MEMORANDUM & ORDER Plaintiff Joseph Jackson (“Plaintiff”) seeks damages from the County of Nassau (the “County”), nine County detectives, the Incorporated Village of Freeport (the “Village”), one Village police officer, and one Village detective (collectively, “Defendants”) for his alleged wrongful conviction and imprisonment for murder. In 2018, after more than twenty years in prison, the Nassau County Conviction Integrity Unit (“CIU”) filed a motion to vacate Plaintiff’s sentence, which motion the Nassau County Supreme Court granted. Plaintiff subsequently filed this action, alleging (1) nine federal causes of action, under 42 U.S.C. §1983 (“Section 1983″), for malicious prosecution, denial of a fair trial, Brady violations, coercion, supervisory liability, Monell liability, conspiracy, failure to intervene, and prolonged pretrial detention against various individual Defendants; and (2) three state law causes of action for malicious prosecution, false imprisonment, and intentional and/or negligent infliction of emotional distress against the County and Village. Before this Court are the County Defendants’ partial motion to dismiss (County Defs. Mot., ECF No. 288; County Defs. Br., ECF No. 290; County Defs. Reply, ECF No. 308), and the Village Defendants’ motion to dismiss Plaintiff’s Second Amended Complaint (Village Defs. Mot., ECF No. 291; Village Defs. Br., ECF No. 293; Village Defs. Reply, ECF No. 306). Plaintiff filed an opposition to both motions. (Pl. Opp. to Village Defs., ECF No. 300; Pl. Opp. to County Defs., ECF No. 301.) For the reasons that follow, the County Defendants’ motion is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part; and the Villages Defendants’ motion is GRANTED. BACKGROUND I. Factual History1 A. The Parties At all relevant times, Plaintiff has been a resident of Nassau County, New York. (Second Amended Complaint (“SAC”), ECF No. 278, 12.) In addition to the County, Plaintiff names as defendants the following individuals who served as detectives at the County during the relevant period: Robert Dempsey (“Dempsey”); Gary Abbondandelo (“Abbondandelo”); John M. Holland (“Holland”); Michael Herts (“Herts”); Martin Alger (“Alger”); Walter Swenson (“Swenson”); Anthony Kosier (“Kosier”); Dan Severin (“Severin”), and Jerl Mullen (“Mullen”). (Id. 16.) Defendants Dempsey, Abbondandelo, Holland, Herts, Alger, Swenson, Kosier, and Severin are sued in their individual capacity, while Mullen, who is deceased, is being sued through the administrator of his estate, Dora Mullen (the “Mullen Estate”). (Id.) The Court collectively refers to these individuals as the “Individual County Defendants,” and together with the County, the “County Defendants.” In addition to the Village, Plaintiff names as defendants Robert Melendez (“Melendez”), a Village police officer during the relevant period, and Arthur Zimmer (“Zimmer”), a Village detective during the relevant period. (Id. 15.) Defendant Melendez is being sued in his individual capacity, while Zimmer, who is deceased, is being sued through the unidentified administrator of his estate (the “Zimmer Estate”). (Id.) The Court collectively refers to these individuals as the “Individual Village Defendants,” and together with the Village, the “Village Defendants.”2 B. The Murder of Steven Jason This case arises from the murder of Steven Jason on March 20, 1994. The following allegations are taken from Plaintiff’s SAC: In the early hours of March 20, 1994, Glenn Montes (“Montes”) was driving his friend Maurice Larrea (“Larrea”), then an off-duty New York Police Department (“NYPD”) officer, home from a bachelor party they had attended that evening. (SAC
21, 23.) At approximately 2:00 a.m., while heading east on Sunrise Highway, Montes observed two black men chasing Steven Jason in a parking lot adjacent to a Blimpie’s restaurant on the corner of Sunrise Highway and Guy Lombardo Avenue in Freeport, New York. (Id. 21.) As Montes would later tell Individual County Defendant Holland, Jason reached the curb of Sunrise Highway and dove to the ground, at which point Montes saw one of the men shoot him (the “Montes Statement”). (Id.