Dawn Hughey v. Anthony Easlick

3 F.4th 283
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 28, 2021
Docket20-1804
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 3 F.4th 283 (Dawn Hughey v. Anthony Easlick) 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
Dawn Hughey v. Anthony Easlick, 3 F.4th 283 (6th Cir. 2021).

Opinion

RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b) File Name: 21a0146p.06

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

┐ DAWN HUGHEY, │ Plaintiff-Appellant, │ > No. 20-1804 │ v. │ │ ANTHONY EASLICK, │ Defendant-Appellee. │ │ ┘

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan at Ann Arbor. No. 5:19-cv-10368—Judith E. Levy, District Judge.

Argued: April 27, 2021

Decided and Filed: June 28, 2021

Before: MOORE, COLE, and GILMAN, Circuit Judges. _________________

COUNSEL

ARGUED: Gina U. Puzzuoli, ROMANO LAW PLLC, Pleasant Ridge, Michigan, for Appellant. Daniel Hude, OFFICE OF THE MICHIGAN ATTORNEY GENERAL, Lansing, Michigan, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Gina U. Puzzuoli, Daniel G. Romano, Richard A. Moore, ROMANO LAW PLLC, Pleasant Ridge, Michigan, for Appellant. Andrew J. Jurgensen, OFFICE OF THE MICHIGAN ATTORNEY GENERAL, Lansing, Michigan, for Appellee. _________________

OPINION _________________

KAREN NELSON MOORE, Circuit Judge. Dawn Hughey’s 42 U.S.C. § 1983 suit arises from a handcuffing during a traffic stop. Hughey alleges that Michigan State Trooper No. 20-1804 Hughey v. Easlick Page 2

Anthony Easlick yanked her left arm as he handcuffed her, that he ignored her complaints about pain in her left arm, and that the cuffs were overly tight. Hughey purportedly sustained a torn rotator cuff and ring marks around her wrists. Finding that Easlick is entitled to qualified immunity, the district court granted summary judgment to the trooper on Hughey’s excessive- force claim. Because Hughey has created a genuine dispute of material fact about whether Easlick violated her clearly established constitutional right to be free from excessive force, we REVERSE and REMAND for further proceedings.

I. BACKGROUND

One day, Dawn Hughey was late to work. R. 1 (Compl. at 3) (Page ID #3). She hurtled down the highway—14 mph over the 70-mph speed limit—to her job at Goodwill. R. 21-3 (Hughey Dep. at 20) (Page ID #176); R. 21-2 (Easlick Dep. at 23) (Page ID #160). She zoomed by Michigan State Trooper Anthony Easlick, who flipped on his dashcam, pulled Hughey over, and strode over to her car. R. 21-3 (Hughey Dep. at 20) (Page ID #176); R. 21-2 (Easlick Dep. at 23) (Page ID #160); Dashcam 00:01–00:46.1

The next fourteen minutes are undisputed. Easlick discovered that Hughey’s car was uninsured and unregistered and that there was an outstanding warrant for Hughey’s failure to appear in court for a traffic violation. R. 21-2 (Easlick Dep. at 28–9) (Page ID #161–62). Easlick relayed that Hughey needed to pay the $400 bond on her warrant in cash immediately or he would have to take her to the courthouse to sort out the warrant. R. 21-3 (Hughey Dep. at 22) (Page ID #177); R. 21-2 (Easlick Dep. at 31–32) (Page ID #162); Dashcam 13:46–14:09. Hughey, unsurprisingly, did not have hundreds of dollars of cash in her possession. R. 21-3 (Hughey Dep. at 23) (Page ID #177). Crying, Hughey emerged from her car; she did not resist arrest. Id. at 24–25 (Page ID #177); R. 21-2 (Easlick Dep. at 34) (Page ID #163); Dashcam at 14:40–15:04.

The broad strokes of what followed are likewise uncontested. Easlick handcuffed Hughey’s hands behind her back, walked her to his car, and placed her in the front passenger

1At this point, the dashcam’s microphone flipped on. Dashcam 00:58–01:08. No. 20-1804 Hughey v. Easlick Page 3

seat. R. 21-3 (Hughey Dep. at 25) (Page ID #177); R. 21-2 (Easlick Dep. at 35) (Page ID #163). Ten minutes later, a tow truck—which Easlick had summoned—hauled Hughey’s car away. R. 21-2 (Easlick Dep. at 44) (Page ID #165). Easlick switched off the dashcam’s microphone. Id. at 42–43 (Page ID #165). Sometime after the tow truck arrived, Hughey expressed suicidal thoughts, so Easlick took her to the hospital for a psychiatric evaluation. R. 21-3 (Hughey Dep. at 32) (Page ID #179); R. 21-2 (Easlick Dep. at 37–39) (Page ID #164). Easlick removed the handcuffs there. R. 21-3 (Hughey Dep. at 36) (Page ID #180); R. 21-2 (Easlick Dep. at 45–46) (Page ID #166).

The parties dispute three key points: the nature of the handcuffing, Hughey’s and Easlick’s exchanges over Hughey’s purported arm pain, and what occurred at the hospital. First, Hughey alleges that Easlick twisted her left arm behind her back as he handcuffed her and did not check the tightness of the handcuffs. R. 21-3 (Hughey Dep. at 25–27) (Page ID #177–78). Easlick asserts, however, that he did not twist Hughey’s arm and insists that he did place a finger between the cuffs and Hughey’s wrists to check the cuffs’ tightness. R. 21-2 (Easlick Dep. at 34–35) (Page ID #163).

Second, Hughey claims that her left shoulder began to hurt “[a]lmost immediately” after Easlick placed her in the passenger seat. R. 21-3 (Hughey Dep. at 28–29) (Page ID #178). She recalls that she told Easlick four or five times while she was in his car that her shoulder hurt. Id. at 27–28 (Page ID #178). She swears that Easlick said “nothing” in response to her complaints and never checked whether the cuffs were too tight. Id. Easlick, on the other hand, has shifted his stance about whether and when Hughey complained of her shoulder injury. In his incident report, Easlick wrote: “Hughey complained of pain in her left arm and I double checked the tension of the handcuffs.” R. 16-2 (Police Rep. at 1) (Page ID #83). At his deposition, Easlick initially could not recall whether Hughey had told him that her shoulder hurt. R. 21-2 (Easlick Dep. at 39) (Page ID #164). Easlick remembered only that ten to fifteen minutes after he placed Hughey in the passenger seat and after Hughey expressed suicidal ideation, Hughey asked him when he was going to remove her handcuffs. Id. Easlick stated that he told Hughey that he would remove her cuffs at the hospital. Id. Easlick later clarified that Hughey might have implied that her handcuffs were too tight when she asked him when he was going to remove the No. 20-1804 Hughey v. Easlick Page 4

cuffs. Id. at 40 (Page ID #164). After refreshing his memory with his incident report, however, Easlick recalled that Hughey told him that her left arm hurt as she was getting into his car. Id. at 55–56 (Page ID #168).

Third, Hughey attested that after Easlick took off the handcuffs at the hospital, a nurse observed that Hughey had “rings around [Hughey’s] wrists where the cuffs were on too tight and [Easlick told the nurse] that’s from the cuffs.” R. 21-3 (Hughey Dep. at 36) (Page ID #180). Easlick does not recall this interaction. R. 21-2 (Easlick Dep. at 46–47) (Page ID #166).

What does the dashcam footage portray of the contested events?2 In short: very little. When Hughey gets out of her car, Easlick has his back to the dashcam and is standing almost entirely off-camera. Dashcam 15:01–15:03. Hughey steps in front of Easlick. Id. Easlick apparently handcuffs Hughey, which takes fifty-three seconds. Id. 15:03–15:56. Easlick is located between Hughey and the dashcam, and both persons are predominantly off-screen. Id. So no part of the handcuffing is visible in the footage—only Hughey’s right elbow can be seen. Id.3 Easlick puts his left hand on Hughey’s hands, which are now handcuffed behind her back, and walks her to the passenger side of his car. Id. 15:36–16:04. Both persons walk off camera. Id. 16:04. Easlick presumably places Hughey in the front passenger seat. Id. 16:04–16:12. Clicking noises indicate that Easlick is opening the passenger-side door and buckling Hughey into the front-passenger seat. Id. The two imperceptibly talk for twenty-four seconds. Id. 16:12–16:36.

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3 F.4th 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dawn-hughey-v-anthony-easlick-ca6-2021.