*945 MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Marcus Gregory (“Gregory”) has filed a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (“Section 1983”) action against the City of Waukegan (“City”) and three officers in the narcotics division of its Police Department (“Department”): Jon Oliver (“Oliver”), Scott Chastain (“Chastain”) and Gabriel Guzman (“Guzman”). Gregory charges that he was deprived of his constitutional rights under the Fourth Amendment 1 in having been (1) falsely arrested and also subjected to (2) excessive force, (3) abuse of process in withholding exculpatory information and (4) abuse of process in pressuring him to be an informant.
All defendants have collectively filed a Fed.R.Civ.P. (“Rule”) 56 summary judgment motion, and they and Gregory have complied with this District Court’s related LR 56.1. 2 For the reasons set forth in this memorandum opinion and order, defendants’ motion for summary judgment:
1. as to the false arrest claim is granted in part and denied in part,
2. as to the excessive force claim is denied in its entirety and
3. and 4. as to both abuse of process claims is granted.
Summary Judgment Standards
Familiar Rule 56 principles impose on parties moving for summary judgment the burden of establishing the lack of a genuine issue of material fact
(Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
A genuine- issue of triable fact exists only if “the evidence is such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving party.”
As with any summary judgment motion, this Court accepts nonmovant Gregory’s version of any disputed facts, but only so long as it is supported by record evidence. 3 What follows in the Facts section is culled from the parties’ submissions.
Facts
City maintаins an informal policy that allows its police officers to recruit infor *946 mants to assist its narcotics division by providing “street intelligence” or “performing controlled drug buys” (G.Add.St. ¶ 4). As an informant, the arrestee can “work off charges” in exchange for confidential informant work (id. ¶ 9). Although there are no written guidelines for that practice, recruiting informants in exchange for “working off charges” is common in the Department (id. ¶ 10). At times police officers choose not to process an arrest until after they have tried to get helpful information from the arrestee (id. ¶ 11). Even when charges are processed, police will allow some arrestees to work off minor charges in exchange for assistance (id.). In the case of severe felony charges, where the State’s Attorney alone can drop or downgrade charges, a police recommendation will invariably result in reduced charges if the arrestee cooperates with the police (id.).
Members of the Department stopped Gregory numerous times during mid-1998 and solicited him (without success) to become an informant (G.Add.St-¶ 14). When Gregory again refused to become an informant on August 25, 1998, Chastain and Officer Thomas Granger (“Granger”) issued four tickets charging him with traffic violations (id. ¶ 16). Three days later, when Chastain, Granger and Guzman stopped Gregory for another traffic violation, Guzman noted cocaine in plain view in the car (id. ¶¶ 17-18). One of the officers told Gregory hе was under arrest for possession of cocaine (id. ¶ 18). But before the arrest was processed, Guzman offered not to do so if Gregory would agree to serve as a drug informant (id. ¶ 19). Once more Gregory refused the offer (id.). Although Gregory claims that the officers singled him out for recruitment (id. ¶ 14), he also acknowledges that defendants’ actions were not limited to him, but were part of an effort to catch “bigger fish” such as drug dealers (id. ¶ 12).
Gregory was charged with possession of cocaine for the August 28, 1998 incident (G.Add.St-¶ 20). During the bench trial the prosecutor stated that Guzman and Chastain had found a rock of crack cocaine in the car’s back seat (G. Ex. 10 at 3-5) and that a woman of an unknown identity was present in the front seat (id. at 3-4). That information is contradicted by testimony givеn by Granger, who said that the cocaine was on the front seat and located near the female passenger (G.Add.St.l 18). Additionally, Granger’s knowledge differed from those of other officers in that he knew the name of the female passenger, Beverly Dixon (id.). Gregory was acquitted by the trial judge, who found there was insufficient evidence to show that he knowingly possessed the drugs (D.St^ 11).
On November 5, 1998 Gregory visited his cousin Stan McNulty at 580 S. Genes-see Street (D.St.113). After consuming a little alcohol there, Gregory left the premises to use a pay telephone (G.Add.StJ 21). While he was gone, Guzman, Oliver, Chas-tain, Granger and other City police officers executed a valid search warrant that authorized them to search the residence and а woman named Leola at the residence (D. St. ¶ 12; G. Ex. 2 at 58). When Gregory returned to the house, he saw that a door had been broken by a battering ram (G. Exs. 1 at 39 and 4 at 39-40). Gregory was approached by Guzman (G. Ex. 4 at 45-46), who — although he knew nothing about Gregory (id. at 37) — insisted that Gregory enter the house (G. Ex. 1 at 39-40). Although Gregory wanted to leave and said he would return to visit his cousin Stan later (G.Add.St^ 24), instead he entered the house at Guzman’s continued insistence (id. ¶ 25).
Once Gregory was inside the house, Guzman searched him and found a crack pipe (G.Add.St^ 25). Although Guzman *947 claimed Gregory had consented to being searched (G. Ex. 4 at 40), Gregory says he did not consent to be searched and acceded only after intimidation by Guzman (G.Add.StV 25). After the crack pipe was found, Gregory was arrested and handcuffed for possession of drug paraphernalia. In the midst of the arrest, Gregory fell with Guzman onto a couch in the living room of the house (G. Ex. 1 at 49). Once there, Gregory was beaten by a stick and punched repeatedly by Guzman and Chas-tain (id. at 48-49), though no visible injuries resulted from the beatings (id. at 49).
Gregory was handcuffed and raised to a standing position by Oliver (id. at 50). According to defendants, Gregory then attempted to kick Guzman (D.St.1i'19), and Oliver responded by pulling Gregory down by the handcuffs (G. Ex. 2 at 81). In Gregory’s contrasting version (which is credited here), he was being asked to sit down when Oliver violently kicked his feet out from under him (G.Add.StV 28). Gregory’s foot was caught beneath the couch, breaking his ankle (id.).
That entire episode resulted in • police charges being instituted against Gregory for resisting arrest and pоssession of drug equipment, both misdemeanors (G.Ex. 7). Ultimately Gregory pleaded guilty to charges of aggravated assault (a felony) and resisting arrest (D.St-¶ 21).
Qualified Immunity
Because all three officer defendants claim protection against all of Gregory’s claims under the mantle of qualified immunity, a brief rehearsal of the principles of that doctrine is in order before the claims are examined individually. ’Although the review of the doctrine at the'current summary judgment stage of the proceedings cannot serve the goal of
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
To that end the contours of Fourth Amendment protection against the use of excessive force are of course well developed. And whether such force violates a “clearly established” right is a function of “whether it would be clear to a reasonable official that his conduct was unlawful in the situation he confronted”
(Saucier,
That then provides the matrix for one phase of the examination of each of Gregory’s claims. This opinion turns to a seria-tim consideration of the individual claims.
Count One: False Arrest
Although Amended Complaint (“Complaint”) Count One is labeled “False Arrest” (suggesting a state-law-based claim),, it properly draws on the Fourth Amendment by describing the onset of the November 5, 1998 incident: Gregory’s inability to leave when confronted by Guzman, followed by Gregory’s commanded entry into the house.
4
But before that situation is addressed, any claim based on the August 28, 1998 arrest is readily dis
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patched by reason of the two-year statute of limitations applicable to Illinois-based Section 1983 claims
(Mitchell v. Donchin,
To return to the events of November 5, 1998, it is plain that Gregory reasonably “believed that he was not free to leave”
(United States v. Mendenhall,
That meets not only the Fourth Amendment’s “seizure” standard but also the required test of its unreasonableness. To be sure, the officers had a warrant based on probable cause to seаrch the house at which Gregory arrived while the warrant was being executed (D.StJ26). But such a warrant does not automatically extend to all persons who may come on the scene subject to the warrant.
Ybarra v. Illinois,
Here defendants have provided no evidence of any probable cause for their November 5 seizure of Gregory. Their assertion that Gregory consented to a search (G. Ex. 4 at 40) is trumped for Rule 56 purposes by Gregory’s statements that he did not consent, but acceded only after intimidation by Guzman (GAdd.St^ 25). Nor have defendants pointed to any facts suggesting probable cause to believe Gregory was involved in drug activity or other illegal action that would justify Guzman’s search. 5 Gregory was not the owner or *949 even an occupant of the proрerty subject to the search warrant, but merely a social visitor who arrived after the warrant was executed (D.St-¶¶ 12-14). Indeed, Guzman acknowledged that he did not know anything about Gregory when he insisted that Gregory enter the house (G. Ex. 4 at 37). Consequently there was simply no warrant (in either sense of that word) for Gregory’s seizure. 6
Nor is any problem posed here by the second prong of the
Saucier
test: whether the constitutional right was clearly established (Saucier;
But as to City, the long-established
Monell
requirements require not only that Gregory prove
7
the deprivation of a federal right (as he has) but also that it flowed from an express municipal policy or custom or the deliberаte act of a decisionmaker with final policy-making authority for City (see, e.g.,
Ienco v. City of Chicago,
Count Two: Use of Excessive Force
Just as with the Count One claim, Gregory’s excessive force claim is measured against the Fourth Amendment’s unreasonable seizures yardstick
(Graham v. Connor,
As for “objective reasonableness,” any officers’ actions are assessed “in light of the facts and circumstances confronting them, without regard to their underlying intent or motivation”
(Graham,
requires careful attention to the facts and circumstances of each particular case, including the severity of the crime at issue, whether the suspect poses an immediate threat to the safety of the officers or others, and whether he is actively resisting arrest or attempting to evade arrest by flight.
In that respect, “[n]ot every push or shove, even if it may later seem unnecessary in the peace of a judge’s chambers, violates the Fourth Amendment”
(id.
(internal quo
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tation marks and citation omitted)). When police officers encounter a rapidly evolving situation, they are entitled tо graduate their response to meet the demands of the circumstances confronting them
(id.
at 396-97,
Saucier,
It is first important to note that even though Gregory later entered a guilty plea to charges of aggravated assault and resisting arrest (G.St-¶ 21), the officers’ charges at the time of the inсident were merely the misdemeanors of resisting arrest and possession of drug equipment (G.Ex. 7). In light of that minor offense characterization (which defendants can hardly label as objectively unreasonable), the first Graham factor of “the severity of the crime at issue” cuts against the reasonableness of the force portrayed by Gregory.
Next Graham calls for examination of whether Gregory posed an immediate threat to the safety of officers or others. As to Gregory’s charge that he was the victim of a leg sweep, whether he was already handcuffed (G.Add.SO 28) or was instead actively resisting arrest when the fall occurred (D.St-¶¶ 19-20) is a question of material fact that is very much in dispute. Even when it is assumed that Gregory’s attemptеd kick, identified in the aggravated assault conviction (G.St-¶ 21), had placed Guzman “in reasonable apprehension of receiving a battery,” 8 it is unclear when the kick at Guzman occurred. For Rule 56 purposes this Court must credit Gregory’s version that the leg sweep happened only during a request for him to sit down (G.Add.SO 28), rather than defendants’ position that the injury occurred simultaneously with Gregory’s kick toward Guzman (G. Ex. 2 at 78). That then eliminates (for now) any Gregory-damaging resolution of the “immediate threat” factor.
As for the last Graham-identified question (whether Gregory was actively resisting arrest when he was subjected to the alleged excessive force), that is not answered by his guilty plea to the resisting-arrest charge (D.St-¶ 21). Remember that aсcording to Gregory he was subjected to the excessive force (the leg sweep) after he had been handcuffed (G.Add.StJ 28), which had taken place while he was resisting arrest by struggling on the couch with Guzman (G. Ex. 4 at 26). Hence Gregory’s currently-accepted version is that he had been subdued and was not actively resisting arrest when the leg sweep occurred.
In total, then, the alleged excessive force related to the leg sweep plainly survives summary judgment scrutiny on the first phase of the Saucier formulation. As the ensuing discussion shows, the other physical harms that Gregory sustained (the beatings to which he was subjected during the handcuffing process) might pose a closer question — although the ultimate answer proves to be the same.
*951
In that respect Gregory acknowledges (1) that the beatings occurred while the officers were trying to handcuff him and place him under arrest for misdemeanor possession of drug paraphernalia (G. Ex. 1 at 48-50) and (2) that he pleaded guilty to resisting arrest during that period (G.Add. St-¶ 21). That might tend to cut against a finding of excessive force in
Graham
terms. But it is scarcely conclusive — such cases as
O’Leary v. Luongo,
Further, while the absence of any visible injuries is clearly relevant to the determination whether the use of force is constitutionally excessive, it does not preordain the outcome
(McNair v. Coffey,
The Fourth Amendment protects against unreasonable seizures, not seizures that “shock the conscience” or cause “severe injuries.” If, under the totality of circumstances, a police officer unreasonably seizes a person by using excessive force, he has violated that person’s Fourth Amendment rights. The objectively unreasonable seizure itself (regardless of the officer’s motive or whether any injury inflicted was severe) crosses the constitutional threshold.
So although the issue is closer, it must be concluded that the other aspect of the physical harms sustained by Gregory — the punches and beatings — also implicate factual disputes that preclude summary judgment on the first phase of the
Saucier
inquiry. No resolution of those disputes, or of the disputes as to. the leg sweep, are permissible at this Rule 56 stage
(Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
That being so, it is hardly necessary to dwell on
Saucier’s
second test for qualified immunity: whether the particular violation of that constitutional right in this case is clearly established, as a matter of law, as a cоnstitutional violation (
But defendant officers claim to have another string to their summary judgment bow: D. Mem. 7 contends that
Heck v. Humphrey,
But that suggested one-to-one correlation between (1) a conviction for resisting arrest or aggravated assault and (2) the absence of a viable claim of excessive force is simply nonexistent. It is apparent that in some instances a Section 1983 claim does not contradict the events that resulted in a plaintiffs convictions — two obvious examples would be an officer’s unjustified imposition of excessive force in an overreaction to an arrestee’s assault,
11
or the imposition of excessive force after the event that lеd to a resisting-arrest conviction (in the latter respect, see, e.g.,
Simmons v. Sheahan,
No. 94 C 549,
In this instance Gregory’s factual statement provides a plausible scenario that would not invalidate the resisting arrest and aggravated assault convictions, based on the fact that his own actions had preceded the imposition of excessive force. And Gregory’s version of events could also allow his convictions to coexist with his excessive force claim on the premise that the excessive force was improperly disproportionate to Gregory’s offenses of conviction.
As for the resisting arrest conviction, it was based on a charge “in that the defendant struggled with Officer Gabriel Guzman while being handcuffed” (G. Ex. 13 at 3). Because Gregory says he was handcuffed before the leg sweep (G.Add.St. ¶ 28), the conviction for resisting arrest would not be invalidated by a Section 1983 excessive force claim because of the lack of contemporaneousness.
Although the beating of Gregory’s face and body (G.Add.St^ 28) occurred while Gregory was being handcuffed (G. Ex. 1 at 47-51), it does not follow that a finding of excessive force would automatically invalidate the conviction for resisting arrest. Force was likely necessary to handcuff Gregory while he was resisting arrest, but there is surely a need for a factual determination as to whether the beatings with fists and sticks was or was not necessary to effect the arrest.
As for the aggravated assault cоnviction, it was based on a charge that Gregory “knowingly kicked at Gabriel Guzman, thereby placing Gabriel Guzman in reasonable apprehension of receiving a battery” (G. Ex. 13 at 4). As with the other conviction, Gregory’s excessive force claim would not necessarily invalidate it for the same two reasons.
In temporal terms, the conviction does not place the attempted kick at a specific time during the incident. Although Oliver’s testimony has it occurring simulta *953 neously with the injury (G. Ex. 2 at 81), the leg sweep could have occurred after the aggravated assault and would thus not at all contradict the conviction.
On the other branch of the analysis, it is obvious that the conviction of aggravated assault for an аttempted kick would not necessarily preclude an excessive force claim. Both the leg sweep and the beating sustained by Gregory could constitute excessive force, not at all the reaction of a reasonable officer at the scene, without disturbing the determination that Gregory had committed an assault.
Because it is exceedingly plain that Gregory’s convictions for resisting arrest and aggravated assault would not necessarily be invalidated by his claims of excessive force, Heck does not bar those claims. And so, at last, defendants’ motion for the summary dismissal of Gregory’s excessive force claims is denied.
Count Three: Abuse of Process
Gregory asks that his original claim of “malicious prosecution” be recharacterized for Section 1983 purposes as a claim of abuse of process under the Fourteenth Amendment’s guaranty of procedural due process (G.Ans.Mem.15). In that respect Gregory says that the police failed to tell the prosecutor exculpatory evidence that would have prevented his prosecution on drug charges (id.), more specifically that the prosecutor did not testify to the contradictory recollections among the three police officers as to the location of the crack cocaine found in the August 28, 1998 traffic stop (G.Add.StJ 20). Even were that purported scenario to be credited (more on this later), it would not suffice to show a violаtion of a constitutional right.
It is true that withholding material exculpatory evidence from a prosecutor is a constitutional tort that threatens an individual’s right to a fair trial
(Newsome v. McCabe,
Whether or not Gregory made a
Brady
request to the prosecutors, in this instance the officers’ purported failure to turn over potentially exculpatory evidence would not have violated Gregory’s constitutional rights because that evidence was not material in
Brady
terms — that is, there was no reasonable probability that the result of the proceeding would have been different if the evidence had been disclosed to the defense
(United States v. Jackson,
But as hinted at earlier, the supposed scenario that has served as the basis for the just completed discussion — and rejection — of this abuse of process claim is unsound on the record tendered to this Court. For one thing, even though Gregory’s claim depends on the premise that the nondisclosure of Granger’s version of events operated to his detriment, the record reflects no effort oh his part to inquire whether the prosecutor would have instituted proceedings if she had been provided with that information. Nothing stood in *954 the way of his making that inquiry through the discovery process, and his failure to do so does not reasonably entitle him to a favorable inference.
Indeed, and even more damaging, Gregory does not really show (in the Rule 56 sense) that the officers withheld information from the prosecutor. Gregory instead seeks to deduce a constitutional violation from the discrepancy between the prоsecutor’s description during Gregory’s bench trial of the Guzman and Chastain testimony and the different version voiced by Granger, which was not given to Gregory’s counsel or to the trial judge. But for aught that appears, that may well have been the result of the prosecutor’s decision, rather than of the officers’ having withheld the information from the prosecutor. 12 Yet Gregory also failed to inquire into that topic through the discovery process, and once again he is disentitled to a favorable inference' now.
Relatedly, that same difficulty confronts any possible argument that Gregory was compelled to undergo a prosecution that would not have been brought if the prosecutor had known the contested location of the cocaine and the identity of the female passenger. As just discussed, any such contention suffers from the failure to support a reasonable inference of the prosecutor’s lack of knowledge. But even were that not the case, Gregory has also proffered nothing to support even an inference that the assertedly undisclosed information would have caused the prosecutor not to prosecute Gregory. After all, the uncontested evidence was that police officers located a rock of crack cocaine in Gregory’s car (G.St-¶ 9).
Finally, even though Complaint ¶ 23 also attempts to lay this claim at City’s doorstep, nothing is advаnced that even suggests that the charged conduct reflects City’s policy, custom or usage. Hence it is entitled to summary judgment on Monell grounds.
All of that being so, Gregory has failed to create a factual dispute that enables him to survive the summary judgment motion as to his Count Three claim. So the motion to dismiss the claim of abuse of process for withholding exculpatory evidence is granted.
Count Four: Abuse of Process
Count Four, after incorporating by reference the allegations of the earlier counts, states the gravamen of Gregory’s remaining abuse of process claim in Complaint ¶¶ 26 and 27:
26. Defendants Oliver, Chastain and Guzman, acting maliciously and without justification, caused the bringing of a suit against Plaintiff not in order to vindicate legal rights and obtain а judgment but in order to intimidate Plaintiff and for other improper purposes, and thereby deprived Plaintiff of rights secured by the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.
27. This deprivation of rights was caused by an official policy, custom or usage of the City of Waukegan.
Then by way of argument to flesh out that claim, Gregory accuses City of having a pattern and practice of making pretextual arrests to pressure otherwise unwilling ar-restees into serving as informants (G.Ans.Mem.17). According to Gregory, City targets individuals for arrest not to enforce the laws, but rather to use arrests as a bargaining chip to “persuade the ar-restee to become an informant” (id.).
*955 But then, after having asserted without caselaw support that аn effort to enlist Gregory as an informant based on the charges brought against him arising out of the August 28, 1998 arrest violated his constitutional rights, 13 Gregory disregards the very statute of limitations issue discussed as to Count One. Gregory’s claim focuses on the conduct of Oliver, Chastain and Guzman on August 28, 1998: their asserted threats to process charges against Gregory if he failed to become an informant. Because that conduct occurred more than two years before this action was filed, any claim grounded on that conduct is also barred by the statute of limitations for all Illinois-based Section 1983 claims.
What did take place during the two-year period that preceded the institution of this lawsuit, however, was the State’s Attorney’s decision to prosecute the charges and to proceed to trial-and of course the trial itself. And in turn, the only actions that the officers could have taken during that time frame that might implicate a constitutional violation would have been the same alleged failure to provide exculpatory information that served as the basis of Count Three.
There is obviously no need to repeat the analysis set out in the preceding section of this opinion: This potential aspect of Count Four must share the same fate as Count Three. For the identical reasons that caused Count Three’s dismissal, the only non-time-barred conduct sought to be ascribed to the officers also cannot be the basis оf a viable Section 1983 claim.
Conclusion
As stated at the outset, the presence or absence of genuine material facts as to Gregory’s several claims has led to a mixed bag of results in Rule 56 terms:
1. As to Gregory’s Count One claim of unreasonable seizure due to his arrest, Guzman’s motion is denied, while all other defendants are entitled to a judgment as a matter of law and are dismissed.
2. As to Gregory’s Count Two claim of unreasonable seizure in the form of excessive force, the officers’ motion is denied in its entirety.
3 and 4. As to Gregory’s Count Three and Four claims of abuse of process, all defendants are entitled to a judgment as a matter of law and are dismissed.
Because the surviving claims must go to trial, this action is set for a status hearing at 8:45 a.m. October 25, 2002 to discuss the further procedures and time table toward that end.
Notes
. As always, this opinion adheres to the conventional and convenient (though technically imprecise) practice of referring to the underlying Bill of Rights provision (which of course imposes limitations only on the federal government) rather than to the Fourteenth Amendment (which applies to state actors and has been construed to embody such Bill of Rights guaranties).
. LR 56.1 is designed to facilitate the resolution of Rule 56 motions by calling for evi-dentiary statements and responses (in each instance with record citations), thus highlighting the existence or nonexistence of factual disputes. This opinion cites to defendants' LR 56.1(a)(3) statement as "D. St. ¶ — ,” while Gregory’s responses are cited as "G. Resp. St. ¶ — ” and his LR 56.1(b)(3)(B) statement of additional facts is cited as "G. Add. St. ¶ — .” This opinion employs the same "D.” and "G." abbreviations in referring to the parties' exhibits ("Ex.”), memo-randa ("Mem.”), answering memoranda ("Ans.Mem.”) - and • reply memoranda ("R.Mem.”).
.Because nonmovant Gregory’s version must be taken as true at this point, this opinion eschews hedging phrases such as "Gregory contends” or "Gregory asserts” when setting out the background. Relatedly, the recital will not always identify the frequent disparities in the parties' versions of the facts.
. D. Mem. 2-3 claims it is improper for Gregory to change labels from “false arrest” to "unreasonable seizure.” That is nonsense—
*948
not only is it unnecessary for federal plaintiffs to specify legal theories
(Bartholet v. Reishauer A.G.,
. Defendants incorrectly contend that
Michigan v. Summers,
. As to any possible contention that a search and accompanying seizure of Gregory might have been supported by a perceived fear for the safety of the officer or others (see, e.g.,
United States
v.
Rivers,
. For present purposes Gregory's burden is only that of creating reasonable inferences, not one of рroof as such. But any continued repetition of that burden involves an awkward locution, given the fact that so much of the caselaw speaks of what a plaintiff must "prove” or "show.” Although this opinion also employs such terms to mirror that case-law, this Court has consistently applied Gregory's lesser burden of creating reasonable inferences, not the greater burden of persuasion.
. Here is 720 ILCS 5/12-l(a):
A person commits an assault when, without lawful authority, he engages in conduct which places another in reasonable apprehension of receiving a battery.
. Here is 720 ILCS 5/7-7:
A person is not authorized to use force to resist an arrest which he knows is being made either by a police officer or by a private pеrson summoned and directed by a police officer to make an arrest, even if he believes that the arrest is unlawful and the arrest in fact is unlawful.
. Here is the relevant portion of 720 ILCS 5/12-2 (a):
A person commits an aggravated assault, when, in committing an assault, he
(6) Knows the individual assaulted to be a peace officer, or a person summoned and directed by him or a correctional officer, while such officer is engaged in the execution of any of his official duties.
Note that "aggravated” in that subsection does not connote any especially egregious physical conduct — it is rather based on the identity of the target of the assault.
.Remember that an assault need not involve an actual unlawful touching — a battery (see n. 8). And that was true here, for the charge was only that Gregory's attempted kick "plac[ed] Gabriel Guzman in reasonable apprehension of receiving a battery.”
. In fact, it would appear much more likely that the prosecutor’s trial preparation would have encompassed the interviewing of all three officers — the witnesses to the occurrence.
. See the just-completed discussion as to Count Three. And remember the Supreme Court's teaching that arrests based on legitimate probable cause, such as traffic violations, do not implicate constitutional rights on grounds of pretext just because the arresting officers may have bigger fish to fry
(Whren v. United States,
