We consider a claim of qualified immunity for the use of force during an ordinary traffic stop.
Facts
Ralph Kermit Winterrowd 2d wasn’t weaving across the road when the Alaska State Troopers pulled him over. He wasn’t speeding. He didn’t even coast through a stop sign. He was pulled over because the troopers suspected his plates were invalid.
As is typical in such circumstances, the troopers who pulled him over — Brad L. Nelson, John R. Cyr, Jorge A. Santiago, and Robert M. Baty — asked Winterrowd to produce his driver’s license and registration. Winterrowd was unable to produce valid registration. 1 The troopers then ordered him out of his vehicle. Because they intended to speak with him inside a patrol car, they attempted to perform a routine pat-down for officer safety.
As Winterrowd faced the police car, Nelson ordered him to put his hands behind his back. 2 Nelson saw no signs of a weapon, and Winterrowd offered no physical threat to the officers. Instead, Winter-rowd explained that he could not put his hands behind his back because he had a *1183 shoulder injury. According to. Winter-rowd, the officers responded by forcing him onto the hood of the car. Nelson then grabbed Winterrowd’s right arm and forced it up. When Winterrowd screamed in pain, the troopеr applied greater pressure, pumping his arm up and down. After several seconds of this treatment, Nelson released Winterrowd, who fell to the ground. 3
Winterrowd brought this action in federal court. The district court dismissed most of his claims on summary judgment, but found disputed material facts supporting his 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claim that the troopers used еxcessive force during the pat-down. 4 The district judge concluded that defendants weren’t entitled to qualified immunity on summary judgment. The troopers now bring this interlocutory appeal. 5
Analysis
A patrol officer may conduct scores of traffic stops every month, and perform *1184 numerous pat-downs. During the course of this work, the officer will inevitably meet individuals who cannot immediately comply with his instructions. People are slow or hard of hearing. They suffer from bad backs, joint problems or tendonitis.
Naturally, a police officer need not endanger himself by unduly crediting a suspect’s mere claim of injury. We recognize that some suspects mаy feign injury in an attempt to hide weapons. But a statement that a suspect is physically unable to comply with a request does not, by itself, justify the use of force. Instead, the police may use force only when the intrusion on the individual’s liberty is outweighed by the governmental interests at stake.
See Blanford v. Sacramento County,
Accepting Winterrowd’s version of the facts, the troopers could not have so concluded on the basis of the immediate offense. Winterrowd wasn’t even suspected of driving dangerously. Instead, the officers believed his license plates were invalid. No reasonable officer could conclude that an individual suspected of a license plate violation posed a threat that would justify slamming him against the hood of a car.
Nor could the troopers have so concluded on the basis of any other faсt presented here. Winterrowd didn’t take a swing at the officers, nor did the officers detect suspicious bulges or metallic glints on his person. According to Winterrowd, he didn’t resist the officers, nor did he flee.
The officers point to only three contemporaneous observations that they believe justified their use of fоrce. First, the officers argue that, because they removed twenty to twenty-five pens and pencils from Winterrowd’s person, they could reasonably have concluded that he posed an immediate threat. But pens and pencils have legitimate, non-violent uses; many motorists carry them. The fact that ordinаry objects in the possession of a suspect could be used as weapons cannot, standing alone, justify the use of force. There would have to be some indication that the individual in question intended to use these utensils to threaten or harm the officers. Any other rule would authorize the police to use force against virtually all motorists simply because they carry writing utensils, keys or other ordinary objects that could potentially be used as weapons.
Defendants do not claim that Winter-rowd reached for a pen or pencil, or that he gave any other indication that he planned to wield those items belligerеntly. The fact that Winterrowd had more than the usual number of such utensils is of no consequence. Having a large number of pencils may suggest some personal eccentricity, but it does not make it more likely that one of those utensils will be used as a weapon or otherwise enhance the risk to the officers. At most, it might suggest that the officers could reasonably exercise greater caution during the encounter.
*1185 Second, the troopers imply that their use of force was justified because Winter-rowd carried a firearm in his car. 6 But they were unaware of this fact when they forced him onto the hood of their car. In any event, Winterrowd was well away from his vehicle, and unable to- access the weapon at the time.
Third, the officers point to Winterrowd’s belligerent attitude and his belief that he was not required to register his vehicle. But on summary judgment we must accept Winterrowd’s claim that he was neither threatening nor physically abusive. Win-tеrrowd believed he was not required to register his vehicle with the State of Alaska. Such a belief — a mistake of law — is no different from that of a motorist who failed to see a stop sign, or who didn’t realize the speed limit had dropped to 45 miles per hour. Even if Winterrowd wás adamant that registration was not required, that attitudе would not justify the deliberate infliction of pain. Winterrowd’s objections were entirely verbal. At worst, the officers could conclude that he scoffed at state bureaucracy. Such an attitude poses no physical danger and thus cannot justify the force allegedly used here.
The troopers also clаim that they feared for their safety based on prior experiences -with Winterrowd. The officers point to no facts that would have justified such a fear, voicing only vague suspicions: “I was aware that Mr. Winterrowd presented officer safety issues, including the exhibition of a hostile attitude .toward Law Enforcement officers.”
Such generalized concerns, standing alone, cannot justify the use of force.
See Deorle v. Rutherford,
None of the violations that gave rise to Winterrowd’s prior encounters with the policе suggest a reasonable fear that he could be dangerous. He had been cited *1186 multiple times for having expired vehicle registrations, for failing to carry his driver’s license, for failing to display plates and for failing to insure his vehicle. Such passive offenses cannot give rise to a reasonable inference that the suspect is dangerous, no matter how many of them he may have committed.
The officers no doubt had an interest in confirming that Winterrowd was unarmed, but they had no justification for doing so in a physically abusive manner, as Winter-rowd alleges. There were many ways the troopers could have checked for weapons short of pushing Winterrowd onto the hood of the police vehicle and yanking the arm he claimed was injured. Even if the officers doubted Winterrowd’s claim that he had a shoulder injury, they were not entitled to use force to gain his compliance. When no immediate threat is posed and the police can use other means of patting down a suspect, they may not insist on doing so in a manner that will cause the suspect pain. We do not require officers to risk their own safety by crediting a suspect’s claim that he is injured; we hold only that a verbal refusal to comply on grounds of physical impossibility does not justify the kind of manhandling that Win-terrowd claims the officers inflicted on him.
We now turn to whether a reasonable officer would have known that the use of force here was excessive.
See Saucier v. Katz,
* * *
An officer may not use force solely because a suspect tells him he is incapable of complying with a request during the course of an ordinary pat-down. The officers here admit that they could have patted Winterrowd down without forcing his arm behind his back. They have shown no justification for pushing him onto the hood of the police car and yanking his arm. While the officers tell a different story, we must accept Winterrowd’s version of the event. Because the facts, if resolved in Winterrowd’s favor, would show the officers violated his clearly established constitutional rights, the district court did not err in denying the motion for summary judgment on grounds of qualified immunity.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. From what we can tell from the record, Winterrowd takes the curious (and legally unjustified) position that the State of Alaska lacks the authority to require him to register his vehicle.
. Nelson admits that he could have administered the pat-down in a way that did not require Winterrowd to put his hands behind his back. A pat-down can be conducted in a number of ways. The individual could hold *1183 his arms over his head, out to the sides or he could lean forward onto the police car.
. Because this case arises on the troopers’ motion for summary judgment on a qualified immunity claim, we present the facts in the light most favorable to Winterrowd.
See Adams v. Speers,
Defendants also claim Winterrowd presented no evidence, instead making only general assertions in legal memoranda.
See British Airways Bd. v. Boeing Co.,
. We have held that officers are justified in patting down an individual when they plan to have him sit in a patrol car.
See United States v. Thompson,
Unlike the situation in Thompson, the officers here were not dealing with an unknown individual. See p. 1185 infra. Instead, at leаst one of those officers, Cyr, indicated that he was familiar with Winterrowd when they pulled him over; there is no evidence that Winterrowd failed to produce his driver’s license. Whether the pat-down in this case was legal under Thompson is thus an open question. Because the legality of the pat-down is not at issue on this appeal, we assume — without deciding — that the pat-down was lawful.
.Winterrowd cross-appeals from the district court's grant of summary judgment to defendants on his other claims. We have jurisdiction to hear the government’s appeal of his denial of qualified immunity because such denial is an appealable final decision.
Wong v. United States,
Winterrowd’s other claims against the defendants — that they unconstitutionally seized *1184 his property, failed to comply with various federal and state regulations and issued citations that were incompatible with federal law — and his claim that his constitutional rights were violated during the course of the district court proceedings, are all unrelated to the question of whether the troopers used excessive force against him. We need not decide the merits of those сlaims in order to dispose of the qualified immunity claim, and we therefore lack jurisdiction to decide those issues in this appeal. Id.
Winterrowd also raises new claims and provides new evidence on appeal. We grant the defendants’ motion to strike, to the extent that the material presented was nоt before the district court.
. Nothing in the record suggests that Winter-rowd's possession of the gun was illegal.
. Indeed, this fact may cut the other way. Having recognized Winterrowd, the officers may have remembered that he didn't pay them the deference they believed was their due. Their behavior, then, may have been a resрonse to his exercise of First Amendment rights, rather than to the present situation. While we must consider the facts here "without regard to the arresting officer’s subjective motivation for using force,”
Tatum v. City & County of S.F.,
