Wе must decide whether aliens stopped at the border have a constitutional right to be free from false imprisonment and the use of excessive force by law enforcement personnel. Concluding that they do, we affirm the denial of Humberto Gonzalez’s motion for summary judgment that he pursued on the basis of a claim of qualified immunity, and we remand for further proceedings.
I.
On interlocutory appeal of the denial of a summary judgment motion seeking dismissal for qualified immunity, we review the facts in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.
Kinney v. Weaver,
Plaintiff Maria Martinez-Aguero is a forty-nine-year-old citizen and resident of Mexico who visits the United States once a month to accompany her aunt to the El Paso Social Security office. Though she normally enters the country using a valid border-crossing card (which is the same thing as a visitor visa), her card had become invalid when the former Immigrаtion and Naturalization Service decided to issue biometric, machine-readable cards for increased security. On July 3, 2001, Martinez-Aguero went with her aunt and mother to the U.S. consular office to apply for new cards and asked how she could legally enter the United States while waiting for the cards to arrive in the mail. Officials told her she could get a stamp on her old cards that would allow her to travel in the interim. For the next three months she used the stamped card to cross the border without incident.
On October 4, Martinez-Aguero and her aunt made them usual bus trip to El Paso. United States immigration officials stopped the bus within the zone outside the port of entry but within the territorial United States. Gonzalez, an INS border patrol agent, ordered Martinez-Aguero and her aunt off the bus and requested to see their documents. He told Martinez-Aguero that her visa had expired, so she сould not enter the country.
Martinez-Aguero asked to speak to someone in authority, and Gonzalez replied in Spanish, “I am in charge!” Martinez- *621 Agüero asked him why he would not help her, because he also was Mexican. This agitated Gonzalez, who pointed to patches on his uniform and shouted, “Look at me! I am not a Mexican! Look at my uniform!” He then yelled profanities at them in Spanish and threw their visas to the ground.
Martinezr-Aguero picked her visa up and made a sarcastic remark to her aunt about Gonzalez’s bad language, which he apparently overheard. She and her aunt began walking back in the direction of Mexico when Gonzalez yelled, “Stop in the name of the law!”
Martinez-Aguero alleges in her affidavit that Gonzalez then “grabbed [her] arms, twisted them behind [her] back, pushed her into a concrete barrier, which hit [her] in the stomach ... [and] then started kicking [her] with his knees in [her] lower back.” Another agent then took Martinez-Aguero into an office and handcuffed her to a chair. Gonzalez allegedly came in and showed her scratches on his arms and told her that he was going to claim that she cut him with her fingernails.
Shortly thereafter, Martinez-Aguero, who is epileptic, suffered a seizure while still handcuffed to the chair. She was given oxygen, and when she recovered she was questiоned by officials before being permitted to leave. She suffered another seizure after arriving home and was taken to the hospital. She claims she now suffers from recurrent seizures (before the beating she had not suffered a seizure for 17 years), memory problems, back injuries, and continual pain. She alleges she cannot walk long distances or adequately clean her house anymore.
II.
Martinez-Aguero sued Gonzalez fоr assault, battery, and false arrest under the Federal Tort Claims Act and for false arrest and excessive use of force under the Fourth and Fifth Amendments. Gonzalez moved for summary judgment, asserting qualified immunity. The district court denied the motion, and Gonzalez filed an interlocutory appeal.
III.
Our standard of review for interlocutory appeals differs from the usual Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56 standards for summary judgment. We lack jurisdiction to reviеw the district court’s finding that no genuine issue of material fact exists; rather, we “consider only whether the district court erred in assessing the legal significance of the conduct that the district court deemed sufficiently supported for purposes of summary judgment.”
Kinney,
IV.
We use a two-part test to determine whether an officer is entitled to qualified immunity: first, do the facts alleged show that he has violated plaintiffs constitutional rights,
see Saucier v. Katz,
The only claims relevant to this appeal are Martinez — Aguero’s Bivens actions un *622 der the Fourth and Fifth Amendments. 1 Specifically, she alleges wrongful arrest under the Fourth Amendment and excessive force under the Fourth and Fifth Amendments. We must determine whether (1) Martinez-Aguero is entitled to the protection of these constitutional guarantees, (2) the facts she alleges would suffice to show that Gonzalez violated her rights, and (3) the rights were clearly established at the time of the incident.
A.
Gonzalez argues that Martinez-Aguero had no constitutional rights at the time of the alleged incident because she was an alien who attempted to enter the country illegally and was not admitted. Gonzalez relies on
United States v. Verdugo-Urquidez,
The crucial distinction is “that certain constitutional protections available to persons inside the United States are unavailable to aliens outside our geographic borders.”
Zadvydas v. Davis,
This doctrine is called the “еntry fiction,” and Gonzalez urges its application to this case: Because Martinez-Aguero was denied entry into the United States, and because the fiction requires us to treat her as if stopped at the border (even though she was technically present in U.S. territory), and because the Fourth and Fifth Amendments have no extraterritorial application, Gonzalez contends he should be entitled to qualified immunity.
We disagree. This conclusion is inconsistent with
Lynch v. Cannatella,
The “entry fiction” that excludable aliens are to be treated as if detained at the border despite their physical presence in the United States determines the aliens’ rights with regard to immigration and deportation proceedings. It does not limit the right of excludable aliens detained within United States territory to humane treatment.
Id. at 1373.
We reasoned in Lynch that the sоvereign should enjoy particularly broad discretion in the immigration context, because the power to decide which, and how many, outsiders may join our society is critical to national self-determination. See id. There are, however, no identifiable national interests that justify the wanton infliction of pain. See id. at 1373-74. We concluded that “whatever due process rights excludable aliens may be denied by virtue of their status, they are entitled under the due process clauses of the fifth and fourteenth amendments to be free of gross physical abuse at the hands of state or federal officials.” Id. at 1374.
Gonzalez distinguishes
Lynch
because the aliens there were detained for ten days, but Martinez-Aguero was detained for only about six hours. This distinction fails, however, because Mezei (the alien detained at Ellis Island) was held captive for twenty-one months.
See Mezei,
In
Graham v. Connor,
Graham does not call into question the part of Lynch that limits the applicability of the “entry fiction” to the context of immigration and deportation proceedings. Instead, it merely locates the right to be free from exсessive use of force in the express textual guarantees of the Fourth Amendment. Graham does, however, require us to analyze Martinez-Aguero’s excessive force claim, first and foremost, as a claim alleging an unreasonable seizure under that amendment. 5 We turn now to whether she has standing under the Fourth Amendment to challenge unlawful arrest and the excessive use of force.
In pre-Verdugo-Urquidez cases, the Supreme Court had assumed, and we have explicitly held, that the Fourth Amendment applies to aliens. 6 Martinez-Aguero argues that the definition of “the People” in Verdugo-Urquidez, seemingly limiting the class of aliens that deserve protection to those with “substantial connections” to the United States, is not binding, because Justice Kennedy, though joining the majority opinion in full, specially concurred to express disagreement with the majority’s textual analysis.
Justice Kennedy appeared to indiсate that the key factor in his decision was the extraterritorial application of the Fourth Amendment: “If the search had occurred in a residence within the United States, I have little doubt that the full protections of the Fourth Amendment would apply.”
Verdugo,
If, however, we take at face value the fact that Justice Kennedy joined the opinion of the Court,
see Verdugo,
Gonzalez contends that Martinez-Ague-ro lacked “substantial connections” with the United States because, besides having an expired visa and applying for a new one, her only connection consisted of periodic visits to assist her aunt with retrieving her Social Security check. Gonzalez cites
Am. Immigration Lawyers Ass’n v. Reno,
Martinezr-Aguero is correct. There may be cases in which an alien’s connection with the United States is so tenuous that he cannot reasonably expect the protection of its constitutional guarantees; the nature and duration of Martinez-Aguero’s contacts with the United States, however, are sufficient to confer Fourth Amendment rights. It follows that she may bring a Bivens сlaim for unlawful arrest and the excessive use of force under the Fourth Amendment.
B.
Because Martinez-Aguero is entitled to Fourth Amendment protection, it is obvious that she has alleged facts that, if true, would establish that Gonzalez violated those rights. As to false arrest, Gonzalez arrested Martinez-Aguero pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 111, which reads as follows: “Whoever ... forcibly assaults, resists, opposes, impedes, intimidates, or interferes with any person ... while engaged in or on account of the performance of official duties ... shall ... be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than one year, or both[.]”
Under the Fourth Amendment, an arrest is reasonable if supported by probable cause.
See Atwater v. City of Lago Vista,
This reasoning applies with equal force to Martinez-Aguero’s claim of excessive force. In
Graham,
Again, Martinez-Aguero plainly prevails under the facts she presents. She allеges that she was entirely docile and compliant (with the exception of one stray remark not intended for Gonzalez to hear); therefore, there could be no state interest in subduing her using force. In short, she has presented facts sufficient to survive summary judgment on both claims.
C.
Finally, we must determine whether Martinez-Aguero’s rights were “clearly established” at the time of the incident. She contends that Gonzalez has waived any right to make this argumеnt. Indeed, the issue that Gonzalez presents on appeal, as described and discussed in his brief, deals exclusively with the question whether aliens enjoy Fourth or Fifth Amendment protection at all. The words “clearly established” appear precisely once, when Gonzalez states the test for qualified immunity. Because, however, one could read Gonzalez’s argument that the relevant cases do not support any constitutionаl protections for Martinez-Aguero as implicitly containing the lesser argument that the protections are not clearly established, we therefore consider the issue on the merits.
Gonzalez could argue that Martinez-Aguero’s Fourth Amendment rights were not clearly established because courts have split on the precedential value of Verdugo-Urquidez; because it is uncertain how the Court intended the “substantial connections” test to be applied; and because the Court seemed explicitly to reserve the question whether illegal aliens would have Fourth Amendment rights on U.S. soil. 10 But, decisions pre-dating Verdugo-Urquidez, including cases from this circuit, state unequivocally that aliens are entitled to Fourth Amendment protection. 11
Also, the inquiry into whether rights are clearly established “must be undertaken in light of the specific context of the case, not as a broad general proposition.”
Saucier,
The logic of
Lynch
applies equally to arresting an alien without cause: “Counsel has not suggested and we cannot conceive of any national interests that would justify [the practice] simply because that person is an excludable alien.”
Lynch,
We AFFIRM the denial of summary judgment, and REMAND to the district court for further proceedings.
Notes
. "Under
Bivens
a person may sue a federal agent for money damages when the federal agent has allegedly violated that person's constitutional rights.”
Brown v. Nationsbank Corp.,
. Specifically, the defendant in
Verdugo-Ur-quidez
was detained in a correctional facility in California while federal agents searched his residence in Mexico without a warrant.
See Verdugo-Urquidez,
. Id.
at 271,
. In
United States v. Angeles-Mascote,
. Because the Fourth Amendment applies to Martinez-Aguero, we need not decide whether the due process protection embodied in
Lynch
continues to apply of its own force to a case where the protection of the Fourth Amendment is unavailable. We note, however, that because
Graham
by its own terms,
.
See, e.g., Almeida-Sanchez v. United States,
.
See also United States v. Emerson,
. Though Martinez-Aguero arguably did not have a valid border-crossing card the day she was arrested, she reasonably relied on the statements of officials at the U.S. consular office that her stamped, expired card would suffice.
See Raley v. Ohio,
.Cf. United States v. Tehrani,
.
Verdugo-Urquidez,
. See supra n. 6 and accompanying text.
