Bud Lee v. Metropolitan Gov't of Nashville

432 F. App'x 435
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 18, 2011
Docket09-6083
StatusUnpublished
Cited by99 cases

This text of 432 F. App'x 435 (Bud Lee v. Metropolitan Gov't of Nashville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bud Lee v. Metropolitan Gov't of Nashville, 432 F. App'x 435 (6th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

McKEAGUE, Circuit Judge.

Patrick Lee was escorted out of a concert and then attempted to elude arrest by several police officers. In their protracted efforts to subdue Lee, who was under the influence of drugs, officers used different forms of force, including tasers. Shortly *438 after he was arrested, Lee became unresponsive and later died. Lee’s parents filed the instant suit on his behalf, alleging that the officers and Nashville violated their son’s constitutional rights, and that the taser was a defective product. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of several Defendants, and a jury verdict later absolved the remaining Defendants of liability. Plaintiffs appealed. For the reasons that follow, we AFFIRM the orders and judgment of the district court, and we decline to grant Plaintiffs a new trial.

I. Background

A. Factual History

On September 22, 2005, Patrick Lee (“Lee”) attended a concert at the Mercy Lounge in Nashville, Tennessee. After getting too close to the stage and a performer who was on stilts, Mercy Lounge employees escorted Lee out of the venue. Although the owner and a bouncer were able to get Lee outside, Lee refused to leave the premises and persisted in what can only be described as strange behavior. Eventually, the owner called the Metropolitan Nashville Police Department (“MNPD”) for assistance. The first officer to respond was Defendant Christopher Brooks (“Brooks”). Lee approached Brooks’s police cruiser, and Brooks got out of the cruiser to speak with Lee. Lee’s responses to Brooks’s questions were incoherent: Lee said that his name was “Blue” and he would point to the sky when he was asked what was going on. After he asked for Lee’s identification, Brooks testified that he felt that Lee invaded his space about three times, and eventually “kind of lunged” at him. Brooks then ordered Lee to place his hands behind his back. Initially, Lee complied with Brooks’s orders, but as soon as Brooks grabbed Lee’s hands, Brooks testified that Lee then jerked away, ripped his shirt off, spun around, and lunged at Brooks again. Brooks responded by using pepper spray on Lee. Lee then took off running, and Brooks followed. Lee responded to an order to stop, and got on the ground, but as soon as Brooks approached, he fled again. At some point during the chase, Lee — who had stripped off all of his clothes and was nude — eventually fell down. Brooks attempted to subdue him, only to have Lee escape again. At about the same time, other NMPD officers began responding to a radio call for assistance that was placed by Brooks. The second officer to arrive, Defendant Jonathan Mays (“Mays”), was armed with a Taser X26, which is manufactured by Defendant TASER International, Inc. (TASER). A few seconds later, Defendant Ryan Scott (“Scott”) also arrived on scene.

Brooks suggested that Mays use the taser on Lee. After giving several warnings to no avail, Mays deployed the taser for the first time. 1 The taser had the intended effect, and Lee immediately fell to the ground. During the next two minutes Mays recalled activating the taser six more times with little or no effect on Lee. Because many of the taser activations did not incapacitate Lee, it is unclear how many of the activations actually resulted in the taser delivering electricity to Lee. At *439 the same time, Brooks and Scott attempted to gain control of Lee. Brooks testified that he and Scott tried to subdue Lee just a second or two after Lee hit the ground, and that Brooks’s arms got tangled up in the taser wires. Scott testified that he asked Mays if he was done applying the taser before he attempted to subdue Lee because he was concerned about getting shocked. 2 Other witnesses testified that the officers backed away from Lee while he was being tased. The officers had difficulty subduing Lee because he was struggling while naked and sweaty, and Lee also partially moved underneath a ear. The officers were able to get a single handcuff onto one of Lee’s wrists. Thinking that Lee was under control, Mays removed his taser cartridge. However, Lee broke away from the officers and then ran at Mays who directly administered a brief shock to Lee.

At roughly the same time, more NMPD officers arrived to the scene, including Defendants Jamie Scruggs (“Scruggs”), Wayne Fisher (“Fisher”), John Wright (“Wright”), and Justin Pinkelton (“Pinkelton”). Scruggs, who was also armed with a taser, testified that the first thing that he noticed when he arrived on site was the “loud popping and crackling sound” of taser use. According to Scruggs, his training told him that this was the sound that a taser made when it was activated but did not have a connection with the target. Scruggs first saw Lee running between cars, sweating “profusely,” with a single handcuff on. Scruggs further testified that he had never seen someone behaving the way Lee was that evening. Lee came at Scruggs who ordered him to stop, and warned Lee that he would use his taser. The warnings were ignored, and Scruggs activated his taser once Lee was about 3 feet away, incapacitating him. Lee got up again, “almost immediately,” and Scruggs deployed the taser a second time, with the intended effect. In what Scruggs described was an effort to “incapacitate him so we could take him into custody,” he deployed the taser a third time, to no effect, and Lee ran away again.

Mays, who had retrieved a second taser cartridge, came upon Lee, and again deployed his taser after issuing warnings. The probes of the taser struck Lee, but Lee growled and pulled the probes from his body, rather than falling to the ground. 3 Somehow, but without the use of the taser, Lee appears to have gone to the ground again. Scruggs, who had also retrieved a second cartridge, went up to Lee, who was flailing and trying to get up again. Scruggs deployed his taser again, after issuing verbal warnings and commands, because he wanted to give the officers an opportunity to subdue Lee before he got back up. Scruggs testified that Lee fell back to the ground, but “pretty quickly got up” again. Scruggs further testified that he pulled the trigger two more times without effect, but on the next pull the taser worked and Lee fell back, hitting his head on an SUV’s step bar. At this point, “[ojfficers moved in very quickly and started to wrestle with him and get him in custody.” Still, while the officers were trying to subdue Lee, Scruggs felt that he *440 needed to directly apply the taser two more times, because Lee “was still actively resisting, appeared very strong, [ ] wasn’t tired from the previous struggle, and he was very slippery so it was hard for them to get him handcuffed.” Following the second direct application of the taser, the officers were able to place the handcuffs on Lee. Three officers, Smith, Mallery, and Cregan, were required to pull Lee’s arms together in order to handcuff him.

Because Lee was still struggling, Cregan placed one knee between Lee’s shoulder, and his other knee to Lee’s lower back, to keep Lee on the ground. Cregan testified that he thought this was the safest technique for both Lee and the other officers.

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432 F. App'x 435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bud-lee-v-metropolitan-govt-of-nashville-ca6-2011.