George Redding v. D.P. Boulware

501 F. App'x 238
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedDecember 20, 2012
Docket11-7455
StatusUnpublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 501 F. App'x 238 (George Redding v. D.P. Boulware) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
George Redding v. D.P. Boulware, 501 F. App'x 238 (4th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

Affirmed by unpublished opinion. Judge NIEMEYER wrote the opinion, in which Judge URBANSKI joined. Judge KEENAN wrote a dissenting opinion.

Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.

NIEMEYER, Circuit Judge:

This case presents the issue of whether law enforcement officers used excessive force in effecting the arrest of Daphne Redding, of Columbia, South Carolina, following a traffic stop.

During the course of a traffic stop, Red-ding (1) failed to stop in response to South Carolina State Trooper D.P. Boulware’s use of his police car’s blue light and siren; (2) failed to obey the trooper’s repeated directives to sit down in her car after she was stopped; (3) refused to produce her driver’s license and registration; and (4) in other respects failed to cooperate with the trooper’s lawful commands. When Red-ding pushed Trooper Boulware out of her way in an effort to walk past Boulware to her apartment, Trooper Boulware attempted to place Redding under arrest for assaulting a police officer. Redding, however, refused to be handcuffed. Trooper Boulware was able to place a handcuff on one of Redding’s wrists but, because of her continuing and active resistance, was unable to place the handcuff on the other.

In response to Trooper Boulware’s call for assistance, Lexington County Deputy Sheriff B.A. Hill arrived and directed Red-ding to place her unsecured arm behind her back so that it could be cuffed. As she refused, Deputy Hill repeated the command six more times. Because Redding continued to resist, Deputy Hill used force to move Redding’s hand behind her back and place the second handcuff on her. After being cuffed, Redding ceased resisting, and charges against her were processed in the normal course.

During the course of the scuffle, however, Redding sustained abrasions when resisting as she was held on the ground and a broken arm when Deputy Hill forced her *240 arm behind her to be cuffed. She commenced this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1988, contending that the officers used excessive force in arresting her. The district court granted summary judgment to the officers, and we now affirm.

I

The record in this case is substantially not in dispute, 1 as the entire encounter was recorded on videotape, with a clock recording the passage of time on the videotape, and discloses a continually escalating series of events that developed over a period of some 20 minutes.

A few minutes after 4 a.m. on May 28, 2007, Trooper Boulware observed a vehicle on 1-26 in Columbia, South Carolina, traveling at about 35 miles per hour, which was below the minimum 45-mile-per-hour speed limit on the Interstate. As he observed the vehicle, it was also weaving from lane to lane; its brakes were being applied for no apparent reason; and, when turning right from the Interstate, its turn signal was not used. Trooper Boulware turned on his marked police car’s blue light and, on an intermittent basis, his siren in an effort to stop the vehicle. The vehicle, however, failed to stop and continued driving for about a half a mile, after which it entered the parking lot of an apartment complex. Using his public address microphone, Trooper Boulware directed the driver to stop the car, and he focused his search light on the vehicle. The vehicle stopped, and Daphne Redding, a 67-year-old woman, exited the vehicle. Trooper Boulware asked Redding why she took so long to stop, and Redding responded that she could not tell whether he was a policeman. Boulware then told Redding to “have a seat back in your car.” Redding, however, refused, and Boulware repeated the command four separate times. Red-ding stated that she was going to go to her apartment to get her husband. When the officer told her that she could not do that, she started to honk the horn. Again Trooper Boulware instructed her not to honk the horn.

Trooper Boulware demanded that Red-ding produce her driver’s license, registration, and proof of insurance, and Redding responded, “Wait just a minute,” and she continued to yell for her husband. Boul-ware continued to insist that Redding produce her registration and insurance on four different occasions over the next several minutes. On each occasion, Redding told the trooper to wait a minute. Red-ding also tried to use her cell phone to call her husband, and after she ignored Trooper Boulware’s command not to call anyone, Boulware moved to take her phone. Red-ding then attempted to walk to the apartment to get her husband. As Trooper Boulware blocked her way and pressed Redding for her license, Redding pushed Trooper Boulware backward, and walked by him. At that point, at 4:09 a.m., Trooper Boulware announced that he was placing Redding under arrest.

When Trooper Boulware sought to effect the arrest by placing handcuffs on Red-ding, Redding resisted. Trooper Boulware then pushed Redding against the front of a nearby automobile in an effort to handcuff her. As Redding continued to resist, he *241 took her to the ground. Trooper Boul-ware told Redding reportedly to quit fighting him; she was under arrest; and “you are going to be charged with resisting if you do not put that other hand behind your back.” Redding, however, kept calling for her husband and kept resisting. While the officer was able to get one handcuff on, he was unable to get the other on, despite instructing Redding several times, “Give me your hand.” After struggling unsuccessfully to place Redding in handcuffs for a period of some four minutes, Boulware called the dispatcher for assistance. He stated, “I’ve got one cuff on her. I can’t do much else with her.” Trooper Boulware and Redding were about the same size. Boulware was approximately 5 feet 7 inches tall and weighed 175 pounds; Redding was approximately 5 feet 6 inches tall and weighed 190 pounds.

Over the next five to ten minutes, while Trooper Boulware was holding Redding on the ground and waiting for assistance, Redding continued to resist. At one point, she said she was hurting, and the officer indicated “we both are. I think you dislocated my finger.” When Redding asked, “what do you want from me?”, the trooper stated, “You are under arrest for assaulting a police officer.” After several minutes passed, Trooper Boulware stated again, “Now you need to quit fighting me and give me your other hand so that we can get this over with instead of fighting me because you ain’t doing nothing but hurtin’ yourself.” Several minutes later, when the dispatcher asked Officer Boul-ware, “Have you got the subject in custody now?”, Officer Boulware stated, “Negative. Not Yet. I am just trying to do what I can without hurting her any — .”

At 4:21 a.m., some 12 minutes after Trooper Boulware first sought to effect the arrest of Redding, Lexington County Deputy Sheriff Hill arrived. Deputy Hill then instructed Redding, “Ma'am come, you need to bring hands behind your back.” After Redding refused and resisted, Deputy Hill repeated the command six more times as he attempted to place her wrist into the handcuffs, warning her that her resisting was “going to cause [him] to break [her] arm.” Finally, at 4:22 a.m., while Officer Boulware was holding Red-ding down, Deputy Hill forced Redding’s wrist into the handcuffs and thus placed her in custody.

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Bluebook (online)
501 F. App'x 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-redding-v-dp-boulware-ca4-2012.