in and acted in concert to facilitate and carry out numerous overt
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evidence, including but not limited to defendants' coercion, improper inducement, and
fabrication of Mr. Boney's "confession" and witness statements; their use of improperly
Camm and pointing to the true perpetrator; and other evidence tending to establish Mr.
Camm's innocence;
other means deliberately designed to frame David Camm of crimes he did not commit;
c. Providing Charles Boney non-public facts to help coerce his story and implication
of David Camm in the murders that Boney committed when in fact those facts originated
with police during the six “interviews” they had with Boney;
d. creating false police reports, reposing false facts to the court, and otherwise
f. before and after Mr. Camm's arrest, charging for the crimes, and continuing after
his conviction, deliberately choosing not to investigate leads pointing to other suspects
evidence linking Boney to the crime that was ever present at the crime scene; and
exoneration on October 24, 2013 and through the present, defendants continuing to
285. Defendants' conspiracy, and overt acts in furtherance thereof, proximately and
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directly caused Mr. Camm's arrest, malicious prosecution, unfair trial, wrongful conviction, and
deprivation of liberty without due process of law during his thirteen-year imprisonment, as well
COUNT VI
286. Mr. Camm hereby incorporates by reference all of the foregoing paragraphs, in
287. Before, during, and since the unlawful investigation, prosecution, and conviction
of David Camm, municipal defendant Floyd County, by and through their final policymakers,
with deliberate indifference, maintained a policy, custom, or pattern and practice of promoting,
288. Before, during and after the unlawful investigation, prosecution, and conviction of
David Camm, the municipal defendant Floyd County, by and through it’s final policymakers,
with deliberate indifference, maintained a policy, custom, or pattern and practice of failing to
adequately train, supervise, and discipline investigators and police officers in connection with
fundamental investigative tasks implicating the constitutional rights of witnesses and suspects.
acting as investigators along with other untrained investigators and detectives, including but not
limited to defendants Faith, K. Henderson, Owen, Stites, Englert, M. Henderson, Vaught, Toran,
Fessel Miller, Kessinger, the authority and discretion to conduct and supervise investigations
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with deliberate and reckless disregard for their constitutional duties and the rights of innocent
suspects.
impunity.
misconduct and failure to supervise, train and discipline were reflected in the multiple acts of
misconduct and illegality committed by multiple investigators and police officers, detectives and
described above.
practices of investigative misconduct and failure to supervise and train detectives and officers
were also reflected in numerous prior cases and investigations involving defendant officers and
other employees which, upon information and belief, were known to the municipal defendants
investigators and police defendants, known and unknown, in the course of the investigation and
prosecution of David Camm were carried out pursuant to the municipal defendants' policies,
customs, or patterns and practices of promoting, facilitating, or condoning improper, illegal, and
unconstitutional investigative techniques, and their policy, custom, or pattern and practice of
294. Upon information and be1ief, municipal defendants, acting with deliberate
indifference, maintained this policy, custom, or pattern and practice of investigative misconduct
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and policy of failing to train, supervise, discipline, or otherwise remediate investigators and
police officers, despite their notice of ongoing lapses of constitutional magnitude and the known
or obvious risk that these policies would result in violations of the constitutional rights of
295. These municipal defendants' policies, customs, or patterns and practices were the
moving force in the violation of David Camm’s constitutional rights, directly resulting in his
malicious prosecution, unfair trial, unjust conviction and thirteen year imprisonment, as well as
the other grievous and continuing injuries and damages as set forth above.
COUNT VII
296. Mr. Camm hereby incorporates by reference all of the foregoing paragraphs and
297. Defendants Faith, Clemons, Sarkisian, Niemeyer, Walls, Neal, Biddle, Hickerson,
Owen, Stites, and Englert along with John and Jane Doe officers, and Richard and Roberta Roe
supervisors, intentionally and/or recklessly, directly and proximately caused Mr. Camm, an
innocent man, to be falsely arrested, maliciously prosecuted, and wrongly imprisoned, in breach
of the duties they owed to Mr. Camm by a) destroying evidence, b) fabricating evidence, c)
constitutionally adequate investigation, and e) maliciously prosecuting Mr. Camm and causing
298. The defendants' actions caused Mr. Camm to suffer physical harm, including
physical ailments and unauthorized physical contact resulting from the circumstances and
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duration of his wrongful incarceration, and to fear for his physical safety throughout the period
299. The defendants' actions caused Mr. Camm to experience severe emotional
distress, including, but not limited to humiliation, embarrassment, degradation, loss of trust,
permanent loss of natural psychological development, ongoing depression and the continued
COUNT VIII
300. Mr. Camm hereby incorporates by reference all of the foregoing paragraphs and
301. Defendants Faith, Clemons, Sarkisian, Niemeyer, Walls, Neal, Biddle, Hickerson,
Owen, Stites, and Englert, along with John and Jane Doe officers, and Richard and Roberta Roe
supervisors, directly, proximately, and with negligence and/or gross negligence, caused Mr.,
Camm, an innocent man, to be falsely arrested, maliciously prosecuted, and wrongly imprisoned,
in breach of the duties they owed to Mr. Camm to refrain from a) destroying evidence, b)
and causing Mr. Camm's false arrest and imprisonment, directly and proximately caused Mr.
Camm, an innocent man, to be falsely arrested, maliciously prosecuted, and wrongly imprisoned.
302. The defendants' actions caused Mr. Camm to suffer physical harm, including
physical ailments resulting from the circumstances and duration of his wrongful incarceration,
and to fear for his physical safety throughout the period of his pretrial and post-conviction
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incarceration.
303. The defendants' actions caused Mr. Camm to experience severe emotional
distress, including, but not limited to humiliation, embarrassment, degradation, loss of trust,
permanent loss of natural psychological development, ongoing depression and the continued
COUNT IX
NEGLIGENT SUPERVISION
304. Mr. Camm hereby incorporates by reference all of the foregoing paragraphs and
305. The municipal defendants, as well as Supervisory Defendants and Richard and
Roberta Roe supervisors (the "supervisory defendants" ) had a duty to properly train and
supervise investigator, officer, detective, and supervisor employees of the Floyd County and/or
ISP and to provide adequate policies to prevent the above conduct, including fabricating
evidence, destroying evidence, coercing and fabricating confessions and witness statements, and
306. Nonetheless, the municipal defendants and the supervisory defendants were
grossly negligent and negligent in the training, supervision and discipline of the non-supervisory
307. Defendants as well as unknown officers with the Floyd County and/or ISP
committed negligent and intentional acts that resulted in the arrest and imprisonment of Mr.
Camm for murder, without probable cause or other legal justification, knowing that there was no
physical or testimonial evidence connecting Mr. Camm to the crime, and also fabricated
statements including admissions that they attributed conduct to Mr. Camm in police reports and
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in testimony, pretrial and at trial, concerning the precise details of the crime, and where in fact
308. Municipal defendants and the supervisory defendants knew of or had reason to
know of the risks that non-supervisory defendants, as well as unknown officers with Floyd
County and ISP would commit negligent and intentional acts that resulted in the wrongful arrest
309. As a direct and proximate result of this negligent training, supervision, and
adoption of policies, Mr. Camm was wrongly arrested, prosecuted, convicted, and imprisoned,
and sustained the injuries and damages set forth in this Complaint.
COUNT X
RESPONDEAT SUPERIOR
310. Mr. Camm hereby incorporates by reference all of the foregoing paragraphs and
311. At all times relevant to this Complaint, Defendants along with John and Jane Doe
officers, and Richard and Roberta Roe supervisors acted as agents of, and in the scope of their
employment. The conduct by which the defendants committed the torts of malicious prosecution,
false arrest and imprisonment, intentional or reckless infliction of emotional distress and
negligent infliction of emotional distress was undertaken while the defendants were carrying out
their routine investigative functions as investigators and police officers, while defendants were
subject to their employer's control and engaging in such conduct as would have been reasonably
expected, and was in fact foreseen, by their employer. In undertaking this conduct, defendants
intended to further the law enforcement goals of Floyd County and the Indiana State Police.
312. Floyd County, the Indiana State Police, and Englert Forensic Consultants, LLC,
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are liable for all damages caused by its agents' actions leading to Camm’s malicious prosecution,
and intentional, reckless or negligent infliction of emotional distress under the doctrine of
respondeat superior.
A. That the Court award compensatory damages to him and against the defendants,
B. That the Court award punitive damages to him, and against all individual
defendants, in an amount, to be determined at trial, that will deter such conduct by defendants in
the future;
D. For pre-judgment and post-judgment interest and recovery of his costs, including
reasonable attorneys' fees pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988 for all 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claims and costs
Respectfully submitted,
/s/GARRY R. ADAMS
GARRY R. ADAMS
THOMAS E. CLAY
DANIEL J. CANON
CLAY DANIEL WALTON & ADAMS, PLC
101 Meidinger Tower
462 S. Fourth Street
Louisville, KY 40202
(502) 561-2005
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VERIFICATION
I, David Camm, state that I have read the foregoing Complaint and the statements
contained therein are true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
____________________________________
DAVID CAMM
Subscribed and sworn to before me by David Camm on this the _____ day of October,
2014.
____________________________________
NOTARY PUBLIC
KENTUCKY STATE AT LARGE
__________________COUNTY
74