Carlos Chacon v. City of Austin, Texas

577 F. App'x 355
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 11, 2014
Docket13-50521
StatusUnpublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 577 F. App'x 355 (Carlos Chacon v. City of Austin, Texas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carlos Chacon v. City of Austin, Texas, 577 F. App'x 355 (5th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

PER CURIAM: *

Officers Eric Copeland and Russell Rose sought summary judgment on the basis of *356 qualified immunity in an action brought by Carlos Chacon under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Chacon’s suit alleges that Officers Copeland and Rose used excessive force in arresting him. The district court denied the officers’ motion for summary judgment. Officers Copeland and Rose filed an interlocutory appeal. We AFFIRM.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Carlos Chacon, the plaintiff, testified in a deposition as to the following events on April 29, 2011. After working out late at a gym in Austin, Texas, then cleaning up and having supper, Carlos Chacon searched for a massage service on the internet. Finding one, he called the telephone number and scheduled an appointment for that night. The woman who answered the call told him she was a masseuse, that a massage would cost $75, and asked Chacon to go to her location behind a restaurant. He said he thought it would be a business location. Once driving to where he had been directed, he saw a motel but no sign of any other business. Chacon called again and was told to go to a specific room at the motel. Though suspicious, Chacon said he was willing to give the ostensible masseuse the benefit of the doubt. He arrived at the motel room, paid the woman $75, but she made it clear that sexual services were what she planned on providing. He told the woman that her behavior was wrong and illegal. Chacon said he would call the police to report her. During this discussion, a man began kicking the motel room door and yelling at him that the police were there and going to tow his car unless he moved it.

Chacon left the room and found the motel manager and on-site security guard in order to tell them about the problem. When they were reluctant to help him, Chacon told the two that he was going to call 911 himself and made his first of two such calls. Chacon testified that as he called, the man who had been kicking the door reappeared and threatened to kill him, reaching into his shorts as if to grab a gun. Chacon then ran to his car, got inside, and began driving for his own safety. From his car, Chacon initiated a second 911 call to report the incident.

Recordings of the calls to police show that the first call was about five minutes long and ended abruptly. The second call began with Chacon’s telling the operator that his first call had been disconnected. The next call also lasted about five minutes. In both calls, Chacon identified himself as Carlos Chavez and provided the operator with his location at the motel. 1 He explained to the operator that he tried to get a massage but encountered difficulties with the masseuse, another man, and the motel security officer. Chacon also reported a man was walking around the motel with a gun, that he had waved the gun at Chacon, and that he had tried to shoot him as Chacon drove his car in the motel parking lot.

During the call, Chacon described the man with the gun as an African American male wearing a white shirt, black hat, and black shorts. He described other persons he believed were involved with the man including a Hispanic male in an orange shirt and a woman wearing what appeared to be a blue security uniform, which Cha-con believed to be fake. Chacon indicated he was driving a silver BMW around the motel parking lot.

*357 As a result of the calls, two Austin Police Department officers, Officers Copeland and Rose, were dispatched. Because a gun had been reported, Chacon’s call was categorized as a “hot shot” call. Both officers drove to the scene with their lights and sirens running, which activated their dashboard cameras and microphones. The district court found that the sound on the videos from each patrol car confirmed the radio dispatcher at least twice stated that the report was of an African American male in a white shirt and black shorts carrying a gun and the complainant was driving a silver BMW.

Officer Rose arrived on the scene first and encountered a group of four people near the motel manager’s office: a woman in a security uniform, a Hispanic male in an orange shirt, a Caucasian woman, and an African American male in black shorts and a white shirt, later identified as John Green. Notwithstanding the reports he just received, Officer Rose, when flagged down by the African American male and the woman in the security guard uniform, asked if either had called about a gun. The African American male, Green, responded that no one had called about a gun and explained that a drunk man came to his room, refused to leave, and was now circling the parking lot in a BMW. One of the women present added that she saw the driver on his phone and she suggested that he was the one who called about the gun. She then claimed that Green called 911 as well. Green then agreed that he had called the police. The district court noted that the record contains no evidence of calls other than the two made by Chacon.

In the midst of Officer Rose’s conversation with the group, Chacon’s BMW came into view. Green pointed it out as containing the drunk man. The district court found that as “Chacon slowly approached in his vehicle, Officer Rose immediately drew his gun and pointed it at Chacon.” The district court noted that Officer Rose “never identified himself as an Austin Police Department officer or any other law enforcement official, and laced nearly every statement with profanity.” While pointing a flashlight as well as his patrol car’s headlights at Chacon, Officer Rose told Chacon to stop the car and show his hands. The district court found that Cha-con “immediately responded, ‘I don’t have a gun, he’s the one,’ presumably referencing Green.” Officer Copeland, having just arrived at the scene, drew his gun and joined Officer Rose as they approached Chacon’s car. Officer Rose instructed Chacon to put his hands out the window. Chacon initially reached his hands out the window as instructed, but then withdrew them. The district court found that Cha-con put his hands back in the car “allegedly to put the car in park.”

Officers Copeland and Rose grabbed Chacon as he opened his car door and ordered him to get out. As the district court characterized the incident, “Chacon calmly explained, yet again, he did not have a gun, while Officer Rose continued to yell at him to get on the ground.” Officer Rose “followed immediately, before Chacon could possibly have complied, [with] a new order to ‘not move.’ Chacon replied calmly, ‘I’m not moving.’ ” Officer Rose looked into Chacon’s car and did not see a gun. When Chacon then asked Officer Rose if he was a police officer, Officer Rose replied, “you’re damn right I am.”

Officer Rose tried to handcuff Chacon. The district court determined that Chacon tried to pull away from Rose, and “a scuffle broke out between the three men, with both officers (who are much smaller than Chacon) struggling to take Chacon to the ground.” The district court noted that Chacon “never appeared to swing at either officer, nor did he appear to be interested *358 in fleeing,” but described the interaction as “a true struggle” where “Chacon spins around and shoves one of the officers off of him.”

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Bluebook (online)
577 F. App'x 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carlos-chacon-v-city-of-austin-texas-ca5-2014.