Hall v. Navarre

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedJuly 10, 2023
Docket2:21-cv-12970
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Hall v. Navarre, (E.D. Mich. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION TIMOTHY HALL,

Plaintiff, Case No. 21-12970 (consolidated with 22-11797) v. Honorable Laurie J. Michelson BLAKE NAVARRE, CO’VOSIEE COWAN, TIMOTHY BARR, and CITY OF DETROIT,

Defendants.

OPINION AND ORDER DENYING HALL’S MOTION FOR RECONSIDERATION [58] AND GRANTING IN PART COWAN, BARR, AND THE CITY OF DETROIT’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT [51] In August 2020, Timothy Hall was protesting in downtown Detroit when Detroit police officers ordered the protestors to disperse because they were blocking Woodward Avenue, a major city street. The protest was one of many that occurred that summer in response to the murder of George Floyd. After repeating orders to disperse over the loudspeakers, police officers formed a line, moved toward protestors on Woodward, and detained them. The officers also used tear gas. At this time, Hall was standing on the sidewalk when Officer Blake Navarre ran toward him and tackled him to the ground. Hall was zip-tied and dragged to the curb. According to Hall, Officer Co’Vosiee Cowan eventually took him to the hospital to treat his injuries and then transported him to the Detroit Detention Center. There, Officer Timothy Barr issued Hall a citation for disorderly conduct, disobeying a lawful order from a police officer, and obstructing a moving lane of traffic. These charges were ultimately dismissed.

Believing the officers’ behavior to be unconstitutional, Hall sued Navarre, Cowan, Barr, and eventually the City of Detroit for violations of his First and Fourth Amendment rights and of state law. Cowan, Barr, and the City of Detroit now move for summary judgment on all claims against them. Apparently dissatisfied with discovery, Hall also moved this Court to reopen discovery and allow him more time to investigate his Monell claims. The Court denied this motion, and Hall now moves for reconsideration.

For the reasons that follow, Cowan, Barr, and the City of Detroit’s motion for summary judgment will be granted in part, with only Hall’s First Amendment retaliation claim surviving as to Barr. Hall’s motion for reconsideration utterly fails to meet the demanding standard for such relief and will be denied. Background Facts

On the evening of August 22, 2020, Timothy Hall went to downtown Detroit to participate in a protest against police brutality. Hall had been participating in similar protests throughout the summer of 2020, which were initially provoked by the murder of George Floyd. (See ECF No. 61, PageID.1631.) Hall arrived at the protest in a gas mask, a flak jacket (i.e., a military-style vest that typically has body-armor plates in it, but Hall wore his without any plates), elbow pads, knee pads, gloves, and jackboots. (ECF No. 61, PageID.1627–1629, 1654.) Hall testified that he wore protective gear to the protest because he suffers from a heart condition and wanted to protect “the zipper from [his] heart operation.” (Id. at

PageID.1627–1628.) He was also aware of the potential for police intervention and the use of tear gas due to his experiences at past protests. (Id.) Specifically, in July of that year, Hall attended a protest after Detroit police officers shot Hakim Littleton. (Id. at PageID.1632.) Hall said that police intervened in the Littleton protest by pushing forward against the protestors, which resulted in him being “knocked down . . . with a shield[.]” (Id. at PageID.1640.) After the Littleton protest, a friend advised Hall to “have something on” when he attended protests. (Id. at PageID.1632.)

Officer Blake Navarre was a member of the arrest team of the Mobile Field Force, which was deployed to the August 22 protest. (ECF No. 51-10, PageID.934.) As the name suggests, the arrest team was charged with arresting certain protestors after a protest was dispersed. (Id.) As part of the arrest team, Navarre was also “tasked with doing social media surveillance, looking up videos, as well as looking up previous people that we’ve had contact with at previous protests to keep an eye on

what they were saying.” (Id. at PageID.935.) Navarre testified that Hall was one of these “targeted” individuals because he had assaulted Navarre at the Littleton protest. (Id. at PageID.935–936.) But officers were unable to identify Hall by name at that time, so according to Navarre, “based on my own previous experiences as well as talking to the Mobile Field Force command, their sergeants and lieutenants, we needed to get him detained, arrested, and identified in order to actually properly label him, or get a name to him anyway.” (Id. at PageID.935.) Turning back to August 22, Navarre was called in before his usual 6 p.m. shift

because “there was a large crowd growing, as well as intel that the protestors planned on taking control over public streets,” including Woodward. (ECF No. 51-10, PageID.941.) After getting equipment from the precinct, Navarre’s team was instructed to stay “stationed out of sight” near the protest until receiving further orders. (Id. at PageID.941–942.) While waiting, Navarre did his “own workups on [protestors’] live feeds on the group’s Facebooks” and learned “who was there, what they were talking about, if I heard anything like antagonizing in nature or anything

premeditated that they wanted to do that night, I would relay that information to supervision[.]” (Id. at PageID.943.) Navarre testified that the team was also given “orders from violent crime task force to effect an arrest on Ethan Ketner,” a member of Detroit Will Breathe, “regarding the criminal activity that he had been taking a part of previously.” (Id.) At that time, Navarre “noticed Timothy Hall wearing his body armor as well as his gloves with the hard knuckles, boots, tactical pants, as well

as a gas mask” while walking with Ketner. (Id.) He identified Hall as the same individual from the Littleton protest by his “tattoo of the three arrows” and his face. (Id.) According to Navarre, there were “many attempts to [disperse] the crowd verbally with orders that they would be placed under arrest for an unlawful assembly[.]” (ECF No. 51-10, PageID.944; ECF No. 51-15, PageID.1018 (“[S]everal orders were given out over the loudspeakers for everyone to disseminate and leave the area. They were advised that it was an unlawful assembly, okay, and that if they did not leave, they would be placed under arrest.”).) Hall recalls officers giving orders,

but stated that they said, “This is an unlawful assembly and you are ordered to leave the roadways and enter the sidewalks.” (ECF No. 61, PageID.1659.) Though the timeline is not clear, at some point after officers ordered the crowd to disperse, Navarre’s team was ordered to “slowly approach” the protestors on foot. (ECF No. 51-10, PageID.944.) The team then broke down the barriers that had been put up on Woodward in preparation for engaging with protestors and regrouped to discuss the individuals that were to be “detain[ed] on sight[.]” (Id.) Navarre said he

received a verbal order to detain Hall on sight for “[a]ssaulting police at a previous incident as well as the current circumstances [of] . . . [u]nlawful assembly and disorderly conduct, as well as disobeying a lawful order.” (Id. at PageID.944–945.) According to Navarre, the protest was unlawful because it “was taking over the street” and Hall “was part of the group that was disobeying a lawful order to [disperse]; a crowd that had taken over Woodward Avenue.” (Id. at PageID.945.)

Once ordered to begin arrests, Navarre stated he “expeditiously made it to Mr. Hall as he was then starting to approach the group that was engaging with officers at that time, and then tackled him.” (ECF No. 51-10, PageID.949.) Video taken from overhead from a nearby building shows Hall standing on the sidewalk near Woodward, where protestors were met by police. (Video Ex.

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Hall v. Navarre, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-navarre-mied-2023.