Relying mostly on their version of events, Craig Billings, a Murray County Oklahoma deputy sheriff, and Steve Watkins and Tony Simpson, police officers with the City of Sulphur, Oklahoma police department, appeal from the district court’s denial of their motion for summary judgment based on qualified immunity. But the Mascorros have a different version. Because, as the district court concluded, the issues are fact bound, we lack jurisdiction to consider the officers’ arguments with respect to all but one claim of error. As the evidence and reasonable inferences regarding that single claim, hot pursuit of a traffic offender, taken in the light most favorable to the Mascorros demonstrates a violation of a clearly established constitutional right, we affirm.
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND 1
Joshua Burchett is Christina Mascorro’s son and Jose Mascorro’s stepson. At the time of these events, Joshua was 17 years old. At 11:30 p.m. on July 23, 2007, Billings noticed Joshua was driving without taillights and turned around to pull him over. Joshua did not stop but drove two blocks to his parents’ house, ran inside, and hid in the bathroom.
The front door is the only door to the Mascorro house. The Mascorros claim they woke to Billings kicking the door in a rage, swearing, threatening and ordering someone to open it and come outside. Christina testified to the following. She did not at first understand to whom Billings was referring. When Jose opened the door, Billings drew his gun, pointed it at Jose’s head and yelled, “On your knees, mother f* * * *r!” (Appellant Billings Appendix at p. 115.) Christina raised her voice to ask Billings to calm down and tell them what he wanted because she could not understand him. Billings answered, “I want the mother F’er driving that car out here now.” (Appellants Watkins & Simpson Appendix at 158.) After asking Billings what car he meant, Christina noticed her son’s car in the driveway and said “That’s my son’s car. Oh, my gosh, what did he do?” (Id. at 158). Jose asked Billings if he had a warrant. As Christina started to turn away from the door Billings sprayed her in the face with pepper spray, and then stepped into the house and sprayed her again. Billings then sprayed Jose and Christopher, Christina’s 14-year-old son, directly in the face as Christina retreated to the back bedroom to call 911. At some point after she completed her call, Officer Watkins retrieved her from the bedroom and led her outside.
According to Jose’s testimony he retreated to the kitchen to try to wash the pepper spray from his face. “[A]s soon as [he] kn[e]w” another officer, later identified as Simpson, entered the kitchen and led him out of the house. 2 (Watkins and Simpson Appendix at p. 232.)
*1203 Billings informed Watkins and Simpson that Joshua had locked himself in the bathroom. The officers ordered Joshua to come out and, when he refused, Simpson drew his gun, kicked down the bathroom door, and took him into custody. The Mascorros contend Billings was visibly angry during the entire encounter, screaming at the top of his lungs and spitting with rage as he tried to speak and they did nothing to threaten or physically resist Billings in any way.
A number of other officers were present at the house when the Mascorros were taken outside. According to Christina’s testimony, before Joshua was removed from the home, Billings approached her, pushed her up against a wall, and demanded to know where he was. When one of the officers suggested calling an ambulance Billings said, “No one is calling any ambulance.” (Appellants Watkins & Simpson Appendix at p. 259). At some point, she requested an ambulance but Billings responded she did not need one. Nevertheless, an ambulance was called to the scene. Billings arrested Christina and Jose and cuffed them in the ambulance. Other officers escorted them with Christopher to the hospital. The three Mascorros were treated and released from the hospital, at which point officers took Christina and Jose to jail. They were both charged with obstructing a police officer in the performance of his duties and Christina was charged with aggravated assault and battery on a police officer because Billings alleged and subsequently testified that she poked him in the chest when he was standing at the front door before he sprayed her. They were released on bond later the same day. The state court eventually quashed the arrest and dismissed the charges, concluding Billings had entered the house illegally because no exigent circumstances justified his warrantless entry. 3 When they returned home, they found their belongings strewn about, trash cans upended, and a hole kicked in one wall.
II. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The Mascorros brought this action against Billings, Watkins and Simpson 4 asserting claims of unlawful entry, excessive use of force, false arrest, false imprisonment, and malicious prosecution. Watkins and Simpson moved for dismissal on the excessive force and malicious prosecution claims. The district court dismissed the Mascorros’ claims of malicious prosecution against Watkins and Simpson under Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure but left all other claims intact. The Mascorros moved for partial summary judgment and Billings, Simpson, and Watkins moved for summary judgment based on qualified immunity and other grounds. The district court denied the Mascorros’ summary judgment motion. It granted Billings, Simpson, and Watkins’ motions as to claims against them in their official capacities, but denied summary judgment on all other issues, including their qualified immunity defense. The officers brought this interlocutory appeal on the single issue of whether they are entitled to qualified immunity.
III. DISCUSSION
A. Issues We Cannot Address
The officers contend the district court erred in denying them qualified im *1204 munity on each of the Mascorros’ claims. However, their arguments concerning the excessive force, false arrest, false imprisonment and (against Billings) malicious prosecution claims are based solely on their version of events. For instance, all the officers claim their actions were justified because the Mascorros refused to hand over their son to the police and Christina assaulted Billings. The Mascorros’ version of events is different. Watkins and Simpson allege they arrived too late to be held responsible for Billings’ use of force and the timing of their arrival made reliance on Billings’ assertions at the scene reasonable. 5 Again, the Mascorros saw it differently. The district court properly determined genuine issues of material fact were present with respect to these claims. We lack jurisdiction as to them. 6
B. The Issue We Can Address
As to the Mascorros’ unlawful entry claim, however, the officers argue their entry into the home was justified by probable cause to arrest Joshua for a traffic offense coupled with the exigent circumstances necessarily attending the pursuit of a fleeing suspect. 7 The facts relating to this narrow aspect of the unlawful entry claim are not disputed and therefore we may address the purely legal issue of whether the officers are entitled to qualified immunity with respect to that claim.
To defeat the officers’ claim of qualified immunity, the Mascorros must show (1) the officers violated their constitutional or statutory rights, and (2) the violated rights were clearly established at the time of the events in question.
Shroff v. Spellman,
C. Warrantless Entry into a Home
“It is a basic principle of Fourth Amendment law that searches and
*1205
seizures inside a home without a warrant are presumptively unreasonable.”
Payton v. New York,
The officers justify their warrantless entry into the Mascorro home by probable cause to arrest Joshua coupled with an exigent circumstance — pursuit of a fleeing suspect. 8 The Mascorros argue the “hot pursuit” of their son under these circumstances did not constitute the kind of exigent circumstance excusing the officers from obtaining a warrant before entering their home. They do not dispute the relevant facts: Joshua was driving without taillights and he continued driving toward the house when Billings turned around to follow him. And they have not refuted Billings’ assertion of probable cause to arrest their son for the traffic offense. 9
In
United States v. Santana,
Four years later the Court again addressed the issue of a warrantless arrest in a home. In
Payton v. New York,
it reiterated the requirement for police to have either a warrant or an ability to articulate exigent circumstances in order to enter a home even where circumstances would otherwise permit a warrantless arrest for a felony.
Again addressing the question of warrantless entry, in
Welsh v. Wisconsin,
the Supreme Court noted “the Court in
[Pay-ton
] explicitly refused to consider the sort of emergency or dangerous situation, described in our cases as ‘exigent circumstances,’ that would justify a warrantless entry into a home for the purpose of either arrest or search.”
[A]n important factor to be considered when determining whether any exigency exists is the gravity of the underlying offense for which the arrest is being made.... [Application of the exigent-circumstances exception in the context of a home entry should rarely be sanctioned when there is a probable cause to believe that only a minor offense ... has been committed.
*1207
Id.
at 749 n. 11, 753,
Immediately after
Welsh,
we decided
Bledsoe v. Garcia,
We do not find the circumstances here amount to the kind of exigency excusing an officer from obtaining a warrant before entering a home. The intended arrest was for a traffic misdemean- or committed by a minor, with whom the officer was well acquainted,
11
who had fled into his family home from which there was only one exit. The risk of flight or escape was somewhere between low and nonexistent. Moreover, there was no evidence which could have potentially been destroyed
12
and there were no officer or public safety concerns. There is nothing to indicate the sort of “real immediate and serious consequences” of postponing action to obtain a warrant required for a showing of exigent circumstances.
See Welsh,
D. Clearly Established Law
Qualified immunity shields an officer from suit when []he makes a decision that, even if constitutionally deficient, reasonably misapprehends the law governing the circumstances []he confronted. Because the focus is on *1208 whether the officer had fair notice that h[is] conduct was unlawful, reasonableness is judged against the backdrop of the law at the time of the conduct. If the law at that time did not clearly establish that the officer’s conduct would violate the Constitution, the officer should not be subject to liability or, indeed, even the burdens of litigation.
Brosseau v. Haugen,
The constitutional right was clearly established for purposes of qualified immunity if it would have been clear to a reasonable officer at the time the officers entered the Mascorro house that their entry was unlawful under the circumstances presented.
Fogarty v. Gallegos,
Relevant precedent clearly prohibits police from routinely entering a person’s home to effectuate a warrantless arrest (even if the officers have probable cause to believe the person committed a felony),
see Payton,
While hot pursuit of a felon might be sufficient, neither the Supreme Court nor this Court
15
has ever found an entry into a person’s home permissible based merely on the pursuit of a misdemeanant; additional circumstances have always dictated the result.
Santana
involved a hot pursuit of a fleeing felon as well as possible destruction of evidence and was decided before the Supreme Court’s admonition in
Welsh
that the seriousness of the offense for which officers seek to effectuate an arrest is a vital component of any exigent circumstances justifying warrantless entry into the home.
Bledsoe
involved volatile behavior on the part of the occupants of the house and an adult male arrestee who, though living with his parents at the time of the warrantless entry, had been living in another state until a few months before officers attempted to arrest him.
Bledsoe,
We do not rely on generalities in our application of the “clearly established” standard here. The specific and identifiable facts of the relevant cases make clear the sort of exigent circumstances permitting officers to enter a suspect’s home without a warrant in pursuit of the suspect — they must involve a serious offense coupled with the existence of an immediate and pressing concern such as destruction of evidence, officer or public safety, or the possibility of imminent escape. These officers do not even argue such concerns were present or that the traffic violation for which Billings had probable cause to arrest Joshua constituted a serious offense. No reasonable officer would have thought pursuit of a minor for a mere misdemeanor *1210 traffic offense constituted the sort of exigency permitting entry into a home without a warrant.
Notes
. The officers make numerous impermissible arguments based on the facts as
they
see them. As noted in our discussion below, our limited review of a denial of summary judgment based on qualified immunity does not permit us to evaluate the district court's conclusions regarding the facts except in the most limited of circumstances.
See Scott v. Harris,
. Jose also filed a supplemental affidavit stating Watkins and Simpson were in the home seconds after Billings sprayed the Mascorros "so they had to be right behind [him]” when he used the pepper spray. (Appellants Watkins and Simpson Appendix at p. 263).
. The Mascorros raised the issue of collateral estoppel below but on appeal merely ask us to "take notice” of the state court’s determination that no exigent circumstances justified the warrantless home entry. (Appeal No. 10-7006, Appellee Br. atp. 7).
. The complaint and answer were both amended. We recite the Mascorros' claims as set forth in the First Amended Complaint.
. It is not necessary that a police officer actually participate in the use of excessive force in order to be held liable under section 1983. Rather, an officer who is present at the scene and who fails to take reasonable steps to protect the victim of another officer's use of excessive force, can be held liable for his nonfeasance.
Mick v. Brewer,
. Orders denying qualified immunity are appealable to the extent that they resolve abstract issues of law. We will not hear an appeal when the question is the sufficiency of the evidence or the correctness of the district court’s findings with respect to a genuine issue of material fact. An appeal is proper if the defendant sets off to show that the law was not clearly established at the time of the challenged action, or that qualified immunity is proper even under the plaintiff’s version of the facts. Because we may review only legal issues, we must accept any facts that the district court assumed in denying summary judgment.
Amundsen v. Jones,
.This slim tendril of legitimate argument, buried as it is in larger, mostly improper, factual discussion, is the only reason we have not dismissed the appeal for lack of jurisdiction.
. Simpson and Watkins argue their entry was justified by the need to aid the Mascorros; they arrived only after Billings told them he had used his pepper spray. However, the Mascorros dispute the timing of Watkins and Simpson's entry and any discussion on that point is not appropriate here.
See Amundsen,
. The officers also argue their entry was justified because Joshua eluded an officer in violation of Okla. Stat. Ann. tit. 21, § 540A. However, the Mascorros claim Billings did not have probable cause to arrest Joshua for eluding a police officer because while Billings may have activated his emergency lights he never deployed his siren or any other "audible signal” (a requirement under Oklahoma law) to signal pursuit.
See Aldridge v. State,
. Driving under the influence was a "nonjailable traffic offense that constituted only a civil violation under the applicable state law” in Wisconsin at the time.
See Welsh,
. Billings testified he recognized Joshua because he previously had contact with him for drug violations and he was also a neighbor. From his testimony one might infer he knew Joshua was a minor.
. In a hot pursuit case, warrantless entry is in part justified by the significant risk that the evidence would no longer be in the suspect's possession if the police waited until a warrant could be obtained. In such cases, however, the intrusion is also justified by the suspect's flight, which frustrates police efforts to make a legitimate warrant-less arrest.
Aquino,
. "[I]n an obvious case, these [more general] standards can ‘clearly establish' the answer, even without a body of relevant case law,”
Brosseau,
. The officers point to a single case in which we implied in dicta a willingness to interpret
Welsh
as permitting warrantless entry based on pursuit for minor offenses,
see United States v. Aquino,
. The officers rely heavily on an unpublished case,
Sanchez v. Ulibarri,
