LARHONDA DUNLAP PEREZ v. BRYAN SIMPSON, Officer; JOSH PATRICK, Officer
No. 23-5193
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
Decided and Filed: October 11, 2023
File Name: 23a0227p.06
Before: KETHLEDGE, THAPAR, and MATHIS, Circuit Judges.
RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b)
COUNSEL
ON BRIEF: Jason Bell, BELL, HESS & VAN ZANT, PLC, Elizabethtown, Kentucky, for Appellant. Aaron Bentley, Louisville, Kentucky, for Appellee.
OPINION
THAPAR, Circuit Judge. When Officer Josh Patrick tried to arrest LaRhonda Perez, she ran. After a chase, Perez suddenly stopped at a street, and Officer Patrick tased her. Perez sued, alleging Officer Patrick used excessive force. The district court denied him qualified immunity. Because Officer Patrick‘s appeal rests on a factual dispute, we dismiss for lack of jurisdiction.
I.
Officers Bryan Simpson and Josh Patrick drove to LaRhonda Perez‘s house to execute seven felony arrest warrants. Officer Simpson approached Perez behind the house. After a brief exchange, Perez bolted.
Officer Patrick and Perez agree on most of what happened next. Perez twisted and wove her way through the neighborhood—including across a two-way street—in a chase the length of two football fields. While running, Officer Patrick ordered her to stop. Perez didn‘t listen. So Officer Patrick fired his taser. He missed, and Perez kept fleeing. She headed toward another two-lane street, intending to cross. But a row of moving cars stood in her way, so she stopped.
Here‘s where the accounts diverge. Perez alleges she raised her hands and stood still, expecting to be handcuffed. Officer Patrick claims she didn‘t raise her hands and instead took off running. Both agree, however, that at that moment, Officer Patrick made the split-second decision to fire his taser again. This time, it connected. Perez fell forward and hit her chin on the ground, fracturing her jaw. She later pled guilty to evading police and resisting arrest.
II.
We start and end with our jurisdiction. Typically, we lack jurisdiction to review a denial of summary judgment. See
We briefly explain why. When analyzing excessive force, our circuit often sorts taser cases based on “[a] simple dichotomy“—was the suspect actively resisting or not? Rudlaff v. Gillispie, 791 F.3d 638, 642 (6th Cir. 2015). Fleeing from officers is active resistance. See VanPelt v. City of Detroit, 70 F.4th 338, 340 (6th Cir. 2023). And tasing an actively resisting suspect is not excessive force. Rudlaff, 791 F.3d at 642.
It‘s undisputed that, seconds before Officer Patrick fired his taser, Perez was actively resisting. But Perez claims she stopped, raised her hands, and surrendered the instant before Officer Patrick tased her.1 Officer Patrick disagrees. The district court denied qualified immunity based on this factual dispute. And the parties’ briefing on appeal rehashes these same facts.
But in fast-paced, high-intensity situations like this one, the “was she still resisting?” question is not the whole ballgame. Our Fourth Amendment inquiry focuses on what was “knowable” to a reasonable officer. White v. Pauly, 580 U.S. 73, 77 (2017). Another dispositive question is whether, at the time Officer Patrick fired his taser, every reasonable officer would have perceived Perez as no longer actively resisting arrest. Then—and only then—should qualified immunity be denied.
But answering that question requires resolving factual disputes. And because we can‘t resolve those disputes on appeal, we dismiss this appeal for lack of jurisdiction and remand.
