Conforti v. City of Franklin

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Wisconsin
DecidedSeptember 13, 2021
Docket2:20-cv-00349
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Conforti v. City of Franklin, (E.D. Wis. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF WISCONSIN

PAUL R. CONFORTI, Plaintiff,

v. Case No. 20-C-0349

CITY OF FRANKLIN, et al., Defendants. ______________________________________________________________________ DECISION AND ORDER Paul Conforti brings this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the City of Franklin, two of its police officers, and its insurer. Before me now is the defendants’ motion for partial summary judgment. I. BACKGROUND On the evening of January 7, 2019, the plaintiff and two friends, Michael Beals and Randi Slomski, were out socializing when Beals started to choke. The plaintiff and Slomski were able to remove the obstruction from Beals’ airway and called 911. An ambulance arrived, and it was decided that Beals should be brought to the hospital. The plaintiff and Slomski rode in the ambulance with Beals to the hospital. At the hospital, the plaintiff and Slomski accompanied Beals into the emergency department and to an exam room. While he was receiving treatment, Beals became unruly, and a nurse asked the plaintiff and Slomski to leave the room, which they did. While he was in the lobby of the emergency department, the plaintiff learned that medical staff planned to administer medication to Beals that might adversely interact with medication Beals was already taking. The plaintiff told a hospital employee sitting at the front desk about his concerns, but the plaintiff was unsatisfied with the response he received. At around the same time, hospital staff called the Franklin Police Department and asked for assistance with Beals. Officers Hernan and Burkee (who are not defendants)

were the first to respond to the call and went into the exam room to help control Beals. Officers Gary Wallace and Christopher Rydelski (who are defendants) were also dispatched to the hospital. When they arrived, Wallace and Rydelski could hear shouting from one of the exam rooms and proceeded to that area. Hernan and Burkee told Wallace and Rydelski that Beals was being unruly and assaulting hospital staff and the officers. Burkee and Wallace also told them that Beals had two friends with him that had already been told to leave the emergency department because they were creating a disturbance. In the exam room, Wallace and Rydelski could see Beals struggling with Hernan and Burkee and heard Beals threatening to kill officers and hospital staff. While Wallace and Rydelski were assisting Hernan and Burkee with Beals, a

woman who appeared to be a nurse or other hospital employee came into the exam room and asked the officers to come to the lobby because a person (the plaintiff) was shouting and using profanities and threatening a hospital employee. Wallace and Rydelski went to the lobby to help the employee, but by the time they arrived the disturbance had ended. Slomski apparently realized that the officers were looking for the plaintiff, and he told them that the plaintiff had already left the hospital. Wallace and Rydelski went outside. According to the plaintiff, by the time the officers were looking for him, he was standing outside, about 40 feet away from the hospital entrance. He was vaping and had just used his phone to request an Uber ride home. According to the officers, when they 2 exited the hospital, they observed the plaintiff standing near the hospital door with his back turned to them. He was the only person in the area. The officers approached the plaintiff and noticed that his hand was in his pocket. The officers claim that they announced themselves as police officers and asked the plaintiff to remove his hand from

his pocket. The plaintiff denies that the officers said they were officers and claims that the first thing he heard was a command to remove his hand from his pocket. The plaintiff says that, in response to the command to remove his hand from his pocket, he asked “why” and turned around to face the officers. The parties agree that, at this point, Officer Wallace grabbed the plaintiff’s left arm and Officer Rydelski grabbed his right arm. The plaintiff began shouting and became tense. In response, Wallace removed his TASER from its holster and told the plaintiff that he would be tased if he did not stop resisting. The parties agree that, once the plaintiff was warned about the TASER, he stopped resisting and allowed the officers to handcuff him. What happened next is disputed. The plaintiff contends that, once he was

handcuffed and under control, the officers violently forced him towards their police cruiser and slammed his face and body against its side. The plaintiff claims that he saw stars, moved in and out of consciousness, chipped his tooth, lacerated the inside of his mouth, and lost his glasses. The plaintiff says that, at this point, the officers threw him face-first onto the ground and pummeled him with as many as twenty knee strikes and punches to the head. Eventually, a “spit shield” was placed on the plaintiff’s head, and he was placed into the back of the police cruiser. Pl. Prop. Findings of Fact (“PFOF”) ¶ 61. The officers then pulled him out of the cruiser, threw him back on the ground, and continued attacking him. Eventually, they brought him to a sidewalk and waited for other officers to bring a 3 device known as “the wrap” to the scene. Id. ¶ 70. This is a device that officers use to restrain a subject’s legs if the officers think the subject will kick them. Once the wrap arrived, the officers placed the plaintiff in it, put him in a wheelchair, and brought him back into the hospital to receive treatment for his wounds.

The defendants tell a different story. They contend that, once the plaintiff was handcuffed, they escorted him towards the squad car. At the car, the plaintiff pulled away from them, turned around, and spit on Officer Wallace’s face. In response, the officers performed a “takedown maneuver” on the plaintiff to prevent him from spitting on them again. Def. PFOF ¶ 30. Once he was on the ground, the plaintiff began flailing his legs, attempted to roll over, and attempted to kick and spit on the officers. Wallace told the plaintiff to stop resisting, but the plaintiff did not relent. Wallace therefore “directed one knee-strike to [the plaintiff’s] lower quadrant to gain compliance,” but the plaintiff continued to resist. Id. ¶ 32. At the same time, Rydelski also directed “one or two” knee- strikes “to the right rib cage area” because the plaintiff continued to resist. Id. ¶ 33. While

this was occurring, Wallace radioed for backup, and this prompted Officer Burkee to come outside and assist. Burkee grabbed the plaintiff’s legs, and at that point the officers had the plaintiff under control. Burkee placed the spit shield on the plaintiff’s face, and the officers brought the plaintiff to the squad car and attempted to place him in the back seat. But once the plaintiff was on the backseat he rolled over on his side and kicked Officer Wallace in the groin or thigh area. In response, the officers removed the plaintiff from the vehicle and put him back on the ground. They called for “the wrap” and placed the plaintiff in it when it arrived to prevent the plaintiff from continuing to kick them. Once the plaintiff was in the wrap, he was brought inside the hospital for treatment. 4 In the present suit, the plaintiff alleges that the actions of Wallace and Rydelski violated the Fourth Amendment. The plaintiff initially alleged that the arrest itself was unlawful, but he has since conceded that the officers are entitled to summary judgment on any claim for wrongful arrest. Pl. Br. at 23. He further concedes that the defendants

are entitled to summary judgment on any claim involving the officers’ conduct up to the time that they placed him in handcuffs. Id.

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Conforti v. City of Franklin, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conforti-v-city-of-franklin-wied-2021.