HomeMy WebLinkAbout2023-cv-1343 - Elias v. City of Fort Collins, et al. - 036 - Mot Amend Complaint 1
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLORADO
Civil Action No. 23-cv-1343-GPG-KAS
HARRIS ELIAS,
Plaintiff,
v.
CITY OF FORT COLLINS,
JASON HAFERMAN,
SERGEANT ALLEN HEATON, and
CORPORAL REDACTED,
Defendants.
PLAINTIFF’S MOTION FOR LEAVE TO FILE AMENDED COMPLAINT
Plaintiff Harris Elias, by and through his attorney, file this Motion for Leave to File
Amended Complaint and in support of the same respectfully states as follows:
CERTIFICATE OF CONFERRAL
The parties discussed this motion in open court at the scheduling conference
held on September 11, 2023. At the scheduling conference, defendants indicated that
they do not oppose the relief requested herein.
CAUSE FOR AMENDMENT
1. Plaintiff Harris Elias initiated this lawsuit on May 3, 2023 in the Larimer County District
Court, State of Colorado. The matter was then removed to this court on May 26, 2023
(ECF 1).
2. At the time that Plaintiff filed his initial Complaint in the Larimer County District Court,
Plaintiff was unaware of Corporal Redacted’s first and last name due to the City of
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Fort Collins providing an internal affairs investigation report that had his name
redacted anywhere it appeared.
3. After the lawsuit was filed, counsel for City of Fort Collins emailed undersigned
counsel to represent that former Corporal, now Sergeant, Jason Bogosian is the
individual currently identified as “Corporal Redacted.”
4. Plaintiff seeks leave to file an Amended Complaint for purpose of making that name
substitution.
5. The proposed First Amended Complaint is filed with this Motion as Exhibit 1. A
redlined version of the First Amended Complaint is attached as Exhibit 2, as required
by the rules.
6. Plaintiff notes that due to this case having originally been filed in state court with
entirely different formatting pursuant to state court practice standards, and now having
been removed by Defendants to federal court, for ease of reading/review Plaintiff first
adapted his original Complaint’s formatting from state to federal and then applied the
“red-lining” feature to highlight any changes made to content.
7. Plaintiff will state to the Court and counsel that the only non-formatting (substantive)
amendments made in the First Amended Complaint are the substitution of Mr.
Bogosian’s name wherever “Corporal Redacted” previously appeared.
Respectfully submitted this 13th day of September, 2023.
THE LIFE & LIBERTY LAW OFFICE
/s/ Sarah Schielke
Sarah Schielke
The Life & Liberty Law Office LLC
1209 Cleveland Avenue
Loveland, CO 80537
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P: (970) 493-1980
F: (970) 797-4008
E: sarah@lifeandlibertylaw.com
Counsel for Plaintiff
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
This is to certify that on September 13, 2023, a true and accurate copy of the foregoing
Motion has been sent to the following parties by PACER/ECF:
Mark Ratner
Robert Weiner
Katherine Hoffman
Hall & Evans, LLC
Attorney for Defendants City of Fort Collins
and Sergeant Allen Heaton
Yulia Nikolaevskya
Jonathan Abramson
Kissinger & Fellman, P.C.
Attorney for Defendant Jason Haferman
Harris Elias
Plaintiff /s/ Sarah Schielke
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IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLORADO
Civil Action No. 23-CV-1343-GPG-KAS
HARRIS ELIAS,
Plaintiffs,
v.
CITY OF FORT COLLINS,
JASON HAFERMAN,
SERGEANT ALLEN HEATON, and
CORPORAL JASON BOGOSIAN,
Defendants.
FIRST AMENDED COMPLAINT AND JURY DEMAND
Plaintiff Harris Elias, by and through his attorney Sarah Schielke of The Life & Liberty
Law Office, respectfully alleges for his First Amended Complaint and Jury Demand as follows:
I. INTRODUCTION
1. Plaintiffs bring this civil rights action pursuant to § 13-21-131, C.R.S. and 42 U.S.C. § 1983
and 1988 for relief through compensatory damages and attorneys fees , stemming from
Defendants’ violations of Plaintiff’s rights guaranteed by the Fourth and Fourteenth
Amendments to the Constitution of the United States and Article II, Section 7 of the Colorado
Constitution.
2. The Court has jurisdiction over Plaintiff’s claims pursuant to § 13 -21-131, C.R.S., § 13-1-
124(1)(b), C.R.S., because the acts giving rise to the claims were committed in the State of
Colorado, and pursuant to state court supplemental jurisdiction over the federal claims arising
out of 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
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3. Pursuant to C.R.C.P. 98(c)(5), venue is proper in this Court, which Plaintiff designates a s the
place of trial for this action.
4. Jurisdiction supporting Plaintiff’s claim for attorney’s fees is conferred by 42 U.S.C. § 1988
and § 13-21-131(3).
5. All of the event described herein occurred in the Town of Fort Collins and the State of
Colorado.
II. PARTIES
6. Plaintiff Harris Elias is, and at all times relevant to this Complaint has been, a resident of the
State of Colorado. He currently resides in Fort Co llins, Colorado.
7. Defendant (former) Fort Collins Police Officer Jason Haferman (“Officer Haferman”) was at
all times relevant to this complaint duly appointed and sworn as a police officer working for
Fort Collins Police Services. Upon information and belief, Defendant Haferman has resigned
from FCPS but has retained his P.O.S.T. certification in Colorado and continues to work in
law enforcement. Haferman is a named Defendant in his individual capacity.
8. Defendant City of Fort Collins is a governmental entity and municipality incorporated under
the laws of the State of Colorado for purposes of liability under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and the Fort
Collins Police Services is a department of City of Fort Collins. Defendant City of Fort Collins
enforces local and state law through its law enforcement agency, the Fort Collins Police
Department (“FCPS”).
9. At all times relevant to this Complaint, Defendant City of Fort Collins employed and was
responsible for the oversight, supervision, discipline and training of FCPS personnel, including
Officer Haferman, Sergeant Heaton, and Corporal Bogosian.
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10. Defendant City of Fort Collins was also, at all times relevant to this Complaint, the body
responsible for FCPS’s official policies and practices as well as FCPS’s unofficial customs and
practices with respect to DUI arrests and probable cause.
11. Defendant Sergeant Allen Heaton was responsible for supervising Officer Haferman over the
period that he made the repeated wrongful DUI arrests at issue in this Complaint, personally
participated in or otherwise observed several of the wrongful DUI arrests preceding Plaintiff’s
arrest, and was also personally involved in Plaintiff’s Mr. Elias’s wrongful DUI arrest by
arriving on scene to personally approve of and condone the ongoing constitutional violations
and misconduct. For his personal involvement, Defendant Heaton is sued in his individual
capacity.
12. Defendant Jason Bogosian, is a Corporal at FCPS who at all times relevant to this complaint
was duly appointed and sworn as a police officer working for Fort Collins Police Services.
FCPS has claimed in documents such as the 68-page internal investigation report regarding
Officer Haferman that this Corporal was responsible for supervising Officer Haferman during
the period of Haferman’s repeated wrongful DUI arrests. Corporal Bogosian is sued in his
individual and official capacities.
III. STATEMENT OF FACTS
13. Officer Haferman began working at FCPS in 2017 as a patrol officer.
14. Even as a normal patrol officer, Officer Haferman immediately established himself as a prolific
arrester for DUI offenses.1 In fact, he accumulated so many DUI arrests in his first two years
1 Colorado has several DUI-type offenses (DUI, DWAI, DUI per se, and DUI-Drugs). The impact
and import of a citizen being charged with any of those DUI -type offenses is nearly identical and
so for ease of reference the term “DUIs” as used herein is meant to encompass all such offenses
unless otherwise specified.
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working at FCPS as a regular patrol officer that in 2020, FCPS decided to promote him to their
“DUI Officer,” which meant his primary daily objective every time he worked was to ignore
all other regular calls for service and instead spend his shift seeking out and charging as many
drivers as possible with DUIs.
15. FCPS, like most other Colorado law enforcement agencies, had great incentive to create
positions like “DUI officers” and fill those roles with individuals like Haferman because grant
funding at both the state and federal levels was allotted to agencies through reasoning that takes
into account the quantity of DUI arrests that agency had made in preceding years. The more
DUI arrests an agency made each year, the more the agency would profess DUI drivers to be
a huge “problem” in their jurisdiction, and then the more grant funding they would receive to
do DUI enforcement next year. The additional funding provided by these grants would
typically pay for all of the hours worked by the agency’s “DUI officer” (often at an elevated
overtime hourly rate) and would also go to fund more equipment and officers for the agency
itself, in effect, enabling the department to increase its annual budget on its own. Various
agencies like MADD (Mothers Against Drunk Driving) would also give awards and extensive
positive publicity to agencies that had officers making abundant DUI arrests, which was of
course quite also desirable to both agency and officer for enhancing their respective images in
the eyes of the public.
16. Due to the foregoing, FCPS was eager to put its most prolific DUI charging officer in the role
of “DUI Officer” whenever possible. Haferman applied for this position and because he had
already shown such promise in making so many DUI arrests in his normal patrol shift, in May
of 2020, FCPS gave him the job.
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17. At the same time, the coronavirus pandemic had just struck. Bars and restaurants all closed and
other recreational events like concerts and festivals were all cancelled. This brought DUI
enforcement (and much of the public’s driving generally) to a near standstill for several
months, as there were concerns about the safety of breath testing or housing DUI offenders in
jails due to the virus’s known propensity for spreading in respiratory droplets in poorly
ventilated spaces.
18. A vaccine was developed and began to be distributed to the public at the end of 2020. Much
of the economy began to reopen and people began resumption of more normal co mmuting and
public gatherings. Law enforcement agencies like FCPS directed their officers to return to
normal practices for DUI enforcement.
19. Officer Haferman was eager to show his superiors at FCPS that he was going to be the most
prolific DUI officer they had ever had since the position was created. Upon information and
belief, only some of which is detailed herein, he began regularly stopping cars without
reasonable suspicion and making arrests without probable cause very early on in his stint as
FCPS’s DUI officer.
20. On one such occasion, on November 27, 2020, Officer Haferman stopped and harassed the
occupants of a vehicle merely because he believed the driver had had prior law enforcement
contacts. He detained the driver and its occupants with no legal basis for an extended period
of time, forcing them unlawfully to wait for a K9 unit to arrive to search their vehicle. The
driver, Jacob Larkin, later filed a motion to suppress the stop due to this illegal detention. At
the suppression hearing, Officer Haferman admitted he was not a trained DRE (Drug
Recognition Expert) but he claimed to be able to diagnose Mr. Larkin as “being under the
influence of narcotics” because he looked tired. The Larimer County District Court, in finding
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that Haferman’s detention of Mr. Larkin was in fact unlawful and a violation of the Fourth
Amendment, noted that “not even a DRE, 12-step protocol, based on mere observations of the
subject in a few minutes, in the dark, while engaging in a conversation with another individual
[as Haferman testified] could reach such a conclusion.” The Court also stated in its written
ruling that in Mr. Larkin’s case “there are multiple obvious and logical reasons that were not
explored [by Haferman] in any manner,” all of which “negate[d] any reas onable assumption
that a crime has or is about to occur.”
21. The Judge also ruled in the Larkin case that Haferman was unreasonable in characterizing so
many various aspects of very normal human behavior like “being on edge about being
contacted by police” as grounds to continue seizing the person in violation of the Fourth
Amendment. Most importantly, the Court, after hearing Haferman’s testimony, openly
questioned the veracity of Haferman’s testimony. As the Court wrote: “Officer Haferman
testified he was certain it was multiple [prior law enforcement] contacts [in defendant’s
history]; however, the Court questions the accuracy of such when the rest of [Haferman’s]
testimony regarding this point was incredibly non-specific and couldn’t distinguish the
research regarding Mr. Larkin versus [the passenger].” The Court held that Haferman’s
continued detention of Mr. Larkin was thus “unquestionably unconstitutional” and all the
evidence in the case was suppressed.
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22. Thus by early 2021,2 at basically the inception of his tenure as “DUI Officer,” FCPS had notice
that Haferman was engaging in wrongful searches and seizures of citizens. But FCPS did
nothing.
23. Haferman received the same training as any other officer with respect to the administration of
SFSTs (Standardized Field Sobriety Tests). Yet, immediately, Haferman began administering
SFSTs to subjects in a manner that was entirely inconsistent with his training and designed to
create a false impression of the subject’s intoxication when described by him in his r eports.
24. Most critically, all of the defects in Haferman’s administrations of roadside tests were
abundantly observable on video. They included, and are not limited to:
a. Haferman regularly interpreted normal human behaviors as “cues” or “clues” of
impairment when his training instructed the opposite.
b. Haferman regularly claimed that his training supported his claims of other innocuous
human behaviors being indications of impairment when no such training or
scientifically-backed validation data existed.
c. Haferman also regularly administered the Horizontal Gaze Nystgamus (HGN) test to
people completely wrong, and would then falsely claim that what he observed in his
HGN administration on the subject supported his arrest decision.
2 Upon information and belief, Haferman had several wrongful DUI arrests prior to 2021 however
Fort Collins has endeavored not to answer questions or provide in any timely fashion records in
response to requests from defense counsel or the media related to those arrests. The various
wrongful DUI arrests set forth in this Complaint are thus based on very incomplete records and
not meant to be a comprehensive accounting of all the notice attrib utable to FCPS regarding
Haferman’s wrongful and unconstitutional arrest decisions.
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25. Haferman also by early 2021 was regularly writing reports containing lies and exaggerations
regarding the claimed observed indications of impairment, regularly controverted by his or his
cover officers’ own videos.
26. Haferman also by early 2021 was regularly muting and deactivating his bodyworn camera
during his citizen contacts and arrests, in violation of FCPS policy and Colorado law.
27. All of the issues described in the three preceding paragraphs were observable on video. In other
words, if anyone at FCPS were supervising Haferman during this time and had watched just
one of his (or his cover officer’s) videos of his SFST administration, or compared one of his
videos to his written reports, they would have immediately identified all of the foregoing
problems. They were plain and obvious.
28. Either no one was supervising Haferman at FCPS, or, someone was, and they just did not care
to intervene.
29. Upon information and belief, at least one of the individuals personally responsible for
supervising Haferman during this period was Jason Bogosian.
30. Corporal Jason Bogosian has admitted in an IA investigation into Haferman that early on in
his period of having the duties of supervising Haferman and reviewing his work (January 2021
through May 2022), he noticed that Haferman was counting as a clue of impairment on one of
the standardized roadside tests something that was not a clue of impairment at all. Specifically,
Haferman was claiming subjects to show impairment on this maneuver if they didn’t count to
30 during the 30-second-timed one-leg stand maneuver.
a. It is expressly included as part of the standardized field sobriety training provided by
NHTSA on how to administer roadsides the admonition that what the subject counts to
while being timed holding their leg up for 30 seconds is irrelevant. Particularly since
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they are instructed to count in “one-one-thousand, two-one-thousand” fashion which is
almost always considerably slower than the rate that seconds elapse in real time.
b. Corporal Jason Bogosian saw that Haferman was repeatedly stating subjects were
failing and/or showing impairment clues on the one-leg stand test because of this clue
that he had not just made up, but which the NHTSA manual in fact told him expressly
not to consider a clue.
c. Corporal Jason Bogosian, noticing this, confronted Haferman about his repeated
misrepresentation of impairment evidence against people he had arrested in his DUI
reports. He told him it was not an impairment indicator and he needed to stop using it
as one.
d. Haferman did not respond by acknowledging this as a mistake, however. Instead,
Haferman told Corporal Jason Bogosian, his superior, that this was “an advanced
technique to indicate impairment.” Corporal Bogosian asked where such advanced
training would have come from. Officer Haferman refused to say.
e. This was the first of many red flags to Corporal Jason Bogosian and FCPS about Officer
Haferman.
f. Any reasonable supervising officer knows that police officers making DUI arrests
compile most, if not all, of their “evidence” of the driver’s impairment by having them
do roadside tests which are supposed to be standardized and done according to training.
Any reasonable supervising officer would recognize that if a subordinate police officer
was making up his own “advanced” impairment detection clues on these tests and then
making arrest decisions based on such nonsense (and having the audacity to tell his
corporal that he wasn’t violating the NHTSA training manual, he was just doing
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something “advanced”), that this would create an unacceptably high probability of that
officer wrongfully arresting innocent people and almost certainly disregarding other
critical components of police work.
g. Any reasonable supervising officer in this situation, after hearing Haferman’s
completely absurd claim that the impairment clues he used in violation of his training
saying otherwise were simply “advanced” impairment clues, would have at a minimum
taken an hour or two to review Haferman’s DUI arrest videos (particularly in any one
of the many “none detected” or extremely low BAC DUI arrest cases that Haferman
had had up to that point) and see if Haferman was doing other roads ides correctly and
if he was reporting the facts accurately in his reports.
h. Any reasonable supervising officer in this situation also would have recognized that
Haferman treating this non-clue as an impairment clue could have contributed to
prosecutors prosecuting DUI cases they would not have otherwise prosecuted or
citizens pleading to crimes they did not commit, due to the false claims in Haferman’s
report on this maneuver. Any reasonable supervising officer in this situation would
have at least generated a supplemental report in all the cases where Haferman listed
this non-clue as evidence of impairment, correcting that misimpression, so that those
individuals affected by it could be notified and make important decisions in their cases
in light of it accordingly. Particularly since Haferman’s inclusion of this non -clue as a
clue also had considerable bearing and impact on his credibility and reliability as a DUI
investigator.
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i. Corporal Jason Bogosian did none of these things. He just told Haferman to stop using
the non-clue as a clue and until Haferman went under investigation for multiple,
repeated wrongful DUI arrests a year later, he never even spoke to anyone of it again.
31. On January 21, 2021, Officer Haferman made his next wrongful arrest, this time o f C.B.3 Like
he did in all his DUI arrest reports (see infra), he included false and exaggerated claims of the
driver having “overall slow behavior,” “droopy eyes,” and failed roadside maneuvers. C.B.
even blew into a PBT on scene (Portable Breath Test) and the result was triple zeroes (0.000
BAC). But Haferman arrested her anyway and charged her with DUI.
a. Review of the bodyworn camera (BWC) videos from C.B.’s arrest reveals multiple
discrepancies between what actually occurred and what Officer Haferman a lleged
about her in his report.
b. Haferman listed C.B. having “droopy eyes” as an indication of impairment even though
she literally explained to him she had a medical condition (blepharoptosis) that caused
her to have droopy eyes.
c. Review of the BWC video from C.B.’s arrest reveals yet another occasion on which
Haferman muted his BWC for nearly the entirety of his contact, in violation of FCPS
policy and Colorado law. It is obvious from his video that this tampering was
deliberate, as Haferman reactivates his audio for brief a 13-minute period in the middle
of the 90+ minute video before muting it again.
3 To protect the privacy of individuals who have been victims of Officer Haferman’s wrongful
arrests but who have not yet chosen to come forward publicly, initials are bei ng used in lieu of
their full names.
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d. It is obvious from the videos in C.B.’s arrest that Haferman is administering the HGN
to C.B. incorrectly and claiming in his report HGN “clues” that did not exist.
e. On March 19, 2021, C.B.’s blood test results came back negative for alcohol and
negative for all drugs of abuse.
f. On March 20, 2021, Haferman reviewed the blood test results and entered them into
C.B.’s case.
g. That same day, at least one of Haferman’s supervising officers, Defendant Sergeant
Allen Heaton, claims to have reviewed Haferman’s arrest and the negative blood test
results and approved of both.
32. Thus, as of March 20, 2021, FCPS as an entity and supervis ing officers Sergeant Heaton and
Corporal Jason Bogosian personally, again had notice that Haferman was wrongfully arresting
innocent people. This time, not only did they do nothing to stop it; but at least one of them
expressly approved of the behavior.
33. It should also be noted that by FCPS’s own admission in response to a media inquiry about
Haferman’s DUI arrests a year later (in May 2022), they stated through their press relations
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officer that they “always conduct an internal review of any DUI arrest made by one of its
officers that has chemical test results come back negative for drugs/alcohol.”
34. Thus, according to FCPS’s own claims, multiple superior officers at FCPS would have had to
have reviewed Haferman’s wrongful DUI arrest of C.B. in Mar ch 2021, and therefore seen:
the issues with his roadside administration, discrepancies between the video and his report, and
his violation of policy and law by muting his BWC through most of the contact, and not only
done nothing to intervene, but actually approved of it.
35. Interestingly, however, despite the claims FCPS made to the press purporting to be supervising
and reviewing Haferman’s negative blood test DUI arrests during this time, the Axon Evidence
Audit Trail for Haferman’s BWC video from the C.B. arrest reveals that no one at FCPS ever
looked at Haferman’s video until more than a year later (on May 29, 2022) when FCPS
was already under fire and public scrutiny for having permitted Haferman to make so many
wrongful DUI arrests for so long without any supervision or intervention.
36. In any event, no remedial action, discipline, or any other form of verbal counseling was given
to Haferman by FCPS supervisory personnel regarding the wrongful arrest of C.B. And so, he
carried on.
37. On February 18, 2021, Officer Haferman made his next wrongful DUI arrest, this time of the
disabled veteran Harley Padilla. At the time Haferman stopped Mr. Padilla, Mr. Padilla
required a wheelchair to safely walk and had to speak through a tracheotomy tube in his throat.
Mr. Padilla had just recently survived a terrible motorcycle accident. It is extremely difficult
to watch the video of Haferman’s mistreatment of Mr. Padilla. In addition to insulting and
denigrating Mr. Padilla both during the stop and throughout the arrest report he wrote about
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him later, Haferman also made an extraordinary number of false claims about Mr. Padilla in
his report that were observably contradicted by his BWC video. For example:
a. Haferman claimed that Mr. Padilla weaved once over the center line t o a significant
degree. Haferman’s video revealed this to be false. A Larimer County Judge later ruled
that this claim was observably false.
b. Haferman claimed that Mr. Padilla was “slow to react” and didn’t respond to the
overhead red and blue lights “as a sober person would.” Haferman’s video revealed
this to be false. A Larimer County Judge later ruled that this claim was observably
false.
c. Haferman claimed that Mr. Padilla’s verbal responses were slurred and nonsensical,
and indicative of impairment. Haf erman’s video revealed this to be false. A Larimer
County Judge later ruled that this claim was observably false. Also - Mr. Padilla did
not have a larynx and it is worth reiterating that he had to speak through a trach tube
hole in his throat. Even this reality did not make Haferman think twice about making
his absurd typical false claims in his DUI arrest report of Mr. Padilla regarding “slurred
speech” and “slow responses.”
d. Haferman claimed that Mr. Padilla was “rambling on” about “nonsensical” things and
requesting an ambulance without explaining what injury or ailment he had. The video
revealed none of this to be true. Mr. Padilla was coherent and responded appropriately
to all questions. Mr. Padilla’s request for an ambulance was made in response to
Haferman repeatedly ordering Mr. Padilla to get out of his car after Mr. Padilla had
already told him he needed a wheelchair first to do so.
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e. Mr. Padilla told Haferman several times he was missing a hip and would need a wheelchair
to ambulate outside of his vehicle. Haferman can be heard on video telling Mr. Padilla that
he “don’t have a wheelchair on demand” and that Mr. Padilla should just get out and let
Haferman assist him.
f. Haferman is then heard on video trying to get the utterly disabled Mr. Padilla to agree to
participate in literal physical roadside maneuvers. Mr. Padilla, incredulous, said “no” and
then repeated that he required a wheelchair to ambulate outside of his car. Haferman left
all of this out of his arrest report of Mr. Padilla. Mr. Padilla requested a wheelchair more
than 7 times in the first 15 minutes of the stop. Yet there is literally no reference to Mr.
Padilla’s requests for a wheelchair anywhere in Haferman’s report.
g. Haferman also claimed (like he always did in his DUI arrest repor ts) that Mr. Padilla had
“glassy” and “droopy” eyes. The video revealed this to be a deliberately false
mischaracterization of Mr. Padilla’s existing physical deformities as instead being claimed
impairment indicators. The video shows that Mr. Padilla’s body, face, and parts of his
eyelids were covered in burn scars. Observable burn scars on one’s eyelids would naturally
cause one’s eyes to appear “glassy” or “droopy” at all times, and thus would also make the
idea of listing these permanent physical featur es as instead indicators of impairment
supporting a DUI arrest entirely ludicrous.
h. Haferman informed Mr. Padilla he could smell marijuana and Mr. Padilla explained that
he had a medical card for use of medical marijuana to treat pain from the catastrophic
injuries he sustained to his body in a motorcycling accident. Haferman, knowing that
anyone who uses marijuana on any regular basis will always have some trace amount of
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THC in their blood, happily arrested Mr. Padilla despite the absence of any impairme nt
indicators.
i. Mr. Padilla requested that Haferman call an ambulance. Haferman asked him why. Mr.
Padilla said because Haferman was harassing him, ordering him to get out of his car which
was dangerous, and that he wanted to just go get a blood test now t o prove his innocence
and knew he could not be safely transported to the hospital in the back of Haferman’s patrol
car. Haferman included none of this in his report and instead wrote that Mr. Padilla kept
asking for an ambulance “but was unable to explain what injury or ailment he had.”
j. Finally, after some supervising officers showed up4 and Haferman proceeded to insult and
humiliate Mr. Padilla in front of them some more, an ambulance arrived to transport Mr.
Padilla to the hospital for a blood test. Then Haferman took Mr. Padilla to jail. Because
Mr. Padilla had several DUIs from over ten years prior, the DUI that Haferman charged
him with was a felony.
k. Mr. Padilla could not afford to post the bond set on this class 4 felony DUI. As a result,
and because he was unwilling to plead guilty to an offense he knew he had not committed,
he sat in jail awaiting trial for over a year.
l. Mr. Padilla’s blood test came back on April 21, 2021, showing trace amounts of THC
presumed to be unimpairing under Colorado law. At the time those results came back, it
also was (and remains) well known and accepted in all scientific communities that ther e is
4 If Corporal Jason Bogosian or Sergeant Heaton were in this group of officers, this constitutes
even more specific notice to them regarding Haferman’s ongoing disregard for the rights of
citizens.
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no correlation between such trace amounts of THC and impairment in any medical
marijuana user.
m. Finally, on March 3, 2022, Mr. Padilla’s case was heard by a judge in a bench trial. The
state presented as expert witness a forensic toxicologist from CBI who testified that Mr.
Padilla’s blood results offered nothing to support the claim that he was impaired:
n. Larimer County District Court Judge Cure acquitted Mr. Padilla of DUI, DWAI, and
Careless Driving. In doing so, the Court further ruled that “based on the totality of the
circumstances and the evidence presented, the Court finds that Officer Haferman lacks
credibility.” The Court ruled that “his testimony was inconsistent” and “changed course on
several of the key facts.” The Court further ruled that “[s]ome of [Haferman’s] testimony
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is not supported by the evidence,” while “some of it was contrary to the e vidence.” The
Court also made the finding that “Officer Haferman’s testimony exaggerated the bad
driving in this case, not only with his testimony today, but as found on the point of view
[video] on February 18 of 2021, when relaying that [information abou t driving] to
dispatch.”
o. Even the most cursory review of the claims and descriptions of impairment indications in
Haferman’s report, when compared to his BWC video, reveals the Larimer County District
Court Judge’s findings to be true.
p. In other words, if any supervisor at all at FCPS had ever bothered to supervise Haferman,
or to otherwise even simply review Haferman’s video after Mr. Padilla’s blood results
came back on April 21, 2021 showing no evidence of impairment, they would have seen
that yet again Haferman was lying and exaggerating in his reports about impairment
indicators in order to continue his reign as the department’s most prolific DUI officer, by
repeatedly wrongfully arresting observably innocent people and charging them with
DUI/DWAI offenses they did not commit.
38. Of course, no one at FCPS was supervising Haferman or reviewing his videos.
39. The reality stated in the paragraph above continued despite the fact that the DUI arrest numbers
Haferman was putting up just 6 months into his post-pandemic-lockdown term as DUI Officer
(in the November 2020 – May 2021 timeframe) were significantly higher than any other DUI
officer to precede him in the history of the department.
40. The sheer quantity of DUI arrests being made by Haferman by this point (over 100), in addition
to the negative blood test results now repeatedly coming back on those arrests, should have
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alerted any reasonable supervising officer of the need to check Haferman’s work and ensure
he was not violating the constitutional rights of innocent citizens like Plaintiff.
41. If any reasonable supervising officer had looked at any of the videos from Haferman’s DUI
arrests involving negative or near-negative blood test results at this time, they would have seen
exactly what the Larimer County District Court Judge saw in the Larkin and Padilla cases, and
which of course was also something that any lay person could have easily seen after spending
just 10 minutes comparing Haferman’s arrest reports with his BWC videos: That is, that:
a. Officer Haferman was regularly arresting and charging with DUI individuals who
appeared quite observably unimpaired on video and that he was systematically lying
and exaggerating in his arrest reports regarding evidence of impairment for those cases;
and
b. Officer Haferman was not administering the SFSTs as trained and was claiming all
kinds of normal features of normal human behavior to constitute scientifically validated
clues of impairment; and
c. That Haferman was also regularly targeting and exploiting drivers with disabilities,
claiming that all the symptoms of their known medical conditions were instead proof
of alcohol/drug impairment.
42. But, because no one was actually supervising Haferman, and because his supervisors were
instead approving and lauding his DUI arrest numbers despite the increasing number of blood
test results coming back in his cases proving that he had in fact also been arresting innocent
people, Haferman happily continued with the unconstitutional conduct and – in the latter half
of 2021, really even picked it up a notch.
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43. On May 15, 2021, Officer Haferman made another wrongful DUI arrest, this time of G.C. He
again included the same false statements and exaggerations of impairment indicators in his
report for G.C. He again failed to administer the roadside tests to G.C. in the standardized
manner he was trained. He again claimed all the clues of HGN present when they were not,
and he again administered the HGN test incorrectly. He also made G.C. go through all the
roadside tests despite her being 65 years old and having several medical conditions
contraindicating their use. There were again multiple discrepancies between his BWC videos
and what he claimed occurred in his report.
a. Haferman arrested G.C. and she did a breath test at the police station, which produced
a result of .035% BAC, well under the limit for DUI or DWAI, and, by Colorado law,
presumed to be an unimpairing BAC.
b. Haferman charged G.C. with DWAI and Careless Driving anyway.
c. The district attorney promptly dismissed the DWAI charge. However, due to the
Careless Driving charge, the wrongfully charged DWAI was unable to be sealed from
G.C.’s record.
d. Corporal Jason Bogosian claimed to have reviewed this arrest and approved of it.
e. No remedial action, discipline, or any other form of verbal counseling was given to
Haferman by FCPS supervisory personnel regarding the wrongful arrest of G.C.
44. On June 10, 2021, Officer Haferman made his next wrongful DUI arrest, this time of R.B.
When he stopped R.B., R.B. was clearly having a mental health episode and in need of medical
attention. He told Haferman this, many times. Yet Haferman did not get R.B. medical attention.
Instead, he listed all of R.B.’s mental health behaviors as indications of impairment, and then
arrested him for DUI.
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a. On August 29, 2021, Haferman received R.B.’s blood results. They were negative for
alcohol and all impairing drugs.
b. Haferman’s supervising officer Defendant Sergeant Heaton (and possibly Corporal
Bogosian) again claimed to have approved of Haferman’s report and arrest.
c. The district attorney promptly dismissed the DUI charge against R.B.
d. No remedial action, discipline, or any other form of verbal counseling was given to
Haferman by FCPS supervisory personnel regarding the wrongful arrest of R.B.
45. On June 11, 2021, Officer Haferman made another wrongful DUI arrest, this time of Cody
Erbacher. Mr. Erbacher admitted to having had one beer several hours earlier in the day,
however, and to Haferman, any admission to any drinking at any prior time become sufficient
grounds in his mind – despite the absence of any actual indications of impairment – to make a
DUI arrest. He again included the false statements and exaggerations of impairment indicators
in his report for Mr. Erbacher. He again failed to administer the roadside tests in the
standardized manner he was trained. He lied about Mr. Erbacher showing clues/signs of
impairment when there were none. There were again multiple additional discrepancies between
BWC videos and what Haferman claimed occurred in his report.
a. On November 10, 2021, Haferman received Mr. Erbacher’s blood results. They were
negative for alcohol and all drugs.
b. It appears from the reports in Mr. Erbacher’s case that Haferman now no longer even
had a supervising or approving officer pretending to review his arrests.
c. Despite FCPS claiming that all negative blood test results received by their agency
were subjected to an “internal review,” the documents in Mr. Erbacher’s case indicate
that absolutely no one at FCPS, internal or otherwise, was reviewing or claiming to
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review anything in this Haferman wrongful arrest with “none detected” results nor in
any other Haferman wrongful arrest.
d. Upon receipt of the blood results, the district attorney promptly dismissed the DUI
charge against Mr. Erbacher.
e. Until Haferman’s pattern of constitutional violations was brought to the attention of the
local and national news media in April 2022, absolutely no remedial action, discipline,
or any other form of verbal counseling was ever given to Haferman by FCPS
supervisory personnel regarding the wrongful arrest of Mr. Erbacher.
46. On July 23, 2021, Officer Haferman made another wrongful DUI arrest, this time of Carl Sever.
Mr. Sever was 74 years old at the time Haferman arrested him. He was driving home from the
gym. Haferman claimed to pull him over because Mr. Sever was “going 10 mph under the
speed limit.” Going 10 mph under the speed limit is not unlawful.
a. Haferman falsely claimed in his report that there was an odor of alcohol coming from
Mr. Sever’s vehicle and from “his breath.” Mr. Sever had not drank alcohol in more
than 10 years. He told Haferman this.
b. Haferman again made false claims in his report (controverted by the BWC video) that
Mr. Sever had “slow speech” and nonsensical claims that his “body behavior was
slow.” It is difficult to imagine what speed of movement Haferman was expecting out
of this, or any other, 74-year-old, in order to not be declared drunk.
c. With Mr. Sever, Haferman again muted his BWC when a cover officer arrived and
kept it muted for the rest of his roadside test administration with Mr. Sever.
d. Haferman again failed to administer the roadside tests in the standardized manner he
was trained. Haferman again counted as clues of “impairment” against Mr. Sever
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various features of normal human behavior that were not, by any training or manual,
actual clues of impairment.
e. Mr. Sever advised Haferman that he had a TBI from a car accident. Haferman
deliberately omitted this from his report.
f. Haferman arrested Mr. Sever for DUI and took him for a blood draw. Th en he took Mr.
Sever to jail. When Mr. Sever was released the next day, he did not have his phone,
wallet, or car, and did not know the number for anyone he could call to pick him up.
As a result, he had to walk 4.5 miles home.
g. More than 3 months later, on November 9, 2021, Mr. Sever’s blood test results came
back. They were negative for alcohol and impairing drugs. There was merely some
trace THC (1.4 ng) at a level presumed by Colorado law to be unimpairing and a trace
amount of Mr. Sever’s anti-seizure medication which he had been prescribed for over
15 years.
h. The Larimer DA’s Office dismissed the charges against Mr. Sever.
47. On July 29, 2021, Haferman made another wrongful DUI arrest, this time of Jesse
Cunningham. Mr. Cunningham is a disabled veteran and the Vice President of a veteran
nonprofit organization in Nebraska dedicated to helping veterans reintegrate into their
communities after leaving the military and fighting to prevent veteran suicide. He had come to
Colorado for the week with his wife and two daughters on family vacation. His day had started
off tragically – receiving the news that a close family friend of his had died. Not wanting to
ruin the whitewater rafting trip the family had planned together for the rest of the day, he tried
to put it out of his mind and went along. After the rafting trip, he attempted to get money out
of a nearby ATM to tip the rafting instructor. The ATM claimed to be dispensing money but
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nothing came out. This left Mr. Cunningham and his family with no choice but to wait around
for nearly two hours waiting for the ATM operator to refund the cash the machine had
deducted. While waiting, he had two 3.2% alcohol (PBR) beers. After the ATM owner arrived
and fixed the mistake, he and his family went to McDonald’s to get some food before making
the drive back to where they were staying in Estes Park. After eating, at 8:15 pm, they started
their drive there. Just minutes in, at 8:18 pm, they witnessed a horrific motorcycle accident
caused by a Mazda RX-7 driver pulling out in front of 3 motorcyclists at an intersection,
causing them all to crash. One of the motorcyclists impacted the Mazda and went cartwheeling
through the air and landing in critical condition in a ditch.
a. Mr. Cunningham is a combat veteran with 32 months of combat experience and combat
lifesaving training. He immediately pulled over, had his wife call 911, and ran to
provide aid. The motorcyclist’s leg was nearly severed from the knee down and his
femur bone was sticking out of his skin by about 8”. The rider’s femur had been
“desleeved” which means that the force of the impact was so great that it had removed
all the tissue, tendons, and blood off the bone.
b. Mr. Cunningham, understanding the severity of the rider’s injuries and the need for
prompt lifesaving measures, immediately began stabilizing the rider, using the T-shirt
of a bystander to control the bleeding. As he did this, he assessed the rest of the rider’s
injuries while also triaging the other two injured motorcyclists.
c. The scene was utterly chaotic with multiple injured riders in need of help and dozens
of bystanders getting out of their cars to come and watch or ask to assist. While he
worked to stem the bleeding from the rider’s desleeved femur, Mr. Cunningham also
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managed to take control of the scene, quickly giving directions to people on where to
go, who to call, and what to do to assist him.
d. When paramedics finally arrived on scene, Mr. Cunningham filled them in on the list
of all injuries he had triaged and brought them up to speed on the life- and leg- saving
measures he had taken so far with respect to the most injured rider so they could take
over.
e. Since Mr. Cunningham and his family were the main witnesses to this accident, FCPS
officers asked them to remain on scene and fill out witness statements describing what
they saw. They did so. The officers then asked if they would remain on scene to answer
any questions that the accident reconstruction officers would have. They were all
exhausted, both physically and mentally, Mr. Cunningham in particular. Even still, they
all said they would continue to stay there to do whatever was needed to assist.
f. While waiting for the accident reconstruction team to arrive, Mr. Cunningham received
a phone call from a friend back home with horrible news. His friend told him that their
mutual friend that had died that morning had in fact died by suicide. Mr. Cunningham
had dedicated his life to preventing such an event and was completely gutted by this
news. It took everything that he had left in him to try and keep it together and not break
down in front of his wife and daughters.
g. And then - Officer Haferman arrived.
h. Haferman marched up to Mr. Cunningham. He informed Mr. Cunningham that
someone thought they had smelled the odor of alcohol on him earlier.
i. Mr. Cunningham is former military police. He worked for Homeland Security. He grew
up and lived surrounded by friends and family all in law enforcement. As a result, at
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the foundation of his soul was nothing but complete trust and respect for all those in
law enforcement and a core belief that others in his field, like him, held values like
integrity and fairness in their work most dear.
j. For this reason, Mr. Cunningham heard this allegation of alcohol odor from Haferman
and truly thought nothing of it. Without hesitation or worry, he explained to Haferman
how he had had two light beers nearly four hours ago, so if someone had in fact smelled
it, that would be the cause.
k. Throughout this encounter, Mr. Cunningham can be seen on video appearing
completely sober, unimpaired, coherent, and normal. Ignoring this presentation and
ignoring all that Mr. Cunningham had just done to save the lives of multiple people in
a horrific accident, Haferman informed Mr. Cunningham that he needed him to do
roadside tests to prove he was safe to drive.
l. Mr. Cunningham explained he was completely exhausted from all the events of that
day, both mentally and physically, and asked if he could instead just do a breath test to
prove that he was unimpaired.
m. Haferman had a portable brea th test on hand and available. But he told Mr.
Cunningham no, that the PBT result “wasn’t admissible in court,” and so instead
insisted that he complete the more physical roadside tests. Mr. Cunningham attempted
to cooperate, complaining the whole time that his shoes were filled with water and his
legs felt like Jell-O.
n. Mr. Cunningham did not know any of this about Haferman. And so, despite his
catastrophic day filled with physical exertion, devastating emotional loss, and
extraordinary mental stress, Mr. Cunningham attempted to cooperate with Haferman’s
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balancing tests, complaining the whole time that his shoes were filled with water from
rafting (you can hear them squishing on the video) and that his legs felt like Jell-O.
o. Haferman again did not administer the tests in the standardized manner he was trained
and Haferman again included multiple lies in his report regarding Mr. Cunningham’s
performance on the tests that were obviously contradicted by his BWC video.
p. It is obvious from the videos that Mr. Cunningham was both totally exhausted and
completely sober and unimpaired.
q. Haferman arrested Mr. Cunningham for DUI anyway. He also charged him with two
counts of Child Abuse due to having his daughters with him in the car. Mr. Cunningham
was horrified. He again begged Haferman to give him a breath test on scene to prove
his innocence. Haferman again refused him a breath test.
r. Haferman put Mr. Cunningham into handcuffs and told him he would need to complete
a chemical test. Mr. Cunningham again implored Haferman to let him do a breath test.
s. Haferman told Mr. Cunningham he would have to take a blood test because he had
admitted earlier that he had a prescription for Adderall for his ADHD. Notable here is
the fact that Mr. Cunningham told Haferman that he was prescribed this medication,
but when asked when he had last taken it, he told Haferman that it had been several
days, and that he didn’t even have it with him because he had left it at home in Nebraska
as he didn’t need to take his ADHD medication while he was on vacation.
t. Mr. Cunningham then spent the night in jail. He spent thousands of dollars hiring legal
counsel. His family, utterly traumatized, picked him up and they drove home to
Nebraska to prepare for the funeral of their close family friend.
u. Of course, Haferman was not done with Mr. Cunningham yet.
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v. On Tuesday morning, while getting dressed for his friend’s funeral in Nebraska, Child
Protective Services showed up at Mr. Cunningham’s house to interview his children.
Haferman had called in a referral to Nebraska CPS to investigate Mr.
Cunningham for child abuse.
w. Weeks later, the injured motorcyclist who Mr. Cunningham had worked to save and
Mr. Cunningham were able to connect to each other. The motorcyclist (Max) told Mr.
Cunningham that it was only thanks to him and the measures he took on scene that his
leg was able to be saved rather than having to be amputated.
x. Months later, on October 20, 2021, Mr. Cunningham’s blood results finally came back.
“None detected” for alcohol and all impairing drugs.
y. The Larimer DA dismissed the charges against Mr. Cunningham.
z. Despite FCPS claiming that all negative blood test results received by their agency
were subjected to an “internal review,” the documents in Mr. Cunningham’s case
indicate that absolutely no one at FCPS, internal or otherwise, was reviewing or
claiming to review this Haferman wrongful arrest.
aa. Upon information and belief, until Haferman’s pattern of constitutional violations was
brought to the attention of the public by local and national news media in April 2022,
absolutely no one at FCPS ever looked at this or any other wrongful Haferman DUI
arrest involving “none detected” blood results.
48. On August 8, 2021, Officer Haferman made another wrongful DUI arrest, this time of B.C.
B.C. was another disabled veteran. Haferman came into Krazy Karl’s while on duty to pick up
food he had ordered. While there, he saw B.C. drink one beer. He decided he would wait for
B.C. to leave and arrest him for DUI. Haferman went out to his car and waited.
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a. B.C. wasn’t even planning to drive. He had called his mom to pick him up.
b. As soon as his mom told him she was nearby, B.C. went to move his car to a legal
parking space to be left overnight. He drove his car about 10 feet. Haferman
immediately activated his red and blue lights and ordered B.C. out of the car.
c. Haferman later claimed in his report from this arrest that he activated his BWC during
the encounter, but the video “got lost in Evidence.com” and could not be recovered.
d. Haferman falsely claimed in his report that numerous admissions were made by B.C.
during the periods in which he “lost” his BWC video.
e. Some of the roadside tests Haferman did with B.C. were recorded by his cover officer’s
(Young’s) BWC video. Comparing that video to Haferman’s report again reveals
multiple lies, exaggerations, and discrepancies between what actually occurred and
what Haferman put in his report. The video also, again, shows Haferman not
administering the tests to B.C. correctly.
f. For example, B.C. did the one-leg stand maneuver perfectly and for ten seconds longer
than anyone is supposed to be able to do it. Despite this, Haferman claimed in his report
that B.C. failed it.
g. While arresting B.C., B.C.’s mother arrived on scene within minutes and corroborated
the fact that she was picking B.C. up. Haferman arrested B.C. for DUI anyway.
h. B.C. requested a breath test. His breath test results were .04 BAC which is under the
limit for both DUI and DWAI, and by Colorado law, presumed to be an unimpairing
amount of alcohol.
i. Haferman charged B.C. anyway and booked him into the jail. Then he went to write
his report in which he claimed B.C. made all kinds of admissions and exhibited all
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kinds of signs of impairment indicators. He then, as mentioned previously,
conveniently, and once again, claimed that his BWC footage of the incident
mysteriously had disappeared.
j. The district attorney’s office completely dismissed the case against B.C.
k. According to FCPS’s reports and records for B.C.’s case, again, no supervising officer
ever reviewed or looked at Haferman’s wrongful arrest of B.C. (nor his mysterious
repeated loss of BWC video footage).
l. Upon information and belief, prior to the media a ttention on Haferman’s wrongful
arrests in April 2022, no remedial action, discipline, or any other form of verbal
counseling was ever given to Haferman by FCPS supervisory personnel regarding the
wrongful arrest of B.C. or Haferman’s (now) repetitive destruction of his BWC videos.
49. On September 4, 2021, Officer Haferman made another wrongful DUI arrest, this time of K.S.
K.S. swerved to avoid a deer in the road and hit a tree. Haferman ignored this very normal
explanation for the car leaving the road and decided to instead use it to arrest her for DUI. He
again included the false statements and exaggerations of impairment indicators in his report
for K.S. He failed to administer the roadside tests to K.S. in the standardized manner he was
trained. He lied about K.S. showing clues or signs of impairment. There were multiple
additional discrepancies between BWC videos and what he claimed occurred in his report.
a. On December 15, 2021, Haferman received K.S.’s blood results. They were negative
for alcohol and all drugs.
b. It appears from the reports in K.S.’s case that by this time, Haferman continued to have
no supervising or approving officer reviewing his work.
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c. Despite FCPS claiming that all negative blood test results received by their agency
were subjected to an “internal review,” the documents in K.S.’s case indicate that
absolutely no one at FCPS, internal or otherwise, was reviewing this Haferman
wrongful arrest of K.S., or any other Haferman wrongful arrest.
d. Upon receipt of the blood results, the district attorney promptly dismissed the DUI
charge against K.S.
e. Upon information and belief, until Haferman’s pattern of constitutional violations was
brought to the attention of the public by local and national news media in April 2022,
absolutely no one at FCPS ever looked at this or any other wrongful Haferman DUI
arrest involving “none detected” blood results.
f. Upon information and belief, prior to the media attention on Haferman’s wrongful
arrests in April 2022, no remedial action, discipline, or any other form of verbal
counseling was ever given to Haferman by FCPS supervisory personnel regarding the
wrongful arrest of K.S.
50. On October 8, 2021, Officer Haferman made another wrongful DUI a rrest, this time of D.A.
He again included the same false statements and exaggerations of impairment indicators in his
report for D.A. He failed to administer the roadside tests to D.A. in the standardized manner
he was trained. There were multiple discrepancies between his BWC videos and what he
claimed occurred in his report.
a. After getting his blood, Haferman booked D.A. into the jail. Upon D.A.’s release, he
was subjected to mandatory bond conditions which required him to submit to sobriety
monitoring and drug/alcohol testing for over 3 months.
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b. On January 10, 2022, Haferman received D.A.’s blood results which showed a result
of .036% BAC, well under the limit for DUI or DWAI, and, by Colorado law, presumed
to be unimpairing.
c. It appears from the reports in D.A.’s case that by this time, Haferman continued to have
no supervising or approving officer reviewing his work.
d. Another officer who was on scene (Kevin Alexander) to witness Haferman administer
roadsides to D.A., aware of Haferman’s failure to administer them correctly and
propensity for reporting impairment indicators in sober people that would later be
absent from any BWC video, actually went out of his way to state in his own report
that while on scene with Haferman he did not at any time “take note of [D.A.]’s
performance” on the roadsides. Officer Alexander did not corroborate any of the
claimed impairment indicators that Haferman alleged in his report.
e. Upon receiving D.A.’s blood results, the Larimer County district attorney once again
promptly dismissed the wrongful DUI arrest Haferman had filed against D.A.
f. No remedial action, discipline, or any other form of verbal counseling was given to
Haferman by FCPS supervisory personnel regarding the wrongful arrest of D.A.
51. Again on October 8, 2021 (yes, he had two in one day), Haferman made his next wrongful
DUI arrest, this time of G.E. G.E. was visiting Colorado from Idaho and driving a rental car.
Haferman pulled him over for the headlights not being fully activated. He learned as soon as
he pulled him over that this was because it was a rental car that G.E. was not familiar with.
Undeterred, Haferman ordered G.E. out of the car to perform roadside tests.
a. He again included the false statements and exaggerations of impairment indicators in
his report for G.E. He failed to administer the roadside tests to G.E. in the standardized
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manner he was trained. He lied about G.E. showing clues/signs of impairment that were
not present. There were multiple additional discrepancies between BWC videos and
what he claimed occurred in his report.
b. Despite performing the HGN test on G.E. incorrectly, it was still obvious from
Haferman’s BWC that G.E. had zero clues on the HGN. Haferman lied and claimed
G.E. had all 6 clues of impairment on the HGN test in his report.
c. Haferman then arrested G.E. for DUI and took him to the jail for a breath test. G.E.
blew a .016% on the breath test, which is scored as a “none detected” resul t on the
machine due to its range of error. G.E. was, thus, provably observed to be innocent to
Haferman that very night.
d. So did Haferman apologize and let G.E. go? Of course not. He charged him with DWAI
and booked him into the jail.
e. It appears from the reports in G.E.’s case that Haferman continued to no longer have
any supervising or approving officer pretending to review his arrests.
f. Because of the lies and exaggerations Haferman included in his report about G.E., it
still took more than two months for the District Attorney to dismiss the DWAI charge
he had filed against him.
g. Upon information and belief, until Haferman’s pattern of constitutional violations was
brought to the attention of the local and national news media in April 2022, absolutely
no one at FCPS ever looked at this or any other wrongful Haferman DUI arrest
involving negative chemical test results.
52. On November 19, 2021, Officer Haferman made another wrongful DUI arrest, this time of S.J.
He again included the false statements and exaggerations of impairment indicators in his report
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for S.J. He failed to administer the roadside tests to S.J. in the standardized manner he was
trained. He lied about S.J. showing clues or signs of impairment when there were none. There
were multiple additional discrepancies between BWC videos and what he claimed occurred in
his report.
a. S.J. denied alcohol consumption and blew triple zeroes into a PBT on scene showing
negative for alcohol. Haferman arrested her for DUI and forced a blood draw anyway.
b. On February 23, 2022, Haferman received S.J.’s blood results. They were negative for
alcohol and all drugs.
c. It appears from the reports in S.J.’s case that by this time, Haferman continued to have
no supervising or approving officer reviewing his work.
d. Despite FCPS claiming that all negative blood test results received by their agency
were subjected to an “internal review,” the documents in S.J.’s case indicate that
absolutely no one at FCPS, internal or otherwise, was reviewing this Haferman
wrongful arrest of S.J. or any other Haferman wrongful arrest.
e. Upon receipt of the blood results, the district attorney promptly dismissed the DUI
charge against S.J.
f. Until Haferman’s pattern of constitutional violations was brought to the attention of the
local and national news media in April 2022, absolutely no remedial action, discipline,
or any other form of verbal counseling was ever given to Haferman by FCPS
supervisory personnel regarding the wrongful arrest of S.J.
53. Thus, prior to encountering Plaintiff Mr. Elias in D ecember 2021, Haferman had effected at
least 14 wrongful DUI arrests of innocent people without intervention, comment, or reprimand
from anyone at FCPS.
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54. Upon information and belief, the only feedback Haferman had received from FCPS
supervisory personnel (including Sergeant Heaton and Corporal Bogosian) about his DUI
arrests by this time was positive and blind reinforcement to continue whatever he was doing,
as it was producing DUI arrest statistics that FCPS benefitted from greatly in the eyes of the
public when posted about on social media, seeking additional agency funding, and when shared
with MADD.
55. Upon information and belief, no one at FCPS knew about the inordinately high number of
innocent people Haferman was arresting because no one was supervising him or reviewing his
work. In the alternative, if anyone at FCPS was aware of all the innocent people Haferman was
arresting, they simply didn’t care and so did nothing to try and prevent Haferman from doing
it again.
56. It was therefore by December 2021 not just reasonably foreseeable from Haferman’s pattern
of misconduct but in fact utterly inevitable that he would violate the constitutional rights of
more citizens in the very near future with more wrongful DUI arrests.
HAFERMAN’S WRONGFUL ARREST OF PLAINTIFF HARRIS ELIAS
57. And indeed, he did. On December 3, 2021, just two weeks after his wrongful arrest of S.J.,
Officer Haferman made another wrongful DUI arrest, this time of Plaintiff Harris Elias.
58. Mr. Elias, a pilot and general contractor, and single father to three teenagers, had just enjoyed
dinner with his 15-year-old son at DGT, a small taco restaurant in downtown Fort Collins.
59. Mr. Elias and his son then got in Mr. Elias’s SUV and pulled out of the small parking lot next
to the restaurant. They began driving home. They waited at the stop light at Laurel and College.
When the light turned green, Mr. Elias turned right. Unbeknownst to Mr. Elias, a pedestrian
and dark clothing had begun walking into the road. Mr. Elias noticed the pedestrian step out
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into the road area lit by street lights immediately and simply adjusted his turn to go a bit wider
so there would be ample space between himself and the pedestrian.
60. Officer Haferman witnessed this and decided to pull Mr. Elias over and charge him with a
DUI. He activated his red and blue lights.
61. Mr. Elias pulled over promptly, smoothly, and normally.
62. Officer Haferman went to Mr. Elias’s window and accused Mr. Elias of several things he knew
he had not done. Namely, Haferman accused him of “crossing the pedestrians up at that last
light and then “cut[ting] into multiple lanes of traffic” and told Mr. Elias he had “been weaving
since right before [Haferman] turned on his lights.”
63. Haferman then told Mr. Elias he needed to “make sure everything’s ok tonight.” Mr. Elias told
Haferman that everything was ok.
64. Haferman next asked Mr. Elias where he was coming from. This was none of his business and
Mr. Elias told him so, by responding that he was not going to be answering any more questions.
65. Haferman then asked Mr. Elias for his license, insurance, and registration. Mr. Elias provided
all of these documents to Officer Haferman promptly, without issue, and while demonstrating
perfectly normal manual dexterity and comprehension in the process.
66. Mr. Elias told Haferman his insurance was in the glove box. Before reaching into it, however,
he had the wherewithal to recognize that could be perceived as a threat to a police officer and
so asked for permission to retrieve it from his glove box.
67. Haferman asked Mr. Elias if there were any weapons in the glove box. Mr. Elias told him no,
and then opened it and leaned back so that Haferman could inspect it himself. Haferman did
so inspect it and then gave Mr. Elias permiss ion to get his insurance out of it. Mr. Elias did so.
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68. While Mr. Elias retrieved his insurance, Haferman walked around his car shining his flashlight
inside looking for evidence of alcohol consumption. He found none. He went back to Mr.
Elias’s driver window.
69. Officer Haferman asked Mr. Elias how much alcohol he had had tonight. Mr. Elias reminded
Haferman that he was not going to be answering his questions.
70. Officer Haferman responded to this by asking Mr. Elias another question (“Is there a reason
you don’t answer questions?”). Mr. Elias reminded Haferman yet again that he was not going
to answer questions.
71. Mr. Elias determined that he did not have current proof of insurance in his car and so informed
Haferman he would pull up his insurance on his phone. He began doing so – normally, soberly,
and without indication of impairment.
72. While Mr. Elias pulled up his insurance on his phone, Officer Haferman asked him yet another
question (“Is this your son?”). For the fourth time, Mr. Elias had to remind Haferman that he
was not answering questions.
73. Haferman then turned his attention to Mr. Elias’s 15-year-old son in the passenger seat. Mr.
Elias’s son had what was obviously a bottle of Coca-Cola in his lap. Officer Haferman
shamelessly demanded that the son hold up the coke bottle so he could see if it was an alcoholic
drink. Mr. Elias’s son did so.
74. Mr. Elias logged into his insurance company’s website and account and pulled up his current
proof of insurance on the phone. He did so without indication of impairmen t to even the
slightest degree. He showed it to Officer Haferman.
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75. Officer Haferman told Mr. Elias that he needed him to identify the VIN number of the vehicle
covered on the policy and then also show him where the VIN was on the vehicle he was driving
so he could confirm that this particular car was covered.
a. It should be noted that prior to Mr. Elias, people had regularly pulled up their insurance
on their phones during traffic stops with Haferman, and never had he demanded that
the driver also perform th is bizarre VIN location-and-comparison task that Haferman
was now demanding of Mr. Elias.
b. This was a higher difficulty task, no doubt, but being completely sober and unimpaired,
Mr. Elias had no problem completing it.
76. Officer Haferman then took Mr. Elias’s license and registration, walked away from the car,
and then muted the microphone on his BWC. He apparently used this time to call for cover
officers. Two cover officers arrived, one was FCPS Officer Sean Gavin. The other was CSU
Officer Christian Cardenas.
77. The three officers surrounded Mr. Elias’s vehicle as Haferman went back to his window to
order him out of the car. Mr. Harris rolled his window up, unbuckled his seat belt, and complied
with the order to exit his car.
78. Officer Haferman directed Mr. Elias to a patch of grass next to the roadway. Mr. Elias walked
where directed. Once at the spot, Haferman attempted yet again to begin questioning Mr. Elias.
Mr. Elias again informed Officer Haferman that he was not going to answer questions. He said
“I don’t answer questions” and “I won’t participate in your trials and I’d like to be free to go.”
79. Mr. Elias’s walk was normal and without indication of impairment. Mr. Elias’s speech was
normal and without indication of impairment. Mr. Elias’s standing was norm al and without
indication of impairment.
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80. Officer Haferman demanded that Mr. Elias explain his “driving behavior” and told him it was
“extremely poor.” Mr. Elias replied: “Ok, write me a ticket and let me go please.”
81. Officer Haferman then said “Well, I’m trying to determine whether you’re under the influence
of anything.” Mr. Elias replied: “Ok, fair enough, let me know when I’m free to go.”
82. Officer Haferman became indignant. Raising his volume at Mr. Elias, he responded, “Uh, I’ll
let you know when you’re free to go, and you’re being detained right now so I can investigate
this further on why you were driving so poorly.”
83. “Okay,” Mr. Elias responded.
84. “Okay??” Haferman replied, now visibly upset and growing embarrassed, “Okay, so did you
have any alcohol tonight?”
85. Mr. Elias politely reminded Officer Haferman for the sixth time that he was not going to answer
questions.
86. Furious, Officer Haferman responded to this with yet another question. “Ok, well, how am I
supposed to determine whether you’re under the influence of something??” He said.
87. Mr. Elias replied: “You can contact my attorney.”
88. Officer Haferman reacted to this by going on a long rant to Mr. Elias. It is not worth recapping
here. In summary, Haferman again rehashed his false account of Mr. Elias’s driving while
stuttering repeatedly and then added to this account several false claims of components of Mr.
Elias’s physical demeanor (like “constricted pupils”) which were either untrue or irrelevant, to
try and bait Mr. Elias into attempting to prove his innocence.
89. Mr. Elias did not take the bait. He said “fair enough” and stood there quietly awaiting
Haferman’s next instruction.
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90. This rant was the first time Haferman mentioned an odor of alcohol. Specifically, he accused
Mr. Elias of having “a faint odor of alcohol coming from his breath” and his “uh – person.”
91. CSU Officer Cardenas, moments after this comment, assisted Haferman in putting Mr. Elias
into handcuffs, which required him to get very close to Mr. Elias’s person.
92. Officer Cardenas has since admitted that he did not smell any odor of alcohol – faint or
otherwise – on Mr. Elias.
93. Mr. Elias in fact did not have any odor of alcohol about his breath or his person.
94. Officer Haferman then next endeavored to get Mr. Elias to agree to roadside maneuvers. Mr.
Elias politely reminded him: “I already said no.”
95. Officer Haferman replied: “Alright, you’re under arrest for driving under the influence.” He
directed Mr. Elias to put his hands behind his back to be handcuffed.
96. Mr. Elias put his hands behind his back in the manner he was instructed. Haferman, exasperated
and embarrassed, closed the space between himself and Mr. Elias and began twisting Mr.
Elias’s hands at the wrist to try and bait him into becoming angry or noncompliant from the
sudden infliction of pain.
97. Mr. Elias cried out in pain and implored Officer Haferman to settle down and stop hurting him.
98. CSU Officer Cardenas intervened to complete the handcuffing process and stop Haferman
from his needless escalation and misuse of force upon Mr. Elias.
99. Handcuffed at the patrol vehicle, Haferman demanded Mr. Elias tell him how old his son was.
Mr. Elias again for the eighth time reminded Haferman that he did not answer questions.
100. Officer Haferman read Express Consent law to Mr. Elias and asked him to pick a breath or
blood test. Mr. Elias elected a breath test.
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101. Officer Haferman responded, “Ok” and then deliberately slammed his patrol car door shut
on Mr. Elias’s leg while it was still observably located in the door jamb. Mr. Elias screamed
out in pain.
102. Officer Haferman went “ooop” and then slammed the door shut again.
103. Haferman took Mr. Elias to the jail for a breath test. While there, Mr. Elias continued
interacting normally and without any indication of impairment to even the slightest degree.
104. While waiting for the twenty-minute deprivation period to pass prior to administering the
breath test, Officer Haferman began to wonder if doing a breath test was really the best idea.
In a panic, he called his supervising Sergeant Allen Heaton and asked if he coul d force Mr.
Elias to do a blood draw instead (far better for the fishing expedition Haferman was on) by
claiming Mr. Elias urgently needed medical care for his knee.
105. Mr. Elias had literally just completed the 20-minute deprivation period for the breath test
and the breath test machine was on the table right next to him ready to be used. He could have
completed the breath test he had chosen right there, proven his innocence, and then be taken
to the hospital.
106. But Haferman was not going to let that happen. Instead, he told Mr. Elias they needed to
abandon the breath test and go to the hospital for medical treatment. He told Mr. Elias
(knowingly lying to him) that they would then come back and do the breath test after. Mr. E lias
complied.
107. Back at the scene of Mr. Elias’s vehicle, Officer Gavin waited for Mr. Elias’s girlfriend to
arrive to pick up Mr. Elias’s son and drive Mr. Elias’s vehicle home. Mr. Elias’s girlfriend
arrived and asked what in the world had happened.
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108. Officer Gavin informed her that Mr. Elias would have to stay at the jail for at least a couple
hours depending on how impaired he was.
109. Mr. Elias’s girlfriend shook her head at Officer Gavin, utterly incredulous. “He hasn’t been
drinking!” She told him withou t hesitation. “He’s been doing electrical in my basement the
whole day!”
110. Officer Gavin shrugged and said he was just the back-up officer.
111. Mr. Elias’s girlfriend’s statement was plainly material to Mr. Elias’s guilt/innocence and
an extremely exculpatory piece of evidence at that. Officer Gavin elected not to share or
document Mr. Elias’s girlfriend’s exculpatory comments in any report, in violation of FCPS
policy.
112. At the hospital, Mr. Elias asked to see Haferman’s supervising sergeant so that he could
make a complaint.
113. Defendant Sergeant Heaton arrived at the hospital. He chose not to activate his BWC video
while Mr. Elias made his complaint of excessive force, misconduct, and wrongful arrest against
Officer Haferman. This was in violation of FCPS policy and Colorado law.
114. Upon information and belief, Sergeant Heaton failed to create a report or any record of any
kind documenting Mr. Elias’s complaint against Officer Haferman, in direct violation of FCPS
policy 1020. He did not follow up on Mr. Elias’s complaint as required by FCPS policy 1020
and he did not enter Mr. Elias’s complaint into IACMS for follow -up and investigation as
required by FCPS policy 1020.
115. While Defendant Sergeant Heaton took Mr. Elias’s complaint, he personally observed that
Mr. Elias was sober, coherent, articulate, and showing no indication of impairment whatsoever,
not even to the slightest degree. Despite recognizing that this was clearly yet another wrongful
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DUI arrest in a long line of wrongful Haferman DUI arrests, he did nothing to intervene or stop
it, despite having the opportunity and ability to do so.
116. Rather than intervene, Defendants Sergeant Heaton and Haferman both muted their BWC
cameras and discussed how they would get a blood test from Mr. Elias and send it out to be
tested for every prescription and over-the-counter drug that existed to increase the chances of
having something be detected in Mr. Elias’s blood that they could claim justified the DUI
arrest.
117. After having his knee examined by medical personnel, Haferm an informed Mr. Elias that
he could not do the breath test he had requested due to the passage of time and instead would
have to do a blood test. Mr. Elias did not want to be poked with a needle and voiced his
opposition to having his original choice of chemical test not be honored.
118. Haferman told Mr. Elias that he no longer had a choice of test and that he would have to
submit to a blood test or he would be deemed a refusal which would cause an automatic
revocation of his driver’s license for one year. Any revocation of Mr. Elias’s driver’s license
would result in a lifetime revocation of his pilot’s license with the FAA. Mr. Elias, terrified
and having no choice, agreed to the blood test.
119. While reviewing the CBI lab testing and consent paperwork for the blood draw with Officer
Haferman, Mr. Elias inquired as to what the box “DRE was conducted” meant.
120. Officer Haferman responded: “A drug recognition expert, um, in this case, I’m not
suspecting drugs are in play. So I will only be checking the box that says [to test for] alcohol.
These are a list of different drugs that the lab can test for but, um, I’m just going to check to
have your blood tested for alcohol because I believe alcohol is suspected.”
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121. This was a lie Haferman told Mr. Elias to get him to agree to provide his blood. Haferman
knew that CBI tested all blood kits for 14 categories of drugs and he further knew that if that
drug panel came back negative for those 14 categories, he and Defendant Sergeant Heaton still
could and would ask CBI to send Mr. Elias’s blood out for more comprehensive testing for all
the various prescription and over the counter drugs that existed.
122. Officer Haferman in fact did do just that with Mr. Elias’s blood. In fact, here is a list of all
the drugs Haferman and FCPS ultimately directed CBI to have Mr. Elias’s blood tested for:
• Ethanol
• Volatiles
• Barbituates
• Benzoylecgonine (Cocaine)
• Benzodiazepines
• Buprenorphine
• Cannabinoids
• Carisoprodol
• Meprobamate
• Fentanyl
• Methadone
• Methamphetamine
• Amphetamine
• MDMA
• MDA
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• Codeine
• Morphine
• Hydrocodone
• Hydromorphone
• Oxycodone
• Oxymorphone
• Tramadol
• Zolpidem
• Antihistamines (Benadryl or allergy medication)
• Antidepressants (any depression medication)
• Antitussives (any cold medicine)
• Antiseizure medications
• Antipsychotic medications
• Pain medication (including even Aleve or Advil)
• Muscle relaxants
• Hallucinogens (LCD, psilocybin)
• Hypnosedatives
• Gabapentin
• Countless untold other “over-the-counter medications”
123. After his knee was x-rayed, the hospital released Mr. Elias to Officer Haferman. Officer
Haferman took Mr. Elias to jail.
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124. At 10:48 pm, Officer Haferman arrived at the Larimer County jail to book in Mr. Elias who
he knew would have to spend the entire week end there, in a jump suit, in a cell, awaiting a
bond setting by a judge on Monday, due to the Child Abuse charge that he had added.
125. At 11:18 pm, Officer Haferman left Mr. Elias at the jail and drove back to his desk at Fort
Collins Police Services.
126. At 11:58 pm, Officer Haferman called Child Protective Services and made a report
that Mr. Elias had committed child abuse. Haferman made this report of alleged child abuse
by Mr. Elias:
a. After having spent 2 hours with Mr. Elias and observed no indications of impairment;
b. After claiming that “only alcohol” was suspected in Mr. Elias, while yet refusing to
give Mr. Elias the breath test for alcohol that he had repeatedly requested; and
c. Without knowing the results of any blood testing.
127. Haferman also knew this particular arrest, being devoid of any roadside tests he could
exploit to support it, would require a report filled with particularly flamboyant lies and
exaggerations of impairment cues. And indeed it did. Haferman then proceeded to write a
report narrative for his arrest of Mr. Elias and filled it, as usual, with lies and exaggerations in
order to ensure Mr. Elias’s criminal prosecution for DUI and Child Abuse went on as long as
possible.
128. Mr. Elias’s life was completely upended and devastated by Haferman’s wr ongful arrest.
First, he spent 3 days in jail.
129. Mr. Elias appeared in court on Monday virtually, from the jail, wearing an orange jumpsuit.
He then listened as the appointed public defender pleaded with the judge on Mr. Elias’s behalf
to not enter the mandatory protection order that would have prohibited Mr. Elias from having
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contact with his child. He listened as the district attorney argued that he shouldn’t be allowed
to have contact with his son. He was overcome with debilitating, sick grief and anxiety . He
was a single father. Who would care for his child? Would he have to go to foster care? How
would he explain this to his kids? His family? His friends?
130. After hearing argument from defense and prosecutor that seemed to go on for a lifetime,
Mr. Harris then listened as, in front of a courtroom full of people and a jail room full of other
inmates, Magistrate Judge Cara Boxberger shamed Mr. Elias for putting his child in danger,
for not being a responsible parent, and for representing a threat to the safety of the community.
She pondered aloud about how “difficult” it was for her to decide whether she should issue the
standard protection order she usually issued which would prohibit Mr. Elias from contact with
his child altogether, or to do something else. In the end, she decided to enter a protection order
that permitted the innocent Mr. Elias contact with his son, but which prohibited him from
driving anyone under age 18, including his own children, in any car unless the car had ignition
interlock (breathalyzer) installed in it.
131. Magistrate Boxberger was not done yet. She also entered an order requiring as a bond
condition that Mr. Elias submit to regular drug and alcohol urine testing to monitor his sobriety.
132. There are no words to describe the degree to which this dehumanizing and utterly
humiliating event traumatized Mr. Elias.
133. As the sole parent and caretaker to his son, the protection order prohibiting Mr. Elias from
driving anyone under the age of 18 completely upended both of their lives. Mr. Elias normally
drove his son to and from school and now no longer could. He had to ask his girlfriend (who
had her own young children to care for) for help and he had to hire Ubers to get him and his
son to school, to activities, or even just to the grocery store.
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134. During this time Mr. Elias would regularly become overcome with anxiety and stress
regarding how he would be able to take care of his son or drive him somewhere in case of an
emergency without violating the conditions of the protection order and/or subjecting himself
to extraordinary embarrassment.
135. Mr. Elias’s son and his friends often did activities together which Mr. Elias had become
accustomed to chauffeuring. Now, not only could he not transport any of them anywhere, but
he or his son would have to explain to them that he was no longer available to drive them
because he was currently being criminally prosecuted for DUI and Child Abuse and had been
prohibited from driving minors anywhere during the pendency of the case.
136. All the while, Mr. Elias was having to wake up and call an automated line to see if he
would be required to drive to a drug testing facility and provide a urine sample to comply with
the sobriety monitoring condition of his bond. When he was called to test, he would have to
find a facility and walk in amongst probationers, parolees, and others convicted of crimes to
go to a room where a lab employee would watch him pee to ensure that he gave an untampered
with urine sample. The urine tests were expensive and humiliating.
137. At one point, Mr. Elias got a bad cold. He went to take cold medication to help him be able
to breathe and sleep. He then stopped, in a fright, wondering if cold medication would cause
some kind of positive test result on these drug tests. He decided not to risk it. He suffered
through the rest of his illness with no medication.
138. Living with this case pending was the lowest, sickest feeling Mr. Elias had ever felt in his
life.
139. Mr. Elias had to pay attorneys fees to hire counsel for the baseless charges. He missed work
due to the stress from the baseless charges. He lost sleep worrying that Haferman would find
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a way to tamper with or alter his blood test results. Mr. Elias knew that if Haferman succeeded
in doing so, that would be the end of his career, his relationship, his respect as a parent, his
pilot’s license, and his livelihood.
140. After being informed that the state’s blood testing could take more than 4 months, Mr.
Elias, through his attorney, paid to have his blood tested by a private lab. For nearly a month
still, the harrowing wait for the results, with the concomitant extreme burden and stress of
having to keep up with regular drug testing while not being able to transport his son, went on.
141. Finally, on December 20, 2021, the private lab’s results came back to Mr . Elias’s defense
attorney. There were no surprises here: No alcohol was detected.
142. Mr. Elias’s defense counsel immediately sent the results to the district attorney, demanding
that the case be dismissed and the protection order lifted.
143. No one at the DA’s office responded to this email for over a week. Defense counsel emailed
the DA again requesting dismissal given the blood results.
144. Larimer Deputy District Attorney Jessica Hitchings finally responded to defense counsel
by saying that the blood might still have drugs in it, so she would have to consult with a
supervisor, as she was not comfortable dismissing the case until the state’s blood test results
came back or until a supervisor gave her approval to dismiss.
145. Mr. Elias’s defense counsel reminded the DA that Haferman had expressly stated on his
video he “only suspected alcohol,” which was not present, and, if the state’s blood results for
some reason came back showing drugs, they could always refile the charges. Defense counsel
implored DDA Hitchings to recognize the damage that this baseless case had already inflicted
on Mr. Elias’s life and do the right thing when faced with such clear evidence of this man’s
innocence.
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146. DDA Hitchings told defense counsel she couldn’t do anything without supervisor approval.
147. Days later, DDA Hitchings told defense counsel she had received supervisor approval to
dismiss the case without prejudice (me aning they could refile if their own blood test results
came back showing any drugs) but that since it was a Victims Rights Act (VRA) case, they
would first have to talk to Mr. Elias’s son’s mother and get her position on the case dismissal
before doing so.
148. Mr. Elias’s son’s mother resides in Iowa and has no involvement in her son’s life. The
prospect of having to wait for the district attorney’s office to both locate and obtain the position
of Mr. Elias’s long-lost ex-girlfriend prior to releasing him from the hell he was living in was
additionally terrible, humiliating, and devastating for Mr. Elias.
149. Mr. Elias’s defense counsel worked to assist the DA’s office in getting in touch with Mr.
Elias’s son’s mother by email to speed up the process of getting his case dismissed.
150. Even with defense counsel’s help, it took two weeks to facilitate this contact and to get the
DA to file the motion to dismiss the case.
151. On January 10, 2021, the DA’s office finally filed a motion to dismiss the case against Mr.
Elias. The Court granted the motion the following day on January 11, 2021.
152. While this event reduced considerably the amount of stress and difficulties being imposed
in Mr. Elias’s day-to-day life, it was not the end of his anxiety and worry. He could only af ford
to have his blood tested at a private lab for alcohol. So if Haferman had tampered with his
blood to add any kind of drug to it, he would not know until the state’s results came back.
153. And Mr. Elias knew that if his blood came back positive for any dr ug, the state would refile
the DUI and Child Abuse charges against him and his life would be thrown into
embarrassment, fear, uncertainty, and oppressive disruption yet again.
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154. Haferman and FCPS did in fact request that Mr. Elias’s blood be tested for all the drugs
that could be tested for, including hundreds of various drugs outside the standard 14 -drug
category ELISA panel. CBI obliged FCPS’s request for this additional extensive drug testing
(for free) and sent the blood to a lab in Pennsylvania to have it completed.
155. The additional panoply of testing that FCPS requested to be conducted on Mr. Elias’s blood
caused it to take an additional 1-2 months for the results to come back, compounding Mr.
Elias’s anxiety and suffering.
156. On March 4, 2022, five months after his arrest, Mr. Elias’s blood results from CBI finally
came back. They were negative for everything.
157. A copy of Mr. Elias’s “none detected” blood results was sent directly to Officer Haferman.
On March 9, 2022, Haferman completed a supplemental report into the case acknowledging
the blood results.
158. Despite FCPS claiming that all negative blood test results received by their agency were
subjected to an “internal review,” this report indicates that absolutely no one at FCPS, internal
or otherwise, was reviewing this wrongful arrest of Mr. Elias or any other Haferman wrongful
arrest.
159. Until Haferman’s pattern of constitutional violations was brought to the attention of the
local and national news media in April 2022, absolutely no remedial action, discipl ine, or any
other form of verbal counseling was ever given to Haferman by FCPS supervisory personnel
regarding the wrongful arrest of Mr. Elias.
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HAFERMAN CARRIES ON
160. While Mr. Elias was suffering from the weight and burden of being wrongfully charged
with DUI and Child Abuse and anxiously awaiting his CBI blood results, Officer Haferman
was of course carrying on with his wrongful arrests of other innocent citizens.
161. On December 19, 2021, he made another wrongful DUI arrest, this time of L.M. Haferman
claimed that L.M. stopped at an intersection for longer than he thought should be normal. He
also claimed she failed to signal when turning. He did not record any of these claimed driving
behaviors. He ordered L.M. out of her car and began his DUI fishing expedition. It did not go
well. L.M. appeared normal and unimpaired. She told him that she had had 2 glasses of wine
hours earlier and was now completely sober. He arrested her anyway.
a. L.M. requested a breath test. Her breath test results were under the limit for both DUI
and DWAI, and by Colorado law, presumed to not be impairing.
b. Haferman arrested and charged L.M. anyway and booked her into the jail. Then he
went to write his report in which he claimed L.M. made all kinds of admissions and
exhibited all kinds of signs of impairment indicators during the roadsides. He then,
conveniently, and once again, claimed that most of these indicators would not be
observable on his BWC footage because the audio had yet again mysteriously
“malfunctioned.”
c. The district attorney’s office dismissed the DUI charge against L.M.
d. According to FCPS’s reports and records for L.M.’s case, again, no supervising officer
ever reviewed or looked at Haferman’s wrongful arrest of L.M. (nor his mysterious
repeated propensity for lost, damaged, or malfunctioning BWC footage).
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e. No remedial action, discipline, or any other form of verbal counseling was ever given
to Haferman by FCPS supervisory personnel regarding the wrongful arrest of L.M. or
Haferman’s repetitive tampering/destroying of his BWC content.
162. On March 26, 2022, Officer Haferman made another wrongful DUI arrest, this time of
Carly Zimmerman. Haferman stopped Ms. Zimmerman because he felt she went too quic kly
past him while he was on another traffic stop. She had been crying for three hours and told him
so. He ignored this and instead pressed her to admit to drinking alcohol. She told him she had
not. He arrested her for DUI and demanded a chemical test. She agreed to a blood test.
Haferman then inexplicably muted his BWC for the rest of the encounter with Ms.
Zimmerman.
a. Haferman likely realized it was extremely probable that Ms. Zimmerman’s blood
would reveal that he had made another wrongful DUI arrest. He elected to remedy this
problem by muting his BWC and then later falsely claiming under oath that Ms.
Zimmerman had during the 30 minutes spent at the hospital refused to complete the
blood test.
b. Police practices experts later reviewed the BWC from Hafer man’s arrest of Ms.
Zimmerman (see infra) and voiced shock and condemnation that he had arrested
someone who presented as she did, with zero indications of drug or alcohol impairment
whatsoever.
c. Haferman falsely claimed in his report for Ms. Zimmerman’s arrest that she was
slurring her speech. The portion of the BWC that did have audio (the first 17 minutes)
revealed this to be a categorical lie.
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d. Haferman falsely claimed in his report for Ms. Zimmerman’s arrest that she failed
various roadside maneuvers. The BWC revealed this to also be a categorical lie.
e. The DA’s office later dismissed the criminal case against Ms. Zimmerman.
163. On April 7, 2022, Haferman made another wrongful DUI arrest, this time of Derrick
Groves. Mr. Groves had gotten into a single vehicle accident due to his Tesla malfunctioning.
He told officers he was on probation and so definitely had not consumed any alcohol or drugs.
Mr. Groves appears normal and unimpaired on video. Haferman charged him with DUI
anyway, offering him only a blood test. Mr. Groves’s blood test results later come back tested
for alcohol and all drugs possible, yet again showing “none detected.” The DA’s office
immediately dismissed the case against Mr. Groves.
164. By May 26, 2022, Haferman’s understanding of his own impu nity was reaching
extraordinary heights. By way of example, at the DOR (DMV) hearing regarding the
revocation of Ms. Zimmerman’s license for allegedly refusing a blood test that Haferman had
destroyed the video evidence of, Haferman testified that he was not going to answer questions
about Ms. Zimmerman’s performance on the roadside tests because he couldn’t remember it
and he didn’t believe he had to.
a. Throughout the DOR hearing, Haferman can be heard literally making his own
objections, as the testifying witness, to defense counsel’s questions about the roadsides.
b. Eventually the DOR hearing officer had to instruct Haferman to stop making objections
and instead respond to the very relevant questions being asked. Rather than comply,
Haferman got confrontational with the hearing officer and demanded that he (yes, the
DOR hearing officer presiding over the hearing) supply him with legal authority for
why he should have to testify about the specifics of the roadside maneuvers.
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c. Haferman then threatened the hearing officer that if he forced him to answer questions
about the specific roadside tests, then he would be setting some kind of unlawful
precedent going forward.
d. At this same DOR hearing, Haferman initially testified under oath that the Larimer
County District Court Judge did not make findings about his credibility in the Padilla
case. When confronted with the transcript showing this had in fact occurred, he then
proceeded to declare her finding incorrect, stating that he above all others knew what
was true due to his “training and experience.”
THE ACCESSIBLE DATA IS INCOMPLETE
165. In 2021, FCPS (as an entire agency) made 504 DUI arrests. Officer Haferman was involved
in 191, or nearly 40%, of them. Notably, FCPS has not released the number of DUI arrest
cases where Haferman was the officer that made the arrest decision.
166. Upon information and belief, there are more innocent citizens who have been arrested and
wrongfully charged with DUI/DWAI by Officer Haferman. Plaintiff simply cannot access
records to identify those individuals and detail their wrongful arrests here due to Colorado’s
sealing laws.
a. Under Colorado law (until 2022), if a defendant’s criminal case was dismissed, the
defendant could file a petition to seal the case which then causes all records related
to it to be destroyed.
b. As a result, when people are wrongfully charged with DUI and their blood results
come back showing they were so wrongfully charged and the DA’s office dismisses
the case, the vast majority of those people then (desperate to try and reduce the
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damage inflicted upon their lives by the wrongful arrest) file petitions to seal which
results in the destruction of those records at FCPS.
c. The only wrongful arrest records accessible to Plaintiff’s counsel through CORA
requests, then, are those individuals whose cases were dismissed and who also did
not know that they could seal their case. This is necessarily a small number of
people because Larimer County judges as a matter of policy expressly advise
defendants whose cases are dismissed that they can seal.
d. Making the identification of other wrongful DUI arrest victims even more difficult,
Colorado’s sealings law recently changed, and effective January 1, 2022, dismissed
criminal cases are now automatically sealed.
e. It is now nearly impossible to obtain through open records requests any of the
records related to wrongful arrests. The only remaining avenue to access such
materials is through the civil discovery process after filing a civil lawsuit.
167. Even under these difficult-information-gathering conditions, however, Haferman’s
wrongful DUI arrest activity became sufficiently alarming for the local press to begin
asking questions in April 2022 – notably, critically, and quite provably, well before any
supervisors at FCPS ever began asking any questions.
MEDIA COVERAGE PROMPTS FCPS TO LIE, SCRAMBLE,
AND GAS-LIGHT THE PUBLIC
168. On April 8, 2022, Fox 31 Denver (KDVR) Investigative Reporter Rob Low received a tip
about Haferman and began investigating Haferman’s pattern of wrongful DUI arrests, starting
with that of Mr. Elias. On that day (April 8), Mr. Low sent a reco rds request to FCPS requesting
the videos and reports from Mr. Elias’s arrest.
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169. FCPS’s records custodian took 3 weeks to do it, but eventually, FCPS provided reporter
Mr. Low with the Elias videos. Business at FCPS and with Haferman’s DUI arrest work
continued as usual.
170. Months later, when public pressure forced FCPS to terminate Haferman, FCPS made
repetitive assertions to the press and in their own reports that they had spontaneously opened
an internal investigation into Haferman of their own initiative on April 13 and, they doth
protested quite too much, “not in response” to any media inquiries.
171. However, there exist no records corroborating this fanciful claim beyond FCPS’s own self -
serving statements that this is the date they began their self-initiated internal investigation.
172. Notably, if FCPS had opened an internal affairs investigation into Haferman on April 13,
it certainly didn’t involve telling Haferman about it, and it certainly didn’t involve telling
Haferman to change anything he was doing.
173. Because on April 15, 2022, Haferman was still working as DUI Officer for FCPS and that
very day himself made two more DUI arrests. During one of the arrests, he mentioned to the
arrestee that his 2-year-term as DUI Officer was ending soon and he’d be rotating back to
patrol. Haferman during this conversation gave no impression whatsoever that he was under
investigation for anything or that would otherwise suggest he was being forced to rotate out of
the role (and, the end of April 2022 would have in fact marked Haferman having served the
full 2 years of every FCPS DUI Officer’s 2-year term, as scheduled).
174. And whatever claimed “internal investigation” FCPS was doing also didn’t affect
Haferman on May 14, 2022, when he again wrongfully arrested someone for DUI, this time
75-year-old Chuck Matta, despite no indications of impairment. After being put into handcuffs
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and taken to jail, Mr. Matta requested (repeatedly) that he be allowed to do a breath test.
Haferman finally relented at the station, where Mr. Matta blew triple zeroes.
175. The day that FCPS finally released Mr. Elias’s videos to reporter Low, on April 29, 2022,
they also apparently sent Defendant Sergeant Heaton a heads up about it, probably because he
was the supervising sergeant involved on scene and also had elected not to create a BWC video
of his involvement (or the formal complaints made to him by Mr. Elias) in violation of
Colorado law and FCPS policy.
176. Defendant Heaton decided it might be a good time to watch what was recorded in the other
officers’ BWC videos regarding his involvement. He knew he (deliberately) hadn’t recorded
anything of Mr. Elias’s case himself but worried if the other officers presen t there with him
had made sure to at least mute their mics to ensure his comments and approval of Haferman’s
actions weren’t recorded. So, for the first time, on April 29, 2022, Sergeant Heaton watched
Haferman’s video from the Elias arrest.
a. This entire sequence of events (a citizen witnessing police officer misconduct,
requesting their supervising sergeant to make a complaint, the sergeant responding and
“taking the complaint” and then eradicating evidence, video or otherwise, of said
complaint) is eerily and grotesquely similar to that of (now former) Sergeant Metzler’s
infamous conduct in the case of Karen Garner v. City of Loveland, et al. When
Metzler’s misconduct was exposed to the public by Ms. Garner’s counsel, Metzler lost
his job for it.
b. FCPS is aware of Sergeant Heaton doing that here (indeed they did an extensive
internal investigation into Mr. Elias’s case which included multiple supervisors
reviewing all the videos) and FCPS did nothing.
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177. Throughout the month of May 2022, KDVR reporter Rob Low continued requesting
records and asking questions about the Harris Elias arrest. In response, FCPS’s public relations
officer would promise answers and then after 7-10 days, would supply responses to only some
of the questions reporter Low had asked.
178. Reporter Low told FCPS he was going to run a story on the Elias arrest and asked if Chief
Swoboda wanted to be interviewed or provide any comment. Chief Swoboda enthusiastically
agreed to an on-camera interview on May 25. In that interview, he defended Haferman’s arrest
decision and made knowingly defamatory statements towards Mr. Elias, like: “It’s concerning
that later it came back that he [Elias] didn’t consume any, but that doesn’t mean the officer
didn’t smell alcohol inside the car or on his breath or on his person.”
179. FCPS Chief Swoboda also claimed that FCPS had initiated their own internal review of the
Elias arrest specifically “before” his interview on May 25 because they “always” do that in a
case with “none detected” blood results.
180. Yet the audit trail for Haferman’s BWC video of the Elias video reveals that Kim Cochran,
the Professional Standards Unit (PSU) officer at FCPS who would have done such a review,
did not look at Haferman’s Elias arrest video for the first time until 4 days later, on May 29,
2022.
181. While investigating and asking questions for his story on Mr. Elias’s wrongful arrest,
reporter Rob Low began to see that this was not a one-off type of wrongful arrest, but that
Officer Haferman instead appeared to have a pattern of making man y wrongful DUI arrests of
citizens. There were many more victims. He and other news outlets began digging in,
demanding answers, explanations, and accountability from FCPS.
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182. In response to this additional media scrutiny, FCPS PR Manager Kimble again reiter ated
to Rob Low of KDVR in a June 14, 2022 email that “FCPS reviews all cases where DUI blood
tests come back with no drugs detected.”
183. On June 16, 2022, Fox 31 Denver ran its first piece about Haferman pattern of wrongful
DUI arrests. It gave FCPS Chief Swoboda opportunity to be interviewed and comment on the
story before it was published and this time, he refused to be interviewed.
184. Instead, knowing this story was coming out, Chief Swoboda worked to get ahead of it,
releasing the day before, on June 15, 2022, a statement to the public through a video post on
FCPS’s Facebook page.
185. In this statement, Swoboda defended Haferman’s conduct, insulted and defamed the
victims of Haferman’s wrongful arrests, and made multiple other false claims suggesting that
FCPS had always been reviewing Haferman’s arrests and ensuring they were lawful. He also
went even further than that, stating:
186. By FCPS’s Chief’s own admission, then, either multiple FCPS supervisors were reviewing
Haferman’s ND cases and approving of it and finding no training issues and finding no
discrepancies between his reports and his videos and finding no problem with his repeated
destruction of video evidence by failing to activate it or muting it during some of his most
questionable arrests…. Or, he was simply lying about there having been any supervisory
review of any of Haferman’s wrongful arrests. The latter possibility is better corroborated by
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the evidence and logically considerably more likely, but regardless, either option establishes
Monell liability against Defendant FCPS.
187. FCPS Chief Swoboda, in the same public statements, also went even further to defend
Haferman’s wrongful arrests – claiming that Haferman always had probable cause to arrest the
individuals and that if nothing impairing was found in their blood, that was simply the result
of limitations on what drugs CBI could test for.
a. For example, Swoboda wrote on FCPS’s Facebook page in the 6/15/22 statement:
b. This paragraph openly insinuates that “nothing detected” blood test results for
individuals charged with DUI by officer Haferman proves not that these people are
innocent, but instead that Officer Haferman was so special and so highly trained that
he was able to detect in them impairment from obscure and unknown types of street
drugs for which science hasn’t yet even figured out how to test.
c. Not one single “none detected” wrongful DUI arrest made by Officer Haferman up to
that point ever included any allegation, insinuation, or shred of evidence supporting the
idea that the individuals were impaired by a synthetic street drug or impairing aerosol
inhalant.
d. FCPS Chief Swoboda’s allegation that the innocent people wrongfully arrested by
Haferman like Plaintiff Mr. Elias, who had been previously vindicated through their
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blood tests, were not innocent but instead just on drugs that CBI could not test for was
defamatory and served to compound their damages. Chief Swoboda making these
comments both online, in print, and in in-person interviews with the media caused Mr.
Elias more suffering, trauma, and emotional distress.
188. FCPS Chief Swoboda’s claims to the public about FCPS’s drug testing capabilities were
also knowingly untrue at the time they were made. Here’s the rest of the statement he made
about FCPS’s drug testing capabilities:
189. Also provably untrue from Chief Swoboda’s public statements:
a. CBI is not limited to a “standard ELISA panel to test for 14 categories of drugs.” In
fact, CBI can test for every kind of drug for which a test exists.
b. For example, in Harley Padilla’s case, FCPS asked CBI to test for a whole slew of
additional prescription medications outside of the standard ELISA 14-drug panel, and
CBI did so.
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c. This “specialized testing” was done at CBI, not CSU, and this “specialized testing” did
not cost FCPS anything additional to have completed.
d. Similarly, in Plaintiff Mr. Elias’s own case, FCPS asked CBI to test for apparently
every single drug or medication that can be tested for on earth:
190. Swoboda made his false claim that FCPS could only test for the 14 -panel of drugs provided
in an ELISA panel on June 15, 2022. Mr. Elias’s blood test result showing that FCPS can,
could, and did test for every other type of drug under the sun was provided to FCPS on March
4, 2022, and was part of the Elias arrest records in FCPS’s possession.
191. Swoboda also falsely claimed in his public statement on behalf of FCPS that CBI could not
or would not test blood for synthetic street drugs. This was categorically untrue. From CBI
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Toxicology’s own website:
192. Swoboda’s claim that CBI could or would not test blood for “aerosol inhalants” was also
a provable lie. CBI states clearly on their website that they test for commonly abused inhalants:
193. CBI’s website also confirms that they do “specialized testing” for law enforcement in
DUI/DUID cases upon request, at no cost, for all the synthetic street drugs that the standard
ELISA panel does not detect. The list of drugs that CBI can test for law enforcement in DUI
cases upon request, for free, is so long that it would not be productive to copy and paste here,
however it is worth pointing out that this list of hundreds of types of drugs 5 includes:
1. All synthetic fentanyl drugs; and
2. All synthetic bath salt type of drugs.
b. In other words, if law enforcement suspects there is some other type of drug on board
not likely to be detected in a standard 14-panel ELISA screen, they are expressly
informed by CBI that specialty testing can be done to detect any other drug that science
5 The list is currently viewable (as of March 28, 2023) online at:
https://cbi.colorado.gov/sections/forensic-services/toxicology-services/toxicology-testing
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has been developed to test for, including synthetic street drugs, upon request and free
of charge.
194. This information is also provided directly to individual law enforcement officers in CBI’s
toxicology testing form. This document is part of every blood testing kit and is filled out by
the officers themselves in every single DUI blood test case.
a. Swoboda’s claim that only CSU could conduct such specialized testing was therefore
knowingly false when uttered.
b. Swoboda’s claim that such testing was expensive and only could be pursued in “serious
cases like vehicular assault and vehicular homicide” was therefore also knowingly false
when uttered.
195. Chief Swoboda made these knowingly false claims in order to ratify and defend
Haferman’s constitutional violations, and at the time he made such false statements to the
public and press, he knew or reasonably should have known that spreading such lies would
cause Plaintiffs like Mr. Elias further harm, suffering, and distress.
196. All CBI drug testing is free. Swoboda’s claim in his June 2022 public statements that in
order to do “specialized testing” for other drugs outside the ELISA panel, it would have cost
FCPS “more than a quarter of a million dollars in testing fees” for its past year of 504 DUI
arrests was also knowingly and provably false when uttered. CBI states on their website and
on the drug test request forms in every blood kit that it has been completing specialized drug
testing for law enforcement in DUI/DUID cases for free since July 2019:
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197. Swoboda made these false claims in the same public statement that accused the innocent
people who had come forward about their wrongful DUI arrests at the hands of Haferman of
doing a “quick hit news story” that was misleading and he urged everyone to “no t fall for the
salacious headlines.” In fact, it was only Chief Swoboda who undertook to deliberately report
to the public misleading and false facts.
198. In a video address to the public accompanying this public statement on June 15, 2022,
Chief Swoboda made this statement:
“In some of these [DUI] blood tests, they are coming back that no drugs were detected. We
look at each and every one of these cases to make sure that we are out there operating
appropriately. Is there training issues? Is there equipment is sues? What’s happening?
So please, don’t fall for the salacious headlines. Don’t think that when those reports
come back or you see that in the media, that somehow it means it was bad policing.
Our officers are routinely interacting with people that are on drugs or misusing drugs
that don’t show up in those panels. Things like inhalants, having people huffing and
then driving a vehicle. Those don’t show up in those panels. We also don’t have over
the counter drugs that show up. Or some prescription drugs that show up. And lastly
and most importantly, synthetic drugs. That’s a market that is changing daily and the
testing isn’t keeping up. So I just wanted all of you to know that when you see reports
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about zero drugs coming back in someone’s blood after arrest, please ask questions if
you have them but don’t make the leap that it’s somehow bad policing.”
199. Chief Swoboda knowingly lied in his video statement to the public. CBI does test for the
inhalants used in huffing. It does this testing upon request in DUI/DUID cases and for free.
FCPS was not “looking at each and every one of th[o]se cases to make sure that [they] are out
there operating appropriately.” Swoboda made the above statement despite knowing that he
and FCPS had literally zero evidence or support for the idea that the “none detected” blood test
DUI cases involved drugs that CBI was unwilling to test for, that were too expensive to test
for, or that forensic science was not yet capable of testing for.
200. It should also be noted that if any FCPS officer or supervisor believed that a “none
detected” blood test result was due to other impairing drugs not checked in the 14 -panel screen
(rather than being due to the person’s actual innocence), the blood could be retested or
subjected to specialized testing for any and all other drugs at any time for a year or more
after the date of the arrest. This is because CBI by rule maintains the blood samples from
DUI arrests for at least one year and longer if needed or requested.
a. At the time that Chief Swoboda made these deliberately false and misleading
statements to the public claiming that all “none detected” blood test cases were due to
drug testing limitations and not driver innocence, nearly all of those drivers’ blood
samples were thus still in refrigeration at CBI, perfectly preserved, and available
for any manner of free specialized drug testing.
b. Rather than request the testing, Chief Swoboda elected to lie to the public about
nonexistent drug testing limitations and nonexistent drug testing costs instead.
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201. Further cementing Plaintiff’s failure to supervise Monell claims, in the internal affairs
investigation FCPS eventually did open into him, Haferman openly admitted that no one was
supervising him at FCPS for the entirety of his tenure there.
a. For example: it is FCPS written policy that all arrest reports including all important
information needed to be completed by officers by the end of their shifts.
i. Haferman did not comply with this written policy. He was completing his
reports sometimes days or even weeks later.
ii. When interviewed by FCPS’s “Professional Standards Unit” (PSU) for the
internal affairs investigation into his wrongful DUI arrests, Haferman was
questioned about his failure to comply with this written policy. Haferman told
investigator Kim Cochran that reports did not need to be completed by end of
shift at FCPS and in fact in his “entire career at FCPS,” it was “never mentioned
by any supervisor that he needed to complete reports by the end of shift.” He
went on and on about this written policy not being actual policy followed by
anyone at FCPS and he informed Cochran that he “has never had a supervisor
speak to him about getting reports done in a timely manner.”
b. Also throughout this interview with his own employer, Haferman would repeatedly
claim that he had a great memory while in nearly the same breath refusing to
acknowledge certain basic facts of his cases by claiming he could “not recall.” He
bragged that over the past two years as DUI Officer he took no notes during roadsides
or any other part of the investigation and instead “most everything was done by
memory.” He stated this as a point of pride, reminding the investigator Cochran that no
supervisor of his at FCPS had ever found any problem with that.
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c. Haferman was questioned by investigator Cochran about his failure to activate his
BWC and whether there had been prior instances of him doing so. To her face,
Haferman lied and said he could r ecall no prior instances of him having to document
that he had muted his camera or forgot to turn on his camera (in fact there were more
than 6 such instances in just the previous year).
d. For all the instances in which Haferman quite confidently informed t he FCPS
investigator that he had never received any kind of supervisory direction suggesting he
needed to do things differently, and conveniently, only for those instances, FCPS
investigator Cochran found Haferman’s statements to be “highly unlikely and
inaccurate.” For everything else, she presumed that Haferman was merely mistaken
and not “intentionally lying.”
e. Investigator Cochran then acknowledged just a few paragraphs later in her 68 -page
report on Haferman that there were “issues with Haferman’s abil ity to give accurate
testimony.”
202. In the separate report produced as a result of the investigation into Haferman’s conduct and
testimony in Ms. Zimmerman’s DOR hearing, the FCPS investigator (really having no choice
at this point) had to make the finding that Haferman’s arrest report did include false statements
that were belied by his own videos. She reluctantly acknowledged that Haferman appeared to
have “a disregard for accurate reporting and poor attention to detail.”
203. These are catastrophically dangerous traits for any police officer to have and both realities
of which any supervising officer at FCPS would have discovered to be true about Haferman if
they had been supervising anything he was doing starting in November 2020.
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204. An officer who has “a disregard for accurate reporting and poor attention to detail” is
almost certain to also be an officer who makes wrongful arrests of innocent people. Particularly
if that officer is given a job exclusively focused on making arrests for only one type of crime
(DUI) where that one type of crime (unlike nearly every other type of offense in the Criminal
Code) is also able to be charged based solely on the subjective opinion and claimed
observations of the arresting officer.
205. When interviewed by FCPS’s Professional S tandards Unit in the summer of 2022,
Haferman further solidified Plaintiff’s Monell claims, when he stated that throughout his tenure
as the DUI Officer, he “believed he was doing good work” and “didn’t have any reason to
believe he wasn’t doing good work based on no supervisors or experts in the field saying
otherwise.”
206. In the course of FCPS’s investigation into Haferman’s misconduct, multiple FCPS officers
admitted that Haferman’s failure to administer the roadsides to drivers correctly was obvious
and apparent on his videos.
207. When interviewed by FCPS’s Professional Standards Unit in the summer of 2022,
Haferman openly stated that he treated a driver’s invocation of the right to remain silent
as an indication of impairment because it “showed poor judgment in how to interact with
police.” He said this was also consistent with his training and experienced received at FCPS.
208. In public statements to the press throughout the summer (as more Haferman victims came
forward to various news outlets and additional stories about Haferman and FCPS’s pattern of
wrongful DUI arrests continued to run), both Chief Swoboda and FCPS’s public relations
officer continued to make knowingly false and defamatory statements insisting that Haferman
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had probable cause to make all of his arrests and insinuating that the drivers whose blood
results came back with nothing detected were simply impaired by some other substance.
209. These continued defamatory statements made by FCPS suggesting his arrest was l awful
and that he had simply been on some kind of synthetic street drug or inhalant caused Mr. Elias
– a father, business owner, and pilot – to suffer additional emotional distress and further
compounded his damages.
210. On September 1, 2022, the Larimer County District Attorney sent a letter to Chief Swoboda
referencing the fact that they had had several “previous discussions” concerning Haferman’s
integrity, judgment, and reliability, and now despite those “previous discussions,” felt forced
to conclude that Haferman “at minimum, has demonstrated a significant disregard for the
integrity of his investigations and does not have a firm grasp of the impact of depriving our
citizens of their liberty.”
211. On September 2, 2022, FCPS announced that they were putting Haferman on
administrative leave.
212. In December of 2022, Chief Swoboda made a public statement on FCPS’s Facebook page
again, this time to announce that Haferman had resigned. He then explained that when FCPS
had actually reviewed his work (after being forced to by media inquiries in May), FCPS had
realized Haferman was lying in his reports, doing roadsides incorrectly, and arresting people
without probable cause.
213. No one at FCPS ever interviewed any of the victims of Haferman’s wrongful DUI arrests
as part of their several-months long investigation resulting in a 68-page report.
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214. A reporter offered Chief Swoboda the opportunity to apologize to victims of Haferman’s
wrongful arrests, including Mr. Elias in particular. Chief Swoboda refused to issue any
apology.
215. To date, no one at FCPS has offered any apology to Mr. Elias or any other victims of
Haferman’s and its repeated wrongful DUI arrests.
216. As a result of the Defendants’ violations of his constitutional rights under both the U.S.
and Colorado Constitutions, Plaintiff Mr. Elias has suffered damages, trauma, depression,
upset, loss of sleep, loss of work, loss of happiness, embarrassment, disruption of family
relationships, emotional distress, and a catastrophic loss of ability to feel safe, to trust law
enforcement, and to drive anywhere without risking again his loss of liberty.
IV. CLAIMS FOR RELIEF
FIRST CLAIM FOR RELIEF
Section 13-21-131, C.R.S. – Arrest without Probable Cause
Violation of Colorado Constitution, Article II, Section 7
(against Defendant Haferman)
217. Plaintiff hereby incorporates all other paragraphs of this Complaint as if fully set forth
herein.
218. Section 13-21-131 of the Colorado Revised Statutes directs that any peace officer who
“subjects or causes to be subjected, including failure to intervene, any other person to the
deprivation of any individual rights … secured by the bill of rights, article II of the state
constitution is liable to the injured party for legal or equitable relief or any other appropriate
relief.”
219. Statutory immunities and statutory limitations on liability, damages, or attorneys fees do
not apply to claims brought pursuant to § 13-21-131.
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220. Defendant Haferman was a police officer under Colo. Rev. Stat. § 24 -31-901(3), employed
by the City of Fort Collins and its Police Department at the time he wrongfully seized, arrested
and maliciously prosecuted Mr. Elias.
221. Officer Haferman did not at any time during his encounter with Mr. Elias have probable
cause or reasonable suspicion or any other legally valid basis to believe that Mr. Elias had
committed, was committing, or was about to commit any crime.
222. Defendant Officer Haferman unreasonably seized and arrested Mr. Elias, in violation of
his rights under the Constitution of the State of Colorado.
223. Officer Haferman did not at any time have a warrant authorizing his seizure or arrest of
Mr. Elias.
224. Officer Haferman violated Mr. Elias state constitutional rights by engaging in an unlawful
seizure of Mr. Elias that was objectively unreasonable in light of the facts and ci rcumstances
confronting them before, during and after his encounter with Mr. Elias.
225. Defendant Haferman knowingly violated Mr. Elias individual rights as secured by the bill
of rights of the Colorado Constitution.
226. Defendant Haferman did not act upon a good faith and reasonable belief that his actions in
seizing Plaintiff without probable cause or reasonable suspicion was lawful.
227. The acts or omissions of the Defendant Haferman were the moving force behind, and the
proximate cause of, injuries sustained by Mr. Elias.
228. Defendant Haferman’s wrongful arrest and humiliation of Mr. Elias caused him to
experience extraordinary stress, expense, depression, terror and anxiety. The experience of this
event caused and continues to cause Mr. Elias trauma and emotional distress, loss of any
feeling of safety or security, along with all the other damages and injuries descr ibed herein.
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SECOND CLAIM FOR RELIEF
42 U.S.C. § 1983 – Unlawful Arrest Without Probable Cause – Individual, Failure-to-
Supervise/Train, Unconstitutional Pattern/Practice under Monell
Violation of Fourth Amendment, Due Process
(against Defendants Haferman, Sergeant Heaton, Corporal Bogosian, and Fort Collins)
HAFERMAN
229. Plaintiff incorporates by reference the foregoing paragraphs of this Complaint as if set forth
fully herein.
230. The actions of Defendant Officer Haferman as described herein, while acting under color
of state law, intentionally deprived Mr. Elias of the securities, rights, privileges, liberties, and
immunities secured by the Constitution of the United States of America, including his right to
be free from unlawful seizure as guaranteed by the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution of
the United States of America and 42 U.S.C. § 1983, in that Mr. Elias was arrested without a
warrant and without probable cause to believe he had committed any offense.
231. Defendant Officer Haferman knew that Mr. Elias was unimpaired and that he had no
probable cause to arrest him and he did so anyway, with deliberate indifference to Mr. Elias’s
rights under the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
232. Officer Haferman’s arrest of Mr. Elias was objec tively unreasonable in light of the facts
and circumstances confronting him before, during and after this encounter.
233. Officer Haferman’s conduct described herein was attended by circumstances of malice, or
willful and wanton conduct, which he must have realized was dangerous, or that was done
heedlessly and recklessly, without regard to the consequences or the rights of others,
particularly Plaintiff.
234. Defendant Officer Haferman falsified his report regarding evidence of impairment to
ensure that Plaintiff would be prosecuted for the DUI offense he had not committed.
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235. Defendant Officer Haferman caused Plaintiff to be arrested without probable cause or a
warrant, and the false statements in his reports caused Plaintiff to be wrongly subjected to
criminal prosecution. Defendant Haferman’s actions were done with malice and caused
Plaintiff damages.
SERGEANT HEATON
236. Defendant Sergeant Heaton was responsible for supervising Defendant Haferman.
237. Defendant Sergeant Heaton was also personally involved in several of Hafe rman’s
wrongful DUI arrests.
238. Defendant Sergeant Heaton was able to observe that Haferman was wrongfully arresting
people and charging them with DUI and instead of doing anything to intervene and stop the
behavior, he instead expressly approved of it and at times even took measures to help Haferman
in covering it up.
239. If Defendant Sergeant Heaton had been fulfilling his duty to even intermittently review
Haferman’s work (particularly his repeated DUI arrests coming back with “none detected”
blood results), he would have seen that Haferman was lying in his reports, falsifying
impairment indicators, administering roadsides incorrectly, and regularly tampering with or
otherwise muting/disabling his bodyworn camera in violation of FCPS policy and Colorado
law.
240. If Defendant Sergeant Heaton had been fulfilling his duty to even intermittently review
Haferman’s work, he would have noticed the dozens of red flags indicating that his
intervention, supervision, and more was required to stop Haferman from his pattern an d
practice of arresting innocent people for DUI.
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241. Any reasonable supervisor in Sergeant Heaton’s position would have recognized that
Haferman was wrongfully arresting innocent people and regularly violating the constitutional
rights of citizens several months before Haferman encountered Plaintiff Mr. Elias and
subjected him to the same.
CORPORAL JASON BOGOSIAN
242. Defendant Corporal Jason Bogosian was also responsible for supervising Defendant
Haferman.
243. Defendant Corporal Bogosian did nothing to actually supervise or monitor the work being
done by Officer Haferman.
244. If Defendant Corporal Bogosian had been fulfilling his duty to even intermittently review
Haferman’s work (particularly his repeated DUI arrests coming back with “none detected”
blood results), he would have seen that Haferman was lying in his reports, falsifying
impairment indicators, administering roadsides incorrectly, and regularly tampering with or
otherwise muting/disabling his bodyworn camera in violation of FCPS policy and Colorado
law.
245. If Defendant Corporal Bogosian had been fulfilling his duty to even intermittently review
Haferman’s work, he would have noticed the dozens of red flags indicating that his
intervention, supervision, and more was required to stop Haferman from his pattern and
practice of arresting innocent people for DUI.
246. Any reasonable supervisor in Corporal Bogosian’s position would have recognized that
Haferman was wrongfully arresting innocent people and regularly violating the constitutional
rights of citizens several months before Haferman encountered Plaintiff Mr. Elias and
subjected him to the same.
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CITY OF FORT COLLINS
247. Defendant City of Fort Collins is a governmental entity and municipality incorporated
under the laws of the State of Colorado for purposes of liability under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and
the Fort Collins Police Services is a department of the City of Fort Collins. Defendant City of
Fort Collins enforces local and state law through its law enforcement agency, the Fort Collins
Police Services (“FCPS”).
248. Defendant Fort Collins had a duty to train and supervise Defendant Haferman.
249. At all times relevant to this Complaint, Defendant City of Fort Collins employed and was
responsible for the promulgation of policies, customs, practices and training of FCPS
personnel, including Officers Haferman.
250. Defendant Fort Collins was aware Defendant Haferman’s propensity for wrongfully
arresting citizens to increase his DUI arrest numbers, falsifying his reports, and had evidence
of the same, and it chose to not just fail to remedy it, but to instead reward it, ensuring it would
continue to occur.
251. Both Fort Collins’s failure to supervise and train Haferman, as well as its aforementioned
unconstitutional customs/practices, were the moving force behind Mr. Elias’s wrongful arrest.
252. Defendant Fort Collins’ actions and omissions violated Plaintiff’s federal constitutional
rights, and were a substantial and significant contributing cause and proximate cause of
Plaintiff’s damages.
253. Defendant Fort Collins did not act upon a good faith and reasonable belief that their actions
and omissions in failing to adequately train and supervise FCPS officers in this area was lawful.
254. Defendant Fort Collins, through its Chief and policymaker Jeffrey Swoboda, made
knowingly false and defamatory statements to the public in the aftermath of its wrongful arrest
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of Mr. Elias which exacerbated Mr. Elias’s emotional distress, suffering, and damages by
insinuating that he had been on some other kind of drug they couldn’t test for and falsely
suggesting that testing for those other drugs was too expensive for the agency (when the testing
was free).
255. These Defendants’ conduct were the proximately cause of the injuries, damages, and losses
to Mr. Elias described herein.
THIRD CLAIM FOR RELIEF
Section 13-21-131, C.R.S. – Violation of Due Process
Malicious Prosecution
Violation of Colorado Constitution, Article II, Section 25
(against Defendant Haferman)
256. Plaintiff Mr. Elias incorporates by reference the foregoing paragraphs of this Complaint as
if set forth fully herein.
257. Defendant Haferman was a police officer under Colo. Rev. Stat. § 24 -31-901(3), employed
by the City of Fort Collins at the time he wrongfully seized, arrested and maliciously
prosecuted Mr. Elias.
258. Section 25 of Article II of the Colorado state constitution guarantees to Mr. Elias the right
to not be deprived of life, liberty or property, without due process of law.
259. Defendant Haferman caused the criminal prosecution against Mr. Elias by falsifying and
deliberately exaggerating the facts in his report and his Affidavit for Warrantless Arrest, in an
effort to make it more likely to appear there had been probable cause for Mr. Elias’s arrest , and
providing those documents to the District Attorney.
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260. Defendant Officer Haferman’s false allegations were the sole moving force behind the
criminal prosecution against Mr. Elias, which included Mr. Elias being subjected to extremely
oppressive and humiliating bond conditions as already detailed herein.
261. Defendant Haferman’s actions were done with malice.
262. No probable cause supported the criminal charges Haferman brought against Mr. Elias.
263. The criminal prosecution against Mr. Elias resolved in his favor when the Larimer County
Court dismissed the case against him on January 11, 2022.
264. Defendant Haferman’s malicious and false prosecution of Mr. Elias caused him to suffer
further trauma, damages, lost wages, suffering, depression, and despair.
FOURTH CLAIM FOR RELIEF
42. U.S.C. § 1983 – Malicious Prosecution
Fourth Amendment, Due Process Violations
(against Defendant Haferman)
265. Plaintiff incorporates by reference the foregoing paragraphs of this Complaint as if set forth
fully herein.
266. Defendant Haferman caused the criminal prosecution against Mr. Elias by falsifying and
deliberately exaggerating the facts in his report in an effort to make it more likely to appear
there had been probable cause for Mr. Elias’s arrest, and providing those documents to the
District Attorney.
267. Defendant Officer Haferman’s false allegations were the sole moving force behind the
criminal prosecution against Mr. Elias.
268. Defendant Haferman’s actions were done with malice.
269. No probable cause supported the criminal charges Haferman brought against Mr. Elias.
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270. Defendant Haferman’s malicious and false prosecution of Mr. Elias caused him to suffer
further trauma, damages, lost wages, suffering, depression, and despair.
PRAYER FOR RELIEF
WHEREFORE, Plaintiff respectfully requests this Court enter judgment in his favor and against
Defendants, and award him all relief as allowed by law and equity, including but not limited
to:
a. Declaratory relief and injunctive relief, as appropriate;
b. Actual economic damages as established at trial;
c. Compensatory damages, including but not limited to those for past and future pecuniary
and non-pecuniary losses, physical and mental pain, trauma, fear, anxiety, loss of
enjoyment of life, loss of liberty, loss of sense of security, and other non-pecuniary
losses;
d. Punitive or exemplary damages for all claims as allowed by law in an amount to be
determined at trial;
e. Issuance of an Order mandating appropriate equitable relief, including but not limited
to:
i. Issuance of a formal written apology from each Defendant to Plaintiff;
ii. The imposition of appropriate policy changes designed to avoid future similar
misconduct by Defendants;
iii. Mandatory training designed to avoid and prevent future similar misconduct by
Defendants;
iv. Imposition of disciplinary action against appropriate employees of Fort Collins;
f. Pre-judgment and post-judgment interest at the highest lawful rate;
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g. Attorney’s fees and costs; and
h. Such further relief as justice requires.
JURY DEMAND
Plaintiffs demand a jury trial on all issues so triable.
Respectfully submitted this 13th day of September, 2023.
THE LIFE & LIBERTY LAW OFFICE
s/ Sarah Schielke
Sarah Schielke
Counsel for Plaintiff
The Life & Liberty Law Office LLC
1209 Cleveland Avenue
Loveland, CO 80537
P: (970) 493-1980
F: (970) 797-4008
E: sarah@lifeandlibertylaw.com
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IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLORADO
Civil Action No. 23-CV-1343-GPG-KAS
HARRIS ELIAS,
Plaintiffs,
v.
CITY OF FORT COLLINS,
JASON HAFERMAN,
SERGEANT ALLEN HEATON, and
CORPORAL JASON BOGOSIAN,
Defendants.
FIRST AMENDED COMPLAINT AND JURY DEMAND
Plaintiff Harris Elias, by and through his attorney Sarah Schielke of The Life & Liberty
Law Office, respectfully alleges for his First Amended Complaint and Jury Demand as follows:
I. INTRODUCTION
1. Plaintiffs bring this civil rights action pursuant to § 13-21-131, C.R.S. and 42 U.S.C. § 1983
and 1988 for relief through compensatory damages and attorneys fees, stemming from
Defendants’ violations of Plaintiff’s rights guaranteed by the Fourth and Fourteenth
Amendments to the Constitution of the United States and Article II, Section 7 of the Colorado
Constitution.
2. The Court has jurisdiction over Plaintiff’s claims pursuant to § 13-21-131, C.R.S., § 13-1-
124(1)(b), C.R.S., because the acts giving rise to the claims were committed in the State of
Colorado, and pursuant to state court supplemental jurisdiction over the federal claims arising
out of 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
Deleted: KLM
Deleted: REDACTED
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3. Pursuant to C.R.C.P. 98(c)(5), venue is proper in this Court, which Plaintiff designates as the
place of trial for this action.
4. Jurisdiction supporting Plaintiff’s claim for attorney’s fees is conferred by 42 U.S.C. § 1988
and § 13-21-131(3).
5. All of the event described herein occurred in the Town of Fort Collins and the State of
Colorado.
II. PARTIES
6. Plaintiff Harris Elias is, and at all times relevant to this Complaint has been, a resident of the
State of Colorado. He currently resides in Fort Collins, Colorado.
7. Defendant (former) Fort Collins Police Officer Jason Haferman (“Officer Haferman”) was at
all times relevant to this complaint duly appointed and sworn as a police officer working for
Fort Collins Police Services. Upon information and belief, Defendant Haferman has resigned
from FCPS but has retained his P.O.S.T. certification in Colorado and continues to work in
law enforcement. Haferman is a named Defendant in his individual capacity.
8. Defendant City of Fort Collins is a governmental entity and municipality incorporated under
the laws of the State of Colorado for purposes of liability under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and the Fort
Collins Police Services is a department of City of Fort Collins. Defendant City of Fort Collins
enforces local and state law through its law enforcement agency, the Fort Collins Police
Department (“FCPS”).
9. At all times relevant to this Complaint, Defendant City of Fort Collins employed and was
responsible for the oversight, supervision, discipline and training of FCPS personnel, including
Officer Haferman, Sergeant Heaton, and Corporal Bogosian. Deleted: Redacted
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10. Defendant City of Fort Collins was also, at all times relevant to this Complaint, the body
responsible for FCPS’s official policies and practices as well as FCPS’s unofficial customs and
practices with respect to DUI arrests and probable cause.
11. Defendant Sergeant Allen Heaton was responsible for supervising Officer Haferman over the
period that he made the repeated wrongful DUI arrests at issue in this Complaint, personally
participated in or otherwise observed several of the wrongful DUI arrests preceding Plaintiff’s
arrest, and was also personally involved in Plaintiff’s Mr. Elias’s wrongful DUI arrest by
arriving on scene to personally approve of and condone the ongoing constitutional violations
and misconduct. For his personal involvement, Defendant Heaton is sued in his individual
capacity.
12. Defendant Jason Bogosian, is a Corporal at FCPS who at all times relevant to this complaint
was duly appointed and sworn as a police officer working for Fort Collins Police Services.
FCPS has claimed in documents such as the 68-page internal investigation report regarding
Officer Haferman that this Corporal was responsible for supervising Officer Haferman during
the period of Haferman’s repeated wrongful DUI arrests. Corporal Bogosian is sued in his
individual and official capacities.
III. STATEMENT OF FACTS
13. Officer Haferman began working at FCPS in 2017 as a patrol officer.
14. Even as a normal patrol officer, Officer Haferman immediately established himself as a prolific
arrester for DUI offenses.1 In fact, he accumulated so many DUI arrests in his first two years
1 Colorado has several DUI-type offenses (DUI, DWAI, DUI per se, and DUI-Drugs). The impact
and import of a citizen being charged with any of those DUI-type offenses is nearly identical and
so for ease of reference the term “DUIs” as used herein is meant to encompass all such offenses
unless otherwise specified.
Deleted: Defendant ,
whose true name is currently unknown
Deleted: It is unclear why FCPS has redacted Haferman’s
supervising Corporal’s name from publicly released
documents regarding Officer Haferman. Upon information
and belief, Corporal Redacted’s name will be easily
identified in the discovery process and so this Corporal will
simply be referred to as “Corporal Redacted” until that
time. Corporal Redacted
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working at FCPS as a regular patrol officer that in 2020, FCPS decided to promote him to their
“DUI Officer,” which meant his primary daily objective every time he worked was to ignore
all other regular calls for service and instead spend his shift seeking out and charging as many
drivers as possible with DUIs.
15. FCPS, like most other Colorado law enforcement agencies, had great incentive to create
positions like “DUI officers” and fill those roles with individuals like Haferman because grant
funding at both the state and federal levels was allotted to agencies through reasoning that takes
into account the quantity of DUI arrests that agency had made in preceding years. The more
DUI arrests an agency made each year, the more the agency would profess DUI drivers to be
a huge “problem” in their jurisdiction, and then the more grant funding they would receive to
do DUI enforcement next year. The additional funding provided by these grants would
typically pay for all of the hours worked by the agency’s “DUI officer” (often at an elevated
overtime hourly rate) and would also go to fund more equipment and officers for the agency
itself, in effect, enabling the department to increase its annual budget on its own. Various
agencies like MADD (Mothers Against Drunk Driving) would also give awards and extensive
positive publicity to agencies that had officers making abundant DUI arrests, which was of
course quite also desirable to both agency and officer for enhancing their respective images in
the eyes of the public.
16. Due to the foregoing, FCPS was eager to put its most prolific DUI charging officer in the role
of “DUI Officer” whenever possible. Haferman applied for this position and because he had
already shown such promise in making so many DUI arrests in his normal patrol shift, in May
of 2020, FCPS gave him the job.
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17. At the same time, the coronavirus pandemic had just struck. Bars and restaurants all closed and
other recreational events like concerts and festivals were all cancelled. This brought DUI
enforcement (and much of the public’s driving generally) to a near standstill for several
months, as there were concerns about the safety of breath testing or housing DUI offenders in
jails due to the virus’s known propensity for spreading in respiratory droplets in poorly
ventilated spaces.
18. A vaccine was developed and began to be distributed to the public at the end of 2020. Much
of the economy began to reopen and people began resumption of more normal commuting and
public gatherings. Law enforcement agencies like FCPS directed their officers to return to
normal practices for DUI enforcement.
19. Officer Haferman was eager to show his superiors at FCPS that he was going to be the most
prolific DUI officer they had ever had since the position was created. Upon information and
belief, only some of which is detailed herein, he began regularly stopping cars without
reasonable suspicion and making arrests without probable cause very early on in his stint as
FCPS’s DUI officer.
20. On one such occasion, on November 27, 2020, Officer Haferman stopped and harassed the
occupants of a vehicle merely because he believed the driver had had prior law enforcement
contacts. He detained the driver and its occupants with no legal basis for an extended period
of time, forcing them unlawfully to wait for a K9 unit to arrive to search their vehicle. The
driver, Jacob Larkin, later filed a motion to suppress the stop due to this illegal detention. At
the suppression hearing, Officer Haferman admitted he was not a trained DRE (Drug
Recognition Expert) but he claimed to be able to diagnose Mr. Larkin as “being under the
influence of narcotics” because he looked tired. The Larimer County District Court, in finding
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that Haferman’s detention of Mr. Larkin was in fact unlawful and a violation of the Fourth
Amendment, noted that “not even a DRE, 12-step protocol, based on mere observations of the
subject in a few minutes, in the dark, while engaging in a conversation with another individual
[as Haferman testified] could reach such a conclusion.” The Court also stated in its written
ruling that in Mr. Larkin’s case “there are multiple obvious and logical reasons that were not
explored [by Haferman] in any manner,” all of which “negate[d] any reasonable assumption
that a crime has or is about to occur.”
21. The Judge also ruled in the Larkin case that Haferman was unreasonable in characterizing so
many various aspects of very normal human behavior like “being on edge about being
contacted by police” as grounds to continue seizing the person in violation of the Fourth
Amendment. Most importantly, the Court, after hearing Haferman’s testimony, openly
questioned the veracity of Haferman’s testimony. As the Court wrote: “Officer Haferman
testified he was certain it was multiple [prior law enforcement] contacts [in defendant’s
history]; however, the Court questions the accuracy of such when the rest of [Haferman’s]
testimony regarding this point was incredibly non-specific and couldn’t distinguish the
research regarding Mr. Larkin versus [the passenger].” The Court held that Haferman’s
continued detention of Mr. Larkin was thus “unquestionably unconstitutional” and all the
evidence in the case was suppressed.
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22. Thus by early 2021,2 at basically the inception of his tenure as “DUI Officer,” FCPS had notice
that Haferman was engaging in wrongful searches and seizures of citizens. But FCPS did
nothing.
23. Haferman received the same training as any other officer with respect to the administration of
SFSTs (Standardized Field Sobriety Tests). Yet, immediately, Haferman began administering
SFSTs to subjects in a manner that was entirely inconsistent with his training and designed to
create a false impression of the subject’s intoxication when described by him in his reports.
24. Most critically, all of the defects in Haferman’s administrations of roadside tests were
abundantly observable on video. They included, and are not limited to:
a. Haferman regularly interpreted normal human behaviors as “cues” or “clues” of
impairment when his training instructed the opposite.
b. Haferman regularly claimed that his training supported his claims of other innocuous
human behaviors being indications of impairment when no such training or
scientifically-backed validation data existed.
c. Haferman also regularly administered the Horizontal Gaze Nystgamus (HGN) test to
people completely wrong, and would then falsely claim that what he observed in his
HGN administration on the subject supported his arrest decision.
2 Upon information and belief, Haferman had several wrongful DUI arrests prior to 2021 however
Fort Collins has endeavored not to answer questions or provide in any timely fashion records in
response to requests from defense counsel or the media related to those arrests. The various
wrongful DUI arrests set forth in this Complaint are thus based on very incomplete records and
not meant to be a comprehensive accounting of all the notice attributable to FCPS regarding
Haferman’s wrongful and unconstitutional arrest decisions.
Deleted: ¶
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25. Haferman also by early 2021 was regularly writing reports containing lies and exaggerations
regarding the claimed observed indications of impairment, regularly controverted by his or his
cover officers’ own videos.
26. Haferman also by early 2021 was regularly muting and deactivating his bodyworn camera
during his citizen contacts and arrests, in violation of FCPS policy and Colorado law.
27. All of the issues described in the three preceding paragraphs were observable on video. In other
words, if anyone at FCPS were supervising Haferman during this time and had watched just
one of his (or his cover officer’s) videos of his SFST administration, or compared one of his
videos to his written reports, they would have immediately identified all of the foregoing
problems. They were plain and obvious.
28. Either no one was supervising Haferman at FCPS, or, someone was, and they just did not care
to intervene.
29. Upon information and belief, at least one of the individuals personally responsible for
supervising Haferman during this period was Jason Bogosian.
30. Corporal Jason Bogosian has admitted in an IA investigation into Haferman that early on in
his period of having the duties of supervising Haferman and reviewing his work (January 2021
through May 2022), he noticed that Haferman was counting as a clue of impairment on one of
the standardized roadside tests something that was not a clue of impairment at all. Specifically,
Haferman was claiming subjects to show impairment on this maneuver if they didn’t count to
30 during the 30-second-timed one-leg stand maneuver.
a. It is expressly included as part of the standardized field sobriety training provided by
NHTSA on how to administer roadsides the admonition that what the subject counts to
while being timed holding their leg up for 30 seconds is irrelevant. Particularly since
Deleted: Corporal Redacted
Deleted: Redacted
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they are instructed to count in “one-one-thousand, two-one-thousand” fashion which is
almost always considerably slower than the rate that seconds elapse in real time.
b. Corporal Jason Bogosian saw that Haferman was repeatedly stating subjects were
failing and/or showing impairment clues on the one-leg stand test because of this clue
that he had not just made up, but which the NHTSA manual in fact told him expressly
not to consider a clue.
c. Corporal Jason Bogosian, noticing this, confronted Haferman about his repeated
misrepresentation of impairment evidence against people he had arrested in his DUI
reports. He told him it was not an impairment indicator and he needed to stop using it
as one.
d. Haferman did not respond by acknowledging this as a mistake, however. Instead,
Haferman told Corporal Jason Bogosian, his superior, that this was “an advanced
technique to indicate impairment.” Corporal Bogosian asked where such advanced
training would have come from. Officer Haferman refused to say.
e. This was the first of many red flags to Corporal Jason Bogosian and FCPS about Officer
Haferman.
f. Any reasonable supervising officer knows that police officers making DUI arrests
compile most, if not all, of their “evidence” of the driver’s impairment by having them
do roadside tests which are supposed to be standardized and done according to training.
Any reasonable supervising officer would recognize that if a subordinate police officer
was making up his own “advanced” impairment detection clues on these tests and then
making arrest decisions based on such nonsense (and having the audacity to tell his
corporal that he wasn’t violating the NHTSA training manual, he was just doing
Deleted: Redacted
Deleted: Redacted
Deleted: Redacted
Deleted: Redacted
Deleted: Redacted
Case No. 1:23-cv-01343-GPG-KAS Document 36-2 filed 09/13/23 USDC Colorado pg 9 of
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something “advanced”), that this would create an unacceptably high probability of that
officer wrongfully arresting innocent people and almost certainly disregarding other
critical components of police work.
g. Any reasonable supervising officer in this situation, after hearing Haferman’s
completely absurd claim that the impairment clues he used in violation of his training
saying otherwise were simply “advanced” impairment clues, would have at a minimum
taken an hour or two to review Haferman’s DUI arrest videos (particularly in any one
of the many “none detected” or extremely low BAC DUI arrest cases that Haferman
had had up to that point) and see if Haferman was doing other roadsides correctly and
if he was reporting the facts accurately in his reports.
h. Any reasonable supervising officer in this situation also would have recognized that
Haferman treating this non-clue as an impairment clue could have contributed to
prosecutors prosecuting DUI cases they would not have otherwise prosecuted or
citizens pleading to crimes they did not commit, due to the false claims in Haferman’s
report on this maneuver. Any reasonable supervising officer in this situation would
have at least generated a supplemental report in all the cases where Haferman listed
this non-clue as evidence of impairment, correcting that misimpression, so that those
individuals affected by it could be notified and make important decisions in their cases
in light of it accordingly. Particularly since Haferman’s inclusion of this non-clue as a
clue also had considerable bearing and impact on his credibility and reliability as a DUI
investigator.
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i. Corporal Jason Bogosian did none of these things. He just told Haferman to stop using
the non-clue as a clue and until Haferman went under investigation for multiple,
repeated wrongful DUI arrests a year later, he never even spoke to anyone of it again.
31. On January 21, 2021, Officer Haferman made his next wrongful arrest, this time of C.B.3 Like
he did in all his DUI arrest reports (see infra), he included false and exaggerated claims of the
driver having “overall slow behavior,” “droopy eyes,” and failed roadside maneuvers. C.B.
even blew into a PBT on scene (Portable Breath Test) and the result was triple zeroes (0.000
BAC). But Haferman arrested her anyway and charged her with DUI.
a. Review of the bodyworn camera (BWC) videos from C.B.’s arrest reveals multiple
discrepancies between what actually occurred and what Officer Haferman alleged
about her in his report.
b. Haferman listed C.B. having “droopy eyes” as an indication of impairment even though
she literally explained to him she had a medical condition (blepharoptosis) that caused
her to have droopy eyes.
c. Review of the BWC video from C.B.’s arrest reveals yet another occasion on which
Haferman muted his BWC for nearly the entirety of his contact, in violation of FCPS
policy and Colorado law. It is obvious from his video that this tampering was
deliberate, as Haferman reactivates his audio for brief a 13-minute period in the middle
of the 90+ minute video before muting it again.
3 To protect the privacy of individuals who have been victims of Officer Haferman’s wrongful
arrests but who have not yet chosen to come forward publicly, initials are being used in lieu of
their full names.
Deleted: Redacted
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d. It is obvious from the videos in C.B.’s arrest that Haferman is administering the HGN
to C.B. incorrectly and claiming in his report HGN “clues” that did not exist.
e. On March 19, 2021, C.B.’s blood test results came back negative for alcohol and
negative for all drugs of abuse.
f. On March 20, 2021, Haferman reviewed the blood test results and entered them into
C.B.’s case.
g. That same day, at least one of Haferman’s supervising officers, Defendant Sergeant
Allen Heaton, claims to have reviewed Haferman’s arrest and the negative blood test
results and approved of both.
32. Thus, as of March 20, 2021, FCPS as an entity and supervising officers Sergeant Heaton and
Corporal Jason Bogosian personally, again had notice that Haferman was wrongfully arresting
innocent people. This time, not only did they do nothing to stop it; but at least one of them
expressly approved of the behavior.
33. It should also be noted that by FCPS’s own admission in response to a media inquiry about
Haferman’s DUI arrests a year later (in May 2022), they stated through their press relations
Deleted: Redacted
Deleted: ¶
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officer that they “always conduct an internal review of any DUI arrest made by one of its
officers that has chemical test results come back negative for drugs/alcohol.”
34. Thus, according to FCPS’s own claims, multiple superior officers at FCPS would have had to
have reviewed Haferman’s wrongful DUI arrest of C.B. in March 2021, and therefore seen:
the issues with his roadside administration, discrepancies between the video and his report, and
his violation of policy and law by muting his BWC through most of the contact, and not only
done nothing to intervene, but actually approved of it.
35. Interestingly, however, despite the claims FCPS made to the press purporting to be supervising
and reviewing Haferman’s negative blood test DUI arrests during this time, the Axon Evidence
Audit Trail for Haferman’s BWC video from the C.B. arrest reveals that no one at FCPS ever
looked at Haferman’s video until more than a year later (on May 29, 2022) when FCPS
was already under fire and public scrutiny for having permitted Haferman to make so many
wrongful DUI arrests for so long without any supervision or intervention.
36. In any event, no remedial action, discipline, or any other form of verbal counseling was given
to Haferman by FCPS supervisory personnel regarding the wrongful arrest of C.B. And so, he
carried on.
37. On February 18, 2021, Officer Haferman made his next wrongful DUI arrest, this time of the
disabled veteran Harley Padilla. At the time Haferman stopped Mr. Padilla, Mr. Padilla
required a wheelchair to safely walk and had to speak through a tracheotomy tube in his throat.
Mr. Padilla had just recently survived a terrible motorcycle accident. It is extremely difficult
to watch the video of Haferman’s mistreatment of Mr. Padilla. In addition to insulting and
denigrating Mr. Padilla both during the stop and throughout the arrest report he wrote about
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him later, Haferman also made an extraordinary number of false claims about Mr. Padilla in
his report that were observably contradicted by his BWC video. For example:
a. Haferman claimed that Mr. Padilla weaved once over the center line to a significant
degree. Haferman’s video revealed this to be false. A Larimer County Judge later ruled
that this claim was observably false.
b. Haferman claimed that Mr. Padilla was “slow to react” and didn’t respond to the
overhead red and blue lights “as a sober person would.” Haferman’s video revealed
this to be false. A Larimer County Judge later ruled that this claim was observably
false.
c. Haferman claimed that Mr. Padilla’s verbal responses were slurred and nonsensical,
and indicative of impairment. Haferman’s video revealed this to be false. A Larimer
County Judge later ruled that this claim was observably false. Also - Mr. Padilla did
not have a larynx and it is worth reiterating that he had to speak through a trach tube
hole in his throat. Even this reality did not make Haferman think twice about making
his absurd typical false claims in his DUI arrest report of Mr. Padilla regarding “slurred
speech” and “slow responses.”
d. Haferman claimed that Mr. Padilla was “rambling on” about “nonsensical” things and
requesting an ambulance without explaining what injury or ailment he had. The video
revealed none of this to be true. Mr. Padilla was coherent and responded appropriately
to all questions. Mr. Padilla’s request for an ambulance was made in response to
Haferman repeatedly ordering Mr. Padilla to get out of his car after Mr. Padilla had
already told him he needed a wheelchair first to do so.
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e. Mr. Padilla told Haferman several times he was missing a hip and would need a wheelchair
to ambulate outside of his vehicle. Haferman can be heard on video telling Mr. Padilla that
he “don’t have a wheelchair on demand” and that Mr. Padilla should just get out and let
Haferman assist him.
f. Haferman is then heard on video trying to get the utterly disabled Mr. Padilla to agree to
participate in literal physical roadside maneuvers. Mr. Padilla, incredulous, said “no” and
then repeated that he required a wheelchair to ambulate outside of his car. Haferman left
all of this out of his arrest report of Mr. Padilla. Mr. Padilla requested a wheelchair more
than 7 times in the first 15 minutes of the stop. Yet there is literally no reference to Mr.
Padilla’s requests for a wheelchair anywhere in Haferman’s report.
g. Haferman also claimed (like he always did in his DUI arrest reports) that Mr. Padilla had
“glassy” and “droopy” eyes. The video revealed this to be a deliberately false
mischaracterization of Mr. Padilla’s existing physical deformities as instead being claimed
impairment indicators. The video shows that Mr. Padilla’s body, face, and parts of his
eyelids were covered in burn scars. Observable burn scars on one’s eyelids would naturally
cause one’s eyes to appear “glassy” or “droopy” at all times, and thus would also make the
idea of listing these permanent physical features as instead indicators of impairment
supporting a DUI arrest entirely ludicrous.
h. Haferman informed Mr. Padilla he could smell marijuana and Mr. Padilla explained that
he had a medical card for use of medical marijuana to treat pain from the catastrophic
injuries he sustained to his body in a motorcycling accident. Haferman, knowing that
anyone who uses marijuana on any regular basis will always have some trace amount of
Deleted: ¶
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THC in their blood, happily arrested Mr. Padilla despite the absence of any impairment
indicators.
i. Mr. Padilla requested that Haferman call an ambulance. Haferman asked him why. Mr.
Padilla said because Haferman was harassing him, ordering him to get out of his car which
was dangerous, and that he wanted to just go get a blood test now to prove his innocence
and knew he could not be safely transported to the hospital in the back of Haferman’s patrol
car. Haferman included none of this in his report and instead wrote that Mr. Padilla kept
asking for an ambulance “but was unable to explain what injury or ailment he had.”
j. Finally, after some supervising officers showed up4 and Haferman proceeded to insult and
humiliate Mr. Padilla in front of them some more, an ambulance arrived to transport Mr.
Padilla to the hospital for a blood test. Then Haferman took Mr. Padilla to jail. Because
Mr. Padilla had several DUIs from over ten years prior, the DUI that Haferman charged
him with was a felony.
k. Mr. Padilla could not afford to post the bond set on this class 4 felony DUI. As a result,
and because he was unwilling to plead guilty to an offense he knew he had not committed,
he sat in jail awaiting trial for over a year.
l. Mr. Padilla’s blood test came back on April 21, 2021, showing trace amounts of THC
presumed to be unimpairing under Colorado law. At the time those results came back, it
also was (and remains) well known and accepted in all scientific communities that there is
4 If Corporal Jason Bogosian or Sergeant Heaton were in this group of officers, this constitutes
even more specific notice to them regarding Haferman’s ongoing disregard for the rights of
citizens.
Deleted: Redacted
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no correlation between such trace amounts of THC and impairment in any medical
marijuana user.
m. Finally, on March 3, 2022, Mr. Padilla’s case was heard by a judge in a bench trial. The
state presented as expert witness a forensic toxicologist from CBI who testified that Mr.
Padilla’s blood results offered nothing to support the claim that he was impaired:
n. Larimer County District Court Judge Cure acquitted Mr. Padilla of DUI, DWAI, and
Careless Driving. In doing so, the Court further ruled that “based on the totality of the
circumstances and the evidence presented, the Court finds that Officer Haferman lacks
credibility.” The Court ruled that “his testimony was inconsistent” and “changed course on
several of the key facts.” The Court further ruled that “[s]ome of [Haferman’s] testimony
Deleted: ¶
Deleted: <object>¶
Formatted: Indent: Left: 0", First line: 0"
Formatted: Indent: Left: 0"
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is not supported by the evidence,” while “some of it was contrary to the evidence.” The
Court also made the finding that “Officer Haferman’s testimony exaggerated the bad
driving in this case, not only with his testimony today, but as found on the point of view
[video] on February 18 of 2021, when relaying that [information about driving] to
dispatch.”
o. Even the most cursory review of the claims and descriptions of impairment indications in
Haferman’s report, when compared to his BWC video, reveals the Larimer County District
Court Judge’s findings to be true.
p. In other words, if any supervisor at all at FCPS had ever bothered to supervise Haferman,
or to otherwise even simply review Haferman’s video after Mr. Padilla’s blood results
came back on April 21, 2021 showing no evidence of impairment, they would have seen
that yet again Haferman was lying and exaggerating in his reports about impairment
indicators in order to continue his reign as the department’s most prolific DUI officer, by
repeatedly wrongfully arresting observably innocent people and charging them with
DUI/DWAI offenses they did not commit.
38. Of course, no one at FCPS was supervising Haferman or reviewing his videos.
39. The reality stated in the paragraph above continued despite the fact that the DUI arrest numbers
Haferman was putting up just 6 months into his post-pandemic-lockdown term as DUI Officer
(in the November 2020 – May 2021 timeframe) were significantly higher than any other DUI
officer to precede him in the history of the department.
40. The sheer quantity of DUI arrests being made by Haferman by this point (over 100), in addition
to the negative blood test results now repeatedly coming back on those arrests, should have
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alerted any reasonable supervising officer of the need to check Haferman’s work and ensure
he was not violating the constitutional rights of innocent citizens like Plaintiff.
41. If any reasonable supervising officer had looked at any of the videos from Haferman’s DUI
arrests involving negative or near-negative blood test results at this time, they would have seen
exactly what the Larimer County District Court Judge saw in the Larkin and Padilla cases, and
which of course was also something that any lay person could have easily seen after spending
just 10 minutes comparing Haferman’s arrest reports with his BWC videos: That is, that:
a. Officer Haferman was regularly arresting and charging with DUI individuals who
appeared quite observably unimpaired on video and that he was systematically lying
and exaggerating in his arrest reports regarding evidence of impairment for those cases;
and
b. Officer Haferman was not administering the SFSTs as trained and was claiming all
kinds of normal features of normal human behavior to constitute scientifically validated
clues of impairment; and
c. That Haferman was also regularly targeting and exploiting drivers with disabilities,
claiming that all the symptoms of their known medical conditions were instead proof
of alcohol/drug impairment.
42. But, because no one was actually supervising Haferman, and because his supervisors were
instead approving and lauding his DUI arrest numbers despite the increasing number of blood
test results coming back in his cases proving that he had in fact also been arresting innocent
people, Haferman happily continued with the unconstitutional conduct and – in the latter half
of 2021, really even picked it up a notch.
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43. On May 15, 2021, Officer Haferman made another wrongful DUI arrest, this time of G.C. He
again included the same false statements and exaggerations of impairment indicators in his
report for G.C. He again failed to administer the roadside tests to G.C. in the standardized
manner he was trained. He again claimed all the clues of HGN present when they were not,
and he again administered the HGN test incorrectly. He also made G.C. go through all the
roadside tests despite her being 65 years old and having several medical conditions
contraindicating their use. There were again multiple discrepancies between his BWC videos
and what he claimed occurred in his report.
a. Haferman arrested G.C. and she did a breath test at the police station, which produced
a result of .035% BAC, well under the limit for DUI or DWAI, and, by Colorado law,
presumed to be an unimpairing BAC.
b. Haferman charged G.C. with DWAI and Careless Driving anyway.
c. The district attorney promptly dismissed the DWAI charge. However, due to the
Careless Driving charge, the wrongfully charged DWAI was unable to be sealed from
G.C.’s record.
d. Corporal Jason Bogosian claimed to have reviewed this arrest and approved of it.
e. No remedial action, discipline, or any other form of verbal counseling was given to
Haferman by FCPS supervisory personnel regarding the wrongful arrest of G.C.
44. On June 10, 2021, Officer Haferman made his next wrongful DUI arrest, this time of R.B.
When he stopped R.B., R.B. was clearly having a mental health episode and in need of medical
attention. He told Haferman this, many times. Yet Haferman did not get R.B. medical attention.
Instead, he listed all of R.B.’s mental health behaviors as indications of impairment, and then
arrested him for DUI.
Deleted: FCPS officer
Deleted: (possibly Corporal Redacted)
Case No. 1:23-cv-01343-GPG-KAS Document 36-2 filed 09/13/23 USDC Colorado pg 20
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a. On August 29, 2021, Haferman received R.B.’s blood results. They were negative for
alcohol and all impairing drugs.
b. Haferman’s supervising officer Defendant Sergeant Heaton (and possibly Corporal
Bogosian) again claimed to have approved of Haferman’s report and arrest.
c. The district attorney promptly dismissed the DUI charge against R.B.
d. No remedial action, discipline, or any other form of verbal counseling was given to
Haferman by FCPS supervisory personnel regarding the wrongful arrest of R.B.
45. On June 11, 2021, Officer Haferman made another wrongful DUI arrest, this time of Cody
Erbacher. Mr. Erbacher admitted to having had one beer several hours earlier in the day,
however, and to Haferman, any admission to any drinking at any prior time become sufficient
grounds in his mind – despite the absence of any actual indications of impairment – to make a
DUI arrest. He again included the false statements and exaggerations of impairment indicators
in his report for Mr. Erbacher. He again failed to administer the roadside tests in the
standardized manner he was trained. He lied about Mr. Erbacher showing clues/signs of
impairment when there were none. There were again multiple additional discrepancies between
BWC videos and what Haferman claimed occurred in his report.
a. On November 10, 2021, Haferman received Mr. Erbacher’s blood results. They were
negative for alcohol and all drugs.
b. It appears from the reports in Mr. Erbacher’s case that Haferman now no longer even
had a supervising or approving officer pretending to review his arrests.
c. Despite FCPS claiming that all negative blood test results received by their agency
were subjected to an “internal review,” the documents in Mr. Erbacher’s case indicate
that absolutely no one at FCPS, internal or otherwise, was reviewing or claiming to
Deleted: Redacted
Case No. 1:23-cv-01343-GPG-KAS Document 36-2 filed 09/13/23 USDC Colorado pg 21
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review anything in this Haferman wrongful arrest with “none detected” results nor in
any other Haferman wrongful arrest.
d. Upon receipt of the blood results, the district attorney promptly dismissed the DUI
charge against Mr. Erbacher.
e. Until Haferman’s pattern of constitutional violations was brought to the attention of the
local and national news media in April 2022, absolutely no remedial action, discipline,
or any other form of verbal counseling was ever given to Haferman by FCPS
supervisory personnel regarding the wrongful arrest of Mr. Erbacher.
46. On July 23, 2021, Officer Haferman made another wrongful DUI arrest, this time of Carl Sever.
Mr. Sever was 74 years old at the time Haferman arrested him. He was driving home from the
gym. Haferman claimed to pull him over because Mr. Sever was “going 10 mph under the
speed limit.” Going 10 mph under the speed limit is not unlawful.
a. Haferman falsely claimed in his report that there was an odor of alcohol coming from
Mr. Sever’s vehicle and from “his breath.” Mr. Sever had not drank alcohol in more
than 10 years. He told Haferman this.
b. Haferman again made false claims in his report (controverted by the BWC video) that
Mr. Sever had “slow speech” and nonsensical claims that his “body behavior was
slow.” It is difficult to imagine what speed of movement Haferman was expecting out
of this, or any other, 74-year-old, in order to not be declared drunk.
c. With Mr. Sever, Haferman again muted his BWC when a cover officer arrived and
kept it muted for the rest of his roadside test administration with Mr. Sever.
d. Haferman again failed to administer the roadside tests in the standardized manner he
was trained. Haferman again counted as clues of “impairment” against Mr. Sever
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various features of normal human behavior that were not, by any training or manual,
actual clues of impairment.
e. Mr. Sever advised Haferman that he had a TBI from a car accident. Haferman
deliberately omitted this from his report.
f. Haferman arrested Mr. Sever for DUI and took him for a blood draw. Then he took Mr.
Sever to jail. When Mr. Sever was released the next day, he did not have his phone,
wallet, or car, and did not know the number for anyone he could call to pick him up.
As a result, he had to walk 4.5 miles home.
g. More than 3 months later, on November 9, 2021, Mr. Sever’s blood test results came
back. They were negative for alcohol and impairing drugs. There was merely some
trace THC (1.4 ng) at a level presumed by Colorado law to be unimpairing and a trace
amount of Mr. Sever’s anti-seizure medication which he had been prescribed for over
15 years.
h. The Larimer DA’s Office dismissed the charges against Mr. Sever.
47. On July 29, 2021, Haferman made another wrongful DUI arrest, this time of Jesse
Cunningham. Mr. Cunningham is a disabled veteran and the Vice President of a veteran
nonprofit organization in Nebraska dedicated to helping veterans reintegrate into their
communities after leaving the military and fighting to prevent veteran suicide. He had come to
Colorado for the week with his wife and two daughters on family vacation. His day had started
off tragically – receiving the news that a close family friend of his had died. Not wanting to
ruin the whitewater rafting trip the family had planned together for the rest of the day, he tried
to put it out of his mind and went along. After the rafting trip, he attempted to get money out
of a nearby ATM to tip the rafting instructor. The ATM claimed to be dispensing money but
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nothing came out. This left Mr. Cunningham and his family with no choice but to wait around
for nearly two hours waiting for the ATM operator to refund the cash the machine had
deducted. While waiting, he had two 3.2% alcohol (PBR) beers. After the ATM owner arrived
and fixed the mistake, he and his family went to McDonald’s to get some food before making
the drive back to where they were staying in Estes Park. After eating, at 8:15 pm, they started
their drive there. Just minutes in, at 8:18 pm, they witnessed a horrific motorcycle accident
caused by a Mazda RX-7 driver pulling out in front of 3 motorcyclists at an intersection,
causing them all to crash. One of the motorcyclists impacted the Mazda and went cartwheeling
through the air and landing in critical condition in a ditch.
a. Mr. Cunningham is a combat veteran with 32 months of combat experience and combat
lifesaving training. He immediately pulled over, had his wife call 911, and ran to
provide aid. The motorcyclist’s leg was nearly severed from the knee down and his
femur bone was sticking out of his skin by about 8”. The rider’s femur had been
“desleeved” which means that the force of the impact was so great that it had removed
all the tissue, tendons, and blood off the bone.
b. Mr. Cunningham, understanding the severity of the rider’s injuries and the need for
prompt lifesaving measures, immediately began stabilizing the rider, using the T-shirt
of a bystander to control the bleeding. As he did this, he assessed the rest of the rider’s
injuries while also triaging the other two injured motorcyclists.
c. The scene was utterly chaotic with multiple injured riders in need of help and dozens
of bystanders getting out of their cars to come and watch or ask to assist. While he
worked to stem the bleeding from the rider’s desleeved femur, Mr. Cunningham also
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managed to take control of the scene, quickly giving directions to people on where to
go, who to call, and what to do to assist him.
d. When paramedics finally arrived on scene, Mr. Cunningham filled them in on the list
of all injuries he had triaged and brought them up to speed on the life- and leg- saving
measures he had taken so far with respect to the most injured rider so they could take
over.
e. Since Mr. Cunningham and his family were the main witnesses to this accident, FCPS
officers asked them to remain on scene and fill out witness statements describing what
they saw. They did so. The officers then asked if they would remain on scene to answer
any questions that the accident reconstruction officers would have. They were all
exhausted, both physically and mentally, Mr. Cunningham in particular. Even still, they
all said they would continue to stay there to do whatever was needed to assist.
f. While waiting for the accident reconstruction team to arrive, Mr. Cunningham received
a phone call from a friend back home with horrible news. His friend told him that their
mutual friend that had died that morning had in fact died by suicide. Mr. Cunningham
had dedicated his life to preventing such an event and was completely gutted by this
news. It took everything that he had left in him to try and keep it together and not break
down in front of his wife and daughters.
g. And then - Officer Haferman arrived.
h. Haferman marched up to Mr. Cunningham. He informed Mr. Cunningham that
someone thought they had smelled the odor of alcohol on him earlier.
i. Mr. Cunningham is former military police. He worked for Homeland Security. He grew
up and lived surrounded by friends and family all in law enforcement. As a result, at
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the foundation of his soul was nothing but complete trust and respect for all those in
law enforcement and a core belief that others in his field, like him, held values like
integrity and fairness in their work most dear.
j. For this reason, Mr. Cunningham heard this allegation of alcohol odor from Haferman
and truly thought nothing of it. Without hesitation or worry, he explained to Haferman
how he had had two light beers nearly four hours ago, so if someone had in fact smelled
it, that would be the cause.
k. Throughout this encounter, Mr. Cunningham can be seen on video appearing
completely sober, unimpaired, coherent, and normal. Ignoring this presentation and
ignoring all that Mr. Cunningham had just done to save the lives of multiple people in
a horrific accident, Haferman informed Mr. Cunningham that he needed him to do
roadside tests to prove he was safe to drive.
l. Mr. Cunningham explained he was completely exhausted from all the events of that
day, both mentally and physically, and asked if he could instead just do a breath test to
prove that he was unimpaired.
m. Haferman had a portable breath test on hand and available. But he told Mr.
Cunningham no, that the PBT result “wasn’t admissible in court,” and so instead
insisted that he complete the more physical roadside tests. Mr. Cunningham attempted
to cooperate, complaining the whole time that his shoes were filled with water and his
legs felt like Jell-O.
n. Mr. Cunningham did not know any of this about Haferman. And so, despite his
catastrophic day filled with physical exertion, devastating emotional loss, and
extraordinary mental stress, Mr. Cunningham attempted to cooperate with Haferman’s
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balancing tests, complaining the whole time that his shoes were filled with water from
rafting (you can hear them squishing on the video) and that his legs felt like Jell-O.
o. Haferman again did not administer the tests in the standardized manner he was trained
and Haferman again included multiple lies in his report regarding Mr. Cunningham’s
performance on the tests that were obviously contradicted by his BWC video.
p. It is obvious from the videos that Mr. Cunningham was both totally exhausted and
completely sober and unimpaired.
q. Haferman arrested Mr. Cunningham for DUI anyway. He also charged him with two
counts of Child Abuse due to having his daughters with him in the car. Mr. Cunningham
was horrified. He again begged Haferman to give him a breath test on scene to prove
his innocence. Haferman again refused him a breath test.
r. Haferman put Mr. Cunningham into handcuffs and told him he would need to complete
a chemical test. Mr. Cunningham again implored Haferman to let him do a breath test.
s. Haferman told Mr. Cunningham he would have to take a blood test because he had
admitted earlier that he had a prescription for Adderall for his ADHD. Notable here is
the fact that Mr. Cunningham told Haferman that he was prescribed this medication,
but when asked when he had last taken it, he told Haferman that it had been several
days, and that he didn’t even have it with him because he had left it at home in Nebraska
as he didn’t need to take his ADHD medication while he was on vacation.
t. Mr. Cunningham then spent the night in jail. He spent thousands of dollars hiring legal
counsel. His family, utterly traumatized, picked him up and they drove home to
Nebraska to prepare for the funeral of their close family friend.
u. Of course, Haferman was not done with Mr. Cunningham yet.
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v. On Tuesday morning, while getting dressed for his friend’s funeral in Nebraska, Child
Protective Services showed up at Mr. Cunningham’s house to interview his children.
Haferman had called in a referral to Nebraska CPS to investigate Mr.
Cunningham for child abuse.
w. Weeks later, the injured motorcyclist who Mr. Cunningham had worked to save and
Mr. Cunningham were able to connect to each other. The motorcyclist (Max) told Mr.
Cunningham that it was only thanks to him and the measures he took on scene that his
leg was able to be saved rather than having to be amputated.
x. Months later, on October 20, 2021, Mr. Cunningham’s blood results finally came back.
“None detected” for alcohol and all impairing drugs.
y. The Larimer DA dismissed the charges against Mr. Cunningham.
z. Despite FCPS claiming that all negative blood test results received by their agency
were subjected to an “internal review,” the documents in Mr. Cunningham’s case
indicate that absolutely no one at FCPS, internal or otherwise, was reviewing or
claiming to review this Haferman wrongful arrest.
aa. Upon information and belief, until Haferman’s pattern of constitutional violations was
brought to the attention of the public by local and national news media in April 2022,
absolutely no one at FCPS ever looked at this or any other wrongful Haferman DUI
arrest involving “none detected” blood results.
48. On August 8, 2021, Officer Haferman made another wrongful DUI arrest, this time of B.C.
B.C. was another disabled veteran. Haferman came into Krazy Karl’s while on duty to pick up
food he had ordered. While there, he saw B.C. drink one beer. He decided he would wait for
B.C. to leave and arrest him for DUI. Haferman went out to his car and waited.
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a. B.C. wasn’t even planning to drive. He had called his mom to pick him up.
b. As soon as his mom told him she was nearby, B.C. went to move his car to a legal
parking space to be left overnight. He drove his car about 10 feet. Haferman
immediately activated his red and blue lights and ordered B.C. out of the car.
c. Haferman later claimed in his report from this arrest that he activated his BWC during
the encounter, but the video “got lost in Evidence.com” and could not be recovered.
d. Haferman falsely claimed in his report that numerous admissions were made by B.C.
during the periods in which he “lost” his BWC video.
e. Some of the roadside tests Haferman did with B.C. were recorded by his cover officer’s
(Young’s) BWC video. Comparing that video to Haferman’s report again reveals
multiple lies, exaggerations, and discrepancies between what actually occurred and
what Haferman put in his report. The video also, again, shows Haferman not
administering the tests to B.C. correctly.
f. For example, B.C. did the one-leg stand maneuver perfectly and for ten seconds longer
than anyone is supposed to be able to do it. Despite this, Haferman claimed in his report
that B.C. failed it.
g. While arresting B.C., B.C.’s mother arrived on scene within minutes and corroborated
the fact that she was picking B.C. up. Haferman arrested B.C. for DUI anyway.
h. B.C. requested a breath test. His breath test results were .04 BAC which is under the
limit for both DUI and DWAI, and by Colorado law, presumed to be an unimpairing
amount of alcohol.
i. Haferman charged B.C. anyway and booked him into the jail. Then he went to write
his report in which he claimed B.C. made all kinds of admissions and exhibited all
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kinds of signs of impairment indicators. He then, as mentioned previously,
conveniently, and once again, claimed that his BWC footage of the incident
mysteriously had disappeared.
j. The district attorney’s office completely dismissed the case against B.C.
k. According to FCPS’s reports and records for B.C.’s case, again, no supervising officer
ever reviewed or looked at Haferman’s wrongful arrest of B.C. (nor his mysterious
repeated loss of BWC video footage).
l. Upon information and belief, prior to the media attention on Haferman’s wrongful
arrests in April 2022, no remedial action, discipline, or any other form of verbal
counseling was ever given to Haferman by FCPS supervisory personnel regarding the
wrongful arrest of B.C. or Haferman’s (now) repetitive destruction of his BWC videos.
49. On September 4, 2021, Officer Haferman made another wrongful DUI arrest, this time of K.S.
K.S. swerved to avoid a deer in the road and hit a tree. Haferman ignored this very normal
explanation for the car leaving the road and decided to instead use it to arrest her for DUI. He
again included the false statements and exaggerations of impairment indicators in his report
for K.S. He failed to administer the roadside tests to K.S. in the standardized manner he was
trained. He lied about K.S. showing clues or signs of impairment. There were multiple
additional discrepancies between BWC videos and what he claimed occurred in his report.
a. On December 15, 2021, Haferman received K.S.’s blood results. They were negative
for alcohol and all drugs.
b. It appears from the reports in K.S.’s case that by this time, Haferman continued to have
no supervising or approving officer reviewing his work.
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c. Despite FCPS claiming that all negative blood test results received by their agency
were subjected to an “internal review,” the documents in K.S.’s case indicate that
absolutely no one at FCPS, internal or otherwise, was reviewing this Haferman
wrongful arrest of K.S., or any other Haferman wrongful arrest.
d. Upon receipt of the blood results, the district attorney promptly dismissed the DUI
charge against K.S.
e. Upon information and belief, until Haferman’s pattern of constitutional violations was
brought to the attention of the public by local and national news media in April 2022,
absolutely no one at FCPS ever looked at this or any other wrongful Haferman DUI
arrest involving “none detected” blood results.
f. Upon information and belief, prior to the media attention on Haferman’s wrongful
arrests in April 2022, no remedial action, discipline, or any other form of verbal
counseling was ever given to Haferman by FCPS supervisory personnel regarding the
wrongful arrest of K.S.
50. On October 8, 2021, Officer Haferman made another wrongful DUI arrest, this time of D.A.
He again included the same false statements and exaggerations of impairment indicators in his
report for D.A. He failed to administer the roadside tests to D.A. in the standardized manner
he was trained. There were multiple discrepancies between his BWC videos and what he
claimed occurred in his report.
a. After getting his blood, Haferman booked D.A. into the jail. Upon D.A.’s release, he
was subjected to mandatory bond conditions which required him to submit to sobriety
monitoring and drug/alcohol testing for over 3 months.
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b. On January 10, 2022, Haferman received D.A.’s blood results which showed a result
of .036% BAC, well under the limit for DUI or DWAI, and, by Colorado law, presumed
to be unimpairing.
c. It appears from the reports in D.A.’s case that by this time, Haferman continued to have
no supervising or approving officer reviewing his work.
d. Another officer who was on scene (Kevin Alexander) to witness Haferman administer
roadsides to D.A., aware of Haferman’s failure to administer them correctly and
propensity for reporting impairment indicators in sober people that would later be
absent from any BWC video, actually went out of his way to state in his own report
that while on scene with Haferman he did not at any time “take note of [D.A.]’s
performance” on the roadsides. Officer Alexander did not corroborate any of the
claimed impairment indicators that Haferman alleged in his report.
e. Upon receiving D.A.’s blood results, the Larimer County district attorney once again
promptly dismissed the wrongful DUI arrest Haferman had filed against D.A.
f. No remedial action, discipline, or any other form of verbal counseling was given to
Haferman by FCPS supervisory personnel regarding the wrongful arrest of D.A.
51. Again on October 8, 2021 (yes, he had two in one day), Haferman made his next wrongful
DUI arrest, this time of G.E. G.E. was visiting Colorado from Idaho and driving a rental car.
Haferman pulled him over for the headlights not being fully activated. He learned as soon as
he pulled him over that this was because it was a rental car that G.E. was not familiar with.
Undeterred, Haferman ordered G.E. out of the car to perform roadside tests.
a. He again included the false statements and exaggerations of impairment indicators in
his report for G.E. He failed to administer the roadside tests to G.E. in the standardized
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manner he was trained. He lied about G.E. showing clues/signs of impairment that were
not present. There were multiple additional discrepancies between BWC videos and
what he claimed occurred in his report.
b. Despite performing the HGN test on G.E. incorrectly, it was still obvious from
Haferman’s BWC that G.E. had zero clues on the HGN. Haferman lied and claimed
G.E. had all 6 clues of impairment on the HGN test in his report.
c. Haferman then arrested G.E. for DUI and took him to the jail for a breath test. G.E.
blew a .016% on the breath test, which is scored as a “none detected” result on the
machine due to its range of error. G.E. was, thus, provably observed to be innocent to
Haferman that very night.
d. So did Haferman apologize and let G.E. go? Of course not. He charged him with DWAI
and booked him into the jail.
e. It appears from the reports in G.E.’s case that Haferman continued to no longer have
any supervising or approving officer pretending to review his arrests.
f. Because of the lies and exaggerations Haferman included in his report about G.E., it
still took more than two months for the District Attorney to dismiss the DWAI charge
he had filed against him.
g. Upon information and belief, until Haferman’s pattern of constitutional violations was
brought to the attention of the local and national news media in April 2022, absolutely
no one at FCPS ever looked at this or any other wrongful Haferman DUI arrest
involving negative chemical test results.
52. On November 19, 2021, Officer Haferman made another wrongful DUI arrest, this time of S.J.
He again included the false statements and exaggerations of impairment indicators in his report
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for S.J. He failed to administer the roadside tests to S.J. in the standardized manner he was
trained. He lied about S.J. showing clues or signs of impairment when there were none. There
were multiple additional discrepancies between BWC videos and what he claimed occurred in
his report.
a. S.J. denied alcohol consumption and blew triple zeroes into a PBT on scene showing
negative for alcohol. Haferman arrested her for DUI and forced a blood draw anyway.
b. On February 23, 2022, Haferman received S.J.’s blood results. They were negative for
alcohol and all drugs.
c. It appears from the reports in S.J.’s case that by this time, Haferman continued to have
no supervising or approving officer reviewing his work.
d. Despite FCPS claiming that all negative blood test results received by their agency
were subjected to an “internal review,” the documents in S.J.’s case indicate that
absolutely no one at FCPS, internal or otherwise, was reviewing this Haferman
wrongful arrest of S.J. or any other Haferman wrongful arrest.
e. Upon receipt of the blood results, the district attorney promptly dismissed the DUI
charge against S.J.
f. Until Haferman’s pattern of constitutional violations was brought to the attention of the
local and national news media in April 2022, absolutely no remedial action, discipline,
or any other form of verbal counseling was ever given to Haferman by FCPS
supervisory personnel regarding the wrongful arrest of S.J.
53. Thus, prior to encountering Plaintiff Mr. Elias in December 2021, Haferman had effected at
least 14 wrongful DUI arrests of innocent people without intervention, comment, or reprimand
from anyone at FCPS.
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54. Upon information and belief, the only feedback Haferman had received from FCPS
supervisory personnel (including Sergeant Heaton and Corporal Bogosian) about his DUI
arrests by this time was positive and blind reinforcement to continue whatever he was doing,
as it was producing DUI arrest statistics that FCPS benefitted from greatly in the eyes of the
public when posted about on social media, seeking additional agency funding, and when shared
with MADD.
55. Upon information and belief, no one at FCPS knew about the inordinately high number of
innocent people Haferman was arresting because no one was supervising him or reviewing his
work. In the alternative, if anyone at FCPS was aware of all the innocent people Haferman was
arresting, they simply didn’t care and so did nothing to try and prevent Haferman from doing
it again.
56. It was therefore by December 2021 not just reasonably foreseeable from Haferman’s pattern
of misconduct but in fact utterly inevitable that he would violate the constitutional rights of
more citizens in the very near future with more wrongful DUI arrests.
HAFERMAN’S WRONGFUL ARREST OF PLAINTIFF HARRIS ELIAS
57. And indeed, he did. On December 3, 2021, just two weeks after his wrongful arrest of S.J.,
Officer Haferman made another wrongful DUI arrest, this time of Plaintiff Harris Elias.
58. Mr. Elias, a pilot and general contractor, and single father to three teenagers, had just enjoyed
dinner with his 15-year-old son at DGT, a small taco restaurant in downtown Fort Collins.
59. Mr. Elias and his son then got in Mr. Elias’s SUV and pulled out of the small parking lot next
to the restaurant. They began driving home. They waited at the stop light at Laurel and College.
When the light turned green, Mr. Elias turned right. Unbeknownst to Mr. Elias, a pedestrian
and dark clothing had begun walking into the road. Mr. Elias noticed the pedestrian step out
Deleted: Redacted
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into the road area lit by street lights immediately and simply adjusted his turn to go a bit wider
so there would be ample space between himself and the pedestrian.
60. Officer Haferman witnessed this and decided to pull Mr. Elias over and charge him with a
DUI. He activated his red and blue lights.
61. Mr. Elias pulled over promptly, smoothly, and normally.
62. Officer Haferman went to Mr. Elias’s window and accused Mr. Elias of several things he knew
he had not done. Namely, Haferman accused him of “crossing the pedestrians up at that last
light and then “cut[ting] into multiple lanes of traffic” and told Mr. Elias he had “been weaving
since right before [Haferman] turned on his lights.”
63. Haferman then told Mr. Elias he needed to “make sure everything’s ok tonight.” Mr. Elias told
Haferman that everything was ok.
64. Haferman next asked Mr. Elias where he was coming from. This was none of his business and
Mr. Elias told him so, by responding that he was not going to be answering any more questions.
65. Haferman then asked Mr. Elias for his license, insurance, and registration. Mr. Elias provided
all of these documents to Officer Haferman promptly, without issue, and while demonstrating
perfectly normal manual dexterity and comprehension in the process.
66. Mr. Elias told Haferman his insurance was in the glove box. Before reaching into it, however,
he had the wherewithal to recognize that could be perceived as a threat to a police officer and
so asked for permission to retrieve it from his glove box.
67. Haferman asked Mr. Elias if there were any weapons in the glove box. Mr. Elias told him no,
and then opened it and leaned back so that Haferman could inspect it himself. Haferman did
so inspect it and then gave Mr. Elias permission to get his insurance out of it. Mr. Elias did so.
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68. While Mr. Elias retrieved his insurance, Haferman walked around his car shining his flashlight
inside looking for evidence of alcohol consumption. He found none. He went back to Mr.
Elias’s driver window.
69. Officer Haferman asked Mr. Elias how much alcohol he had had tonight. Mr. Elias reminded
Haferman that he was not going to be answering his questions.
70. Officer Haferman responded to this by asking Mr. Elias another question (“Is there a reason
you don’t answer questions?”). Mr. Elias reminded Haferman yet again that he was not going
to answer questions.
71. Mr. Elias determined that he did not have current proof of insurance in his car and so informed
Haferman he would pull up his insurance on his phone. He began doing so – normally, soberly,
and without indication of impairment.
72. While Mr. Elias pulled up his insurance on his phone, Officer Haferman asked him yet another
question (“Is this your son?”). For the fourth time, Mr. Elias had to remind Haferman that he
was not answering questions.
73. Haferman then turned his attention to Mr. Elias’s 15-year-old son in the passenger seat. Mr.
Elias’s son had what was obviously a bottle of Coca-Cola in his lap. Officer Haferman
shamelessly demanded that the son hold up the coke bottle so he could see if it was an alcoholic
drink. Mr. Elias’s son did so.
74. Mr. Elias logged into his insurance company’s website and account and pulled up his current
proof of insurance on the phone. He did so without indication of impairment to even the
slightest degree. He showed it to Officer Haferman.
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75. Officer Haferman told Mr. Elias that he needed him to identify the VIN number of the vehicle
covered on the policy and then also show him where the VIN was on the vehicle he was driving
so he could confirm that this particular car was covered.
a. It should be noted that prior to Mr. Elias, people had regularly pulled up their insurance
on their phones during traffic stops with Haferman, and never had he demanded that
the driver also perform this bizarre VIN location-and-comparison task that Haferman
was now demanding of Mr. Elias.
b. This was a higher difficulty task, no doubt, but being completely sober and unimpaired,
Mr. Elias had no problem completing it.
76. Officer Haferman then took Mr. Elias’s license and registration, walked away from the car,
and then muted the microphone on his BWC. He apparently used this time to call for cover
officers. Two cover officers arrived, one was FCPS Officer Sean Gavin. The other was CSU
Officer Christian Cardenas.
77. The three officers surrounded Mr. Elias’s vehicle as Haferman went back to his window to
order him out of the car. Mr. Harris rolled his window up, unbuckled his seat belt, and complied
with the order to exit his car.
78. Officer Haferman directed Mr. Elias to a patch of grass next to the roadway. Mr. Elias walked
where directed. Once at the spot, Haferman attempted yet again to begin questioning Mr. Elias.
Mr. Elias again informed Officer Haferman that he was not going to answer questions. He said
“I don’t answer questions” and “I won’t participate in your trials and I’d like to be free to go.”
79. Mr. Elias’s walk was normal and without indication of impairment. Mr. Elias’s speech was
normal and without indication of impairment. Mr. Elias’s standing was normal and without
indication of impairment.
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80. Officer Haferman demanded that Mr. Elias explain his “driving behavior” and told him it was
“extremely poor.” Mr. Elias replied: “Ok, write me a ticket and let me go please.”
81. Officer Haferman then said “Well, I’m trying to determine whether you’re under the influence
of anything.” Mr. Elias replied: “Ok, fair enough, let me know when I’m free to go.”
82. Officer Haferman became indignant. Raising his volume at Mr. Elias, he responded, “Uh, I’ll
let you know when you’re free to go, and you’re being detained right now so I can investigate
this further on why you were driving so poorly.”
83. “Okay,” Mr. Elias responded.
84. “Okay??” Haferman replied, now visibly upset and growing embarrassed, “Okay, so did you
have any alcohol tonight?”
85. Mr. Elias politely reminded Officer Haferman for the sixth time that he was not going to answer
questions.
86. Furious, Officer Haferman responded to this with yet another question. “Ok, well, how am I
supposed to determine whether you’re under the influence of something??” He said.
87. Mr. Elias replied: “You can contact my attorney.”
88. Officer Haferman reacted to this by going on a long rant to Mr. Elias. It is not worth recapping
here. In summary, Haferman again rehashed his false account of Mr. Elias’s driving while
stuttering repeatedly and then added to this account several false claims of components of Mr.
Elias’s physical demeanor (like “constricted pupils”) which were either untrue or irrelevant, to
try and bait Mr. Elias into attempting to prove his innocence.
89. Mr. Elias did not take the bait. He said “fair enough” and stood there quietly awaiting
Haferman’s next instruction.
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90. This rant was the first time Haferman mentioned an odor of alcohol. Specifically, he accused
Mr. Elias of having “a faint odor of alcohol coming from his breath” and his “uh – person.”
91. CSU Officer Cardenas, moments after this comment, assisted Haferman in putting Mr. Elias
into handcuffs, which required him to get very close to Mr. Elias’s person.
92. Officer Cardenas has since admitted that he did not smell any odor of alcohol – faint or
otherwise – on Mr. Elias.
93. Mr. Elias in fact did not have any odor of alcohol about his breath or his person.
94. Officer Haferman then next endeavored to get Mr. Elias to agree to roadside maneuvers. Mr.
Elias politely reminded him: “I already said no.”
95. Officer Haferman replied: “Alright, you’re under arrest for driving under the influence.” He
directed Mr. Elias to put his hands behind his back to be handcuffed.
96. Mr. Elias put his hands behind his back in the manner he was instructed. Haferman, exasperated
and embarrassed, closed the space between himself and Mr. Elias and began twisting Mr.
Elias’s hands at the wrist to try and bait him into becoming angry or noncompliant from the
sudden infliction of pain.
97. Mr. Elias cried out in pain and implored Officer Haferman to settle down and stop hurting him.
98. CSU Officer Cardenas intervened to complete the handcuffing process and stop Haferman
from his needless escalation and misuse of force upon Mr. Elias.
99. Handcuffed at the patrol vehicle, Haferman demanded Mr. Elias tell him how old his son was.
Mr. Elias again for the eighth time reminded Haferman that he did not answer questions.
100. Officer Haferman read Express Consent law to Mr. Elias and asked him to pick a breath or
blood test. Mr. Elias elected a breath test.
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101. Officer Haferman responded, “Ok” and then deliberately slammed his patrol car door shut
on Mr. Elias’s leg while it was still observably located in the door jamb. Mr. Elias screamed
out in pain.
102. Officer Haferman went “ooop” and then slammed the door shut again.
103. Haferman took Mr. Elias to the jail for a breath test. While there, Mr. Elias continued
interacting normally and without any indication of impairment to even the slightest degree.
104. While waiting for the twenty-minute deprivation period to pass prior to administering the
breath test, Officer Haferman began to wonder if doing a breath test was really the best idea.
In a panic, he called his supervising Sergeant Allen Heaton and asked if he could force Mr.
Elias to do a blood draw instead (far better for the fishing expedition Haferman was on) by
claiming Mr. Elias urgently needed medical care for his knee.
105. Mr. Elias had literally just completed the 20-minute deprivation period for the breath test
and the breath test machine was on the table right next to him ready to be used. He could have
completed the breath test he had chosen right there, proven his innocence, and then be taken
to the hospital.
106. But Haferman was not going to let that happen. Instead, he told Mr. Elias they needed to
abandon the breath test and go to the hospital for medical treatment. He told Mr. Elias
(knowingly lying to him) that they would then come back and do the breath test after. Mr. Elias
complied.
107. Back at the scene of Mr. Elias’s vehicle, Officer Gavin waited for Mr. Elias’s girlfriend to
arrive to pick up Mr. Elias’s son and drive Mr. Elias’s vehicle home. Mr. Elias’s girlfriend
arrived and asked what in the world had happened.
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108. Officer Gavin informed her that Mr. Elias would have to stay at the jail for at least a couple
hours depending on how impaired he was.
109. Mr. Elias’s girlfriend shook her head at Officer Gavin, utterly incredulous. “He hasn’t been
drinking!” She told him without hesitation. “He’s been doing electrical in my basement the
whole day!”
110. Officer Gavin shrugged and said he was just the back-up officer.
111. Mr. Elias’s girlfriend’s statement was plainly material to Mr. Elias’s guilt/innocence and
an extremely exculpatory piece of evidence at that. Officer Gavin elected not to share or
document Mr. Elias’s girlfriend’s exculpatory comments in any report, in violation of FCPS
policy.
112. At the hospital, Mr. Elias asked to see Haferman’s supervising sergeant so that he could
make a complaint.
113. Defendant Sergeant Heaton arrived at the hospital. He chose not to activate his BWC video
while Mr. Elias made his complaint of excessive force, misconduct, and wrongful arrest against
Officer Haferman. This was in violation of FCPS policy and Colorado law.
114. Upon information and belief, Sergeant Heaton failed to create a report or any record of any
kind documenting Mr. Elias’s complaint against Officer Haferman, in direct violation of FCPS
policy 1020. He did not follow up on Mr. Elias’s complaint as required by FCPS policy 1020
and he did not enter Mr. Elias’s complaint into IACMS for follow-up and investigation as
required by FCPS policy 1020.
115. While Defendant Sergeant Heaton took Mr. Elias’s complaint, he personally observed that
Mr. Elias was sober, coherent, articulate, and showing no indication of impairment whatsoever,
not even to the slightest degree. Despite recognizing that this was clearly yet another wrongful
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DUI arrest in a long line of wrongful Haferman DUI arrests, he did nothing to intervene or stop
it, despite having the opportunity and ability to do so.
116. Rather than intervene, Defendants Sergeant Heaton and Haferman both muted their BWC
cameras and discussed how they would get a blood test from Mr. Elias and send it out to be
tested for every prescription and over-the-counter drug that existed to increase the chances of
having something be detected in Mr. Elias’s blood that they could claim justified the DUI
arrest.
117. After having his knee examined by medical personnel, Haferman informed Mr. Elias that
he could not do the breath test he had requested due to the passage of time and instead would
have to do a blood test. Mr. Elias did not want to be poked with a needle and voiced his
opposition to having his original choice of chemical test not be honored.
118. Haferman told Mr. Elias that he no longer had a choice of test and that he would have to
submit to a blood test or he would be deemed a refusal which would cause an automatic
revocation of his driver’s license for one year. Any revocation of Mr. Elias’s driver’s license
would result in a lifetime revocation of his pilot’s license with the FAA. Mr. Elias, terrified
and having no choice, agreed to the blood test.
119. While reviewing the CBI lab testing and consent paperwork for the blood draw with Officer
Haferman, Mr. Elias inquired as to what the box “DRE was conducted” meant.
120. Officer Haferman responded: “A drug recognition expert, um, in this case, I’m not
suspecting drugs are in play. So I will only be checking the box that says [to test for] alcohol.
These are a list of different drugs that the lab can test for but, um, I’m just going to check to
have your blood tested for alcohol because I believe alcohol is suspected.”
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121. This was a lie Haferman told Mr. Elias to get him to agree to provide his blood. Haferman
knew that CBI tested all blood kits for 14 categories of drugs and he further knew that if that
drug panel came back negative for those 14 categories, he and Defendant Sergeant Heaton still
could and would ask CBI to send Mr. Elias’s blood out for more comprehensive testing for all
the various prescription and over the counter drugs that existed.
122. Officer Haferman in fact did do just that with Mr. Elias’s blood. In fact, here is a list of all
the drugs Haferman and FCPS ultimately directed CBI to have Mr. Elias’s blood tested for:
• Ethanol
• Volatiles
• Barbituates
• Benzoylecgonine (Cocaine)
• Benzodiazepines
• Buprenorphine
• Cannabinoids
• Carisoprodol
• Meprobamate
• Fentanyl
• Methadone
• Methamphetamine
• Amphetamine
• MDMA
• MDA
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• Codeine
• Morphine
• Hydrocodone
• Hydromorphone
• Oxycodone
• Oxymorphone
• Tramadol
• Zolpidem
• Antihistamines (Benadryl or allergy medication)
• Antidepressants (any depression medication)
• Antitussives (any cold medicine)
• Antiseizure medications
• Antipsychotic medications
• Pain medication (including even Aleve or Advil)
• Muscle relaxants
• Hallucinogens (LCD, psilocybin)
• Hypnosedatives
• Gabapentin
• Countless untold other “over-the-counter medications”
123. After his knee was x-rayed, the hospital released Mr. Elias to Officer Haferman. Officer
Haferman took Mr. Elias to jail.
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124. At 10:48 pm, Officer Haferman arrived at the Larimer County jail to book in Mr. Elias who
he knew would have to spend the entire weekend there, in a jump suit, in a cell, awaiting a
bond setting by a judge on Monday, due to the Child Abuse charge that he had added.
125. At 11:18 pm, Officer Haferman left Mr. Elias at the jail and drove back to his desk at Fort
Collins Police Services.
126. At 11:58 pm, Officer Haferman called Child Protective Services and made a report
that Mr. Elias had committed child abuse. Haferman made this report of alleged child abuse
by Mr. Elias:
a. After having spent 2 hours with Mr. Elias and observed no indications of impairment;
b. After claiming that “only alcohol” was suspected in Mr. Elias, while yet refusing to
give Mr. Elias the breath test for alcohol that he had repeatedly requested; and
c. Without knowing the results of any blood testing.
127. Haferman also knew this particular arrest, being devoid of any roadside tests he could
exploit to support it, would require a report filled with particularly flamboyant lies and
exaggerations of impairment cues. And indeed it did. Haferman then proceeded to write a
report narrative for his arrest of Mr. Elias and filled it, as usual, with lies and exaggerations in
order to ensure Mr. Elias’s criminal prosecution for DUI and Child Abuse went on as long as
possible.
128. Mr. Elias’s life was completely upended and devastated by Haferman’s wrongful arrest.
First, he spent 3 days in jail.
129. Mr. Elias appeared in court on Monday virtually, from the jail, wearing an orange jumpsuit.
He then listened as the appointed public defender pleaded with the judge on Mr. Elias’s behalf
to not enter the mandatory protection order that would have prohibited Mr. Elias from having
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contact with his child. He listened as the district attorney argued that he shouldn’t be allowed
to have contact with his son. He was overcome with debilitating, sick grief and anxiety. He
was a single father. Who would care for his child? Would he have to go to foster care? How
would he explain this to his kids? His family? His friends?
130. After hearing argument from defense and prosecutor that seemed to go on for a lifetime,
Mr. Harris then listened as, in front of a courtroom full of people and a jail room full of other
inmates, Magistrate Judge Cara Boxberger shamed Mr. Elias for putting his child in danger,
for not being a responsible parent, and for representing a threat to the safety of the community.
She pondered aloud about how “difficult” it was for her to decide whether she should issue the
standard protection order she usually issued which would prohibit Mr. Elias from contact with
his child altogether, or to do something else. In the end, she decided to enter a protection order
that permitted the innocent Mr. Elias contact with his son, but which prohibited him from
driving anyone under age 18, including his own children, in any car unless the car had ignition
interlock (breathalyzer) installed in it.
131. Magistrate Boxberger was not done yet. She also entered an order requiring as a bond
condition that Mr. Elias submit to regular drug and alcohol urine testing to monitor his sobriety.
132. There are no words to describe the degree to which this dehumanizing and utterly
humiliating event traumatized Mr. Elias.
133. As the sole parent and caretaker to his son, the protection order prohibiting Mr. Elias from
driving anyone under the age of 18 completely upended both of their lives. Mr. Elias normally
drove his son to and from school and now no longer could. He had to ask his girlfriend (who
had her own young children to care for) for help and he had to hire Ubers to get him and his
son to school, to activities, or even just to the grocery store.
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134. During this time Mr. Elias would regularly become overcome with anxiety and stress
regarding how he would be able to take care of his son or drive him somewhere in case of an
emergency without violating the conditions of the protection order and/or subjecting himself
to extraordinary embarrassment.
135. Mr. Elias’s son and his friends often did activities together which Mr. Elias had become
accustomed to chauffeuring. Now, not only could he not transport any of them anywhere, but
he or his son would have to explain to them that he was no longer available to drive them
because he was currently being criminally prosecuted for DUI and Child Abuse and had been
prohibited from driving minors anywhere during the pendency of the case.
136. All the while, Mr. Elias was having to wake up and call an automated line to see if he
would be required to drive to a drug testing facility and provide a urine sample to comply with
the sobriety monitoring condition of his bond. When he was called to test, he would have to
find a facility and walk in amongst probationers, parolees, and others convicted of crimes to
go to a room where a lab employee would watch him pee to ensure that he gave an untampered
with urine sample. The urine tests were expensive and humiliating.
137. At one point, Mr. Elias got a bad cold. He went to take cold medication to help him be able
to breathe and sleep. He then stopped, in a fright, wondering if cold medication would cause
some kind of positive test result on these drug tests. He decided not to risk it. He suffered
through the rest of his illness with no medication.
138. Living with this case pending was the lowest, sickest feeling Mr. Elias had ever felt in his
life.
139. Mr. Elias had to pay attorneys fees to hire counsel for the baseless charges. He missed work
due to the stress from the baseless charges. He lost sleep worrying that Haferman would find
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a way to tamper with or alter his blood test results. Mr. Elias knew that if Haferman succeeded
in doing so, that would be the end of his career, his relationship, his respect as a parent, his
pilot’s license, and his livelihood.
140. After being informed that the state’s blood testing could take more than 4 months, Mr.
Elias, through his attorney, paid to have his blood tested by a private lab. For nearly a month
still, the harrowing wait for the results, with the concomitant extreme burden and stress of
having to keep up with regular drug testing while not being able to transport his son, went on.
141. Finally, on December 20, 2021, the private lab’s results came back to Mr. Elias’s defense
attorney. There were no surprises here: No alcohol was detected.
142. Mr. Elias’s defense counsel immediately sent the results to the district attorney, demanding
that the case be dismissed and the protection order lifted.
143. No one at the DA’s office responded to this email for over a week. Defense counsel emailed
the DA again requesting dismissal given the blood results.
144. Larimer Deputy District Attorney Jessica Hitchings finally responded to defense counsel
by saying that the blood might still have drugs in it, so she would have to consult with a
supervisor, as she was not comfortable dismissing the case until the state’s blood test results
came back or until a supervisor gave her approval to dismiss.
145. Mr. Elias’s defense counsel reminded the DA that Haferman had expressly stated on his
video he “only suspected alcohol,” which was not present, and, if the state’s blood results for
some reason came back showing drugs, they could always refile the charges. Defense counsel
implored DDA Hitchings to recognize the damage that this baseless case had already inflicted
on Mr. Elias’s life and do the right thing when faced with such clear evidence of this man’s
innocence.
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146. DDA Hitchings told defense counsel she couldn’t do anything without supervisor approval.
147. Days later, DDA Hitchings told defense counsel she had received supervisor approval to
dismiss the case without prejudice (meaning they could refile if their own blood test results
came back showing any drugs) but that since it was a Victims Rights Act (VRA) case, they
would first have to talk to Mr. Elias’s son’s mother and get her position on the case dismissal
before doing so.
148. Mr. Elias’s son’s mother resides in Iowa and has no involvement in her son’s life. The
prospect of having to wait for the district attorney’s office to both locate and obtain the position
of Mr. Elias’s long-lost ex-girlfriend prior to releasing him from the hell he was living in was
additionally terrible, humiliating, and devastating for Mr. Elias.
149. Mr. Elias’s defense counsel worked to assist the DA’s office in getting in touch with Mr.
Elias’s son’s mother by email to speed up the process of getting his case dismissed.
150. Even with defense counsel’s help, it took two weeks to facilitate this contact and to get the
DA to file the motion to dismiss the case.
151. On January 10, 2021, the DA’s office finally filed a motion to dismiss the case against Mr.
Elias. The Court granted the motion the following day on January 11, 2021.
152. While this event reduced considerably the amount of stress and difficulties being imposed
in Mr. Elias’s day-to-day life, it was not the end of his anxiety and worry. He could only afford
to have his blood tested at a private lab for alcohol. So if Haferman had tampered with his
blood to add any kind of drug to it, he would not know until the state’s results came back.
153. And Mr. Elias knew that if his blood came back positive for any drug, the state would refile
the DUI and Child Abuse charges against him and his life would be thrown into
embarrassment, fear, uncertainty, and oppressive disruption yet again.
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154. Haferman and FCPS did in fact request that Mr. Elias’s blood be tested for all the drugs
that could be tested for, including hundreds of various drugs outside the standard 14-drug
category ELISA panel. CBI obliged FCPS’s request for this additional extensive drug testing
(for free) and sent the blood to a lab in Pennsylvania to have it completed.
155. The additional panoply of testing that FCPS requested to be conducted on Mr. Elias’s blood
caused it to take an additional 1-2 months for the results to come back, compounding Mr.
Elias’s anxiety and suffering.
156. On March 4, 2022, five months after his arrest, Mr. Elias’s blood results from CBI finally
came back. They were negative for everything.
157. A copy of Mr. Elias’s “none detected” blood results was sent directly to Officer Haferman.
On March 9, 2022, Haferman completed a supplemental report into the case acknowledging
the blood results.
158. Despite FCPS claiming that all negative blood test results received by their agency were
subjected to an “internal review,” this report indicates that absolutely no one at FCPS, internal
or otherwise, was reviewing this wrongful arrest of Mr. Elias or any other Haferman wrongful
arrest.
159. Until Haferman’s pattern of constitutional violations was brought to the attention of the
local and national news media in April 2022, absolutely no remedial action, discipline, or any
other form of verbal counseling was ever given to Haferman by FCPS supervisory personnel
regarding the wrongful arrest of Mr. Elias.
HAFERMAN CARRIES ON
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160. While Mr. Elias was suffering from the weight and burden of being wrongfully charged
with DUI and Child Abuse and anxiously awaiting his CBI blood results, Officer Haferman
was of course carrying on with his wrongful arrests of other innocent citizens.
161. On December 19, 2021, he made another wrongful DUI arrest, this time of L.M. Haferman
claimed that L.M. stopped at an intersection for longer than he thought should be normal. He
also claimed she failed to signal when turning. He did not record any of these claimed driving
behaviors. He ordered L.M. out of her car and began his DUI fishing expedition. It did not go
well. L.M. appeared normal and unimpaired. She told him that she had had 2 glasses of wine
hours earlier and was now completely sober. He arrested her anyway.
a. L.M. requested a breath test. Her breath test results were under the limit for both DUI
and DWAI, and by Colorado law, presumed to not be impairing.
b. Haferman arrested and charged L.M. anyway and booked her into the jail. Then he
went to write his report in which he claimed L.M. made all kinds of admissions and
exhibited all kinds of signs of impairment indicators during the roadsides. He then,
conveniently, and once again, claimed that most of these indicators would not be
observable on his BWC footage because the audio had yet again mysteriously
“malfunctioned.”
c. The district attorney’s office dismissed the DUI charge against L.M.
d. According to FCPS’s reports and records for L.M.’s case, again, no supervising officer
ever reviewed or looked at Haferman’s wrongful arrest of L.M. (nor his mysterious
repeated propensity for lost, damaged, or malfunctioning BWC footage).
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e. No remedial action, discipline, or any other form of verbal counseling was ever given
to Haferman by FCPS supervisory personnel regarding the wrongful arrest of L.M. or
Haferman’s repetitive tampering/destroying of his BWC content.
162. On March 26, 2022, Officer Haferman made another wrongful DUI arrest, this time of
Carly Zimmerman. Haferman stopped Ms. Zimmerman because he felt she went too quickly
past him while he was on another traffic stop. She had been crying for three hours and told him
so. He ignored this and instead pressed her to admit to drinking alcohol. She told him she had
not. He arrested her for DUI and demanded a chemical test. She agreed to a blood test.
Haferman then inexplicably muted his BWC for the rest of the encounter with Ms.
Zimmerman.
a. Haferman likely realized it was extremely probable that Ms. Zimmerman’s blood
would reveal that he had made another wrongful DUI arrest. He elected to remedy this
problem by muting his BWC and then later falsely claiming under oath that Ms.
Zimmerman had during the 30 minutes spent at the hospital refused to complete the
blood test.
b. Police practices experts later reviewed the BWC from Haferman’s arrest of Ms.
Zimmerman (see infra) and voiced shock and condemnation that he had arrested
someone who presented as she did, with zero indications of drug or alcohol impairment
whatsoever.
c. Haferman falsely claimed in his report for Ms. Zimmerman’s arrest that she was
slurring her speech. The portion of the BWC that did have audio (the first 17 minutes)
revealed this to be a categorical lie.
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d. Haferman falsely claimed in his report for Ms. Zimmerman’s arrest that she failed
various roadside maneuvers. The BWC revealed this to also be a categorical lie.
e. The DA’s office later dismissed the criminal case against Ms. Zimmerman.
163. On April 7, 2022, Haferman made another wrongful DUI arrest, this time of Derrick
Groves. Mr. Groves had gotten into a single vehicle accident due to his Tesla malfunctioning.
He told officers he was on probation and so definitely had not consumed any alcohol or drugs.
Mr. Groves appears normal and unimpaired on video. Haferman charged him with DUI
anyway, offering him only a blood test. Mr. Groves’s blood test results later come back tested
for alcohol and all drugs possible, yet again showing “none detected.” The DA’s office
immediately dismissed the case against Mr. Groves.
164. By May 26, 2022, Haferman’s understanding of his own impunity was reaching
extraordinary heights. By way of example, at the DOR (DMV) hearing regarding the
revocation of Ms. Zimmerman’s license for allegedly refusing a blood test that Haferman had
destroyed the video evidence of, Haferman testified that he was not going to answer questions
about Ms. Zimmerman’s performance on the roadside tests because he couldn’t remember it
and he didn’t believe he had to.
a. Throughout the DOR hearing, Haferman can be heard literally making his own
objections, as the testifying witness, to defense counsel’s questions about the roadsides.
b. Eventually the DOR hearing officer had to instruct Haferman to stop making objections
and instead respond to the very relevant questions being asked. Rather than comply,
Haferman got confrontational with the hearing officer and demanded that he (yes, the
DOR hearing officer presiding over the hearing) supply him with legal authority for
why he should have to testify about the specifics of the roadside maneuvers.
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c. Haferman then threatened the hearing officer that if he forced him to answer questions
about the specific roadside tests, then he would be setting some kind of unlawful
precedent going forward.
d. At this same DOR hearing, Haferman initially testified under oath that the Larimer
County District Court Judge did not make findings about his credibility in the Padilla
case. When confronted with the transcript showing this had in fact occurred, he then
proceeded to declare her finding incorrect, stating that he above all others knew what
was true due to his “training and experience.”
THE ACCESSIBLE DATA IS INCOMPLETE
165. In 2021, FCPS (as an entire agency) made 504 DUI arrests. Officer Haferman was involved
in 191, or nearly 40%, of them. Notably, FCPS has not released the number of DUI arrest
cases where Haferman was the officer that made the arrest decision.
166. Upon information and belief, there are more innocent citizens who have been arrested and
wrongfully charged with DUI/DWAI by Officer Haferman. Plaintiff simply cannot access
records to identify those individuals and detail their wrongful arrests here due to Colorado’s
sealing laws.
a. Under Colorado law (until 2022), if a defendant’s criminal case was dismissed, the
defendant could file a petition to seal the case which then causes all records related
to it to be destroyed.
b. As a result, when people are wrongfully charged with DUI and their blood results
come back showing they were so wrongfully charged and the DA’s office dismisses
the case, the vast majority of those people then (desperate to try and reduce the
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damage inflicted upon their lives by the wrongful arrest) file petitions to seal which
results in the destruction of those records at FCPS.
c. The only wrongful arrest records accessible to Plaintiff’s counsel through CORA
requests, then, are those individuals whose cases were dismissed and who also did
not know that they could seal their case. This is necessarily a small number of
people because Larimer County judges as a matter of policy expressly advise
defendants whose cases are dismissed that they can seal.
d. Making the identification of other wrongful DUI arrest victims even more difficult,
Colorado’s sealings law recently changed, and effective January 1, 2022, dismissed
criminal cases are now automatically sealed.
e. It is now nearly impossible to obtain through open records requests any of the
records related to wrongful arrests. The only remaining avenue to access such
materials is through the civil discovery process after filing a civil lawsuit.
167. Even under these difficult-information-gathering conditions, however, Haferman’s
wrongful DUI arrest activity became sufficiently alarming for the local press to begin
asking questions in April 2022 – notably, critically, and quite provably, well before any
supervisors at FCPS ever began asking any questions.
MEDIA COVERAGE PROMPTS FCPS TO LIE, SCRAMBLE,
AND GAS-LIGHT THE PUBLIC
168. On April 8, 2022, Fox 31 Denver (KDVR) Investigative Reporter Rob Low received a tip
about Haferman and began investigating Haferman’s pattern of wrongful DUI arrests, starting
with that of Mr. Elias. On that day (April 8), Mr. Low sent a records request to FCPS requesting
the videos and reports from Mr. Elias’s arrest.
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169. FCPS’s records custodian took 3 weeks to do it, but eventually, FCPS provided reporter
Mr. Low with the Elias videos. Business at FCPS and with Haferman’s DUI arrest work
continued as usual.
170. Months later, when public pressure forced FCPS to terminate Haferman, FCPS made
repetitive assertions to the press and in their own reports that they had spontaneously opened
an internal investigation into Haferman of their own initiative on April 13 and, they doth
protested quite too much, “not in response” to any media inquiries.
171. However, there exist no records corroborating this fanciful claim beyond FCPS’s own self-
serving statements that this is the date they began their self-initiated internal investigation.
172. Notably, if FCPS had opened an internal affairs investigation into Haferman on April 13,
it certainly didn’t involve telling Haferman about it, and it certainly didn’t involve telling
Haferman to change anything he was doing.
173. Because on April 15, 2022, Haferman was still working as DUI Officer for FCPS and that
very day himself made two more DUI arrests. During one of the arrests, he mentioned to the
arrestee that his 2-year-term as DUI Officer was ending soon and he’d be rotating back to
patrol. Haferman during this conversation gave no impression whatsoever that he was under
investigation for anything or that would otherwise suggest he was being forced to rotate out of
the role (and, the end of April 2022 would have in fact marked Haferman having served the
full 2 years of every FCPS DUI Officer’s 2-year term, as scheduled).
174. And whatever claimed “internal investigation” FCPS was doing also didn’t affect
Haferman on May 14, 2022, when he again wrongfully arrested someone for DUI, this time
75-year-old Chuck Matta, despite no indications of impairment. After being put into handcuffs
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and taken to jail, Mr. Matta requested (repeatedly) that he be allowed to do a breath test.
Haferman finally relented at the station, where Mr. Matta blew triple zeroes.
175. The day that FCPS finally released Mr. Elias’s videos to reporter Low, on April 29, 2022,
they also apparently sent Defendant Sergeant Heaton a heads up about it, probably because he
was the supervising sergeant involved on scene and also had elected not to create a BWC video
of his involvement (or the formal complaints made to him by Mr. Elias) in violation of
Colorado law and FCPS policy.
176. Defendant Heaton decided it might be a good time to watch what was recorded in the other
officers’ BWC videos regarding his involvement. He knew he (deliberately) hadn’t recorded
anything of Mr. Elias’s case himself but worried if the other officers present there with him
had made sure to at least mute their mics to ensure his comments and approval of Haferman’s
actions weren’t recorded. So, for the first time, on April 29, 2022, Sergeant Heaton watched
Haferman’s video from the Elias arrest.
a. This entire sequence of events (a citizen witnessing police officer misconduct,
requesting their supervising sergeant to make a complaint, the sergeant responding and
“taking the complaint” and then eradicating evidence, video or otherwise, of said
complaint) is eerily and grotesquely similar to that of (now former) Sergeant Metzler’s
infamous conduct in the case of Karen Garner v. City of Loveland, et al. When
Metzler’s misconduct was exposed to the public by Ms. Garner’s counsel, Metzler lost
his job for it.
b. FCPS is aware of Sergeant Heaton doing that here (indeed they did an extensive
internal investigation into Mr. Elias’s case which included multiple supervisors
reviewing all the videos) and FCPS did nothing.
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177. Throughout the month of May 2022, KDVR reporter Rob Low continued requesting
records and asking questions about the Harris Elias arrest. In response, FCPS’s public relations
officer would promise answers and then after 7-10 days, would supply responses to only some
of the questions reporter Low had asked.
178. Reporter Low told FCPS he was going to run a story on the Elias arrest and asked if Chief
Swoboda wanted to be interviewed or provide any comment. Chief Swoboda enthusiastically
agreed to an on-camera interview on May 25. In that interview, he defended Haferman’s arrest
decision and made knowingly defamatory statements towards Mr. Elias, like: “It’s concerning
that later it came back that he [Elias] didn’t consume any, but that doesn’t mean the officer
didn’t smell alcohol inside the car or on his breath or on his person.”
179. FCPS Chief Swoboda also claimed that FCPS had initiated their own internal review of the
Elias arrest specifically “before” his interview on May 25 because they “always” do that in a
case with “none detected” blood results.
180. Yet the audit trail for Haferman’s BWC video of the Elias video reveals that Kim Cochran,
the Professional Standards Unit (PSU) officer at FCPS who would have done such a review,
did not look at Haferman’s Elias arrest video for the first time until 4 days later, on May 29,
2022.
181. While investigating and asking questions for his story on Mr. Elias’s wrongful arrest,
reporter Rob Low began to see that this was not a one-off type of wrongful arrest, but that
Officer Haferman instead appeared to have a pattern of making many wrongful DUI arrests of
citizens. There were many more victims. He and other news outlets began digging in,
demanding answers, explanations, and accountability from FCPS.
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182. In response to this additional media scrutiny, FCPS PR Manager Kimble again reiterated
to Rob Low of KDVR in a June 14, 2022 email that “FCPS reviews all cases where DUI blood
tests come back with no drugs detected.”
183. On June 16, 2022, Fox 31 Denver ran its first piece about Haferman pattern of wrongful
DUI arrests. It gave FCPS Chief Swoboda opportunity to be interviewed and comment on the
story before it was published and this time, he refused to be interviewed.
184. Instead, knowing this story was coming out, Chief Swoboda worked to get ahead of it,
releasing the day before, on June 15, 2022, a statement to the public through a video post on
FCPS’s Facebook page.
185. In this statement, Swoboda defended Haferman’s conduct, insulted and defamed the
victims of Haferman’s wrongful arrests, and made multiple other false claims suggesting that
FCPS had always been reviewing Haferman’s arrests and ensuring they were lawful. He also
went even further than that, stating:
186. By FCPS’s Chief’s own admission, then, either multiple FCPS supervisors were reviewing
Haferman’s ND cases and approving of it and finding no training issues and finding no
discrepancies between his reports and his videos and finding no problem with his repeated
destruction of video evidence by failing to activate it or muting it during some of his most
questionable arrests…. Or, he was simply lying about there having been any supervisory
review of any of Haferman’s wrongful arrests. The latter possibility is better corroborated by
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the evidence and logically considerably more likely, but regardless, either option establishes
Monell liability against Defendant FCPS.
187. FCPS Chief Swoboda, in the same public statements, also went even further to defend
Haferman’s wrongful arrests – claiming that Haferman always had probable cause to arrest the
individuals and that if nothing impairing was found in their blood, that was simply the result
of limitations on what drugs CBI could test for.
a. For example, Swoboda wrote on FCPS’s Facebook page in the 6/15/22 statement:
b. This paragraph openly insinuates that “nothing detected” blood test results for
individuals charged with DUI by officer Haferman proves not that these people are
innocent, but instead that Officer Haferman was so special and so highly trained that
he was able to detect in them impairment from obscure and unknown types of street
drugs for which science hasn’t yet even figured out how to test.
c. Not one single “none detected” wrongful DUI arrest made by Officer Haferman up to
that point ever included any allegation, insinuation, or shred of evidence supporting the
idea that the individuals were impaired by a synthetic street drug or impairing aerosol
inhalant.
d. FCPS Chief Swoboda’s allegation that the innocent people wrongfully arrested by
Haferman like Plaintiff Mr. Elias, who had been previously vindicated through their
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blood tests, were not innocent but instead just on drugs that CBI could not test for was
defamatory and served to compound their damages. Chief Swoboda making these
comments both online, in print, and in in-person interviews with the media caused Mr.
Elias more suffering, trauma, and emotional distress.
188. FCPS Chief Swoboda’s claims to the public about FCPS’s drug testing capabilities were
also knowingly untrue at the time they were made. Here’s the rest of the statement he made
about FCPS’s drug testing capabilities:
189. Also provably untrue from Chief Swoboda’s public statements:
a. CBI is not limited to a “standard ELISA panel to test for 14 categories of drugs.” In
fact, CBI can test for every kind of drug for which a test exists.
b. For example, in Harley Padilla’s case, FCPS asked CBI to test for a whole slew of
additional prescription medications outside of the standard ELISA 14-drug panel, and
CBI did so.
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c. This “specialized testing” was done at CBI, not CSU, and this “specialized testing” did
not cost FCPS anything additional to have completed.
d. Similarly, in Plaintiff Mr. Elias’s own case, FCPS asked CBI to test for apparently
every single drug or medication that can be tested for on earth:
190. Swoboda made his false claim that FCPS could only test for the 14-panel of drugs provided
in an ELISA panel on June 15, 2022. Mr. Elias’s blood test result showing that FCPS can,
could, and did test for every other type of drug under the sun was provided to FCPS on March
4, 2022, and was part of the Elias arrest records in FCPS’s possession.
191. Swoboda also falsely claimed in his public statement on behalf of FCPS that CBI could not
or would not test blood for synthetic street drugs. This was categorically untrue. From CBI
Toxicology’s own website:
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192. Swoboda’s claim that CBI could or would not test blood for “aerosol inhalants” was also
a provable lie. CBI states clearly on their website that they test for commonly abused inhalants:
193. CBI’s website also confirms that they do “specialized testing” for law enforcement in
DUI/DUID cases upon request, at no cost, for all the synthetic street drugs that the standard
ELISA panel does not detect. The list of drugs that CBI can test for law enforcement in DUI
cases upon request, for free, is so long that it would not be productive to copy and paste here,
however it is worth pointing out that this list of hundreds of types of drugs5 includes:
1. All synthetic fentanyl drugs; and
2. All synthetic bath salt type of drugs.
b. In other words, if law enforcement suspects there is some other type of drug on board
not likely to be detected in a standard 14-panel ELISA screen, they are expressly
informed by CBI that specialty testing can be done to detect any other drug that science
has been developed to test for, including synthetic street drugs, upon request and free
of charge.
5 The list is currently viewable (as of March 28, 2023) online at:
https://cbi.colorado.gov/sections/forensic-services/toxicology-services/toxicology-testing
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194. This information is also provided directly to individual law enforcement officers in CBI’s
toxicology testing form. This document is part of every blood testing kit and is filled out by
the officers themselves in every single DUI blood test case.
a. Swoboda’s claim that only CSU could conduct such specialized testing was therefore
knowingly false when uttered.
b. Swoboda’s claim that such testing was expensive and only could be pursued in “serious
cases like vehicular assault and vehicular homicide” was therefore also knowingly false
when uttered.
195. Chief Swoboda made these knowingly false claims in order to ratify and defend
Haferman’s constitutional violations, and at the time he made such false statements to the
public and press, he knew or reasonably should have known that spreading such lies would
cause Plaintiffs like Mr. Elias further harm, suffering, and distress.
196. All CBI drug testing is free. Swoboda’s claim in his June 2022 public statements that in
order to do “specialized testing” for other drugs outside the ELISA panel, it would have cost
FCPS “more than a quarter of a million dollars in testing fees” for its past year of 504 DUI
arrests was also knowingly and provably false when uttered. CBI states on their website and
on the drug test request forms in every blood kit that it has been completing specialized drug
testing for law enforcement in DUI/DUID cases for free since July 2019:
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197. Swoboda made these false claims in the same public statement that accused the innocent
people who had come forward about their wrongful DUI arrests at the hands of Haferman of
doing a “quick hit news story” that was misleading and he urged everyone to “not fall for the
salacious headlines.” In fact, it was only Chief Swoboda who undertook to deliberately report
to the public misleading and false facts.
198. In a video address to the public accompanying this public statement on June 15, 2022,
Chief Swoboda made this statement:
“In some of these [DUI] blood tests, they are coming back that no drugs were detected. We
look at each and every one of these cases to make sure that we are out there operating
appropriately. Is there training issues? Is there equipment issues? What’s happening?
So please, don’t fall for the salacious headlines. Don’t think that when those reports
come back or you see that in the media, that somehow it means it was bad policing.
Our officers are routinely interacting with people that are on drugs or misusing drugs
that don’t show up in those panels. Things like inhalants, having people huffing and
then driving a vehicle. Those don’t show up in those panels. We also don’t have over
the counter drugs that show up. Or some prescription drugs that show up. And lastly
and most importantly, synthetic drugs. That’s a market that is changing daily and the
testing isn’t keeping up. So I just wanted all of you to know that when you see reports
about zero drugs coming back in someone’s blood after arrest, please ask questions if
you have them but don’t make the leap that it’s somehow bad policing.”
199. Chief Swoboda knowingly lied in his video statement to the public. CBI does test for the
inhalants used in huffing. It does this testing upon request in DUI/DUID cases and for free.
FCPS was not “looking at each and every one of th[o]se cases to make sure that [they] are out
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there operating appropriately.” Swoboda made the above statement despite knowing that he
and FCPS had literally zero evidence or support for the idea that the “none detected” blood test
DUI cases involved drugs that CBI was unwilling to test for, that were too expensive to test
for, or that forensic science was not yet capable of testing for.
200. It should also be noted that if any FCPS officer or supervisor believed that a “none
detected” blood test result was due to other impairing drugs not checked in the 14-panel screen
(rather than being due to the person’s actual innocence), the blood could be retested or
subjected to specialized testing for any and all other drugs at any time for a year or more
after the date of the arrest. This is because CBI by rule maintains the blood samples from
DUI arrests for at least one year and longer if needed or requested.
a. At the time that Chief Swoboda made these deliberately false and misleading
statements to the public claiming that all “none detected” blood test cases were due to
drug testing limitations and not driver innocence, nearly all of those drivers’ blood
samples were thus still in refrigeration at CBI, perfectly preserved, and available
for any manner of free specialized drug testing.
b. Rather than request the testing, Chief Swoboda elected to lie to the public about
nonexistent drug testing limitations and nonexistent drug testing costs instead.
201. Further cementing Plaintiff’s failure to supervise Monell claims, in the internal affairs
investigation FCPS eventually did open into him, Haferman openly admitted that no one was
supervising him at FCPS for the entirety of his tenure there.
a. For example: it is FCPS written policy that all arrest reports including all important
information needed to be completed by officers by the end of their shifts.
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i. Haferman did not comply with this written policy. He was completing his
reports sometimes days or even weeks later.
ii. When interviewed by FCPS’s “Professional Standards Unit” (PSU) for the
internal affairs investigation into his wrongful DUI arrests, Haferman was
questioned about his failure to comply with this written policy. Haferman told
investigator Kim Cochran that reports did not need to be completed by end of
shift at FCPS and in fact in his “entire career at FCPS,” it was “never mentioned
by any supervisor that he needed to complete reports by the end of shift.” He
went on and on about this written policy not being actual policy followed by
anyone at FCPS and he informed Cochran that he “has never had a supervisor
speak to him about getting reports done in a timely manner.”
b. Also throughout this interview with his own employer, Haferman would repeatedly
claim that he had a great memory while in nearly the same breath refusing to
acknowledge certain basic facts of his cases by claiming he could “not recall.” He
bragged that over the past two years as DUI Officer he took no notes during roadsides
or any other part of the investigation and instead “most everything was done by
memory.” He stated this as a point of pride, reminding the investigator Cochran that no
supervisor of his at FCPS had ever found any problem with that.
c. Haferman was questioned by investigator Cochran about his failure to activate his
BWC and whether there had been prior instances of him doing so. To her face,
Haferman lied and said he could recall no prior instances of him having to document
that he had muted his camera or forgot to turn on his camera (in fact there were more
than 6 such instances in just the previous year).
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d. For all the instances in which Haferman quite confidently informed the FCPS
investigator that he had never received any kind of supervisory direction suggesting he
needed to do things differently, and conveniently, only for those instances, FCPS
investigator Cochran found Haferman’s statements to be “highly unlikely and
inaccurate.” For everything else, she presumed that Haferman was merely mistaken
and not “intentionally lying.”
e. Investigator Cochran then acknowledged just a few paragraphs later in her 68-page
report on Haferman that there were “issues with Haferman’s ability to give accurate
testimony.”
202. In the separate report produced as a result of the investigation into Haferman’s conduct and
testimony in Ms. Zimmerman’s DOR hearing, the FCPS investigator (really having no choice
at this point) had to make the finding that Haferman’s arrest report did include false statements
that were belied by his own videos. She reluctantly acknowledged that Haferman appeared to
have “a disregard for accurate reporting and poor attention to detail.”
203. These are catastrophically dangerous traits for any police officer to have and both realities
of which any supervising officer at FCPS would have discovered to be true about Haferman if
they had been supervising anything he was doing starting in November 2020.
204. An officer who has “a disregard for accurate reporting and poor attention to detail” is
almost certain to also be an officer who makes wrongful arrests of innocent people. Particularly
if that officer is given a job exclusively focused on making arrests for only one type of crime
(DUI) where that one type of crime (unlike nearly every other type of offense in the Criminal
Code) is also able to be charged based solely on the subjective opinion and claimed
observations of the arresting officer.
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205. When interviewed by FCPS’s Professional Standards Unit in the summer of 2022,
Haferman further solidified Plaintiff’s Monell claims, when he stated that throughout his tenure
as the DUI Officer, he “believed he was doing good work” and “didn’t have any reason to
believe he wasn’t doing good work based on no supervisors or experts in the field saying
otherwise.”
206. In the course of FCPS’s investigation into Haferman’s misconduct, multiple FCPS officers
admitted that Haferman’s failure to administer the roadsides to drivers correctly was obvious
and apparent on his videos.
207. When interviewed by FCPS’s Professional Standards Unit in the summer of 2022,
Haferman openly stated that he treated a driver’s invocation of the right to remain silent
as an indication of impairment because it “showed poor judgment in how to interact with
police.” He said this was also consistent with his training and experienced received at FCPS.
208. In public statements to the press throughout the summer (as more Haferman victims came
forward to various news outlets and additional stories about Haferman and FCPS’s pattern of
wrongful DUI arrests continued to run), both Chief Swoboda and FCPS’s public relations
officer continued to make knowingly false and defamatory statements insisting that Haferman
had probable cause to make all of his arrests and insinuating that the drivers whose blood
results came back with nothing detected were simply impaired by some other substance.
209. These continued defamatory statements made by FCPS suggesting his arrest was lawful
and that he had simply been on some kind of synthetic street drug or inhalant caused Mr. Elias
– a father, business owner, and pilot – to suffer additional emotional distress and further
compounded his damages.
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210. On September 1, 2022, the Larimer County District Attorney sent a letter to Chief Swoboda
referencing the fact that they had had several “previous discussions” concerning Haferman’s
integrity, judgment, and reliability, and now despite those “previous discussions,” felt forced
to conclude that Haferman “at minimum, has demonstrated a significant disregard for the
integrity of his investigations and does not have a firm grasp of the impact of depriving our
citizens of their liberty.”
211. On September 2, 2022, FCPS announced that they were putting Haferman on
administrative leave.
212. In December of 2022, Chief Swoboda made a public statement on FCPS’s Facebook page
again, this time to announce that Haferman had resigned. He then explained that when FCPS
had actually reviewed his work (after being forced to by media inquiries in May), FCPS had
realized Haferman was lying in his reports, doing roadsides incorrectly, and arresting people
without probable cause.
213. No one at FCPS ever interviewed any of the victims of Haferman’s wrongful DUI arrests
as part of their several-months long investigation resulting in a 68-page report.
214. A reporter offered Chief Swoboda the opportunity to apologize to victims of Haferman’s
wrongful arrests, including Mr. Elias in particular. Chief Swoboda refused to issue any
apology.
215. To date, no one at FCPS has offered any apology to Mr. Elias or any other victims of
Haferman’s and its repeated wrongful DUI arrests.
216. As a result of the Defendants’ violations of his constitutional rights under both the U.S.
and Colorado Constitutions, Plaintiff Mr. Elias has suffered damages, trauma, depression,
upset, loss of sleep, loss of work, loss of happiness, embarrassment, disruption of family
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relationships, emotional distress, and a catastrophic loss of ability to feel safe, to trust law
enforcement, and to drive anywhere without risking again his loss of liberty.
IV. CLAIMS FOR RELIEF
FIRST CLAIM FOR RELIEF
Section 13-21-131, C.R.S. – Arrest without Probable Cause
Violation of Colorado Constitution, Article II, Section 7
(against Defendant Haferman)
217. Plaintiff hereby incorporates all other paragraphs of this Complaint as if fully set forth
herein.
218. Section 13-21-131 of the Colorado Revised Statutes directs that any peace officer who
“subjects or causes to be subjected, including failure to intervene, any other person to the
deprivation of any individual rights … secured by the bill of rights, article II of the state
constitution is liable to the injured party for legal or equitable relief or any other appropriate
relief.”
219. Statutory immunities and statutory limitations on liability, damages, or attorneys fees do
not apply to claims brought pursuant to § 13-21-131.
220. Defendant Haferman was a police officer under Colo. Rev. Stat. § 24-31-901(3), employed
by the City of Fort Collins and its Police Department at the time he wrongfully seized, arrested
and maliciously prosecuted Mr. Elias.
221. Officer Haferman did not at any time during his encounter with Mr. Elias have probable
cause or reasonable suspicion or any other legally valid basis to believe that Mr. Elias had
committed, was committing, or was about to commit any crime.
222. Defendant Officer Haferman unreasonably seized and arrested Mr. Elias, in violation of
his rights under the Constitution of the State of Colorado.
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223. Officer Haferman did not at any time have a warrant authorizing his seizure or arrest of
Mr. Elias.
224. Officer Haferman violated Mr. Elias state constitutional rights by engaging in an unlawful
seizure of Mr. Elias that was objectively unreasonable in light of the facts and circumstances
confronting them before, during and after his encounter with Mr. Elias.
225. Defendant Haferman knowingly violated Mr. Elias individual rights as secured by the bill
of rights of the Colorado Constitution.
226. Defendant Haferman did not act upon a good faith and reasonable belief that his actions in
seizing Plaintiff without probable cause or reasonable suspicion was lawful.
227. The acts or omissions of the Defendant Haferman were the moving force behind, and the
proximate cause of, injuries sustained by Mr. Elias.
228. Defendant Haferman’s wrongful arrest and humiliation of Mr. Elias caused him to
experience extraordinary stress, expense, depression, terror and anxiety. The experience of this
event caused and continues to cause Mr. Elias trauma and emotional distress, loss of any
feeling of safety or security, along with all the other damages and injuries described herein.
SECOND CLAIM FOR RELIEF
42 U.S.C. § 1983 – Unlawful Arrest Without Probable Cause – Individual, Failure-to-
Supervise/Train, Unconstitutional Pattern/Practice under Monell
Violation of Fourth Amendment, Due Process
(against Defendants Haferman, Sergeant Heaton, Corporal Bogosian, and Fort Collins)
HAFERMAN
229. Plaintiff incorporates by reference the foregoing paragraphs of this Complaint as if set forth
fully herein.
230. The actions of Defendant Officer Haferman as described herein, while acting under color
of state law, intentionally deprived Mr. Elias of the securities, rights, privileges, liberties, and
Deleted: Redacted
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immunities secured by the Constitution of the United States of America, including his right to
be free from unlawful seizure as guaranteed by the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution of
the United States of America and 42 U.S.C. § 1983, in that Mr. Elias was arrested without a
warrant and without probable cause to believe he had committed any offense.
231. Defendant Officer Haferman knew that Mr. Elias was unimpaired and that he had no
probable cause to arrest him and he did so anyway, with deliberate indifference to Mr. Elias’s
rights under the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
232. Officer Haferman’s arrest of Mr. Elias was objectively unreasonable in light of the facts
and circumstances confronting him before, during and after this encounter.
233. Officer Haferman’s conduct described herein was attended by circumstances of malice, or
willful and wanton conduct, which he must have realized was dangerous, or that was done
heedlessly and recklessly, without regard to the consequences or the rights of others,
particularly Plaintiff.
234. Defendant Officer Haferman falsified his report regarding evidence of impairment to
ensure that Plaintiff would be prosecuted for the DUI offense he had not committed.
235. Defendant Officer Haferman caused Plaintiff to be arrested without probable cause or a
warrant, and the false statements in his reports caused Plaintiff to be wrongly subjected to
criminal prosecution. Defendant Haferman’s actions were done with malice and caused
Plaintiff damages.
SERGEANT HEATON
236. Defendant Sergeant Heaton was responsible for supervising Defendant Haferman.
237. Defendant Sergeant Heaton was also personally involved in several of Haferman’s
wrongful DUI arrests.
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238. Defendant Sergeant Heaton was able to observe that Haferman was wrongfully arresting
people and charging them with DUI and instead of doing anything to intervene and stop the
behavior, he instead expressly approved of it and at times even took measures to help Haferman
in covering it up.
239. If Defendant Sergeant Heaton had been fulfilling his duty to even intermittently review
Haferman’s work (particularly his repeated DUI arrests coming back with “none detected”
blood results), he would have seen that Haferman was lying in his reports, falsifying
impairment indicators, administering roadsides incorrectly, and regularly tampering with or
otherwise muting/disabling his bodyworn camera in violation of FCPS policy and Colorado
law.
240. If Defendant Sergeant Heaton had been fulfilling his duty to even intermittently review
Haferman’s work, he would have noticed the dozens of red flags indicating that his
intervention, supervision, and more was required to stop Haferman from his pattern and
practice of arresting innocent people for DUI.
241. Any reasonable supervisor in Sergeant Heaton’s position would have recognized that
Haferman was wrongfully arresting innocent people and regularly violating the constitutional
rights of citizens several months before Haferman encountered Plaintiff Mr. Elias and
subjected him to the same.
CORPORAL JASON BOGOSIAN
242. Defendant Corporal Jason Bogosian was also responsible for supervising Defendant
Haferman.
243. Defendant Corporal Bogosian did nothing to actually supervise or monitor the work being
done by Officer Haferman.
Deleted: REDACTED
Deleted: Redacted
Deleted: Redacted
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244. If Defendant Corporal Bogosian had been fulfilling his duty to even intermittently review
Haferman’s work (particularly his repeated DUI arrests coming back with “none detected”
blood results), he would have seen that Haferman was lying in his reports, falsifying
impairment indicators, administering roadsides incorrectly, and regularly tampering with or
otherwise muting/disabling his bodyworn camera in violation of FCPS policy and Colorado
law.
245. If Defendant Corporal Bogosian had been fulfilling his duty to even intermittently review
Haferman’s work, he would have noticed the dozens of red flags indicating that his
intervention, supervision, and more was required to stop Haferman from his pattern and
practice of arresting innocent people for DUI.
246. Any reasonable supervisor in Corporal Bogosian’s position would have recognized that
Haferman was wrongfully arresting innocent people and regularly violating the constitutional
rights of citizens several months before Haferman encountered Plaintiff Mr. Elias and
subjected him to the same.
CITY OF FORT COLLINS
247. Defendant City of Fort Collins is a governmental entity and municipality incorporated
under the laws of the State of Colorado for purposes of liability under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and
the Fort Collins Police Services is a department of the City of Fort Collins. Defendant City of
Fort Collins enforces local and state law through its law enforcement agency, the Fort Collins
Police Services (“FCPS”).
248. Defendant Fort Collins had a duty to train and supervise Defendant Haferman.
Deleted: Redacted
Deleted: Redacted
Deleted: Redacted’s
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249. At all times relevant to this Complaint, Defendant City of Fort Collins employed and was
responsible for the promulgation of policies, customs, practices and training of FCPS
personnel, including Officers Haferman.
250. Defendant Fort Collins was aware Defendant Haferman’s propensity for wrongfully
arresting citizens to increase his DUI arrest numbers, falsifying his reports, and had evidence
of the same, and it chose to not just fail to remedy it, but to instead reward it, ensuring it would
continue to occur.
251. Both Fort Collins’s failure to supervise and train Haferman, as well as its aforementioned
unconstitutional customs/practices, were the moving force behind Mr. Elias’s wrongful arrest.
252. Defendant Fort Collins’ actions and omissions violated Plaintiff’s federal constitutional
rights, and were a substantial and significant contributing cause and proximate cause of
Plaintiff’s damages.
253. Defendant Fort Collins did not act upon a good faith and reasonable belief that their actions
and omissions in failing to adequately train and supervise FCPS officers in this area was lawful.
254. Defendant Fort Collins, through its Chief and policymaker Jeffrey Swoboda, made
knowingly false and defamatory statements to the public in the aftermath of its wrongful arrest
of Mr. Elias which exacerbated Mr. Elias’s emotional distress, suffering, and damages by
insinuating that he had been on some other kind of drug they couldn’t test for and falsely
suggesting that testing for those other drugs was too expensive for the agency (when the testing
was free).
255. These Defendants’ conduct were the proximately cause of the injuries, damages, and losses
to Mr. Elias described herein.
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THIRD CLAIM FOR RELIEF
Section 13-21-131, C.R.S. – Violation of Due Process
Malicious Prosecution
Violation of Colorado Constitution, Article II, Section 25
(against Defendant Haferman)
256. Plaintiff Mr. Elias incorporates by reference the foregoing paragraphs of this Complaint as
if set forth fully herein.
257. Defendant Haferman was a police officer under Colo. Rev. Stat. § 24-31-901(3), employed
by the City of Fort Collins at the time he wrongfully seized, arrested and maliciously
prosecuted Mr. Elias.
258. Section 25 of Article II of the Colorado state constitution guarantees to Mr. Elias the right
to not be deprived of life, liberty or property, without due process of law.
259. Defendant Haferman caused the criminal prosecution against Mr. Elias by falsifying and
deliberately exaggerating the facts in his report and his Affidavit for Warrantless Arrest, in an
effort to make it more likely to appear there had been probable cause for Mr. Elias’s arrest, and
providing those documents to the District Attorney.
260. Defendant Officer Haferman’s false allegations were the sole moving force behind the
criminal prosecution against Mr. Elias, which included Mr. Elias being subjected to extremely
oppressive and humiliating bond conditions as already detailed herein.
261. Defendant Haferman’s actions were done with malice.
262. No probable cause supported the criminal charges Haferman brought against Mr. Elias.
263. The criminal prosecution against Mr. Elias resolved in his favor when the Larimer County
Court dismissed the case against him on January 11, 2022.
264. Defendant Haferman’s malicious and false prosecution of Mr. Elias caused him to suffer
further trauma, damages, lost wages, suffering, depression, and despair.
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FOURTH CLAIM FOR RELIEF
42. U.S.C. § 1983 – Malicious Prosecution
Fourth Amendment, Due Process Violations
(against Defendant Haferman)
265. Plaintiff incorporates by reference the foregoing paragraphs of this Complaint as if set forth
fully herein.
266. Defendant Haferman caused the criminal prosecution against Mr. Elias by falsifying and
deliberately exaggerating the facts in his report in an effort to make it more likely to appear
there had been probable cause for Mr. Elias’s arrest, and providing those documents to the
District Attorney.
267. Defendant Officer Haferman’s false allegations were the sole moving force behind the
criminal prosecution against Mr. Elias.
268. Defendant Haferman’s actions were done with malice.
269. No probable cause supported the criminal charges Haferman brought against Mr. Elias.
270. Defendant Haferman’s malicious and false prosecution of Mr. Elias caused him to suffer
further trauma, damages, lost wages, suffering, depression, and despair.
PRAYER FOR RELIEF
WHEREFORE, Plaintiff respectfully requests this Court enter judgment in his favor and against
Defendants, and award him all relief as allowed by law and equity, including but not limited
to:
a. Declaratory relief and injunctive relief, as appropriate;
b. Actual economic damages as established at trial;
c. Compensatory damages, including but not limited to those for past and future pecuniary
and non-pecuniary losses, physical and mental pain, trauma, fear, anxiety, loss of
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enjoyment of life, loss of liberty, loss of sense of security, and other non-pecuniary
losses;
d. Punitive or exemplary damages for all claims as allowed by law in an amount to be
determined at trial;
e. Issuance of an Order mandating appropriate equitable relief, including but not limited
to:
i. Issuance of a formal written apology from each Defendant to Plaintiff;
ii. The imposition of appropriate policy changes designed to avoid future similar
misconduct by Defendants;
iii. Mandatory training designed to avoid and prevent future similar misconduct by
Defendants;
iv. Imposition of disciplinary action against appropriate employees of Fort Collins;
f. Pre-judgment and post-judgment interest at the highest lawful rate;
g. Attorney’s fees and costs; and
h. Such further relief as justice requires.
JURY DEMAND
Plaintiffs demand a jury trial on all issues so triable.
Respectfully submitted this 13th day of September, 2023.
THE LIFE & LIBERTY LAW OFFICE
s/ Sarah Schielke
Sarah Schielke
Counsel for Plaintiff
The Life & Liberty Law Office LLC
1209 Cleveland Avenue
Loveland, CO 80537
P: (970) 493-1980
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F: (970) 797-4008
E: sarah@lifeandlibertylaw.com
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