Catherine Wilkerson v. Kevin Warner

545 F. App'x 413
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 31, 2013
Docket12-1510
StatusUnpublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 545 F. App'x 413 (Catherine Wilkerson v. Kevin Warner) 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
Catherine Wilkerson v. Kevin Warner, 545 F. App'x 413 (6th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

THOMAS A. VARLAN, Chief District Judge.

This case arises out of an incident involving the protest of a political speaker at the University of Michigan on November 30, 2006. Catherine Wilkerson (“Wilkerson”), a medical doctor, attended the speech to protest with others. When she witnessed what she thought was an unconscious protestor being handled by police officers, Wilkerson involved herself in the situation by taking the protestor’s vital signs before paramedics from a private emergency services corporation arrived to treat him. When the paramedics arrived, Wilkerson disapproved of their treatment of the protestor, and she loudly voiced her opinions. Eventually, one of the paramedics requested that the police remove Wilkerson from the area, and an officer put Wilkerson’s hands behind her back and moved her to the hallway outside of the room where the speech was given. Wilkerson was subsequently charged with attempting to resist and obstruct the paramedics at the scene. She proceeded to trial and was acquitted. Wilkerson filed suit against several law enforcement officers from the scene, including the one who detained her, as well as the detective who investigated the case and sought charges against her, a paramedic, and the responding emergency services corporation. All defendants moved for summary judgment, and the district court granted summary judgment as to each. For the reasons explained herein, we REVERSE the grant of summary judgment to Officer Kevin Warner on Wilkerson’s Fourth Amendment excessive force claim and state-law assault and battery claims, and remand this case for further proceedings with respect to those claims. We AFFIRM the grant of summary judgment to defendants on all other claims.

I. BACKGROUND

Dr. Raymond Tanter, a professor at Georgetown University, was a sponsored speaker at the Michigan League on the University of Michigan campus on November 30, 2006. Wilkerson, along with various other individuals, attended the lecture to protest Dr. Tanter’s speech (the “Tan-ter Speech”). After several individuals started heckling the speaker, University of Michigan Department of Public Safety (“UMDPS”) officers removed some of the protestors from the audience. Because of his interference with the removal of another protestor, defendants UMDPS Officers Mark West (“Officer West”) and Janet Conners (“Officer Conners”) subdued Blaine Coleman (“Coleman”) to the ground in the hallway outside of the room where the Tanter Speech was taking place. Coleman was handcuffed with his hands behind his back.

Wilkerson, who is a medical doctor, left the Tanter Speech and went to the hallway, where she saw Coleman with Officer West, Officer Conners, and other UMDPS officers. Coleman appeared to Wilkerson to be unconscious and, believing that he was hurt, Wilkerson informed Officer West and Officer Conners that she was a doctor. The officers allowed Wilkerson to take *417 Coleman’s vital signs. Wilkerson requested that the officers remove Coleman’s handcuffs, but they refused to do so. Wilkerson maintains that she continued to attempt to give medical advice and to ask that the handcuffs be removed.

As individuals from the Tanter Speech gathered in the area around Coleman, defendant Officer Kevin Warner (“Officer Warner”) of the Ann Arbor Police Department (“AAPD”) arrived. Several police officers and others established a line to keep the crowd back from Coleman. Prior to Wilkerson’s arrival in the hallway, UMDPS officers had requested dispatch to send for an emergency medical unit from defendant Huron Valley Ambulance, Inc. (“HVA”), and a unit arrived minutes after Wilkerson first observed Coleman. Officer West removed Coleman’s handcuffs, and the HVA paramedics began working on Coleman. Defendant Dean Lloyd (“Lloyd”) was an HVA supervisor at the scene, and when HVA paramedic Anthony Jacobs arrived, he became the attending paramedic. Throughout the paramedics’ treatment of Coleman, Wilkerson continued to communicate her unsolicited opinions about Coleman’s medical treatment and HVA’s actions.

The HVA paramedics believed that Coleman was feigning unconsciousness, and Lloyd broke ammonia capsules under Coleman’s nose. Wilkerson testified at her deposition that Lloyd cupped his hands over Coleman’s nose and mouth and said, “You don’t like that, do you?” (R. 44-10). Wilkerson demanded that Lloyd stop using the ammonia capsules, telling him that what he was doing was “punitive” and “not efficacious.” (R. 44-10). At some point during the treatment of Coleman, Lloyd yelled, “Get her out of here,” and Officer Warner forcibly removed Wilkerson from the hallway and into a nearby stairwell. (Id.; R. 17). Wilkerson testified at her deposition that she was leaving the scene at that point, but that Officer Warner grabbed her wrists from behind, yanked them up toward her shoulder blades, twisted her arm, and pushed her against a wall. She further testified that his actions caused her agonizing pain and she begged him to let go of her arm. While Warner detained Wilkerson in the stairwell, HVA transported Coleman to the hospital.

AAPD officers detained Wilkerson in the stairwell for approximately twenty to thirty minutes until Officer Conners approached Officer Warner and Wilkerson and asked Wilkerson if she would like to make a statement. Wilkerson indicated that she did not, and Officer Conners gave Wilkerson her business card and told her to call if she wished to make a statement. Officer Conners informed Wilkerson that she could leave. Wilkerson was never handcuffed or formally placed under arrest while at the Michigan League. Coleman, as well as other protestors, were arrested on November 30, 2006, and they were subsequently charged with attempting to assault, resist, or obstruct a police officer.

On the evening of November 30, 2006, UMDPS Officers West and Conners each prepared and filed reports on the events at the Michigan League. Officer Conners filed additional reports on December 1, 2006, and December 18, 2006, respectively, to clarify the events. AAPD Officer Warner also wrote a detailed report on the night of November 30, 2006.

Beginning on the night of November 30, 2006, and continuing into January 2007, Wilkerson publicly criticized the University of Michigan, the UMDPS and AAPD officers, and the HVA personnel, based upon their actions and treatment of her and others on the night of the Tanter Speech. On or about January 16, 2007, *418 Wilkerson filed a citizen’s complaint against Officer Warner.

Defendant UMDPS Detective Michael Mathews (“Detective Mathews”) was assigned to investigate the events of November BO, 2006, and his investigation included compiling and reviewing the reports filed by Officers West, Conners, and Warner, as well as those of other officers. On January 2, 2007, Detective Mathews filed a request for a warrant with the Washtenaw County Prosecutor’s Office, seeking charges against Wilkerson, specifically for resisting or obstruction of Officer Warner and the HVA personnel. Detective Mathews submitted the reports and other relevant documents to the Washtenaw County prosecutor, and on January 23, 2007, the prosecutor issued a misdemeanor complaint against Wilkerson, charging her with one misdemeanor count of attempting to assault, resist, or obstruct Officer Warner, and one misdemeanor count of attempting to assault, resist, or obstruct the HVA personnel assisting Coleman.

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Bluebook (online)
545 F. App'x 413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/catherine-wilkerson-v-kevin-warner-ca6-2013.