Holmes v. Reddoch

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedMarch 18, 2021
Docket2:19-cv-12749
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Holmes v. Reddoch, (E.D. La. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA

MICHAEL R. HOLMES CIVIL ACTION

VERSUS No. 19-12749

CORBETT REDDOCH, ET AL. SECTION I

ORDER & REASONS The plaintiff, Michael R. Holmes (“Holmes”), an attorney, was allegedly wronged by the defendants in connection with his 2018 arrest. He claims constitutional violations under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, as well as a variety of state law tort claims, arising out of that arrest against certain officers of the Plaquemines Parish Sheriff’s Office (“Sheriff’s Office”), namely: Corbett Reddoch (“Reddoch”), Holly Hardin (“Hardin”), Ryan Hebert (“Hebert”), Christopher Lambert (“Lambert”), and Paul Durnin (“Durnin”).1 Holmes also sued Sheriff Gerald Turlich (“Sheriff Turlich”), alleging liability under state law negligence theories and respondeat superior.2 While Holmes sued all the officers in their individual capacities, Sheriff Turlich was sued only in his official capacity.3 The defendants filed the instant motion4 for summary judgment, in which they argue that the doctrine of Heck v. Humphrey bars most of Holmes’s claims. Alternatively, they argue that the officers are entitled to qualified immunity, and, if

1 R. Doc. No. 1, at 2–3 ¶¶ 5–10. 2 Id. at 3 ¶ 10; id. at 10 ¶¶ 49–50. 3 Id. at 2–3 ¶¶ 5–10. 4 R. Doc. No. 68. not, Holmes has failed to sufficiently carry his burden to survive summary judgment. The Court grants the defendants’ motion for the reasons below. I. BACKGROUND

The facts of this case read like a law school exam. They arise from Holmes’s arrest at a church-school fair in Plaquemines Parish. Three young girls attending the fair complained to the school’s principal about a man taking pictures of them.5 They said that the unwanted photography made them “feel uncomfortable” based on what they had learned in their “safe environment” class about interacting with strangers.6 A mother of one of the girls took a picture of the photographer, which was then

shown to the principal.7 The principal took the girls to defendant Hardin, a detective in the Sheriff’s Office.8 Hardin then asked the girls to point to the man; the girls pointed to Holmes.9 The principal’s involvement in the matter ended at that point.10

5 R. Doc. No. 76-2, at 17, 19 (Principal’s deposition). The girls ranged in age, but the oldest was a third-grader. Id. at 17. 6 Id. at 19, 23–24. 7 Id. at 20–21. 8 Id. at 21. 9 Id. 10 Id. at 42. Reddoch approached Holmes to “investigat[e]” whether “a crime had been committed.”11 Reddoch “asked” Holmes to provide identification.12 Holmes says he refused by asking “why?”13 Reddoch then asked Holmes to walk with him away from

the crowd.14 Holmes initially complied, then stopped, at which point Reddoch again said, “Show me your ID.” Holmes, again, says that he only asked why.15 The pair differ as to how Holmes responded. Holmes claims he was not hostile in any way to Reddoch,16 while Reddoch claims that Holmes was “belligerent” and was using “profanities” near the children from the start.17 Specifically, Reddoch testified that after asking if he could “talk to [Holmes] for a second,” Holmes responded, “No. Fuck you, cop. I’m an attorney, and that’s not how it works.”18

Reddoch later explained that, due to Holmes’s behavior, he “didn’t know where this was going to go” and “because things can go bad quick,” he “didn’t want to be next to a group of little girls if it did.”19 So Reddoch “grabbed [Holmes] by the arm in an

11 R. Doc. No. 72-2, at 16 (Reddoch’s deposition). Specifically, Reddoch sought to determine whether Holmes was “some type of a sex offender,” id., or otherwise “registered in any way.” Id. at 13. The Court notes that, although it is immaterial, there is a matter of slight dispute as to how Reddoch found out about the children’s complaints. Compare id. at 3 (“I had four groups of little girls came [sic] up and tell me they had, indeed, had a problem.”), with R. Doc. No. 76-2, at 17 (stating that the girls approached the principal). As discussed below, the only material fact is that Reddoch knew of the girls’ complaints, not how he knew. 12 R. Doc. No. 72-2, at 15. 13 R. Doc. No. 72-1, at 2 ¶¶ 11–12. 14 R. Doc. No. 72-2, at 2. 15 Id. 16 R. Doc. No. 72-1, at 1 ¶ 6; id. at 2 ¶ 11. 17 R. Doc. No. 72-2, at 10. 18 Id. at 11–12. 19 Id. at 10. easy escort position” to lead him away from the children.20 Guided by Reddoch’s self- described “civil” grasp, Holmes started walking away from the crowd.21 Things then escalated quickly—though the parties dispute how. Reddoch

testified that Holmes “violently threw his arm up into the air and pulled away.”22 (Holmes, on the other hand, swears he “was standing perfectly still.”)23 Reddoch was mindful that Holmes had a “10-pound camera around his neck, which is a blunt force object, and [Reddoch] had no idea what was in the bag” that Holmes was wearing on his back.24 After Holmes raised his arm, Reddoch “didn’t know if [Holmes] was going to attack,” or whether “he was going for his bag.”25 Reddoch was in “close proximity” to Holmes, and Reddoch feared “that a physical attack may be imminent.”26 So, to

protect “[his] safety and the safety of [Holmes],”27 Reddoch used a “rollover armbar” to take Holmes to the ground.28 Describing the takedown, Holmes said that Reddoch “violently grabbed my arm, twisted it up behind me, swept me [sic] legs from under me, and threw me to the ground.”29 Reddoch testified that he used the least amount of force that should

20 Id. 21 Id. at 38. Reddoch explained this was less secure than a “compliant escort position,” in which Holmes’s movement would have been more limited. Id. at 37–38. 22 Id. at 17. At another point in his deposition, Reddoch testified that Holmes “acted erratically by lifting his arm high into the air and pulling away from [Reddoch] while cussing.” Id. at 8. 23 R. Doc. No. 72-1, at 2. 24 R. Doc. No. 72-2, at 21. 25 Id. at 17. 26 Id. at 33. 27 Id. at 32. 28 Id. at 39. 29 R. Doc. No. 72-1, at 2. have been used in this situation, and this maneuver is the “minimum, quickest, safest way to get someone under control.”30 Holmes declared that Reddoch, once they were on the ground, “kneeled into my

lower back with all his weight,” and the “[o]ther deputies then pinned my legs and ankles and forcefully dragged my right arm from beneath my body.”31 He was then handcuffed,32 and, according to Holmes, Reddoch “intentionally inflicted greater pain and injury upon me by kneeling on me with his full body weight on my low back, upper arm, and shoulder.”33 After a search revealed Holmes’s wallet and driver’s license, the officers ran his name and discovered two valid, outstanding arrest warrants.34 Holmes was

arrested for the warrants35 and taken to the Belle Chasse lockup and held overnight.36 The church-school’s principal asked that Holmes’s car be towed from the property;37 pursuant to Sheriff’s Office policy, the officers conducted an inventory search prior to having the vehicle towed away.38 Holmes argues, however, that the

30 R. Doc. No. 72-2, at 39. 31 R. Doc. No. 72-1, at 2. 32 Id. 33 Id. at 3. 34 R. Doc. No. 72-2, at 30. 35 Id. at 8. 36 R. Doc. No. 72-1, at 3. 37 R. Doc. No. 76-2, at 34 (deposition of principal); see also id. at 55 (asking the principal whether she and the priest “ask[ed] the police to have [the officers] remove the vehicle from there,” to which the principal responded, “[c]orrect”). 38 R. Doc. No. 68-3, at 12. officers had an evidentiary purpose for the search—Hardin said that she was going to search the car to “find [Holmes’s] flash drives.”39 As a result of his struggle with the officers, Holmes was charged, inter alia,

with resisting arrest40 under La. Rev. Stat. §

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Holmes v. Reddoch, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holmes-v-reddoch-laed-2021.