Austin Mоon was a young motorcyclist. He liked to ride fast. So fast, in fact, he twice eluded police officers at triple-digit speeds. On officers' third attempt to stop Moon, a Criminal District Attorney Investigator named Jonathan Meachum caused Moon to crash. Moon died. The question presented is whether Meachum is entitled to qualified immunity. The district court held yes. We affirm.
I.
A.
On June 26, 2014, Meachum was patrolling I-20 near the tоwn of Cisco, Texas. He
Having shaken the police SUV from his tail, Moon exited I-20. He stopped at a gas station and hid behind a gas pump. Eastland County Deputy Sheriff Ben Yarbrough drove by the gas station and spotted Moon. Moon likewise spotted Yarbrough. So Moon again sped away-this time performing a "wheelie." Yarbrough turned on his lights and gave chase. Moon again escaped. Yarbrough radioed that Moon was now headed south on US-183.
Meanwhile, Investigator Meachum had also exited I-20 onto southbound US-183. But given Moon's pit stop, Meachum was now in front of him. The relevant stretch of US-183 is a twо-lane undivided road with rolling hills. Videos in the record show light but consistent traffic going both directions. Videos also show Meachum was driving approximately 100 mph; motorcyclist Moon was clocked at 150 mph and closing quickly behind Meachum.
Thus bеgan the fateful seven seconds at the heart of this case. According to the dashboard camera ("dashcam") on Meachum's police SUV and Moon's expert report, the officer was going approximately 100 mph when he spotted Moon approaching from behind. The dashcam at that moment is timestamped 17:46 and 41 seconds. At 42.3 seconds, Meachum slowed to 93 mph and moved to the right side оf his lane. At 43.0 seconds, Meachum slowed to 87 mph. At 44.7 seconds, Meachum slowed to 71 mph. Then, over the next 2.3 seconds-from 44.7 to 47.0-Meachum slowed to 56 mph and moved his SUV leftward and over the center line of US-183. At 47.7 seconds, Moon crashed into the back of Meachum's SUV. The dashcam shows Meachum was traveling 51 mph at impact.
B.
Moon's survivors and estate sued Meachum under
Meachum described his actions as a "rolling block." Meachum testified he performed a rolling block because he wanted to (1) discourage Moon from passing in the oncoming traffic lane and (2) warn the oncoming traffic of the pursuit. Videos corroborated Meachum's testimony there was northbound traffic on thе highway. The
The district court held Meachum was entitled to qualified immunity and entered summary judgment. It held "the law is clear that '[a] police officer's attempt to terminate a dangerous high-speed car chasе that threatens the lives of innocent bystanders does not violate the Fourth Amendment, even when it places the fleeing motorist at risk of serious injury or death.' " Morrow v. Meachum , No. 1:16-cv-118,
II.
Our review is de novo . Vann v. City of Southaven ,
A.
Appellants seek money damages from the рersonal pocket of a law-enforcement officer. The qualified-immunity doctrine makes that task difficult in every case. In this case, it's impossible.
1.
Qualified immunity includes two inquiries. The first question is whether the officer violated a constitutional right. The second question is whether the "right at issue was 'clearly established' at the time of [the] alleged misconduct." Pearson v. Callahan ,
The second question-whether the officer violated cleаrly established law-is a doozy. The § 1983 plaintiff bears the burden of proof. See Vann ,
First, we must frame the constitutional question with specificity and
Second, clearly established law comes from holdings, not dicta. Sorenson v. Ferrie ,
Third, overcoming qualified immunity is especially difficult in excessive-force cases. This "is an area of the law 'in which the result depends very much on the facts of each case,' and thus police officers are entitled to qualified immunity unless existing precedent 'squarely governs' the specific facts at issue." Kisela v. Hughes , --- U.S. ----,
The fourth and final commandment is we must think twice before denying qualified immunity. The Supreme Court reserves "the extraordinary remedy of a summary reversal" for decisions that are "manifestly incorrect." Kisela ,
2.
Appellants are seeking an extraordinary remedy. To get it, they must make an extraordinary showing. They have fallen far short. They have not identified a controlling precedent that " 'squarely governs' the specific facts at issue." Kisela ,
To the extent we can identify clearly established law in excessive-force cases, it supports Meachum, not Moon. In at least three recent cases, the Supremе Court has decided whether officers are entitled to qualified immunity for using deadly force to end high-speed chases. In all three cases, the Court said yes. In Plumhoff , the Court held officers were entitled to qualified immunity after firing 15 shots that killed two men who fled a traffic stop at speeds over 100 mph.
Appellants argue these cases are distinguishable in various ways. True. All that matters here, however, is that three cases affording qualified immunity to officers who used deadly force to end police chases do nothing to foreclose using deadly force to end police chases. See Mullenix ,
B.
For their part, Appellants attempt to identify clearly established law in three lines of cases. Individually and collectively, they are insufficient.
1.
Appellants first point to Brower v. County of Inyo ,
(1) caused an 18-wheel tractor-trailer to be placed across both lanes of a two-lane highway in the path of Brower's flight, (2) "effectively concealed" this roadblock by placing it behind a curve and leaving it unilluminated, and (3) positioned a police car, with its headlights on, between Brower's oncoming vehicle and the truck, so that Brower would be "blinded" on his approach.
Brower held no such thing. "The only question in Brower was whether a police roadblock constituted a seizure under the Fourth Amendment." Scott ,
Appellants fall back to Tennessee v. Garner ,
Second, the Supreme Court has warned us against extending Garner . In fаct, that's the one mistake common to the Supreme Court's recent reversals in excessive-force cases. See Mullenix ,
Third, and in all events, Garner is easily distinguishable. A motorcyclist eluding arrest twice and leading police on a chase at well over 100 mph poses an obvious threat to the pursuing officers and the public. The videos in this case show many other motorists on the road. Moon's "reckless, high-speed flight" therefore endаngered the public and officers in ways Garner's fence-hopping never did. Scott ,
2.
Next, Appellants point to Lytle v. Bexar County ,
Even if Lytle survives Mullenix , Plumhoff , and the Supreme Court's other recent applications of the qualified-immunity doctrine, cases involving gunshots are too factually dissimilar to put the relevant question "beyond debate." al-Kidd ,
Even if gunshot cases were relevant, the law is at best ambiguous. Sure, there's Lytle . On the other hand, Mullenix , Plumhoff , Vann , Pasco , and Thompson v. Mercer ,
3.
Finally, Appellants argue it is unconstitutional for officers to perform a rolling block where a fleeing motorcyclist "рosed no immediate danger to anyone." Because there is no binding precedent saying so, they rely on a purported "consensus of persuasive cases from other jurisdictions." Breen v. Tex. A&M Univ. ,
We have not previously identified the level of out-of-circuit consensus necessary to put the relevant question "beyond debate." al-Kidd ,
Appellants fall far short of establishing an out-of-circuit consensus, let alone a robust one. It is true the Sixth Circuit has denied qualified immunity in two motorcycle-chase cases. See Stamm v. Miller ,
First, Stamm is irrelevant because it was decided after Meachum's chase. See Anderson ,
Second, and more generally, the Sixth Circuit's approach is infected by the same disease the Supreme Cоurt cured in Mullenix . The Sixth Circuit held Garner makes it "clearly established law that an officer may not use his police vehicle to intentionally hit a motorcycle unless the suspect on the motorcycle poses a threat to the officer or others." Stamm ,
Finally, the Sixth Circuit does not represent a consensus. The Fourth Circuit concluded an officer acted reasonably in hitting a fleeing motorcyclist with his vehicle to end a high-speed chase. Abney v. Coe ,
* * *
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
There is some dispute about Moon's speed after he was clocked by the radar gun. The Texas Department of Public Safety estimated Moon was traveling southbound on US-183 at approximately 170 mph in the seconds before the crash. Moon's expert estimated the motorcycle's speed at impact was between 100 and 110 mph. This dispute is immaterial to our resolution of the case.
The times and speeds in this paragraph comе from a frame-by-frame reading of Meachum's dashcam, but they may not be precisely accurate. Moon's expert report posits the speeds displayed on dashcam videos are "substantially delayed" because they are based on GPS data that lags the real-time movement of the police vehicle. Moon's expert argues once that delay is considered, the actual speed оf Meachum's SUV at impact was 45 mph not 51 mph. That dispute is immaterial to our resolution of this appeal. We reproduce the dashcam readings only because they illustrate textually what the video depicts visually: the general speed and position of Meachum's vehicle over the course of those seven seconds.
Appellants also sued Eastland County, and the district court also granted summаry judgment on those claims. Appellants do not challenge that ruling here.
As Justice Thomas has explained, the qualified-immunity doctrine originated in common-law defenses to torts committed by executive officers. See Ziglar v. Abbasi , --- U.S. ----,
Of course, "[t]his is not to say that an official action is protected by qualified immunity unless the very action in question has previously been held unlawful." Hope v. Pelzer ,
Some courts have suggested dicta can clearly establish the law for purposes of qualified immunity. They reason it is "arguably dicta" to find a constitutional violation at step one before granting qualified immunity at step two. But, they say, the very purpose of such "dicta" is to clearly establish the law for future qualified-immunity cases. Hanes v. Zurick ,
Supreme Court precedent renders irrelevant whether Meachum "deliberately" caused a fatal collision. "An officer's evil intentions will not make a Fourth Amendment violation out of an objectively reasonable use of force...." Graham v. Connor ,
In assessing a threat to the public, we сonsider not only the safety of those present at the moment of collision but also "the safety of those who could have been harmed if the chase continued." Pasco ,
Appellants also rely on our original opinion in Vann , which we have withdrawn, see
