Cody Boone v. Ottawa County Central Dispatch Authority

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 21, 2026
Docket25-1305
StatusUnpublished

This text of Cody Boone v. Ottawa County Central Dispatch Authority (Cody Boone v. Ottawa County Central Dispatch Authority) 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
Cody Boone v. Ottawa County Central Dispatch Authority, (6th Cir. 2026).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 26a0038n.06

Case No. 25-1305

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

CODY BOONE, Personal Representative of the Estate ) ) of James Kenneth Boone, ) FILED Plaintiff-Appellant, ) Jan 21, 2026 ) KELLY L. STEPHENS, Clerk v. ) ) OTTAWA COUNTY CENTRAL DISPATCH ) ON APPEAL FROM THE AUTHORITY, a Michigan governmental agency; ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT NICOLE JEAN WENTWORTH, KATHERINE LEE ) COURT FOR THE WESTERN COENEN, RYAN A. CULVER, and MEAGAN ANN ) DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN ROSS, individually and in official capacities, ) Defendants-Appellees, ) OPINION ) TRACY JO OOMEN; PAULA SUE HOOKER; ) MARY C. ALLMAN, ) ) Defendants. )

Before: GIBBONS, LARSEN, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.

JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge. On December 1, 2019, Kenneth Boone called

911 and reported that he had beaten his father James to death with a hammer. Kenneth had initially

called 911 one hour before, at which time James took the phone and told Ottawa County Central

Dispatch Authority (“OCCDA”) telecommunicators that Kenneth had stopped taking his

schizophrenia medicine and had threatened him. James also explained that Kenneth wanted to be

arrested because Kenneth knew that he might “do something bad” to his father. Despite this

warning, OCCDA telecommunicators assigned the call a code that did not make it a top priority.

Because all officers were busy at the time, the call sat pending without a response, and no OCCDA No. 25-1305, Boone v. Ottawa County Central Dispatch Authority et al.

employee radioed police to alert them to the incident. Kenneth killed James before emergency

services were dispatched.

James’s estate sued the OCCDA and seven of its employees in Michigan state court

asserting a substantive due process claim based on an alleged state-created danger, a Monell

liability claim, and several state tort claims. Defendants removed the case to federal court and,

after completing discovery, moved for summary judgment. The district court granted summary

judgment on the federal claims and declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the

remaining state claims. While this case involves undeniably tragic circumstances, we find that the

defendants did not violate James’s constitutional rights and therefore affirm the district court’s

grant of summary judgment to the defendants.

I.

A.

The OCCDA provides 24-hour emergency communications support to Ottawa County’s

police, fire, and emergency medical services agencies. When someone in Ottawa County calls

911, they are connected to the OCCDA, which is operated at any given time by four

telecommunicators1 and a supervisor.

OCCDA telecommunicators serve two primary roles. They first work as “call takers.” DE

112-5, Wentworth Dep., Page ID 1870; DE 112-5, Ross Dep., Page ID 2086. A telecommunicator

is a call taker when answering an incoming emergency call, which any telecommunicator may take

depending on availability. In real time, a call taker gathers information from the caller and enters

that information into the Computer Aided Dispatch (“CAD”) system. A call taker then gives the

1 The OCCDA refers to its employees as “telecommunicators” and “dispatchers” interchangeably. DE 112-5, Culver Dep., Page ID 1984. To avoid confusion with the OCCDA employees’ dispatching responsibilities, we refer to them as telecommunicators in this opinion. -2- No. 25-1305, Boone v. Ottawa County Central Dispatch Authority et al.

incident a call type code. Based on the code used, the CAD system automatically assigns the

incident a priority between one and five, which indicates the urgency with which emergency

services should respond.2

Second, telecommunicators act as “dispatchers.” DE 112-5, Coenen Dep., Page ID 1922;

DE 112-5, Wentworth Dep., Page ID 1870. Each telecommunicator is assigned to dispatch for a

different emergency agency during a shift. The OCCDA coordinates with four agencies: City

Police, County Police, Fire, and Tactical. Once a call taker enters the CAD notes and assigns the

incident a code, the code taker marks the call as “ready for dispatch,” which transfers the matter

to the dispatcher who is assigned to the relevant agency. DE 112-5, Wentworth Dep., Page ID

1879. At this point, it is that dispatcher’s responsibility to coordinate within the dispatch authority

to send emergency services.

Dispatchers work with emergency services to prioritize higher priority calls before lower

priority ones. When a priority one call is pending, dispatchers are instructed to pre-broadcast (i.e.,

alert by radio) the incident to on-duty officers. Additionally, when a call involves a life-threatening

emergency, dispatchers may engage a deputy from a nearby village for help. But even when a

dispatcher thinks a call is an emergency that warrants engaging that deputy, the dispatcher must

still get permission from a police supervisor before doing so.

2 Priority one calls are defined as “[i]n progress calls involving imminent threat to life or the possibility of injury.” DE 106-9, OCCDA Telephone Complaint/Report Processing Procedures Call Guides, Page ID 1321. These include “in progress assaults . . ., robberies, injuries, medical emergencies, all fires, [and] crimes involving weapons.” Id. Priority 2 calls, by contrast, involve “[i]n progress calls involving criminal activities where the threat involves property only, [and] crimes against persons[] not in progress.” Id. The OCCDA directs telecommunicators to dispatch first “[a]ny call involving immediate threat to . . . or the possibility of an immediate threat [to a citizen’s] well-being.” Id. -3- No. 25-1305, Boone v. Ottawa County Central Dispatch Authority et al.

B.

On December 1, 2019, at 6:16 AM, Kenneth Boone called 911 and spoke with Nicole

Wentworth, an OCCDA telecommunicator working as the City Police dispatcher. Kenneth told

Wentworth that he was “not feeling safe with [his] dad,” and requested that police “[c]ome arrest

me.” DE 112-2, 911 Call Transcript, Page ID 1709. Kenneth continued that his father, James,

was “not acting like himself” and that James was “threatening” and “scaring” him. Id. James then

took the phone and stated that, in fact, Kenneth was threatening him. James explained that Kenneth

was not taking his Depakote medication, which he took for “[m]ental illness.” Id. at 1710–11.

When questioned, James said that there were no weapons or children at the home, and that

no one had been drinking or doing drugs. And when Wentworth asked whether “anybody [had]

been physically assaulted,” James responded, “[n]ot yet, no.” Id. at 1711. James explained,

however, that Kenneth had requested that police arrest him because Kenneth knew “he could do

something bad to” James. Id. at 1712. Although James said Kenneth was not actively making any

threats, he noted that Kenneth had woken him up in the middle of the night and was “starting to

get in [his] face and double fist his fists.” Id. Wentworth told James that she would “get an officer

out that way for [him],” noting that she wanted James “to stay safe,” and “[i]f anything change[d]

before” police arrived, James should “call [her] back immediately.” Id. James thanked Wentworth

and ended the call.

While speaking to the Boones, Wentworth contemporaneously entered the following

information into the CAD system to summarize the conversation:

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