Biles v. Bessner

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedAugust 18, 2020
Docket2:19-cv-10779
StatusUnknown

This text of Biles v. Bessner (Biles v. Bessner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Biles v. Bessner, (E.D. Mich. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION

LARRY BILES, JESSE LEE 19-cv-10779 ALEXANDER CROXTON, HON. TERRENCE G. BERG Plaintiffs,

v. ORDER DENYING MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT MARK BESSNER, TROOPER IN FAVOR OF PLAINTIFF “UNKNOWN” KURISH, JOHN BILES DOE SUPERVISOR, Defendants. This is an excessive-force case stemming from the aftermath of a six-minute police chase that occurred in the metro Detroit area in 2016. Plaintiffs Larry Biles and Jesse Lee Alexander Croxton say that two Michigan State Police Troopers, Defendants Mark Bessner and Christopher Kurish, violated Plaintiffs’ Fourth Amendment rights by punching and kicking them without justification, also tasing Biles and holding his head underwater while he was handcuffed. Plaintiffs further assert a claim for individual supervisory liability against the officers’ unidentified “John Doe” Supervisor. The case is now before the Court on Plaintiff Biles’s motion for summary judgment against Defendants Bessner and Kurish. Biles contends there is no genuine issue of material fact as to whether Bessner and Kurish used excessive force against him in violation of his Fourth Amendment rights. ECF No. 18. Although the Clerk of Court has already entered default against Defendant Bessner

for failure to plead or otherwise defend, and Bessner did not file a response brief, the Court finds that Defendant Kurish has come forward with evidence raising a genuine issue of material fact as to whether each of the Defendants used excessive force against Biles. Accordingly, Biles’s motion for summary judgment, ECF No. 18, must be denied. BACKGROUND The police chase that gave rise to this case unfolded in Oak Park, Michigan on April 13, 2016. ECF No. 18-2, PageID.123 (Biles Dep. Tr.).

Plaintiffs had made plans to work on one of Biles’s cars together that day. ECF No. 20-3, PageID.443 (Croxton Dep. Tr.). Biles picked up Croxton in his Dodge Charger and the two friends began driving back to the car Biles wanted to work on. ECF No. 1, PageID.3 (Compl.); ECF No. 20-3, PageID.444. Michigan State Police Troopers Bessner and Kurish, Defendants in this case, were riding in a marked police car and observed that the license plate of the Charger Biles was driving was in fact registered to a Chrysler 300, so they attempted to pull Plaintiffs over. ECF No. 20-2, PageID.415 (Police Report). Instead of pulling over when

the Defendant troopers activated their overhead lights, Plaintiffs fled. ECF No. 18-2, PageID.70, 97, 116; ECF No. 20-2, PageID.416. But see ECF No. 20-3, PageID.449 (testifying that Biles initially pulled over before speeding off). The police report describes the chase as lasting approximately six

minutes, with Biles reaching a peak speed of almost 140 miles per hour. ECF No. 20-2, PageID.415–16; ECF No. 18-2, PageID.123–24. During the course of the chase, Plaintiffs disregarded red lights and stop signs, and narrowly avoided colliding with other cars. ECF No. 18-2, PageID.124; ECF No. 20-2, PageID.416. Eventually, Plaintiffs’ Charger became stuck in the mud, at which point the Defendant troopers pulled their marked car in front of the Charger to block its path. ECF No. 18-2, PageID.126. Biles, who is African American, testified that he fled because

Croxton told him to, and because he thought he was being unfairly racially profiled by the troopers. ECF No. 18-2, PageID.118–19. Croxton testified his in deposition that he told Biles to flee because he worried the troopers would take the several thousand dollars in cash they had in the Charger, and because Croxton had a gun with him he didn’t want the troopers to find. ECF No. 20-3, PageID.449–50. Although the police report indicates the troopers later found approximately $11,000 in cash in the Charger, it mentions nothing about a gun. ECF No. 18-2, PageID.119, 121, 127. Croxton says the officers never found it, and the

state agrees that no gun was found. ECF No. 20-3, PageID.450. Once Plaintiffs’ car became stuck in the mud, it is undisputed in the parties’ deposition testimony that Biles waited with his hands on the steering wheel for the Defendant troopers to approach his car. ECF No. 1, PageID.3; ECF No. 18-6, PageID.327. The police report simply states that, “[a]t the conclusion of the pursuit . . . Biles refused to exit the car.”

ECF No. 20-2, PageID.415, 417. It’s unclear whether the description of Biles’s refusal refers to his actions immediately after his Charger came to a stop or later in time, after the troopers say he pulled away from them as they tried to get him out of the car. Trooper Kurish acknowledged during his deposition that Biles could not have posed a threat to officer safety simply by refusing to exit his car, without engaging in any other acts of resistance or noncompliance. ECF No. 18-6, PageID.326. Nonetheless, when Biles began opening his car door to comply with

the troopers’ command to “Get the fuck out of the car,” Plaintiffs assert Trooper Bessner immediately tased him, without provocation. ECF No. 1, PageID.4; ECF No. 18-2, PageID.133; ECF No. 20-3, PageID.451–52; ECF No. 18-6, PageID.302. Exactly when Trooper Bessner first tased Biles is somewhat in dispute. According to Plaintiffs, Bessner tased Biles at least three times while he was still inside the Charger even though he was not resisting in any way. ECF No. 18-2, PageID.140. At odds with Plaintiffs’ sequence of events, Trooper Kurish testified that Bessner first used his taser after Kurish had already removed

Croxton, who had been in the Charger’s passenger seat, and placed him onto the ground. ECF No. 18-6, PageID.301, 349–50. After Croxton was handcuffed, Trooper Kurish, still at the passenger side of the car, said he saw Biles pulling away from Trooper Bessner inside the car. ECF No. 18- 6, PageID.343–44. Kurish then pepper-sprayed Biles from the passenger side of the car in an effort to assist in subduing him. ECF No. 18-6,

PageID.343–44. “When that didn’t work,” Trooper Kurish said, “I determined I would need to go to the driver’s side of the car and help Mr. Bessner get Mr. Biles out of the car.” ECF No. 18-6, PageID.344. It was in that window of time, while Trooper Kurish was moving from the passenger side of the car to the driver side, that Kurish asserts Trooper Bessner first tased Biles. ECF No. 18-6, PageID.344, 350. According to Kurish, when he arrived at the driver side of the Charger he saw Biles, still inside the car, pulling his arm away from Trooper

Bessner and “holding onto the steering wheel with both of his hands.” ECF No. 18-6, PageID.343–49. Elsewhere in his deposition testimony, however, Kurish says “[a]t some point, I don’t know what point it was, Mr. Bessner used his taser and still Mr. Biles was in the driver seat of the vehicle.” ECF No. 18-6, PageID.302. Because he was moving around the car at the time, Kurish claims he could not see Bessner tase Biles the first time and is thus (according to his deposition testimony) unable to assess whether Biles was actively resisting or, relatedly, whether Bessner’s taser use was

justified. ECF No. 18-6, PageID.328. When asked during his deposition whether it was “necessary” for Trooper Bessner to tase Biles before getting him out of the car, Trooper Kurish responded, “I didn’t see that part of why he was tasered so I don’t know why Mr. Bessner tasered him.” ECF No. 18-6, PageID.328. Briefly, concerning Croxton, who is not moving for summary

judgment, the parties agree he was not resisting being placed in handcuffs and complied fully with the troopers’ instructions. Plaintiffs say the troopers nonetheless proceeded to “punch and kick [Croxton]” multiple times after he was handcuffed, badly injuring his right knee and knocking out three of his teeth. ECF No. 1, PageID.4; ECF No. 18-2, PageID.137–39; ECF No. 20-3, PageID.440–41, 452–53 (Croxton Dep. Tr.); ECF No.

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