Anthony McCormick v. City of Fort Lauderdale, Jonathan Walker, Officer

333 F.3d 1234, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 11629, 2003 WL 21350097
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedJune 11, 2003
Docket01-16567
StatusPublished
Cited by396 cases

This text of 333 F.3d 1234 (Anthony McCormick v. City of Fort Lauderdale, Jonathan Walker, Officer) 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
Anthony McCormick v. City of Fort Lauderdale, Jonathan Walker, Officer, 333 F.3d 1234, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 11629, 2003 WL 21350097 (11th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

This appeal is about the use of force to make an arrest.

Plaintiff Anthony McCormick was pepper-sprayed and shot by Police Officer Jonathan Welker when Officer Welker attempted to arrest McCormick for aggravated battery. McCormick sued the City of Fort Lauderdale (City) and Officer Welker for, among other things, unlawful arrest and excessive force. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the City and Officer Welker because the arrest was based upon probable cause and the officer’s application of force was reasonable under the circumstances. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

McCormick always carried with him an ornate, wooden walking stick. McCormick claims he sometimes used the walking stick as a balancing point due to medical difficulties with his back and legs. On 17 May 1996, McCormick was loitering — with his walking stick — in the vicinity of the Unity Coin Laundry (Laundry) in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. McCormick entered the Laundry with his stick in hand, although he was making no use of the stick for walking assistance. Deborah Capuano, a white female, entered the Laundry and began to wash her clothes at a nearby machine. McCormick, a black man, apparently began a verbal altercation with Ca-puano by saying something to the effect of “bye-bye white race.” 1

McCormick put pieces of a banana peel into the soap dispenser and across the coin-deposit mechanism of the washing machine used by Capuano. While McCormick continued his racial insults, he put the end of his walking stick inside Capua-no’s washing machine. McCormick ordered Capuano to leave the Laundry, telling her also that she and all white people should go back west. It was at this point that Turesa Hosein, an owner of the Laundry, called the police.

McCormick admitted that he was “taunting” Capuano by putting his hand *1239 “inside the water [of Capuano’s washing machine] and basically just, like, flick[ing] the water in [Capuano’s] face.” McCormick claims that he and Capuano separated briefly and that as he was exiting the Laundry Capuano appeared before him with her hands approaching his neck “with her nails pointing at [McCormick].” McCormick then pushed Capuano; and Capuano fell backwards, striking her head on the pavement. 2 Hosein called the police a second time, this time relaying that someone had been hurt at the Laundry.

As Capuano was lying on the ground and bleeding from her head wound, bystanders (including Hosein) attempted to render assistance to Capuano; but McCormick would let no one near Capuano. 3 One witness testified that McCormick would swing his stick at anyone who tried to approach Capuano; McCormick did not specifically deny that he was swinging the stick at bystanders. Hosein was eventually able to help Capuano to a chair that Hosein placed outside the Laundry.

In the meantime, Officer Jonathan Welker' of the City of Fort Lauderdale Police- Department, received a radio call from dispatch about a disturbance at the Laundry involving a black male making racial slurs and pushing a woman. Before Officer Welker arrived at the Laundry, he received another radio call from dispatch that the situation was upgraded to an assault and that a white, female victim required emergency medical services.

Officer Welker testified at his deposition that, when he arrived at the Laundry, he saw a' “white female sitting in a chair bleeding profusely from her head.” Officer Welker asked Capuano what happened; and, through her crying, Capuano said someone had hurt her. She indicated by pointing with her thumb that her assailant was inside the Laundry. Hosein also indicated that the assailant was in the Laundry wearing a green shirt. 4 Officer Welker testified that, from the look of Capuano’s injury, it was possible that an aggravated battery — a felony — had been committed. 5

Officer Welker testified that he entered the Laundry and saw two men standing *1240 next to McCormick. 6 Officer Welker asked where was the assailant, and the men standing next to McCormick backed away and indicated that McCormick was the person in question. Officer Welker noticed that McCormick had a blunt object in his hand.

In his affidavit, McCormick claims that his back was to the door when Officer Welker entered the Laundry. McCormick says that he was conversing with another man when he heard someone shouting, “Hey, hey, hey.” As McCormick turned to face the shouting person, “a mist of liquid hit [McCormick’s] face and eyes and [he] immediately experienced a severe burning sensation and inability to catch [his] breath.” McCormick claims in the affidavit that he was never told that he was under arrest. nor was he asked to surrender before receiving the pepper spray in the face. 7

Officer Welker testified that McCormick was unaffected by the administered pepper spray. “He turned his back to me. He wiped his eyes and turned right back around and looked at me like nothing had *1241 happened.” .As Officer Welker backed out of the Laundry, McCormick continued to advance toward Welker. 8 After McCormick refused to obey repeated orders to drop the stick, Officer Welker delivered a second burst of pepper spray. According to Officer Welker, the seeond spraying also had no effect. Officer Welker radioed for a step-up of his backup response,

McCormick started to walk away with his stick still in hand, and Officer Welker holstered his pepper spray and drew his baton. Officer Welker unsuccessfully attempted to kick the stick out of McCormick’s hand. Throughout these events, Officer Welker continually shouted for McCormick to drop the stick. In McCormick’s affidavit, he claims that he “heard shouting but, at the time, [he] could not understand what anyone was saying.” (In other words, even McCormick’s affidavit given five years later creates no dispute of fact that McCormick was told to drop the stick after the pepper-spraying and before the shooting on 17 May 1996. 9 )

After Officer Welker attempted unsuccessfully to kick the stick out of McCormick’s hand, McCormick turned again on Officer Welker. According to Officer Welker, McCormick advanced with the stick raised above his head. Officer Welker testified that McCormick began pumping the stick at him as if he intended to strike Officer Welker. Witnesses verified that McCormick had the stick raised above his head and was either pumping or swinging the stick at Officer Welker. Officer Welker drew his weapon and pointed it at McCormick. Some of the bystanders were then yelling for McCormick to drop the stick.

In the affidavit submitted in opposition to summary judgment, McCormick states only that he “lifted [his] hands in submission,” fearing another confrontation with his alleged assailant.

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333 F.3d 1234, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 11629, 2003 WL 21350097, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anthony-mccormick-v-city-of-fort-lauderdale-jonathan-walker-officer-ca11-2003.