OPINION
This case arises from a traffic stop for a seatbelt violation in which Los Angeles County Sheriffs Deputy Richard Wells pepper sprayed Mark Anthony Young and struck him with a baton after Young exited his vehicle and disobeyed Wells’s order to reenter it. Young filed this action against Wells and the County of Los Angeles, claiming that Wells’s use of force was excessive under the Fourth Amendment, and also that Wells’s conduct constituted false imprisonment and negligence under California tort law. 1 The district court granted summary judgment to the defendants on all of Young’s claims. We affirm the grant of summary judgment on Young’s false imprisonment claim. However, because we conclude that the use of intermediate force is unreasonable when an officer has detained a suspect for minor infractions and the suspect clearly poses no threat to the officer or the public safety, we reverse as to Young’s excessive force and negligence claims. 2
I.
Because on summary judgment the evidence of the non-moving party is assumed
*1159
to be true,
see Narayan v. EGL, Inc.,
When Young found his registration, he exited his truck carrying both the registration and his vegetables, walked to Wells’s motorcycle, and handed Wells the registration. Wells took the registration and ordered Young to “just have a seat in the truck.” Young declined to do so, stating, “I don’t feel like sitting in my truck, man.” 3 Instead, Young walked past his truck, sat on the sidewalk curb, and resumed eating his broccoli. The exchange between Wells and Young continued:
DEPUTY WELLS: Mr. Young—
MR. YOUNG: I don’t feel—
DEPUTY WELLS: —I’m not asking you what you feel like—
MR. YOUNG: —sitting—
DEPUTY WELLS: —doing.
MR. YOUNG: —in my truck.
DEPUTY WELLS: Have a seat in your truck, please.
MR. YOUNG: I don’t feel like sitting in my truck, officer.
DEPUTY WELLS: Mr. Young, have a seat—
MR. YOUNG: I don’t feel like sitting in my truck.
DEPUTY WELLS: —in your truck, please. Mr. Young, have a seat—
MR. YOUNG: I don’t feel like sitting in my—
DEPUTY WELLS: —in your truck, please.
MR. YOUNG: —truck.
DEPUTY WELLS: Mr. Young, have a seat in your truck please. Until you sit in your truck, I can’t write you the ticket. You want me to hurry up and write the ticket. Have a seat in your truck, please. Mr. Young. Mr. Young.
Young contends that shortly afterwards, while he was still sitting on the sidewalk curb, Wells approached him from behind 4 and pepper sprayed him. The audio transcript of the stop suggests Young was unaware he was about to be pepper sprayed:
MR. YOUNG: You going to give me no — I’m an officer of the law, sir ... You don’t give me warning.
*1160 DEPUTY WELLS: I don’t have to give you a warning.
Wells does not argue on this appeal that Young posed any physical threat to him prior to his use of pepper spray, nor that he reasonably or unreasonably feared such a threat. 5
Wells continued to pepper spray Young as he rose to his feet and attempted to back away from the pepper spray. Young protested, repeatedly telling Wells, “I’m an officer of the law.” Young asserts that Wells responded to his protests by drawing his baton, striking him a number of times with it, and ordering him to get on the ground.
Wells asserted in his motion for summary judgment that he struck Young with the baton because he “believed that [Young] was trying to gain a position of advantage over [him], from which position he could then launch an assault,” and that he “believed that [Young] was about to throw the broccoli at [him] in order to cause a distraction before assaulting him.” However, on this appeal, Wells makes no claim that his decision to strike Young with a baton was motivated by safety concerns.
Despite being struck, Young did not immediately get on the ground, and continued to object to Wells’s use of force, saying, for example, “I’m not going to let you hit me another time,” and “How you going to pepper spray me?” At this point, a second sheriffs deputy, Michael Berk, arrived on the scene, and, like Wells, ordered Young to lie on the ground. Young did so, and Berk handcuffed him and placed his knee on his back. Young contends that after he lay on the ground, Wells struck him with a baton again. As he lay handcuffed on his stomach with Officer Berk on his back, Young complained that Berk had handcuffed him too tightly, to which Berk responded, “Well, you know what, that’s part of not going along with the program.” Young continued to complain vocally about Wells’s use of force, stating that his eyes were burning from the pepper spray, that he had not been warned prior to Wells’s use of the spray, and that, “You cannot pepper spray nobody. You cannot just pepper spray nobody, officer.” Berk replied to this last statement by saying, “If you keep getting agitated, I’m going to pepper spray you.” Young asked to be allowed to stand up and to have his handcuffs loosened; Berk stated that “until you calm down, I ain’t going to help you.” After several minutes in which Young strenuously objected to his treatment — in particular, to the fact that Berk continued to press his knee into his back — the officers allowed Young to stand, and placed him in the back of Berk’s police car.
Young filed suit against both Wells and the County of Los Angeles in the Central District of California, and the district court granted summary judgment for the defendants on all counts. We review that judgment
de novo,
“viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party to determine the presence of any issues of material fact.”
Benay v. Warner Bros. Entertainment, Inc.,
II.
Young appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Wells on his excessive force claim. Summary judgment is appropriate here only if, taking the facts in the light most favorable to Young, a reasonable jury could not find that “the officer’s conduct violated a constitutional right[J”
Saucier v. Katz,
If we determine that, taking the facts in the light most favorable to Young, the defendant’s conduct amounts to a violation of a constitutional right, we then determine whether the defendant is entitled to qualified immunity by assessing whether “the right at issue was clearly established at the time of defendant’s alleged misconduct.”
Pearson v. Callahan,
1. Nature and Quality of Intrusion
The gravity of the particular intrusion that a given use of force imposes upon an individual’s liberty interest is measured with reference to “the type and amount of force inflicted.”
Deorle v. Rutherford,
Both pepper spray and baton blows are forms of force capable of inflicting significant pain and causing serious injury. As such, both are regarded as “intermediate force” that, while less severe than deadly force, nonetheless present a significant intrusion upon an individual’s liberty interests.
See Smith v. City of Hemet,
Pepper spray “is
designed
to cause intense pain,” and inflicts “a burning sensation that causes mucus to come out of the nose, an involuntary closing of the eyes, a gagging reflex, and temporary paralysis of the larynx,” as well as “disorientation, anxiety, and panic.”
Headwaters Forest Defense v. County of Humboldt,
A police officer’s use of baton blows, too, presents a significant use of force that is capable of causing pain and bodily injury, and therefore, baton blows, like pepper spray, are considered a form of “intermediate force.”
Mohr,
The amount of force used in this case was significant as well. Young alleges that Wells began pepper spraying him as he sat on the sidewalk curb and continued doing so as he stood up and backed away from him, suggesting that his exposure to pepper spray lasted for at least several seconds and involved more than just a minimal burst designed to startle him and alert him to the seriousness of the situation and the potential for use of greater force. Similarly, Young alleges that in addition to landing two baton blows to his legs (including one while he was restrained on the ground), Wells swung the baton at Young’s head multiple times.
In pepper spraying Young and striking at him multiple times with a baton while landing at least two blows, Wells used a significant amount of two forms of intermediate force known to cause serious pain and to lead in some cases to serious physiological consequences. Whatever such force is ultimately labeled, there is no question that its use against an individual is a sufficiently serious intrusion upon lib *1163 erty that it must be justified by a commensurately serious state interest.
2. Governmental Interest
In evaluating the government’s interest in the use of force we look to: “(1) the severity of the crime at issue, (2) whether the suspect posed an immediate threat to the safety of the officers or others, and (3) whether the suspect was actively resisting arrest or attempting to evade arrest by flight.”
Miller,
Of the three factors we traditionally examine in determining the governmental interest, the most important is whether the individual posed an immediate threat to officer or public safety.
Smith,
With respect to Wells’s use of baton blows after Young stood up from the curb, Wells again does not argue on appeal that his use of force was motivated by any concern for his safety. However, on summary judgment he submitted as an exhibit a contemporaneous incident report in which he stated that his baton blows were motivated by safety concerns, stating that “the manner in which Young was moving and circling me caused me to believe that he was trying to gain a position of advantage over me” and that he feared Young “was going to throw the broccoli at me as a distraction before assaulting me.” Even if Wells had advanced this argument on appeal, it would for two reasons be inadequate to support a grant of summary judgment with respect to Young’s claim that Wells’s use of the baton constituted excessive force. First, “a simple statement by an officer that he fears for his safety or the safety of others is not enough; there must be objective factors to justify such a concern.”
Deorle,
Second, whether a startled Young rose to his feet, “moving and circling” Wells also presents a genuine issue of fact. Moreover, it would hardly be surprising if Young did so given that he had just been unexpectedly pepper sprayed while sitting on the curb eating his broccoli. This court has recognized that an officer’s “provocative conduct” can trigger an individual’s “limited right to offer reasonable resistance.”
Arpin v. Santa Clara Valley Transp. Agency,
Moreover, Young asserts that one of Wells’s baton blows against him took place as Young lay face-first on the ground. Were a jury to deem this assertion credible it could readily conclude that the force used was far in excess of any safety concerns, reasonable or otherwise, that might have motivated Wells’s alleged conduct.
In short, no safety concern whatsoever appear to have justified Wells’s decision to approach a sitting Young from behind and pepper spray him, and Wells’s declaration that his baton strikes were justified by a reasonable fear for his safety — an argument that he has not advanced in defending this appeal — would, at most, suffice to raise a jury question as to whether his use of force was justified by an immediate threat to his safety. Thus, the single most important factor in assessing the government’s interest in the use of force weighs heavily against the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Wells.
In addition to immediate safety threats, in determining whether there is a sufficiently strong governmental interest to justify a given use of force we must consider “the severity of the crime at issue.”
Miller, 340
F.3d at 964. Young committed two offenses prior to Wells’s use of force. First, he drove his truck without fastening his seatbelt, the offense that led Wells to initiate the traffic stop. Second, after exiting his truck to provide Wells with his registration, Young refused Wells’s instructions to re-enter the truck, insisting on sitting on the curb and eating his broccoli instead, thus committing the misdemeanor offense of interfering with a peace office in violation of Cal. Pen.Code § 148(a)(1);
see also
Cal. Pen.Code § 17(b) (defining misdemeanor offenses under California law). Young’s failure to wear a seatbelt was a run-of-the-mill traffic violation that clearly provided little, if any, support for the use of force upon him.
See Bryan,
Finally, in assessing the governmental interest in force we consider whether the suspect “was actively resisting arrest or attempting to evade arrest by flight.”
Miller,
In addition to the three factors that we traditionally consider in evaluating the governmental interest in a given use of force, all of which weigh in favor of a determination that the government had a minimal interest in the use of significant force, Wells urges that after Young refused the order to reenter his truck, his “only options were to abandon his attempt to get [Young] to comply with his lawful order or to resort to force.” The record in this case would not compel a reasonable jury to accept Wells’s position that if he had not used force at the moment he did, he would have had no alternative but to acquiesce in Young’s disobedience of his order. Wells had a variety of less intrusive options at his disposal when Young refused his orders: Wells could have warned Young that he would be placed under arrest if he did not comply with the order; he could have warned Young that disobedience would lead Wells to use force against him; he could have simply begun
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to effect Young’s arrest by attempting to handcuff him; or he could have called for assistance as he apparently did in order to summon Berk to the scene. Wells chose none of these options, thus bypassing a variety of less painful and potentially injurious measures that would have been both feasible and reasonable under the circumstances. Instead, he proceeded to employ a level of intermediate force that caused Young significant pain and threatened serious bodily injury. That he did so given the availability of other, less intrusive measures makes clear just how limited was the government’s interest in the use of significant force.
See, e.g., Bryan,
3. Balancing Governmental Interest Against Nature of Intrusion
We conclude our analysis of whether the force used by Wells was reasonable by balancing “the gravity of the intrusion on the individual against the government’s need for that intrusion.”
Miller,
Having determined that the force allegedly used against Young was significant and that the governmental interest in the use of that force minimal, we conclude that, taking the facts in the light most favorable to Young, the force used by Wells was excessive in violation of the Fourth Amendment.
Our conclusion comports with the logical notion that it is rarely necessary, if ever,
*1167
for a police officer to employ substantial force without warning against an individual who is suspected only of minor offenses, is not resisting arrest, and, most important, does not pose any apparent threat to officer or public safety. Indeed, we have found the use of pepper spray to be excessive in such circumstances even when a warning was provided.
Headwaters Forest Defense v. County of Humboldt,
4. Qualified Immunity
Having determined that, “[t]aken in the light most favorable to the party asserting the injury ... the facts alleged show the officer’s conduct violated a constitutional right,”
Saucier,
The legal principles that dictate our conclusion that the force involved was excessive were clearly established and indeed, long-standing, prior to 2007, the time of the use of force at issue in this case.
Graham’s
holding that the Fourth Amendment allows only such force as is objectively reasonable under the circumstances was well-established long before that time,
see Graham,
Relying upon that established law, we held in
Blankenhom
that police officers violated Fourth Amendment principles that were clearly established by 2001, the time at which they gang-tackled an individual who was suspected of trespassing and
*1168
disobeyed an officer’s order to kneel down and be handcuffed.
[i]n assessing the state of the law at the time of Blankenhorn’s [2001] arrest, we need look no further than Graham’s holding that force is only justified when there is a need for force. We conclude that this clear principle would have put a prudent officer on notice that gang-tackling without first attempting a less violent means of arresting a relatively calm trespass suspect — especially one who had been cooperative in the past and was at the moment not actively resisting arrest — was a violation of that person’s Fourth Amendment rights.
In addition to Blankenhom’s holding as to the notice provided to reasonable officers by 2001, our holding in
Headwaters II
would have provided a reasonable officer in Wells’s position with specific and unambiguous notice that the use of pepper spray and baton blows constituted excessive force. In
Headwaters II,
we held that police officers employ excessive force in violation of the Fourth Amendment when they use pepper spray upon an individual who is engaged in the commission of a non-violent misdemeanor and who is disobeying a police officer’s order but otherwise poses no threat to the officer or others.
Because the legal rules dictating the result reached in this case were well-established at the time of Wells’s conduct, we conclude that the district court erred in granting summary judgment on the issue of qualified immunity. 9
*1169 III.
Young also appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Wells as to his false imprisonment claim. Under California law, the elements of a claim for false imprisonment are: “(1) the nonconsensual, intentional confinement of a person, (2) without lawful privilege, and (3) for an appreciable period of time, however brief.”
See Easton v. Sutter Coast Hosp.,
Young first argues that he did not violate § 148(a)(1) because Wells’s order that he reenter his vehicle was an unlawful attempted seizure in violation of the Fourth Amendment, and § 148(a)(1) prohibits only refusal to comply with a peace officer’s
lawful
orders.
See Smith,
Young’s second argument as to why Wells lacked probable cause to arrest him is that Young’s repeated statements to Deputy Wells that he would not re-enter his vehicle were acts of expression protected by the First Amendment. Young relies upon
People v. Quiroga,
Because Wells’s order that Young reenter his vehicle was lawful and Young’s refusal to obey was not an act of speech protected by the First Amendment, Wells had the authority to arrest Young for disobeying a peace officer’s order in violation of § 148(a)(1). Young has thus failed to establish an essential element of a false imprisonment claim under California law— that he was arrested “without lawful privilege.”
Easton,
IV.
In conclusion, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Wells with respect to Young’s false imprisonment claim because Wells had lawful authority to arrest Young on account of his violation of CaLPenal Code § 148(a)(1). However, we reverse with respect to Young’s claim alleging excessive force in violation of the Fourth Amendment. He asserts facts that amount to a textbook violation of his Fourth Amendment rights: the use of significant force without warning against an individual who committed only minor misdemeanors; who posed no apparent threat to officer or public safety; and who was not seeking to flee, even though a variety of less intrusive alternatives to the use of such force was available. The district court thus erred in granting summary judgment to Wells both with respect to whether a constitutional violation had occurred, and with respect to whether the law governing Wells’s conduct was clearly established. Because the Fourth Amendment violation alleged by Young also suffices to establish the breach of a duty of care under California law, we reverse the district court’s dismissal of Young’s state law negligence claim, as well.
See, e.g., Munoz v. City of Union City,
*1171 AFFIRMED, in part, REVERSED, in part, and REMANDED.
Notes
. Young's suit included another state law claim that is not at issue in this appeal.
. Defendants Wells and the County of Los Angeles submitted a joint brief that does not assert any separate defenses on behalf of the County. As the County has rested its defense of this appeal upon the simple premise that Young’s claims against Wells are meritless, our disposition of (his appeal addresses only the merits of those claims without regard to any separate defenses that the County might have raised in light of its status as a municipal defendant. Accordingly, our disposition of Young's claims against Wells apply equally to his claims against the County. For the sake of simplicity, we refer in the text to the positions taken in the defendants' brief as Wells’s positions, when they are in actuality those of both Wells and the County, and our holdings apply to the County, as well as to Wells.
. As is explained in Part III,
infra,
Wells’s order that Young reenter his truck was a lawful one, and Young's refusal to obey was a violation of Cal.Penal Code § 148(a)(1) that gave Wells probable cause to arrest him. Whether the force he used was reasonable is a separate question.
Blankenhorn v. City of Orange,
. Young's declaration states, “I felt liquid on my head, and turned my head around and saw Deputy Wells holding a can of pepper spray for the first time. I rose to my feet and tried to back away from the pepper spray. Deputy Wells continued to spray me.”
. Additionally, while Wells recorded in his incident report that Young had responded to his orders with the objection, “Fuck you, I don’t want to, I'm eating my vegetables,” the audio transcript records no such statement by Young.
. Wells argues that Young has failed to raise a genuine issue of material fact as to whether he was required to block “eight or more” baton swings aimed at his head because the audio recording of the incident captures Young exclaiming to passersby, "This man pepper sprayed me and hit me twice with a baton because I didn't have my seatbelt on.” Because this brief audio snippet does not render Young’s factual claim "blatantly contradicted by the record, so that no reasonable jury could believe it,”
Scott v. Harris, 550
U.S. 372, 380,
. The Commission sets minimum training standards for all California law enforcement personnel. See The Commission on Peace officer Standards and Training, Commission on POST — Home, http://post.ca.gov/ (last visited August 19, 2011).
. Although we note that both of the offenses of which Young was suspected were misdemeanors, a crime's status as a misdemeanor or felony is not the key question but rather provides a rough proxy for the true object of the court’s inquiry: whether a given offense indicates a suspect's potential dangerousness, immediate or otherwise, such that there is a heightened social interest in the use of force to apprehend or subdue that suspect.
See Garner,
471 U.S at 14,
. Our conclusion that Wells is not entitled to summary judgment on his qualified immunity claim is further supported by the evidence presented by Young that the minimum train *1169 ing standards for California law enforcement personnel instruct that both pepper spray and batons are painful, potentially dangerous weapons that should be used only as defensive weapons in response to a suspect’s aggressive actions. While our holding that Wells is not entitled to qualified immunity in this case ultimately rests not on such training standards, but on clearly established constitutional law principles and holdings, the fact that Wells’s alleged conduct violated basic police practice makes clear that a reasonable officer in Wells’s position would have had abundant notice that the conduct at issue was unlawful.
. Indeed, Williams noted that drivers have even more limited liberty interests during a traffic stop than do passengers, because, "there is probable cause to stop the driver based on the traffic infraction.” Id. at 1032.
. Williams emphasized that "[allowing a passenger ... to wander freely about while a lone officer conducts a traffic stop presents a dangerous situation by splitting the officer’s attention between two or more individuals.” Id. at 1034. Young argues that this rationale is inapplicable here, as Wells needed to account for only one individual during the course of the traffic stop. However, our holding in Williams did not rest on the fact that the stopped car contained more than one individual. Rather, it rested on the need to allow an officer to safely perform his duties during the stop without being distracted by the need to ensure that an individual who has wandered from a vehicle poses no threat to the officer or the public safety. See id. (emphasizing "the value of giving officers control over the movement of people involved in a traffic stop as helpful in limiting the risk of danger to the police and the occupants of the car.”). Here, although Young was the only individual for whom Wells needed to account, the task of accounting for Young’s movements and actions threatened to distract Wells from the performance of his duties, specifically the completion of Young's traffic citation. We see no reason to deem Williams inapplicable simply because Wells's attention was divided between Young’s movements and the completion of a citation, rather than between the movements of two individuals.
