Coley v. Boyett

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedOctober 22, 2019
Docket5:17-cv-01553
StatusUnknown

This text of Coley v. Boyett (Coley v. Boyett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coley v. Boyett, (W.D. La. 2019).

Opinion

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1B ecatuhsceeh iladrrmeei nn otrhsCe,o uwirltrl e fteotr h eomn layJs C a nAdC S.e e WestDeirsnt rLiocuti sLoiofac Rnauall 5 e. 7.12(6). and as to Plaintiffs’ negligence claims against Boyett and Faulkner. Because the parties do not directly address the claim, the Court makes no ruling as to Hall and Coley’s claims for “loss of consortium, love, service and society due to injuries to their children.” [Record Document 19 at 8]. BACKGROUND On the night of April 1, 2017, Coley and his daughters, JC and AC, were at the Stone Vista Apartments in Shreveport, Louisiana where they were visiting with a friend. [Record Document 41-10 at 49]. When it was dark outside, JC, AC, and Coley intended to walk a few blocks to a house where the girls lived with their mother, Hall. [Record Document 41-10 at 49-50] As they were preparing to leave the apartment building, Coley halted the girls because he heatd police sirens and observed a white Honda and police cars driving past. [Record Document 41-10 at 50]. Coley then observed the line of vehicles continue until they passed the Stone Vista complex. [Record Document 41-10 at 50-51]. What Coley witnessed was a police chase that began earlier that night in Bossier City, Louisiana. [Record Document 41-9 at 10-11]. Bossier City police officers pursued the vehicle in a chase that crossed the Texas Street Bridge from Bossier City to Shreveport, Louisiana. [Record Document 41-9 at 12]. As the chase proceeded onto Interstate 49, Officer Chad Boyett of the Bossier City Police Department led the chase because, per the Bossier City “General Orders,” the officer with a canine takes the lead in a pursuit when possible, and Officer Boyett had canine Torres (“Tortes’’) in his vehicle that night. [Record Documents 41- 5 at 21:25, 41-9 at 12-14, and 41-11 at 6, 53].

The car chase continued through Shreveport, eventually passing the Stone Vista Apartments complex, where Coley had first noticed the procession. [Record Documents 1 at 3, 41-5 at 21:35-21:36]. The white Honda then continued driving past the apartments before circling back to the Stone Vista Apartments where it entered one of the complex parking lots, slowed to a roll, and two men fled from the vehicle. [Record Documents 41-6 at 21:37-21:38 and 41-11 at 19]. At this point, Boyett also exited his vehicle and let Torres out of the back seat. [Record Document 41-5 at 21:38]. Torres was not on a leash. [Record Documents 41-5 at 21:38 and 41-11 at 69]. One officer pursued the man who exited from the passenger side of the white Honda while Boyett and Torres pursued the suspect who exited from the driver’s seat, Trevier Williams (“Williams”). [Record Documents 41-2 at 1, 41-5 at 21:38, 41-6 at 21:38, and 41-13 at 18]. Almost immediately after the pursuit began, Boyett gave Torres the command to apprehend Williams (“bite command”). [Record Document 41-11 at 82]. He did not give a vetbal warning. [Record Document 41-11 at 85]. According to Boyett, he did not observe anybody outside except other police officers and the suspects. [Record Document 41-11 at 86-87]. When Boyett gave the bite command, Williams was still fully visible to Boyett. [Record Document 41-11 at 83]. Torres began running after Williams, eventually following him out of the complex and across a street where Torres “hit Williams and knocked] him to the ground in the gtass.”2 [Record Document 41-11 at 83-84]. As Boyett observed Torres knocking Williams to the ground, he “was preparing to jump down from [a] retaining wall” located at

2 Plaintiffs dispute the fact that Torres made contact with Williams. [Record Document 41-10 at 52]. Coley states that Williams fell because he hit a fence. [Record Document 41-10 at 79]. In any event, this fact is not material to any legal issue in this case.

the edge of the apartment complex but “lost [his] footing and fell face first basically in the concrete” and lost sight of Torres and Williams. [Record Document 41-11 at 84, 168]. While Boyett was standing up from the fall, a parked car blocked his view of Torres, Williams, JC, AC, and Coley, but he heard someone inside one of the Stone Vista apartments calling out that “the dog has the baby.” [Record Document 41-11 at 84-85]. When he cleared the car blocking his view of the incident, Boyett observed Torres biting JC. [Record Document 41-11 at 98]. Coley alleges that before the bite, he observed Williams running towards him and his daughters with Torres trailing about fifteen or twenty feet behind. [Record Document 41-10 at 51-52]. Williams passed the group, but when Torres reached the trio, instead of continuing the pursuit of Williams, he “latches onto [JC].” [Record Document 41-10 at 52]. Coley, assuming that the police dog was trained to start “shaking” after latching onto someone, gtabbed Tortes and “put [him] in a headlock” and “held the dog still so it couldn’t move his head nor body until [Coley] looked and [he] saw an officer come running out of the gate” in

an effort to protect JC from further injury. [Record Documents 41-7 at 21:38 and 41-10 at 86- 87]. There is dispute as to how long it took Boyett to get Torres to release his bite on JC. According to Boyett, he ran across the street, “grabbed his collar, called his name and gave him an out command, and he let go.” [Record Document 41-11 at 98]. According to Coley, the officer approached them while the attack was still ongoing and was “tugging on the collar and saying something. The dog is not responding. . .. Whatever he was saying, he said it more than four times... . [Torres] didn’t release within ten seconds.” [Record Document 41-10 at

87-88]. Witness to the attack Keyaira Kimble estimated it took officers approximately five seconds to get Torres to release JC. [Record Document 45-14 at 6]. Another witness, Erica Proby, saw Boyett give Torres a command to release three times before making physical contact with Torres to make him release. [Record Document 45-10 at 10]. After Boyett got Torres to release JC, an ambulance arrived at the scene and JC was taken to the University Health emergency room where doctors examined her. [Record Documents 41-10 at 96-97 and 41-14 at 6]. Her exam revealed a puncture wound in her right upper abdomen and “multiple superficial linear abrasions” on the right side of her back. [Recotd Document 41-14 at 19]. She remained hospitalized overnight where doctors treated her with intravenous antibiotics. [Record Document 41-14 at 27-28]. The next morning, she

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Bluebook (online)
Coley v. Boyett, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coley-v-boyett-lawd-2019.