Case Information
*1 Before EDMONDSON, Chief Judge, ANDERSON and BIRCH, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM:
Plaintiff-Appellant Deloris Burkett (“Plaintiff”), appearing individually and as representative of the estate of her deceased son, Mark Burkett (“Burkett”), appeals the grant of summary judgment to Alachua County, Florida, the Sheriff of Alachua County (the “Sheriff”), and Alachua County Jail correctional officers sued in their individual capacity (the “Correctional Officers”) on her 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claim. No reversible error has been shown; we affirm.
We review de novo the grant of summary judgment. Info. Sys. & Networks
Corp. v. City of Atlanta,
Burkett was placed into a holding cell around 4 a.m.; and he banged on his cell door and shouted obscenities until around 8 a.m., when officers entered Burkett’s cell to take him to his first appearance before a judge. Officers ordered Burkett to lie down on the floor so that officers could handcuff him; but Burkett was unresponsive to this command. An officer then shot Burkett with a taser gun and handcuffed him. At his first appearance, Burkett continued to act strangely; and the presiding judge ordered that Burkett receive a mental health evaluation. The judge also ordered that a blood sample be taken from Burkett.
At approximately 12:00 p.m., Burkett received a shot to sedate him. At 3:00 p.m., officers and a nurse entered Burkett’s cell to draw blood from him. Burkett was still handcuffed and shackled at his legs. Burkett did not respond to an officer’s orders to lie down on the floor; so the officer grabbed Burkett by the arm. *4 Burkett became agitated, moved towards the officers, and began kicking his legs. During this altercation, the vials carried by the nurse into Burkett’s cell were knocked to the ground. Several officers wrestled Burkett to the floor, where he was held face down. An officer held a folded-up blanket up to Burkett’s head. [3] Burkett continued to resist being restrained by the officers. An officer used a stun gun against Burkett; and another officer administered “knee strikes” to Burkett’s outer thigh. Officers then placed Burkett into a “three-point restraint,” which linked the restraints around his wrists and ankles behind his back. After officers placed Burkett in the three-point restraint, the blanket was removed from the side of Burkett’s head. Burkett stopped moving; and medical help arrived at Burkett’s cell. The medical personnel asked that Burkett’s restraints be removed, which took up to two minutes. Burkett had stopped breathing; and medical personnel conducted CPR. Burkett was transferred to a hospital, where he later was pronounced dead. [4]
*5 Plaintiff asserts that the Correctional Officers violated the Fourth Amendment by using excessive force against Burkett in an attempt to receive a blood sample from him. Plaintiff also argues that the Correctional Officers [5]
violated the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment by acting with deliberate indifference to Burkett’s mental health. About this claim, Plaintiff [6]
argues that the Correctional Officers ignored Burkett’s medical needs by applying a taser gun to him, injecting him with a sedative, and physically restraining him. In addition, Plaintiff contends that Alachua County and the Sheriff failed to train officers or to implement policies on how to handle mentally ill detainees and on *6 the appropriate use of force, which resulted in deliberate indifference to Burkett’s rights.
“Qualified immunity offers complete protection for government officials
sued in their individual capacities if their conduct does not violate clearly
established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would
have known.” Vinyard v. Wilson,
We begin with Plaintiff’s Fourth Amendment claim. To determine if
excessive force was used, we “ask whether a reasonable officer would believe that
[the] level of force [was] necessary in the situation at hand.” Lee,
Here, considering Burkett’s agitation when officers entered his cell to draw blood along with his demonstration of an altered mental state and earlier aggression that included biting an officer, an officer could have believed that the force used was reasonably necessary. When officers were in Burkett’s cell for the blood test, Burkett became aggressive; and several officers were needed to restrain him. The Correctional Officers were required to make an instant decision about how to keep Burkett under control and how to secure a blood sample from him. We do not believe that the Correctional Officers applied excessive force in violation of the Fourth Amendment.
We turn to Plaintiff’s Fourteenth Amendment (Due Process) claim. To
prevail on this claim, Plaintiff must prove that Burkett had an objective medical
need and that a government official acted with deliberate indifference to that need.
See Bozeman v. Orum,
Because the Correctional Officers’ conduct did not cause Burkett to suffer a
constitutional deprivation, we need not decide whether the Correctional Officers
were entitled to qualified immunity. See Saucier v. Katz,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
[1] According to Plaintiff’s complaint, Burkett “had exhibited unusual behavior throughout the day, including detachment, irrationality and other behaviors consistent with mental and emotional instabilities.”
[2] Because Burkett had engaged in a physical struggle with the officers who picked him up from Plaintiff’s home, including biting one of them, the judge ordered that Burkett receive an HIV test.
[3] One officer testified that the blanket was used to prevent Burkett from biting an officer. Although another officer in Burkett’s cell testified that he did not remember seeing a blanket used against Burkett, because we construe the facts in the light most favorable to Plaintiff, we will assume that a blanket was held up to Burkett’s head.
[4] Experts disagreed about the cause of Burkett’s death. One expert concluded that Burkett’s death was the result of traumatic brain injury; and another expert determined that Burkett died as a result of “acute exhaustive mania,” which occurs in schizophrenic patients who experience “agitation, paranoid delusion and combative behavior followed by cardiovascular collapse and death when efforts are made to restrain them.” The latter expert noted that schizophrenia runs in Burkett’s family. We construe this conflicting evidence in the light most favorable to Plaintiff.
[5] “Claims involving the mistreatment of arrestees or pretrial detainees in custody are governed by
the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause,” and require a showing of deliberate indifference
to a substantial risk of serious harm. Cottrell v. Caldwell,
[6] Claims of deliberate indifference to a serious medical need of a pretrial detainee, such as Burkett,
are governed by the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause instead of the Eighth
Amendment’s Cruel and Unusual Punishment Clause, which applies to similar claims by convicted
prisoners. See Lancaster v. Monroe County, Ala.,
[7] In her reply brief, Plaintiff challenges -- for the first time on appeal -- the district court’s grant
of summary judgment to Defendants on her state law claims for wrongful death. Because Plaintiff
did not raise this issue in her initial brief, we decline to consider it. See United States v. Whitesell,
