ORDER DENYING DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
Dеfendants Joshua Eagle and Elton Robertson (collectively, Defendants) move for summary judgment. (Doc. 83.) Plaintiff Harry J. Coles, a prisoner proceeding pro se, alleges that Eagle and Robertson used excessive force during his arrest on April 24, 2007. 1 Defendants argue that they are entitled to qualified immunity. The Motion is brought pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56. After careful consideration of the entire record herein, the court finds that Defendants are not entitled to qualified immunity, and DENIES the Motion for Summary Judgment.
I. SUMMARY OF FACTS
On April 24, 2007, at approximately 2:48 a.m., Coles was driving a silver Nissan on Kapiolani Boulevard, in Honolulu. Eagle, who was then a Police Officer with the Honolulu Police Department (“HPD”), noticed Coles weaving between lanes several times and then slow to approximately two miles per hour. Eagle searched the Nissan’s license plate number in his patrol car’s mobile data computer (“MDC”), which revealed that the Nissan had been reported stolen. Eagle verified this with HPD Dispatch, then activated his emergency lights, indicating that Coles should pull over.
Rather than pull immediately to the side of the road, Coles entered a nearby parking lot and drove to its far corner where there wаs an exit onto Makaloa Street. The exit was blocked by concrete barriers, however, and Coles stopped the car behind them. Eagle parked his patrol car in back of Coles’s car to prevent Coles from backing up. Eagle ordered Coles to keep his hands in sight and to get out of the car several times. When Coles did not comply, Eagle tried to open the door and discovered that it would not open.
Coles says that he was concerned for his safety during this late-night traffic stop because he is African-American. Coles claims that he put his hands on the steering wheel to allow Eagle to clearly see them, and kept them their throughout the ensuing altercation. Defendants dispute this, stating that Coles made furtive, reaching motions near the left side of the driver’s seat numerous times. At the October 25 hearing on this motion, Coles conceded that he did in fact move his hand from the steering wheel to the driver’s side door area several times.
Robertson arrived at the parking lot to assist Eagle in what he believed was a high risk traffic stop involving a stolen car. When he arrived, Robertson saw Eagle standing outside of Coles’s car repeatedly ordering Coles to keep his hands visible and get out of the car. Robertson says that he also told Coles to keep his hands visible, and that Coles initially complied, but later removed his left hand from the steering wheel and appeared to be searching under the driver’s seat. Robertson then drew his gun. All parties agree that Coles said several times that the car door would not open.
Eagle then broke the driver-side window with his baton and Defendants began pulling Coles through the window. Defendants claim that Coles vigorously resisted, hooking his leg around the steering wheel *1094 column, shouting obscenities, and keeping his left hand out of sight. Defendants ordered Coles to stop resisting and get out of the car. Defendants noticed a strong odor of alcohol on Coles’s breath and coming from the car during this altercation. Eagle saw a bottle that appeared to be 1/4 full of clear liquid between Coles’s legs. This bottle was recovered and determined to contain alcohol.
After Eagle broke the window, Coles claims that Eagle beat him about the face, head, and neck, eventually pulling Coles from the car by his clothes and hair. Eagle admits that he struck Coles’s upper torso with his knee twice, but asserts that he did so only to force Coles to release the steering column.
Coles claims that, once he was out of the car, Defendants threw him on the ground and “repeatedly kicked [him] in the ribs, body, face and head.” (Comp., Doc. 1 at 8.) Coles asserts that Eagle continued to beat him with the baton, while “Robertson fell on [him] with his knee, in the middle of his back, and remained there while Off. Eagle struck [him] in the head with his baton and then handcuffed him. Prior to being handcuffed, the officers tore off his blood spattered shirt and pants and left him in his underw[ea]r.” (Id.)
Eagle and Robertson deny they beat Coles. Defendants claim they used only the amount of force necessary to “place[Coles] on the ground next to the vehicle ... and to place Coles’ hands behind his back” so they could handcuff him. (Doc. 84-2 at ¶ 12, Robertson Dec.) Coles does not allege that either officer continued to beat him once he was handcuffed.
After Coles was out of the car and handcuffed, Robertson checked the driver-side door and determined that it was working properly, including the door locks and alarm system. At approximately 2:52 a.m., four minutes after Eagle first noticed Coles, Eagle arrested Coles for the unauthorized control of a propelled vehicle, driving without a license, possessing an open container of alcohol in the car, and on an outstanding criminal contempt warrant. 2
The owner of the car was summoned to the parking lot, where he identified his car and stated that he did not know Coles and had not given him permission to use the car. Coles complained of facial pain and was taken twice to The Queen’s Medical Center (QMC) by Officer Michael Hisatake. In his Complaint, Coles alleged that QMC emergency room personnel refused to treat him becausе he was African-American and in police custody. 3 Although neither party submitted QMC’s records regarding Coles’ two visits to the emergency room on April 24, 2007, Eagle’s incident report, which was completed four hours after Coles’s arrest, states that QMC personnel refused to treat Coles because he “was too disorderly to treat.” 4 (Doc. 127-5 at 2, Pl. Separate & Concise Statement.).
*1095 II. LEGAL STANDARDS
A. Summary Judgment
Summary judgment is appropriate if the papers show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). A "genuine issue" exists if there is a sufficient evidentiary basis on which a reasonable jury could find fоr the nonmoving party.
See Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
If the nonmoving party "fails to make a showing sufficient to establish the existence of an element essential to that party’s case, and on which that party will bear the burden of proof at trial," summary judgment may be entered.
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
B. Qualified Immunity
“Qualified immunity entitles [police officers] not to stand trial or face the other burdens of litigation’ on [a constitutional] claim, provided their conduct did not violate a clearly established federal right."
Brooks v. City of Seattle,
Any genuine issues of material fact concerning the underlying facts of whаt the officer knew or what the officer did are questions of fact for the jury.
Acosta v. City and County of San Francisco,
III. DISCUSSION
Coles alleges that Defendants’ actions constitute excessive force in violation of the U.S. Constitution. Defendants argue that under the circumstances present at the time of the arrest, their use of force was reasonable.
A. Excessive Force Standard
An excessive force claim arising in the context of a traffic stop and arrest is “most properly characterized as one invoking the protections of the Fourth Amendment.”
Graham v. Connor,
The right to employ "some degree of physical coercion or threat thereof" to effect an arrest accompanies the right to make the arrest or investigatory stop,
id.
at 396,
“Because [the excessive force inquiry] nearly always requires a jury to sift through disputed factual contentions, and to draw inferences therefrom, ... summary judgment or judgment as a matter of law in excessive force cases should be granted sparingly.”
Santos v. Gates,
*1097 B. Amount of Force Used
The court must “first assess the quantum of force used and then measure the governmental interests at stake by evaluating a range of factors.”
Davis v. City of Las Vegas,
The undisputed facts show that Defendants pulled Coles out of a broken car window after he refused to open the door and exit the car, all the while asserting that the car door would not open. Eagle admits that he kneed Coles twice during this removal, to distract and force Coles to release his hold on the steering column. Defendants wrestled Coles to the ground and restrained him facedown while they applied handcuffs. Coles claims that during this struggle his shirt and pants were torn off, both Defendants hit and kicked him, and Robertson fell on Coles’s back while attempting to apply the handcuffs. Once the handcuffs were in place, however, Coles does not allege that Defendants exerted further force.
There is no dispute that HPD took Coles to the hospital twice, but he received no treatment either time. Defendants say Coles refused treatment, but as noted above, Eagle’s police report states that medical personnel refused to treat Coles because he was too disruptive. (Doc. 127-5 at 2.) Coles alleges that the hospital refused to treat him because he is African-American and was in poliсe custody. Neither party, however, submitted the hospital reports of Coles’s two visits to the emergency room on April 24, 2007, which might have clarified this issue.
Coles claims that he
received extensive injuries to his face, head, hands, arms and body due to the assault. He has lost several teeth, has recurring migraine headaches and has lost full use of his neck and left hand. His left arm and three fingers on his left hand are numb and he has been told that he has extensive nerve damage due to a spinal injury. Furthermore, he has continued to relive the experience by having recurring nightmares. As a result, he has had to seek professional help and is currently taking medication to deal with the emotional stress of the incident.
(Compl. Doc. 1 at 7; Opp’n. Doc. 116-5 at 5.) In his Concise Statement of Facts, filed more than two and a half years after the Complaint, Coles also alleges that his wrist was broken.
Coles submits: (1) an HPD incident report prepared three hours after the incident, stating that Coles had a bloody nose and had “refused treatment.” (Doc. 116-3 at 4, Pl.’s Opp’n., Exs.); (2) his prison health reports, dated September 2008 until June 2010, showing that he is being treated for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (See Doc. 119.); and (3) an emergency room report from the Casa Grande Regional Medical Center, dated August 27, 2009, showing that Coles had pain and tingling in his right hand, arm, neck and shoulder, although it does not indicate the cause for this pain or the visit to the emergency room. (See Doc. 116-5 at 2, Pl. Opp’n.) These documents, without more, are not dispositive of what Coles’s physical injuries were on the date he was arrested.
Accepting Coles’s non-conclusory statements as true and resolving all differences in his favor, this court finds that the amount of force used to pull Coles from
*1098
the car and used against thereafter, while less than deadly, was significant and certainly morе than a minimal use of force.
See Brooks,
C. The Graham Factors
Whether Defendants’ use of force was reasonable under the Fourth Amendment in light of the other circumstances surrounding the arrest is the next inquiry.
See Miller v. Clark County,
1. The Severity of the Crime
Eagle initially noticed Coles because Coles was weaving in and out of lanes and was driving extremely slowly. (Eagle Decl.) Coles explains his somewhat erratic driving by stating that “Kapiolani Blvd. and Ke[e]amoku Street is a historic and notorious area of nightclubs and night-life activities.” (PL Opp’n. at 1.) Eagle checked the Nissan’s license plate number on his MDC, learning that the car been reported stolen. (Eagle Decl. ¶ 5.) Eagle verified this with HPD dispatch, and thereafter indicated that Coles should pull over.
Coles claims that Eagle’s statement is unverifiable, unsubstantiated hearsay because MDC reports are unrecorded. Coles argues that it is implausible that Eagle had time to call HPD dispatch to verify the MDC report before he pulled Coles over, and alleges that Eagle received confirmation that the car was stolen only after he had arrested Coles, suggesting that Eagle did not know that a serious crime was being committed when he pulled Coles over. In support of this theory, Coles initially submitted only the second page of an HPD Incident Recall sheet pertaining to Coles’s arrest on April 24, 2007, showing dispatch calls from 3:03 a.m. to 4:02 a.m., eleven minutes after Coles was arrested. (Pl. Opp’n, Doc. 116-3, p. 2.) One notation, entered at 3:07 a.m., states: “ * * * * NJN343 2004 NISS 2DR SIL/HPO7160498/SC: 1651 ALA MOANA BLVD.” Id. This cryptic note refers to the car that Coles was driving, which was reported stolen from 1651 Ala Moana Boulevard.
After the hearing, however, Coles submitted the first page of the Incident report, which shows that Eagle requested HPD Dispatch to check the car’s license number at 2:49 a.m., immediately after noticing Coles and presumably after he had checked the MDC. This undercuts Coles’s contention that Eagle was unaware that the vehicle was stolen when he initiated the traffic stop. Nor does Coles explain why Robertson believed that he was proceeding to a high risk traffic stop, for a “stolen vehicle type of case,” if Eagle had not already reported that he was stopping an individual in a suspected stolen car. (Doc. 84-3, Robertson Decl. ¶ 3.).
Coles’s bare assertions about what Eagle knew when he pulled him over, or how the MDC works, or whether an MDC has recordable data that is now or ever was available, 5 or how long it takes an officer to verify the MDC’s information are not supported by supported facts or even a showing that Coles is qualified to provide such “evidence.” Instead, Coles claims these facts as true in a vacuum, without swearing to or even signing his claims under *1099 penalty of perjury, in an attempt to present a disputed issue of material fact.
“Conclusory [summary judgment] affidavits that do not affirmatively show personal knowledge of specific facts are insufficient."
Casey v. Lewis,
Eagle thus had probable cause to believe that Coles was committing a felony when he pulled Coles over: thе unauthorized control of a propelled vehicle.
See
HRS § 708-836 (defined as a class C felony). “[T]he government has an undeniable legitimate interest in apprehending criminal suspects, and that interest is even stronger when the criminal is ... suspected of a felony, which is by definition a crime deemed serious by the state. This factor strongly favors the government.”
Miller,
2. Whether Coles Posed an Immediate Threat to the Safety of Defendants or Others
The threat posed is the most significant
Graham
factor to consider.
See Brooks,
It is undisputed that Coles: (1) had been driving erratically in a stolen car at 2:50 in the morning; (2) refused to pull over on the street when signaled, instead driving to the back exit of a parking lot; (3) refused to get out of the car when ordered to do so; (4) remained in the car with the keys, while Defendants were on foot; (5) moved his hands out of Defendants’ sight several times (while he claims he attempted to open the car door); and (6) smelled of alcohol (when Eagle broke the car window). Even assuming that Coles’s movement of his hands out of the officers’ sight was to repeatedly search for the car door handle, the officers had no way of knowing that was what Coles was doing. It was therefore eminently reasonable for Eagle and Robertson to be concerned that Coles possessed a weapon and could reach for it in seconds while he remained in the car. Clearly, the scene was not safe until Coles was out of the car and under Defendants’ control.
Once Coles was out of the car, however, and Defendants had him on the ground, on his stomach, with both hands visible, weap *1100 onless, the threat was significantly diminished. While this factor weighs in favor of Defendants until Coles was removed from the car, it weighs in favor of Coles once he was on the ground, being subdued by two armed police officers, at least one whom was kneeling on Coles’s back.
3. Whether Coles was Actively Resisting Arrest or Attempting to Evade Arrest by Flight.
It is undisputed that Coles did not pull over immediately when Eagle signaled. Instead, Coles turned into a parking lot and proceeded to its farthest corner where there was an alternate, albeit blocked, exit. Coles says he pulled into the lot for safety, rather than block the street, but does not explain why he continued to the Makaloa Street exit at the back of the lot, even though he says the concrete barriers were clearly visible. This suggests that Coles was attempting to flee.
Moreover, although Coles claims that he could not open the car door, there is no dispute that the door and lock operated perfectly when Robertson checked them immediately after the arrest. This supports a finding that Coles simply refused to leave the car when ordered to do so. While Coles’s resistance “may not have been violent or aggressive, those aspects are more relevant to the second
Graham
factor, leaving the fact of [his] resistance.”
Brooks,
D. Availability of Alternative Methods
The court should also look to “the availability of alternative methods of capturing or subduing a suspect” in evaluating the totality of the circumstances in excessive force inquiries.
Davis,
It is uncertain what alternatives were available. It was late at night, Coles was in a stolen car, he was driving and behaving erratically, he fаiled to pull over immediately, he refused to open the door and surrender, his hands were not always visible, and when the window was broken both police officers smelled alcohol. The situation was rapidly becoming highly-charged. Simply because Coles stopped the car, turned it off, initially placed his hands on the steering wheel, and was not overtly aggressive does not mean that Coles had no weapon or was under Defendants’ control. Although Coles was in fact unarmed, Defendants had no way of knowing this at the time they pulled him from the car.
Waiting for more police to arrive does not seem sensible under the circumstances, nor would that have likely precipitated a different result. It is well established that police officers’ safety concerns justify requiring a driver to exit his vehicle.
See Pennsylvania v. Mimms,
*1101 E. Totality of the Circumstances
The court is mindful that it must not employ hindsight but must evaluate the officers’ conduсt from the “perspective of a reasonable officer on the scene.”
Graham,
Although the question is close, however, on this record, the court cannot conclude that the officers’ use of force once Coles was removed from the car was reasonable. Coles alleges that: “Once out of the car, Coles was thrown on the ground where Off. Robertson and Eagle repeatedly kicked Coles in the ribs, body, face and head. Also, Off. Eagle continued to beat Coles with his baton. Off. Robertson then fell on Coles with his knee, in the middle of his back, and remained there while Off. Eagle struck Coles in the head with his baton and then handcuffed him. Prior to being handcuffed, the officers tore off his blood spattered shirt and pants and left him in his underware.” (Compl. Doc. 1, at 8.)
Defendants dispute this version of the facts, stating that they used only the amount of force necessary to “place [Coles] on the ground next to the vehicle ... [and to] place Coles’ hands behind his back as Coles was continuing to resist being placed in handcuffs.” (Doс. 84-3, Robertson Dec. at ¶ 12.) Defendants claim that Coles strenuously resisted their efforts to handcuff him, yelling profanities and hooking his legs on the steering wheel to prevent them from pulling him from the car. Defendants concede, however, that once Coles was out of the vehicle his hands were fully visible.
(See id.,
¶ 11.) It is therefore unclear whether Defendants had control over Coles once he was pulled from the car.
See Headwaters Forest Def,
This scenario presents a classic case of dispute over what actually occurred, raising a genuine issue of material fact about the nature and duration of the force applied once Coles was out of the car. “[I]f an excessive force claim turns on which of two conflicting stories best captures what happened on the street,
Graham [v. Con-nor]
will not permit summary judgment in favor of the defendant official.”
Saucier,
F. Defendants’ Subjective Intentions Are Irrelevant
Because the issue may arise later, the court addresses Coles’s argument that, because the Honolulu Police Commission disciplined Eagle for two incidents that occurred months after Coles’s arrest, for using excessive force and discourtesy-profanity, Eagle’s subjective intent should be *1102 considered in evaluating whether Defendants used excessive force against him. (See Doc. 116-2, 2-7, HPD disciplinary-reports.).
In
Whren v. United States,
IV. CONCLUSION
Summary judgment in excessive force cases is granted sparingly, and it is not justified here. Plaintiff has raised a triable issuе of material fact on whether Defendants’ conduct was objectively reasonable after they pulled him from his car before they arrested him. Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment is DENIED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Although Defendants argue against a state law claim for false arrest, Coles concedes that he is not asserting a state law claim for false arrest nor seeking supplemental jurisdiction for such a claim. The court therefore does not address this argument.
. Coles was convicted of Unauthorized Control of Propelled Vehicle, in violation of Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS) § 708-836 (Supp. 2008), and Possessing Intoxicating Liquor While Operating Motor Vehicle, in violation of HRS § 291-3.1(b) (2007 Repl.).
See State v. Coles,
120 Hawai’i 417,
. The court dismissed Coles’s claims against Hisatake, QMC, and Dr. Matthew Ng on August 27, 2009,
.Coles submits his prison medical records, dated from September 2008 until June 2010, to support his injury claims. They do not reference treatment Coles received (or refused) immediately after his arrest or during the following year and a half. (See Doc. 120, Pl. Exhs.)
. Coles also provides Robertson’s incident report, completed at 6:45 a.m. on the day of the arrest, which suggests that there is or was a record of Eagle’s MDC check on the Nissan. (See Doc. 116-4, Pl.'s Concise Statement of Facts and Opp'n.) (referring to Officer EAGLE’S follow up ... and attached MDC 192 A).
