City of Clinton v. Robert Dahman

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 30, 2023
DocketWD85780
StatusPublished

This text of City of Clinton v. Robert Dahman (City of Clinton v. Robert Dahman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Clinton v. Robert Dahman, (Mo. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS WESTERN DISTRICT CITY OF CLINTON, ) ) Appellant, ) ) v. ) WD85780 ) ROBERT DAHMAN, ) Filed: May 30, 2023 ) Respondent. )

Appeal from the Labor and Industrial Relations Commission

Before Division Two: Alok Ahuja, P.J., and Anthony Rex Gabbert and Thomas N. Chapman, JJ. Robert Dahman previously worked as a police officer for the City of

Clinton. While on duty in August 2017, Dahman responded to an active crime

scene after another officer was fatally shot. Dahman was diagnosed with post-

traumatic stress disorder following the incident, and resigned from the police

force a short time later. He filed a claim for workers’ compensation benefits. The Labor and Industrial Relations Commission awarded him benefits for his post-

traumatic stress disorder. It found that Dahman had suffered a permanent

partial disability of 10% of the body as a whole. The City appeals. It contends that Dahman failed to show that the work-related stress causing his post-

traumatic stress disorder was “extraordinary and unusual,” as required by § 287.120.8.1 We affirm the Commission’s award of workers’ compensation benefits.

Factual Background Robert Dahman began working for the City of Clinton’s Police Department in January 2011. The evidence indicated that Clinton’s police force was small,

and close-knit. Dahman underwent and passed psychological evaluations before

being hired.

Dahman worked as a patrol officer, and frequently made traffic stops and

issued traffic citations. Dahman testified that during his time on the force, he

responded to hundreds of domestic violence calls, and secured hundreds of crime scenes. Dahman testified that he never discharged his firearm while on duty.

On the night of August 6, 2017, Dahman was working an overnight shift

from 9:00 p.m. until 7:00 a.m. Officer Gary Michael was also on patrol that

night. Officer Michael was a good friend of Dahman’s, and they spent time

together outside of work. At approximately 10:30 p.m., Dahman heard Officer

Michael report over the radio that he had made a traffic stop; shortly thereafter,

Officer Michael reported, “Shots fired. Officer hit.” Dahman responded to the

scene. On his way, he heard over his radio that the suspect vehicle had fled.

When he arrived at the scene of the shooting, Dahman found Officer Michael unconscious on the ground. Officer Patrick Meeks was also on the scene,

attempting to administer first aid to Officer Michael. At the time, the officers did

not know how many suspects were involved. Dahman testified that he was in shock after learning that Officer Michael had been shot.

1 Unless otherwise indicated, statutory citations refer to the 2016 edition of the

Revised Statutes of Missouri, updated by the 2022 Cumulative Supplement.

2 Dahman was told by a 9-1-1 dispatcher that the suspect’s vehicle had crashed after fleeing the shooting scene. Dahman responded to the crash site.

The area was dark, with very little lighting from nearby homes or streetlights.

Dahman found no sign of the suspect, or of a weapon, in or near the vehicle. Shortly after arriving at the crash site, Dahman learned that the suspect had used

a high-powered rifle to shoot Officer Michael. Dahman feared for his safety

because he was wearing similar protective gear to Officer Michael, and he knew

that his bulletproof vest would not stop rounds from a high-powered rifle.

Dahman was also concerned that, having already shot one police officer, the

suspect might have little hesitation in shooting another, thinking “he has nothing to lose at this point.” Dahman was alone at the crash site for approximately thirty

minutes, and was there most of the night and into the morning of August 7. In

the dark at the crash scene, with a potentially armed suspect still at large,

Dahman testified that he felt “very vulnerable.” Dahman knew that he “was

clearly out gunned with just a pistol,” that he “was well within [the suspect’s] rifle

range,” and that the suspect “had the darkness that he could hide in.” During the

time he was alone at the scene, Dahman was “[h]iding behind [his] patrol car,” to

take cover from possible gunfire.

While at the site of the suspect’s vehicle, Dahman learned that Officer Michael had died from his injuries. Dahman was upset and emotional upon

hearing this news.

Before he finished work in the morning, Dahman watched security-camera video footage from a gas station, which showed Officer Michael conducting the

traffic stop of the suspect’s vehicle.

3 Officer Michael’s funeral was attended by police officers from all over the United States, and included a funeral procession through Clinton. Dahman was

one of Officer Michael’s pallbearers.

The manhunt for the suspect took several days. News media came to the City to cover the event. After the suspect was apprehended, Dahman was

scheduled to be a witness at his trial.

Starting immediately after the August 2017 incident, Dahman began to

experience adverse symptoms including fatigue, anxiety, tightness in the chest,

insomnia, lack of motivation, and a sense of helplessness. He was easily startled,

experienced crying spells and nightmares, and would avoid conversations about the incident. He also substantially increased his consumption of alcohol. Before

the August 2017 incident, Dahman had experienced other traumatic events such

as responding to the death of an infant in the line of duty. Dahman testified,

however, that he had not experienced mental-health issues prior to Officer

Michael’s shooting.

Dahman resigned from the Police Department in October 2017. He

testified that the events surrounding Officer Michael’s shooting were the primary

factor causing him to leave the police force and to seek other, non-law-

enforcement-related employment, since Dahman felt that he could not do his job due to his fear of being shot. Dahman also testified that he believed his

subsequent divorce was attributable at least in part to his mental-health issues

and increased alcohol consumption arising from the August 2017 events. Clinton’s Chief of Police at the time was Kevin Miller. Chief Miller had

served in that capacity for thirteen years at the time of his deposition in 2018.

4 Chief Miller testified that Officer Michael’s shooting was the first officer shooting during his time with the Department; this was the first line-of-duty fatality in

Clinton that either Chief Miller or Dahman could recall. Chief Miller testified

that Officer Michael’s shooting was “an unusual . . . [and] extraordinary event for the City of Clinton Police Department.” Indeed, in his deposition, Chief Miller

agreed with the City’s counsel that it was “[e]xtraordinarily unusual for a police

officer to be shot” anywhere in the United States – not just in Clinton.

Chief Miller testified that he spoke with Dahman about the shooting. He

testified that both he and Dahman were “struggling,” and provided “support for

each other and what we were going through.” Dahman reported to Chief Miller that he was experiencing “a lot of anxiety,” “was having nightmares” and “trouble

sleeping,” and “was using alcohol a great deal more than what he normally did.”

Chief Miller testified that other officers in the Department were experiencing

similar issues. During Chief Miller’s deposition, he had to take a break because

he was overcome by emotion while recounting the events surrounding Officer

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Bluebook (online)
City of Clinton v. Robert Dahman, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-clinton-v-robert-dahman-moctapp-2023.