Aleia Tousis v. Keith Billiot

84 F.4th 692
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 18, 2023
Docket22-2211
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 84 F.4th 692 (Aleia Tousis v. Keith Billiot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aleia Tousis v. Keith Billiot, 84 F.4th 692 (7th Cir. 2023).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ No. 22-2211 ALEIA TOUSIS, As Special Administrator of the Estate of Gus Tousis, deceased, Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.

KEITH BILLIOT, Special Agent, Drug Enforcement Administration, Defendant-Appellant. ____________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 1:20-cv-03012 — Sharon Johnson Coleman, Judge. ____________________

ARGUED JANUARY 5, 2023 — DECIDED OCTOBER 18, 2023 ____________________

Before FLAUM, ROVNER, and BRENNAN, Circuit Judges. ROVNER, Circuit Judge. Aleia Tousis, as special administra- tor of the estate of her father, Gus Tousis, sued a law enforce- ment officer who shot and killed Gus Tousis following a high- speed chase. The officer moved for summary judgment on qualified immunity grounds, and the district court denied the motion. We reverse. 2 No. 22-2211

I. Because this appeal arises from the denial of the officer’s motion for summary judgment, we view the facts in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, the daughter of the driver involved in this incident. Plumhoff v. Rickard, 572 U.S. 765, 768 (2014). We may not make credibility determinations or weigh the evidence. Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 255 (1986); Payne v. Pauley, 337 F.3d 767, 770 (7th Cir. 2003). We will refer to Gus Tousis as “Tousis" and to his daughter as Aleia. The Drug Enforcement Administration (“DEA”) began in- vestigating Tousis in late 2017. Based on that investigation, the DEA obtained a warrant to place a tracking device on Tou- sis’s car. In addition to providing investigators with the loca- tion of Tousis’s car, the device tracked the speed at which the vehicle was traveling. On June 2, 2018, the investigating agents believed that Tousis was involved in drug trafficking, that he had a source named Vernon Turner in the Aurora, Il- linois area, and that he would be going to Turner’s home that day to procure drugs. They decided to surveil Turner’s home, observe whether Tousis procured illegal drugs, and then ar- rest Tousis and seize any drugs that he obtained from Turner. On the day in question, DEA Task Force Officer Robert Boehnke surveilled Turner’s home and observed Tousis arriv- ing in a gray or silver SUV. Boehnke saw Tousis enter Turner’s garage carrying a bag, and then exit the garage car- rying the same bag. Boehnke noted a change in the appear- ance of the bag and believed that a drug transaction had taken place. He informed his fellow officers about what he saw. Spe- cial Agent Keith Billiot, the defendant here, was a supervisory special agent involved in the investigation that day. He No. 22-2211 3

understood that Tousis was suspected of dealing cocaine and heroin, and that he had a record of drug-related arrests as well as arrests for other offenses. Agent Billiot followed the reports from Officer Boehnke and other DEA agents that day. DEA agents enlisted the aid of the DuPage County Sher- iff’s Department to conduct a traffic stop of Tousis’s SUV after it left Turner’s home. When a sheriff’s deputy attempted the stop near I-88 and Yackley Avenue, Tousis fled at high speeds, with the tracking device showing that the car acceler- ated from 64.6 miles per hour to 115.2 miles per hour on I-88 during the chase. Because of the danger to the officers and the public posed by Tousis’s reckless flight, the officers ended their pursuit. Tousis was last observed by those officers weav- ing in and out of traffic at dangerous speeds. The tracking de- vice continued to show Tousis’s location and speed, and the officers, including Agent Billiot, followed his progress. After the officers ended the visible pursuit on I-88, Tousis reduced his speed at certain points. The officers hoped to follow Tousis to his home or to some place where it would be safe to appre- hend him. Billiot learned from his fellow officers that Tousis was heading eastbound on Interstate 290 at a high rate of speed. Agent Billiot was driving an unmarked car that was equipped with a siren and emergency lights. He proceeded to Interstate 290 and spotted Tousis but did not activate his lights or siren. Billiot followed Tousis off the highway at Cen- tral Avenue in Chicago, where Tousis proceeded south- bound. At this point, Tousis was driving at normal speeds, but he was taking evasive actions that indicated to Billiot that Tousis suspected he was being followed. Billiot continued to follow Tousis until they were both headed northbound on Central Avenue. At that point in the 4 No. 22-2211

road, Central Avenue has two lanes in each direction with a median separating them. Tousis was in the left-hand lane and Billiot in the right-hand lane when Billiot observed that Tou- sis was approaching a red light and would be stopped behind two cars at the light. Billiot decided that this was a good place to make a second attempt at a traffic stop because Tousis would be blocked in by traffic and would be unable to flee. Billiot activated his emergency lights and siren and pulled in front of Tousis’s car at a northwest angle. The position of Bil- liot’s car in relation to Tousis’s car placed the driver’s door of Billiot’s car directly in front of Tousis’s car at a distance of ap- proximately ten to twenty-five feet. Officer Boehnke was ap- proaching from behind and was over a hundred yards away from the scene of the confrontation at the moment that Billiot pulled in front of Tousis. After stopping his car, Billiot grabbed his carbine rifle, exited his car wearing a well- marked DEA law enforcement vest and ran towards Tousis’s stationary car, shouting commands at him to turn off the car and exit the vehicle. Closing the distance between the cars as he ran, Billiot raised his rifle and pointed it at Tousis, but Tou- sis ignored Billiot’s orders. Instead, Tousis moved the car for- ward, maneuvering to the right where the lane was now open. There was nothing between Agent Billiot and Tousis’s car. As soon as Tousis’s car pulled forward, Billiot fired a single shot at Tousis with his rifle. Backpedaling from the moving car, Billiot fell onto the median, injuring his back. The bullet struck the steering wheel “off-center to the left from the top of the steering wheel,” and a fragment hit Tousis in the neck. R. 62-2, at 21, ¶ 56. When comparing the location of the bullet hole in the windshield with the location of the bullet strike on the steering wheel, the positioning indicates that, at the moment that Billiot fired his weapon, “Tousis was turning his wheel No. 22-2211 5

to the right, maneuvering his vehicle away from Billiot, and Billiot was angled to the driver[’s] side of the front end of Tou- sis’s vehicle.” Id. After the shot was fired, Tousis’s car accelerated, veering to the right. The car struck a light pole, jumped a curb, and came to a stop. The car was moving fast enough that, when it hit the light pole, the front right wheel was torn off and the axle was broken. Officer Boehnke pulled up and saw that Tousis was slumped down and bleeding from the neck. Both Boehnke and Billiot tried to open the car, but the doors were locked and their efforts to break the windows with a hand strike, with a device called a “window break,” and with a ba- ton were all unsuccessful. Eventually, Tousis was extracted from the car with the aid of an Illinois Department of Trans- portation worker who broke a window with a sledgehammer. Tousis was taken to a hospital where he was pronounced dead. Billiot was also taken to a hospital where he was treated for injuries to his back and released the same day. The police officers recovered approximately 300 grams of cocaine from Tousis’s car.

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