Brown v. Trump

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Missouri
DecidedJune 14, 2021
Docket4:18-cv-00389
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Brown v. Trump, (E.D. Mo. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MISSOURI EASTERN DIVISION

RODNEY BROWN, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) vs. ) Case No. 4:18-cv-00389-MTS ) CITY OF ST. LOUIS, et al., ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER A video in the record of this case unequivocally shows Plaintiff, Rodney Brown, disrupting a ticketed event on private property, screaming in the faces of other attendees, resisting his removal by police officers, and yelling expletives at the crowd as the officers escort him out of the event. Despite his disruptive and belligerent behavior being captured on video, he brought a slew of claims against a host of Defendants, including President Trump, whose campaign event it was, the City of St. Louis, which employed the officers who arrested him, and multiple police officers individually. Many of these claims were dismissed. The remaining Defendants now have moved for summary judgment on the unresolved claims. The video, along with other undisputed facts from the record, plainly show probable cause existed to arrest and prosecute Plaintiff. As explained below, his claims fail, and the Court therefore will grant the Motion for Summary Judgment, Doc. [108]. I. Background On March 11, 2016, former President Donald Trump, then a candidate for the 2016 presidential election, held a sizable, ticketed campaign rally inside the privately-owned Peabody Opera House in St. Louis. Multiple attendees disrupted the rally in protest during various times throughout the event. See Doc. [128] ¶ 11. Plaintiff, Rodney Brown, was one of them. Plaintiff Brown acquired a ticket and took a seat in the first row open to the public, “very close to the front of the auditorium,” and just a few seats over from the center aisle. Doc. [120] ¶ 4. A video in the record “accurately depicts”1 much of the events at issue here. Id. ¶ 5. Several minutes into

Trump’s remarks, during an otherwise quiet moment after Trump momentarily paused, Plaintiff made an exceedingly loud, prolonged, and forced laughing sound. His laugh was so loud that though the video in the record was recorded near the back of the crowded auditorium, a considerable distance from Plaintiff at the front of the auditorium, Plaintiff’s laughing sound is clearly audible. Of the large crowd, only Plaintiff’s laughing sound is heard. That is, no one else in the audience can be heard reacting audibly to Trump’s statement at all, let alone with laughter. Even when viewing the facts in the light most favorable to Plaintiff, it is still fair to say that his laughing sound was out of place. See Doc. [109-3] at 10 (34:3-15) (Plaintiff noting that Trump “just kinda cracked [him] up” because Trump’s “jokes” were “not, like, landing”). In any event, Trump and the crowd did not receive the laugh well. After Plaintiff laughed, the video

shows that Trump immediately shielded his eyes from the stage lights so that he could look into the audience. The crowd simultaneously began to stir. Row after row of people visible in the video, almost all of whom had been sitting when Plaintiff made his loud laughing sound, began to stand up. Soon, nearly everyone visible in the audience—dozens of individuals—were standing. The crowd’s murmuring swiftly turned boisterous. Multiple audience members can be heard yelling “get him out of here,” or some variation of it.

1 Doc. [120] ¶ 5 (Plaintiff noting it is “[u]ncontested that Exhibit A accurately depicts a portion of events that occurred at the Trump Rally.”); Doc. [109-3] at 9 (32:10-13) (Plaintiff agreeing at his deposition that the video “accurately and fairly depicts events that occurred at the Donald Trump rally on March 11, 2016.”). No less than three men can be seen approaching Plaintiff, who was also on his feet. Plaintiff “feared that the three men who approached him might physically harm him.” Doc. [120] ¶ 10. A man seated next to Plaintiff, Mark Comfort, observed one of the men approaching Plaintiff. Id. ¶ 11. Comfort also “fear[ed]” the man “might resort to violence.” Id. Comfort

attempted to keep Plaintiff and the man separate and urged the man not to “do anything violent.” Id. Plaintiff had a different approach. The video shows Plaintiff “nose-to-nose”2 with the man, as Comfort put it, and screaming in the man’s face. Id. ¶ 12. That is to say, Plaintiff yelled in the face of someone he thought might become violent. The video plainly shows Plaintiff alternate between animatedly yelling in the man’s face and yelling and pointing in the direction of Trump on stage. As Plaintiff and the man exchange words, the video shows the man repeatedly pointing toward the back of the auditorium. From the stage, Trump instructs that Plaintiff be removed, six times saying some variation of “get him out of here.” See Doc. [109-3] at 26 (98:8-12) (Q: “Was it your impression when Trump said that, that he was talking about you, ‘Get him out of here’?” A: “Yes. Yes, I was the only person he was directing that toward[.]”).

Defendants Matthew Boettigheimer and Steven Korte were present at the rally as on-duty St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department officers. Defendant Boettigheimer heard Plaintiff’s “very loud out-of-place laugh” that started the ruckus, a laugh “he believed was made to intentionally disrupt the event.” Doc. [120] ¶ 16. Boettigheimer saw Plaintiff “engaged in [the] disturbance” with other audience members. Id. ¶ 17. Boettigheimer felt the disturbance “was

2 Comfort testified that Plaintiff and the other man were “nose-to-nose.” Doc. [109-7] at 9 (31:14-20). Plaintiff, though, attempts to characterize that as a genuine dispute of fact because Plaintiff testified only that he was “within one foot from” the man and that “he did not testify they were ‘nose-to-nose.’” Doc. [120] ¶ 12. That Plaintiff did not testify that he was nose-to-nose with the man does not create a dispute. Plaintiff does not point the Court to anywhere that he, under oath, denied being nose-to-nose. Only that he did not describe it that way. Plaintiff’s testimony, that he was within one foot of the man, is consistent with Comfort’s testimony in that a person nose-to-nose with someone can easily be said to be within one foot from the other. Plaintiff pointed to no information in the record that contradicted Comfort’s description of nose-to-nose, and it therefore is not disputed. getting too large” and that he “needed to quell it immediately” in order to prevent it from becoming violent. Id. ¶ 21. So, with the assistance of Defendant Korte, Boettigheimer “escorted [Plaintiff] out of the auditorium.” Id. ¶ 22. It took some time for them to escort Plaintiff to the back and out of the auditorium since Plaintiff chose to sit so close to the front. But Plaintiff took advantage of

this long escort down the center aisle. He “continued to turn around and yell” in the direction of Trump and the crowd. Id. ¶ 23. As Defendants got closer to the exit with Plaintiff, the video shows Defendants Korte and Boettigheimer slowing down as they ask the throngs of media and spectators blocking the aisle to clear. Plaintiff, with his head still turned away from the exit, continued yelling at the crowd and at Trump. At that point, both Boettigheimer and Korte had a hold of Plaintiff and were trying to move him forward. Plaintiff, though, was completely turned and facing the opposite way—still facing toward Trump and the crowd. He continued his recalcitrance as they neared the exit, turning toward the crowd, yelling fervently, and gesturing with a free arm. From the roar of the crowd, his words cannot be heard on the recording. But his fervent yelling led to clear articulation that

makes what he was saying unmistakably clear: “fuck you!” and “fuck” this and that. The camera then pans away, capturing the face of one onlooker, mouth agape.

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Brown v. Trump, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-trump-moed-2021.