MEMORANDUM
Bеfore the court is the motion to dismiss of defendants City of Harrisburg Bureau of Police and Officer Dave Salada. The motion has been fully briefed, and is now ripe for disposition.
Background
Defendants have moved to dismiss pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). The standard for dismissal under Rule 12(b)(6) is that “a complaint should not be dismissed for failure to state a claim unless it appears beyond a doubt that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of his claim which would entitle him to relief.”
Conley v. Gibson,
Therefore, the court will take every allegation pleaded in Mr. Troublefield’s complaint as true. According to the complaint, defendant Salada, a Harrisburg city police officer, was dispatched to the vicinity of *162 North Sixth Street in the mid-afternoon of November 8, 1989 in response to a call about a possible car theft. Salada found plaintiff in the front seat of a car. Pistol drawn, Salada asked Troublefield if he owned the car. Troublefield, who was intoxicated, answered “No. I guess you got me.”
Salada ordered plaintiff to climb out of the car and lie on the ground. Troublefield complied without protest or struggle, extending himself prostrate, facing the ground. Pistol still drawn, the officer began to search the suspect, and then proceeded to apply handcuffs. As he locked on the handcuffs, Salada started to return his weapon to his holster. Suddenly, the weapon fired, propelling a bullet into Trou-blefield’s leg.
Plaintiff was subsequently taken to the hospital for surgery. The complaint alleges that his injuries rеsulted in permanent nerve and other physical damage. At this point, plaintiffs medical bills have exceeded $24,000.
In July 1991, plaintiff commenced this suit by praecipe for a writ of summons in the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County, Pennsylvania. The complaint posed five separate causes of action, some brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988 and some brought under common law tort theories. Plaintiff alleged: 1) that Officer Sa-lada used excessive force in effectuating plaintiffs arrest in contravention of the fourth amendment’s stricture against unreasonable searches and seizures; 2) that Salada’s actions amounted to a denial of life, liberty or property in violation of the fourteenth amendment's due process clause; 3) that Salada was guilty of negligence under state tort law; 4) that the city’s Bureau of Police is liable under the municipal liability doctrine for failure to train or supervise its officer in proper firearm techniques; and 5) that the city had wrongfully permitted Salada to carry a firearm when they were on notice through previous incidents that Salada was not fit to carry a firearm, as well as being vicariously liable.
Defendants removed the action to this court on January 29, 1992. Soon afterward, defendants filed this motion to dismiss.
Discussion
The motion attacks every count of Trou-blefield’s pleading. The court will, accordingly, аddress each count in order.
I. Fourth Amendment Claim
Plaintiff claims that the officer’s actions in making the arrest constituted excessive force and therefore rise to the level of an unreasonable search and seizure in contravention of the fourth amendment of the United States Constitution.
In
Graham v. Connor,
Defendant’s principal argument is that, given the facts as alleged in the complaint, no seizure occurred implicating fourth amendment rights because there was no intentional act on the part of Salada which resulted in Troublefield’s injury.
Plaintiff counters that fourth amendment protections under Graham were triggered as soon as Salada gained custody and control of him, and that, therеfore, the officer’s conduct must be evaluated under *163 the objective reasonableness test of Graham.
In a case announced just two months prior to
Graham, Brower v. Inyo County,
The Court first opined that
[a] [violation of the Fourth Amendment requires an intentional acquisition of physical control. A seizure occurs even when an unintended person or thing is the object of the detention or taking, but the detention or taking itself must be willful. This is implicit in the word “seizure,” which can hardly be applied to an unknowing act.
Brower,
In determining whether the means that terminates the freedom of movement is the very means that the government intended we cannot draw too fine a line, or we will be driven to saying that one is not seized who has been stopped by the accidental discharge of a gun with which he was meant only to be bludgeoned, or by a bullet in the heart that was meant only for the leg. We think it is enough for a seizure that a person be stopped by the very instrumentality set in motion or put in place in order to achieve that result.
Id.
at 598-99,
Since the announcement of Brower and Graham, several courts have had the opportunity to apply the analyses set forth in those two cases against the background of an accidental injury to a police suspect in the course of an arrest.
The most recent decision is found in
Glasco v. Ballard,
The Glaseo court, construing Graham and Brower, held that the accidental shooting did not constitute a seizure of the plaintiff and granted summary judgment. The court rejected the plaintiff's contention that the language in Graham which indicates that an officer’s intentions, either good or evil, are irrelevant in a fourth amendment excessive force case dictated that the officer’s conduct in firing the shot should be adjudged according to the “objective reasonableness” standard:
Although persuasive when read out of context, [the Graham language] is less so when read in full. The plaintiff correctly understands the Supreme Court to suggest that intent is irrelevant but confuses the type of “intent” to which the Court is referring. In criminal law terms, the Court rulеd that specific intent, or motivation, is not an element of the Fourth Amendment. It made no actual ruling on the issue of general intent. In other words, it is irrelevant whether the police officer intended to brutalize a suspect or merely intended to discipline him, but it is still relevant *164 whether the officer intended to perform the underlying violent act at all.
Glasco,
The Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals in
Campbell v. White,
The First Circuit Court of Appeals has also seen this issue. Pursuing a robbery suspect, police fired in order to stop the suspect’s escape and instead hit a hostage. Adjudicating whether the hostage possessed a fourth amendment claim, a First Circuit Court of Appeals panel in
Landol-Rivera v. Cruz Cosme,
Several
pre-Graham
cases also are instructive on whether non-intentional conduct on the part of police implicates the fourth amendment. In
Dodd v. City of Norwich,
It makes little sense to apply a standard of reasonableness to an accident. If such a standard were applied, it could result in a fourth amendment violation bаsed on simple negligence. The fourth amendment, however, only protects individuals against “unreasonable” seizures, not seizures conducted in a “negligent” manner. The Supreme Court has not yet extended liability under the fourth amendment to include negligence claims. Only cases involving intentional conduct have been considered by the Supreme Court. Negligence, in fact, has been explicitly rejected as a basis for liability under the fourteenth amendment.
Dodd,
A Georgia district court in
Matthews v. City of Atlanta,
Plaintiff argues that these
pre-Graham
cases are no longer good law, as
Graham
dictates that once a seizure has occurred, an official’s conduct must be judged under a standard of reasonableness. The court disagrees. The intentional act is a threshold requirement of fourth amendment liability — it is only the first step.
See Fletcher v. Conway,
No. 89 C 5183,
Plaintiff comes forward with several cases he argues support the proposition that an officer’s actions in drawing a weapon post-seizure must be measured under the Graham standard. Only one case is of real relevance here, and it appears to unre-cоncilable with the cases cited above.
The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals in
Pleasant v. Zamieski,
This court declines to follow Pleasant, as its discussion of excessive force requirements is troubling conclusory. In reviewing plaintiff’s post-trial motions, the Sixth Circuit panel essentially assumes that plaintiff's claim presented a jury issue on objective reasonableness, without making any inquiry as to whether fourth amendmеnt rights were implicated at all. Pleasant appears to ignore the strong language found in Brower with regard to the necessity of intentional conduct to state a fourth amendment claim even as it reviewed dicta from that decision cited by the plaintiff. 2 In addition, the Pleasant court appears to give the short shrift to the heavy load of case decisions holding that accidental shootings in identical circumstances did not constitute seizures. The Pleasant court does not identify or discuss any of these cases. One may infer that this is a result of the procedural status of the case: The plaintiff, as the appellant, framed the issues, and would not, one may assume, have brought up the issue of whether a seizure had occurred at all when the officer’s con *166 duct had already been adjudged to be a jury issue. 3
Here, this court is faced with a situation nearly similar to those presented by the
Matthews, Glaseo,
and
Dodd
cases. As in those cases, the suspect here had been “seized” in the sense that his freedom of movement was restricted — Troublefield was in the process of being cuffed; in
Matthews
and
Glaseo
the suspects were being detained at gunpoint; in
Dodd
the burglar was being handcuffed and had, like Troublefield, apparently surrendered (the
Dodd
court noted that the plaintiff had, in effect, been already “seized”). This court is likewise persuaded that the language of
Brower v. Inyo County,
Here, defendant Salada had effectively taken Troublefield into his control through a means intentionally applied — ordering him to the ground and then proceeding to handcuff him. If in performing this activity he were to, say, intentionally grind Trou-blefield’s head into a' storm drain, a reasonableness inquiry under the fourth amendment may have been appropriate. However, as Troublefield was injured by a bullet fired by accident, no fourth amendment rights have been trampled upon because Salada did not intend the bullet to bring plaintiff within his control or to, perhaps, settle him down were he struggling to break free.
In addition, the court can see no principled reason to depart from the clear holdings of these cases and the language of
Brower
to decide, as plaintiff urges, that since plaintiff had already bеen “seized”— as opposed to
Landol-Rivera
and
Campbell
where the suspect was merely being pursued — all the circumstances of his arrest must be scrutinized under a “reasonableness” standard. In the court’s view, such an approach is of no consequence to whether the shooting here constitutes a fourth amendment violation. The court can see no principled reason for applying what is essentially a negligence standard (i.e. “reasonableness”) to an officer’s conduct in a situation where a suspect is accidentally shot while in the process of being apprehended (only moments after the initial confrontation, one may surmise), but in holding that no fourth amendment “seizure” is present where an officer is chasing a suspect and his gun accidentally discharges.
See Dodd v. City of Norwich,
In so ruling, the court notes that, in circumstances like those in the present, § 1983 jurisprudence at times dictates harsh results. However, it is clear that not every injury born by a citizen at the hands of the government rises to the level of a constitutional violation. Such is the case here. The court will dismiss plaintiff’s fourth amendment excessive force claim.
II. Due Process Claim
Graham v. Connor,
III. Municipal Liability
Plaintiff also asserts municipal liability against the City of Harrisburg, Bureau of Policе pursuant to
Monell v. Department of Social Services,
Here, Plaintiff has alleged that the Bureau of Police knew, prior to the shooting, that Officer Salada was not qualified to carry a firearm based on at least one prior, incident in which his weapon was discharged unexpectedly causing injury. In light of this knowledge, the Bureau of Police further failed to adequately and properly supervise and train him in the safe use of firearms, particularly in the course of making an arrest.
In
City of Los Angeles v. Heller,
Here, the court has held that defendant Salada’s conduct as described by the complaint does not state a § 1983 claim for violations of the fourth amendment. All of plaintiff’s municipal liability claims are based on the police bureau’s inadequate training and supervision of Officer Salada specifically,
see
Complaint H 48,
4
and do not go to general departmental policies or practices. Therefore, pursuant to
Heller,
no claim exists against the Bureau of Police under theories of municipal liability. This claim must be dismissed.
See Williams; Estate of Dawson; Lach; accord Apodaca v. Rio Arriba County Sheriff's Dep’t,
IV. Pendent State Law Claims
As the court has dismissed all the federal claims brought by plaintiff, it no longer has jurisdiction over the pendent state law claims. See 28 U.S.C. § 1367(c)(3) (pendent jurisdiction should be exercised unless “the district court has dismissed all claims over which it has original jurisdiction”). This case was removed from the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County. The court will accordingly remand the case there for further proceedings on the state law claims.
ORDER
In accordance with the accompanying memorandum, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED THAT:
1) Defendants’ motion to dismiss is GRANTED with regard to Counts I, II, IV and V of plaintiff’s complaint;
*168 2) The Clerk of Court is directed to remand this case to the Dauphin County Court of Common Pleas with regard to Count III of the complaint, which concerns state common law negligence claims.
Notes
. The court will discuss infra that Salada’s initial apprehension of plaintiff and the mishaр with the gun must be considered separate “seizures.”
. The
Pleasant
court did consider the
Brower
decision. However, it was in the context of plaintiff asserting that the dicta in that case regarding shooting someone when one only meant to bludgeon him required the court to find in her favor. The court found that this language had no effect on their deliberations, noting that “[t]he court did not say that the accidental discharge of a gun used as a bludgeon was an unreasonable seizure
per se."
. The other case relied on by plaintiff,
Spera v. Lee,
. Plaintiff alleges that the bureau is liable under § 1983 due to vicarious liability, see Complaint ¶ 48(c). The Supreme Court made it clear in Monell that there is no such basis for municipal liability under § 1983.
