Adams v. City of Atl. City
This text of 294 F. Supp. 3d 283 (Adams v. City of Atl. City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
SIMANDLE, Judge:
I. INTRODUCTION
This matter is before the Court on Defendant City of Atlantic City's ("Atlantic City") Motion for Summary Judgment [Docket Item 200], as well as Defendants Atlantic City Police Department ("ACPD") Officer Frank Timek, ACPD Officer Brent Dooley, ACPD Officer Kyle Eisenbeis, and ACPD Sergeant Daryl Hall's ("Individual Defendants") Motion for Summary Judgment [Docket Item 195]. In this case, Plaintiff Julius Adams ("Adams") claims his Fourth Amendment rights were violated when Atlantic City police officers conspired to use, and did use, excessive force against him during an encounter on the Atlantic City boardwalk. Plaintiff also claims that Atlantic City is liable under
Plaintiff filed his amended complaint in this Court on June 3, 2014, against, inter alia, Individual Defendants and Atlantic City. [Docket Item 34.] In due course, Defendants Timek, Dooley, Eisenbeis, Hall, ACPD Commander James V. Pasquale, and ACPD Officer Matthew Rogers filed their motion for summary judgment. [Docket Item 195.] Plaintiff subsequently filed stipulations of dismissal as to Defendant Pasquale [Docket Item 235] and Defendant Rogers [Docket Item 236], and a response in opposition to the Individual Defendants' Motion [Docket Item 230]. Atlantic City also filed its motion for summary judgment [Docket Item 200], and Plaintiff filed a response in opposition [Docket Item 228]. Individual Defendants filed a reply [Docket Item 234], as did Atlantic City [Docket Item 233].
For the reasons stated herein, the Court will deny Individual Defendants' motion for summary judgment with regard to Plaintiff's excessive force and civil conspiracy claims and Atlantic City's motion for summary judgment with regard to Plaintiff's § 1983 municipal liability claim for failure to investigate, supervise, and discipline. The Court will also deny Atlantic City's motion for summary judgment with regard to the claim of failure to train K-9 handlers. The Court will grant Atlantic *287City's motion for summary judgment with regard to Plaintiff's § 1983 claim for failure to train non-K-9 officers regarding excessive force.
II. BACKGROUND1
A. Factual Background
1. June 17, 2011 Incident
On June 17, 2011, Plaintiff and a friend left a casino in Adams's car, when police stopped them. [Docket Item 195-7, Deposition of Julius Adams ("Adams Dep."), at 18:7-11, 19:3-6.] Two police officers initially made the stop but many police cars quickly came to the scene. Adams testified that Officer Dooley, one of the police officers at the traffic stop, assaulted him by "slamming him into the hood of the car and roughing him up". [Id. at 30:18-20.] Adams was taken back to the police station and charged with drunk driving.
As a result of the traffic stop and encounter with Officer Dooley, Adams filed a complaint with the Internal Affairs Department of the ACPD sometime around September or October of 2011; however, he never received a response. [Id. at 34:14-25, 43:1-4.] In January of 2012, while in court for the drunk driving charge, Adams claims that Officer Dooley and other members of the police department threatened him by punching their fists into their hands, inside the courtroom while the judge was not present. [Id. at 48-49:24-25, 1-5.] He believed these threats occurred because the officers were displeased with him filing a complaint with Internal Affairs. [Id. at 50:10-11.]
2. February 28, 2012 Incident
Adams's next encounter with the Atlantic City police occurred on February 28, 2012, when he was 50 years old. [Docket Item 200, Ex. F, at 17.] He was exiting Trump Plaza Casino by himself after gambling for approximately four hours. [Docket Item 195-7 at 53:20, 54:25, 55:1.] Adams walked out of the doors onto Pacific Avenue when he met up with Brian Norwood, a person he referred to as an acquaintance, and another man Adams had never met before. [Id. at 59:16-18, 62:9-10.] Adams and the two men took a left out of the casino and walked into a tunnel called Boardwalk Hall. Adams and the police officers who were present greatly dispute what happened next.
According to Adams, while he was walking through Boardwalk Hall, Officer Dooley and another unnamed officer drove up in their patrol car, got out, stopped the three men, and asked for their identification. [Id. at 63:6-10, 66:4-6.] Simultaneously, four other officers pulled up to the scene in their patrol cars. [Id. at 71:9-12.] While the unnamed officer took the three ID cards back to his police car, Officer Dooley, Timek, and a third officer had Adams, Norwood, and the other unidentified man up against the wall, restraining their movement. [Id. at 70:18-19, 71:19-21.]
The officer who first arrived at the scene with Officer Dooley then returned from checking the three men's ID cards at his car, pointed at Adams and said, "Is that him?" [Id. at 74:17-19.] Officer Timek *288went to his car and released his German Shepherd dog, Vader, who ran and attacked Adams on Timek's command. [Id. at 76:23-25, 77:1-4.] While the dog was biting Adams's leg, Officer Timek slammed Adams's head into the wall, dragged him to the ground, and put him in handcuffs. [Id. at 77:7-8.] Officer Dooley then left Norwood and started to hit Adams and drag him on the ground; the third officer who had initially arrived with Dooley left the third man joined in and "was on [Adams]." [Id. at 77:9-13.] The other three officers joined in and all six of them were began beating Adams, who described "flurries of hits and kicks and punches and hitting me with pipes.2 I could feel them busting me across my head.... And it was a flurry of a good two and a half minutes of me almost being killed before the other cops came up. And I thought it was going to be over." [Id. at 77:14-20.]
At that point, Sergeant Hall and a handful of other officers arrived at the scene. [Id. at 77:19-24.) Adams pleaded with Sergeant Hall to make the officers stop and that he wasn't resisting arrest, to which Officer Timek "hollered: [']He kicked at my dog, Sarge.[']" [Id. at 77:21-24.] Sergeant Hall responded, "Oh, you like kicking dogs?" [Id. at 77:25, 78:1-6.) He opened the door to his patrol car, and let out another German Shepherd dog, Max, to attack Adams, and said "Let him kick this one." [Id. ] Adams described the dogs "playing tug-of-war with my legs." [Id. at 78:3-6.] They then gave the dogs the command to stop, and Sergeant Hall kicked Adams twice in the side and "upside [Adams's] head." [Id.
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SIMANDLE, Judge:
I. INTRODUCTION
This matter is before the Court on Defendant City of Atlantic City's ("Atlantic City") Motion for Summary Judgment [Docket Item 200], as well as Defendants Atlantic City Police Department ("ACPD") Officer Frank Timek, ACPD Officer Brent Dooley, ACPD Officer Kyle Eisenbeis, and ACPD Sergeant Daryl Hall's ("Individual Defendants") Motion for Summary Judgment [Docket Item 195]. In this case, Plaintiff Julius Adams ("Adams") claims his Fourth Amendment rights were violated when Atlantic City police officers conspired to use, and did use, excessive force against him during an encounter on the Atlantic City boardwalk. Plaintiff also claims that Atlantic City is liable under
Plaintiff filed his amended complaint in this Court on June 3, 2014, against, inter alia, Individual Defendants and Atlantic City. [Docket Item 34.] In due course, Defendants Timek, Dooley, Eisenbeis, Hall, ACPD Commander James V. Pasquale, and ACPD Officer Matthew Rogers filed their motion for summary judgment. [Docket Item 195.] Plaintiff subsequently filed stipulations of dismissal as to Defendant Pasquale [Docket Item 235] and Defendant Rogers [Docket Item 236], and a response in opposition to the Individual Defendants' Motion [Docket Item 230]. Atlantic City also filed its motion for summary judgment [Docket Item 200], and Plaintiff filed a response in opposition [Docket Item 228]. Individual Defendants filed a reply [Docket Item 234], as did Atlantic City [Docket Item 233].
For the reasons stated herein, the Court will deny Individual Defendants' motion for summary judgment with regard to Plaintiff's excessive force and civil conspiracy claims and Atlantic City's motion for summary judgment with regard to Plaintiff's § 1983 municipal liability claim for failure to investigate, supervise, and discipline. The Court will also deny Atlantic City's motion for summary judgment with regard to the claim of failure to train K-9 handlers. The Court will grant Atlantic *287City's motion for summary judgment with regard to Plaintiff's § 1983 claim for failure to train non-K-9 officers regarding excessive force.
II. BACKGROUND1
A. Factual Background
1. June 17, 2011 Incident
On June 17, 2011, Plaintiff and a friend left a casino in Adams's car, when police stopped them. [Docket Item 195-7, Deposition of Julius Adams ("Adams Dep."), at 18:7-11, 19:3-6.] Two police officers initially made the stop but many police cars quickly came to the scene. Adams testified that Officer Dooley, one of the police officers at the traffic stop, assaulted him by "slamming him into the hood of the car and roughing him up". [Id. at 30:18-20.] Adams was taken back to the police station and charged with drunk driving.
As a result of the traffic stop and encounter with Officer Dooley, Adams filed a complaint with the Internal Affairs Department of the ACPD sometime around September or October of 2011; however, he never received a response. [Id. at 34:14-25, 43:1-4.] In January of 2012, while in court for the drunk driving charge, Adams claims that Officer Dooley and other members of the police department threatened him by punching their fists into their hands, inside the courtroom while the judge was not present. [Id. at 48-49:24-25, 1-5.] He believed these threats occurred because the officers were displeased with him filing a complaint with Internal Affairs. [Id. at 50:10-11.]
2. February 28, 2012 Incident
Adams's next encounter with the Atlantic City police occurred on February 28, 2012, when he was 50 years old. [Docket Item 200, Ex. F, at 17.] He was exiting Trump Plaza Casino by himself after gambling for approximately four hours. [Docket Item 195-7 at 53:20, 54:25, 55:1.] Adams walked out of the doors onto Pacific Avenue when he met up with Brian Norwood, a person he referred to as an acquaintance, and another man Adams had never met before. [Id. at 59:16-18, 62:9-10.] Adams and the two men took a left out of the casino and walked into a tunnel called Boardwalk Hall. Adams and the police officers who were present greatly dispute what happened next.
According to Adams, while he was walking through Boardwalk Hall, Officer Dooley and another unnamed officer drove up in their patrol car, got out, stopped the three men, and asked for their identification. [Id. at 63:6-10, 66:4-6.] Simultaneously, four other officers pulled up to the scene in their patrol cars. [Id. at 71:9-12.] While the unnamed officer took the three ID cards back to his police car, Officer Dooley, Timek, and a third officer had Adams, Norwood, and the other unidentified man up against the wall, restraining their movement. [Id. at 70:18-19, 71:19-21.]
The officer who first arrived at the scene with Officer Dooley then returned from checking the three men's ID cards at his car, pointed at Adams and said, "Is that him?" [Id. at 74:17-19.] Officer Timek *288went to his car and released his German Shepherd dog, Vader, who ran and attacked Adams on Timek's command. [Id. at 76:23-25, 77:1-4.] While the dog was biting Adams's leg, Officer Timek slammed Adams's head into the wall, dragged him to the ground, and put him in handcuffs. [Id. at 77:7-8.] Officer Dooley then left Norwood and started to hit Adams and drag him on the ground; the third officer who had initially arrived with Dooley left the third man joined in and "was on [Adams]." [Id. at 77:9-13.] The other three officers joined in and all six of them were began beating Adams, who described "flurries of hits and kicks and punches and hitting me with pipes.2 I could feel them busting me across my head.... And it was a flurry of a good two and a half minutes of me almost being killed before the other cops came up. And I thought it was going to be over." [Id. at 77:14-20.]
At that point, Sergeant Hall and a handful of other officers arrived at the scene. [Id. at 77:19-24.) Adams pleaded with Sergeant Hall to make the officers stop and that he wasn't resisting arrest, to which Officer Timek "hollered: [']He kicked at my dog, Sarge.[']" [Id. at 77:21-24.] Sergeant Hall responded, "Oh, you like kicking dogs?" [Id. at 77:25, 78:1-6.) He opened the door to his patrol car, and let out another German Shepherd dog, Max, to attack Adams, and said "Let him kick this one." [Id. ] Adams described the dogs "playing tug-of-war with my legs." [Id. at 78:3-6.] They then gave the dogs the command to stop, and Sergeant Hall kicked Adams twice in the side and "upside [Adams's] head." [Id. at 78:10-18.] He instructed Norwood and the third man to leave the scene "before the same thing happen[s] to you," using a racial slur and stating that he knew where they lived and threatening them not to say anything or the same thing would happen to them. (Id. at 85:8-12, 91:23-25, 92:1-7.) Adams described the police officers who participated in beating him "high-fiv[ing] each other" after Hall kicked Adams and put an end to the assault. [Id. at 88:19-21.]
Defendants' account regarding what happened that night varies greatly from Adams's testimony. According to Defendants, Officer Timek responded to the Boardwalk Hall's Georgia Avenue tunnel regarding a report made by a Boardwalk Hall security employee about "three black males in the Boardwalk Hall tunnel drinking/doing CDS [i.e., controlled dangerous substance] and requested that police respond"; Plaintiff states that the "Boardwalk Hall security personnel called stating, it's not an emergency but three black males walked into the tunnel and he thinks they are either going to be doing drugs or drinking. Caller asked if ACPD can send an officer to send them away." [Docket Items 200-2 ¶ 3; 229 ¶ 3.] When the men saw the marked patrol car, Officer Timek saw one man shove his hand into his waistband and then immediately remove it, indicating to Officer Timek that he was trying to conceal something. [Docket Item 195-8 at 11.] Officer Timek got out of his patrol car, unholstered his gun, pointed it at the men, and told them to get against the wall. Timek stated that he was alone at this time.
Officer Timek's police report is unclear as to when exactly Sergeant Hall arrived; however, it seems to suggest that Hall was there prior to when he arrived in Adams' version of events. To that effect, Timek's report states: "I called for my canine partner *289who exited my patrol vehicle and approached to assist. Simultaneously, I observed that Sergeant Hall was on scene and with his canine partner on lead. I placed my canine partner back into my patrol vehicle."
Officer Timek then states that Adams "abruptly attempted to spin around combatively into my direction," so Timek took Adams to the ground as Adams "violently resisted [Timek's] control."
Timek then states that Sergeant Hall "approached with his canine partner," told Adams he was under arrest, and to stop resisting "or his canine partner would be deployed several times." [Id. at 11-12.] Timek states that, in response to Adams's continued "violent resist[ance]," "a canine apprehension was made on the suspect," though Adams continued to resist by "pulling his hands away, attempting to recover from the ground[,] and kicking at the canine." [Id. at 12.] Hall's report describes this as his canine "engag[ing] Adams['s] right thigh pant leg area as he rolled around with Timek on his back. Adams was able to get his left knee up and strike the K9 in the snout causing him to disengage and yelp.... K9 Max re-engaged Adams on the right upper calf. Adams now kicked K9 Max again in the face not once but twice with his left foot." [Id. at 14.] Hall describes Adams fighting not only with his dog, Max, but also with Timek, Dooley, and Eisenbeis.
*290The EMS report states that Adams was bleeding from his right leg and reported having been bitten several times; EMS noted a "1 ½ to 2 inch" injury to Adams's right calf, noted on the diagram to have been inflicted to the back of Adam's calf. [Docket Item 200, Ex. E.]
While in the emergency room, Adams allegedly told the medical personnel that he was "busted by cops for buying drugs." [Docket Item 200, Exhibit F, at 18 of 60.] Timek stated that he "heard [Adams] state that he had been smoking CDS and drinking alcohol all day prior to arrest." [Docket Item 195-8 at 12.] Officer Rogers stated that Adams stated "he was 'high on cocaine' ... repeatedly ... [and] went on to state that 'I am just a user not a dealer, I shouldn't be here.' " [Id. at 20.] Adams disputes that he made those statements. [Docket Item 232 ¶ 19.]
Adams's medical records from AtlantiCare's ER reflect soft tissue damage to his right lower thigh; soft tissue swelling of the right lower leg; "leg laceration, closed head injury, chest wall injury, blunt abdominal trauma"; and bruised ribs, inter alia. [Docket Item 200, Ex. F, at 14-17.] Adams also got five stitches to his right calf. [Id. at 17.] The medical records also note: "MULTIPLE SUPERFICIAL BITES TO RIGHT LATERAL LEG, laceration(s), the wound is approximately 6 cm(s) [2.4?], of the right calf[,]" as well as a "SMALL PUNCTURE WOUND NOTED" to the "RIGHT LOWER THIGH." [Id. at 20 of 60 (emphasis in original).] Elsewhere, they describe Adams's report of "pain in mouth since [d]ried blood in mouth[,]" "pain with respiration," an abdomen that was "tender to palpation[,]" swelling, and a laceration on the "left wrist, [d]ried blood[.]" [Id. at 28 of 60.] Adams also reported to the medical staff that the police kicked him "over and over again in the stomach until I pissed on myself"; the staff noted the presence of urine on his underpants.
Adams's mug shot was taken at some point after he was treated at AtlantiCare; it shows his face and neck area. [Docket Item 195-17.] Defendants submit that the mug shot does not reflect the injuries Adams alleges he sustained. [Docket Items 234 at 3; 200-2 ¶ 41; 195-5 ¶ 42.] Plaintiff disputes this. [Docket Items 229 ¶ 41; 232 ¶ 42.]
On March 3, 2012, Adams returned to AtlantiCare because, hospital records reflect, "he [did] not know about the results of his testing because police took his papers." [Docket Item 200, Ex. H.] He reported "low back pain left thigh and calf pain. Patient was arrested 2/28 for buying drugs.4 States police kicked him in chest and abdomen, k 9 dogs bit his right leg.... Has sutures right calf, and pain swelling right thigh."
3. ACPD's Internal Affairs Policies
Citizens may file complaints they have about encounters with Atlantic City police officers with ACPD's Internal Affairs Department. ACPD has an Early Warning System ("EWS") that notifies the Chief of Police whenever an officer triggers the system by accumulating more than three internal affairs complaints within a calendar year. However, the former ACPD chief of police between 2010 and 2013, Chief Ernest C. Jubilee, testified in his deposition that although he was made *291aware "every time a complaint is made against an officer" as well as when an officer would trigger the EWS, he did nothing to respond to those complaints or discipline the officer. [Docket Item 228-24 at 31, Ex. X, Jubilee Dep. at 116:3-5; 45, dep. at 170:17-172:25; 46, dep. at 173:1-6.)
Plaintiff retained Dr. Jon Shane, an associate professor of criminal justice at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, who submitted an expert report that examined ACPD's internal-affairs functioning and concluded that: "The Atlantic City Police Department did not properly implement this internal affairs program as required by the New Jersey Attorney General's Office and did not follow accepted industry standards in effect at the time for conducting internal affairs investigations. The Atlantic City Police Department also did not follow accepted industry standards for identifying and addressing patterns and trends of complaints against police officers." [Docket Item 200-10 at 32.]
Additionally, Plaintiff's expert provided statistical analysis that showed the national rate of sustained complaints for excessive force in a department of similar size to ACPD is 12%, while ACPD's sustain rate for excessive force is 0.219%.
During his deposition, current ACPD Chief of Police Henry White engaged in the following colloquy:
Attorney Bonjean: Would you agree that two sustained findings of in excess of 550 complaints of excessive force between the years of 2007 and 2014 might have contributed to the public's perception that the Atlantic City Police Department was covering up or not taking internal affairs complaints seriously?
Chief White: Yes.
[White Dep., Docket Item 228-5 at 16, 108:6-12.]
All of this, Plaintiff asserts, amounts to "deliberate indifference" on the part of Defendant Atlantic City, allowing a reasonable jury to conclude that the city is liable under § 1983 for failure to investigate complaints of excessive force.
4. Suspension of the K-9 Unit
In August of 2009, Atlantic City Mayor Lorenzo Langford suspended ACPD's K-9 units from the streets, due to citizen complaints over their misuse. [Docket Item 228-35 at 12-15, Langford Dep. at 39:7-51:21.] Mayor Langford testified during his deposition that a number of factors contributed to his decision to suspend the unit, including: (1) members of the community had repeatedly complained that dogs were being misused and a large, vocal group of concerned citizens had stormed the City Council demanding their removal from the streets; (2) he was privy to the disproportionate number of civil rights cases involving K9 "criminal apprehensions" that came before the City Council for settlement approval and was sensitive to the expense associated with litigating and resolving those cases; and (3) he, personally, had witnessed an incident where ACPD K9 officers were all too eager to release their K9s into a crowd as a means of "crowd control".
Christine Peterson5 was hired as public safety director in March of 2010 and was tasked with conducting a review of ACPD's K-9 unit. [Docket Item 228-41, Peterson Dep., at 3-6.] At the conclusion of Peterson's review, she authorized the return of the patrol dogs on the condition that certain criteria were satisfied as set forth in her Directive 025-2010. [Docket *292Item 228-37, Directive 025-2010 and Revised K-9 Policy.] The directive first required officers to undergo medical and psychological examinations, and have their "personnel records and Internal Affairs files [reviewed] to determine present suitability" for reassignment to the K-9 Unit.
Plaintiff asserts that extensive discovery reveals that ACPD returned the dogs to the streets without satisfying the criteria set forth in Directive 025-2010. Chief White testified that he conducted a diligent search for any documents that would reflect compliance with the portion of the directive relating to the re-evaluation of the handlers and could find no document in ACPD's control that reflected that the K-9 handlers were reevaluated pursuant to Section IV of the selection criteria set forth in the K-9 policy, per Directive 025-2010. [Docket Item 228-48 at 9-12, 19, 24.] Additionally, the city is unable to produce any documentation that reflects that all of the K-9 units were evaluated by an outside facility and passed that evaluation. [Docket Item 228, Plaintiff's Resp., at 65-66.]
B. Procedural Background
On August 28, 2012, Adams entered a guilty plea in New Jersey State Court to an amended charge of fourth-degree harm to a law enforcement animal under N.J.S.A. 2C:29-3.1. [Docket Item 200-9 at 3-10.] During his court appearance on that date, the presiding judge asked, "What was the [law enforcement] animal's name?" before he began allocuting Adams.
THE COURT: Do you in fact understand what's happening here? You're entering a guilty plea to an amended charge of fourth-degree harm to a law enforcement animal.
MR. ADAMS: Yes.
...
THE COURT: Are you pleading guilty because you believe you are guilty?
MR. ADAMS: Yes.
...
THE COURT: Let's talk about the offense. Count 2 amended on February 28, 2012, were you in Atlantic City?
MR. ADAMS: Yes.
THE COURT: Did you there and then attempt to cause or in fact cause harm to a law enforcement officer animal being operated by the Atlantic City police department with the name of Vader?
MR. ADAMS: Yes.
THE COURT: I understand the animal was engaged by the officers on you, is that right?
MR. ADAMS: Yes.
THE COURT: The dog was biting you.
MR. ADAMS: Yes.
THE COURT: Then you struck the dog in order to get the dog off of you.
MR. ADAMS: Yes.
THE COURT: Do you understand by doing so you were committing an offense because you shouldn't be striking the dog, is that right?
MR. ADAMS: I was just getting him off me.
THE COURT: But it's still against the law to hit him.
MR. ADAMS: I didn't know that, yes.
THE COURT: But you know it now.
MR. ADAMS: Yes.
*293THE COURT: You knew what you were doing at the time?
MR. ADAMS: Yes.
THE COURT: State satisfied?
MR. BERGMAN[, assistant prosecutor]: Thank you, Judge, yes.
THE COURT: Any questions for me, sir, about your guilty plea? Any questions, sir?
MR. ADAMS: Yes, the civil suit against Atlantic City Police Department.
THE COURT: I don't know the answer to that, sir. I mean, you're not prevented from bringing a lawsuit, but I can't tell you what the outcome would be and whether or not the State would use the fact that you pled guilty to striking Vader against you. I can't predict that. It could be, but I can't predict that.
MR. ADAMS: Thank you.
Adams subsequently filed suit in this court against the following defendants, among others: Officers Dooley, Eisenbeis, Hall, Pasquale, Rogers, and Timek, for excessive force in violation of § 1983 and the Fourth Amendment and for civil conspiracy; and the City of Atlantic City, for municipal liability under § 1983.
In due course, Atlantic City filed a motion for summary judgment with regard to the municipal liability claims, as well as the excessive force claims; Individual Defendants filed a separate motion for summary judgment with regard to the excessive force and civil conspiracy claims. Plaintiff has filed Stipulations of Dismissal with regard to Defendants Pasquale and Rogers and they are no longer parties to this action. [Docket Items 235, 236.]
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
At summary judgment, the moving party bears the initial burden of demonstrating that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a) ; accord Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
A factual dispute is material when it "might affect the outcome of the suit under the governing law," and genuine when "the evidence is such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving party." Anderson,
IV. DISCUSSION
A. Individual Defendants' Liability
1. Excessive Force
Plaintiff first claims that a genuine issue of material fact exists as to whether *294Defendant Officers used unreasonable (i.e., excessive) force in violation of his Fourth Amendment rights. The Court agrees that, taking the facts in the light most favorable to Plaintiff, a reasonable jury could determine that Defendants used unreasonable force while detaining Plaintiff.
Plaintiff and Defendants have two very different accounts of what occurred the night of the incident. Plaintiff claims that the officers, unprovoked, started beating him relentlessly, perhaps due to a prior encounter and Plaintiff's subsequent complaint to Internal Affairs. He contends, in effect, that they also used their police dogs in a sadistic and malicious manner, causing lasting injury to Plaintiff's person. He claims those actions were unreasonable and constituted a use of excessive force.
In contrast, Defendants contend that Plaintiff was conducting himself in a threatening and aggressive manner that warranted the force that was used to apprehend him. They also deny any allegations that they released two dogs to attack Plaintiff and that they were all ganging up around him, punching, kicking, and hitting him with pipes. Additionally, Defendants argue that Plaintiff's claim cannot survive summary judgment because the EMT records indicate that Plaintiff suffered from one, not two dog bites. [Docket Item 234, Ind. Def.s' Rep., at 3.] Defendants also contend that Adam's mug shot does not corroborate his version of events.
"To state a claim for excessive force as an unreasonable seizure under the Fourth Amendment, a plaintiff must show that a 'seizure' occurred and that it was unreasonable." Kopec v. Tate,
The test for reasonableness under the Fourth Amendment is whether under the totality of the circumstances, "the officers' actions are 'objectively reasonable' in light of the facts and circumstances confronting them, without regard to their underlying intent or motivations." Graham v. Connor,
Here, Individual Defendants claim that on February 28, 2012, they were responding to a call reporting three men involved in illegal narcotic activity. The only evidence Defendants have put forth to support the actual occurrence of such illegal narcotic activity-notwithstanding the characterization of the location of the altercation as a high-drug-activity area-is Officer Timek's testimony of one, unnamed, male stuffing his hand in his waist band and quickly removing it in response to seeing the patrol car. Given that, it *295would be very difficult, if not outright impossible, to say that the severity of the crime being committed when the officers arrived at the scene was great. Cf. Samoles v. Lacey Twp., No. 12-3066 FLW,
Furthermore, although Plaintiff (apparently undisputedly) was in possession of a knife prior to his encounter with the police, a reasonable jury could conclude that he did not pose an immediate threat to the officers. Third Circuit case law acknowledges that officers facing individuals who are suspected to be violent and known to be armed, are justified in using a higher degree of physical force. Mellott v. Heemer,
Here, however, Officer Dooley had searched Adams and taken away his knife without incident early on in the encounter, before any physical altercation occurred. Unlike Mellott, there were only three individuals being detained, two of whom are not alleged by Defendants to have been resisting or violent, and a large number of officers, along with two police dogs, were present. Although the Individual Defendants contend that Adams was acting aggressively and violently, a reasonable jury could credit Adams's version of events which contests this allegation, and conclude that he did not pose an immediate threat to any of the officers or other people in the area. According to Adams, he was acting calmly and out of concern for his own well-being. Defendants do not allege that Adams was committing a crime of violence or that he ever threatened or intended to use the knife. See Wade v. Colaner, No. CIV. A. 06-3715-FLW,
The parties further dispute whether Adams was actively resisting arrest at the time the alleged excessive force was used. The factual dispute between Plaintiff and Defendants about whether Plaintiff was acting violently and actively resisting arrest, or cooperating and being beaten without regard to his cooperation, is a precise example of factual dispute that must be resolved by a jury.
In Tolan v. Cotton, --- U.S. ----,
Here, as in Tolan, Plaintiff and Individual Defendants highly dispute the way Adams handled himself throughout the encounter. This is a question of credibility and a reasonable jury could credit Plaintiff's version of events, that he was not resisting arrest, and rather was beaten by officers using excessive force in light of the circumstances. See also Gorman v. Twp. of Manalapan,
The hospital records likewise reflect injuries that a reasonable finder of fact could use as support for Adams's account of the altercation. They do not support summary judgment for Defendants.
At this point in the litigation, taking the facts in a light most favorable to the non-movant, Defendants' arguments for summary judgment are not persuasive. A reasonable jury could find Plaintiff's version of events credible and conclude that Defendants used excessive force in violation of the Fourth Amendment during the process of arresting Plaintiff. The Court accordingly declines to grant summary judgment on Plaintiff's excessive force claims on that ground.
2. Heck v. Humphrey
Defendant Atlantic City advances the argument that Heck v. Humphrey,
Heck holds that a plaintiff may not bring an action under § 1983 if a judgment in the plaintiff's favor would contradict the *297validity of a prior criminal conviction, unless that judgment has been reversed on appeal or impaired in collateral proceedings.
In Garrison v. Porch,
act of assault, Porch then responded by using a degree of force that was much greater than was reasonably necessary to subdue him and place him under arrest.... Garrison admits that ... he acted in a ... manner, which constituted simple assault. At that point, Garrison alleges that Porch responded by using an excessive level of force .... There is no logical inconsistency in these two assertions. A reasonable jury could find that, even considering Garrison's initial behavior which constituted a simple assault, Porch used an unreasonable amount of force in arresting him, and in doing so violated his constitutional rights. Garrison's § 1983 claim is therefore not barred by Heck [.]
Here, Atlantic City argues that Garrison's focus on the greater context of the interaction does not apply, because Adams never claims he was bitten after he committed the assault on the police dog for which he pled guilty. [Docket Item 233 at 10-12.] This does not accurately represent the evidentiary record before the Court. Plaintiff pled guilty to assaulting Officer Timek's dog, Vader. Plaintiff alleges that Officer Timek's dog reengaged after Plaintiff hit Vader, and continued to bite Adams, at the same time that the Individual Defendants beat him. That occurred after the conduct that was the basis for Adams's guilty plea. Plaintiff also alleges *298that Sergeant Hall's dog, Max, attacked him well after Adams hit Officer Timek's dog. "There is no logical inconsistency" between Adams having hit Vader in violation of N.J.S.A. 2C:29-3.1 and the Individual Defendants subsequently having used excessive force by 1) having Vader continue to bite Plaintiff; 2) beating Plaintiff themselves; or 3) subsequently having Max bite Plaintiff. Garrison,
Atlantic City urges the Court to conclude that the plea colloquy wherein Adams admitted to having hit Vader represented an error suggested by Adams's attorney and uncorrected by the State and the trial judge who took Adams's plea, and that, in fact, Adams admitted to having struck Sgt. Hall's dog, Max. Perhaps if it were established to the satisfaction of the finder of fact that the law enforcement animal assaulted was in fact Hall's dog rather than Timek's, a sequence of events could be reconstructed where the Heck bar might apply. However, given the clear allocution by Adams to having struck Vader (undisputedly Officer Timek's dog), the Court declines to rule otherwise as a matter of law on this summary judgment motion.
Alternatively, Defendant Atlantic City argues Garrison is inapplicable because no reasonable jury could credit Plaintiff's version of events:
Although Defendant acknowledges that Plaintiff alleges Defendant Timek's dog Vader first apprehended Plaintiff, followed by K-9 Max; and under the above cited cases, hypothetically Plaintiff could have been pleading guilty to the assault on Vader thus 'Heck barring' a claim against Timek and Vader but still have an excessive force claim against Hall and K-9 Max. However, no reasonable jury could find that any K-9 other than Max apprehended Plaintiff. There are no independent witnesses to confirm Plaintiff's version that two dogs were used. All of the defendant officers' reports and testimony are consistent in that regard. Furthermore, Hall's report states that Max apprehended Plaintiff at the thigh, then Plaintiff punched Max in the snout, at which time Max let go and then re-engaged at the calf. Plaintiff's own undisputed medical records confirm injuries consistent with the defendant officers' version.
[Docket Item 233, Atlantic City's Rep., at 11-12.] First, the Court does not agree, as discussed above, that Plaintiff's conviction for having assaulted Vader operates to " Heck-bar" his claim against Timek. Second, the Court disagrees with Atlantic City's characterization of the evidentiary record as not allowing a reasonable finder of fact to conclude that any K-9 other than Max bit Plaintiff.
The police officers' corroboration of each others' versions of events is not sufficient to grant summary judgment where Plaintiff has presented contrary testimony, constituting "competent evidence." Tolan,
Second, the hospital records may corroborate "injuries consistent with the defendant officers' version"; they may equally corroborate "injuries consistent with" Plaintiff's version, as they reflect, inter alia, more than one dog-bite as well as significant additional injuries (including internal injuries that could reflect having been beaten, as Plaintiff claims he was). They are not a basis to grant summary judgment.
These disputed events are exactly the kind of material facts a jury must decide. If Plaintiff's recollection of events is credited, a reasonable jury could conclude that Officer Timek and Sergeant Hall's dogs used excessive force at their direction, after the fact and in response to Mr. *299Adams's hitting Officer Timek's dog. See Benhaim v. Borough of Highland Park,
For the reasons stated above, the Court declines to find that Plaintiff's claims of excessive force are Heck -barred, and will deny summary judgment on that ground.
3. Civil Conspiracy
Plaintiff next claims that Individual Defendants conspired to violate his civil rights by targeting him for unwarranted violence, subjecting him to malicious prosecution, coordinating false stories and reports against Plaintiff to incriminate him and rationalize violence and mistreatment, and coordinating their stories in order to conceal the extent of the damage that Defendants perpetrated against Plaintiff. [Docket Item 230 at 12-13.]
In order to state a claim of conspiracy pursuant to
Here, Plaintiff argues that he was retaliated against after his June 17, 2011 traffic stop and subsequent complaint to ACPD's Internal Affairs. [Docket Item 230 at 12-13.] Plaintiff testified that while in court for his June 17, drunk driving charge, Defendant Dooley and other officers made gestures indicating that they would retaliate against him for filing an Internal Affairs complaint. "I don't know the officers' names but I know Dooley because he had it in for me. But they was like this here (indicating) crushing they knuckles, pushing their hands together like breaking their knuck-you know, like breaking-you know how to crack our knuckles like, that kind of stuff they were doing." [Docket Item 230-1 at 28.] Further, during Plaintiff's encounter with police on February 28, 2012, he claims that prior to excessive force being used against him, an officer looked at Dooley after taking Plaintiff's ID card and said, "Is that him?" Id. at 22. Plaintiff contends that this set of facts leads to the reasonable inference that Defendant Dooley and at least one other officer involved in this incident agreed to violate Plaintiff's constitutional rights by beating him in retaliation for his prior filing of an internal affairs complaint against Dooley, and Plaintiff's vocal complaints about the Atlantic City Police Department. [Docket Item 230 at 13.] Plaintiff does not cite to any other evidence that specifically shows Defendants conspired to falsify police reports, coordinate their stories, or maliciously prosecute him.
*300Defendant asserts that Plaintiff's claim must fail because it is undisputed that the officers were dispatched to the tunnel, therefore: "How were they to know Julius Adams was one of the individuals they were being dispatched to disperse?" [Docket Item 234 at 6.] They contend that it is unreasonable to infer that any Defendant officer recognized Plaintiff as someone who had attempted to file an internal affairs complaint in 2011. Id. Furthermore, Defendant argues that it is not enough to allege that Defendant Dooley and at least one other officer conspired; rather Plaintiff's claims must have more specificity to be sustained.
Based on the evidentiary record, the Court finds that a reasonable jury could conclude that Officer Dooley and at least one officer conspired to deprive Plaintiff of his constitutional right to be free from the use of excessive force. If Plaintiff's allegations are credited and Officer Dooley and other officers did in fact threaten Plaintiff in the courtroom, and later identified him as the person whom they threatened, and did then use excessive force against him, a reasonable jury could infer that those officers had a "meeting of the minds" and reached an understanding to inflict excessive force on Plaintiff as a punishment in retaliation for his complaints to Internal Affairs. See United States v. Rorke, No. CRIM. A. 90-485,
The existence of material facts in genuine dispute is sufficient to deny Defendants' motion for summary judgment as to Plaintiff's claim of civil conspiracy.
B. Monell Claims against Atlantic City
1. Failure to Investigate
Plaintiff claims that Atlantic City should be liable for the excessive force used by Individual Defendants because a genuine issue of material fact exists as to whether Atlantic City has a widespread, well-settled practice or custom of permitting its officers to employ excessive force without fear of discipline by routinely failing to properly investigate internal affairs complaints. (Pl. Br. at 16.)
In Monell v. Dep't of Soc. Servs. of City of N.Y.,
Once a § 1983 plaintiff identifies a municipal policy or custom, he must "demonstrate that, through its deliberate conduct, the municipality was the 'moving force' behind the injury alleged." Brown,
The seminal case concerning the failure to investigate civilian complaints in the Third Circuit is Beck,
Defendant cites Franks v. Cape May County, No. 07-6005,
Here, Plaintiff supports this claim by first citing the number of excessive force complaints filed against Defendant Officers Timek, Hall, Dooley, Rogers, and Eisenbeis. Between 1990 and 2014, these officers have accumulated sixty-three complaints that involve assault or excessive force, although no complaint has been sustained. [Docket Item 228 at 16-17, citing Docket Item 228-3, Ex. C.] Officer Timek alone has received forty-four Internal Affairs complaints related to assault or excessive force; however, he testified at his deposition that he does not remember a single time he was warned or reprimanded by the police department. [Docket Items 228-1, Ex. A, at 26; 228-11, Ex. K (Timek Dep.), at 3.) Additionally, between 2007 and 2014, the ACPD Internal Affairs Department received more than 550 complaints of excessive force, of which only two were sustained. Nevertheless, complaints for excessive force result in medical attention for the complainant 71.9% of the time. [Docket Item 200-10 at 64.] Similar to the deficient procedures the internal affairs department in Beck had in place, Atlantic City's internal affairs department at best looks into every complaint in isolation and does not consider past complaints of excessive force against officers when investigating current complaints. [Docket Item 228-24 at 45-50; Docket Item 228-2, Ex. B., at 32-46. 70-71.] Additionally, ACPD's Internal Affairs is far more likely to formally interview the complainant when the complaint comes from an internal rather than external source. [Docket Item 228-2 at 57-59.] Relatedly, Adams alleges that he was brushed aside when he attempted to follow up with internal affairs regarding the status of the pending investigation of his complaint.
Plaintiff points out several deficiencies in the investigative process of Internal Affairs: the likelihood that an external complainant will not be interviewed, the lack of responsiveness to individuals attempting to follow up on their complaint, and the complete lack of discipline or supervision when an officer triggers ACPD's Early Warning System. All of this together is enough for a reasonable jury to conclude that the ACPD maintained a deficient internal affairs department and failed to meaningfully investigate complaints made by civilians regarding officers' use of excessive force. See Beck,
*303Day v. Jackson Twp., No. 10-4011,
Furthermore, the Court also finds that the link between deficient Internal Affairs investigations and the injury to Plaintiff in this case is not too tenuous to allow a jury to determine the issue of proximate cause.
Defendant argues that Plaintiff cannot show that the volume of police use-of-force complaints (without any finding of excessive or unreasonable force) caused Plaintiff's injuries. [Docket Item 233 at 14-17.] Plaintiff need not show his injuries were the direct result of faulty departmental procedures to satisfy the nexus requirement. Bielevicz,
Former Chief Jubilee testified that ACPD tracked complaints against officers and informed the Chief of Police about the existence of a certain number of Internal Affairs complaints made against specific officers within a certain time frame "[t]o keep [the Chief of Police] informed of the particular officers who were getting the number of the complaints that they were." [Docket Item 228-24 at 45, Jubilee Dep. 172:8-11.] He continued:
Q: Do you remember taking any action with respect to any [such] memo you received during your course and tenure as Chief of Police?
A: No.
Id. at 45-46, Dep. 172:23-173:1. A reasonable finder of fact could conclude from this evidence, among other sources, that Atlantic City Police Department did not use their knowledge of complaints to institute any remedial action, policy changes, modifications to assignment, or discipline of officers. Jubilee further testified that he was notified when an Atlantic City police officer triggered the warning system by accumulating more than three internal affairs complaints within six months, but did nothing to respond to those complaints. Lieutenant Lee Hendricks, the City's designee on internal affairs, testified in 2015 that, as a matter of policy, the Chief of Police is informed every time an internal affairs complaint is made against an officer. [Docket Item 228-32 at 3, Hendricks Dep. 56:13-14.] However, when Jubilee was chief between the years 2010 and 2013, the department merely counted complaints and did nothing to address them. It is the earlier time period that is relevant in assessing Atlantic City's liability for these 2011-2012 incidents.
Plaintiff has put forth sufficient evidence to allow a reasonable jury to find that the Atlantic City Police Department and the City of Atlantic City were aware *304of the high volume of complaints of constitutional violations (including, specifically, complaints of excessive force) and did not take proper steps to investigate these complaints or discipline the officers, and that their failure to do so proximately caused the injuries Adams suffered. See Colburn v. Upper Darby Twp.,
2. Failure to Train, Supervise, and Discipline
Plaintiff alleges that a genuine issue of material fact exists regarding whether Atlantic City failed to train, supervise, and discipline its officers with regard to officers' use of excessive force. The Court will grant summary judgment in favor of Atlantic City on Plaintiff's municipal liability claims based on failure to train the non-K-9 officers, and deny summary judgment with regard to the claims based on failure to supervise and discipline all officers, and failure to train the K-9 officers.8
When deciding if a city should be liable for failure to train or supervise its officers, "the focus must be on adequacy of the training program in relation to the tasks the particular officers must perform." City of Canton v. Harris,
Plaintiff argues that ACPD officers engaged in routine use of excessive force against the citizens of Atlantic City and that the city did nothing to address the issue of excessive force in its department. [Docket Item 228 at 47.]
Additionally, Plaintiff's use-of-force expert Van Ness Bogardus stated: "The Atlantic City Police Department's Use of Force Policy did not offer adequate guidance to line level officers or dog handlers to prevent issues of unreasonable, unnecessary and excessive use of force in the *305form of [1] intimidating citizens with the presence of an ACPD attack dog, [2] 'gun pointing at an unarmed and non-threatening misdemeanor suspect,' [3] '... tackling[ ] suspects to the ground,' [4] 'delivery of approximately one strike to the suspect's facial area' and [5] attempts to further assist by holding him down while additional force was used, and [6] 'unwarranted K-9 aggression in the form of dog biting' an unarmed, immobilized, and non-threatening suspect." [Docket Item 228-40 at 9 (emphasis in original).]
Plaintiff further notes that the ACPD has a written policy that requires ACPD officers to undergo yearly performance evaluations; despite this, Lt. Hendricks admitted that ACPD was not in compliance with its own policy, and had only ordered three performance evaluations in the last five years. [Docket Item 228-33 at 6, Hendricks Dep. 100:11-24.] Likewise, Chief Jubilee testified that he was made aware when an officer triggered the Early Warning System, but did nothing to respond.
Given that evidence in the record, the Court finds that a reasonable finder of fact could find that the City exhibited deliberate indifference with regard to its failure to supervise and/or discipline ACPD officers with regard to the use of excessive force.
While there is significant evidence to support Plaintiff's claim with respect to failure to supervise and failure to discipline, there is clearly insufficient evidence regarding the failure to train aspects of Plaintiff's claims with regard to non-K-9 officers, as Plaintiff identifies no training deficiencies as to these non-K-9 officers.
Defendant argues that if Plaintiff's Fourth Amendment rights were violated by Defendant Officers' use of excessive force, "it is absurd to suggest that it happened because the officers were not properly trained not to beat a defenseless person and instruct two dogs to maul him for sport or out of uncontrolled anger." [Docket Item 233 at 27.] The Court agrees with Defendant. Atlantic City has produced records indicating that ACPD officers regularly undergo yearly in-service training specifically in the area of use of force. [Docket Items 233-6, Ex. FF (Training Records for Defendant Timek) and -7, Ex. GG (2012 Use of Force Training Material).] Plaintiff has not cited to anything within the evidentiary record regarding any specific deficiencies in the Atlantic City Police Department's training program. See Lapella v. City of Atlantic City, No. 10-2454,
The Court will deny summary judgment on Plaintiff's Monell claims dealing with failure to supervise and failure to discipline, and grant summary judgment with respect to failure to train.
3. Monell Claims Related to K-9 Handlers
Plaintiff brings his next Monell claim arguing that Plaintiff's dog-bite injuries were caused by Atlantic City's failure to train, supervise, and discipline its K-9 handlers in accordance with the appropriate and constitutional use of patrol dogs for "criminal apprehension." [Docket Item 228 at 54.] Relatedly, Plaintiff claims that the ACPD has a practice of condoning K-9 handlers' use of patrol dogs to bite non-threatening, non-violent and impaired petty offenders. Id. at 76.
Plaintiff argues, specifically, that Atlantic City showed deliberate indifference to the safety and well-being of the citizens of Atlantic City when the ACPD re-deployed the K-9 patrol units in 2010 (after the Mayor suspended the unit in 2009) without satisfying the re-training and re-certification criteria for their return, as set forth in *306public safety director Christine Peterson's Directive 025-2010. Id. at 55. This directive stated that K-9 officers were to undergo medical and psychological examinations and have their "personnel records and Internal Affairs files [reviewed] to determine present suitability." [Docket Item 228-37 at 2.] Additionally, the directive ordered that "[a]ll K-9 Teams are required to be evaluated at an outside police K-9 training facility, by recognized K-9 training expert ..." Id. at 3.
Defendant argues in response that the "Mayor's decision to suspend the unit, re-evaluate whether to have a K9 unit and whether policy changes were necessary, along with re-certifying and requiring psychological evaluations of the K9 officers, is the antithesis of deliberate indifference." [Docket Item 233 at 30.] Defendant also argues that the City sought more stringent review and regulation of its K-9 unit as compared with what the Attorney General's K-9 Guidelines, or any other law, requires, thereby suggesting that compliance with old training requirements were sufficient. Id. at 30-31. This, Defendant argues, entitles it to summary judgment on Plaintiff's Monell claims regarding ACPD's actions with regard to its K-9 handlers. The Court disagrees.
Plaintiff has presented evidence that ACPD returned the dogs to the streets without satisfying the criteria set forth in Directive 025-2010. First, Plaintiff states that ACPD has produced no writing from any officer confirming that they complied with the Directive. [Docket Item 228 at 64.] Current Chief of Police Henry White testified at a deposition on April 15, 2016 that he conducted a search for any documents that would reflect compliance with the portion of the directive relating to the re-evaluation of the handlers and could find no documents in ACPD's care that reflected that the K-9 handlers were reevaluated pursuant to Section IV of the selection criteria set forth in the K-9 policy. [Docket Item 228-48 at 9-12.] Atlantic City also has failed to produce any documents that show that all of the K-9 handlers were evaluated, and passed evaluation, at an outside facility, as required by Peterson's directive. [Docket Item 228 at 65.] The evaluation requirement implies that training would be offered by the outside facility to assure proficiency, yet there is no evidence that this outside training was provided and received.9
Dr. William M. Glass conducted psychological evaluations in accordance with Directive 025-2010; however, he also wrote a follow-up memo to Director Peterson and Captain Myers informing them that he "found some concerns" with three out of the thirteen candidates and wished to reevaluate them. [Docket Item 228-50, Ex. XX, at 4-5.] The city did not produce any evidence that these three candidates were re-interviewed by Dr. Glass, and the record seems, in fact, to suggest that the city ignored Glass's memo, argues Plaintiff. [Docket Item 228 at 70.]
Joe Rodriguez, the head K-9 trainer between 2010 and 2015, similarly voiced concerns over the appointment of Officer Timek and another officer to the K-9 unit due to concerns about their aggressive temperament, and was, in his words, "basically told" by his higher-ups to "go blow". [Docket Item 228-44, Ex. RR (Rodriguez Dep.), at 16, 41-42.] This is further evidence from which a jury could find that the City was indifferent to the retraining and recertification requirements imposed upon its canine handlers, due to prior documented deficiencies.
*307Additionally, Plaintiff presented a study of ACPD K-9 handler apprehensions from 2009, 2011 and 2012. Plaintiff gleans from this study that out of the 42 apprehensions reviewed in this time period, (1) fewer than 10% involved the suspect's use of any weapon or object that could be used as a weapon; (2) only two cases involved an on-scene officer or civilian who sought medical treatment for physical injuries; (3) fewer than 5% of cases involved the K-9 actually "finding" the suspect; (4) greater than 50% of cases involved impaired or "under the influence" suspects; and (5) in all but a handful of cases, the precipitating offense was a non-violent offense or merely an investigatory stop that uncovered no offense whatsoever. [Docket Item 228-51 at 2-4.]
The Court finds that from this evidence, a reasonable jury could conclude that this indifference to proper management of the K-9 unit with regard to investigations, supervision, and training was the "moving force" behind the excessive force used against Adams by Officer Timek and Sergeant Hall and their K-9 partners. A genuine issue of material fact exists on Plaintiff's Monell claim based on failure to train, supervise, and discipline its K-9 handlers, and therefore summary judgment is denied. See Castellani v. City of Atl. City, No. CV 13-5848,
In summary, the Court will deny Defendant Atlantic City's motion for summary judgment as to all Monell claims against the City of Atlantic City with the exception of the Monell claim for failure to train the regular non-canine unit officers, as to which there is no evidence and summary judgment will be granted for Atlantic City.
V. CONCLUSION
For the reasons cited above, the Court will grant in part and deny in part Defendants' motions for summary judgment. The accompanying Order will be entered and counsel shall prepare their Joint Final Pretrial Order at this time.
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