This civil rights case stems from the shooting death of Michael Newby by Officer McKenzie Mattingly in West Louisville. It comes before us on an interlocutory appeal from the district court’s denial of the appellant’s motion for summary judgment on qualified immunity and state-law immunity grounds. Before the district court, Angela Bouggess, the administrator of Newby’s estate, raised a Fourth Amendment claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and various state-law tort claims. To decide this case, we need only ask whether an officer who employs deadly force against a fleeing suspect without reason to believe that the suspect is armed or otherwise poses a serious risk of physical harm is entitled to either qualified immunity or immunity under the law of Kentucky. We hold that he is entitled to neither. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
I
Bouggess raises a Fourth Amendment claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, a statute that provides a cause of action for redress against persons acting under color of law for “deprivation^] of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws” of the United States. The Supreme Court has held that defendants in such suits are entitled to qualified immunity from liability for civil damages insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights.
Saucier v. Katz,
The availability of interlocutory appeal from the denial of qualified immunity is an exception to the general rule that an appeal can be taken only from a final judgment. But that exception is a limited one. We have jurisdiction to consider an interlocutory appeal only if that appeal raises a pure question of law.
Johnson v. Jones,
*888 II
Because this case comes to us on summary judgment, we construe the facts in the light most favorable to Bouggess. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). If Bouggess can prevail under those facts, the case is inappropriate for resolution on interlocutory appeal and must be remanded. As we have held, when “the legal question of immunity is completely dependent upon which view of the facts is accepted by the jury,” the “jury becomes the final arbiter of [a] claim of immunity.”
Brandenburg v. Cureton,
On the evening of January 3, 2004, Officer McKenzie Mattingly of the Louisville Metro Police Department was involved in a drug-sting operation. He had planned to stage a drug transaction with some individuals in the parking lot of H & S Foods at 46th and West Market Streets in Louisville. Mattingly had backup officers listening over a wire transmitter. Officer Thomerson was the “eye” of the operation. As Mattingly waited in his vehicle, he was approached by a number of individuals who may have offered to sell him narcotics. Nineteen-year-old Michael Newby was one of those individuals. Mattingly did not think Newby was armed. 1
During the operation, the other suspects on the scene reached into Mattingly’s car and took some of Mattingly’s money. They then ran away. Mattingly thought at this point that none of the suspects remained near the car. He then got out of the car to see which way the suspects ran so that he could radio that information to his fellow officers. Mattingly did not radio for help or in any way indicate to other officers that they should be concerned that any of the suspects (including Newby) might be armed.
Upon Mattingly’s exit from the vehicle, he saw Newby nearby, bending down to pick up a twenty-dollar bill. Mattingly sought to arrest Newby, but a struggle ensued between the two men. No guns were drawn and no shots were fired during the struggle. 2
*889 After the struggle, Newby broke free from Mattingly and ran directly away from Mattingly toward three eyewitnesses in a car, and also within view of the H & S Foods manager. Mattingly then drew his gun and fired at least three shots at New-by. 3 According to the medical examiner’s report, three shots struck Newby in the back.
Newby, now struck three times by bullets from Mattingly’s firearm, fled around a corner and sat down. Mattingly and Thomerson then approached Newby. Mattingly did not warn Thomerson that Newby might have a weapon. JA 156. Another officer on the scene, with his gun holstered, then approached Newby to handcuff him. Mattingly did not warn that officer that Newby might be armed. When Newby struggled with the officers during handcuffing and following handcuffing, Mattingly did not alert the officers that Newby might be armed. Newby died from his injuries soon after the shooting.
Newby was, in fact, carrying a firearm in his waistband. JA 227.
Ill
Viewing the facts as given above, the question is whether Mattingly violated Newby’s clearly established constitutional rights.
A
“[A]pprehension by use of deadly force is a seizure subject to the reasonableness requirement of the Fourth Amendment.”
Tennessee v. Garner,
In applying
Gamer’s
“probable cause” standard, the Sixth Circuit has focused on the following non-exhaustive list of factors: (1) the severity' of the crime at issue; (2) whether the suspect poses an immediate threat to the safety of the officers or others; and (3) whether the suspect is actively resisting arrest or attempting to evade arrest by flight.
Sigley v. City of Parma Heights,
B
Thus, the question in this case is whether, under the foregoing standard, Mattingly had probable cause to believe that Newby posed a threat of serious physical harm to Mattingly or to others.
Garner,
1
It is crucial for the purposes of this inquiry to separate Officer Mattingly’s decision-points and determine whether each of his particular decisions was reasonable.
Dickerson,
The question of whether Mattingly’s second decision was reasonable is the nub of this case. The relevant time for the purposes of this inquiry is the moment immediately preceding the shooting.
Dickerson,
2
After Newby had broken free from Mat-tingly’s custody and had run about ten feet from Mattingly, did Mattingly have probable cause to believe that Newby posed an imminent danger of serious physical harm to him or to others? Examining the information available to Mattingly at the time, precedent binding on this court, and viewing the facts in the light most favorable to the Bouggess, it is clear that Mattingly did not have probable cause sufficient to open fire.
Under the facts properly viewed at this stage, Mattingly did not know or suspect that Newby had a firearm. Too much evidence throws doubt on Mattingly’s bare
*891
assertion that he suspected that Newby had a weapon. Moreover, Mattingly’s arguments on this point amount to disputes over the factual inferences made by the district court on summary judgment.
5
As such, under
Johnson,
we cannot consider them on this interlocutory appeal.
Newby’s only crimes, so far as Mattingly suspected, were dealing crack and physically resisting arrest. If an officer seeks to arrest someone for dealing crack cocaine and the suspect resists, using his hands, and then flees, may the officer shoot him? Under the governing doctrine, the answer is clearly “no.” Officers cannot open fire in such circumstances absent more evidence that the suspect poses a danger to officers or to the public.
Garner,
Newby’s first crime was dealing crack. On appeal, Mattingly contends in his reply brief that “trained police officers know that drug dealers, especially crack cocaine dealers, usually carry guns.”
Reply Br. of Appellant,
at 5 (citing
United States v. Swafford,
Newby’s second crime was resisting arrest and fleeing the scene. It cannot reasonably be contended that physically resisting arrest, without evidence of the employment or drawing of a deadly weapon, and without evidence of any intention on the suspect’s part to seriously harm the officer, could constitute probable cause that the suspect poses an imminent danger of
serious
physical harm to the officer or to others.
Cf. Garner,
However, while such action by a suspect justifies force, it does not justify
deadly
force, especially when the struggle has concluded and the suspect is in flight.
Garner,
Finally, Mattingly never warned Newby that he might shoot, as required by
Garner
when feasible under the circumstances. Nothing indicates that a warning was infeasible.
Craighead,
3
To resist this conclusion, Mattingly argues that Newby struggled with him and thus that Newby “assaulted a police officer.” That is a subject of dispute. A reasonable fact-finder could conclude that Mattingly tried to arrest Newby and that Newby merely resisted and ran away. We cannot view the facts in the light most favorable to the defendant on this appeal. Moreover, “resisting arrest,” without probable cause to believe that the suspect poses a
serious
danger to anyone, cannot be enough to justify deadly force.
Cf. Garner,
Mattingly also relies on several cases from this circuit that he claims support his position. In each case he cites, with one exception, this court either reversed the denial of qualified immunity or affirmed the grant of qualified immunity. To that extent, and to that extent alone, they support Mattingly’s position. However, in each case, the suspect in question was both known by the police to possess a weapon and had indicated an intent to use that weapon against the police or others.
6
See
*893
Gaddis v. Redford Township,
The exception is
Brandenburg,
One case decided by this court after briefing was complete in this case might provide support for Mattingly’s claim that he did not violate Newby’s Fourth Amendment rights. In
Livermore v. Lubelan,
This case is distinguishable from Liv-ermore on at least two grounds, each pertinent to the Gamer excessive force standard. First, while in Livermore the suspect was known by every officer on the scene to have a rifle, Mattingly did not know Newby had a weapon. Second, the crimes committed by the Livermore suspect go to the heart of Garner’s standard- — “crime[s] involving the infliction or threatened infliction of serious physical harm.” Despite the disputed issue of fact about whether the Livermore suspect was aiming at the police at the precise instant he was shot, he had aimed his weapon at them only moments before. He had set buildings on fire. He had participated in an armed standoff with the police in which shots were fired at a passing helicopter. None of those aggravating facts is 'present in this case.
4
We acknowledge that in challenges to official action, particularly police action in the heat of the moment, courts must be careful to avoid unduly burdening officers’ *894 ability to make split-second decisions. Effective policing requires that courts accord police officers a certain latitude to make mistakes. There seems to be little doubt that Mattingly was flustered and nervous. We might well have been nervous in his situation. The legal standard, however, is objective. Even a split-second decision, if sufficiently wrong, may not be protected by qualified immunity.
Viewing the facts in the light most favorable to Bouggess, Mattingly lacked probable cause to believe Newby posed a serious danger to him or to the public. On an interlocutory appeal of the denial of summary judgment on qualified immunity grounds, our jurisdiction generally extends only to resolving issues of law.
Johnson,
C
Our next step is to determine whether the right at issue was clearly established on the date of the shooting.
Baranski,
The question in this case, therefore, is whether Mattingly reasonably could have thought that he had probable cause to believe that Newby posed a serious danger to Mattingly or to others. Under the facts viewed in the light most favorable to Boug-gess, Newby was (a) present at a crack deal; (b) uttered no threatening remarks toward Mattingly or anybody else; (c) never drew a weapon; (d) struggled with Mat-tingly in order to flee; (e) did not reach for Mattingly’s gun; (f) did not fire Mat-tingly’s gun at Mattingly’s foot; (g) broke free from Mattingly and ran away, facing away from Mattingly; and (h) was shot three times in the back.
1
Viewing the facts that way, no reasonable officer could have thought he had probable cause to use deadly force against Newby. In
Garner,
The use of deadly force to prevent the escape of all felony suspects, whatever the circumstances, is constitutionally unreasonable. It is not better that all felony suspects die than that they escape. Where the suspect poses no immediate threat to the officer and no threat to others, the harm resulting from failing to apprehend him does not justify the use of deadly force to do so. It is no doubt unfortunate when a suspect who is in sight escapes, but the fact that the police arrive a little late or are a little slower afoot does not always justify killing the suspect.
Where the officer has probable cause to believe that the suspect poses a threat of serious physical harm, either to the officer or to others, it is not constitutionally unreasonable to prevent escape by using deadly force. Thus, if the suspect *895 threatens the officer with a weapon or there is probable cause to believe that he has committed a crime involving the infliction or threatened infliction of serious physical harm, deadly force may be used if necessary to prevent escape, and if, where feasible, some warning has been given.
Certainly, Gamer’s statement of the governing law may be applied differently in particular sets of circumstances, and reasonable minds can disagree over precisely which circumstances justify the use of deadly force.
Nevertheless, the Supreme Court has recognized that there are obvious cases in which an officer should have been on notice that his conduct violated constitutional rights, despite the generalized nature of that Court’s pronouncements of constitutional standards.
Hope v. Pelzer,
This is such an obvious case. Within this circuit,
Dickerson
established, more than ten years ago, that conduct like that committed by Mattingly violates the Fourth Amendment. In that case, there was uncontroverted evidence of serious danger to the officers stemming from the suspect’s clear possession of a weapon, his recent firing of his weapon, and his threatening language toward the police. Nevertheless, examining the moment immediately preceding the shooting, the
Dickerson
court determined that, because it was disputed whether the suspect was non-threatening
when he was shot,
the officer was not entitled to qualified immunity.
This case most closely parallels an unpublished decision issued by the court in 2000. In
Sigley v. Kuhn,
So it is in this case. Mattingly and Newby struggled, perhaps over a gun, perhaps not. Newby fled, maybe posing a serious risk to Mattingly or to others, maybe not. We cannot resolve those doubts on an interlocutory appeal.
Johnson,
2
Mattingly does not offer a convincing rebuttal to this conclusion. The cases he cites all stand for the proposition that, when a police officer both knows a defendant has a weapon
and
has a reasonable belief that the weapon will be used against him or others, the officer is justified in using deadly force.
See, e.g., Gaddis,
Mattingly tries to resist this conclusion by arguing that “an exigency exists when officers demonstrate that a suspect has a willingness to use a weapon.”
Reply Br. of Appellant,
at 8 (citing
Causey v. City of Bay City,
In this case, viewing the facts in the light most favorable to Bouggess, Mattingly violated Newby’s Fourth Amendment rights by shooting him dead without “probable cause to believe” that he posed “a threat of serious physical harm, either to the officer or to others.”
Garner,
IV
The remaining issue for our decision is whether Mattingly is entitled to state-law official immunity on Bouggess’s state-law claims. The district court held that Mat- *897 tingly was not entitled to such immunity. We agree.
Under Kentucky law, when sued in their individual capacities, “public officers and employees enjoy only qualified official immunity, which affords protection from damages liability for good faith judgment calls made in a legally uncertain environment.”
Yanero v. Davis,
Viewing the facts in the light most favorable to Bouggess, Mattingly’s actions violated clearly established federal constitutional law and thus were taken in bad faith. We need go no further than that to hold that Mattingly is not entitled to state-law official immunity for his actions at this stage.
V
The district court denied Mattingly’s motion for summary judgment on qualified immunity and state-law immunity grounds. Under the facts as we must construe them, Mattingly violated Newby’s clearly established constitutional rights. We thus AFFIRM the judgment of the district court and REMAND the case for further proceedings.
Notes
. Mattingly claims that Newby lifted his shirt up and jumped back from the car window. Mattingly claimed that such a maneuver is called a "security check” and that it indicated to him that Newby was armed with a concealed weapon. Mattingly's testimony provides the sole support for that assertion. However, given the chance, Mattingly did not notify other officers that he thought he was in danger, even though he had a code word to do so. The audio tape of the operation failed to indicate that any of the vocal sounds claimed by Mattingly to have surrounded the security check ever took place. Because these facts are disputed, and must be viewed in the light most favorable to Bouggess for the purposes of this appeal, we must assume Mat-tingly did not think Newby was armed.
. According to Mattingly, he attempted to arrest Newby, but Newby kept fighting and "had this look in his eyes like, he just had this look in his eyes like, man I’m going to kill you.” Mattingly then drew his weapon. He testified that Newby was trying to take it from him during the struggle and that one shot was fired toward the ground during the struggle. JA 39-40. Mattingly testified that he thought he had been shot in the foot.
Mattingly’s account of the struggle is substantially disputed. Four eyewitnesses indicate that no guns were drawn and that no shots were fired during the struggle. Even Mattingly acknowledges that he was not, in fact, shot in the foot. The eyewitnesses also agree that Newby did nothing but run away before Mattingly opened fire. Even Officer Thomerson, the “eye” of the operation, indicated that the only time he saw Newby check his waistband was after Mattingly opened fire. JA 47, 151. The witnesses all indicate that at least three shots, but perhaps as many as five, were fired in rapid succession at Newby. JA 109, 113, 115, 117. The record also indicates that Mattingly’s gun (a Glock model 22) had an ammunition cartridge with ten remaining bullets, along with one live round in the gun’s chamber, after the shooting. JA 147. The record also indicates that a full Glock magazine contains fifteen bullets. JA 147. Thus, if Mattingly's weapon initially had a full maga *889 zine, it would have been fired either four or five times that evening, depending on whether the weapon also initially had one round in the chamber.
. Although Mattingly claims Newby was feeling for his gun and that Newby was facing Mattingly while backing away more slowly, four eyewitnesses indicate that Newby ran directly away from Mattingly toward the liquor store’s drive-thru line.
. It is axiomatic that, because we make a probable cause inquiry, we must focus on the facts the officer knew at the time. “As in other Fourth Amendment contexts, however, the ‘reasonableness’ inquiry in an excessive force case is an objective one: the question is whether the officers’ actions are 'objectively reasonable’ in light of the facts and circumstances confronting them, without regard to their underlying intent or motivation.”
Graham,
. Even were we to accept that Mattingly had a hunch that Newby was armed, Mattingly still could not prevail. In
Dickerson,
officers were
certain
that the suspect possessed a firearm. They were also certain that the suspect had fired it inside his home within minutes of their arrival. However, qualified immunity was denied for want of probable cause because there was a disputed issue of fact as to whether, at the time the suspect was shot, he posed a danger to officers.
. Mattingly also relies on cases dealing with suspects in high-speed chases, claiming that "courts have similarly dismissed claims when the suspect was armed with nothing more than an automobile."
Br. of Appellant,
at 17. We need not address this claim in great detail. Reasonable people know that automobiles — large, heavy, metal objects — are dangerous when driven recklessly and at high speeds. The cases Mattingly cites do not support a grant of qualified immunity in this case because they deal with reckless drivers who posed objective, serious risks to others.
See, e.g., Dudley v. Eden,
. We have no quarrel with the argument that an officer who knows that a suspect possesses a gun can more easily conclude that the suspect poses a risk of serious harm to him or to others. But that does not help Mattingly in this case, for on the facts as we must construe them here he did not know Newby had a firearm.
Cf. Graham,
