David Stewart v. City of Bessemer

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedMarch 11, 2026
Docket2:24-cv-00122
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
David Stewart v. City of Bessemer, (N.D. Ala. 2026).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ALABAMA SOUTHERN DIVISION

DAVID STEWART, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) Case No.: 2:24-cv-122-AMM ) CITY OF BESSEMER, ) ) Defendant. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This case comes before the court on a motion for summary judgment filed by defendant City of Bessemer. Docs. 26–27. The motion is fully briefed. Docs. 32–33. For the reasons explained below, the motion is GRANTED. I. BACKGROUND This case involves an employment dispute. These are the material facts construed in the light most favorable to plaintiff David Stewart: While employed as a police officer for the City of Bessemer, Mr. Stewart worked a “rivalry” football game between McAdory and City of Bessemer High School. Doc. 25-9 at 24; see Doc. 25-1 at 4. “During [the] fourth quarter, the game was playing, a large fight broke out between kids.” Doc. 25-9 at 24. “So the other officers run over . . . to diffuse . . . that fight.” Id. Before Mr. Stewart made it to the fight, “they put out that shots [were] fired at the game,” so “[e]verybody started running, fleeing.” Id. at 25. The officers began evacuating the stands, and Mr. Stewart “observed some fighting going on when [he] got people moving out of the

stadium.” Id. As Mr. Stewart was “walking towards the exit to get ready to clear the parking lot,” an “older female” ran toward Mr. Stewart calling on him to intervene in the

fight. Id. When he went around the corner, “[a group was] in each other’s face and fixing to start fighting.” Id. So Mr. Stewart “started yelling, giving commands” to the individuals to get in their cars and leave the stadium. Id. A large group of girls “complied” and “started walking off to get in their car.” Id. at 25–26. One girl passed

Mr. Stewart, heading toward the commotion and saying, “Fuck this shit. I’m fixing to whoop their ass. I’m fixing to whoop this bitch’s ass.” Id. at 26; Doc. 25-1 at 4. Mr. Stewart grabbed the girl’s arm and repeated his instruction to leave the area.

Doc. 25-9 at 26. Mr. Stewart believed that “she kept trying [to] get towards these individual girls who [were] leaving,” using expletives, expressing a desire to fight with the other girls, and “jerking away from [him],” so he “did a straight arm bar takedown,

which is what they taught [him] in the academy . . . to cause the least damage to [the officer] and the individual.” Id. at 26, 35. Mr. Stewart “did an arm bar takedown, put her in handcuffs for disorderly conduct and making threats, for harassment, and

transported her to the jail.” Id. at 26. Throughout the incident, Mr. Stewart did not have his body camera turned on, nor did the other officers in the area. Id. at 35, 42. Mr. Stewart later learned that the girl was thirteen at the time of the incident. Id. at

27. The girl’s mother picked the girl up from the police station later that night. Id. at 29; Doc. 25-2 at 2–3. The girl’s mother then filed a complaint with the Bessemer

Police Department. Doc. 25-2; Doc. 25-9 at 30. She alleged that her daughter “experienced police brutality and mishandling of a minor.” Doc. 25-2 at 2. She claimed that her daughter had been bruised, had been in pain since the incident, and had “been to the hospital in regards to this situation.” Id. at 3–4. “Pursuant to the

ordinary procedures of the Bessemer Police Department, Internal Affairs will perform an investigation any time a citizen submits a written complaint about a police officer.” Doc. 25-12 at 2.

Mr. Stewart alleges that Lieutenant Kenneth Reese conducted an initial investigation and “he didn’t see anything wrong” with Mr. Stewart’s actions. Doc. 25-9 at 30. Mr. Stewart contends that “[s]omebody didn’t like that idea that [Lieutenant Reese] was in alliance with it” so “they moved it from Lieutenant Reese,

who was the lieutenant in Internal Affairs, and gave it to another guy who they put in Internal Affairs to do [the investigation].” Id. When asked during his deposition to identify the “they” that made the decision, Mr. Stewart testified, “It’s only

hearsay. They said it come from Woods, because Woods was the interim chief, and he was the overseer of the whole thing . . . .” Id. Chief Mike Wood explained that he “had literally been made acting Chief at 6:00 o’clock the night before [the later

personnel hearing].” Doc. 25-11 at 3. But Mr. Stewart believes that Chief Wood had been interim chief “before [the incident] took place.” Doc. 25-9 at 38. Roy A. Harris, the individual who conducted the subsequent investigation,

explains that he was directed by “Chief of Police Michael Roper . . . to initiate an investigation” into Mr. Stewart’s alleged noncompliance with the Bessemer Police Department’s rules and/or regulations. Doc. 25-12 at 2. After the investigation, Mr. Harris “determined that there was enough evidence to support a finding that Officer

Stewart had violated the Police Department’s [Procedural General Orders] regarding conduct unbecoming an officer and the use of force.” Id. at 2–3.1 On September 29, 2022, the police department conducted a personnel hearing.

Doc. 25-9 at 36; Doc. 25-5. Following the hearing, Chief Wood “recommend[ed to Mayor Gulley] that Officer David Stewart receive a thirty (30) day suspension . . . and also be directed to seek counseling with EAP concerning this event.” Doc. 25-5 at 1. When Chief Wood made the recommendation, he had seen the video depicting

Mr. Stewart’s conduct, and at the time of his recommendation, he “had not really

1 Mr. Stewart disputes the City’s description of Mr. Harris’s conclusion and “asserts that there was not ‘enough evidence’ to support a conclusion that [he] violated the Police Department’s rules and/or regulations regarding the use of force and officer conduct.” Doc. 32 at 1. Regardless whether there was enough evidence, the fact remains that Mr. Harris concluded that there was enough. Doc. 25-12 at 2–3. seen [any] other officer [in the video].” Doc. 25-11 at 3. But after Mr. Stewart brought to Chief Wood’s attention at the hearing that there is another officer in the

background of the video who performs a takedown of a girl, Chief Wood reviewed the video again. Id. at 3, 5. He concluded that the background officer’s conduct was “not similar” to Mr. Stewart’s. Id. After reviewing the video and attending the

hearing, Chief Wood concluded that Mr. Stewart “was a bit excessive on a 13-year- old girl.” Id. at 5. Chief Wood “went through old files of disciplinary action to find something similar to it and what was prescribed at that time, and that’s how [he] came to 30 days.” Id.

“[A]bout a week or so after the internal police department hearing,” Mr. Stewart received a “termination letter.” Doc. 25-9 at 37. Mayor Gulley decided against Chief Wood’s recommendation because he “felt that because of the

aggression that was displayed[,] [a thirty-day suspension] was not harsh enough and it warranted termination.” Doc. 25-10 at 4–5. Based on Mayor Gulley’s review of the video, he deemed Mr. Stewart’s actions to be “excessive force for a 13-year-old child.” Id. at 4. Mayor Gulley stated that upon his review of the video, he “did not

see anyone else display the kind of aggression that [he] saw Officer Stewart display.” Id. Mayor Gulley denied that anyone brought to his attention that the background officer had also taken a suspect to the ground “in a similar manner.” Id. at 3. But he

did admit that “a video was presented . . . to [him] of the incident.” Id. at 2. And Chief Wood explained that “Mayor [Gulley] was aware of [the other officer] after the fact.” Doc. 25-11 at 5.

Mr. Stewart appealed his termination. Doc. 25-7 at 2. An official from the Personnel Board of Jefferson County conducted an evidentiary hearing, id. at 1, and “recommend[ed] that Stewart’s Termination be reversed to a non-compensated 14-

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