Adams v. City of Atl. City

294 F. Supp. 3d 283
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 13, 2018
DocketCivil Action No. 13–cv–7133 (JBS/AMD)
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

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.

Bluebook
Adams v. City of Atl. City, 294 F. Supp. 3d 283 (D.N.J. 2018).

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 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for failing to meaningfully investigate Internal Affairs complaints and failing to supervise, discipline, and train its officers with regard to officers' use of excessive force and use of K-9s (i.e., police dogs).

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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294 F. Supp. 3d 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-city-of-atl-city-njd-2018.