Abel Martinez v. City Of Pembroke Pines

648 F. App'x 888
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedApril 21, 2016
Docket15-12239
StatusUnpublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 648 F. App'x 888 (Abel Martinez v. City Of Pembroke Pines) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abel Martinez v. City Of Pembroke Pines, 648 F. App'x 888 (11th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Plaintiff appeals the district court’s order granting summary judgment on his federal excessive force and state battery and negligence claims. Defendant Kevin King, a police officer for the City of Pembroke Pines, shot and injured Plaintiff while attempting to take him into custody. Plaintiff subsequently brought this action, asserting a § 1983 excessive force claim against King in his individual capacity and state battery and negligence claims against the City. The district court granted summary judgment to Defendants on all of Plaintiffs claims. Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Plaintiff, we agree with the district court that summary judgment is warranted and thus AFFIRM the district court’s order.

BACKGROUND

I. Factual Background

Early on the morning of June 10, 2010, Plaintiffs girlfriend Yanet Hernandez called 911 to report that Plaintiff was unresponsive and was making strange noises, turning blue, and foaming at the mouth. Th.e paramedics who responded to the call went to Plaintiffs house and met with Hernandez, who primarily spoke Spanish. They were directed to a bedroom at the back of the house where they found Plain *890 tiff lying in his bed and starting to wake up.

Pembroke Pines police officer Kevin King, responding to a police medical emergency dispatch, arrived at the house a few minutes after the paramedics. The police dispatch did not indicate that any criminal conduct had occurred, and King had no reason to suspect that a crime was in progress. When he arrived at the house, King heard yelling and saw paramedics standing in the doorway of a bedroom. King went to the bedroom, where he found Plaintiff pacing around the room, waving his arms, and yelling in Spanish. He noticed that Plaintiffs eyes were dilated and that he had a white crusty substance around his lips. Hernandez was in the room, holding an infant and speaking to Plaintiff in Spanish.

Unbeknownst to the paramedics or to King; Plaintiff was at the time of their arrival in a postictal state following a convulsive seizure. Am individual in a postic-tal state is not fully conscious or aware of his actions, and may be aggressive and violent. Observing that something was “not right” with Plaintiff, and for their own safety, the paramedics left the room when King arrived. They also persuaded Hernandez to leave the room with the infant she was holding.

King subsequently was alone with Plaintiff in the bedroom for three to four minutes. Plaintiff was not physically aggressive during this time, but he continued to pace, wave his hands, and speak loudly in Spanish. Plaintiff called out for his mother and Tor his dead grandmother in Cuba. He also began opening drawers as if he were looking for something. He did not respond to King’s commands in Spanish to relax (“tranquilo”) and sit down (“sientese”).

Pembroke Pines police officer Michelle Fanelli subsequently arrived at the house in response to a call for backup, and she joined King in the bedroom with Plaintiff. When Fanelli entered the bedroom, she noticed that Plaintiff was speaking in Spanish. She radioed for a Spanish speaking officer to assist, and was told that one was on the way. Then she watched as Plaintiff continued to pace the room while King spoke to him in a soft voice, trying to convince him to calm down.

About a minute after Fanelli arrived, Plaintiff leaned into the bedroom closet and started moving items, again as if he were looking for something. The officers thought it was unsafe to allow Plaintiff to search through the closet, and they gently guided him out of it. Plaintiff offered no resistance. But by this time, King had determined that Plaintiff was suffering from some kind of psychological problem and that he should be taken into custody, both to ensure officer safety and for examination under Florida’s Baker Act. 1

In an attempt to secure Plaintiff for the above purpose, King approached him from behind and attached a handcuff to his right wrist. Plaintiff immediately began to struggle, flailing his arms such that King was unable to attach the other handcuff. *891 Plaintiff did not punch King, but he repeatedly swung his arms, with the loose handcuffs attached to one wrist, in the direction of King’s head. King did not see the handcuffs make contact, but he felt himself being struck hard on the head several times with what he thought at the time was Plaintiffs fist.

Fanelli fired her taser at Plaintiff in an attempt to bring him under control. Plaintiff momentarily fell to the floor, but he was back on his feet and struggling with King within a few seconds. Fanelli fired her taser at Plaintiff again, and then grabbed Plaintiff and pushed him to the ground. King and Fanelli got on top of Plaintiff and attempted to restrain him, but Plaintiff was able to free himself from both officers and run out of the bedroom.

The officers pursued Plaintiff through the bedroom and to the front door of the house, where they saw him handling the lock. They stood about ten feet away from Plaintiff with their guns drawn, gesturing and verbally ordering Plaintiff to get to the ground. Plaintiff ignored their commands and repeatedly shook his head “no.” It was at this point that King first realized he was injured and bleeding profusely from his head.

Plaintiff continued to. ignore the commands given by the officers, and ran from the front door- to the kitchen. Once he was in the kitchen, Plaintiff again started looking around as if he were trying to find something. Although Plaintiff did not open any drawers or grab anything, he was touching and trying to remove the handcuffs attached to his wrist. King now saw that Plaintiff was covered in blood, which King believed to be from King’s own head injury. King also noticed the loose handcuffs hanging from Plaintiffs wrist, and concluded that he was bleeding because Plaintiff had hit him in the head or face with them.

The officers, who were still about ten to twelve feet away from Plaintiff, continued ordering him to get down on the ground. Suddenly and without warning, Plaintiff took two steps toward King. When Plaintiff was within a few seconds of reaching King and as he was advancing, King fired one shot that hit Plaintiff in the stomach. King did not specifically warn Plaintiff that he was going to shoot, but Fanelli ordered Plaintiff to get down on the ground immediately before King fired. King testified that he fired because he feared serious injury or even death at the hands of Plaintiff, who had already injured him and who was rapidly moving toward him with loose handcuffs attached to his wrist.

After Plaintiff was shot, Fanelli opened the front door, which Plaintiff had locked, and allowed additional officers who had been called for back-up to enter the house. Those officers noted that Plaintiff had loose handcuffs attached to his wrist, and gave verbal commands in Spanish for Plaintiff to calm down and stay back. Although Plaintiff had been shot, and also tased several times, he was unresponsive to the commands and charged at one of the officers. Plaintiff was tased again, but he remained on his feet and continued resisting. Eventually Plaintiff slipped on the floor, and five or six officers were able to restrain him within about a minute.

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648 F. App'x 888, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abel-martinez-v-city-of-pembroke-pines-ca11-2016.