Hicks v. City Of Lynchburg

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Virginia
DecidedSeptember 30, 2023
Docket6:21-cv-00043
StatusUnknown

This text of Hicks v. City Of Lynchburg (Hicks v. City Of Lynchburg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hicks v. City Of Lynchburg, (W.D. Va. 2023).

Opinion

CLERKS OFFICE U.S. DIST. COUR AT LYNCHBURG, VA UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FILED WESTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA 9/30/2023 LYNCHBURG DIVISION LAURA A. AUSTIN, CLERK BY: s/ ARLENE LITTLE DEPUTY CLERK ANIYA NICOLE HICKS, et al., Case No. 6:21-cv-00043 Plaintiffs, v. MEMORANDUM OPINION CITY OF LYNCHBURG, et al., Judge Norman K. Moon Defendants.

The events at issue arise out of a series of violent fights between feuding high-school students that broke out throughout the River Ridge Mall in Lynchburg on March 7, 2020, and the ensuing police response. An “officer needs help” call issued, prompting additional officers’ dispatch to the scene. Stores hastily pulled down their security gates—employees and customers temporarily locked inside and peering out at the melee. Crowds ran in all directions. Officers tried to clear everyone out, but many disregarded them. In the midst of this pandemonium, officers repeatedly commanded Plaintiff Aniya Hicks (then-14 years’ old) to “get back” from an individual who was handcuffed and under arrest for fighting—her then-boyfriend. Plaintiff disregarded the orders, yelling she was going to stay right there. When the officer tried to handcuff Plaintiff, she resisted, pulling back. Her friend tried to pull her away from the officer. Plaintiff and the officer had a physical altercation, leading to Plaintiff kicking and screaming on the ground. As Plaintiff was still resisting handcuffs, another officer assisted the first, using his arm to keep her down. That use of force lasted several seconds. When Plaintiff sat up, she had sustained a gash on her face, requiring stitches. An

officer immediately called a medic. As Plaintiff was at that time laying in the middle of the mall thoroughfare, another officer pulled her to the wall. Plaintiff says that officer moved her roughly and an unnecessary distance. Plaintiff subsequently filed this suit under § 1983 against Defendants City of Lynchburg and Officers Lee Hughes, Nathan Godsie, and Hollie Breton. Noting fast-moving circumstances

such as those at issue here require split-second decisions by officers, the Court concludes that Defendants’ use of force was objectively reasonable, and in any event, they did not act contrary to clearly settled law. Defendants are entitled to qualified immunity on Plaintiff’s excessive force claim. Plaintiff’s other claims fail, including her Monell claim against the City of Lynchburg for allegedly inadequate training. The Court therefore will award summary judgment to Defendants. Background 1. Plaintiff’s Account

The plaintiff is Aniya Nicole Hicks. She was 14 years old on March 7, 2020—the date of the incident. Dkt. 30-1 (“Hicks Dep.”) at 6. Plaintiff was at the indoor mall because it was a weekend night, and she was going to the movies. Id. at 7. Plaintiff and a friend were walking around the mall before the movie started and there were “a lot of people there,” when Plaintiff saw “a fight that broke out between some girls first.” Id. at 10–12. Plaintiff’s own words describe the scale of the fighting that broke out that night. Plaintiff remembered “the fight between the girls first,” and “then the police were called.” Id. at 12. Then, “in the middle of the girls fighting, the boys started fighting.” Id. Plaintiff explained that “[i]t wasn’t just like one or two girls. It was like a group of girls fighting.” Id. at 13. She recalled “[i]t was just a lot of girls just fighting, just a lot.” Id. at 13–14. There was “a lot of punching and

kicking.” Id. at 14 (emphasis added). Plaintiff said that she “d[id] not know the girls” who were fighting, though she “[went] to school with them,” and they were in her grade. Id. at 13–14. While Plaintiff saw the fights, she stated that she otherwise had “had no involvement at all” in them. Id. at 13, 16. Plaintiff explained that the fight between the boys involved “two different friend groups.” Id. at 16; id. at 14–16. Plaintiff “was trying to stop one of the boys from fighting”—“trying to

pull them back and tell them like, [‘]no, it’s not worth it. Don’t fight.[’]”—but she “wasn’t fighting personally.” Id. at 17. She was trying to hold back her “boyfriend at the time” from fighting. Id. When asked about her interaction with officers, Plaintiff explained that it became “really blurry,” and she did “not remember a lot at all.” Id. at 19. She “remember[ed] just me on the ground in handcuffs, blood all in my eyes. I couldn’t see. Just crying. Then I was getting dragged. But before that, I really have no recollection, really, of what happened.” Id. Plaintiff further explained: “I know that I was getting arrested. Then I was on the ground. Then I got my head bashed onto the ground. After that, I was trying to sit up. Then I got dragged from Kay

Jewelers all the way to Planet Fitness by my handcuffs.” Id. at 21. The whole time, she “couldn’t see anything,” because of “all the blood that was just in [her] eye.” Id. However, Plaintiff did eventually recall a few events that preceded the arrest. Plaintiff had gone over to her boyfriend. Id. at 24. Plaintiff explained that she “just wanted to make sure that he was okay. He was my boyfriend at the time and there was just a lot of police around him. It was nobody right there but him and the police.” Id. at 25. He was in handcuffs. Id. Plaintiff recalled that she was “told to get back.” Id. at 22. She said: “I did receive a get back command.” Id. She admitted that she did not comply with the command—instead, she told the officers: “I was going to stand right here.” Id. Plaintiff testified that she did not leave when she was told to because “I wanted to make sure that he was okay.” Id. at 36. Then, Plaintiff testified that “I was getting arrested and I know that the cops smashed my head on the ground.” Id. at 20; id. at 21. According to Plaintiff, she did not push or shove any of the officers, and that she did not remember resisting them. Id. at 34. Plaintiff testified that she later “was dragged by a female officer,” who was Officer

Breton. Id. at 26. Plaintiff explained that she “was screaming out because [she] was hurt, handcuffs behind [her] back and [they were] dragging [her] 50, 60 feet.” Id. Plaintiff suffered wounds to her face during the altercation—requiring a trip to the hospital and stitches above her right eye, which injury she says have caused headaches following the incident. Am. Compl. ¶¶ 25, 31; Hicks Dep. at 37; Pl’s Photos 1, 3. Plaintiff believes it was Sergeant Godsey who caused her injury because “after the event,” her “dad came to the mall … and one of the policemen told [him] which cop it was.” Hicks Dep. at 20. 2. Defendant Officers’ Accounts Officer Lee Hughes was working the night shift on March 7, 2020. Dkt. 30-3 (“Hughes

Dep.”) at 21. Officer Hughes was on patrol when a call came in, the officer said “that they needed more units because there was a disorderly crowd,” but “they said they were sufficient.” Id. at 22. But “[b]riefly after that, an officer-needs-help call came out, so everybody responded at that point that wasn’t tied up.” Id.; see also Hughes Body Cam. at 49:05–15 (dispatch relays officer stating: “I’m in the food court. We need units to the food court.”). Officer Romano also sped to the scene in his police cruiser with his lights activated. See Romano Body Cam. at 50:00–50:35 (continuing to mall but turning off emergency lights when “officer-needs-help” call discontinued). Officer Hollie Breton was working an off-duty assignment providing security at the mall that evening. Dkt. 30-11 (“Breton Dep.”) at 5, 9. Officer Breton testified that “[t]here were a lot of juveniles at the mall,” and that a school resource officer coworker told Officer Breton that the juveniles attended “schools that had rivalries.” Id. at 10. Officer Breton recalled that “there were a lot of individuals in the food court,” and that “there was a growing concern that a fight would

occur.” Id.

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