MEMORANDUM
This is a civil rights suit brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 by plaintiff Keon Brice (“Brice”) against defendants City of York and five of its police officers. Brice alleges that the actions of the officers while arresting him violated his Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights to be free from excessive force and state-created danger. Presently before the court is the defendants’ motion for partial summary judgment. The motion seeks summary judgment on Brice’s municipal liability claims and on the state-created danger claim against the individual officers. One of the officers has also moved for summary judgment on the excessive force claim based upon his participation in the arrest. For the reasons that follow, the motion will be granted with respect to all of these claims.
*506 I. Statement of Facts 1
Brice’s claims arise from the defendant officers’ attempts to arrest him at the Von-ni B. Grimes Gym in York, Pennsylvania. He alleges liability against the city based on the conduct of the officers during that arrest.
A. Brice’s Flight from Police and Subsequent Arrest
Brice was playing basketball at the gym on the day of his arrest. Police responded to the gym after an informant reported that Brice was there. (Doc. 65 ¶ 20; Doc. 74 ¶ 20; Doc. 75, Ex. B, at 13.) Brice had outstanding arrest warrants in Pennsylvania and New York, and the responding officers knew that he had a history of resisting and escaping prior arrest attempts. (Doc. 65 ¶ 19; Doc. 74 ¶ 19; Doc. 75, Ex. B at 11-12; Doc. 75, Ex. S.) Police formulated an arrest plan under which officers covered the gym’s front and rear exits to prevent Brice from fleeing. (Doc. 65 ¶ 21; Doc. 74 ¶ 21; Doc. 75, Ex. B at 16-17.) Defendant Officers Paul DeHart (“DeHart”) and Andrew Shaffer (“Shaffer”) entered the front of the gym accompanied by Sergeant Kahley and Officer Sowers, who are not defendants herein. (Doc. 65 ¶ 21; Doc. 74 ¶ 21; Doc. 75, Ex. B. at 16-17.) The four officers planned to apprehend Brice while defendant Corporeal Craig Losty (“Losty”) and defendant Officers Roland Camacho (“Camacho”) and Scott Nadzom (“Nadzom”) guarded the rear exit. (Doc. 65 ¶ 21; Doc. 74 ¶ 21; Doc. 75, Ex. B. at 16-17.) Camacho covered the rear door, his weapon drawn. According to his deposition testimony, Camacho drew his firearm because he had received “intelligence]” from other officers indicating that Brice had “dealt with guns.” (Doc. 75, Ex. B at 23-24.) Wanted person materials published by the police department do not corroborate this, but they state that Brice “fled/fought and escaped” prior arrest attempts and advise that he “will fight and run.” (Doc. 75, Ex. S.) Losty and Nadzom held positions further from the door on either side of Camacho to apprehend Brice should he attempt to evade arrest. (Doc. 75, Ex. B at 17.) While they were waiting for the officers inside the gym to arrest Brice, another wanted individual unrelated to the instant case exited the rear of the gym. (Id. at 18.) Losty pursued him, leaving Camacho and Nadzom to cover the door. (Id.)
The four officers inside the gym approached Brice, who fled because he “didn’t know who they w[ere] there for.” 2 (Doc. 75, Ex. A at 43.) The officers in the gym radioed those outside, alerting them to Brice’s retreat. (Doc. 65 ¶ 23; Doc. 74 ¶ 23.) Camacho pointed his gun at the door, and when Brice exited the gym, he saw Camacho ten feet away with the weapon directed at Brice’s chest. (Doc. 75, Ex. A at 43-45.) Camacho made no attempt to stop Brice, who veered to the right and ran away from Camacho. (Id. at 51.) Nadzom pursued Brice, overtook him, and tackled him to the ground. (Id. at 49-51; Doc. 67, Ex. E at 56.) Brice struggled back to his feet with Nadzom clinging to his shirt sleeve. (Doc. 67, Ex. E at 56.)
*507 DeHart, Losty, and Shaffer caught up with the struggling pair. (Id. at 57.) De-Hart grabbed Brice’s arm while Shaffer forced his feet from underneath him. (Id.) Losty punched him in the head. (Id.) Camacho arrived after the other officers and attempted to assist their arrest efforts. (Id. at 58.) Without holstering his weapon, Camacho grabbed Brice in the collar area using the hand that held the gun. (Id.) Camacho admitted that he should have holstered his weapon before engaging Brice. (Doc. 75, Ex. B at 33-34.) The side of the weapon brushed against Brice’s temple as Camacho struggled with Brice. (Doc. 67, Ex. E at 58-59.) Brice testified that he believed the contact between his temple and the side of the weapon was accidental. 3 (Id. at 60.) The gun discharged alongside Brice’s head only “seconds” after Camacho arrived to assist the other officers. (Id. at 59-60.) Brice stated that the gun “just went off.” 4 (Id. at 60.) Fortunately, the bullet did not strike Brice, the officers, or any passersby. The officers then apprehended Brice, who later lodged a citizen complaint against the officers alleging they used excessive force to seize him.
B. The Police Department’s Policies and Customs
Brice’s claims arise from both the actions of the individual officers and the policies and customs of the York City Police Department (“the police department” or “the department”), which is operated by defendant City of York (“the city”). He alleges the department’s inadequate handling of citizen complaints and training of officers proximately caused his injuries under the doctrines of excessive force and state-created danger.
The department has implemented a formal policy for investigating citizen complaints. (Doc. 75, Ex. F.) The policy requires citizen complaints to be documented on a Citizen Complaint Report form. (Id. § III.A.1 & .2.) Supervising officers document complaints on the report form and attempt to conciliate with complainants. (Id. § III.A.l.a.) The complaint report form is forwarded to the police department’s Inspectional Services Division (“the division”) regardless of the outcome of that discussion. (Id. § III.A.5.) The division, also known as Internal Affairs, 5 investigates any complaints not resolved by the intake officer. (Id. § III.C.) Each form is identified by a sequential serial number, and the division must audit the forms periodically to verify that all complaints have been resolved or are being investigated. (Id. § III.A.5.) Complaints alleging police brutality are not investigated unless the complaint is sworn under oath. (Id. § III.A.6.)
Less than one month before Brice’s arrest, Inspector William Follmer (“Follmer”) was appointed to head the Inspectional Services Division. (Doc. 75, Ex. E at 5, 8.) Follmer indicated that in practice the complaint process failed to strictly comply with formal policy at the time he took *508 office. Follmer was never formally trained on the seven-page citizen complaint policy by his predecessor, though he reviewed it upon taking office. (Id. at 36-37.) He examined the department’s stock of blank citizen complaint forms and noticed that tablets containing approximately three hundred serially numbered forms were missing. (Id. at 62.) Follmer testified that the missing forms were never completed by complainants, and he stated that he was confident that the missing forms did not represent unaddressed complaints. (Id.)
Complaint investigations involve the inspector contacting complainants who provided contact information on the complaint form. (Doc. 75, Ex. G at 60.) Complainants who do not provide contact information are sent a registered letter requesting a response. (Id.) If the complainant remains incommunicado after the registered mailing, the inspector may, based on the available evidence and his or her discretion, choose to close the investigation or continue the inquiry. (Id.)
Disciplinary action against officers arising from citizen complaints is permanently tracked in officers’ personnel files. (Doc. 75, Ex. F § III.G.) Complaints that yield no discipline are maintained in the division’s offices for three years, after which they are destroyed. (Id.) During his tenure, Follmer maintained no disciplinary records independent of the information in the personnel files. (Doc. 75, Ex. E at 69.)
Brice alleges that the police department’s policy failed to detect an alleged pattern of excessive force by officers that could have corrected, thereby preventing his injury. He also argues that the city failed to train its officers in the appropriate use of force, also contributing to his constitutional injury.
C. Procedural History
After Brice filed a citizen complaint with the police department, he commenced the instant action. 6 His complaint alleges that the conduct of the city and the officers violated his Fourth Amendment right to be free from excessive force and his Fourteenth Amendment right to be free from state-created danger. He maintains assault and battery claims under Pennsylvania law against the individual officers. 7 All defendants move for summary judgment on Brice’s state-created danger claim. The city also moves for summary judgment on the excessive force claim. 8
Defendants’ motion does not formally request summary judgment on the exces *509 sive force claim against Camacho, (see Doc. 63), but the parties’ briefs nevertheless address it insofar as it arises from the firing of Camacho’s sidearm. The court will therefore construe the motion as requesting judgment on that claim to the extent predicated upon the shooting. The parties have fully briefed these issues, which are ripe for decision.
II. Standard of Review
Through summary adjudication the court may dispose of those claims that do not present a “genuine issue as to any material fact,” and for which a jury trial would be an empty and unnecessary formality.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). It places the burden on the non-moving party to come forth with “affirmative evidence, beyond the allegations of the pleadings,” in support of its right to relief.
Pappas v. City of Lebanon,
III. Discussion
Camacho seeks summary judgment on the excessive force claim arising from the firing of his weapon. Camacho, along with DeHart, Losty, Nadzom, and Shaffer move for summary judgment on the state-created danger claim, and the city requests summary judgment on both the excessive force and state-created danger claims against it.
Brice maintains all claims subject to the instant motion pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
9
Section 1983 provides protection where official action causes a “deprivation of rights protected by the Constitution.”
Monell v. Dep’t of Soc. Svcs.,
A. Claims against the Individual Defendants
Brice claims that Camacho violated his Fourth Amendment right to be free from *510 excessive force when Camacho’s weapon discharged during the course of Brice’s arrest. He also maintains a state-created danger claim arising under the Fourteenth Amendment against Camacho and the other individual defendants.
1. Excessive Force Claim against Camacho
Every citizen has a Fourth Amendment right to be free from excessive force during lawful arrests.
See Kopec v. Tate,
This court has previously addressed the volition necessary for an excessive force claim. In Troublefield v. City of Harrisburg, the court considered the excessive force claim of a plaintiff accidentally shot by the officer arresting him. See id. at 162. The officer was on patrol alone and had drawn his sidearm during the course of the arrest. See id. at 161-62. He handcuffed the plaintiff and was returning the weapon to its holster when it accidently fired, shooting the plaintiff in the leg. See id. at 162. The plaintiff argued that the accidental discharge of the weapon warranted Fourth Amendment liability because the plaintiff was seized by the application of handcuffs when the firearm discharged. Id. at 166. This court rejected the plaintiffs argument, holding: “[S]ome nature of volitional act on the part of the state actor must cause the harm to plaintiff for a fourth amendment excessive force claim to sound. Negligence in pulling out a firearm or in reholstering it is not sufficient in this court’s view” to hold a defen *511 dant liable for an excessive force violation. Id.
Troublefield’s
holding relied upon
Dodd v. City of Norwich,
After rehearing, the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit held that the accidental shooting could not support an excessive force claim.
Id.
at 7-8. The shooting occurred as a result of the officer’s accidental and negligent acts, which, unlike intentional conduct, were insufficient to support constitutional recovery.
Id.
at 7 (“It makes little sense to apply a standard of reasonableness to an accident.”) It affirmed the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the officer because the plaintiff’s injury occurred entirely though the officer’s inadvertence.
Id.
at 8. During the years since
Dodd
and
Troublefield,
courts have consistently held that plaintiffs cannot predicate excessive force claims on accidental police shootings.
10
See, e.g., Pollino v. City of
*512
Phila.,
No. Civ. A. 03-6288,
*513
An excessive force claim may proceed to substantive analysis only after the excessive force plaintiff establishes a threshold volitional act. The substantive analysis then considers whether the officer’s use of force was reasonable under the circumstances of the arrest.
See Carswell v. Borough of Homestead,
In the case sub judice, Brice’s excessive force claim arises from police action responding to his flight from arrest. Officers approached him in the gym, and he sprinted out the rear door, dodged the armed Camacho, and continued to flee. Nadzom tacked him. Brice righted himself and continued his flight attempt. De-Hart, Losty, Nadzom, and Shaffer tackled him a second time. Camacho, without holstering his firearm, approached, grabbing him at the shoulder. The side of Camacho’s weapon brushed against Brice’s head. Brice testified that he believed this contact to be accidental. Nevertheless, Brice alleges that Camacho deliberately discharged the weapon only seconds after the accidental brush of the weapon to his head. Brice testified that he inferred this solely because Camacho failed to holster the gun before engaging Brice. 12 He affirmed that he had no other evidence supporting his allegation that Camacho volitionally fired the gun, and his filings in opposition to the motion for summary judgment have produced none.
The court finds that no reasonable jury could conclude that Camacho acted with volition based on Brice’s evidence. Brice’s inference of Camacho’s intentional conduct becomes strained in light of his avowed flight attempt and his admission that the contact between the weapon and his head seemed accidental. Its tenuousness only increases after considering Brice’s further admission that merely “seconds,” (Doc. 67, Ex. E at 60), passed between when Camacho initially grabbed hold of him and when the gun “just went off.” (Id.)
Moreover, no corroborating evidence exists to support Brice’s inference of intentional conduct. The record contains no evidence that, for example, Camacho threatened Brice with the gun after Brice exited the gym and ran away from him. Camacho never brandished the weapon at Brice when Camacho aided the other officers wrestling him to the ground, nor did Camacho menacingly jab Brice with it as he exerted force on Brice’s collar. The court concludes that, after evaluating the evidence in toto, even the most credulous *514 of reasonable jurors would be unable to believe that Camacho acted volitionally. 13
A plaintiff cannot maintain an excessive force against a defendant based upon the defendant’s non-volitional acts. Therefore, Brice cannot maintain an excessive force claim against Camacho for the firing of the weapon, and the motion for summary judgment will be granted. 14 Brice may continue to maintain his excessive force claim against Camacho insofar as it relies on Camacho’s volitional conduct during the course of the arrest, including Camacho’s volitional failure to reholster his weapon while struggling with Brice. 15
2. State-Created Danger Claim against All Individual Defendants
The Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause limits the state’s power to act but does not place an affirmative obligation upon the state to act; it does not guarantee “certain minimal levels of safety and security.”
DeShaney v. Winnebago County Dep’t of Soc. Servs.,
“Although the general rule is that the state has no affirmative obligation to protect its citizens from the violent acts of private individuals, courts have recognized [certain] exceptions to this rule.”
Morse v. Lower Merion Sch. Dist,
(1) the harm ultimately caused was foreseeable and fairly direct;
(2) a state actor acted with a degree of culpability that shocks the conscience;
(3) a relationship between the state and the plaintiff existed such that the plaintiff was a foreseeable victim of the defendant’s acts, or a member of a discrete class of persons subjected to the potential harm brought about by the state’s actions, as opposed to a member of the public in general; and
(4) a state actor affirmatively used his or her authority in a way that created a danger to the citizen or that rendered the citizen more vulnerable to danger than had the state not acted at all.
Bright v. Westmoreland County,
The state-created danger claim cannot be predicated upon the force used to arrest the plaintiff.
“[AJÜ
claims that law enforcement officers have used excessive force — deadly or not — in the course of an arrest, investigatory stop, or other ‘seizure’ of a free citizen should be analyzed under the Fourth Amendment and its ‘reasonableness’ standard, rather than under a ‘substantive due process’ approach.”
Graham v. Connor,
In the case sub judice, Brice’s state-created danger allegations proceed entirely from the force used to effectuate his arrest. 16 His summary judgment filings confirm that both the excessive force claim and the state-created danger claim rely on the same police conduct. Only an excessive force claim can rest upon police conduct during an arrest; 17 a state-creat *516 ed danger claim may not. Hence, summary judgment will be granted in favor of the individual officers on the state-created danger claim. 18 , 19
*517 B. The Municipal Liability Claim for Excessive Force 20
Municipalities and other local government entities may not be held liable under § 1983 for the acts of their employees under a theory of
respondeat superior
or vicarious liability.
Bd. of County Comm’rs v. Brown,
A policy is an official proclamation or edict of a municipality, while a custom is a practice that is “so permanent and well settled as to virtually constitute law.”
Beck v. City of Pittsburgh,
Municipal liability also requires the plaintiff to demonstrate that “‘there is a direct causal link between [the] municipal policy or custom and the alleged constitutional deprivation.’ ”
Brown v. Muhlenberg Twp.,
Brice alleges that the policies and customs of the York City Police Department *518 resulted in the individual defendants’ use of excessive force to arrest him. Brice advances two grounds for municipal liability. 21 First, he contends that the police department maintained a custom of inadequately investigating citizen complaints of excessive force. He argues that had it more thoroughly investigated complaints it would have discovered a pattern of unconstitutional conduct by its officers. It could have then remedied this problem, thereby preventing his constitutional injury. Second, he alleges that the department failed to adequately train and supervise the officers who arrested him and that, had it done so, his injury would not have occurred. The court will address these issues seriatim.
1. Failure to Investigate Citizen Complaints
A custom of failing to investigate citizen complaints may provide a basis for municipal liability if the “a policy-maker (1) had notice that a constitutional violation was likely to occur, and (2) acted with deliberate indifference to the risk.”
Hernandez v. Borough of Palisades Park Police Dep’t,
58 Fed-Appx. 909, 912 (3d Cir. 2003);
Beck v. City of Pittsburgh,
Beck v. City of Pittsburgh,
The complaint procedure in Beck failed to apprise city policymakers of the officer’s pattern of violent conduct because *519 internal investigations handled each 28 complaint as an isolated occurrence. Id. at 973. Complaints were never compared against one another to reveal patterns of problematic conduct. Id. Additionally, internal investigators discounted testimony of complainants and others associated with them, giving substantial weight only to the testimony of impartial observers, who were rarely present. Id. These and other systemic problems rendered the citizen complaint process “sterile and shallow,” incapable of either alerting policymakers to patterns of unconstitutional conduct or remedying constitutional violations once they occurred. Id. at 973-74. 22
In the present case, Brice contends that the city inadequately responded to a series of complaints involving allegations of excessive force during the four years preceding his arrest. He contends that a more thorough policy would have alerted the department to a pattern of excessive force that, if addressed, would have prevented his alleged constitutional injuries. Brice has produced nine complaints 23 of excessive force against police officers during the four years prior to his arrest. 24 (See Doc. 75, Ex. H.) DeHart, Losty, and Shaffer are each the subject of one complaint. (Id. at 24, 30, 33.) Camacho and Nadzom do not appear in any of the complaints. The complaint involving DeHart makes no excessive force allegation against DeHart, instead implicating another officer unrelated to the present case. The remaining forms collectively lodge no more than one allegation of potentially excessive force against each of the officers named therein. (See generally id. passim.) Two of the nine complaints are based on officers’ use of force to apprehend fleeing suspects. (See Doc. 75, Ex. H at 2, 31.)
Contrary to Brice’s assertions, the complaints do not present a pervasive pattern of constitutional violations by York City police officers. In
Beck,
citizens filed six complaints against a single police officer over a four-year period.
See Beck,
Further, Brice’s evidence about the complaint review process does not depict a “sterile and shallow ... investigation” procedure, as was the case in
Beck.
Inspector Follmer’s handling of the citizen complaint filed by Brice after his arrest verifies Arnold’s description of the complaint process. Follmer required all individual defendants in the present case to file written descriptions of the arrest on two separate occasions. (Doc. 65 ¶¶ 37, 44; Doc. 74 ¶¶ 37, 44.) He obtained an additional recorded statement from Camacho, and he met with Brice in prison twice to document his allegations. (Doc. 65 ¶¶ 38, 40, 43; Doc. 74 ¶¶38, 40, 43.) Follmer attempted to contact one of the two witnesses Brice listed on the complaint form but was unable to do so. (Doc. 65 ¶ 47; Doc. 74 ¶ 47.) He did not contact the other witness because she was not present behind the gym when the officers arrested Brice. (Doc. 65 ¶47; Doc. 74 ¶47.) Camacho was not disciplined for his actions during Brice’s arrest, 27 (see Doc. 75, Ex. B at 72), but Follmer testified that, in his experience, internal investigations have resulted in disciplinary action of York City police officers on several occasions during his tenure. 28 (Doc. 75, Ex. E, at 69.) Disciplinary actions against an officer are tracked in the officer’s permanent personnel files. 29
*521
These complaint review procedures do not create a “sterile and shallow” system of investigation in which “each complaint was insulated from other prior and similar complaints and treated in a vacuum.”
Beck,
Brice has produced a sundry of other alleged defects in the York City Police Department’s investigation policies, including the unexplained absence of several hundred complaint forms, the failure of the Inspectional Services Division to keep a discipline log independent of the records in officer’s personnel files, and the failure of supervisors to address the intricacies of the seven-page citizen complaint policy with Follmer upon his promotion to the position of Inspector of Internal Affairs. The police department also neglected to document the discharge of Camacho’s weapon after Brice’s arrest. Such evidence may demonstrate that the York City Police Department failed to adhere to the letter of its policies, but it simply does not rise to the level of deliberate indifference necessary for a violation of Fourth Amendment rights.
Additionally, Brice has failed to establish a “direct causal” link between these shortcomings and his constitutional injury.
Brown v. Muhlenberg Twp.,
*522
The court finds that no reasonable jury would conclude that the alleged inadequate investigation of complaints and other policy shortfalls were “closely related” to or directly caused Brice’s alleged injury.
Woloszyn,
2. Failure to Train
A local government entity may also be held liable for constitutional violations that result from its failure to train or supervise its employees. The failure must “amount[ ] to deliberate indifference to the constitutional rights of persons with whom the police come in contact.”
Colburn,
In the case sub judice, Brice alleges that the police department inadequately trained its employees because it failed to implement a behavior monitoring system to detect developing problems with officers’ personal and professional conduct. He invokes the city’s alleged incomplete investigation of citizen complaints to suggest that the department neglected to review use-of-force polices with officers after the filing of citizen complaints. 31 Finally, he contends that the mayor and city council are notified of officer misconduct only if it potentially warrants termination of employment. He suggests that these city policymakers therefore remain deliberately ignorant of police misconduct and deliberately indifferent to the need to train officers about police conduct guidelines.
The court finds that these allegations fail to support liability under a failure-to-train theory because they are not causally related to Brice’s constitutional injury. Brice has alleged that the city failed to implement a behavior monitoring system, but he has not adduced evidence that the officers arresting him repeatedly engaged in conduct that would have alerted city officials to the risk that they might use *523 excessive force to apprehend a fleeing suspect. His allegations regarding investigation of citizen complaints are similarly unavailing because the city’s investigative processes were not sufficiently inadequate to constitute deliberate indifference. See supra, Part III.B.1. More zealous investigation of citizen complaints would not have altered the intentional actions of the officers in this case, who were faced with the immediate need to apprehend a dangerous suspect known to engage in violent conduct to avoid arrest.
The police department’s disciplinary structure likewise undermines Brice’s failure-to-train allegations. Officers are disciplined under the policies promulgated by the police department that establish disciplinary procedures and enumerate rules of conduct. (Doc. 67, Ex. C at 46-52.) The chief of police is involved in administering discipline whenever an officer has committed an offense that warrants punishment of at least a one-day suspension. (See Doc. 75, Ex. G at 49-50 (stating that an entity known as the trial board reviews misconduct and submits disciplinary recommendations to the chief of police whenever an officer is charged with a third-level offense); Doc. 75, Ex. N § II.C (describing third-level offense as one punishable by suspension of between one and five days)). The mayor and city council become involved if the officer’s conduct could result in termination. (See Doc. 75, Ex. G at 51-52; Doc. 75, Ex. N § III.G.) Reasonable jurors could not conclude that correcting any of the alleged administrative shortcomings of the complaint and disciplinary policies would have altered the arrest-related conduct of the defendant officers faced with a potentially volatile situation.
A review of the training that the- city required of its police officers reinforces the conclusion that the city adequately trained its officers. The police department requires all officers to attend four months of training before joining the department, as mandated by state regulations. Aspiring officers focus on at least sixteen areas of police training, including the handling of firearms. See 37 Pa.Code § 203.51; (Doc. 65 ¶ 4; Doc. 74 ¶ 4). Officers must demonstrate proficiency with their police weapon by passing a qualification test that requires at least seventy-five percent of shots fired to accurately hit a target. See 37 Pa.Code § 203.11; (Doc. 75, Ex. B, at 59-60.) After completing this program, police officers undergo a training on the department’s various policies. (Doc. 75, Ex. B at 44.) Officers also participate in an initial twelve-week field training program, during which the officers cover various police shifts under supervision. (Doc. 65 ¶ 6; Doc. 74 ¶ 6.) All officers must complete mandatory annual in-service requirements and must demonstrate shooting proficiency on an annual basis. See 37 Pa.Code § 203.52(a) & (b)(1); (Doc. 65 ¶ 7; Doc. 67, Ex. C at 27; Doc. 74 ¶ 7). Members of specialized police units, including Camacho, receive additional training and must undergo more extensive firearm training. (Doc. 75, Ex. B at 59-61.) The department’s training program also permits officers to pursue bachelor’s and graduate degrees with a portion of the costs reimbursed by the department. (Doc. 65 ¶ 8; Doc. 74 ¶ 8.)
The court notes that compliance with mandatory state training requirements is not sufficient per se for a municipality to satisfy its training obligations.
See Hogan v. City of Easton,
No. Civ. A. 04-0759,
IV. Conclusion
Camacho did not violate Brice’s Fourth Amendment rights by accidently discharging his weapon, and none of the defendants infringed his right against state-created danger under the Fourteenth Amendment. To the extent that the intentional actions of the officers may have infringed Brice’s Fourth Amendment right to be free from excessive force, Brice has produced no policy or custom of the City of York that proximately caused his injury. The defendants’ motion for partial summary judgment will therefore be granted.
An appropriate order will issue.
ORDER
AND NOW, this 28th day of December, 2007, upon consideration of defendants’ motion for partial summary judgment (Doc. 68), and for the reasons set forth in the accompanying memorandum, it is hereby ORDERED that:
1. Defendants’ motion for partial summary judgment (Doc. 68) is GRANTED as follows:
*525 a. Summary judgment is GRANTED in favor of defendant Officer Camacho in his individual capacity on plaintiffs excessive force claim insofar as plaintiff predicates the claim upon the accidental discharge of Camacho’s weapon. 1
b. Summary judgment is GRANTED in favor of defendants Officer Camacho, Officer Scott Nadzom, Officer Shaffer, Officer Losty, and Officer DeHart in their individual capacities on plaintiffs state-created danger claim.
c. Summary judgment is GRANTED in favor of defendants Officer Camacho, Officer Scott Nadzom, Officer Shaffer, Officer Losty, and Officer DeHart in their official capacities on plaintiffs excessive force and state-created danger claims.
d. Summary judgment is GRANTED in favor of defendant City of York on plaintiffs claim of municipal liability for excessive force and state-created danger.
2. The Clerk of Court is directed to defer entry of judgment until the conclusion of this case.
3. A revised pretrial and trial schedule shall issue by future order of court.
Notes
. In accordance with the standard of review for a motion for summary judgment, the court will present the facts in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, the nonmoving party. See infra Part II.
. Brice testified that he fled because he was unsure whom the police were seeking:
Q. Did you think that the officers were there for you?
A. I didn’t know who they w[ere] there for....
Q. If you didn’t know who they were there for, why did you run?
A. Because they came running towards me, that’s why I ran.
(Doc. 75, Ex. A at 43.)
. Brice testified as follows:
Q. As you sit here today[,] you don’t know if it was accidental in the process of grabbing you with the gun out that it came in contact with your head?
A. I think it was accidental.
(Doc. 67, Ex. E at 59-60.)
. Brice testified as follows:
Q. How soon after he grabs — he meaning Camacho — grabs the left neck area of your shirt, how long after that does the gun discharge?
A. Seconds.
Q. Okay. I mean, is it just bang bang?
A. He grabbed me, hit my face, and' — • ssshht — it just went off.
(Doc. 67, Ex. E at 60.)
.Inspector William Follmer, the division's sole staff member at the time of the events of the instant case, referred to the division as Internal Affairs. (See Doc. 75, Ex. E at 5.)
. Brice was committed to the New York State Department of Correctional Services after the filing of the complaint. (See Doc. 79.) His transportation from New York to Pennsylvania could not be arranged in a manner that would have enabled him to comply with the originally established trial schedule. The case was stayed for the duration of his New York incarceration, a period of twelve months. (See Docs. 78, 79, 84.) Brice was then transferred to the custody of the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections. The court lifted the stay because Brice is now able to appear for proceedings. (Doc. 81, Ex. B; Doc. 84.)
. The claim for excessive force is not subject to the instant motion to the extent predicated upon the intentional conduct of the individual defendants. The assault and battery claims, which Brice maintains exclusively against the individual defendants, are also excluded from this motion.
.Defendants also seek summary judgment on state law assault and battery claims asserted against the city. (Doc. 64 at 18-20.) To the extent that the complaint alleges such a claim, Brice has stipulated that he maintains it only against the individual defendants rather than against the city. (Doc. 73 at 32 n. 23.) The court will therefore consider defendants’ motion on the municipal liability claim for assault and battery no further.
. Section 1983 provides, in relevant part, that Every person who, under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State or Territory or the District of Columbia, subjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States or other person within the jurisdiction thereof to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party injured in an action at law, suit in equity, or other proper proceeding for redress.... 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
. Brice has suggested that
Johnson v. City of Milwaukee,
Johnson is factually distinguishable. In contrast to the instant case, the officer in Johnson deliberately used his weapon as a means to strike plaintiff with the intent to apprehend him. The officer did not intend to discharge a bullet, but his use of the weapon was volitional. The Johnson court observed that the officer’s volitional use of the weapon to seize the plaintiff may have been sufficient to invoke the Fourth Amendment despite the accidental discharge of the weapon. The court noted:
[E]ven if the question was whether the shooting constituted a seizure, ... Johnson would have a strong argument under Brow-er that a seizure occurred. In Brower, the court said that the intentionality requirement was met when a person was stopped "by the very instrumentality set in motion or put in place in order to achieve that result.” Brower,489 U.S. at 599 ,109 S.Ct. 1378 .... In the present case, the instrumentality set in motion to effectuate the seizure was [the officer's] gun.
Johnson,
To the extent that
Johnson
reaches a result contrary to the holding in
Troublefield,
the court will apply the law as interpreted by its holding in the latter case. This outcome is appropriate in light of the Third Circuit's interpretation of
Brower,
under which excessive force recovery requires the officers’ action to demonstrate "objective intent ... to use force to effectuate a seizure.”
In re City of Phila.
*512
Litig.,
. These and other analogous cases evaluate the viability of excessive force claims by analyzing the volitional nature of the action upon which plaintiff alleges injury. Reviewing courts have denied recovery for accidental gunshots resulting both from confrontation between officers and a suspect and from officers' negligent conduct.
For example, in
Clark v. Buchko,
Similarly, in
Matthews v. City of Atlanta,
Courts have also disallowed recovery in cases involving negligent conduct by officers. In
Pollino v. City of Phila.,
No. Civ. A. OS-6288,
Glaseo v. Ballard,
These cases instruct that the desideratum of an excessive force claim is a volitional act. An accidental shooting by police fails to constitute a seizure as a matter of law and is therefore not compensable under the Fourth Amendment.
. At his deposition, Brice testified as follows: Q. Page 8 of your proposed amended complaint — ]you allege the Defendant Camacho deliberately and without warning discharged his firearm. What facts are known to you that support your claim that he deliberately did that?
A. Well, because he — because he never holstered his gun. He never holstered his gun. And [these are] my facts. He never holstered his gun. I’m pretty sure he knew he had his gun in his hand, and he still did what he did....
Q. Is there any other fact known to you that support your claim that that was done deliberately as opposed to accidently?
A. Well, no.
(Doc. 67, Ex. E at 184 (paragraph formatting altered from original).)
.The court's opinion should not be construed as an endorsement of Camacho’s conduct. To the contrary, Camacho’s actions placed Brice, passersby and Camacho’s fellow officers at a risk of fatal harm. Nevertheless, the court believes that cases such as Brower, Troublefield, Dodd, and others, see supra note 11 and accompanying text, counsel that a police officer’s discharge of a firearm must be volitional to subject the officer to a Fourth Amendment claim. The court recognizes that application of this standard may leave Brice without an effective remedy to vindicate his alleged wrongs; however, it is equally convinced that excessive force doctrine as presently developed dictates such a result. The court wishes to reiterate its observation in Troublefield, which stated:
In ... ruling [that no excessive force claim arises from the accidental discharge of a police weapon], the court notes that, in circumstances like those in the present [case], § 1983 jurisprudence at times dictates harsh results. However, it is clear that not every injury bom by a citizen at the hands of the government rises to the level of a constitutional violation. Such is the case here. The court will dismiss plaintiff's fourth amendment excessive force claim.
Troublefield,
. Having concluded that Brice suffered no constitutional injury arising from the accidental discharge of the firearm, his municipal liability claim likewise fails because there is no constitutional harm upon which to predicate recovery.
See Brown v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,
. The court notes that the defendants have not moved for summary judgment on the excessive force claim to the extent that it arises from any of the officers’ intentional conduct.
. Brice apparently confirmed the common factual bases of the two claims during his deposition. The parties have not attached the relevant excerpts to their summary judgment filings, but they agree that he testified to that effect. (See Doc. 65 ¶ 64; Doc. 74 ¶ 64.)
. Brice contends that this holding is inconsistent with the accidental discharge of Cama
*516
cho's weapon. He argues that the non-volitional gunshot was insufficient to effectuate a seizure of him, rendering the shooting outside the Fourth Amendment’s scope and therefore subject to the Fourteenth Amendment. Brice's contention is without merit. The Fourth Amendment applies to any conduct that occurs during "the course of an arrest.”
Graham,
Even were the court to assume,
arguendo,
that the state-created danger doctrine applied, granting summary judgment in favor of the officers would remain the appropriate disposition of the claim. The state-created danger doctrine requires conscience-shocking conduct by the defendant. Conduct that is conscience-shocking depends entirely on the individual circumstances of each case.
Estate of Smith,
In the instant case, reasonable jurors would agree that the officers’ conduct does not shock the conscience. Brice was fleeing arrest. Police tackled him on two separate occasions. A total of five police officers were involved in this task. These facts do not present a situation in which police could calmly reflect on various options before apprehending Brice. Rather, they present an exigent need to apprehend a known flight risk with a history of violent resistance. Camacho and the other officers were required to respond quickly as Brice resisted arrest. Camacho accidentally discharged his weapon as this intense situation unfolded. Assuming that Brice could properly maintain a state-created danger claim, granting summary judgment in favor of defendants would remain the proper disposition for the claim.
. In light of the court's finding that Brice suffered no deprivation of his Fourteenth Amendment right to be free of state-created danger, the court will also enter summary judgment in favor of the city on the state-created danger claim.
See Brown,
. The individual defendants seek entry of judgment on Brice’s excessive force and state-created danger claims against them in their official capacity. (Doc. 64 at 5-6.) Brice fails to offer any argument in response, stating that "such issue is more appropriately resolved at trial.” (Doc. 73 at 32 n. 23.) Brice has provided no legal support for his refusal to address the issue raised by defendants. Accordingly, the court concludes that he has abandoned this claim.
See D’Angio v. Borough of Nescopeck,
The court notes that claims against state officials in their official capacities merge as a matter of law with the municipality that employs them.
See Kentucky v. Graham,
. Plaintiff's claim alleging municipal liability is otherwise known as a
Monell
claim because the doctrine was established by the Supreme Court's decision in
Monell v. Department of Social Services,
. In light of the court's findings that the accidental shooting did not violate Brice's Fourth Amendment rights and that none of the defendants violated his right against state-created danger, Brice cannot maintain municipal liability claims on those grounds.
See Brown,
. In
Beck,
the Third Circuit addressed only whether a reasonable jury could have found that the city’s failure to implement meaningful complaint reporting systems constituted deliberate indifference to the risk of constitutional violations.
See
. These complaints are catalogued as Exhibit H in opposition to the motion for summary judgment. To facilitate citation to the exhibit, the court has consecutively numbered its pages 1 through 35 beginning with the first page of complaint form No. 920.
.Plaintiff has produced eleven separate complaints. However, complaint forms Nos. 1123 and 1125 have been completed by the same complainant and concern the same incident.
(See
Doc. 75, Ex. H at 3-13.) These two forms therefore constitute a single complaint. Complaint form No. 927 alleges that defendant Shaffer used profanity against the complainant.
(See id.
at 22.) The complainant does not aver any use of physical force.
(See id.)
The complaint does not allege conduct implicating constitutional injury, and the court will not consider it further.
See Todd v. Kyler,
No. 1:CV-05-1994,
. The incident arose when Camacho turned too sharply into a parking lot and struck a turnstile pole. (See Doc. 75, Ex. M.)
. Brice relies on the testimony of Follmer and Captain David Arnold to describe alleged inadequacies of the city's citizen complaint review procedure. Follmer was promoted to the Inspectional Services Division only two weeks before Brice’s arrest and did not participate in the investigation of the citizen complaints before then. (Compare Doc. 75, Ex. E at 5-6) (noting that Follmer became inspector of Internal Affairs on January 3, 2002); with Doc. 75, Ex. B at 12-13 (indicating that Brice was arrested on January 16, 2002). He also produced testimony of David Arnold, who has served as a York City Police Captain since 2003. (Doc. 67, Ex. C at 5.) Arnold does not participate in internal affairs investigations, but is familiar with them. (Doc. 75, Ex. G at 58-60.) Follmer and Arnold's testimony indicates that they are familiar with the police department’s practices investigating citizen complaints even though they did not participate in the investigations of the complaints used by Brice to assert his municipal liability claim.
. Camacho was not disciplined because the shooting was ruled accidental after completion of an investigation by the Inspectional Services Division. (Doc. 75, Ex. B, at 72). The record contains no indication that the other individual defendants were disciplined for their roles in Brice’s arrest.
. Follmer could not supply a precise number of officers whom had been disciplined, but he estimated the number to be fewer than ten during the two-and one-half years between Brice’s arrest and his deposition in the instant matter. (Doc. 75, Ex. E at 69.)
. Brice argues that none of the complaint forms filed during the years before his arrest indicate that they were investigated or re *521 solved as required under the citizen complaint policy. Each complaint form includes a detachable receipt upon which intake officers are to document the disposition of the complaint. (See Doc. 75, Ex. H at 1.) If the intake officer is unable to rectify the complaint, the receipt is to be given to the complainant and identifies additional steps that will be undertaken to investigate it. (Id.) None of the receipts on the nine complaints has been appropriately completed, and Brice contends that this confirms the inadequate investigation of citizen complaints.
The court does not agree. A review of the complaint form filed by Brice reveals that the receipt is not appropriately completed (see Doc. 75, Ex. U), but Follmer nevertheless performed a rigorous investigation into Brice’s arrest. Seven of the nine complaints prior to Brice's arrest contain indicia that they were investigated or forwarded to supervisors for further review. (See. Doc. 75, Ex. H at 1, 14, 16, 18, 26-27, 30, 32.) Brice testified that he knows of no occasion upon which the York City Police Department refused to investigate an excessive force complaint or found one to be valid and refused to take action. (Doc. 67, Ex. E at 176-177.) The court finds that, were reasonable jurors to review this evidence, they would be unpersuaded by Brice's argument that the failure to account for every jot and tittle on the complaint forms translates into deliberate indifference to the constitutional rights of citizens.
. Brice has introduced the report of an opinion witness that discusses the various inadequacies of the city’s policies regarding investigation of complaints and training of officers. (See Doc. 75, Ex. I.) The report also opines that these shortcomings produced Brice’s constitutional injury. Nevertheless, the court concludes that reasonable jurors would disagree with the report’s assertion that the city's policies and customs demonstrate deliberate indifference to Brice’s constitutional rights or that they proximately caused his alleged injuries.
. Brice also alleges that the police department’s failure to discipline Camacho because of the weapon discharge constituted a failure to train. Having found that the gunshot did not violate Brice's constitutional rights, the court declines to consider this position further.
See Brown,
. Brice analogizes
Jarlett v. Callis,
No. Civ. A. 00-3489,
The plaintiff filed a municipal liability claim against PHA predicated upon, inter alia, its failure to adequately investigate prior complaints of improper traffic stops and failure to train its officers about jurisdictional limitations. Id. at *3. The Eastern District denied PHA’s motion for summary judgment under both theories. Plaintiff supported the failure to investigate theory using evidence that PHA maintained no statistics on improper traffic stops by its officers. Id. at *8. It did not catalogue complaints, and thus was unable to determine how many complaints had been filed alleging similar violations by officers. Id. Proper jurisdictional limits were never reviewed with the officers who stopped plaintiff's vehicle, nor were notations of misconduct placed in their personnel files. Id.
Evidence supporting liability under the failure-to-train theory included the officers’ testimony that they had never been instructed about jurisdictional limits and learned jurisdictional parameters by reviewing PHA directives. Id. at *7. The PHA maintained no cumulative record of officers’ failure to adhere to jurisdictional limits, and its supervisors believed that non-jurisdictional stops would inevitably "happen.” Id. PHA never attempted to remedy its officers’ inadequate understanding of jurisdictional limits, and the plaintiff had therefore produced evidence that the failings of PHA’s policies and administration had directly caused his constitutional harm. Id.
Jarlett is not factually similar. In the matter sub judice, the York City Police Department has been proactive in the investigation of complaints and supervision of officers. The police department has also satisfied its obligation to train its officers. Further, the Jarlett plaintiff demonstrated that inadequate jurisdictional training and complaint investigation proximately caused the PHA officers to stop his vehicle outside their jurisdiction. In the- present case Brice has failed to demonstrate that the city’s alleged policy failings would have prevented the individual officers from using allegedly excessive force to arrest him. Jarlett, therefore, lends no assistance to plaintiff's cause.
. The instant order grants summary judgment on this claim only insofar as it arises from the accidental discharge of the weapon. It does not prevent plaintiff from seeking recovery based upon any volitional act by defendant Officer Camacho, including his volitional act of grasping of the weapon while apprehending plaintiff.
