BOB GLASSCOX v. ARGO, CITY OF; DAVID RAMSAY MOSES, In His Individual Capacity
No. 16-16804
United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit
September 12, 2018
D.C. Docket No. 2:15-cv-01487-KOB
[PUBLISH]
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Alabama
(September 12, 2018)
Before ROSENBAUM, JILL PRYOR and RIPPLE,* Circuit Judges.
Bob Glasscox was driving his pickup truck down the interstate in Alabama when he experienced an episode of diabetic shock. Physically unable to control his truck, Mr. Glasscox began driving erratically at high speeds. Concerned motorists reported Mr. Glasscox‘s driving to law enforcement, and David Moses from Argo City Police responded and gave chase. After Mr. Glasscox‘s truck came to a stop in the median, Officer Moses approached the truck and, while yelling at Mr. Glasscox to get out, tased him four times in rapid succession. The incident was captured on Officer Moses‘s body camera, which recorded Mr. Glasscox‘s attempts—between taser shocks—to comply with the officer‘s orders.
This appeal arises out of a civil lawsuit Mr. Glasscox filed against Officer Moses and the City of Argo, alleging claims under
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND1
Mr. Glasscox, who lives with Type 1 diabetes, suffered a severe hypoglycemic episode while driving his pickup truck on Interstate 59 South near the City of Argo, Alabama. His condition caused him to begin driving erratically. After other drivers on the interstate reported his erratic driving, the Argo City Police dispatched Officer Moses to the scene. What followed was captured on Officer Moses‘s body camera.2
Officer Moses began following Mr. Glasscox, who was “doing about 80” in a 70 mile-per-hour zone. Doc. 31-1 at 10.3 Officer Moses activated his emergency lights and siren, yet Mr. Glasscox‘s truck began to accelerate, weaving from the fast lane onto the median of the divided highway and narrowly missing some roadside signs and a guardrail.4 Officer Moses followed Mr. Glasscox for approximately five miles. Eventually, the truck came to a stop, halting in the interstate‘s median near the northbound fast lane.
Officer Moses got out of his car and ran to the driver‘s side of Mr. Glasscox‘s truck. At that point, he was standing very close to the fast lane of the northbound interstate where cars were speeding by.5 He had two weapons drawn: his firearm and his taser. Pointing his weapons into the glass of the driver‘s side window, Officer Moses exclaimed, “Let‘s see your fucking hands!” Doc. 19-1, Ex. A at 2:50-2:51. Mr. Glasscox raised his hands, which were empty. Officer Moses opened the driver‘s side door and shouted, “Get out of the car!” Id. at 2:54-2:55. Mr. Glasscox, whose seatbelt was still buckled and hands were still raised, said, “I‘m sorry, man.” Id. at 2:56-2:57. He then said something that is difficult to decipher, but the parties agree it was either “God damn, man,” or “God darn, man.” Officer Moses again shouted, “Get out of the car!” Id. at 3:00-3:01. At this point in the video recording, only one of Mr. Glasscox‘s hands is visible; he appears to be reaching toward his seatbelt. Officer Moses yelled, “Put your seatbelt
Officer Moses admitted that after this first use of the taser, he could see both of Mr. Glasscox‘s hands, which the video shows were empty. Less than a second after the end of the first shock, while Mr. Glasscox‘s hands remained curled toward his chest and he continued to howl and writhe in pain, Officer Moses yelled, “Get out, now!” Id. at 3:15-3:16. Still howling, Mr. Glasscox attempted to pull one of the taser wires from his chest. Immediately—three to four seconds after the first taser shock—Officer Moses deployed his taser a second time, again for five seconds. During these five seconds, while Mr. Glasscox was shaking, screaming, and writhing in pain, Officer Moses yelled, “Stop it! Get out of the car!” Id. at 3:19-3:20. Again, Mr. Glasscox‘s arms and hands can be seen curling toward his chest from shock of the taser.
Less than a second after the second shock ended, Officer Moses yelled, “I‘ll give it to you again! Get out of the car!” Id. at 3:23-3:25. Mr. Glasscox pleaded, “I‘ll get out if you just leave me alone!” Id. at 3:25-3:27. Within one second, Officer Moses moved closer and grabbed Mr. Glasscox‘s wrist with his free hand, demanded that Mr. Glasscox “get out,” and tased Mr. Glasscox a third time, again for five seconds. Id. at 3:29-3:30. In total, about six seconds passed between the second and third deployments. As Officer Moses tased Mr. Glasscox for the third time, Mr. Glasscox yelled, “I will!” Id. at 3:29-3:30.
While the taser was still active, with Mr. Glasscox still shaking uncontrollably and writhing from the shock, Officer Moses held onto Mr. Glasscox‘s wrist and again yelled, “Get out of the car!” Id. at 3:32-3:33. As soon as the shock ended and he could speak, Mr. Glasscox cried again, “I will!” Id. at 3:35. Less than two seconds later, before Mr. Glasscox had a chance to get out of the truck, Officer Moses deployed his taser a fourth time, first aiming the taser near Mr. Glasscox‘s chest and then bringing the weapon to the side of Mr. Glasscox‘s thigh for direct contact. As he brought the taser to Mr. Glasscox‘s thigh, Officer Moses yelled, “Stop it!” Id. at 3:38. When Officer Moses touched the active taser to Mr. Glasscox‘s thigh, Mr. Glasscox brought his hand to the taser. Officer Moses, still holding the taser to Mr. Glasscox‘s thigh, shouted, “Get out of the car!” Id. at 3:41-3:42. Mr. Glasscox let go of the taser and again cried, “I will!” Id. at 3:42. Officer Moses released the taser, and as he did, he said, “Stop fighting! Get out!” Id. at 3:43, 3:46. Mr. Glasscox yelled, “Okay!” id. at 3:47, and with Officer Moses still holding his wrist, swung his legs out of the truck and stood up on the side of the road. While holding the taser, with at least one of its wires still attached to Mr. Glasscox‘s shirt, Officer Moses handcuffed Mr.
After about a minute behind the truck, Officer Moses walked Mr. Glasscox to the patrol car, located on the other side of the median near the southbound fast lane. By this point, police backup had arrived. Officer Moses told the backup officer that Mr. Glasscox was “bleeding all over the place” and had taken “five rides.”7 Id. at 6:11-6:17. Officer Moses unhooked the taser wires from Mr. Glasscox‘s shirt and asked him, “What is wrong with you, sir?” Id. at 7:59-8:00. Mr. Glasscox responded that he is a diabetic and his blood sugar was low. According to the emergency medical services report and Mr. Glasscox‘s treating physician, his blood sugar level was indeed low, and his erratic driving resulted from a severe hypoglycemic episode. Mr. Glasscox suffered physical injuries, including bleeding from the taser probes, and psychological injuries, including possible Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, from his encounter with Officer Moses.
At the scene, Officer Moses told Mr. Glasscox that if in fact he was suffering from diabetic shock, law enforcement would not press charges. Nonetheless, Mr. Glasscox was charged with reckless driving, eluding a police officer, and resisting arrest. A municipal court found him guilty in 2015, and he appealed to the county‘s circuit court for a de novo determination of guilt before a jury. As far as we can tell, Mr. Glasscox is still awaiting a jury trial on the criminal charges.
Mr. Glasscox sued Officer Moses and the City under
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Our review of a district court‘s entry of summary judgment is de novo, and we view the facts in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party. Gray ex rel. Alexander v. Bostic, 458 F.3d 1295, 1303 (11th Cir. 2006). We must draw all reasonable inferences in favor of the party opposing summary judgment. Whatley v. CNA Ins. Cos., 189 F.3d 1310, 1313 (11th Cir. 1999). “Even where the parties agree on the facts, if reasonable minds might differ on the inferences arising from undisputed facts, then the court should deny summary judgment.” Manners v. Cannella, 891 F.3d 959, 967 (11th Cir. 2018) (internal quotation marks omitted).
In contrast, summary judgment should be granted when the record evidence shows that there is no genuine dispute concerning any material fact and the
III. DISCUSSION
A government official asserting a qualified immunity defense bears the initial burden of showing “he was acting within his discretionary authority.” Skop v. City of Atlanta, 485 F.3d 1130, 1136 (11th Cir. 2007). After the official makes this showing—and here it is undisputed—the burden shifts to the plaintiff to show that “(1) the defendant violated a constitutional right, and (2) this right was clearly established at the time of the alleged violation.” Holloman ex rel. Holloman v. Harland, 370 F.3d 1252, 1264 (11th Cir. 2004).
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Mr. Glasscox and drawing all reasonable inferences in his favor, we conclude that Officer Moses violated his constitutional right to be free from the excessive use of force by repeatedly tasing him even though Mr. Glasscox had ceased any resistance and was attempting to comply with Officer Moses‘s commands. We thus affirm the district court‘s denial of the City‘s motion for summary judgment.8 We also conclude that the law was clearly established at the time of Mr. Glasscox‘s encounter with Officer Moses that the repeated deployment of a taser on an arrestee who has stopped resisting and is attempting to comply constituted excessive force. We affirm the denial of qualified immunity to Officer Moses.
A. Officer Moses‘s Repeated Deployment of His Taser Despite Mr. Glasscox‘s Lack of Resistance and Attempts at Compliance Violated the Fourth Amendment.
On appeal, Officer Moses argues that his repeated use of the taser on Mr. Glasscox was a reasonable display of force in light of the dangerous circumstances he encountered and Mr. Glasscox‘s resistance to arrest. We disagree. Even assuming that Officer Moses reasonably deployed his taser twice, a reasonable jury could find that the continued tasing—when the video recording conclusively shows that Mr. Glasscox was not resisting but instead voicing his desire to comply with the officer‘s commands, provided he was given a chance to do so—violated Mr. Glasscox‘s
“The
To balance the necessity of using some force in making an arrest against the arrestee‘s
Under the summary judgment standard, Mr. Glasscox has made a sufficient showing that the force Officer Moses applied in repeatedly tasing him was excessive under the circumstances. We consider the Graham factors out of turn, addressing first the most important factor in determining whether the force used was justified; that is, whether Mr. Glasscox was actively resisting or attempting to evade arrest. The evidence, taken in the light most favorable to Mr. Glasscox, shows that he offered no resistance after the second use of the taser. We then examine the remaining factors—the severity of the crime at issue, whether Mr. Glasscox posed an immediate safety threat, and the nature and extent of Mr. Glasscox‘s injuries—and explain why we balance the factors in Mr. Glasscox‘s favor. When we apply the Graham test to the facts and circumstances here, we conclude a jury could find that the force Officer Moses used in repeatedly tasing Mr. Glasscox was not reasonably proportionate to the need for that force; thus, it was excessive.
“The critical time period for purposes of determining whether” the repeated use of a taser on an arrestee “constituted unconstitutional excessive force spans . . . just before the first activation . . . through . . . the time of the [final] [t]aser deployment.” Wate v. Kubler, 839 F.3d 1012, 1020 (11th Cir. 2016). Even if the arrestee‘s resistance justified deployment of a taser initially, if he has “stopped resisting . . . during this time period,” further taser deployments are excessive. Id.; see id. at 1021 (“Construing the evidence in favor of Plaintiff, the unambiguous facts are that [he] was no longer resisting at least after the first two tasings, and that [the officer‘s] further use of the [t]aser was wholly unnecessary and grossly disproportionate to the circumstances.“). Construed in Mr. Glasscox‘s favor, the evidence shows that he offered no resistance at least after
In the time spanning the second to fourth tasings, Mr. Glasscox did nothing that reasonably could be viewed as resistance. During the second taser shock, Mr. Glasscox‘s movements were entirely involuntary: his hands and arms curled up toward his chest while he shook and writhed. Then, mere seconds after the second shock ended, without giving Mr. Glasscox time to get out of the truck Officer Moses tased him a third time. During this third shock and immediately following, Mr. Glasscox insisted that he would get out of the car, but Officer Moses gave him no more than two seconds to do so before tasing him a fourth time.
Officer Moses contends that when he touched the taser directly to Mr. Glasscox‘s leg after the third taser shock, Mr. Glasscox offered resistance by attempting to pull the taser off his leg. From this, Officer Moses argues that the fourth shock was justified. Even if we accepted that Mr. Glasscox‘s attempt to pull the taser off of his thigh was an act of resistance rather than an involuntary response to a painful stimulus, however, this act would not support Officer Moses‘s argument. The video shows that Mr. Glasscox grabbed the taser after the fourth shock began. Any resistance offered after the use of force is irrelevant to the reasonableness of the force employed. See Saucier v. Katz, 533 U.S. 194, 206-07 (2001) (explaining that excessive force claims must be evaluated for objective reasonableness based on the information officers have at the moment the force is applied), receded from on other grounds in Pearson v. Callahan, 555 U.S. 223 (2009).
All of the relevant circumstances, including the very brief time—mere seconds—between taser deployments; the nature of Mr. Glasscox‘s movements, which were involuntary responses to the taser shock; and Mr. Glasscox‘s expression of his intent to comply by repeatedly saying “I will” in response to Officer Moses‘s commands to get out of the truck indicate that rather than resisting Mr. Glasscox was attempting to comply but was continuously thwarted by Officer Moses‘s repeated tasings, delivered in rapid succession. Because a reasonable jury could conclude that Officer Moses‘s own actions appear to have been preventing Mr. Glasscox from complying, we reject his suggestion that Mr. Glasscox “made no discernible, physical moves to get out of his vehicle” and therefore additional force was justified. Appellants’ Br. at 16. A jury reasonably could infer that Mr. Glasscox made no such moves because Officer Moses never gave him enough time between taser shocks. So the first Graham factor—Mr. Glasscox‘s lack of resistance—weighs heavily against Officer Moses.
The next factor, the severity of the crime in question, favors Officer Moses. Mr. Glasscox eluded the police vehicle, with its emergency lights and sirens activated, for more than five miles driving at a speed of more than 80 miles per hour, more than 10 miles per hour over the posted speed limit. Based on what appeared to be reckless, dangerous, and elusive driving by Mr. Glasscox, Officer Moses undeniably was justified in using force to make an arrest. The problem for Officer Moses is that the repeated taser shocks—issued after Mr. Glasscox ceased driving recklessly and eluding law enforcement—were objectively unreasonable because at this stage we cannot say that Mr. Glasscox was resisting arrest, at the latest, after the second taser shock. The severity of the crime therefore carries little weight for Officer Moses‘s repeated deployments of his taser. After the second taser deployment, Mr. Glasscox was no longer engaged
The next factor, whether Mr. Glasscox posed an immediate safety threat to Officer Moses or others, slightly favors Mr. Glasscox. Again, we focus on the repeated taser shocks. Mr. Glasscox‘s truck had stopped when Officer Moses approached. The parties dispute whether the truck was still running, but a jury reasonably could infer that it was not: the video reveals that during the repeated taser shocks Mr. Glasscox‘s feet moved, but the truck never did, and when Mr. Glasscox exited the truck, neither he nor Officer Moses turned off the ignition. So by that point there was no ongoing pursuit or objective threat of flight necessitating the use of force.
Officer Moses argues that throughout his interaction with Mr. Glasscox the cars passing at high speeds in the northbound fast lane posed an immediate threat to his safety. True enough, and this fact may very well have justified an initial taser shock. But once Mr. Glasscox ceased any resistance, the continuing threat from proximity to the highway cannot be attributed to Mr. Glasscox. Rather, a reasonable jury could find it was Officer Moses‘s repeated firing of his taser that prevented Mr. Glasscox, who was by then attempting to comply, from exiting the truck so that the two men could move to a safer position.
Officer Moses also argues that he administered the first taser shock because Mr. Glasscox moved his right hand out of view, creating a threat that he might have been reaching for a weapon. But by Officer Moses‘s own account, any such threat disappeared after the first shock: Officer Moses testified that he could see both of Mr. Glasscox‘s hands throughout the remainder of their interaction. The video clearly bears this out. So Mr. Glasscox‘s hand movements did not create a threat that would justify Officer Moses‘s repeated use of the taser.
The final factor, the nature and extent of Mr. Glasscox‘s injuries, also favors Mr. Glasscox. Officer Moses argues that Mr. Glasscox‘s injuries were “minimal,” so this Graham factor weighs in his favor. But Officer Moses reported that immediately after the multiple taser shocks, Mr. Glasscox was “bleeding all over the place,” Doc. 19-1, Ex. A at 6:11-6:13, and Mr. Glasscox‘s treating physician testified that he suffered psychological injury, including possible Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. Given that Mr. Glasscox suffered both physical and psychological injuries, we cannot agree that this Graham factor favors Officer Moses.
Applying the Graham factors to the evidence viewed in Mr. Glasscox‘s favor yields only one possible conclusion: that he was no longer resisting at least after the second taser shock and was attempting to comply with commands; thus, Officer Moses‘s repeated firing of his taser, which caused Mr. Glasscox injury, “was wholly unnecessary, and grossly disproportionate to the circumstances.” Wate, 839 F.3d at 1021. As our precedent makes clear, “[t]he use of a taser beyond the arrestee‘s complete physical capitulation repeatedly in a short period where an arrestee was mostly cooperative and made no attempt to flee would be excessive.” Manners, 891 F.3d at 974 (alteration adopted) (internal quotation marks omitted). This is such a case. Mr. Glasscox stopped his truck; turned it off; held his hands where Officer Moses could see them; removed his seatbelt at the officer‘s command; at least after the second taser shock, made no attempt to resist or flee; and repeatedly voiced his intention to cooperate. Yet Officer Moses tased him again and again. And as to Officer Moses‘s argument that Mr. Glasscox‘s failure to get out of the truck quickly put him in danger
Having concluded that Mr. Glasscox has at this stage shown that Officer Moses used excessive force under the circumstances, we address whether a reasonable officer in Officer Moses‘s circumstances would have had fair warning that repeatedly deploying his taser, when Mr. Glasscox was not resisting and was attempting to comply with the officer‘s commands, was unconstitutionally excessive.
B. Clearly Established Law Demonstrated that Officer Moses‘s Conduct Was Unconstitutional.
Officer Moses argues that even if he used excessive force, he did not violate clearly established law. Specifically, he contends that the district court was wrong to rely on Oliver v. Fiorino, 586 F.3d 898 (11th Cir. 2009), as clearly establishing the violation Mr. Glasscox alleges. We agree that Oliver alone does not clearly establish that the force Officer Moses used was excessive, but we disagree that the law was not clearly established.12
To determine whether a right was clearly established, we look to binding decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States, this Court, and the highest court of the relevant state (here, Florida). McClish v. Nugent, 483 F.3d 1231, 1237 (11th Cir. 2007). We ask whether it would be “sufficiently clear that every reasonable official would understand that what he is doing is unlawful,” District of Columbia v. Wesby, 138 S. Ct. 577, 589 (2018) (internal quotation marks omitted), “‘in light of the specific context of the case, not as a broad general proposition,‘” Lee, 284 F.3d at 1194 (quoting Saucier, 533 U.S. at 201). To be clearly established, a legal principle must be “settled law,” meaning that it is not merely suggested, but rather “is dictated by controlling authority or a robust consensus of cases of persuasive authority.” Wesby, 138 S. Ct. at 589-90 (internal quotation marks omitted). What‘s more, a rule must be specific enough that the officer‘s unlawfulness “follow[s] immediately from the conclusion that the rule was firmly established.” Id. at 590 (alteration adopted) (internal quotation marks omitted). The Supreme Court has “stressed that the specificity of the rule is
“[T]he rule requiring particularized case law to establish clearly the law in excessive force cases” has “[a] narrow exception,” Priester v. City of Riviera Beach, 208 F.3d 919, 926 (11th Cir. 2000), known as the “obvious clarity” rule, Oliver, 586 F.3d at 907. Under this rule, “an excessive-force plaintiff can overcome qualified immunity only by showing that the official‘s conduct lies so obviously at the very core of what the
With these principles in mind, we conclude that it was clearly established on the date of Mr. Glasscox‘s arrest that the repeated tasing of a suspect who had ceased any resistance was unlawful. See Oliver, 586 F.3d at 898; Smith, 127 F.3d at 1416. Oliver and Smith together dictate this result. We address these authorities in turn.
Oliver clearly established that administering multiple taser shocks can amount to excessive force. A patrolling police officer encountered Mr. Oliver in the median of a roadway, waving his arms in an attempt to flag the officer down. 586 F.3d at 901. The officer stopped and exited her car and began speaking with Mr. Oliver, who was standing several feet away. Id. at 901-02. Mr. Oliver told the officer that someone had been trying to shoot him, and she called for backup. Id. at 902. A backup officer arrived and attempted to move Mr. Oliver from the median, but Mr. Oliver “struggled and pulled away from him” and “attempted to walk away.” Id. Without warning, the first officer tased Mr. Oliver. Id. The taser shock brought Mr. Oliver to the ground. Id. at 903. “[O]nce [Mr.] Oliver was on the pavement after the first tase, he never got back up, and he never hit, kicked, punched, or threatened the officers.” Id. Nevertheless, three to four seconds after the first shock ended, the officer tased Mr. Oliver again. Id. Ten seconds after the end of this second shock, she tased him for the third time. Id. After this third shock, Mr. Oliver screamed that the pavement was “too hot.” Id. He attempted to sit up and get off the ground. Id. The officer continued to shock Mr. Oliver, and after no fewer than eight shocks, he was lying flat and did not get up. Id. Mr. Oliver died 19 days later as a result of his injuries. Id. at 901, 904.
We affirmed the denial of the officer‘s motion for summary judgment. Although we accepted that the initial use of the taser may have been justified, there was no justification
We agree with Officer Moses that the facts of Oliver are distinct enough that standing alone it did not clearly establish the violation here. Mr. Oliver was suspected of no criminal conduct and at no point posed any threat to the officers. The Smith case clearly established, though, that an officer‘s use of substantial force in subduing an arrestee once the arrestee has submitted to the officer and ceased any resistance or threatening behavior is excessive.
In Smith, officers received a tip that some men at a picnic in a front yard possessed cocaine. 127 F.3d at 1417. Officers stopped at the house, which belonged to Mr. Smith‘s mother, to investigate. Id. When an officer entered the front yard where Mr. Smith was sitting, Mr. Smith raised a baseball bat “in a threatening posture.” Id. at 1417-18. After initially refusing an order by the officer, who had his gun drawn, to drop the bat, Mr. Smith dropped the bat and ran through the backyard and into a street behind his mother‘s house. Id. at 1418. Thinking the police had gone, Mr. Smith turned around to go back to the house and found himself face to face with the officer. Id. “After first pretending to run again, [Mr.] Smith docilely submitted to arrest upon [the officer‘s] request for him to ‘get down.‘” Id. Once on the ground, the officer put his knee on Mr. Smith‘s back and pulled his left arm behind his back to place Mr. Smith in handcuffs. Id. When Mr. Smith cried out in pain, the officer broke Mr. Smith‘s arm. Id. Mr. Smith was not yet in handcuffs when the officer applied this force.
We affirmed the denial of the officer‘s motion for summary judgment based on qualified immunity. Id. at 1417. We held that it was obviously clear to any reasonable officer—and therefore clearly established—that a police officer‘s use of force on a “previously threatening” arrestee after the arrestee ceased any resistance was excessive. Id. at 1419-20.
In light of this clearly established law, no objectively reasonable officer in Officer Moses‘s position could have thought it was lawful to use a taser repeatedly on an arrestee who was not resisting, even if that arrestee had previously offered resistance and was not yet restrained. Oliver settled any question whether repeated taser deployment could constitute excessive force even if an earlier deployment was justified. And Smith removed any doubt that an officer‘s use of substantial force on an arrestee who, although not yet restrained, had ceased any resistance or threatening behavior, is excessive. Together, Smith and Oliver clearly establish that the repeated tasing of a subdued arrestee who has ceased any resistance or threatening conduct is excessive force in violation of the
Alternatively, under the unusual circumstances of this case, it would be obviously clear to any reasonable officer that the display of force was excessive. It
IV. CONCLUSION
Officer Moses may have been justified in deploying his taser to subdue Mr. Glasscox, who had just led him on a high speed chase for several miles on the interstate. But instead of using the taser on Mr. Glasscox and then giving him time to respond to orders, Officer Moses issued repeated taser shocks in rapid succession. Mr. Glasscox, helpless to comply or stop the taser shocks, cried out and writhed in pain and during the brief intervals between shocks told the officer that he would comply. We hold, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Mr. Glasscox, that Officer Moses‘s repeated deployment of the taser amounted to excessive force prohibited by the
We affirm the district court‘s denial of summary judgment to Officer Moses and the City.
AFFIRMED.
