Jerred Graves was killed when he lost control of his vehicle while trying to elude police officer Josh Ford at night on country roads at very high rates of speed. His parents, Delise and Jerry Graves, brought an action against Ford and Police Chief Kermit Thomas of the Haskell, Oklahoma Police Department, both individually and in their official capacities, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983. They claim Officer Ford’s deliberate and unwarranted initiation of a high speed chase resulting in Jerred’s death was a violation of Jerred’s Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights. The district court concluded no constitutional violation occurred and granted summary judgment in favor of all defendants. Exercising jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we AFFIRM.
I. Standard of Review
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo. Dubbs v. Head Start, Inc.,
In response to the Graves’ claims against them in their individual capacities, Officer Ford and Chief Thomas asserted a defense of qualified immunity. This defense shields government officials performing discretionary functions from liability “if their conduct does not violate clearly established rights of which a reasonable government official would have known.”
Perez v. Unified Gov’t of Wyandotte County/Kansas City, Kan.,
The Graves’ claim against Officer Ford and Chief Thomas in their official capacities is actually a claim against the town of Haskell (Haskell). They allege Haskell’s failure to adequately train and discipline Officer Ford contributed to his eagerness to engage in the high-speed chase. However, as a municipality, Has-kell will not be held liable under § 1983 solely because its employees inflicted injury.
Monell v. Dep’t of Social Servs. of the City of New York,
II. Background
Haskell, Oklahoma, is a small town of approximately 2,000 people. On November 6, 2000, Josh Ford was hired as a police officer upon the recommendation of Police Chief Thomas. Officer Ford was CLEET certified at the time he was hired and had previously worked as a. deputy sheriff for the Muskogee County Sheriffs Office. 1 Not long after Ford began working as a patrolman, some of the citizens of Haskell became concerned with his zealous enforcement of Haskell’s traffic laws. In particular, some parents of the local youth complained that Officer Ford was harassing the teenagers in town by following them with his headlights off and engaging *1219 in high-speed chases outside his jurisdiction. 2 Paradoxically, the record is devoid of any evidence of parental attempts to restrain their teenagеrs.
It appears one of Officer Ford’s favorite targets was Charles Ginn (Ginn), Jerred Graves’ best friend. Ginn drove his mother’s 1996 silver Firebird with the license plate “LORRI.” On at least three previous occasions, Ginn and Officer Ford engaged in a car chase which resulted in Ginn outrunning the police officer. At one point, Officer Ford informed Jerred and Ginn, “I’m going to get you, one way or the other.” (Appx. at 198-99.)
After learning of Officer Ford’s proclivity to engage in pursuit of Haskell’s young people, Haskell Reserve Police Chief, Dallas Mathews, told Officer Ford to stop chasing the kids. He advised Officer Ford to chase them for a short time, let them go and wait until they came back to town to handle any traffic infraction which may have occurred. Mathews testified he gave this advice shortly before April 2, 2001. In addition, Mr. Graves testified Chief Thomas stated shortly after Jerred’s death that Chief Thomas had “told [Officer Ford] not to chase those boys, that he could get them when they came back to town. If they’ve got a ticket coming, to give it to them, or call their parents.... [Officer Ford] just didn’t listen to [me].” (Appx. at 230).
At approximately 11 p.m. on April 2, 2001, Jerred and Ginn were on their way home from a friend’s house. Ginn was driving his mother’s silver Firebird and Jerred was driving an identical Firebird owned by his friend, Kari Beede, with the license plate “KJS-CAR.” According to Ginn, he pulled over to the side of the road and Jarred pulled up beside him. Ginn told Jarred to turn his lights off because Ginn was late getting home. Jerred complied and the two cars continued down the road with Jerred in the lead until just before Ginn’s driveway. At that point, Officer Ford pulled around Ginn and behind Jerred with his lights off. 3 Officer Ford then turned on his overhead lights. Jerred took off and Officer Ford pursued him. Ginn followed them to the city limits and turned around.
According to Officer Ford, he immediately radioed the Muskogee Sheriff’s Office informing dispatch he was in pursuit. The Sheriff Office’s log sheet indicates that Officer Ford reported he was in pursuit of a car with the license plate “LORRI.” Ford chased Jerred to a point where the highway curved and intersected a dirt road. Jerred continued down the dirt road, kicking up a dust trail which slowed Ford. By the time Ford got to the end of the dirt rоad where it again intersected with the paved highway, he had lost track of Jerred. He shut off his engine, lights and siren and rolled down the window to listen for the sound of tires. (Appx. at 186-87.) When he heard the sound of a speeding car to the north, he restarted his car and equipment and headed north.
In the meantime, Jerred was approaching an intersection with his lights off at a speed estimated at over 100 miles an hour. Unable to see Jerred’s unlit car, a white truck pulled out and turned north-bound on the highway. Coming from behind, *1220 Jerred swerved to avoid the truck, lost control, overcorrected and hit an obstacle on the other side of the highway. His car went airborne, flipped and rolled into a field. The occupants of the white truck and a second vehicle pulled to the side of the road to give assistance. Officer Ford arrived shortly thereafter and called for rescue. Jerred was life-flighted to St. John Medical Center in Tulsa, where he died on April 3, 2001.
Although the Haskell Police Department had a pursuit policy, Officer Ford admitted he had never read it. Officеr Ford had, however, taken a “Law Enforcement Driver Training” course during his CLEET training. Officer Ford resigned from the Haskell Police Department on April 24, 2001.
The Graves filed a complaint on October 25, 2004, alleging violations of the Fourth Amendment, the Fourteenth Amendment and the failure to provide adequate training and/or supervision. Officer Ford and Chief Thomas filed motions for summary judgment. Both asserted qualified immunity, arguing no constitutional violation occurred. The district court determined the Graves’ Fourth Amendment claim was precluded by established precedent. 4 The court further concluded Ford’s behavior was not arbitrary and the facts did not shock the conscience of the court, thereby negating the Graves’ Fourteenth Amendment substantive due process claim and warranting summary judgment in Ford’s favor. The district court then granted summary judgment to Chief Thomas and Haskell because they had no liability in the absence of a violation of Jerred’s constitutional rights. This timely appeal followed.
III. Discussion
The Graves challenge only the district court’s conclusion that they failed to raise a mаterial issue of fact as to whether the actions of Officer Ford and, in turn, Chief Thomas and Haskell, violated Jerred’s substantive due process rights under the Fourteenth Amendment.
The Fourteenth Amendment provides that no person shall be deprived of "life, liberty, or property, without due process of law." U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 1. "[T]he touchstone of due process is protection of the individual against arbitrary action of government . whether the fault lies in a denial of fundamental procedural fairness or in the exercise of powеr without any reasonable justification in the service of a legitimate governmental objective." Lewis,
“The ‘ultimate’ standard for determining whether there has been a substantive due process violation is whether the challenged government action shocks the conscience of federal judges.”
Moore,
The Supreme Court’s decision in
Lewis
is the starting point when considering a substantive due prоcess claim resulting from a highspeed chase. In
Lewis
a California patrolman pursued two teens on a motorcycle when they refused to heed his command to stop.
Acknоwledging substantive due process may apply to situations where an executive abuse of power has occurred, even though there was no seizure, the Court nevertheless concluded the facts in
Lewis
did not establish the required intent.
Id.
at 836,
Lems
recognized actions demonstrating the level of culpability required in substantive due process claims must be considered in the context of the claim, saying, “[d]elib-erate indifference that shocks in one environment may not be so patently egregious in another, and our concern with preserving the constitutional proportions of substantive due process demands an exact analysis of circumstances before any abuse of power is condemned as conscience shocking.”
Id.
at 850,
The Graves allege the district court ignored the most critical question of fact in this case — Officer Ford’s motive in attempting to stop Jerred. The Graves point to Ginn’s testimony denying Jerred had been driving recklessly prior to the stop 5 and the evidence of Ford’s predilec *1222 tion to “harass” the teenagers, especially Ginn, by following them with his headlights off and engаging them in high-speed chases. They highlight Officer Ford’s alleged statement that he was “going to get” Jerred and Ginn “one way or the other” and the inference that Officer Ford actually thought he was chasing Ginn when he reported the wrong license plate to the Muskogee Sheriffs dispatch. The Graves contend this evidence is sufficient for a jury to infer the attempted traffic stop was intentionally designed to induce a high speed chase, demonstrating Officer Ford’s intent to harm and/or worsen Jerred’s legal plight.' They also maintain Jerred’s lаter legal violations cannot legitimize such pursuit because he was merely exercising his common-law right to resist an unlawful arrest. As a result, the Graves argue the district court erred in requiring they show both the requisite intent and that Officer Ford’s actions rose to a level which “shocks the conscience.” An “exact analysis” of the Graves’ claims reveals two separate decisions at issue here&emdash;the decision to attempt a traffic stop and the decision to engage in pursuit.
A. The Decision to Make a Traffic Stop
Although it seems a bit farfetched, for the purpоse of summary judgment we will assume a jury could believe Officer Ford’s testimony that Jerred did not turn his lights off until Officer Ford pulled behind him, but not credit Officer Ford’s testimony about Jerred’s reckless driving before the stop. So construed, the decision to pull behind Jerred and turn on overhead lights was a product of actual deliberation thus triggering a deliberate indifference analysis of Ford’s mental state (looking for a purpose to cause harm unrelated to the legitimate object of arrest). However, even assuming Ford was deliberately indifferеnt to Jerred’s Fourteenth Amendment rights in attempting a traffic stop, his actions are not conscience shocking.
Contrary to the Graves’ contention, a culpable mental state, alone, is insufficient to establish a violation of substantive due process.
Lewis,
The cоnduct resulting from Ford’s presumed culpable state of mind was merely to pull up behind Jerred and turn on his overhead lights, nothing more. Jerred knew Ford was acting as a police officer and nothing in the record suggests the traffic stop placed Jerred in fear for his physical well-being.
Cf. Checki v. Webb,
*1223
B. The Decision to Engage in Pursidt
The decision to pursue Jerred is squarely within the territory explored in
Lewis.
As in
Lewis,
Officer Ford was faced with an unexplained flight from an attempted traffic stop. Therefore, the Graves must show Officer Ford’s reaction was motivated by “a purpose to cause harm unrelated to the legitimate object of arrest” or worsen Jerred’s legal plight,
Lewis,
Ginn’s testified: “[a]nd [Ford] flipped his top lights on Jerred. And they went out of town.” (Appx. at 206.) Because Ginn very carefully avoided any discussion of Jerred’s specific conduct after Officer Ford turned on his overhead lights, Ford’s testimony is undisputed. Ford said Jerred drove off without headlights at a “high rate of speed” prior to pursuit. (Appx. at 118.) Thus, the undisputed evidence demonstrates Jerred was in the proсess of violating traffic laws and eluding a police officer at the time Ford initiated pursuit. The district court considered the pursuit justified. Jerred supplied, in spades, a “legitimate object of arrest” and the record fails to legitimately suggest an intent of Ford to cause harm unrelated to the arrest.
The Graves take issue with the district court’s conclusion that pursuit was justified, arguing Jerred’s actions were acceptable efforts to resist Officer Ford’s attempt to make an unlawful arrest and, given his legitimate resistance, pursuit wаs not justified. Assuming, arguendo, that the Graves’ conclusion (officer may not give chase) logically follows the premise (juvenile’s attempt to elude police by engaging in illegal conduct is permissible), their justifications for Jerred’s decision to elude Ford via reckless and high-speed flight falls short. We begin by noting a routine traffic stop is not equivalent to an arrest.
United States v. Bradford,
We do not think it desirable, even as a policy matter, to stretch the Fourth Amendment beyond its words and beyond the meaning of arrest.... Street pursuits always place the рublic at some risk, and compliance with police orders to stop should therefore be encouraged. Only a few of those orders, we must presume, will be without adequate basis, and since the addressee has no ready means of identifying the deficient ones it almost invariably is the responsible course to comply.
Hodari D.,
Even if the Oklahoma courts would extend the common-law right to resist an unlawful arrest to a traffic stop, Jerred’s actions fell outside the parameters of lawful resistance. The right to resist is limited to “such force as [is] absolutely necessary to resist an attempted illegal arrest.”
Bad Elk v. United States,
The Graves also gеnerally assert evidence of Officer Ford’s intent to “worsen [Jerred’s] legal plight.” Assuming (without conceding) this argument was adequately raised, we find the Eighth Circuit’s reasoning in Slusarchuk v. Hoff persuasive:
We decline to read the term expansively, as [the Graves] urge, because every police pursuit is intended to “worsen [the] legal plight” of the suspect by arresting him. Thus, a broad reading would eviscerate the intent-to-harm standard ..., at least in part, to sharply limit substantive due process liability. Rather, we construe the term as applying only to a narrow category of pursuits that reflect a conscience-shocking motive beyond the realm of legitimate government action but do not involve an intent to inflict physical harm. The pursuit in this case reflects no such motive.
The Graves also argue the district court erred in granting summary judgment to Chief Thomas and Haskell. “A supervisor who is sued in his or her personal capacity is entitled to invoke the defense of qualified immunity.”
Hinton v. City of Elwood, Kan.,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. "CLEET” is the acronym for Oklahoma's "Council on Law Enforcement Education and Training,” which cеrtifies the mandatory education for Oklahoma law enforcement officers. Officer Ford was employed with the Muskogee County Sheriffs Office from July 26, 1999, through November 3, 2000. He completed his CLEET training on September 7, 2000.
. Lori McVay, Charles Ginn’s mother, testified that she and her husband complained to Chief Thomas about this harassment of the local boys. Her husband told Chief Thomas: "This is going to keep on and, you know, one of these boys [is] going to get killed. Something is going to happen.” (Appx. at 384-85.)
. Officer Ford claims he pulled behind Jerred's vehicle beсause he observed it ... "spinning [] in three 360-degree circles.” (Appx. at 118.) Because Ford’s version of the events is at odds with that of the Graves we presume the Graves’ version is correct for summary judgment analysis.
.
California v. Hodari D.,
. Ginn testified:
I pulled over to the side of the road, and Jerred pulled next to me. I told him to turn his lights out because I was late getting home. And then he went on right — he went on. Right before we got to Mom’s driveway here comefs] Josh [Officer Ford] around me with his lights off and got right on Jerred, and flipped his top lights on Jerred.
(Appx. at 206.) Thus, according to Ginn, Jerred was driving on the street at approximately 11 p.m. with his lights out in violation of 47 Okla. Stat. § 12-201 (1961) (all vehicles on a public road must display lights "[a]t any time from one-half (1/2) hour after sunset to *1222 one-half (1/2) hour before sunrise, also referred to in this chapter as nighttime."). Officer Ford, however, stated Jerred extinguished his lights immediately after Officer Ford turned on his overhead lights. (Appx. at 118).
. The Graves attempt to shroud Ford's statement with malevolent intent. A more benign interpretation is at least as plausible&emdash;Ford hoped to catch and arrest Jerred and Ginn in the commission of criminal acts (traffic laws included). Even assuming Ford wanted to provoke Jerred into a reckless, high speed attempt to elude him, that is not enough. It is also necessary that Ford intended (or, at least, that it was highly probable, bordering on certainty) for Jerred to be harmed in the process. On this record it stretches credulity beyond elastic limits to infer so much from those words.
. Oklahoma recognizes a common-law right to resist arrest, but differentiates between аn attempted arrest and an investigatory detention.
See Castellano v. State,
.
See also, Brown v, City of Oklahoma City, Okla.,
. The only testimony on this point is Officer Ford's. In his deposition, he was asked if, at the time he attempted to stop Jerred, he intended to give him a ticket for reckless driving which Jerred could have paid and gone . on. Ford replied in the affirmative. (Appx. at 184.)
