http://laws.findlaw.com/6th/02a0133p.html
UNITED STATES COURT OF
APPEALS
Recommended For Full-Text
Publication
Pursuant to Sixth Circuit
Rule 206
Emil Ewolski,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
City of Brunswick, et
al.,
Defendants-Appellees.
No. 00-3066
__ F.3d __
2002 U.S. App. Lexis
7129
2002 FED App. 0133P
Appeal from the
United States District Court
for the Northern
District of Ohio at Akron.
No. 96-00647--Dan A.
Polster, District Judge.
Argued: September 19,
2001
Decided and Filed: April 18, 2002
GUY and MOORE, Circuit Judges; HULL, District Judge.(*)
MOORE, J.,
delivered the opinion of the court, in which GUY, J., joined. HULL, D. J,
delivered a separate dissenting opinion.
KAREN NELSON MOORE, Circuit Judge.
Plaintiff-Appellant Emil Ewolski, acting as Administrator
for the estates of John M. Lekan, Beverly Lekan, and John T. Lekan, appeals the
district court's decision granting summary judgment to all defendants in the
instant § 1983 and state law tort action. Appellant's suit alleges violations
of the Lekans' federal constitutional rights as well as several state law tort
claims arising from the conduct of the Brunswick Police Department leading up
to and during a two-day armed standoff with Mr. Lekan, which tragically ended
with Mr. Lekan's decision to kill his son and himself. Specifically, Appellant
claims: (1) that the police violated the Fourth Amendment by making a
warrantless entry into the Lekan home without sufficient evidence of exigent
circumstances, (2) that the police used excessive force against Mr. Lekan and
his family during the standoff in violation of the Fourth Amendment, (3) that
the police's conduct during the standoff demonstrated deliberate indifference
to the safety of the Lekan family in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment, (4)
that the City of Brunswick was liable for the Lekans' constitutional injuries
because the decisions of the Brunswick Chief of Police in supervising the
standoff were those of a final policymaker and because the City failed
adequately to train its officers; and (5) that the police are liable under
state law for trespass, assault and battery, intentional infliction of mental
distress, conspiracy, and wrongful death. For the reasons stated below, we
AFFIRM the decision of the district court.
On March 28,
1996, Beverly Lekan and Emil Ewolski, the administrator for the estates of John
M. Lekan and John T. Lekan, filed this action alleging that the defendants
violated the Lekans' Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights as secured by the
United States Constitution. The complaint also alleged state common law claims
of trespass, assault and battery, intentional infliction of mental distress,
and conspiracy, as well as statutory claims for wrongful death. After the
commencement of this lawsuit, Beverly Lekan died of illness unrelated to the
instant action, and her claims were assumed by Emil Ewolski as administrator of
her estate. On December 8, 1999, the trial court granted a motion for summary
judgment filed by the defendants in regard to all of plaintiffs' federal and
state claims, and dismissed the plaintiffs' complaint in its entirety.
At the time of
the incident, Beverly Lekan was bedridden with multiple sclerosis and had been
receiving home health services from Tri-County Home Nurses, Inc.
("Tri-County") for approximately one year without any significant problems.
While Tri-County provided Mrs. Lekan with assistance with her catheter and
helped her to bathe, she relied on her husband John Lekan for the care of their
nine-year-old son J.T., as well as the cooking and cleaning for the household.
On March 19,
1995, while Mrs. Lekan was receiving her bi-weekly home health services, Mr.
Lekan, carrying a rifle, entered the room where a Tri-County aide was caring
for Mrs. Lekan. At one point, Mr. Lekan placed the weapon only a few inches
from the aide's face. Mr. Lekan again displayed a rifle during the visit by the
aide on March 22, 1995. Subsequently, on March 27, 1995, the Tri-County aide
reported the incidents to her superior Barbara Hillegass. Because of her
concern for the safety of the healthcare workers going to the Lekan home,
Hillegass called Mrs. Lekan on March 30, 1995, and advised her that Tri-County
wanted her husband to sign a contract regarding his guns. Hillegass also asked
Mrs. Lekan if she was comfortable discussing this contract with her husband,
and she indicated that she would talk to him about it. However, in about half
an hour, Mrs. Lekan called back and stated that she was not comfortable
discussing the contract with her husband. In response, Hillegass stated that
Tri-County would discuss the contract with Mr. Lekan.
On the morning
of March 31, 1995, Mrs. Lekan called Tri-County and informed them that she did
not want a home health aide that day and that she wanted to consider a nursing
home placement. She also allegedly informed Tri-County that her husband was
angry and he had kept their son home that day. Because of concern for Mrs.
Lekan, Hillegass called Mrs. Lekan back and asked her if there was a problem.
When Mrs. Lekan did not respond, Hillegass asked her again if there was a
problem. At that point, Mr. Lekan spoke from an extension and spewed various
profanities at Hillegass.
Later, at about
8:50 a.m. that same morning, Mrs. Lekan's mother, Helen Ewolski, advised
Hillegass that Mr. Lekan suffered from post-traumatic stress syndrome, and that
although he had been verbally abusive to his wife in the past, he had never
been physically abusive. At 11:15 a.m., Hillegass called the Cleveland Clinic
to talk to Dr. Kinkle who was Mrs. Lekan's physician. She expressed concern for
Mrs. Lekan and for the safety of J.T., her son. She was told that Dr. Kinkle
was not available, but that he also had a message to call Mrs. Lekan.
Hillegass also
confirmed that around noon on March 31, 1995, Tri-County notified Adult Protective
Services of their concerns in regard to Mrs. Lekan, and Children's Services of
their concerns in regard to J.T. At around 1:30 p.m., Hillegass received
information that neither Adult Protective Services nor Children's Services
considered this to be an emergency situation, and that neither agency would be
taking further immediate action that day in regard to the Lekan home situation.
Nevertheless, Medina County Human Services contacted the Brunswick Police
Department concerning the information they had received from Hillegass.
At 1:45 p.m.,
Hillegass received a phone call from Sergeant Nick Solar concerning the Lekan
situation. Hillegass asked Sergeant Solar what actions he anticipated the
police would take. He told her that this was a potential stand-off situation,
that he was going to devise a game plan, and that the police would probably
make a call. He indicated that he had been made aware of the situation sometime
before 1:45 p.m. by the social services agencies.
Sergeant Solar
then met with Sergeant Stukbauer, Detective Schnell, Patrol Officer Marok, and
Patrol Officer Sam Puzella to discuss the situation. Detective Schnell told
Solar that he had learned in December of 1994 that John Lekan was a paranoid
schizophrenic and if any police officers tried to commit him to a mental
facility, there was a potential for violence. Schnell also had confirmed just
prior to the meeting after a contact with Suzanne Lekan, who was a police
dispatcher and John Lekan's sister-in-law, that John Lekan was a paranoid
schizophrenic and he had not been taking his medication. Suzanne further
informed Schnell that John Lekan had loaded guns, and that she believed he
would shoot at police officers if they went to the home.
After a
discussion, Solar decided to dispatch two officers to the Lekan residence in
order to determine whether Beverly Lekan or her son was in danger. Officer Dale
Schnell volunteered to go to the Lekan home with Officer Sam Puzella. Solar and
other officers went to the Rolling Hills Shopping Center near the Lekan
residence in case further assistance was needed. Because of the information
they had received regarding John Lekan's possible violent reaction to police
officers, Solar advised Puzella to wear civilian clothes rather than a police
uniform. Schnell was already wearing civilian clothes.
Schnell and
Puzella drove to the Lekan residence in an unmarked car, parked, and walked up
to a small porch by the front door. Schnell knocked on the outer storm door
which was in front of the interior door and John Lekan opened the interior
door. The officers did not identify themselves and Puzella asked to speak to
Mrs. Lekan. The officers could not hear Mr. Lekan's response. Puzella asked him
to open the storm door so they could hear him, but Mr. Lekan did not open the
door. Instead, he went to a small nearby open window and said that the officers
could hear him through the window. When Puzella again asked to speak to Mrs.
Lekan, Mr. Lekan did not respond, and at one point he started to sing the Star
Spangled Banner.
Puzella then
took out his police badge and identification card and held them up to the open
window. He told Mr. Lekan that he was a police officer and that he needed to
speak to Mrs. Lekan. Mr. Lekan immediately moved away from the window and
slammed the front door. Puzella pulled the storm door open and tried to open
the front door, but it was locked. Puzella then kicked the door until it
finally opened. Puzella entered the house and was shot by Mr. Lekan. Puzella
and Schnell retreated from the home and called for assistance. Puzella was then
removed from the scene.
The officers
contacted Brunswick Police Chief Patrick Beyer and informed him of the events
at the Lekan home. Beyer contacted the officer in charge of the Emergency
Response Team ("ERT"), Sergeant McDermott, and the two went to the
scene. Beyer established perimeters around the Lekan home, evacuated
neighboring residents, and mobilized the ERT. Chief Beyer instructed Sergeant
Solar, who was trained in hostage negotiation, to return to the police station
and assume the role of chief negotiator.
In the meantime,
Mrs. Lekan called the Brunswick Police Department to report that her door had
been broken down and that someone had been shot. The police transferred the
call to Sergeant Solar. Solar asked to call her back on another line. When
Solar called back, Mr. Lekan answered the phone. He told Solar that "the
first officer was lucky" and that he had his ".270 [rifle] loaded and
ready to go." Joint Appendix ("J.A.") at 936 (Solar Dep. at 95).
Solar asked Lekan if he would come out of the house and assured Lekan that the
police did not want anybody to get hurt. Mr. Lekan told Solar that his home was
his castle and nobody was going to take him or anything else out of it. Chief
Beyer later asked Solar to return to the Lekan house. After arriving at the
scene, Solar continued trying to negotiate with Mr. Lekan by telephone. Mr.
Lekan made no demands, and became increasingly incoherent as the standoff
progressed. At one point, Mr. Lekan asked to speak with Senator Edward Kennedy.
In the meantime,
relatives of the Lekan family went to the Brunswick police station to offer
assistance. Beverly Lekan's mother and sister pleaded with the police to be
allowed to speak with Mr. Lekan to calm the situation. The police, however,
refused to allow any family members to speak with Mr. Lekan.
Between 7:00 and
7:30 p.m., Chief Beyer requested an assessment from James Polzner, a mental
health professional at the scene. Polzner had been monitoring conversations
between Sergeant Solar and Mr. Lekan. Polzner told Chief Beyer that the threat
level was high. Chief Beyer then asked if the officers at the scene had a
reason not to pursue a tactical solution to the standoff. Beyer asked for input
from another psychologist on the scene, who responded by asking rhetorically
why Beyer was considering a tactical assault.
Ultimately,
Chief Beyer decided to order an armed entry into the Lekan house. Pursuant to
the assault plan, the ERT team threw incendiary devices into the house while
using a battering ram to break open the front door. Tear gas was also used
during the assault. The plan failed when one of the incendiary devices ignited
a fire in the entrance hall and the lead officer stopped to put out the fire.
The police lost the initiative as a result. Mr. Lekan exchanged gunfire with
the police, and two more officers were injured. The police ultimately retreated
and the standoff continued.
At approximately
3:00 a.m., Solar spoke again with Mr. Lekan and asked to talk to Mr. Lekan's
son, J.T. Mr. Lekan put J.T. on the telephone. J.T. told Solar that he was fine
and that he was scared. Mr. Lekan then took the telephone and asked to speak to
his cousin, who is a priest. Solar told Mr. Lekan that he could speak to his
cousin if he left the house. Mr. Lekan said "[t]hat's not part of the
scenario" and hung up. J.A. at 136 (Solar Aff. at 4). Solar consulted with
another negotiator from the Southwest Enforcement Bureau, and they concluded
that the request to speak to a priest was a danger sign indicating that Mr.
Lekan might be contemplating a murder-suicide ritual.
Shortly
thereafter, an armored vehicle from the Cleveland Police Department arrived on
the scene. Chief Beyer ordered the armored vehicle to drive onto the front lawn
and illuminate the Lekan house. Officers inside the vehicle attempted to
communicate with Mr. Lekan over a loudspeaker, but received no response. Later
that morning, the armored vehicle rammed through the living room wall and
injected more tear gas into the house in hopes of eliciting a response from Mr.
Lekan. Between 4:00 and 5:00 a.m., the police heard gunshots coming from inside
the residence. At 11:00 a.m., Chief Beyer ordered the vehicle to push through
the garage door. There was still no response from Mr. Lekan. Finally, the
police conducted another tactical rescue operation. A room-to-room search of
the residence was conducted. During the search, the officers found the bodies
of John Lekan and J.T. Lekan. John Lekan had shot his son and then killed
himself.
The details of
this standoff are well summarized in the sixty-seven-page report of William P.
Callis, who was hired by the Brunswick City Council to conduct an independent
review of the incident. Mr. Callis, who was a former FBI Special Agent/Hostage
negotiator, notes in his "Review of Incident Involving John M. Lekan,
Brunswick, Ohio, March 31-April 2, 1995, Summary," that he had the benefit
of reviewing the almost four-hundred-page report about the incident which was
prepared by the Brunswick Police Department. He also had the limited
cooperation of the police department, and he personally interviewed numerous
officers and individuals including Mrs. Lekan about the incident.
In his summary,
Callis addressed the "tactical operations" which took place during
the standoff, and concluded:
In summary, as I have set forth above, I don't
believe this matter could have been resolved through the traditional form of
hostage negotiations. I believe that John Lekan set out on a path of self
destruction when he shot Officer Puzella on that Friday afternoon. I believe
that John Lekan was willing to die "protecting" his home and his son
and, because of his mental disorder, I think he believed he was doing just that
- protecting himself, his home, and his family. J.A. at 514 (Callis Report at
67). Callis noted that he had three criticisms in regard to the tactical
operations:
1.I believe the tactical entry into
the Lekan residence was conducted too soon into the stand off.
2.I believe it was a mistake to try
to use the armored vehicle to overwhelm John Lekan into surrendering.
3.I believe it was a mistake to interrupt the
tactical entry to try to deal with the fire in the front door.
J.A. at 514.
The record also
includes the thirteen-page report of James J. Fyfe Ph.D., who was retained as
plaintiffs' expert. In his report, Dr. Fyfe notes that he reviewed police
investigative reports, the report of William Callis, and the depositions of six
officers who were involved in the incident. He agrees with many of the
statements and conclusions contained in the Callis summary, and notes numerous
violations of generally accepted police custom and practice in regard to the
initial entry of the Lekan home and the resulting standoff. In addition, his
report details the inadequacy of the Brunswick Police Department's policies and
training regarding encounters with emotionally disturbed persons.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Standard of
Review
We review the
district court's grant of summary judgment to the defendant officers de novo.
Aiken v. City of Memphis, 190 F.3d 753, 755 (6th Cir. 1999), cert. denied, 528
U.S. 1157 (2000). Summary judgment is proper only when there is no dispute as
to a material question of fact and one party is entitled to a judgment as a
matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). Viewing all facts and inferences drawn
therefrom in the light most favorable to the nonmovant, this court then
determines whether the evidence presented is such that a reasonable jury could
find for that party. Aiken, 190 F.3d at 755 (citing Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co.
v. Zenith Radio Corp., 475 U.S. 574, 587 (1986)).
Appellant's
claims against the individual officers of the Brunswick Police Department must
be evaluated under the framework of qualified immunity. According to the
doctrine of qualified immunity, "government officials performing
discretionary functions generally are shielded from liability for civil damages
insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or
constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known."
Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 800, 818 (1982). Qualified immunity involves a
two-step inquiry. First, the court must determine whether, based upon the
applicable law, the facts viewed in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs
show that a constitutional violation has occurred. If the court finds a
constitutional violation, it must then consider whether the violation involved
"'clearly established constitutional rights of which a reasonable person
would have known.'" Dickerson v. McClellan, 101 F.3d 1151, 1158 (6th Cir.
1996) (quoting Christophel v. Kukulinsky, 61 F.3d 479, 484 (6th Cir. 1995));
see also Saucier v. Katz, 533 U.S. 194, 121 S. Ct. 2151, 2156 (2001). For a
right to be clearly established, "[t]he contours of the right must be
sufficiently clear that a reasonable official would understand that what he is
doing violates that right." Russo v. City of Cincinnati, 953 F.2d 1036,
1042 (6th Cir. 1992) (quoting Anderson v. Creighton, 483 U.S. 635, 639 (1987)).
"Although it need not be the case that 'the very action in question has been
previously held unlawful, . . . in light of pre-existing law, the unlawfulness
must be apparent.'" Id. (quoting Anderson, 483 U.S. at 640). Whether
qualified immunity is applicable to an official's actions is a question of law
that is reviewed de novo. See Dickerson, 101 F.3d at 1157.
1. Warrantless Entry
Turning first to
the Appellant's warrantless entry claim against Officers Puzella and Schnell,
we conclude that the district court correctly found that exigent circumstances
existed to justify a warrantless entry. A police officer's entry into a home without
a warrant is presumptively unconstitutional under the Fourth Amendment. O'Brien
v. City of Grand Rapids, 23 F.3d 990, 996 (6th Cir. 1994). Warrantless entries
are permitted, however, where "exigent circumstances" exist. Hancock
v. Dodson, 958 F.2d 1367, 1375 (6th Cir. 1992). Exigent circumstances exist
where there are "'real immediate and serious consequences' that would
certainly occur were a police officer to 'postpone[] action to get a
warrant.'" O'Brien, 23 F.3d at 997 (quoting Welsh v. Wisconsin, 466 U.S.
740, 751 (1984)). The relevant inquiry is whether the facts are such that an
objectively reasonable officer confronted with the same circumstances could
reasonably believe that exigent circumstances existed. Dickerson, 101 F.3d at
1158. Three types of circumstances have traditionally been found to constitute
exigent circumstances: "(1) when the officers were in hot pursuit of a
fleeing suspect; (2) when the suspect represented an immediate threat to the
arresting officers and public; (3) when immediate police action was necessary
to prevent the destruction of vital evidence or thwart the escape of known
criminals." Hancock, 958 F.2d at 1375.
Although the
determination of exigent circumstances is normally a question for the jury,
"in a case where the underlying facts are essentially undisputed, and
where a finder of fact could reach but one conclusion as to the existence of
exigent circumstances, the issue may be decided by the trial court as a matter
of law." Id. In Hancock, we found that exigent circumstances existed as a
matter of law where the police received a call concerning a suicidal and
possibly homicidal gunman, shots had been reported fired, and at least one
radio communication indicated that the gunman had threatened to kill any police
officers who arrived. Id. Similarly, in Dickerson, 101 F.3d at 1160, we
concluded that summary judgment based upon exigent circumstances was
appropriate where the police made an unannounced forcible entry while
responding to a call reporting that a drunken man was screaming and had fired
shots in his house. Although it was later determined that the suspect was alone
in his house and was screaming into the telephone, we determined that it was
reasonable for the police to believe that someone was in the house and was in
immediate peril of bodily harm given the presence of a firearm and the
suspect's apparent willingness to use his weapon. Id.
Similar facts
were present here. The district court relied upon facts which showed that at
the time of the initial entry:
the officers had credible evidence that (1) John Lekan was a mentally disturbed man who was volatile, dangerous and not taking his prescribed medication, (2) he recently began brandishing a shotgun in front of home health care personnel in a threatening manner, (3) he told his brother the night before that his guns were "loaded and ready," (4) he inexplicably kept his son home from school that day, and (5) his wife unexpectedly asked to be put into a nursing home that morning.
J.A. at 62 (Dist. Ct. Op. at 11).
In addition, the undisputed evidence showed that Officers Puzella and Schnell
observed Mr. Lekan behaving erratically immediately prior to their decision to
enter.(1) He asserted the Fifth Amendment when asked about his wife and sang the
Star Spangled Banner. When Officers Puzella and Schnell identified themselves
as police officers, he slammed the door. We agree with the district court that
"[o]ne could reasonably construe this as a sign that Mr. Lekan was hiding
something, holding his family hostage, or preventing the police from [stopping]
whatever action he had planned." J.A. at 63 (Dist. Ct. Op. at 12). This
dramatic reaction, combined with the officers' knowledge that he was armed and
volatile and that his wife and child were in the house with him, reveals an
undisputed body of evidence from which a reasonable officer could have
reasonably concluded that there was an immediate threat to Mr. Lekan's wife and
son.
The danger to
Mr. Lekan's family makes this an even stronger case for exigent circumstances
than Hancock, 958 F.2d 1367, where there was no evidence of any potential
hostages.(2) The presence of hostages also distinguishes the instant case from
those cited by the Appellant in which this court declined to find exigent circumstances.
See O'Brien, 23 F.3d at 997-98 (finding absence of exigent circumstances where
no hostages were present); United States v. Johnson, 22 F.3d 674, 680 (6th Cir.
1994) (holding that no exigent circumstances were present once hostages had
been secured and removed from danger). The importance of the potential danger
to innocent people in the house is apparent from our opinion in Dickerson, 101
F.3d at 1160, which emphasized the reasonable belief that a hostage could be
present in the house -- even though this turned out to not be the case -- in
finding that exigent circumstances existed as a matter of law. In the instant
case, the police had actual knowledge that Mr. Lekan's wife and son were
inside, and the apparent threat to them was enhanced by the fact that Mrs.
Lekan had earlier sought to be taken out of the house and that Mr. Lekan had
kept his son home from school.
The Appellant
emphasizes that the police admitted that exigent circumstances were not present
before they arrived at the Lekan home, and that the police never saw a crime
being committed and did not hear Mr. Lekan threaten anyone. As the district
court correctly observed, however, the fact that exigent circumstances did not
exist at some earlier point in time is irrelevant, since our inquiry is limited
to whether exigent circumstances existed at the moment the police entered the
residence. United States v. Morgan, 743 F.2d 1158, 1162 (6th Cir. 1984), cert.
denied, 471 U.S. 1061 (1985). Moreover, this court has never held that the police
must witness a crime for exigent circumstances to be present. In Hancock, 958
F.2d at 1375, for example, the defendant officers' information regarding
exigent circumstances was limited to reports they received from a radio
dispatch. Where, as here, an armed and volatile individual poses an obvious
threat to another, we do not believe the Fourth Amendment requires the police
to stand idly by until they actually observe a criminal act. Similarly,
although the police may not have personally heard any threats, they were aware
of Mr. Lekan's threatening behavior. Moreover, the undisputed evidence
indicates that Officer Schnell was aware of Mr. Lekan's statement that his guns
were "loaded and ready."
We are also
unpersuaded by the Appellant's claim that the defendant officers impermissibly
created the exigent circumstances by initially attempting to see Mrs. Lekan
without identifying themselves as police officers. The Appellant relies upon
United States v. Morgan, 743 F.2d at 1163, in which we observed that
"[p]olice officials . . . are not free to create exigent circumstances to
justify their warrantless intrusions." The Morgan case, however, is easily
distinguished. In Morgan, the police surrounded the home of a person suspected
of possessing illegal firearms and flooded the house with lights while
summoning the suspect with the "blaring call of a bullhorn." Id. at
1161. The suspect exited the house carrying a pistol, which he then set down
inside the doorway of the house. The police arrested him and then searched the
house, seizing a number of firearms, including the pistol. Id. We held that the
warrantless search of the home was not justified by exigent circumstances. We
explained that "[t]here was no substantiated evidence that Morgan was dangerous
or that a grave offense or crime of violence had occurred or was even
threatened." Id. at 1163. We emphasized the lack of any demonstrated need
for immediate action, noting that the police had sufficient time to meet at a
local coffee shop and "assess[] the situation," before deciding to
surround the house. Id. at 1162. Under these circumstances, we found that the
mere possibility that the suspect would react with hostility to the dramatic
actions of the police could not, by itself, create sufficient exigent
circumstances to justify a warrantless search. Id. at 1163. In the instant
case, by contrast, Officers Puzella and Schnell did have reason to believe that
there was a danger of violence. Although this threat may have risen to the
level of exigent circumstances only after the officers identified themselves to
Mr. Lekan, the risk to Mrs. Lekan and her son was not created solely by the
officers' conduct, as in Morgan. Moreover, this risk to Mrs. Lekan and her son
reasonably justified the belief that there was a need to investigate the
situation relatively quickly. This fact distinguishes the instant case from
many created-exigency cases, which have reasoned that the police cannot claim
there was insufficient time to seek a warrant if the evidence shows that the
police controlled the timing of the encounter giving rise to the search. See
United States v. Campbell, 261 F.3d 628, 633-34 (6th Cir. 2001) (noting that in
cases from the Eighth Circuit holding controlled deliveries to be exigent
circumstances created by the police, "the police had the opportunity to
obtain a search warrant prior to executing the controlled delivery at that
dwelling, but chose not to do so."); U.S. v. Cresta, 825 F.2d 538, 553
(1st Cir. 1987) ("Thus, the agents could not have controlled the time at
which the fake delivery took place, which is a necessary element to a finding
that the government deliberately created the exigent circumstances."),
cert. denied, 486 U.S. 1042 (1988).
Moreover, the
created-exigency cases have typically required some showing of deliberate
conduct on the part of the police evincing an effort intentionally to evade the
warrant requirement. See Campbell, 261 F.3d at 633 ("This Court has struck
down warrantless entries by the police in situations where deliberate conduct
on the part of police officers has created the claimed exigent
circumstances."); United States v. VonWillie, 59 F.3d 922, 926 (9th Cir.
1995) ("This is not a case where the government purposely tried to
circumvent the requirements of [the knock and announce statute]."). The
Appellant has presented no evidence to indicate that Officers Schnell and
Puzella made a deliberate effort to incite Mr. Lekan, so as to create a threat
to Mrs. Lekan and her son that could justify a warrantless search. Instead, the
undisputed evidence indicates that the officers had reasonable grounds to be
concerned for the safety of Mrs. Lekan and her son, but did not possess
probable cause sufficient to obtain a warrant. Under these circumstances, it
was reasonable to go to the Lekan home and attempt to learn more through
consensual questioning of Mr. Lekan. United States v. Jones, 239 F.3d 716, 720
(5th Cir.) ("Federal courts have recognized the 'knock and talk' strategy
as a reasonable investigative tool when officers seek to gain an occupant's
consent to search or when officers reasonably suspect criminal
activity."), cert. denied, --U.S.--, 122 S. Ct. 142 (2001). When an
officer observes facts giving rise to exigent circumstances in the course of
such a consensual encounter, it usually cannot be said that the officer
impermissibly "created" the exigent circumstances. Id. Although
Officers Schnell and Puzella's strategic decision not to identify themselves
immediately may have been ill-advised, and may even have contributed to Mr.
Lekan's agitation, this conduct did not give rise to a claim that the police
impermissibly created the exigency.(3)
Even if genuine
issues of material fact did exist as to whether a reasonable officer would have
perceived an immediate threat to the Lekans, we would still find summary
judgment to be appropriate on the basis of the "clearly established"
prong of the qualified immunity test. As the above discussion indicates, we can
find no controlling authority where a court has held similar conduct to be
unconstitutional "under facts not distinguishable in a fair way from the
facts presented in the case at hand." Saucier, 121 S. Ct. at 2157. In
Russo, 953 F.2d at 1043-44, we held that the defendant police officers were
entitled to qualified immunity on the plaintiff's warrantless entry claims,
where the undisputed facts showed that the suspect was mentally disturbed, the
suspect possessed two knives, a radio call had described the suspect as
suicidal, and the suspect had turned out the lights and gone silent immediately
before the officers' decision to enter. We explained that, even if the
officers' actions were unreasonable, we were not aware of "a single case
indicating that an officer's attempt to rescue what that officer believes to be
a suicidal person does not constitute exigent circumstances." Id. at 1044.
We are not aware of any such case that has issued since Russo. Certainly, then,
a reasonable officer could not anticipate that a court might decide exigent
circumstances were absent where the danger of suicide was compounded by an
apparent threat to the suspect's family. Therefore, summary judgment for the
officers on the grounds of qualified immunity is appropriate regarding the
warrantless entry claim.
2. Excessive Force
The district
court rejected the Appellant's Fourth Amendment excessive force claim on the
grounds that there was not a "seizure" of either Mr. Lekan or his
family. J.A. at 65-66 (Dist. Ct. Op. at 14-15). As the court noted, the Fourth
Amendment protects against only unreasonable seizures, it is not a guarantee
against unreasonable or outrageous official conduct generally. See Galas v.
McKee, 801 F.2d 200, 202 (6th Cir. 1986). Therefore, to assert a successful
Fourth Amendment claim, the plaintiffs must first show that there was a
seizure. See id. The district court concluded that none of the Lekans were
seized by the police. We determine that the district court erred insofar as it
found that Mr. Lekan was not seized during the standoff, although we agree with
the district court's conclusion that Mrs. Lekan and her son were not seized.
Nevertheless, we conclude that the Appellant has not demonstrated a genuine
issue of material fact as to whether excessive force was used against Mr.
Lekan.
A Fourth Amendment
seizure occurs when a police officer restrains the liberty of a citizen in such
a way that a reasonable citizen would reasonably believe under the
circumstances that he or she was not free to leave. Michigan v. Chesternut, 486
U.S. 567, 573 (1988). A violation of the Fourth Amendment requires the
"intentional acquisition of physical control" of a person by a state
official. Brower v. County of Inyo, 489 U.S. 593, 596 (1989). A seizure does
not occur, moreover, until the subject is successfully detained by physical
force or a show of authority. California v. Hodari D., 499 U.S. 621 (1991)
(holding that boy was not seized while fleeing from pursuing police officer
until officer tackled him, bringing boy under physical control); Galas, 801
F.2d at 202 ("Clearly, during the initial stages of the pursuit when the
minor plaintiff decided to flee rather than to obey the defendant officer's
directive to stop, the minor plaintiff was not restrained.").
The district
court concluded that Mr. Lekan was not seized, because by barricading himself
in his home he never submitted to official authority. This conclusion was in
error. There can be little question under the circumstances that Mr. Lekan was
not free to leave. The district court considered Mr. Lekan's case to be more
closely analogous to that of a fleeing suspect, who is not under the control of
official authorities. We believe, however, that Mr. Lekan's case more closely
resembles the facts in Brower, 489 U.S. at 598. In that case, the decedent
never voluntarily submitted to official authority, but was restrained
nonetheless when he collided with a police roadblock set up for the purpose of
stopping him. The Court found that this act of restraint constituted a seizure
for the purposes of the Fourth Amendment. Id. Similarly, in this case, although
Mr. Lekan was never in police custody, the police surrounded the house and
paraded an armored vehicle in front of the Lekans' house. These actions qualify
as an intentional application of physical force and show of authority made with
the intent of acquiring physical control. Moreover, this assertion of force and
authority succeeded in restraining Mr. Lekan's liberty to leave his home.
Unlike the fleeing suspects in Hodari D. and Galas, Mr. Lekan was not "on
the loose." By way of illustration, Mr. Lekan clearly would have been
seized for the purposes of the Fourth Amendment had the police nailed shut the
doors and windows of his house with him inside. The actions of the police in
the instant case were no less effective in restraining Mr. Lekan's movements
and, therefore, should be considered a seizure. Cf. Fisher v. City of Memphis,
234 F.3d 312, 318 (6th Cir. 2000) (holding that intentional application of
force which immobilized automobile effectively seized all passengers). This
conclusion is consistent with decisions in other circuits, which have found
that police efforts to force a barricaded individual out of a home are properly
treated as seizures, subject to the Fourth Amendment's reasonableness
requirement. In re City of Philadelphia Litig., 49 F.3d 945, 974 (3rd Cir.)
(Scirica, J., concurring and dissenting) (holding that use of incendiary
devices against house was seizure, as it was use of "force with the aim of
gaining entry into the house or forcing the occupants out"), cert. denied,
516 U.S. 863 (1995); Ginter v. Stallcup, 869 F.2d 384, 388 (8th Cir. 1989)
(holding that setting building on fire to "smoke out" barricaded
suspect was subject to Fourth Amendment reasonableness test to determine whether
destruction of property was warranted). Because we conclude that Mr. Lekan was
seized for the purposes of the Fourth Amendment, we therefore analyze the
police's actions toward him solely under the objective reasonableness test of
the Fourth Amendment. See Graham v. Connor, 490 U.S. 386, 394-95 (1989)
(holding that where an excessive force claim arises in the context of an arrest
or investigatory stop, it should be analyzed solely under Fourth Amendment, and
not Fourteenth Amendment Due Process Clause).
We conclude that
the district court was correct, however, in finding that the police did not
seize Mrs. Lekan or J.T. Lekan. There was no reason for either of them to
believe that the police were preventing them from leaving the house. In fact,
it was the clear objective of the police to remove them from the house and
remove them from the control of Mr. Lekan. Their movement was restrained by Mr.
Lekan (or in Mrs. Lekan's case, her own physical condition), not by the
police.(4) The fact that the police exercised control over the environment in
the Lekans' house does not demonstrate that Mrs. Lekan and her son were seized.
The distinguishing feature of a seizure is the restraint of the subject's
liberty -- specifically, his or her freedom to walk away. Control over one's
environment does not establish a seizure unless that control somehow restricts
the subject's physical liberty. There are no facts alleged that would suggest
this was the case for Mrs. Lekan or her son.
Even though we
conclude that the district court erred in finding that Mr. Lekan was not
seized, the Appellant has nonetheless failed to show that the officers' use of
force was unreasonable. The determination of whether force used to effect a
seizure was unreasonable "requires careful attention to the facts and
circumstances of each particular case, including the severity of the crime at
issue, whether the suspect poses an immediate threat to the safety of the
officers or others, and whether he is actively resisting arrest or attempting
to evade arrest by flight." Graham, 490 U.S. at 396. The test is
objective; it asks whether a reasonable officer would conclude that the level
of force used was appropriate. See id. at 396-97.
Under this
standard, we hold that summary judgment for the defendants was appropriate. The
police used deadly force only during the tactical assault on the Lekans' home.
At this point, however, it is undisputed that Mr. Lekan was firing on the
officers, and he therefore posed an immediate threat to the officers. Although
the facts viewed most favorably to the plaintiffs reveal that Mr. Lekan was not
an immediate threat when the officers were not attempting a forcible entry,
neither was there any use of deadly force at these times. Moreover, it is
undisputed that Mr. Lekan was actively resisting arrest; indeed, he
demonstrated that he would fire on any officers who entered the house. Under
these circumstances, we can only conclude that the use of the battering ram and
the incendiary devices, which were directed against Mr. Lekan's home but not
his person, were objectively reasonable as applied to Mr. Lekan. At least one
court has found far greater destruction of property to be reasonable at the
summary judgment stage in the context of an armed and barricaded individual.
Ginter, 869 F.2d at 389 (holding that plaintiffs failed to create a jury
question as to whether burning down house where heavily armed fugitive was
barricaded was unreasonable use of force). In light of Mr. Lekan's willingness
to use deadly force against the police in resisting arrest, the use of
non-deadly force such as tear gas and psychological tactics, while perhaps
ill-considered, was not excessive under any version of the facts before us.
Indeed, the Appellant has presented no evidence to indicate that Mr. Lekan was
physically harmed in any way by the force exerted by the police.
Even if a
constitutional injury had occurred, the law is not sufficiently clearly
established on this question to overcome qualified immunity. See Russo, 953
F.2d at 1044-45; In re City of Philadelphia Litig., 49 F.3d at 972 (granting
qualified immunity to police where fire used to smoke out barricaded group
after gun battle, because it could not conclude that "in the light of pre-existing
law the unlawfulness of either dropping the explosive or letting the fire burn
should have been apparent" (quotation omitted)). In Russo, 953 F.2d at
1044-45, we held that the defendant police officers were entitled to qualified
immunity as to the claim that they used unreasonable force in firing multiple
times with a non-lethal Taser gun upon a mentally disturbed suspect wielding
two knives. We noted that "although the plaintiffs' allegations may raise
a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the use of the Taser was
reasonable," we could not conclude that the defendant's "use of
non-lethal force to subdue a potentially homicidal individual transgressed
clearly established law." Id. In reaching this conclusion, we emphasized that
the defendant "deployed the Taser in an effort to obviate the need for
lethal force." Id. at 1044. Similarly, here the defendants did not employ
lethal force, except during those occasions when Mr. Lekan fired directly upon
them. We are aware of no controlling precedent since Russo holding that the use
of non-lethal force against an armed and volatile suspect constitutes excessive
force. We therefore conclude that the defendants are entitled to qualified
immunity on the Appellant's excessive force claim.
3. Substantive Due Process Claim
We also conclude
that the district court correctly determined that the conduct of the police
during the two-day standoff did not violate the substantive due process rights
of Beverly Lekan or her son. As the Supreme Court has explained, "'[t]he
touchstone of due process is protection of the individual against arbitrary
action of government,' whether the fault lies in a denial of fundamental
procedural fairness, or in the exercise of power without any reasonable justification
. . . ." County of Sacramento v. Lewis, 523 U.S. 833, 845-46 (1998)
(quoting Wolff v. McDonnell, 418 U.S. 539, 558 (1974) (citations omitted)). The
Appellant's claim is one of substantive, not procedural, due process. That is,
the Appellant argues that Mrs. Lekan and her son were deprived of life and
liberty as a result of the arbitrary exercise of government power -- namely,
the actions of the police in unnecessarily escalating the confrontation with
Mr. Lekan.
The Due Process
Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment is "phrased as a limitation on the
State's power to act, not as a guarantee of certain minimal levels of safety
and security." DeShaney v. Winnebago County Dep't of Social Servs., 489
U.S. 189, 195 (1987). The purpose of the Due Process Clause "was to
protect the people from the State, not to ensure that the State protected them
from each other." Id. at 196. In general, therefore, the Due Process
Clause does not impose liability on the State for injuries inflicted by private
acts of violence. There are, however, exceptions to this general rule. First,
state officials may be subject to constitutional liability if they fail to
provide protection for individuals in state custody. "The rationale for
this principle is simple enough: when the State by the affirmative exercise of
its power so restrains an individual's liberty that it renders him unable to
care for himself, and at the same time fails to provide for his basic human
needs -- e.g., food, clothing, shelter, medical care, and reasonable safety --
it transgresses the substantive limits on state action set by the Eighth
Amendment and the Due Process Clause." Id. at 200.
Even in
noncustodial settings, however, state officials may violate the Due Process
Clause when their affirmative actions directly increase the vulnerability of
citizens to danger or otherwise place citizens in harm's way. See DeShaney, 489
U.S. at 201 ("While the State may have been aware of the dangers that
Joshua faced in the free world, it played no part in their creation, nor did it
do anything to render him any more vulnerable to them."); Gazette v. City
of Pontiac, 41 F.3d 1061, 1065 (6th Cir.1994) ("[A] duty to protect can
arise in a noncustodial setting if the state does anything to render an
individual more vulnerable to danger."); Butera v. District of Columbia,
235 F.3d 637, 648-49 (D.C. Cir. 2001) ("All circuit courts of appeals . .
. have by now relied on this passage in DeShaney to acknowledge that there may
be possible constitutional liability . . . where the state creates a dangerous
situation or renders citizens more vulnerable to danger." (quotation
omitted)); Bowers v. DeVito, 686 F.2d 616, 618 (7th Cir. 1982) ("If the
state puts a man in a position of danger from private persons and then fails to
protect him, it will not be heard to say that its role was merely passive; it
is as much an active tortfeasor as if it had thrown him into a snake
pit."). The Appellant's claim is based upon such a "state-created
danger" theory. That is, the Appellant contends that the conduct of the
Brunswick police in escalating the confrontation with Mr. Lekan substantially
increased the danger that he would act violently toward his wife and son.
In order to
establish a constitutional violation, however, it is not enough to show a
causal connection between state action and an act of private violence.
"[T]he due process guarantee does not entail a body of constitutional law
imposing liability whenever someone cloaked with state authority causes
harm." Lewis, 523 U.S. at 848. The Appellant must demonstrate that the
state acted with the requisite culpability to establish a substantive due
process violation under the Fourteenth Amendment. As the Supreme Court has
explained, this requires that the § 1983 plaintiff show that the challenged
action was so "egregious" that it can be said to be "arbitrary
in the constitutional sense." Id. at 846 (quotation omitted). The Supreme
Court, in elaborating upon this standard, has repeatedly instructed that the
Fourteenth Amendment protects only against abuse of executive power which
"shocks the conscience." Id.
To be sure, the
"shocks the conscience" standard is "no calibrated yard
stick." Id. at 847. At a minimum, the standard requires a showing beyond
mere negligence. Daniels v. Williams, 474 U.S. 327, 332 (1986). "Far from
an abuse of power, lack of due care . . . suggests no more than a failure to
measure up to the conduct of a reasonable person." Id. At the other end of
the spectrum, it is generally agreed that Fourteenth Amendment liability will
attach to "conduct intended to injure in some way unjustifiable by any
governmental interest." Lewis, 523 U.S. at 849 (emphasis added).
"Whether the point of the conscience shocking is reached when injuries are
produced with culpability falling within the middle range, following from
something more than negligence but less than intentional conduct, such as
recklessness or 'gross negligence' is a matter for closer calls." Id.
(quotation and citation omitted).
Whether conduct
falling within this "middle range" reaches the level of conscience
shocking depends upon the facts and circumstances of the individual case. As
the Supreme Court recently explained, conduct "that shocks in one
environment may not be so patently egregious in another, and our concern with
preserving the constitutional proportions of substantive due process demands an
exact analysis of circumstances before any abuse of power is condemned as
conscience shocking." Id. at 850. For example, in the context of pretrial
detention, the fault requirement for a due process violation may be satisfied
by showing that state officials were deliberately indifferent to the basic
medical needs of detainees. Id.; see also Heflin v. Stewart County, 958 F.2d
709, 716 (6th Cir.), cert. denied, 506 U.S. 998 (1992). By contrast, in Lewis,
523 U.S. at 854, the Supreme Court held that even "deliberate
indifference" is insufficient to demonstrate a Fourteenth Amendment
violation on the basis of police conduct during a high speed vehicle chase.
"[T]he
critical question in determining the appropriate standard of culpability is
whether the circumstances allowed the state actors time to fully consider the
potential consequences of their conduct." Moreland v. Las Vegas Metro.
Police Dep't, 159 F.3d 365, 373 (9th Cir. 1998) (reviewing circuits' treatment
of Lewis decision). As the Lewis Court explained, the deliberate indifference
standard "is sensibly employed only when actual deliberation is
practical." Id. at 851. The Court noted, for example, that "liability
for deliberate indifference to inmate welfare rests upon the luxury enjoyed by
prison officials of having time to make unhurried judgments, upon the chance
for repeated reflection, largely uncomplicated by the pulls of competing
obligations." Id. at 853. The Court further explained, however, that
"when unforseen circumstances demand an officer's instant judgment, even
precipitate recklessness fails to inch close enough to harmful purpose to spark
the shock that implicates 'the large concerns of the governors and the
governed.'" Id. (quoting Daniels, 474 U.S. at 332). In such situations,
which include high speed vehicle chases, a Fourteenth Amendment violation
occurs only when the police act with malice and an "intent to harm."
Id. at 854.
Applying this
framework, we agree with the district court that this case "falls within
the 'middle-range' between custodial settings and high-speed chases," and
likewise conclude that, on balance, "the more appropriate standard of
review is 'deliberate indifference.'"(5) J.A. at 69-70 (Dist. Ct. Op. at
18-19). Although the Brunswick police officers conducting the standoff
undoubtedly faced competing obligations and intense pressures in making their
decisions, the facts viewed most favorably to the plaintiffs reveal that this
was a situation where actual deliberation was practical. The police waited five
hours to initiate the first "tactical solution," which strongly
suggests that split-second decision making was not required. Many more hours
passed before the decision was made to deploy the armored vehicle. Indeed, in
his deposition, Chief Beyer indicated that the decision to initiate a tactical
assault was made after consulting two mental health professionals and
requesting input from the officers on the scene. Beyer also indicated that he
discussed the pros and cons of using tear gas. Clearly, this testimony
demonstrates not only that deliberation was practical, but that some effort at
deliberation was in fact made. This conclusion is supported by Callis's report,
which noted that there was no need for immediate action and concluded that
"[o]ne of the strongest points on the side of the authorities was
'time.'" J.A. at 642 (Callis Rep. at 6).
The time for
deliberation available to Chief Beyer in deciding how to respond to Mr. Lekan's
actions distinguishes this case from those cases in which actual malice and an
intent to harm was required. In Lewis, for example, the entire course of events
lasted a mere seventy-five seconds. 523 U.S. at 837. When the officers observed
the victim's motorcycle approaching at high speed, they were forced to make an
instantaneous decision to give chase. Id. at 853. Likewise, in Claybrook v.
Birchwell, 199 F.3d 350 (6th Cir. 2000), we held that a bystander injured
during a police shootout must show that the police acted "'maliciously and
sadistically for the very purpose of causing harm'" in order to maintain a
due process claim. Id. at 359 (quoting Lewis, 523 U.S. at 853). We explained
that this standard was appropriate because the police "had no opportunity
to ponder or debate their reaction to the dangerous actions of the armed
man" when he approached them menacingly with a weapon and then opened
fire. Id. at 360; see also Moreland, 159 F.3d at 373 (holding that intent to
harm standard applied when police encountered a gunfight in progress in a
parking lot where 50 to 100 innocent people were caught in the crossfire).
Unlike the defendants in Claybrook, however, Chief Beyer and his officers were
not exchanging gunfire with Lekan at the time that the fateful decisions of
that day were made.
Other courts
have found that an intent to harm is required where the police fire upon an
escaping suspect and inadvertently injure hostages in the process. Childress v.
City of Arapaho, 210 F.3d 1154, 1157 (10th Cir. 2000) (holding intent to harm
required where police fired upon hijacked van containing hostages in attempt to
stop van as it drove through series of police roadblocks); Lee v. Williams, 138
F. Supp. 2d 748, 761 (E.D. Va. 2001) (intent to harm applied where armed
suspects took a hostage and were attempting to escape in the hostage's van). In
the instant case, however, Mr. Lekan was contained in his house and surrounded
by a vastly superior police presence. The police were never forced to make a
hasty decision to use force in order to prevent his escape into the community.
Although Mr. Lekan did pose a danger to his family, the Appellant's version of
the facts suggests that the danger was not immediate as long as Mr. Lekan was
not provoked.(6)
To hold
otherwise would effectively give the police free licence to take any risk with
the lives of hostages in an armed standoff situation, as long as they did not
act maliciously and sadistically with the intent to cause harm. The district
court noted this same concern, explaining that it did "not believe that,
because Mr. Lekan was armed and dangerous, the defendants could attempt to
restore order by any means whatsoever so long as they did not intend to hurt
the Lekans." J.A. at 69 (Dist. Ct. Op. at 19).
Nevertheless,
even under the more exacting deliberate indifference standard, we conclude that
the Appellant has not shown a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the
conduct of the police rose to the level of the conscience shocking under the
particular circumstances presented. Deliberate indifference has been equated
with subjective recklessness, and requires the § 1983 plaintiff to show that
the state "official knows of and disregards an excessive risk to [the
victim's] health or safety."(7) Farmer v. Brennan, 511 U.S. 825, 837
(1994); see also Stemler v. City of Florence, 126 F.3d 856, 865, 870 (6th Cir.
1997) (applying Farmer's deliberate indifference standard to Fourteenth
Amendment claim in non-institutional setting), cert. denied, 523 U.S. 1118
(1998). Thus, "the official must both be aware of facts from which the
inference could be drawn that a substantial risk of serious harm exists, and he
must also draw the inference." Farmer, 511 U.S. at 837. Having drawn the
inference, the official must act or fail to act in a manner demonstrating
"reckless or callous indifference" toward the individual's rights.
Landol-Rivera v. Cruz Cosme, 906 F.2d 791, 797 (1st Cir. 1990).
From the record,
there is little doubt that Chief Beyer drew the inference that aggressive
tactics might provoke Mr. Lekan to respond in a dangerous manner toward his
wife and child. In his deposition, Chief Beyer quite frankly explained that
"[t]hat possibility [of a violent reaction] existed throughout the entire
crisis situation, so we were concerned that that was in fact what would
happen." J.A. at 393 (Beyer Dep. at 198). Chief Beyer also indicated that
he considered the possibility of a murder-suicide reaction when evaluating the
advisability of initiating an assault with the armored vehicle, but he hoped
that Mr. Lekan "would take his aggressive action out on the police."
J.A. at 396-97 (Beyer Dep. at 206-07).
It seems clear
from the record, however, that Chief Beyer also knew that further delay and
inaction also posed substantial risks. The Callis report, for example,
concluded that although, on balance, a strategy of stalling for time generally
is the best to reduce risks to hostages, stalling has its own drawbacks and
risks. The undisputed facts suggest that these risks and drawbacks factored
into Chief Beyer's decisions to initiate a tactical assault and deploy the
armored vehicle. Prior to ordering the first assault, Chief Beyer consulted a
mental health professional on the scene who informed him that the threat level
was high. Chief Beyer further explained that he perceived that his officers
were tiring and potentially losing their edge, which could have made it more
difficult to conduct successfully a tactical operation later. In addition,
Chief Beyer had some reason for confidence that a tactical assault could
succeed, based upon his knowledge of the past success of the City's emergency
team. Moreover, it seems from the record that everyone agreed at the time that
there was little, if any, prospect for successful resolution to the crisis
through negotiation. Mr. Lekan made no demands and was not communicating
coherently with the negotiator. Given the grim prospect for negotiations, it
was reasonable for Chief Beyer to conclude that a tactical solution would be
required eventually.
Viewed against
this backdrop, we do not think it would be appropriate to say that Chief Beyer
acted with callous indifference to the risk of injury to Mrs. Lekan or her son.
Instead, it appears that Chief Beyer made a decision that required a balancing
of the risks presented by aggressive action against the risks presented by
further delay. This is not a situation where the police deliberately refused to
take obvious steps that would decrease the risk or abandoned the Lekans in a
dangerous environment. See Leffall v. Dallas Indep. Sch. Dist., 28 F.3d 521,
531 (5th Cir. 1994). Instead, the Appellant challenges Chief Beyer's choice
among necessarily risky alternative tactics in undertaking an effort to rescue
Mrs. Lekan and her son from danger. Merely demonstrating that Chief Beyer
incorrectly assessed the competing risks may demonstrate negligence on Chief
Beyer's part, but it is not enough to show a callous disregard for the safety
of Mrs. Lekan and her son. Id.
Cases from other
circuits dealing with unsuccessful police rescue efforts are instructive. See,
e.g., Salas v. Carpenter, 980 F.2d 299, 308 (5th Cir. 1992); Andrews v.
Wilkins, 934 F.2d 1267, 1271 (1st Cir. 1991). In Salas, 980 F.2d at 302-03, the
Fifth Circuit addressed a substantive due process claim asserted on behalf of a
woman who was killed by her husband after a day-long standoff with the police
at the courthouse where the victim worked. City police, equipped with a hostage
negotiating team and a SWAT team, were the first to respond after the husband
stormed his wife's office and took her hostage. Before the city police could
deploy, however, the county sheriff ordered them to leave, asserting his
exclusive jurisdiction over courthouse security. Id. at 302. The sheriff's
department did not possess the same experience, capabilities, or equipment for
dealing with hostage situations that were possessed by the city police. After
unsuccessful efforts to negotiate a resolution, the gunman killed his wife and
then himself. The Fifth Circuit concluded that the actions of the sheriff did
not rise to the level of conscience-shocking behavior. Id. at 309. The Court
reasoned that the officers did not "cut off all avenues of rescue . . .
without providing an alternative." Id. at 308. Rather, the officers
"controlled the conduct of a police rescue, considering factors such as
the safety of those involved." Id. The mere fact that the sheriff's
department did not possess the best available equipment did not render the
decision to handle the standoff conscience shocking. Id. at 310.
In Andrews, 934
F.2d at 1269, the D.C. Circuit addressed a Fourteenth Amendment claim asserted
on behalf of a suspect who drowned while attempting to evade the police. The
suspect dove into a channel after being confronted by a police officer. When
the suspect began to drown, the officer hailed a private boat to assist the
man. Seeing that the suspect was unconscious, a woman on the boat told the
officer she needed to dive in to save him, and informed the officer that she
had been trained to execute such a rescue. Id. The officer directed her not to
go into the water, because the drowning man was an escaped prisoner and could
be dangerous. Id. The court concluded that the officer's action of interfering
with the private citizen's rescue effort did not demonstrate a reckless
disregard for the suspect's safety. Id. at 1271. The court explained that it is
not a constitutional violation "for a state officer to attempt an
ineffectual rescue," and therefore mere negligence on the part of the
officers in the conduct of the rescue did not state a Fourteenth Amendment
violation. Id. at 1270. Moreover, the court explained "the police were
entitled, if not obliged, to prevent [the private citizen on the boat] from
endangering her life in the course of a police rescue effort." Id. at
1271.
Finally, in
Kepner v. Houstoun, 164 F. Supp. 2d 494 (E.D. Pa. 2001), the court addressed a
factual situation closely analogous to the instant case. In Kepner, an armed individual
who was also a diagnosed schizophrenic took his former employer and another
person hostage and barricaded himself in the employer's office. A two-day
standoff ensued. The police ultimately decided to undertake a tactical assault,
after the hostage-taker's demands became increasingly erratic. As the police
stormed the office, the hostage-taker shot and killed one of the hostages. Id.
at 497. The court found that the conduct of the police in undertaking a
tactical assault did not shock the conscience under either the intent to harm
or the deliberate indifference standard. Id. at 500. As the court explained:
While their action surely had grave risks, taking no action
also had grave risks. It is important to remember that Czajkowski, with serious
mental problems, had previously shot Jordan and was making demands that were
becoming increasingly bizarre. In hindsight, maybe the state police were
negligent and should have taken a different path, but negligence is not the
applicable constitutional standard.
Id.
Viewing the
instant facts in light of the foregoing cases, we conclude that the Appellant
has not shown sufficient facts to support a claim of deliberate indifference.
Here, the police attempted to rescue Mrs. Lekan and her son from a threat of
private violence. It is undisputed that there was no clear way out of danger,
and any course pursued by the police entailed significant risks. The Appellant,
at best, has shown that Chief Beyer should have obtained more information from
the mental health professionals on the scene and may have made an incorrect
assessment of the risks as a result. Deliberate indifference, however, requires
that the police act in conscious disregard of a known risk of serious injury.
In cases such as this one in which officers must choose among risks, a
plaintiff must show that the police "knowingly and unreasonably"
opted for a course of conduct that entailed a substantially greater total risk
than the available alternatives. Farmer, 511 U.S. at 846. Although, in hindsight,
we may agree that the decisions made were ill-advised, and may also agree that
Chief Beyer was negligent in failing to better inform himself before making the
decision, this would not lead to the conclusion that he callously disregarded
the risk of injury to the Lekan family.
Appellant's
allegation that better equipment, such as thermal imaging technology, which
could have improved the chances for a successful assault, would have been
available to Chief Beyer if he had waited longer to order the assault is
similarly unavailing. A state official's decision to initiate a rescue with
suboptimal equipment sounds in negligence, not deliberate recklessness. See
Salas, 980 F.2d at 309-310. Indeed, in the instant case, the Appellant has not
contradicted Chief Beyer's deposition testimony that he had no way of knowing
that thermal imaging equipment would later become available. Therefore, his
decision to act without the benefit of such equipment cannot be said to be
deliberate.
There can be
little doubt that the facts of the instant case show that the actions of the
police were, in many instances, ill-advised and poorly executed. Like the
district court, we are not convinced that it was necessary or prudent to
undertake a tactical assault only five hours into the standoff with Mr. Lekan,
particularly since he had by all accounts retreated from the confrontation and
did not appear to be posing an immediate threat to his family or the police.
The experts in this case seem to agree with the district court that
"[a]rmed tactical solutions are radical strategies used only as a last
resort in hostage situations," and that "[u]se of it here was
premature." J.A. at 70 (Dist. Ct. Op. at 19 n.12). Moreover, the assault
itself was poorly planned, and it appears that the police lacked the personnel
and equipment to carry it out successfully. The decision to deploy an armored
vehicle seems particularly imprudent when confronting a paranoid schizophrenic,
even if the vehicle previously had been used successfully in dealing with
individuals who were not mentally ill. Troubled as we are by the conduct of the
police in this standoff, however, imprudence and poor execution do not rise to
the level of constitutionally arbitrary abuses of power. We therefore conclude
that the district court correctly granted summary judgment to the defendants as
to the Appellant's Fourteenth Amendment claim.
C. Municipal
Liability
Having concluded
that the Appellant has not shown a genuine issue of material fact as to any of
the asserted constitutional claims, we therefore conclude that the district
court correctly dismissed the Appellant's municipal liability claims. Where, as
here, a municipality's liability is alleged on the basis of the
unconstitutional actions of its employees, it is necessary to show that the
employees inflicted a constitutional harm. City of Los Angeles v. Heller, 475
U.S. 796, 799 (1986) ("[N]either Monell . . . nor any other of our cases
authorizes the award of damages against a municipal corporation based on the
actions of one of its officers when in fact the jury has concluded that the
officer inflicted no constitutional harm."). Because no such
constitutional violation has been shown, we affirm the district court's
decision granting summary judgment to the City on the Appellant's municipal
liability claim.
D. State Law
Claims
We also hold
that the Appellant's state law claims were properly dismissed. Initially, we
conclude that the Appellant's claims for assault and battery, intentional
infliction of emotional distress, and civil conspiracy were waived by the
Appellant's failure to address them in his brief to this court. See Ahlers v.
Schebil, 188 F.3d 365, 374 (6th Cir. 1999) (finding plaintiffs appealing
summary judgment in § 1983 action had waived a number of their state law tort
claims by failing to address them in their appellate briefs). "Federal
Rule of Appellate Procedure 28(a) requires that an appellant's brief include 'a
statement of the issues presented for review,' and [a]n argument' on each issue
presented." Bickel v. Korean Air Lines Co., 96 F.3d 151, 153 (6th Cir.
1996), cert. denied, 519 U.S. 1093 (1997). Appellant's brief on appeal does not
specifically mention any of these claims, nor does it contain any argument as
to why the district court's determination that summary judgment was appropriate
on these claims was in error. The Appellant's argument section, Appellant's Br.
at 55, suggests that the district court's decision to dismiss the state law
claims should be reversed based upon the same arguments asserted as to the
Appellant's constitutional claims. The district court's opinion, however, quite
clearly based its conclusions as to the state law claims upon different grounds
than its constitutional rulings.(8) These grounds are not addressed anywhere in
the Appellant's brief. Therefore, we decline to consider them.
Read liberally,
the Appellant's brief does address the district court's grant of summary
judgment as to the wrongful death claims, insofar as it challenges the district
court's conclusion that the deaths of Mr. Lekan and his son were not proximately
caused by the defendants. Nevertheless, as employees of a political
subdivision, the individual defendants are entitled to statutory immunity
unless their "acts or omissions were with malicious purpose, in bad faith,
or in a wanton or reckless manner." Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 2744.03(A)(6)(b)
(Banks-Baldwin West 2001). The standard for recklessness employed by Ohio
courts holds that "[t]he actor's conduct is in reckless disregard of the
safety of others if . . . such risk is substantially greater than that which is
necessary to make his conduct negligent." Fabrey v. McDonald Village
Police Dep't, 639 N.E.2d 31, 35 (Ohio 1994) (quotation omitted). As we have
already explained, we believe that the Appellant's version of the facts does
not establish culpability rising above negligence. Therefore, we affirm the
district court's decision to award summary judgment as to the Appellant's
wrongful death claims.
In sum, we
AFFIRM the district court's grant of summary judgment to the Defendants-Appellees
on all claims asserted by the Plaintiff-Appellant.
THOMAS GRAY HULL, District Judge, dissenting.
Respectfully, I dissent. I believe the issue of exigent
circumstances and qualified immunity were issues for the jury. Citing O'Brien,
the district court addressed the issue of exigent circumstances as follows:
Exigent circumstances exist only where "real, immediate
and serious consequences ... would certainly occur were a police officer to
postpone action to get a warrant." O'Brien, 23 F.3d 990, 997 (6th Cir.
1994) (citations omitted); Welsh 466 U.S. at 751. The issue, then, is whether
Mr. Lekan posed a threat to his family that was both real and immediate.
This issue is particularly disturbing because of the way the
Brunwick [sic] police department chose to handle the 'situation.' They sent two
police officers to the house posing as civilians (one in jeans and a
sweatshirt) on the off chance that Mr. Lekan - a known paranoid might let these
strangers in to "talk to his wife." A stable person would not have
let them in. To think their chances of entry might increase after
unsuccessfully attempting to deceive him and then claiming to be police
officers was simply foolhardy. The police could have chosen any number of
other, less confrontational, ways to check on Mrs. Lekan and her son. Although
this particular incident appears to have triggered the unfortunate series of
events that followed, the Court must determine whether exigent circumstances
existed at the precise moment the officers entered the house.
Although the
district court cites O'Brien for the definition of exigent circumstances, and
concludes that this is a decision for the court, O'Brien also teaches that
whether exigent circumstances existed "is a question for the jury provided
that, given the evidence on the matter, there is room for a difference of
opinion." Id. at 997. In the case before us, the district court expressly
recognized an existing material dispute of fact in regard to exigent
circumstances as follows:
Defendants contend that exigent circumstances justified the
warrantless entry because Mr. Lekan presented an immediate threat to his
family. Plaintiffs disagree on the basis that, prior to visiting the home,
defendants admitted there was no probable cause to arrest Mr. Lekan and no
exigent circumstances existed. Further, the officers never saw a crime being
committed, nor did they hear Mr. Lekan threaten anyone.
Based upon this material dispute of fact, there is room for
a difference of opinion on the issue of exigent circumstances and this issue
was for a jury.
This dispute of
fact is further bolstered by the report of William Callis which is significant
because he was hired by the defendant City of Brunswick to conduct an
independent review of the incident. In addressing exigent circumstances,
although the majority finds that this was a hostage situation, in his report
prepared for the defendants, Callis' explains why this incident did not involve
a hostage situation:
Upon reviewing this situation, I am of the opinion that the Lekan matter was not a hostage situation. A hostage is defined as a person held and threatened by a subject to force the fulfillment of certain substantive demands on a third party. In this situation, there was not a threat by Mr. Lekan to harm Mrs. Lekan or their son, nor was there a substantive demand by Mr. Lekan. Therefore, it appears that Beverly Lekan and her son, John T. Lekan, were not actually hostages, but were victims of Mr. Lekan's actions. They were in the residence when Mr. Lekan committed his criminal act and he afforded them no opportunity to leave.
Many hostage situations involve a negotiation process -- or bargaining approach - to meet certain demands. In this situation, there were no substantive demands as Mr. Lekan did not want anything the authorities could provide. He already had what he wanted -- his family and he was already in his own home. (emphasis in original).
Callis' also concludes that there were a number of options
open to the defendants which would also negate exigent circumstances:
However, after reviewing this matter, I can't help but wonder if there was not a better way of conducting the "welfare check" at the Lekan residence. Perhaps the police could have asked a relative of Beverly Lekan's telephone her at home and once she was on the telephone, the police could speak to her to verify that she and her son were well. The identity and telephone numbers of Mrs. Lekan's relatives was available to the authorities. The visiting nurses organization that was caring for Mrs. Lekan telephoned her mother, Helen Ewolski, on the morning of March 31 to advise her that Beverly was requesting to go to a nursing home. Perhaps further investigation by the police could have determined the Lekan's health status and allowed the confrontation between the police and John Lekan to be avoided until something could be done about John's possession of firearms in his mental condition.
Although the
majority finds that there was qualified immunity for the officers in this case,
in the unpublished opinion of Carpenter v. Laxton, 99 F.3d 1138, 1996 WL 623017
(6th (Tenn.)), it was held that if the facts surrounding the existence of exigent
circumstances are in dispute, and a rational jury could draw more than one
inference from the conflicting facts, there are also genuine issues of material
fact regarding whether or not the officers are entitled to qualified immunity.
Therefore, I believe summary judgment in regard to a Fourth Amendment violation
was inappropriate and the issues of exigent circumstances and qualified
immunity should have been submitted to a jury.
I also believe
that the plaintiffs' excessive force claims should have gone to the jury. In
this case, the district court concluded that there was no seizure because Chief
Beyer did not intend to arrest Mrs. Lekan or her son, and because Mr. Lekan
barricaded himself in his own home. However, in Stemler v. City of Florence,
126 F.3d 856 (6th Cir.1997), cert. denied, 523 U.S. 1118, (1998), Conni Black
was killed in a car accident after officers threatened to arrest her if she did
not return to the vehicle of her abusive, intoxicated boyfriend. The fatal
accident occurred five minutes after officers returned her to her boyfriend's
vehicle, and her boyfriend left the scene. In Stemler, this court concluded
that Black was in the custody of the defendant officers in the sense that they
had affirmatively acted to deprive her of her liberty, rather than merely
negligently refusing to act to protect her.
In regard to the
manner in which Chief Beyer conducted the standoff, the district court
summarizes in footnotes 12 and 13 of the Memorandum of Opinion and Order:
12 Armed tactical
solutions are radical strategies used only as a last resort in hostage
situations. Use of it here was premature. Police Chief Beyer commenced the plan
only five hours after the standoff began. There was still hope for a peaceful
resolution at this time. Mr. Lekan had completely retreated from confrontation.
There was no evidence that he harmed his family or intended to harm them, and
he was not shooting at police officers. There was insufficient manpower to
carry out the plan successfully at this time, and the defendants did not yet
have the equipment to determine the location of the residents. In addition, the
plan had a high probability of failure. It called for officers to run through
the house with loaded weapons looking for Mr. Lekan after creating a diversion
through the use of incendiary devices. It is unclear what the police would have
done had Mr. Lekan been discovered in close proximity with his family. Also,
the incendiary devices set a fire in the house, which the officers then had to stop
to put out.
13 Beyer ordered this vehicle to the scene without informing his chief negotiator, Sergeant Solar. Thus, the vehicle appeared on the scene while Solar was still attempting to negotiate a peaceful resolution of the standoff. This could only confirm Mr. Lekan's paranoid suspicion that the police were out to get him, and that he could not trust them. Although the vehicle's loudspeaker ordered Mr. Lekan to pick up the telephone or come out of the house, the phone line had been disconnected -- further reinforcing Mr. Lekan's paranoia. And while an armored vehicle circling a home, flooding it with light, and caving the walls in might cajole a sane person into submission to police authority, this strategy was riskier with an unstable person such as Mr. Lekan.
In addition, the
report of William Callis, in regard to his interview with Chief Beyer,
indicates that the electric power to the Lekan home was cut off "to
manipulate Mr. Lekan's environment," and "the lack of power allowed
the police to control the area." Mr. Lekan's access to the outside was
also restricted by open telephone lines between the negotiators and the Lekan
residence. According to Callis' report, it was Chief Beyer's belief that use of
the armored vehicle would show Mr. Lekan "enough potential force to get
him to surrender," and force was also shown by the many armed police
officers who were members of the SWAT teams that surrounded the Lekan home.
Construing the
facts in a light most favorable to the plaintiffs, it is obvious that all the
members of the Lekan family were affected by the actions of the police in
controlling communications to the home, in the control of their environment by
cutting off the power to the home which left them without heat and electricity,
by the introduction of tear gas into their home by officers who used ferret
rounds fired from shotguns, and by the show of force as armed officers with the
armored vehicle surrounded their home. Consequently, I believe the Lekans were
in the custody of the defendant officers in the sense that the officers had
affirmatively acted to deprive all of them of their liberty.
Taking the
evidence in a light most favorable to the plaintiffs, given the advice detailed
by Callis that Chief Beyer had from mental health professionals at the scene,
the evidence in this case would support a finding by the jury that in
conducting the standoff, Chief Beyer did not act with "objective
reasonableness." Therefore, summary judgment should not have been granted
in regard to the plaintiffs' Fourth Amendment claims.
In the
alternative, even if there was no seizure, the defendants could have been found
to have used excessive force under the analysis of a Fourteenth Amendment
Claim. The district court concluded that Chief Beyer was held to a deliberate
indifference standard in regard to his supervision of the standoff, and under
the facts of this case, this claim could not survive summary judgment because
the plaintiffs could not show that he was deliberately indifferent to an
obvious risk of harm actually suffered by the plaintiffs.
Based upon the
factual circumstances of this case, Chief Beyer had a reasonable opportunity to
deliberate and consider various alternatives prior to electing a course of
action, and his actions would be deemed conscience-shocking if they were taken
with "deliberate indifference" towards the plaintiffs' federally
protected rights. Darrah v. City of Oak Park, 255 F.3d 301, 306 (6th Cir.
2001). Viewing the facts as summarized by the district court in a light most
favorable to the plaintiffs, I believe a rational jury could find that Chief
Beyer's course of action was deliberately indifferent because a rational jury
could conclude that there was an obvious threat of physical injury to the Lekans
(and the potential threat of physical injury was the very premise for the
officers' "welfare check," in the first place). Chief Begley also
knew Mr. Lekan was paranoid and that his mental condition and unpredictable
behavior were major factors to contend with in regard to the entire incident.
In spite of this knowledge, he did not take advantage of the advice of mental
health professionals who were present at the scene. In addition, Chief Begley
was specifically told that the use of tear gas could result in physical harm to
Mrs. Lekan, however, he ignored this risk to her and was deliberately
indifferent to the danger to her.
The issue of
qualified immunity was also addressed in Stemler, 126 F.3d at 868, which held
that the defendants should have known under clearly established law that they
owed a duty to Black not to force her in harm's way after officers had taken
affirmative action which deprived Black of her liberty. Similarly, in this
case, because the Lekans had been confined in their home and deprived of their
liberty by the standoff situation, the defendants should have known under
clearly established law that they owed the Lekans a duty not to force them into
a situation where they would suffer harm.
In this case,
taking the evidence in a light most favorable to the plaintiffs, the evidence
would support a finding by the jury that in conducting the standoff, Chief
Beyer did not act with objective reasonableness and/or that he was deliberately
indifferent to a threat of physical injury to the Lekans, and as a matter of
law, he is not entitled to qualified immunity. Accordingly, I believe summary
judgment should not have been granted in regard to the plaintiffs' excessive
force claims.
In regard to the
plaintiffs' state causes of action, the Sixth Circuit has recognized a general
rule disfavoring a district court's exercise of pendent jurisdiction when
federal issues are dismissed before trial. Gaff v. FDIC, 814 F.2d 311, 319 (6th
Cir.1987). However, the district court in this case did address each of the
plaintiffs' state claims after finding no merit to the plaintiffs' federal
claims. I believe these state claims should have been dismissed without
prejudice.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons
stated herein, based on disputed material facts in this case, I believe summary
judgment for the defendants in regard to the plaintiff's federal and state
claims was inappropriate, and the judgment of the trial court should have been
reversed and remanded. Footnotes
*The Honorable
Thomas Gray Hull, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of
Tennessee, sitting by designation.
1 We
respectfully disagree with Judge Hull's characterization of the district court
opinion as having "expressly recognized an existing material dispute of
fact in regard to exigent circumstances." (Dissent at 40). The portion of
the district court opinion excerpted in Judge Hull's dissent merely restates
the plaintiff's claims that the police were not aware of exigent circumstances
before arriving at the Lekan house and that the police did not directly witness
a crime being committed or Mr. Lekan threatening anybody. As is explained in
this opinion, infra, and in the district court opinion, these facts do not
raise a genuine issue as to whether exigent circumstances existed at the time
the police made the decision to enter the Lekan house. The district court,
therefore, did not "expressly recognize" a genuine issue of material
fact, as it ultimately granted summary judgment to the defendants on the
plaintiffs' Fourth Amendment claims.
2 Our use of the
term "hostage" is intended merely to signify that Mrs. Lekan and her
son were under the control of Mr. Lekan, who was armed and potentially
homicidal, and were in serious danger of being harmed. We recognize that this
may differ from the definition of "hostage" employed in the Callis
report, which requires that the "hostage" be used to secure
substantive demands in a bargaining process. Nevertheless, we disagree with
Judge Hull that the fact that Mr. Lekan was not making substantive demands, and
therefore was not technically holding his family "hostage" in the
sense that term is used by Callis, creates a material fact question as to the
existence of exigent circumstances. The key issue in determining whether
exigent circumstances existed is whether the officers reasonably believed that
"the suspect represented an immediate threat to the . . . public,"
Hancock, 958 F.2d at 1375, not whether the suspect was making substantive
demands in connection with such a threat. As to this question, the portion of
the Callis report quoted in Judge Hull's dissent concedes that although Mrs.
Lekan and her son "were not actually hostages," they "were
victims of Mr. Lekan's actions. They were in the residence when Mr. Lekan
committed his criminal act and he afforded them no opportunity to leave."
J.A. at 496.
3 We therefore
respectfully disagree with Judge Hull's suggestion that the Callis report's
criticisms of the Brunswick Police Department's "welfare check"
procedure creates a genuine issue of material fact as to the question of
exigent circumstances. The portion of the Callis report quoted in the dissent
merely states that the police should have used different methods to discern
what risk, if any, Mr. Lekan posed to his wife and son, and that different
police tactics might have avoided the confrontation between Mr. Lekan and the
police. The fact that Mr. Lekan might not have been provoked to such volatile
behavior if the police had not gone to his home in plain clothes, however, does
not dispute that exigent circumstances were present when Mr. Lekan ultimately
did exhibit this volatile behavior. In the absence of facts suggesting that the
police impermissibly "created the exigency" as that concept is
understood in Fourth Amendment jurisprudence, whether or not police tactics
were part of the causal chain resulting in the exigency is not material to the
question of whether the warrantless entry was justified by exigent
circumstances.
4 In his
dissent, Judge Hull relies upon Stemler v. City of Florence, 126 F.3d 856, 868
(6th Cir. 1997), cert. denied, 523 U.S. 1118 (1998), in reaching the conclusion
that Mrs. Lekan and her son were seized by the police. We think this case is
inapposite. Stemler was a substantive due process case, not a Fourth Amendment
excessive force case. In Stemler, we held that the police, by physically
removing the decedent, Conni Black, from one vehicle and placing her in the vehicle
operated by her intoxicated and abusive boyfriend, took affirmative action to
restrain the decedent's liberty and therefore owed her a duty not to act in a
manner that was deliberately indifferent to her safety pursuant to the
Fourteenth Amendment's substantive due process protections. Id. The decedent's
claims were not analyzed under the Fourth Amendment's objective reasonableness
standard. Moreover, even if Stemler can be read to hold that the decedent was
seized within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment, the factual situation
presented therein is readily distinguishable from the instant case. In Stemler,
we held that the police established custody of the decedent when they
physically grabbed her and lifted her into her boyfriend's vehicle against her
will. Id. No such act of direct physical restraint was ever taken in relation
to Mrs. Lekan or her son.
5 We note that
although the issue has never been decided, cases from this circuit decided
before Lewis have "expressed doubt" as to whether the deliberate
indifference standard should apply in noncustodial settings. Stemler v. City of
Florence, 126 F.3d 856, 865, 869 (6th Cir. 1997), cert. denied, 523 U. S. 1118
(1998). Such doubt, we believe, has been resolved by the Court's opinion in
Lewis, which made clear that the key variable is whether actual deliberation is
practical, not whether the claimant was in state custody. As the Court
explained, deliberate indifference applies in custodial settings because these
settings provide the opportunity for reflection and unhurried judgments. Lewis,
523 U.S. at 853. Custodial settings, however, are not the only situations in
which officials may have a reasonable opportunity to deliberate. "Like
prison officials who are charged with overseeing an inmate's welfare, State
officials who create or enhance danger to citizens may also be in a position
where 'actual deliberation is practical.'" Butera, 235 F.3d at 652
(quoting Lewis, 523 U.S. at 851) (applying deliberate indifference standard in
case in which private citizen was injured while acting as undercover operative
in police investigation where facts showed that "officers had the
opportunity to plan the undercover operation with care").
6 We note that
Whitley v. Albers, 475 U.S. 312 (1986), which was discussed favorably in Lewis,
could be interpreted to suggest that the more permissive "intent to
harm" test applies even when there is a genuine issue of material fact as
to the immediacy of the danger posed by a barricaded and armed individual. The
Whitley Court held that "intent to harm" was the appropriate standard
for assessing Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment violations in the context of a
prison riot. Id. at 320-21. The plaintiff in Whitley, an inmate, was injured
when guards fired shotguns into an inmate-controlled cell block in an operation
to rescue a guard being held hostage. The Court concluded that the intent to
harm standard was appropriate, even though "the evidence could be taken to
show that the general disturbance had quieted down." Id. at 322-23.
Nonetheless, we
think it would be inappropriate to extend the Whitley holding to the instant
case. Initially, Whitley is factually distinguishable. The Whitley Court
emphasized that the undisputed facts showed that the situation, although it had
calmed somewhat, "remained dangerous and volatile." Id. at 323. This
was based upon facts indicating that, in addition to the danger to the hostage
guard, "several . . . inmates were armed . . . , numerous inmates remained
outside their cells, and the cellblock remained in the control of the
inmates." Id. Thus, according to the Court, the police were confronted
with an uncontained and out-of-control prison riot. In the instant case, by
contrast, the threat came from Mr. Lekan alone, and it is undisputed that Mr.
Lekan was contained within his house and surrounded by a vastly superior police
presence. Moreover, the Court's opinion in Whitley suggests that its reasoning
may not apply outside the institutional setting of the prison. The Whitley
Court based its conclusions in large part on the deference traditionally
afforded to prison administrators in maintaining discipline and security, id.
at 321-22, and was careful to limit its holding -- insofar as it defined the
scope of Fourteenth Amendment protections -- to prison inmates. The Court
explained that "[b]ecause this case involves prison inmates rather than
pretrial detainees or persons enjoying unrestricted liberty we imply nothing as
to the proper answer . . . outside the prison security context by holding, as
we do, that in these circumstances the Due Process Clause affords respondent no
greater protection than does the Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause."
Id. at 327.
7 Of course, an
official's subjective awareness of a risk may be proved circumstantially by
evidence suggesting that "the defendant official being sued had been
exposed to information concerning the risk and thus 'must have known' about
it." Farmer, 511 U.S. at 842. Moreover, "the concept of constructive
knowledge is familiar enough that the term 'deliberate indifference' would not,
of its own force, preclude a scheme that conclusively presumed awareness from a
risk's obviousness." Id. at 840.
8 The one exception to this observation is the district court's discussion of the trespass claim. J.A. at 75-76 (Dist. Ct. Op. at 24-25). The sole grounds asserted by the district court for granting summary judgment on the trespass claim was its conclusion that exigent circumstances justified the officers' warrantless entry. Because we also conclude that exigent circumstances existed as a matter of law, we affirm the district court on this claim.