PETITION FOR REHEARING AND SUGGESTION OF REHEARING EN BANC
On interlocutory’ appeal from the district court’s denial of qualified immunity to two police officers at the summary judgment stage, we reversed. Plaintiff, Joe John Rodriguez, has since filed a petition for rehearing and a suggestion for rehearing m banc. Although these filings do not cause us to change our conclusion, they do point to two portions of the record that deserve comment.
On the question of unreasonable seizure, Rodriguez points us to our discussion of his “brief detention” at the end of footnote 15 of our original opinion. He stresses that his transportation to the jail from which he was released (and his transportation back from that jail after he was released) took several — roughly 18 total-hours. The evidence shows that, shortly after his arrest at around one o’clock in the morning, Sgt. Farrell took Plaintiff to the local police station. Plaintiff stayed at the station for roughly two hours before he was transported by other officers, via one county jail were he stayed for some hours, to the jail of the county from which the outstanding warrant came. This final jail was “hours” away from the places of confinement to which Plaintiff was initially taken. After his release, Plaintiff was transported from the final jail and, at his request, was dropped' off near his home between 7:00 and 8:00 pm that same day. No delay for delay’s, sake has been alleged or is supported by the evidence.
Assuming that the entire time of confinement was caused by Sgt. Farrell and Officer Szczepanski,
1
Plaintiffs journey to the jail in the county that issued the arrest warrant (even including his return from that jail), despite its extended nature, was still a “brief detention:” a reasonable detention incident to Plaintiffs lawful arrest.
See generally County of Riverside v. McLaughlin,
On the issue of excessive force, Rodriguez has highlighted evidence tending to show that after Sgt. Farrell grabbed Plaintiffs arm and commenced the.-handcuffing,’ Plaintiff told Sgt. Farrell, during the handcuffing, to be careful because Plaintiffs arm was injured. 2 And, Rodri *1278 guez stresses that, even if the initial handcuffing was not excessive, his continued handcuffing was excessive.
As we noted in our original opinion, a police officer need not credit everything a suspect tells him.
See Marx v. Gumbinner,
That Plaintiffs handcuffs were not removed until about fifteen minutes after his initial handcuffing does not transform what is otherwise a meritless handcuffing-based excessive-force claim into a valid
continued
handcuffing-based excessive-force claim.
See Morreale,
Plaintiffs petition for rehearing is DENIED. And, no judge of the Court having requested a poll, Plaintiffs suggestion for rehearing en banc is DENIED.
Notes
. This assumption is likely wrong. For background, see
Lindsey v. Storey,
. In his deposition, Plaintiff testified that he screamed in pain and screamed that his arm was hurting when Sgt. Farrell applied the *1278 pain compliance handcuffing technique described in our original opinion. Also in that deposition, Plaintiff unequivocally states that, even after the handcuffing began: "I didn’t even tell him then [that my arm was specifically injured], I was just telling him that he was hurting my arm.” In contrast, Sgt. Farrell testified in his deposition that he simply handcuffed Plaintiff behind his back: he denies applying any pain compliance handcuffing technique when arresting Plaintiff or that Plaintiff screamed, in pain or otherwise. But, Sgt. Farrell does note that Plaintiff did ask him to be careful after Farrell started the handcuffing because his (Plaintiff’s) arm was injured. We take the best set of facts for Plaintiff.
. Sgt. Farrell did see that Plaintiff had medical records and prescription drugs with him. And, before the arrest began, Plaintiff claims that he told Sgt. Farrell that Plaintiff had recently been released from a hospital after a motorcycle accident.
Perhaps, if Plaintiff, before the physical part of the arrest began, had also told Sgt. Farrell that Plaintiff's arm was injured, we would be more inclined to conclude that the Constitution required Sgt. Farrell to credit that statement. But, that is not what occurred here.
. Plaintiff did testify that he moaned or grunted in pain while in transport to the police station and that, once at the station, told Sgt. Farrell that he was in pain. And, evidence tends to show that Plaintiff asked that his medications be brought with him from the scene of the arrest.
