Gaskin v. Fletcher

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Alabama
DecidedApril 21, 2022
Docket2:20-cv-00463
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Gaskin v. Fletcher, (M.D. Ala. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF ALABAMA NORTHERN DIVISION

ANDREW CORY GASKINS, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) Case No. 2:20-cv-463-RAH-WC ) [WO] CITY OF WETUMPKA, et al., ) ) Defendant. ) MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

The underlying facts of this case begin with a motor vehicle accident and end with the arrest and criminal conviction of Plaintiff Andrew Gaskins,1 who arrived at the scene of the accident to help his mother, one of the drivers involved in the collision. Following these events, Gaskins brought this action against two of the on- scene police officers, the City of Wetumpka, and Wetumpka’s Chief of Police. In his Complaint, Gaskins brings claims for a violation of his First Amendment rights, false arrest, excessive force, negligence, assault, and outrage. Pending before the

1 The Complaint uses the last name “Gaskin” and “Gaskins” interchangeably and Gaskins’s attorney filed the case under the name “Gaskin.” However, the Plaintiff’s last name, according to the Plaintiff himself, is “Gaskins.” Accordingly, the Court uses “Gaskins” throughout this opinion. Court is the Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment. (Doc. 33.) The motion has been fully briefed and is ripe for review.

I. BACKGROUND On July 5, 2018, Gaskins’s mother was involved in a motor vehicle accident near the intersection of US Highway 231 and Alabama Highway 14 in Wetumpka,

Alabama. (Doc. 35-1 at 13.) Wetumpka police quickly arrived on the scene. Shortly after the police arrived, Gaskins arrived on the scene to check on his mother and to document the accident. Gaskins pulled up to the accident in a white Chevrolet

Trailblazer SUV carrying himself, his eleven-year-old daughter, and his nine-year- old son. (Id. at 8.) Gaskins parked his SUV in the roadway next to his mother’s vehicle. Gaskins then exited his SUV, and with permission from one of the police officers, began

unloading items from his mother’s car to prepare it to be towed. (Id. at 15.) After Gaskins unloaded his mother’s car, police officers asked Gaskins to move his SUV out of the roadway and onto the shoulder. (Id. at 17.) Gaskins complied and drove

the SUV onto the shoulder as requested. (Id.) After parking, Gaskins exited his SUV and began to take pictures of the scene. (Id.) At this point, an ambulance had arrived and began tending to Gaskins’s mother. (Id. at 18.) Meanwhile, Gaskins continued to take pictures. (Id. at 17–18.) This is where the parties’ stories largely begin to diverge. At some point, according to Gaskins, an officer told Gaskins to “get your damn ass out of here.” (Id.

at 18–19.) But Gaskins did not leave the scene.2 Instead, Gaskins told the officer that being a police officer did not give him the right to talk to Gaskins in that manner. (Id. at 19.) Two more officers then approached—Officers David Fletcher and

Brandon Foster—and specifically told Gaskins to return to his vehicle.3 (Id. at 20.) The officers claim that rather than immediately returning to his vehicle, Gaskins became belligerent and continued to protest that he did not have to comply with law enforcement. (Doc. 33-5.)

Gaskins, on the other hand, says he complied with the instruction to return to his vehicle. There, he sat cross-legged in the trunk of the SUV and continued to observe his mother. (Id. at 20, 22.) Fletcher and Foster then approached the open

back hatch of the SUV and ordered Gaskins to leave the scene. (Doc. 35-1 at 22.) According to Gaskins, he was not given time to comply with this order. After being instructed to leave by Fletcher and Foster, Gaskins tried to explain to the

2 For Gaskins’s part, he testified that he did not “get [his] damn ass out of here” because he did not understand what the officer meant by saying “get your damn ass out of here.” That is, Gaskins claims that he was uncertain what the officer meant by “here.” Was the officer telling him to step aside, to move to the shoulder, to go to his car, or to leave the scene altogether? (See Doc. 35-1 at 21 (Responding to why he did not leave the road, Gaskins testified that the officer “said to get your damn ass out of here. He did not say the road.”).)

3 While Gaskins contends that prior to this time he did nothing disruptive or said anything offensive other than chastising an officer for being rude to him, Fletcher testified that “from the time he pulled up to the scene” Gaskins “was very disruptive” and “would not listen to law enforcement and took a simple accident and turned it into a fiasco.” (Doc. 33-2 at 52.) officers that his mother was still on the scene, but before he could finish his sentence, Fletcher and Foster reached inside the SUV, grabbed Gaskins by both arms, “ripped”

Gaskins out of the SUV face-first, “slammed” him down onto the ground, pinned Gaskins’s arms behind his shoulders to immobilize him, and handcuffed his hands behind his back. (Doc. 35-1 at 22–24, 31; Doc. 35-2 at 3.) Gaskins testified that he

never jerked away from the officers, or fought, or resisted the officers in any way while in his SUV or as he was being arrested. (Doc. 35-1 at 41.) The officers tell a different story of persistent arguing, refusals to leave, and an attempt by Gaskins to pull away or resist when Foster began attempting to pull

Gaskins out of the SUV to arrest him for obstruction. (Doc. 33-5.) But back to Gaskins’s story. Laying on the ground, Gaskins began screaming for help. Between pleas for help, Gaskins began crying from confusion and pain. (Id.

at 24.) Gaskins’s children watched and screamed from the backseat. (Id.) While restraining Gaskins, Foster looked at Gaskins and told him that he was “a piece of shit.” (Id.) Then, Foster turned towards Gaskins’s kids, began yelling at them, and told them that their father was a “piece of shit.” (Id.)

At this point, Officer Charles Shannon responded to Gaskins’s cries for help and walked over and asked what Foster and Fletcher were doing. (Id. at 24–25.) They told Shannon that Gaskins was resisting arrest. (Id. at 25.) According to

Gaskins, Shannon told Foster and Fletcher that Gaskins was not resisting arrest and asked again, “What are y’all doing?” (Id.) And then Shannon told Gaskins to “just do what they ask.” (Id.) Fletcher then lifted Gaskins to his feet by his handcuffed

wrists. (Id. at 33.) Once standing, Gaskins was escorted to a police vehicle and placed inside. (Id. at 25.) After Gaskins had been secured in the police vehicle, one of the officers went

to retrieve Gaskins’s children. As Gaskins’s son puts it, the officer reached into the cracked backseat window and grabbed at the Gaskins children, telling them that their dad was a “piece of S-word, and he was going to jail and [they] were going to DHR.” (Doc. 35-2 at 5.) The children got out of the SUV and were put into the back of a

police vehicle. (Id.) Gaskins was then taken to the Elmore County Jail and charged with obstruction of government operations. Gaskins was released from the jail a few

hours later, but not before speaking with Fletcher again. According to Gaskins, Fletcher approached him and apologized for the ordeal, shaking Gaskins’s hand, and telling Gaskins that he would get all his money back and that Fletcher “would go to bat for [Gaskins] in court.” (Id. at 27.)

But the criminal obstruction charge against Gaskins proceeded. Roughly six months after his arrest, Gaskins was convicted of the charge in the Wetumpka Municipal Court. (Doc. 33-9.) Gaskins appealed, but ultimately plead guilty to

obstruction in circuit court. (Doc. 33-10.) Gaskins contends that the force used on him during his arrest tore his rotator cuff and bicep, injuries for which Gaskins would later undergo surgery. (Id. at 5,

33.) He also claims that his knees were scraped, gashed open, and caused to bleed. (Id. at 4–5.) II. THE CLAIMS

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