*2 Before BACHARACH , McHUGH , and EID , Circuit Judges.
_________________________________ McHUGH , Circuit Judge.
_________________________________ *3 In the early morning hours of March 10, 2012, as hundreds of people emptied out of bars and concert venues in Wichita’s Old Town neighborhood at closing time, Wichita Police Officers Lee Froese and Aaron Chaffee fatally shot Marquez Smart. Mr. Smart’s estate and heirs sued the City of Wichita, along with Officers Froese and Chaffee, alleging the officers used excessive force against Mr. Smart. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of Officers Froese and Chaffee on the basis of qualified immunity, reasoning that although the jury could find that the officers had violated Mr. Smart’s right to be free from excessive force, the officers had not violated clearly established law under the facts presented. The district court also granted summary judgment in favor of the City. [1] We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand to the district court for further proceedings.
I. BACKGROUND
A. Factual History We recount the facts in the light most favorable to the non-movants, the plaintiffs, as we must at the summary judgment stage. See Davis v. Clifford , 825 F.3d 1131, 1133 (10th Cir. 2016).
On the evening of March 9, 2012, Mr. Smart, who is black, attended a concert at Doc Howard’s, a large bar and concert venue in the Old Town neighborhood of *4 Wichita, Kansas. Doc Howard’s was located on Mosley Street along with several other bars, concert venues, and a parking garage, as depicted in the map below: [2]
According to Latyra James, an acquaintance of Mr. Smart who attended the concert with him that night, she and Mr. Smart left Doc Howard’s with a group of *5 people around closing time and “all started walking towards” the parking garage on Mosley Street. App. at 268. Ms. James was “a couple of feet away from” Mr. Smart and “didn’t have any trouble seeing him” when she “heard gunshots.” Id. at 270. She confirmed that the “first gunshot . . . wasn’t near” her group and Mr. Smart “wasn’t holding his arm out like he was shooting a gun or anything like that.” Id. at 271.
After the first shot, Ms. James recounted, “everybody [was] running around [like] crazy” and Mr. Smart “tried to run down the alleyway” that intersected Mosley Street next to the parking garage. Id. at 271–72, 274.
Aundras Wilson, a long-time friend of Mr. Smart who was also with him that night, similarly indicated he never saw any gun other than the officers’ guns, did not see anyone other than the officers shoot, and did not “know of [Mr. Smart] ever having a gun.” Id. at 208. DeShawn Wheaton, a bystander, also testified he never saw anyone except the police shooting and never saw Mr. Smart with a gun in his hand, although Mr. Wheaton admitted he only heard, but did not see, the first few shots. Two other police officers who witnessed the shooting likewise stated they did not see a gun in Mr. Smart’s hand.
Officer Froese testified that he arrived in Old Town shortly before closing time, along with several other officers, to help with routine crowd control. As “hundreds” of people started emptying out of the bars and concert venues, Officer Froese began crossing Mosley Street to intervene in a fight involving a large group of people when he heard “one extremely loud gunshot” from another direction. Id. at 178, 175. Officer Froese turned and saw a black man “with his hand *6 extended . . . with a big black gun in his hand, and then [he] saw two more shots, and [he] saw [a] muzzle flash.” Id. at 176. He testified that the shooter, whom he identified during his deposition as Mr. Smart, [3] fired those two shots toward “a big crowd of people . . . in the middle of [Mosley Street].” Id. at 177.
Officer Froese stated he was then “totally focused on” Mr. Smart, who was running in a crouched stance down the side of Mosley Street where the parking garage was located. Id. at 176. Officer Froese ran toward Mr. Smart and fired one shot at him. Mr. Smart kept running, though “slow[ing] slightly,” and when Officer Froese was about five feet “directly behind” Mr. Smart, he “fire[d] four additional shots” in rapid succession. Id. at 184–85. Mr. Smart kept running and started “to turn west into the alleyway,” then Officer Froese “hear[d] some shots to [his] right” from Officer Chaffee. Id. at 186–87. Officer Froese testified he did not recall warning Mr. Smart or ordering him to drop the gun, nor did he hear any other officer do so.
Officer Chaffee, a member of the Wichita Police Department’s gang intelligence team, had also arrived in Old Town shortly before closing time in response to another officer’s report of a gun in a parked car. But as crowds started flowing from the bars and concert venues into the street, Officer Chaffee began helping with crowd control. Officer Chaffee stood on the ledge of an elevated flower *7 bed “to look into the crowd and make sure there wasn’t any disturbance or anything going on that needed any kind of attention.” Id. at 123. He recalled:
And then, at some point while scanning—scanning the area, on the west side of the street I saw a group of people start to scatter, kind of running towards the south. That catches my eye, and so as I look over I . . . see the people scatter, and I start to hear the gunshots, and I see a black male with a yellow shirt standing there with his right arm indexed out at the crowd.
Id. at 124. Officer Chaffee estimated he initially heard “four to five” shots. Id. at 126. From that time on, Officer Chaffee testified he watched Mr. Smart run north along the street and only briefly lost sight of Mr. Smart when he ran behind others in the crowd. Officer Chaffee also stated that Mr. Smart was running “exactly [like] what [Officer Chaffee] had experienced in the past” when people fled the police—running fast and crouching low. Id. at 132. As Officer Chaffee moved west across Mosley Street to intercept Mr. Smart, he saw Officer Froese and heard a second volley of “two or three more shots,” but could not tell whether an officer or someone else had fired the shots. Id. at 133.
Mr. Smart “[fell] to the ground once he started running through the alley” off Mosley Street. Id. at 281. DeShawn Wheaton, a bystander, saw Mr. Smart “on the ground [with] his arms stretched out” with nothing in his hands, “looking back” at Officer Chaffee and shaking his head. Id. at 201, 202. Mr. Wheaton then saw Officer *8 Chaffee fire “about three more shots” at Mr. Smart. [4] Id. at 201. The gunshot wounds killed Mr. Smart.
According to Adron Jones, a bystander, about five seconds elapsed from the first shot Officer Chaffee fired until his final shots. Sergeant Gulliver, another police officer who witnessed the shooting, estimated about five seconds elapsed from when he first saw Officer Chaffee chasing Mr. Smart until Officer Chaffee began firing at Mr. Smart.
Police recovered a .45 caliber handgun, with the magazine missing, about ten feet from where Mr. Smart fell. Along the path between the spot where the officers first saw Mr. Smart and the spot where Mr. Smart fell, police found a magazine for a .45 caliber handgun, two .45 caliber shell casings, and Mr. Smart’s eyeglasses.
Forensic analysis specifically linked the two shell casings to the handgun found near Mr. Smart. The chief medical examiner who performed Mr. Smart’s autopsy could not verify that Mr. Smart had fired a gun that night because she found no gunshot residue on Mr. Smart’s hands. Dr. Christian Westering, an expert for the plaintiffs, tested DNA found on approximately eighteen samples from the handgun, magazine, and shell casings. Two of those samples had too many contributors to draw conclusions; six samples excluded Mr. Smart as a contributor; the remaining samples could not exclude Mr. Smart as a contributor.
Dr. Wayne K. Ross, the plaintiffs’ medical expert, stated Mr. Smart was shot five times “from behind.” Id. at 314. He further testified that three of the bullet wounds exhibited “shoring”—that is, an abrasion around a wound site indicating that the “skin [was] rubbing against a firm surface at the time of the” exit wound. Id. at 316, 320–21. Based on these “shored” exit wounds, Dr. Ross opined that Mr. Smart was on the ground when he suffered the final three gunshot wounds. The plaintiffs also retained a biomechanics expert who concluded that “the trajectories of Mr. Smart’s gunshot wounds are not biomechanically consistent with him running . . . in a crouched, . . . bent over position,” as Officers Froese and Chaffee described. App. at 328.
B. Procedural History
Mr. Smart’s estate and heirs sued Officer Froese, Officer Chaffee, and the City of Wichita, alleging that the officers had used excessive force against Mr. Smart and that this was due to an unlawful policy, practice, or custom adopted by the City. The plaintiffs also advanced claims for negligence and wrongful death under Kansas state law. [5] The district court [6] granted summary judgment for Officers Froese and Chaffee on qualified immunity grounds. Estate of Smart v. City of Wichita , No. 14-2111-JPO, 2018 WL *10 3744063, at *17 (D. Kan. Aug. 7, 2018). The court determined that, taking the disputed facts in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs, Officers Froese and Chaffee “violated [Mr.] Smart’s Fourth Amendment right to be free from an unreasonable use of deadly force.” Id. Nevertheless, the court concluded the plaintiffs had “not satisfied [the] onerous standard” of showing the officers had violated clearly established law. Id. at *18. The court also granted summary judgment in favor of the City, finding the plaintiffs had “fail[ed] to point to facts showing a City custom or policy was the moving force behind [Mr.] Smart’s shooting.” Id. at *21. And the court declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the plaintiffs’ remaining state-law claims. Id. After the district court denied the plaintiffs’ motion for reconsideration, the plaintiffs filed a timely appeal.
II. DISCUSSION
A.
Summary Judgment Based on Qualified Immunity
“The doctrine of qualified immunity shields officials from civil liability so
long as their conduct ‘does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional
rights of which a reasonable person would have known.’”
Mullenix v. Luna
, 136 S.
Ct. 305, 308 (2015) (quoting
Pearson v. Callahan
,
Applying our summary judgment standard to the question whether a plaintiff
has satisfied this two-prong test, we will affirm a district court’s grant of qualified
immunity “unless the plaintiff can show (1) a reasonable jury could find facts
supporting a violation of a constitutional right, which (2) was clearly established at
the time of the defendant’s conduct.”
Gutierrez v. Cobos
,
The plaintiffs allege Officers Froese and Chaffee violated Mr. Smart’s constitutional rights in three ways: (1) shooting an unarmed man, (2) failing to warn Mr. Smart before opening fire, and (3) shooting Mr. Smart after it became clear he posed no threat. We consider each of these issues in turn.
1. Shooting an Unarmed Man
The plaintiffs first argue that Officers Froese and Chaffee violated clearly established law by shooting Mr. Smart despite the fact that Mr. Smart was unarmed and posed no threat to anyone. We conclude that a reasonable jury could find that Officers Froese and Chaffee violated Mr. Smart’s constitutional rights but ultimately conclude that the alleged violation was not clearly established.
a. Whether a reasonable jury could find facts supporting a violation of a constitutional right
The threshold question is, taking the facts in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs, whether a jury could conclude Mr. Smart was unarmed. Officers Froese and Chaffee both testified they saw Mr. Smart holding and firing a gun. Officer Brad Crouch and bystander Adron Jones also reported they saw Mr. Smart holding a gun. And it is undisputed that a .45 caliber handgun was recovered about ten feet from where Mr. Smart fell and that two shell casings found along the path Mr. Smart ran were forensically linked to that handgun. [7]
On the other hand, the plaintiffs adduced testimony from witnesses who said they did not see Mr. Smart fire a gun during the incident, or that they never knew Mr. Smart to *14 own a gun. For example, Sergeant Gulliver testified he never saw a gun in Mr. Smart’s hand, although he was quick to clarify he was “not saying it’s not possible he had a gun.” Supp. App. at 167. Mr. Wilson—a longtime friend of Mr. Smart—could not see Mr. Smart when the shooting began, but testified he never knew of Mr. Smart owning or carrying a gun. The plaintiffs also observe that DNA testing excluded Mr. Smart as a contributor for some (though not all) of the samples recovered from the .45 handgun and that a medical examiner found no gunshot residue on Mr. Smart’s hands during the autopsy. [8] Finally, Ms. James, who was within sight of Mr. Smart when the shooting began, testified she did not see him shooting a gun or holding his arm out, and she claimed the initial gunshots came from some distance away from where she and Mr. Smart were standing.
Officers Froese and Chaffee argue this evidence, while it does not positively corroborate the claim that Mr. Smart had a gun, is entirely consistent with the possibility that he did have a gun. To be sure, the fact that one bystander did not see Mr. Smart shooting a gun does not necessarily controvert another’s claim that he did shoot a gun. But the plaintiffs’ inability to conclusively prove a negative (i.e., that Mr. Smart did not brandish or shoot a gun) does not prevent their evidence from creating a genuine dispute of fact.
We addressed a similar situation in
Pauly v. White
,
Indeed, “considering the physical evidence together with the
inconsistencies in the officer[s’] testimony, a jury will have to make
credibility judgments, and credibility determinations should not be made on
summary judgment.” Moreover, “since the victim of deadly force is unable
to testify, courts should be cautious on summary judgment to ensure that
the officer is not taking advantage of the fact that the witness most likely to
contradict his story—the person shot dead—is unable to testify.”
Id.
at 1217–18 (citations omitted) (quoting
Abraham v. Rason
,
Here, the plaintiffs’ forensic evidence, the multiple eyewitnesses who did not see
Mr. Smart holding a gun (particularly Ms. James, who was standing only a few feet from
Mr. Smart), and the testimony from Mr. Smart’s longtime friend, Mr. Wilson, that
Mr. Smart never owned or carried a gun, all “tend to discredit the police officers[’] story”
at least as strongly as in
Pauly
, creating a dispute of fact as to whether Mr. Smart had a
gun on the night of the shooting.
Id.
at 1218 (quoting
Scott
,
The district court analyzed the officers’ decision to use deadly force under the
three non-exclusive factors the Supreme Court has identified in considering whether
police officers’ use of deadly force is justified.
See Smart
,
Several pieces of evidence, when construed in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs, cast some doubt on the reasonableness of the officers’ belief that Mr. Smart was an active shooter: first, Ms. James’s testimony that the shots did not come from where Mr. Smart was standing suggests that Officers Froese and Chaffee should not have concluded Mr. Smart fired the shots they heard. Second, Ms. James’s testimony that Mr. Smart was not holding a gun or extending his arm suggests the officers should not have concluded Mr. Smart was holding “a big black gun,” as Officer Froese apparently did, or holding his arm out in the manner Officer Chaffee described. See King v. Hill , 615 F. App’x 470, 475 (10th Cir. 2015) (unpublished) (determining a jury could find officer’s mistaken belief that suspect was holding a gun unreasonable where plaintiff’s evidence suggested suspect’s hands were visible and he had no gun); Walker v. City of Orem , 451 F.3d 1139, 1160 (10th Cir. 2006) (concluding “[p]laintiff’s version of events suggests that [police officer] acted precipitously in shooting [plaintiff]” where evidence suggested “angle of [suspect’s] hands and the amount of light on the scene” would have allowed police to see suspect’s hands).
On the other hand, there is also evidence that supports the officers’ conclusion that Mr. Smart was an active shooter: Mr. Smart “ran north” while the “bulk of the crowd” *18 ran south, “reinforc[ing] the officers’ perception that [Mr.] Smart was the shooter.” [9] Response Br. at 30. A bystander with no connection to the police officers, Adron Jones, also testified he saw a man he believed was Mr. Smart “running” with “[a] gun in his hand.” Supp. App. at 195. That another eyewitness believed Mr. Smart was running with a gun, although not known to the officers at the time, bolsters the officers’ reasonableness in drawing the same conclusion from the observable circumstances.
Considering all the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs, the jury could conclude that the officers unreasonably concluded that Mr. Smart was the active shooter. That is, the jury could conclude that the officers violated Mr. Smart’s constitutional right to be free from excessive force.
b. Whether the alleged violation was clearly established
To rebut the presumption of qualified immunity, however, Mr. Smart must also
establish that the constitutional right was clearly established. For these purposes, “[t]he
*19
dispositive question is ‘whether the violative nature of
particular
conduct is clearly
established.’”
See Mullenix
,
The state of the law on March 10, 2012, did not provide fair warning to Officers Froese and Chaffee that it was unconstitutional for them to open fire on a fleeing person they (perhaps unreasonably) believed was armed in what they believed to be an active shooter situation. On this prong of the analysis, we assume that Mr. Smart was unarmed, and that Officers Froese and Chaffee were unreasonable to think otherwise. We nevertheless conclude that their decision to open fire on Mr. Smart did not violate clearly established law.
Plaintiffs rely on two decisions as support for their argument that the officers violated clearly established law by unreasonably misidentifying Mr. Smart as the active shooter. But neither case would have provided guidance to Officers Froese and Chaffee under the particular circumstances here.
In
Zuchel v. Spinharney
,
In
King v. Hill
, officers shot a suspect they believed “had a long gun under [his]
coat.”
It is true that Zuchel and King both involve police shooting a suspect they mistakenly believed to be armed and dangerous. But neither provides meaningful guidance here. Unlike the officers in those cases, Officers Froese and Chaffee saw a suspect brandishing and firing a gun—although they may have been mistaken in identifying that suspect as Mr. Smart. And these events transpired in a large, chaotic crowd of potential victims. Thus, although Zuchel and King establish that officers can violate clearly established law by acting on a grossly mistaken belief that a suspect poses a deadly threat, neither case—nor any other Tenth Circuit or Supreme Court case our research has uncovered—would have given fair notice to officers deciding whether to engage a perceived active shooter in a crowded area. [10]
Plaintiffs invoke various decisions from other circuits, but those decisions also
do not clearly establish a constitutional violation on these facts. For example, in
Cole
v. Carson
,
The dissent cites several cases it argues “clearly establish the unlawfulness of shooting a person who does not present a reasonable threat to the safety of officers or the public.” Dissent at 15. But none of these cases offers meaningful guidance to officers engaging a suspected active shooter because none of them involves the need to neutralize a hostile gunman surrounded by potential victims. See Tennessee v.
Garner
,
Carr v. Castle
,
Abstracting these holdings to the situation here “defines the qualified immunity
inquiry at too high a level of generality” and conflates the two prongs of the test.
See Mullenix
,
In summary, there is evidence from which the jury could conclude that the officers were mistaken in their belief that Mr. Smart was the active shooter. And there is also evidence from which the jury could conclude, with the benefit of hindsight, their mistake was not reasonable. But there is no clearly established law *23 that establishes, under the unique facts presented during an active shooter situation, that the officers should have been on notice their actions were unconstitutional.
2. Failing to Warn Mr. Smart
The plaintiffs also argue that Officers Froese and Chaffee failed to warn Mr. Smart before shooting him. Construing the facts in favor of the plaintiffs, Gutierrez , 841 F.3d at 900, we credit Officer Froese’s testimony on this point and assume neither officer warned Mr. Smart before opening fire. Even so, no clearly established law required such a warning in this situation.
The Supreme Court has held that “
where feasible
, some warning [must be] given”
before an officer may constitutionally use deadly force against a suspect threatening to
inflict serious physical harm.
Garner
,
We have not previously had occasion to address whether officers must give a
verbal warning before engaging a suspect in a situation involving, as this one did, an
active shooter in a crowded public place.
[12]
But other courts have not required such a
*24
warning when officers are faced with rapidly evolving circumstances involving deadly
threats.
See, e.g.
,
Molina-Gomes v. Welinski
,
Because no relevant authority required the officers to give a warning under these circumstances, even assuming the officers failed to warn Mr. Smart before opening fire, we cannot conclude their failure to do so violated clearly established law.
3. Shooting Mr. Smart After It Became Apparent He Posed No Threat
Finally, the plaintiffs argue a reasonable jury could find that Officer Chaffee
violated clearly established law by shooting Mr. Smart after it became clear he posed
people.
See Lee v. Tucker
,
Woods Cross City
,
no threat. We agree and therefore reverse the district court’s grant of summary judgment on this point with respect to Officer Chaffee.
Taking the facts in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs, a reasonable jury could conclude Officer Chaffee shot Mr. Smart after it became clear Mr. Smart no longer posed a threat. Mr. Wheaton described Mr. Smart as lying “on the ground [with] arms stretched out . . . looking back [shaking] his head . . . like I give up or something,” when Officer Chaffee fired his final shots. [13] App. at 201. The plaintiffs’ biomechanics expert opined Mr. Smart’s bullet wounds could not have been inflicted while he was hunched forward as Officers Froese and Chaffee described Mr. Smart’s posture when fleeing. Also, the plaintiffs’ medical expert explained that Mr. Smart’s three “shored” bullet wounds indicated he had been shot three times in the back, while on the ground. From this evidence, a reasonable jury could conclude that by the time Officer Chaffee fired his final shots, Mr. Smart was lying face down on the ground with his arms stretched out, was unarmed, and had time to “look[] back” at Officer Chaffee and shake his head. App. at 201. A reasonable jury could also *26 conclude, based on the witnesses’ testimony that they had time to perceive Mr. Smart no longer posed a threat, that Officer Chaffee likewise had the opportunity to perceive that any threat had passed by the time he fired his final shots.
We addressed a similar situation in
Fancher v. Barrientos
,
Similarly, here, the plaintiffs point to several circumstances that, if true, could have put Officer Chaffee on notice that Mr. Smart posed no threat: Mr. Smart fell to the ground, had his arms outstretched with his empty hands visible, and looked back at Officer Chaffee and shook his head. And other eyewitnesses who, just like Officer Chaffee, were in the midst of a chaotic situation, had time to perceive that Mr. Smart did not pose a threat. Therefore, a reasonable jury could conclude that Officer Chaffee violated Mr. Smart’s right to be free from excessive force by firing the final *27 shots at Mr. Smart after Officer Chaffee had had “enough time . . . to recognize and react to” the fact that Mr. Smart no longer posed a threat (if in fact he ever did pose a threat). Id. (alteration in original) (quotation marks omitted).
Turning now to the second prong of qualified immunity, “it is . . . clearly
established that officers may not continue to use force against a suspect who is
effectively subdued.”
Perea
,
To be sure, the mere fact that a suspect has fallen and been disarmed does not
necessarily mean an officer acts unreasonably by firing additional shots.
See Untalan
v. City of Lorain
,
Sarasota Cty., Fla.
,
B.
Reconsideration of Supplemental Jurisdiction Over State Law Claims
The plaintiffs argue for the first time in their reply brief that if we reverse the
district court’s dismissal of their § 1983 claim, we should also “direct the district
court to ‘reconsider its decision to decline supplemental jurisdiction over [their] state
law claims.’” Reply Br. at 26 (alteration in original) (quoting
Baca v. Sklar
, 398 F.3d
1210, 1222 n.4 (10th Cir. 2005)). It is true that when we reverse a district court’s
dismissal of a federal law claim, we often also direct the district court to reconsider
whether to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over any state law claims it dismissed
along with the federal claim.
See, e.g.
,
Baca
,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s grant of summary judgment as to all defendants on the first two claims of violation of constitutional rights, and as to Officer Froese and the City with respect to the third claim. But we REVERSE the district court’s grant of summary judgment as to Officer Chaffee on Mr. Smart’s claim that Officer Chaffee fired the final shots after it would have been apparent to a reasonable officer that Mr. Smart was no longer a threat, and we REMAND to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this decision.
Estate of Marquez Smart, et al. v. The City of Wichita, et al. , No. 18-3242 BACHARACH , J., dissenting.
Mr. Marquez Smart, a young black man, was fatally shot five times in the back by Officers Froese and Chaffee. Under the plaintiffs’ version of events, Mr. Smart was unarmed and nonthreatening as he was being chased. The district court nonetheless granted summary judgment to Officers Froese and Chaffee based on qualified immunity, holding that the Constitution did not clearly prohibit
them from shooting an unarmed and nonthreatening man or Officer Chaffee from shooting the man as he was lying face down on the street.
The majority reverses the second holding, but this reversal does not go far enough. The Constitution clearly prohibited both officers from shooting an unarmed individual posing no threat to anyone. I would thus reverse the grant of summary judgment to Officers Froese and Chaffee as to their use of deadly force during the chase.
1. The Standards for Review and Summary Judgment
We review de novo the district court’s decision to grant summary
judgment on the ground of qualified immunity.
McCoy v. Meyers
, 887 F.3d
1034, 1044 (10th Cir. 2018). The district court could grant summary
judgment only if there was no genuine dispute of material fact and the
officers were entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a).
To make this assessment, the district court had to view the evidence and
*32
draw all reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs.
See Gutierrez v. Cobos
,
2. The Facts as Found by the District Court
The plaintiffs’ version of events was supported by the record and largely credited by the district court for purposes of summary judgment. Like the district court, I would rely on the plaintiffs’ version of events.
2.1 The Shooting
The shooting took place in Wichita. At roughly 2 a.m., hundreds were gathered on Mosley Street. Because of the size of the gathering, the police were present. One officer (Officer Froese) started to cross the street as another officer (Officer Chaffee) stood nearby.
The sound of gunshots rang out, and most of the crowd dashed south. Mr. Smart and others ran north, and Officer Froese pursued Mr. Smart, firing gunshots along the way. Mr. Smart turned down an alley with Officer Froese continuing in pursuit. When Officer Froese closed to roughly four or five feet, he fired two or three more shots.
Officer Chaffee heard the initial shots and crossed Mosley Street to pursue Mr. Smart, shooting once. Mr. Smart fell with his arms outstretched. Officer Chaffee then shot Mr. Smart three more times. The gunshots killed him. *33 Mr. Smart was ultimately shot five times; every bullet struck him from behind. Police recovered a .45 caliber handgun from about ten feet away from Mr. Smart’s head. Also nearby were a .45 caliber magazine, two .45 caliber casings, and Mr. Smart’s eyeglasses. The magazine had seven cartridges, with the top one loaded backward, blocking the gun from firing.
The district court concluded that a factual dispute exists over Mr. Smart’s alleged possession of a gun. [1] Another factual dispute is where the gunshots originated.
2.2 Where did the gunshots originate? Some witnesses testified that the gunshots had originated in the south, where Mr. Smart had been standing. Officer Froese testified that he had heard a gunshot to his south. According to his account, Mr. Smart was holding a gun and fired two more shots. Officer Chaffee testified that he’d heard four or five gunshots, seen people running south, and seen Mr. Smart pointing a gun.
But these accounts conflict with testimony from Ms. Latyra James, who was standing near Mr. Smart when the shots were fired. Ms. James denied that the shots had come from anywhere near Mr. Smart. Her testimony creates a fact-issue on whether the gunshots originated in Mr. Smart’s vicinity.
2.3 Did Mr. Smart have a gun?
Officers Froese and Chaffee testified that they had seen Mr. Smart with a gun. Officer Froese maintained that he had seen Mr. Smart shoot the gun into a crowd and then run away while clutching the gun. Officer [1] The district court also concluded that a factual dispute existed on whether the officers had warned Mr. Smart to drop the gun. But this factual dispute does not materially bear on the issue of qualified immunity.
Chaffee testified that he had seen Mr. Smart holding the gun with his arm outstretched (when the first shots were fired) and then running with the gun in his hand. Officer Brad Crouch also testified that he had seen Mr. Smart running with a “dark object” in his hand. Officer Crouch added that when the object went sliding down the alley, he could see that it was a handgun. A bystander, Adron Jones, also testified that he had seen Mr.
Smart running with a gun in his hand.
Seven other witnesses (Sergeant Robert Gulliver, Officer Garrett Shaddix, Officer Matthew Phillips, Audras Wilson, Rolando Miller, DeShawn Wheaton, and Latyra James) testified that they had seen Mr.
Smart but hadn’t seen him carrying a gun. Audras Wilson and Mr. Smart were friends and had just attended a concert together. Mr. Wilson testified that he did not know of Mr. Smart owning a gun.
That testimony is supported by the absence of any physical evidence tying Mr. Smart to the gun lying near his corpse. For example, there were no fingerprints found on the gun or the magazine. The police department took swabs from the gun, and later tests excluded Mr. Smart as a DNA match for three of the samples but could not exclude him for other samples. The chief medical examiner found no gunshot residue on Mr.
Smart’s hands during the autopsy.
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Mr. Smart, a reasonable factfinder could conclude that Mr. Smart did not have a gun. *36 3. The Standard for Qualified Immunity
To overcome a defendant’s assertion of qualified immunity, a
plaintiff must show “(1) that the official violated a statutory or
constitutional right, and (2) that the right was ‘clearly established’ at the
time of the challenged conduct.”
Ashcroft v. al-Kidd
,
4. The Violation of a Clearly Established Right
Viewed in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs, the evidence shows that Officers Froese and Chaffee used deadly force without a reasonable basis to believe that Mr. Smart had a gun or posed a danger to anyone. The district court and the majority thus properly acknowledge that the plaintiffs’ version of events would entail a constitutional violation. But I would go further and regard this constitutional violation as clearly established.
4.1 Unreasonableness of the Officers’ Alleged Mistake and Their Conduct
Officers Froese and Chaffee argue in part that any constitutional violation would not have been clearly established because any factual mistakes they might have made would have been reasonable. The majority rejects this argument because a factfinder could justifiably accept the plaintiffs’ theory that the officers had acted unreasonably. I agree with this conclusion.
The district court assumed that Officers Froese and Chaffee had shot
at Mr. Smart “under the mistaken perception that he was the active
shooter,” yet held the officers had not acted “egregious[ly].”
Estate of
Smart v. City of Wichita
, No. 14-2111-JPO,
Framing the issue this way, the majority twice acknowledges that a factfinder could justifiably determine that the officers had acted unreasonably in identifying Mr. Smart as the shooter. Majority Op. at 19, 23. But see id. at 18 n.9 (stating that the “officers reasonably believed [Mr. Smart] was still carrying a gun”).
It’s true that factual mistakes, as well as legal mistakes, may entitle
an officer to qualified immunity.
Pearson v. Callahan
,
We have frequently explained that when qualified immunity is involved, we focus on the plaintiffs’ “version” of the facts. Halley v.
Huckaby
,
Despite this omission in the plaintiffs’ version, Officers Froese and
Chaffee urge us to affirm summary judgment based on their own version of
events, arguing that if they had mistakenly concluded that Mr. Smart had
been carrying a gun, the mistake would have been honest and reasonable.
Such a mistake could trigger qualified immunity if a factfinder would
necessarily regard the officers’ mistake as reasonable.
See Singh v. Cordle
,
Like the majority, I believe that a factfinder could appropriately conclude that the two officers lacked a reasonable belief that Mr. Smart had a gun or was the shooter. Officer Chaffee estimates that he was about 90–100 feet away from Mr. Smart, and Officer Froese could not even estimate how far away he was. And the incident took place at roughly 2 a.m., with the street engulfed by darkness.
Despite the distance and darkness, Officers Chaffee and Froese were so confident that Mr. Smart had a gun that they decided to fire repeatedly at him. Given these circumstances, a factfinder could reasonably determine that the two officers had wrongly assumed that Mr. Smart was armed and had been the shooter.
Officers Froese and Chaffee repeatedly fired at Mr. Smart as they chased him, guns ablazing, with hundreds of innocent bystanders fleeing up and down the street. Given the rapidly moving crowd, a factfinder could reasonably conclude that the officers had unreasonably jeopardized not only Mr. Smart but also the hundreds of others. As they scurried in darkness, a misplaced gunshot could have killed someone else in the crowd. As one expert witness testified:
The record in this case is clear the time of this incident there were anywhere from 200–500 persons in the street following the concerts had recently let out. So, even if it is to be believed that Marquez Smart possessed a firearm as he ran through the crowd, due to the immense number of innocent citizens in the immediate area, it would be completely unreasonable for officers to discharge their weapons realizing that it would likely result in innocent bystanders being seriously injured or even killed. Doc. 188-2 at 15. Indeed, Officers Froese and Chaffee shot not only Mr. Smart but also four others (Darel Lucas, Rashayla Hamilton, Latyra James, and Tationa Nolen).
In analogous circumstances, other federal appellate courts have
disallowed summary judgment because of factual disputes over the
reasonableness of an officer’s mistake. For example, the Ninth Circuit
Court of Appeals addressed a similar issue in
Cruz v. City of Anaheim
, 765
F.3d 1076 (9th Cir. 2014). There five police officers shot a suspect, with
four officers explaining later that they had seen the suspect reach for his
waistband even though he was not carrying a gun
. Cruz
,
The Sixth Circuit took a similar approach in
Floyd v. Detroit
, 518
F.3d 398 (6th Cir. 2008). There a police officer had shot an unarmed man,
*41
but urged qualified immunity based on a mistaken belief that the victim
had shot a fellow officer.
Floyd
,
The Eighth Circuit embraced a similar view in
Wealot v. Brooks
, 865
F.3d 1119 (8th Cir. 2017). There the victim fired a gun before discarding
it.
Wealot
,
As in Cruz , Floyd , and Wealot , the summary-judgment record reflects contested facts bearing on the reasonableness of the police officers’ asserted belief that Mr. Smart was the shooter and was wielding a gun as he ran. A witness testified that the gunshots had not come from the area where Mr. Smart was standing, seven witnesses said that they hadn’t seen Mr. Smart with a gun, and forensic evidence did not link Mr. Smart to the gun that was found.
These facts “would certainly cast doubt on the officers’ credibility”
and could reasonably lead to a finding “that the officers [had] lied.”
Cruz
v. City of Anaheim
,
4.2 Consideration of Our Precedents
The majority acknowledges that a factfinder could regard the officers’ mistakes as unreasonable. The majority nonetheless concludes that the plaintiffs failed to identify a precedent involving an active shooter. I respectfully disagree with the majority’s reasoning and conclusion.
Qualified immunity does not protect officers when the underlying
“right’s contours were sufficiently definite that any reasonable official in
*43
the [officer’s] shoes would have understood that he was violating it.”
Plumhoff v. Rickard
,
1. Tennessee v. Garner ,471 U.S. 1 (1985), 2. Carr v. Castle ,337 F.3d 1221 (10th Cir. 2003), and 3. Walker v. City of Orem ,451 F.3d 1139 (10th Cir. 2006). [2] 4.2.1 Tennessee v. Garner
In
Tennessee v. Garner
, the police shot an unarmed man as he fled
the scene of a burglary.
deadly force to prevent the escape of an apparently unarmed suspected felon . . . may not be used unless it is necessary to prevent the escape and the officer has probable cause to believe that the suspect poses a significant threat of death or serious physical injury to the officer or others.
Id. at 3.
4.2.2 Carr v. Castle
We applied
Garner
in
Carr
, where officers had shot at the backside
of a suspect.
Carr v. Castle
,
4.2.3 Walker v. City of Orem
In
Walker v. City of Orem
, the police shot a suicidal man who was
holding a knife to his own wrist without threatening others.
1993)).
4.3 Violation of a Clearly Established Right Based on These Precedents
When read together,
Garner
,
Carr
, and
Walker
clearly establish the
unlawfulness of shooting a person who does not present a reasonable threat
to the safety of officers or the public. In all three cases, the officers shot
someone who was neither wielding a gun nor threatening anyone’s safety.
And
Carr
specifically noted that the violation was clearly established when
the suspect had been shot multiple times, with all bullets entering the back
of the body.
Carr v. Castle
,
Viewed favorably to the plaintiffs, the evidence shows that Officers Froese and Chaffee shot an unarmed man in the back multiple times even though he was unarmed and non-threatening. A reasonable officer would have known that this conduct violated a clearly established right under Garner , Carr , and Walker . Given these precedents, the sound of gunshots would not have caused reasonable police officers to think that they could unreasonably identify someone in the crowd as the shooter, chase him, and repeatedly fire at him in darkness as hundreds of others fled.
The majority distinguishes
Garner
,
Carr
, and
Walker
, reasoning that
they did not involve an active shooter. But the label “active shooter” is
problematic. An “active shooter” is “an individual [who] is actively
*46
engaged in killing or attempting to kill people with a firearm in a confined,
populated area.”
Ass’n of N.J. Rifle & Pistol Clubs, Inc. v. Attorney Gen.
of New Jersey
,
Irrespective of the label “active shooter,” the majority concedes that a factfinder could justifiably find that the officers had unreasonably decided that Mr. Smart had a gun and that he had been the shooter. Given these concessions, how could reasonable police officers believe that the Constitution would permit them to fatally shoot someone without a reasonable belief that he had a gun, that he had been the shooter, or that he *47 had done anything wrong? In my view, Garner , Carr , and Walker clearly establish that the Constitution does not permit a police officer to shoot a defenseless suspect without a reasonable belief that he was armed, that he was dangerous, or that he had committed any crime.
* * * A genuine factual dispute exists on the reasonableness of the officers’ factual mistakes and their conduct. Because unreasonably chasing and shooting an unarmed person violates a clearly established constitutional right, I would reverse the award of summary judgment for Officer Froese and Officer Chaffee as to the use of deadly force during the chase.
Notes
[1] Mr. Smart does not challenge the district court’s judgment in favor of the City on appeal.
[2] This map appears in the record without labels. For reader convenience, we
have added labels of the key locations, based on undisputed record evidence.
See
Pahls v. Thomas
,
[3] Officer Froese described Mr. Smart as wearing a “yellow collared shirt.” App. at 171. Although the officers emphasize that Mr. Smart was a young black man wearing a yellow shirt, the record indicates that yellow Wichita State gear was common in the area. Officer Froese also recalled that a majority of the crowd that night was black, like Mr. Smart.
[4] Ms. James and Mr. Wilson similarly testified that Officer Chaffee fired additional shots at Mr. Smart after he fell.
[5] Apart from the question whether the district court should exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the state law claims, which we address below, the state law claims and municipal liability claim are not at issue in this appeal.
[6] The parties consented to a magistrate judge conducting all the proceedings in
this case. Because the magistrate judge acted “on behalf of the district court,”
Krauser v. Astrue
,
[7] The plaintiffs suggested for the first time at oral argument that the police,
knowing they shot an unarmed man, planted the gun and perjured themselves as part
of a cover-up. But this theory was not raised in the opening brief before this court
and we do not consider it.
See City of Colo. Springs v. Solis
,
[8] The plaintiffs also point to testimony that other people in the crowd, like Ms. James, were shot by police officers. But this evidence does not negate the possibility that Mr. Smart fired a gun; it simply means at least one police officer also fired a gun.
[9] Although we have never held that a suspect running in the opposite direction
of a crowd constitutes reliable evidence that a suspect is an active shooter, this “split-
second judgment[],”
Phillips v. James
,
[10] Further bolstering this conclusion is the Supreme Court’s instruction that qualified immunity ought to “give[] government officials breathing room to make
[11] The dissent critiques us for using the label “active shooter” because “no one suggests that the gunshots continued once the chase began.” Dissent at 16. But Latyra James testified that “everybody [was] running around [like] crazy,” and “the gunshots just kept getting closer and closer.” App. at 271–72. None of the cases cited by the dissent addressed a similar situation involving hundreds of people and mass panic. And even if the dissent is correct that “the unknown shooter was no longer ‘active’ by the start of the chase,” dissent at 16, the state of the law on March 10, 2012, did not put Officers Froese and Chaffee on notice that they needed to wait for more gunshots before responding to what was certainly an active threat.
[12] None of the cases the plaintiffs cite gives meaningful guidance to officers engaging a perceived active shooter running through a large, chaotic crowd of
[13] Mr. Wheaton described the officer who fired the final shots as “tall” and “slim,” and he testified he saw only Officer Froese shoot Mr. Smart. App. at 199. Based on this testimony, the officers argue it is a mischaracterization of Mr. Wheaton’s testimony to take it as evidence that Officer Chaffee shot Mr. Smart after he fell. We disagree. Drawing all reasonable inferences in the plaintiffs’ favor, we interpret Mr. Wheaton’s testimony as referring to Officer Chaffee’s actions. This is reasonable given that Mr. Wheaton did not know either officer and identifying this officer as Officer Chaffee is consistent with every other account in the record. Thus, we credit Mr. Wheaton’s testimony as evidence that an officer fired these final shots, and we look to other witnesses’ accounts to infer that that officer was Officer Chaffee.
[14]
Perea
and
McCoy
post-dated the events in this case, so our holdings in those
cases, standing alone, could not have given the officers notice that their conduct
violated clearly established law at the time of the conduct in question.
See Tolan v.
Cotton
,
[15] On this note, the officers point to expert testimony about a “reactionary
gap”—a delay between stimulus and response during which an officer must observe
that a threat has passed, orient to the new situation, decide what to do, and then
physically stop shooting at the threat. While this evidence may be relevant to a jury’s
determination whether Officer Chaffee acted reasonably under the circumstances, it
does not inform our inquiry at the summary judgment stage into whether, “as a matter
of law, . . . the risk of physical harm . . . that supported the first shot[s] still existed at
the time of the [final shots].”
Harris v. Pittman
,
[2] Mr. Smart did not present this case law when arguing the clearly
established prong in district court. But “appellate review of qualified
immunity dispositions is to be conducted in light of all relevant
precedents, not simply those cited to, or discovered by, the district court.”
Elder v. Holloway
,
[3] The majority relies on the testimony of Ms. James, who stated that “the gunshots just kept getting closer and closer.” Majority Op. at 23 n.11 (quoting Appellants’ App’x at 271–72). But this testimony could reasonably refer to the gunshots that came from the officers. After all, the two officers do not dispute that Ms. James had been shot by the police rather than someone in the crowd. See, e.g. , Appellants’ App’x at 191 (Officer Froese’s testimony that he could have been the person that had shot the female running behind Mr. Smart). A factfinder could thus reasonably infer that Ms. James had heard gunfire from the police, not someone in the crowd.
