ORDER
While being arrested by Oldham County police officers Richard Whittaker and Kevin Nuss, William Fultz suffered a broken neck. On June 12, 1998, Fultz filed suit
Fultz contends that we lack appellate jurisdiction. Whittaker’s appeal is interlocutory; he awaits trial on the two remaining claims before the district court. Normally 28 U.S.C. § 1291 bars our review of interlocutory appeals, but it provides an exception for assertions of qualified immunity. Mitchell v. Forsyth,
Although Whittaker pays lip-service to these boundaries, his legal arguments flout them. At issue are Whittaker’s actions both before and after Fultz allegedly kicked Nuss in the groin. The legal argument in Whittaker’s brief assumes that “no more than minimal force was used by Officer Whittaker ... before [Fultz] apparently kicked Nuss in the groin.” (Appellant’s Brief at 49) But the district court assumed that prior to Fultz’s kick, Whittaker might have restricted Fultz’s air supply-which obviously would have required more than minimal force. In justifying his actions following Fultz’s alleged kick, Whittaker asserts “that grabbing the [suspect] in some fashion and pulling them back away from your partner would be a proper police procedure.” (Appellant’s Brief at 42) But the district court’s decision assumed that Whittaker intentionally wrenched Fultz’s neck independent of any attempt to separate Fultz from Nuss.
Whittaker declined to make alternative legal arguments-based on the district court’s version of the facts-and has therefore waived any arguments that are within our appellate jurisdiction. See Booker v. GTE.net LEG,
