Lead Opinion
GILMAN, J., delivered the opinion of the court.
COOK, J. (pp. 786-787) and DOWD, D.J. (pp. 787-789), delivered separate opinions concurring in part and dissenting in part.
OPINION
This case provides a classic example of how plausible but unsubstantiated speculation and miscommunication on the part of law enforcement officers can cause grievous consequences to innocent citizens. It also highlights how, in time-sensitive situations, officers are often forced to make difficult judgments that appear improvident through the lens of hindsight. The innocent citizens in this case were James Smoak, his wife Pamela Smoak, and Pamela’s teenage son Brandon Hayden (the Smoaks), who brought a civil-rights action against five members of the Tennessee Highway Patrol (THP) after three of its troopers pulled over the Smoaks’ car in the mistaken belief that they were the perpetrators of a robbery.
Because the troopers decided to conduct a “felony stop” of the Smoaks’ vehicle, the family was removed from their car at gunpoint, handcuffed, and separately placed in the back of three squad cars. James Smoak also sustained a knee injury when he was forcibly restrained after the family’s dog was shot to death by a local police officer on the scene. The district court held that none of the defendants were entitled to qualified immunity based upon the Smoaks’ claims under the Fourth Amendment, but it dismissed the Smoaks’ state-law conspiracy claim. For the reasons set forth below, we REVERSE the district court’s denial of qualified immunity with respect to all aspects of the Smoaks’ claims other than James Smoak’s claim of excessive force against THP troopers Jerry Andrews and David Bush. As to this latter claim, we AFFIRM the district court’s denial of qualified immunity and REMAND the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I. BACKGROUND
A. Factual background
On January 1, 2003, the Smoaks were traveling home to the Carolinas after spending New Year’s Eve in Nashville. Their two young dogs, General Patton and Cassie, were also riding inside of their green Mercury station wagon. After stopping at a gas station to refill the tank, James accidentally left his wallet on the roof of the car before driving off.
“[m]y name is Veronica Louwien, and I’m driving down Interstate 40 in Wilson County, going towards Lebanon. I passed the Mt. Juliet Exit, and a car passed me. It was kind of like a station wagon. It was dark green. It was probably going 110 miles an hour. And then not too far in front of me, there was money flying all over the interstate
Pickard responded by sending state troopers to the scene to meet Louwien.
After assessing the scene, the troopers reported to Pickard that they found a lot of loose currency, but they did not inform him of the actual amount — which turned out to be $445 — at that time. Pickard then contacted local law enforcement, including police dispatchers in the City of Cookeville, and told them to look for a green station wagon traveling at a high rate of speed. He also sent a teletype to area law enforcement inquiring if a “recent robbery” had occurred, possibly involving a green station wagon.
Once Pickard was informed that the amount recovered on the highway was only $445, and that a wallet was found at the scene, he no longer considered the green station wagon to be involved in a robbery. The parties dispute when Pickard was told the actual dollar amount, but both sides agree that Pickard did not relay this information to the other dispatchers until after the Smoaks’ station wagon had been stopped.
In Cookeville, THP dispatcher Brian Brock, who had taken the initial call from Pickard, put out a “be on the lookout” (BOLO) notification for the vehicle, stating that a green station wagon had been seen traveling at a high rate of speed and had lost a large amount of currency. Tim McHood, another THP dispatcher in the general vicinity, issued a second BOLO, stating that the vehicle was possibly involved in a robbery. He based this on a misreading of Pickard’s teletype inquiring about any recent robberies, which he took to mean that the station wagon was involved in a “possible robbery,” but “[wje’re not sure.”
McHood then received another call from Pickard, who had been told by the troopers at the scene that a wallet with a South Carolina identification belonging to James Smoak had been found with the money. This caused McHood to send out another broadcast informing law enforcement that the green station wagon was from out of state, and that large amounts of money and an ID were found.
David Bush, a THP trooper who had heard the BOLOs and the messages about a “possible recent robbery,” spotted the green station wagon traveling east on Interstate 40 and followed it for approximately eight miles. During that time, he did not observe the vehicle speeding or committing any other traffic violations. Bush was told by McHood that the license-plate information from the station wagon matched Smoak’s identification found with the currency. According to the district court and the THP troopers, McHood also instructed Bush to stop the Smoaks’ car, but that Bush should not do so without backup. The Smoaks, however, dispute this and claim that “Bush was solely responsible for the decision to ask for backup.”
McHood and Bush then requested backup from other THP troopers in the area, and THP dispatcher Brian Brock called City of Cookeville police dispatchers for additional backup. Brock told the city dispatchers that “we’re fixing to have a felony stop on a vehicle ... possible armed robbery out of Nashville.” Before pulling
At the time of the stop, Bush had been a trooper with the THP for nine years and had conducted six felony stops involving stolen vehicles. He testified at his deposition that “based on my training, if there’s any probability that a felony has occurred, we treat that as a high-risk stop. And based on the information that my dispatch was giving me, that’s the reason I utilized a felony stop.”
The felony stop of the Smoaks’ car occurred at 5:15 p.m. At that time, the THP in Nashville relayed that it had the exact amount of cash found in the median, but neither McHood nor the troopers in the field inquired as to the amount. A videotape recording by the camera in Bush’s car, which is part of the record, captures most, but not all, of the events of the stop.
After the station wagon was pulled over, Bush instructed the Smoaks to individually exit their vehicle, place their hands in the air, and then to get on their knees with their hands behind their backs. As the Smoaks were being handcuffed, the two Cookeville police officers pointed an assault rifle and a shotgun in the direction of the Smoak family, who incredulously inquired as to why they were being stopped. The Smoaks claim that the weapons were aimed at their heads. For the purpose of the summary judgment motion, the THP troopers admit that pointing a gun at a suspect, absent the justification for deadly force, is a significant departure from customary professional police practices, and that the correct position of an officer’s gun is in the “down ready” position until deadly force is warranted.
The Smoaks asked the THP troopers several times to “please shut the door[s]” of the station wagon so that their dogs would not escape onto the highway. When Hayden asked Trooper Phann to close the passenger-side door, Hayden was told not to move. Phann believed that he would be jeopardizing his own safety if he had to reach over Hayden’s head to shut the vehicle’s door. Lieutenant Andrews then approached the driver’s side of the vehicle, determined that it was empty, and closed the driver-side door.
While Phann was handcuffing Hayden, General Patton, a one-year-old bulldog/bull terrier mix, jumped from the still-open passenger-side door. Andrews stated in his deposition that 30 seconds to one minute elapsed between him shutting the driver-side door and General Patton jumping out, of the car. What followed is disputed by the parties. The Smoaks claim that the dog began to run in a semicircle, with his tag wagging, in order to reach James. They further assert that Eric Hall, one of the Cookeville police officers on the scene, then placed himself in General Patton’s path and killed the dog with his shotgun. The THP troopers contend, however, that the dog moved toward Hall after exiting the vehicle, and that Hall backed away before firing at the dog.
At that point, James, who was handcuffed, jumped up in horror and was restrained by Andrews and Bush, who wrestled him back to the ground. James claims that he was “forced down to the ground by Officer Bush and Lt. Andrews” and that “Bush knocked his legs out from under him, and threw him to the pavement face-first.” He badly injured his knee during the incident, was admitted to the hospital that night, and later underwent surgery to repair the injury. James also alleges that his head hit the pavement, but
Pamela also jumped up after General Patton was shot, causing the Cookeville officers to point their guns at her as Phann placed her back on her knees. The Smoaks were then put in separate patrol cars, in front of which Bush and Hall can be seen on the videotape grinning and laughing. At 5:23 p.m., Bush advised dispatcher Brock that the Smoaks were in custody and Brock should “ask Nashville the charges.” Bush was then told that no robberies had been reported and that James was not wanted for any crimes. At that point, Andrews and Bush determined that a mistake had been made, but the last of the handcuffs was not taken off until nine minutes later.
The entire incident lasted 29 minutes, although the Smoaks claim that the THP troopers knew that the Smoaks were innocent of all wrongdoing within the first ten minutes. After the Smoaks drove off, the videotape shows Bush lamenting that “I wish I had never stopped that f. ..king car.” Bush said in his deposition, however, that he would have made a felony stop even without the information concerning a possible robbery because a speeding vehicle with a wallet and money coming out of it could indicate a carjacking. But Andrews and Phann testified that they would not have conducted a felony stop if they had had all the facts known to the dispatchers at the time. Pickard had actually joked with another THP dispatcher that someone had probably lost all his money, which reminded him of something his kids would do.
B. Procedural background
The Smoaks brought suit against the City of Cookeville and two groups of individuals — the officers and dispatchers from Cookeville on the one hand and the THP troopers and dispatchers on the other— under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. They alleged violations of their rights under the Fourth Amendment, including claims of an unreasonable seizure and excessive force. The complaint also alleged violations of various state laws, all but one of which were dismissed for failure to state a claim. This left the state-law allegation that the THP troopers conspired to protect Hall by making false statements in police reports and to the media. By stipulation of the parties, the City of Cookeville and all of the Cookeville defendants were subsequently dismissed, including Hall, the police officer who shot General Patton. After limited discovery, the THP troopers and dispatchers — the only remaining defendants— moved for summary judgment on the Smoaks’ unreasonable-seizure, excessive-force, and conspiracy claims.
The district court dismissed the Smoaks’ conspiracy claim as unsupported by the facts. But based on the evidence viewed in the light most favorable to the Smoaks, the court concluded that a trier of fact could determine that (1) the high-risk felony stop was conducted without specific ar-ticulable facts that a crime had been committed or that the Smoaks were armed and dangerous, (2) the manner in which the stop was conducted was unreasonable, and (3) the officer’s excessive reaction to the limited information available converted the stop into an arrest, requiring probable cause. Although the district court did not “discern any actual excessive force” from the restraint of James, its order nonetheless denied summary judgment on all aspects of the Smoaks’ excessive-farce claim. The three THP troopers and two dispatchers then timely filed this interlocutory appeal from the denial of qualified immunity.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Jurisdiction
Although a district court’s denial of qualified immunity on purely legal
In the present case, the district court denied qualified immunity on the basis of genuine and material evidentiary disputes, holding that “a trier of fact could reasonably conclude that” the THP troopers effectuated an unreasonable seizure. For the purposes of this interlocutory appeal, the THP troopers have accepted the Smoaks’ version of the facts as true and still argue that qualified immunity is warranted. Jurisdiction is proper under such circumstances. See Sample v. Bailey,
In the present case, the THP troopers argue in both their initial and their reply briefs that “summary judgment would still be appropriate even if Mr. Smoak’s version of events were taken as true.” We therefore have jurisdiction over this interlocutory appeal, but will ignore the THP troopers’ attempts to argue that the Smoaks’ factual allegations lack evidentiary support. See Johnson,
B. Qualified immunity framework
In order to prevail on a claim brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, the Smoaks “must establish that a person acting under color of state law deprived [them] of a right secured by the Constitution or laws of the United States.” See Waters v. City of Morristown,
In determining whether a law enforcement officer is shielded from civil liability due to qualified immunity, this court typically employs a two-step analysis: “(1) whether, considering the allegations in a light most favorable to the. party injured, a constitutional right has been violated, and (2) whether that right was clearly established.” Estate of Carter v. City of Detroit,
C. Unreasonable seizure
The Fourth Amendment guarantees that “[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated .... ” These safeguards of the Fourth Amendment, “with respect to police/citizen contact, vest only after [a] citizen has been seized.” United States v. Richardson,
In the seminal case of Terry v. Ohio,
[W]here a police officer observes unusual conduct which leads him reasonably to conclude in light of his experience that criminal activity may be afoot and that the persons with whom he is dealing may be armed and presently dangerous, where in the course of investigating this behavior he identifies himself as a policeman and makes reasonable inquiries, and where nothing in the initial stages of the encounter serves to dispel his reasonable fear for his own or others’ safety, he is entitled for the protection of himself and others in the area to conduct a carefully limited search of the outer clothing of such persons in an attempt to discover weapons which might be used to assault him. Such a search is a reasonable search under the Fourth Amendment.
Id. at 30-31,
Reasonable suspicion is, of course, a “somewhat abstract” concept. Id. at 274,
In determining the reasonableness of a Terry stop, however, the degree of the THP troopers’ suspicion is only one aspect of the inquiry. “The manner in which the seizure and search were conducted is, of course, as vital a part of the inquiry as whether they were warranted at all.” Terry,
The reasonableness of a stop is thus determined by two factors: “(l)whether there was a proper basis for the stop, which is judged by examining whether the law enforcement officials were aware of specific and articulable facts which gave rise to a reasonable suspicion; and (2) whether the degree of intrusion into the suspect’s personal security was reasonably related in scope to the situation at hand, which is judged by examining the reasonableness of the officials’ conduct given their suspicions and the surrounding circumstances.” Id. at 356. In other words, the greater the degree of intrusion during a stop, the more solid must be the officer’s suspicion that the stopped individual is guilty of wrongdoing.
In the present case, the Smoaks argue that (1) the information known to law enforcement was insufficient for the THP troopers to pull over the station wagon and conduct a Terry stop, and (2) the stop became an arrest due to the degree of the intrusion and the amount of force used. The district court agreed with the Smoaks on both counts.
1. Was the seizure based on reasonable suspicion?
Reasonable suspicion need not arise from an officer’s direct observation, but can be based on informant tips and dispatcher information. United States v. Erwin,
A seizure conducted in reliance on a flyer or dispatch does not violate the Fourth Amendment if the law enforcement officer who issued the information possessed the necessary reasonable suspicion. United States v. Hensley,
if a flyer or bulletin has been issued on the basis of articulable facts supporting a reasonable suspicion that the wanted person had committed an offense, then reliance on the flyer or bulletin justified a stop to check identification .... If the flyer has been issued in the absence of reasonable suspicion, then a stop in the objective reliance upon it violates the Fourth Amendment.
Id. at 232,
In the present case, the totality of the circumstances convince us that the dispatchers on whom Bush relied had a reasonable suspicion that some mishap had occurred. Ms. Louwien reported a green station wagon traveling at a very high rate of speed on the Interstate and money flying out of the vehicle, and law enforcement met Louwien at the scene and observed a significant quantity of currency in the median. The dispatchers relaying this information to the THP troopers in the field did not, however, have sufficient reason to believe that a robbery had occurred, which would have permitted the officers to conduct a much more intrusive felony stop. There were no robberies reported and, as the district court found, “McHood introduced the idea of a possible robbery for which he did not have any factual basis.” Brock then introduced the idea that the robbers had possibly been armed, which again had no basis in fact. In addition, only $445 dollars was found at the scene, along with a wallet. The dispatchers issuing the BOLOs should have promptly given the THP troopers in the field a count of the money once it was available. Andrews and Phann admitted that, had they known all of the information then available to the dispatchers, they would not have conducted a felony stop of the Smoaks’ car.
Besides examining the information known to the dispatchers, we must consider the facts known to the THP troopers who actually participated in the seizure — Andrews, Bush, and Phann. This is' because reasonable suspicion is measured by “all of the information available to law enforcement officials at the time.” Feathers v. Aey,
Based on the totality of the circumstances, we conclude that the THP troopers had a reasonable suspicion sufficient to conduct a Terry stop. But because this suspicion was undercut by the fact that only $445 dollars had been found at the scene along with a wallet, and that no robberies had been reported, we must carefully scrutinize the manner in which the seizure was conducted in deciding whether the intrusiveness of the seizure comported with the degree of reasonable suspicion. See Hardnett,
£ Did the seizure become an arrest?
“When police actions go beyond checking out the suspicious circumstances that led to the original [Terry] stop, the detention becomes an arrest that
Here, the Smoaks were instructed over a squad-car loudspeaker to exit their vehicle, and guns were aimed at them while they walked backwards away from it. They were then handcuffed while on their knees, and their pleas for the officers to shut the station wagon’s doors were ignored. Once the Smoaks were in handcuffs, and after their dog was shot to death, the Smoaks were placed in separate squad cars and questioned. After the officers learned that no robberies had been reported, the Smoaks still had to ask multiple times over the course of nine minutes for the officers to remove their handcuffs. See Houston,
Although the use of guns, handcuffs, and detention in a police cruiser do not automatically transform a Terry stop into an arrest, these displays of force must be warranted by the circumstances. Houston,
In the present case, the THP troopers possessed nothing more than a bare inference that the Smoaks had been involved in a robbery, and weaker still was any inference that they had been involved in an armed robbery. The troopers’ information was further limited because the dispatchers did not promptly relay to them all the relevant data at hand. Even if Andrews, Bush, and Phann initially had a reasonable basis to believe that the Smoaks were armed and dangerous, these fears should have been dispelled much more quickly, and, in fact, were dispelled nine minutes before the Smoaks were' released from their handcuffs. The use of guns pointed at the Smoaks, the refusal to comply with the Smoaks’ pleas to shut the vehicle doors due to the dogs inside, and the prolonged detention in separate police cruisers indicate that Andrews, Bush, and Phann did not use the least intrusive means necessary to conduct a preliminary investigation of a “possible robbery.” See Oliveira v. Mayer,
Accepting the Smoaks’ version of events as true, the manner in which this investigatory stop was conducted — even acknowledging that Andrews, Bush, and Phann believed that a “possible robbery” had been committed — far exceeded the reasonable suspicion of an objective THP trooper. The, Smoaks had obediently complied
The Smoaks have not, however, met their burden of demonstrating that the THP troopers on the scene should have known that the unreasonable seizure was in violation of the, Smoaks’ constitutional rights. See Silberstein v. City of Dayton,
We are also faced with the question of whether the approximately nine minutes that the Smoaks spent in handcuffs after the THP troopers were informed that no robberies had occurred is enough to deny the troopers qualified immunity. The law is clear that “[o]nce the purposes of the initial traffic stop [are] completed, there is no doubt that the officer [can] not further detain the vehicle or its occupants unless something that occurred during the traffic stop generated the reasonable suspicion to justify a further detention.” United States v. Mesa,
The circumstances in the present case, in our opinion, are analogous to the situation presented in Feathers v. Aey,
Insofar as the Smoaks’ claim of excessive force relates to the intrusiveness of the seizure once the stop was made, the discussion above is fully applicable. The Smoaks further claim, however, that the THP troopers used excessive force against James in particular, causing injuries to his knee.
The Fourth Amendment prohibits the use of excessive force by arresting and investigating officers. St. John v. Hickey,
The Smoaks contend that after General Patton was shot, “Mr. Smoak jumped up while in handcuffs as a result of his dog being murdered in front of his family. Two officers quickly grabbed him, Trooper Bush knocked his legs out from under him, and threw him to the pavement face-first.” James also claims that he was “forced down to the ground by Officer Bush and Lt. Andrews.” The district court commented that it did “not discern any actual excessive force” from this aspect of the Smoaks’ claim, but the court’s order does not reflect this determination. Instead, the order denied summary judgment to the THP troopers on all of the Smoaks’ Fourth Amendment claims.
In many of the cases involving excessive force, the plaintiffs resistance is what triggered the use of force from the officers. See, e.g., Burchett v. Kiefer,
James, in contrast, was initially compliant with the police officers’ demands, and he jumped up only after his dog had been shot right in front of him. Given that James was handcuffed, a reasonable officer would not have “knocked his legs out from under him, and [thrown] him to the pavement face-first.” James alleges that he suffered physical injuries that required both admission to a hospital and subsequent surgery. A jury could find that a reasonable officer would not have reacted this forcefully to a handcuffed man who showed no signs of noncompliance until his pet was killed in front of his family.
Based on the facts as alleged by the Smoaks, James was handcuffed, generally compliant, and obviously reacting in horror to the shooting of his dog. The law is clearly established that, in this situation, tackling James in the manner he alleges would not have been a reasonable way to restrain him. Cf. Burchett,
E. Brock and McHood
Finally, the Smoaks claim that “[dispatchers Brock and McHood are liable for their failure to protect [the Smoaks] from the use of excessive force and their unlawful arrest.” Citing Bruner v. Dunaway,
“Generally speaking, a police officer who fails to act to prevent the use of excessive force may be held liable when (1) the officer observed or had reason to know that excessive force would be or was being used, and (2) the officer had both the opportunity and the means to prevent the harm from occurring.” Turner v. Scott,
In the present case, however, Brock and McHood were neither supervisory officers nor were they present at the scene. An unpublished case from this circuit indicates that at least one of these two factors would have to be satisfied in order to hold Brock and McHood liable for negligently alerting Andrews, Bush, and Phann to a “possible robbery.” See Sargent v. City of Toledo Police Dep’t,
On the other hand, we have found no cases in this circuit where a nonsupervisory officer who was not present at the scene or did not actively participate in a constitutional deprivation was held liable for the failure to prevent the constitutional violation from occurring. In one case from the Northern District of Illinois, a dispatcher was held liable for incorrectly telling police officers in the field that a warrant had been issued for the arrest of a woman when in fact her sister was the subject of the warrant. Bibart v. Stachowiak,
We therefore hold, based on the facts before us, that the dispatchers are not hable for their negligent transmissions or their failure to ascertain more details before sending out BOLOs mentioning a possible robbery. In most contexts, “negligence is insufficient to support a § 1983 claim,” Brown v. Kordis,
III. CONCLUSION
We wish to emphasize that, although we are granting qualified immunity to the THP troopers on most aspects of the Smoaks’ claims, we do not condone the actions of law enforcement in this case. That said, a multitude of factors contributed to this unfortunate incident. James Smoak was careless in leaving his wallet on the roof of his car. Veronica Louwien likely exaggerated the speed of James’s vehicle and the amount of money that was “flying all over the Interstate.” The dispatchers were dilatory in giving the troopers in the field a full account of what they knew. Finally, the troopers on the ground overreacted to the situation they faced. Yet the only two factors that were clearly beyond the pale in the entire unfortunate incident were the killing of the Smoaks’ dog and the injury to James’s knee. The first of these factors has been resolved by the Smoaks’ stipulation to drop Hall, the shooter of the dog, as a defendant in this case. We have now resolved the other factor by denying qualified immunity to Andrews and Bush on the claim that they used excessive force in restraining James after the dog was shot.
The validity of all of the other claims of unreasonable seizure and excessive force have been demonstrated through the benefit of hindsight, but these constitutional violations committed by the THP troopers were not so clearly established at the time as to deny the defendants the benefits of qualified immunity. Although events like these can shake our faith in the ability.of law enforcement to punish wrongdoers and
For all of the reasons set forth above, we, REVERSE the district court’s denial of qualified immunity with respect to all aspects of the Smoaks’ claims other than James Smoak’s claim of excessive force against THP troopers Andrews and Bush. As to this latter claim, we AFFIRM the district court’s denial of qualified immunity and REMAND the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part and dissenting in part.
Because the same reasoning that supports qualified immunity for the unreasonable-seizure claim supports qualified immunity for Officer Bush and Lieutenant Andrews on the excessive-force claim, I respectfully dissent from the portion of the majority opinion affirming the denial of qualified immunity.
The majority properly immunizes all of the steps in the encounter leading up to the officers’ use of force. From the majority’s discussion of the seizure claim, we know that the officers conducting this stop — which, by virtue of its intrusiveness morphed from a permissible Terry stop into an unconstitutional arrest-without-probable-cause — merited immunity from suit because the Smoaks did not carry “their burden of demonstrating that the THP troopers on the scene should have known that the unreasonable seizure was in violation of the Smoaks’ constitutional rights.” (Maj. Op. at 782.) So too should go the excessive force claim.
The majority offers three interrelated statements in denying immunity:
“Given that James was handcuffed, a reasonable officer would not have ‘knocked his legs out from under him, and [thrown] him to the pavement face-first.’ ” (Maj. Op. at 783.)
“A jury could find that a reasonable officer would not have reacted this forcefully to a handcuffed man who showed no signs of noncompliance until his pet was killed in front of his family.” (Maj. Op. at 784 (emphasis added).)
“James was handcuffed, generally compliant, and obviously reacting in horror to the shooting of his dog. The law is clearly established that, in this situation, tackling James in the manner he alleges would not have been a reasonable way to restrain him.” (Maj. Op. at 783 (emphasis added).)
From these it appears that the dog-shooting circumstance (focused on James’s perspective) steers the excessive force analysis: either the use of any force cannot pass muster because James’s understandable reaction to seeing his dog shot ought to have constrained the officers, or the degree of force exerted ought to have been moderated in view of James’s having witnessed the dog-shooting.
Yet the majority acknowledges that resistance by an arrestee may justify the use of force by an officer. {See Maj. Op. at 784 (citing cases).) And when James, though handcuffed, jumped to his feet upon the shooting of the dog despite being ordered to remain in the kneeling position
As for the degree of force used to restrain James, determining whether the force used during a seizure is objectively reasonable depends on the totality of the circumstances, including (1) the severity of the crime, (2) whether the suspect poses an immediate threat to the safety of the officers or others, and (3) whether he is actively resisting arrest or attempting to evade arrest by flight. Graham v. Connor,
As the majority acknowledges, the district court, after viewing the record evidence (including the videotape of the incident), did not “discern any actual excessive force” from the restraint of James. The majority’s analysis itself says only that “the video does not so clearly undermine James’s claim ....” (Maj. Op. at 784.) But qualified immunity is meant to protect officers from the “ ‘hazy border between excessive and acceptable force.’ ” Saucier,
Bush’s and Andrews’s actions in restraining James merit the same benefit of the doubt as did the actions of the other officers during this unfortunate encounter. And because the Smoaks failed to .carry their burden of demonstrating that Bush and Andrews should have known that the restraining of James was unreasonable in the situation they confronted, the law of qualified immunity protects them from being subjected to trial.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part and dissenting in part.
It is well-established that there is a Fourth Amendment right to be free from
It is equally well-established that citizens have a right “to be secure in their persons ... against unreasonable ... seizures[J” U.S. Const, amend. IV. Although the law recognizes circumstances under which “police officers are permitted to conduct a limited type of seizure — the ‘investigatory stop’ — in the absence of probable cause[]” (Maj. Op. at 778), any such seizure must be “sufficiently limited in scope and duration to satisfy the conditions of an investigative seizure.” Florida v. Royer,
Based on this articulation of the law, I must dissent with respect to the reasoning and the result of Section II C of the Majority Opinion. The majority concludes that, although the “troopers had a reasonable suspicion sufficient to conduct a Terry stop[,]” (Maj. Op. at 780) “the seizure of the Smoaks violated their Fourth Amendment rights because it became an arrest without probable cause.” (Maj. Op. at 783). Even so, the majority ultimately concludes that this “was not so clear to the THP troopers on the scene as to deny them qualified immunity on this basis.” (Maj. Op. at 782).
I agree completely that the troopers made a legitimate Terry stop. I disagree as to what events are included in this legitimate stop. I have viewed the audio/video recording made by the device attached to the trooper’s vehicle. Although the first several minutes of the stop, during which the Smoaks were ordered out of their car and handcuffed and their dog was killed, may be unfortunate in hindsight, I cannot agree with the majority that what happened between 17:18 (when the Smoak’s car was pulled over) and 27:35 (when one of the troopers finally learned from dispatch that there actually were no reported robberies), constituted an “arrest without probable cause.” (Maj. Op. at 782). Even though I might have preferred that the troopers act somewhat differently, I conclude that their actions during that approximate 10-minute time frame comported with the law.
Where I would draw the line is at 27:35, the time when the troopers learned they had no further reason to hold the Smoaks and yet failed to immediately remove their handcuffs and release them. At that moment, what had been a legitimate investí-
Therefore, although I agree with the majority’s conclusion that there was an arrest without probable cause, I would find that the unlawful arrest occurred at approximately 27:35 and lasted until approximately 36:48. Furthermore, I would not grant qualified immunity as to the events within this narrow window of time because every reasonable officer would know that, as soon as lack of probable cause was verified, the detention should have stopped immediately.
I concur in the background statement set forth in Section I. I concur in the statement of the law set forth in Sections II A and B. I concur only in the result reached in Sections II D and E. I concur in part and dissent in part as to Section II C. To the extent Section III conflicts with my conclusion, I do not join Section III.
