This appeal is about an arrest, the Fourth Amendment, and mistaken identity. Joe John Rodriguez sued Sergeant Wayne Farrell (“Sgt.FarreU”) and Officer Lorri Szczepanski (“Officer Szczepanski”), under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that the police officers violated the Constitution when they mistakenly arrested him pursuant to a valid arrest warrant for another person. Sgt. Farrell and Officer Szczep-anski, in their personal capacities, appeal the district court’s denial of qualified immunity. We reverse.
FACTS 1
On 8 September 1995 at 12:10 a.m., Officer Szczepanski pulled over a vehicle driven by Patricia Foulkes (“Ms.Foulkes”): the vehicle had a broken tag light. Rodriguez was the only passenger in Ms. Foulkes’s car. Shortly after the initial traffic stop, Sgt. Farrell arrived to provide backup.
Officer Szczepanski told Ms. Foulkes to get out of the car and then asked for her driver’s license. After Ms. Foulkes said that her driver’s license was in her purse which was in her car, Officer Szczepanski returned to the car and asked Rodriguez, who was seated in the car with his arm in a sling and resting on a pillow, 2 to hand her Ms. Foulkes’s purse. After Rodriguez handed her Ms. Foulkes’-s purse, Officer Szczepanski directed Rodriguez to get out of the vehicle. Rodriguez complied and walked around freely beside the vehicle. But, before Rodriguez got out of the vehicle, he removed his sling. Because Rodriguez was wearing a long-sleeve shirt (after he had removed his sling), nothing outwardly indicated that Rodriguez’s arm was injured.
Officer Szczepanski returned to Ms. Foulkes, found unlawful drugs (methamphetamine, as well as others) in her purse, and arrested her. Officer Szczepanski thereafter began to search Ms. Foulkes’s car. Then, Sgt. Farrell — who, to this point, had only been observing the situation from a position behind Ms. Foulkes’s car 3 — approached Rodriguez.
Sgt. Farrell asked Rodriguez for identification. Rodriguez directed Sgt. Farrell’s attention to a duffle bag, which contained more than ten pieces of identification, including Rodriguez’s Florida driver’s license, birth certificate, military discharge papers, social security card, credit card, and Y.A. patient data card. 4 Sgt. Farrell, *1344 after obtaining consent from Rodriguez, searched the duffle bag and removed the driver’s license from the organizer that contained Rodriguez’s identifications. During the search, Sgt. Farrell noticed several prescription-drug bottles and questioned Rodriguez about them purpose. Rodriguez told the Sergeant that he had just gotten out of the hospital after a motorcycle wreck. Sgt. Farrell also briefly looked at a collection of hospital records 5 that were in the duffle bag.
Sgt. Farrell called dispatch over his radio and ran a check on Rodriguez’s driver’s license information. The dispatcher responded, “no wants or warrants.” Sgt. Farrell continued to talk with the dispatcher when a “name hit” was obtained on Rodriguez’s name. Teletype communications to the dispatcher indicated that three warrants existed for a Victor Heredia who used the alias “Joe Rodriguez.” 6 Heredia was wanted by the St. Johns County, Florida Sheriffs Department for several charges, including possession of cocaine. 7 The dispatcher relayed descriptive information from the warrant to Sgt. Farrell.
The following chart lists relevant descriptive information from the warrant that was available and the corresponding information for Rodriguez:
Name: Victor Manuel Heredia a/k/a Joe Rodriguez Joe John Rodriguez
Sex: Male Male
Race: White White
Date/Birth: 6/24/53; 7/2/53; 6/23/53(multiple) 3/23/53
Place/Birth: New York New York
SSN: 112-42-9808; 112-42-5808; 112-43-9809 (multiple) 115-42-5388
Tattoos 4 tattoos: right forearm, left arm, right arm, back 6 tattoos: both biceps, both shoulder blades; both ankles (none on right forearm)
Height: 5’6” 511”
Weight: 139 lbs. 180 lbs.
Hair Color: Brown Brown
Eye Color: Green Brown
Scar Scar: forehead No scar
Residence: St. Augustine, Florida Apopka, Florida
After Sgt. Farrell received identifying information from the dispatcher, Sgt. Far *1345 rell approached Rodriguez and questioned him about two of his physical characteristics: height and tattoos. Sgt. Farrell first asked Rodriguez his height. Rodriguez responded by claiming he was 5’11”. Sgt. Farrell disagreed, stating: “No way, I’m 5’11”, you’re shorter than me.” Rodriguez claims that Sgt. Farrell was standing on a curb when Farrell made this statement. Sgt. Farrell then focused on Rodriguez’s tattoos. Convinced by the fact that Rodriguez had at least four tattoos (he had six) and that the locations of the first two identified by Rodriguez were in the locations listed in the warrant, Sgt. Farrell arrested Rodriguez on the Heredia warrant.
When Sgt. Farrell arrested Rodriguez, Sgt. Farrell grabbed Rodriguez’s left arm, twisted it behind Rodriguez’s back, and forced it up to just below the shoulder-blade. Rodriguez fell to the ground screaming in pain, telling Sgt. Farrell that he was hurting his arm. 8 Sgt. Farrell ignored Rodriguez’s screams, completed the cuffing, and took Rodriguez to the station. After arriving at the station roughly 10 minutes later, Rodriguez was placed in a holding cell and his cuffs were removed.
DISCUSSION
“Qualified immunity protects government officials performing discretionary functions ... from liability if their conduct violates no ‘clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.’ ”
Lassiter v. Alabama A&M Univ., Bd. of Trustees,
“Unless a government agent’s act is so obviously wrong, in the light of pre-exist-ing law, that only a plainly incompetent officer or one who was knowingly violating the law would have done such a thing, the government actor has immunity from suit.”
Id.
Whether a defendant official has violated a constitutional right at all is, of course, “a ‘necessary concomitant’ to the question of qualified immunity: if a defendant has not violated the law at all, he certainly has not violated clearly established law.”
Hudson v. Hall,
A. The Arrest
1. Constitutional Violation
“A warrantless arrest without probable cause violates the Fourth Amendment and forms a basis for a section 1983 claim.”
Ortega v. Christian,
In
Hill v. California,
The same “reasonable mistake” standard applies (1) in the context of a section 1983 action and (2) when the police have a valid warrant — as opposed to just probable cause — to arrest someone, but mistakenly arrest someone else due to a misidentification.
E.g., White v. Olig,
The Eleventh Circuit has no precedents for what constitutes an unreasonable seizure due to a mistaken identification and arrest under a valid warrant in the field. The Seventh Circuit, however, has addressed this problem in several opinions: their discussions guide us today.
9
In
Johnson v. Miller,
According to a district court in the Seventh Circuit, these three cases stand for this proposition: “In the Seventh Circuit’s view, a police officer acts reasonably if he arrests a person after determining that the person’s name matches the name
*1347
listed on an outstanding arrest warrant.”
Bruce v. Perkins,
Rodriguez’s identifying information was identical to the information listed in Heredia’s warrant in four critical aspects: same name, same sex, same age, 11 and same race. Significant other information was similar: (1) they had similar Social Security numbers; 12 (2) they had addresses in neighboring towns; 13 and, (3) they were born in the same state. Rodriguez (4) also had no fewer tattoos than Heredia, and many of the tattoos were in the same locations. Against all of these similarities is one material 14 difference: Rodriguez says he is 5’11” tall, and the warrant listed Heredia as 5’6”. 15 A rea *1348 sonable mistake cannot, however, be transformed into an unreasonable mistake over such a small difference, given all the circumstances.
In other words, in the context of this case, a mistaken estimate of no more than five inches does not equal a constitutional violation. After all, Sgt. Farrell and Officer Szczepanski were in the field, not in a police station.
Cf. Cannon v. Macon County,
Time was short in the situation facing Sgt. Farrell and Officer Szczepanski: a nighttime traffic stop. The officers had minutes to make their determination, not months or even days: Rodriguez soon had to be either arrested or let go.
Cf. Tillman v. Coley,
*1349 Put differently, we — given the facts as Rodriguez presents them — conclude, as a matter of law, that Sgt. Farrell and Officer Szczepanski made a “reasonable mistake” when they arrested Rodriguez pursuant to Heredia’s warrant and, thus, committed no constitutional violation upon which to base a section 1983 constitutional false-arrest claim. 17
2. Clearly Established Law
In the alternative, we conclude that, given the law at the time of arrest, the unlawfulness of the arrest was not already clearly established. “A government-officer defendant is entitled to qualified immunity unless, at the time of the incident, the ‘preexisting law dictates, that is, truly compels],’ the conclusion for all reasonable, similarly situated public officials that what Defendant was doing violated Plaintiffs’ federal rights in the circumstances.”
Marsh v. Butler County,
Assuming, arguendo, that Sgt. Farrell and Officer Szczepanski’s mistaken arrest of Rodriguez was unreasonable in the constitutional sense and that Rodriguez, thus, has stated a claim for unconstitutional arrest, the constitutional violation — at the time of the arrest — was not already clearly established: Rodriguez cited to no ease (nor can we find one) in this Circuit or from the United States Supreme Court *1350 or Florida Supreme Court that has ever held an officer, under any set of circumstances, hable for misidentifying an arres-tee when executing a valid arrest warrant.
The cases that are factually closest to the instant case (and that conclude that an officer is, or may be, liable under section 1983) are
Cannon v. Macon County,
Cannon
and
Tillman
share a fundamental distinction from our case: neither case involves an on-the-spot decision to arrest by an officer in the field.
Cannon
concluded that an official
at a police station
was liable for faffing to identify correctly the plaintiff during
seven days of incarceration
under the official’s care.
Cannon,
Public officers need not err on the side of caution.
Id.
at 1030 n. 8. And, “[p]ublic officials are not obligated to be creative or imaginative in drawing analogies from previously decided cases.”
Adams v. St. Lucie County Sheriffs Dep’t,
B. Excessive Force During the Arrest
We conclude that the force used by Sgt. Farrell during his arrest of Rodriguez did not violate the Constitution. The use of excessive force in carrying out an arrest constitutes a violation of the Fourth Amendment.
Graham v. Connor,
The evidence, in the light most favorable to plaintiff, shows that Sgt. Farrell grabbed plaintiffs arm, twisted it around plaintiffs back, jerking it up high to the shoulder and then handcuffed plaintiff as plaintiff fell to his knees screaming that Farrell was hurting him. Plaintiff was placed in the rear of Sgt. Farrell’s patrol car, kept handcuffed behind his back and transported to the police station. The handcuffs were removed minutes after arrival at the police department. The handcuffing technique used by Sgt. Farrell is a relatively common and ordinarily accepted non-excessive way to detain an arrestee.
Plaintiffs orthopedic surgeon testified that the handcuffing was a “very serious, painful event,” that resulted in the loosening of the internal surgical hardware, and caused the displacement of a key bone fragment. The resulting complications included more than twenty-five subsequent surgeries and ultimately amputation of the arm below the elbow. 19
Painful handcuffing, without more, is not excessive force in cases where the resulting injuries are minimal.
See Nolin,
This case is different from
Nolin
because Rodriguez’s earlier surgery made what otherwise would be a common non-excessive handcuffing technique (that ordinarily would be painful but cause minimal injury) a maneuver that caused severe injury and tragic results. This distinction, however, is not important legally and does not preclude a conclusion that Rodriguez has shown no constitutional violation: no evidence has been presented that Sgt. Farrell knew of plaintiffs recent elbow surgery or, more important, knew that handcuffing plaintiff would seriously aggravate plaintiffs preexisting condition.
20
We do
*1353
not use hindsight to judge the acts of police officers; we look at what they knew (or reasonably should have known) at the time of the act. What would ordinarily be considered reasonable force does not become excessive force when the force aggravates (however severely) a pre-existing condition the extent of which was unknown to the officer at the time.
See Silverman,
REVERSED and REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
.Because this appeal is from the denial of summary judgment, we must view the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.
Hudson v. Hall,
. Rodriguez had severely injured his arm in a motorcycle accident.
. Rodriguez testified at his deposition that Sgt. Farrell was behind the car and that he could see the Sergeant in one of the car mirrors. Rodriguez also testified that the interior of the car was "dark.”
. Rodriguez had this extraordinary collection of identifications with him to apply for benefits.
.Rodriguez testified at his deposition that he did not know the extent of these records. But, he believed that they were fewer than 100 pages, covered the motorcycle accident, and were for the purpose of applying for disability benefits.
. The warrant for Heredia was almost six years old.
. The other two charges were for unlawful use of a driver's license and driving with a license that was suspended or revoked.
. Rodriguez testified at his deposition that he, before the arrest began, did not tell Sgt. Farrell that his arm was injured.
. The Seventh Circuit’s views on the subject are consistent with other circuits.
See Brady
v.
Dill,
. The alias was a very common name with 15 identical listings in the local phone book.
. According to the warrant, Heredia used multiple birth dates. Heredia's various birthdays all occurred in 1953, the same year Rodriguez was born.
. According to the warrant, Heredia used multiple Social Security numbers. Heredia’s various Social Security numbers were all similar to each other and similar to Rodriguez’s.
.
See Brown,
. We do not consider the other differences of much importance. Eye color (given contact lens), scars (given cosmetic surgery), and weight are all easily variable, especially over six years. This variability lessens the importance of differences in these characteristics.
See Brady,
.Arresting police officers need not act as judges determining ultimate facts. Trials of guilt or innocence cannot be undertaken by police officers on the side of the road in the middle of the night before an officer can effect a lawful arrest pursuant to a valid warrant. In this case, the arresting officer said, on the spot, he did not believe plaintiff was as tall as plaintiff claimed to be. The officer was not obligated to accept plaintiff's statements as true.
See Marx v. Gumbinner,
. We can find only one circuit court opinion — Rodriguez cites none — actually holding an officer potentially liable for the mistaken arrest of someone pursuant to a valid arrest warrant for another. See
Watts v. County of Sacramento,
Under the circumstances of this case, defining "reasonable mistake” to exclude the acts of Sgt. Farrell and Officer Szczepanski— thereby creating a cause of action against them and subjecting them personally to possible monetary liability — would likely deter fu
*1349
ture officers too much from making arrests in public places on valid warrants about which they do not have first-hand knowledge: the risk of error in identification, and then a lawsuit, would simply be too great. As a result, persons sought for crimes would, therefore, find it easier to evade capture.
See Johnson,
. Sgt. Farrell and Officer Szczepanski have not argued in this appeal that the pertinent arrest was consistent with the Federal Constitution because probable cause (even if no warrant had been involved) existed for the arrest, given that plaintiff was one of only two occupants of an automobile in which the police had just found unlawful drugs in a container that was also in the automobile. So, we do not address that issue. But for background, see
United States v. Buckner,
We, however, do treat the fact that plaintiff was riding in an automobile in which unlawful drugs had been found in a container to which plaintiff had access and had handled as a significant part of the totality of the circumstances of plaintiff's arrest. Plaintiff was not just walking down the street and stopped because passing police officers thought he might fit some outstanding warrant. He was in a car that was carrying drugs, and he (to say the least) was of the same name, sex, race, and age as a person for whom a warrant for a drug crime was outstanding. It is the arrest in these circumstances that is before us. The warrant did not have to justify this arrest in a vacuum; something, at least, approaching (if not reaching) probable cause to arrest was established by plaintiff's having been in the car where drugs were being carried. So, the warrant — with its substantial similarities between plaintiff and the person for whom the warrant was issued — need not (and should - not) be viewed alone: abstract and pure.
. We very occasionally encounter the exceptional case in which a defendant officer’s acts are so egregious that preexisting, fact-specific precedent was not necessary to give clear warning to every reasonable (by which we, in the qualified immunity context, always mean every objectively reasonable) officer that what the defendant officer was doing must be "unreasonable” within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment.
See Priester v. City of Riviera Beach,
. Given the loss of an arm, we are presented with the proverbial "hard case,” that is, one in which one’s natural sympathies are aroused by the plaintiffs plight. We recall Justice Jackson's warning to judges: “We agree that this is a hard case, but we cannot agree that it should be allowed to make bad law.”
FCC v. WOKO, Inc.,
. Rodriguez admits that he did not tell Sgt. Farrell that he had an injured arm before his arrest, and nothing outwardly indicated that Rodriguez’s arm was injured after Rodriguez was outside the car. But, Rodriguez asks us *1352 to infer from the evidence he presented that Sgt. Farrell knew or should have known that Rodriguez’s arm was already injured and required special treatment during the arrest. Rodriguez specifically argues that the evidence shows that, before Sgt. Farrell arrested him: (1) Rodriguez told Sgt. Farrell that he had just gotten out of the hospital because he (Rodriguez) had been in a motorcycle accident; (2) Sgt. Farrell briefly looked through Rodriguez’s hospital records; and, (3) Sgt. Farrell was standing behind Ms. Foulkes’s car when Rodriguez was in the car and still had his arm in a sling. From these three circumstances, Rodriguez says that one can reasonably infer that Sgt. Farrell knew about Rodriguez’s injured arm and that the arm demanded special treatment. We disagree.
Sgt. Farrell testified flatly that he did not see Rodriguez’s arm in a sling. And, the circumstances to which Rodriguez points are not inconsistent with Sgt. Farrell’s sworn testimony. Rodriguez admits that the interior of Ms. Foulkes’s car — the area into which Sgt. Farrell, from his position behind the car, would have needed to have seen Rodriguez in his sling — was "dark.” Never does Rodriguez tell us how far behind the pertinent car Sgt. Farrell was standing. Never does Rodriguez say that he saw Farrell focus on him while Rodriguez was in the car wearing a sling.
Given the evidence in this record, Rodriguez relies on conjecture that the sling could have, and would have, been observed by a reasonable officer.
See Daniels v. Twin Oaks Nursing Home,
Nor does Rodriguez's testimony that Sgt. Farrell briefly "looked” at Rodriguez’s hospital records raise an inference that Sgt. Farrell knew, or should have known, about Rodriguez’s injured arm and that the arm demanded special treatment. Rodriguez specifically testified that Sgt. Farrell "looked” at the records; he admits that Farrell did not "read” them. Rodriguez also provides no evidence tending to show specifically what the content of these hospital records would have been. Under the circumstances, this evidence, even combined with evidence that Rodriguez told Sgt. Farrell that he had just gotten out of the hospital after a motorcycle accident, is not enough to support an inference that Sgt. Farrell knew, or should have known, specifically
*1353
that Rodriguez's arm was injured and that the arm demanded special care.
Cf. Clover,
. In the alternative, we conclude that Sgt. Farrell is entitled to qualified immunity on the excessive force claim.
