Irwin v. CITY OF LAWRENCEBURG, INDIANA

693 F. Supp. 2d 846, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20279, 2010 WL 779490
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Indiana
DecidedMarch 2, 2010
Docket4:08-cv-188-RLY-WGH
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 693 F. Supp. 2d 846 (Irwin v. CITY OF LAWRENCEBURG, INDIANA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Irwin v. CITY OF LAWRENCEBURG, INDIANA, 693 F. Supp. 2d 846, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20279, 2010 WL 779490 (S.D. Ind. 2010).

Opinion

ENTRY ON DEFENDANTS’ SUMMARY JUDGMENT MOTION

RICHARD L. YOUNG, Chief Judge.

On November 9, 2007, Plaintiff, Kayla Irwin (“Plaintiff”), returned home to the apartment in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, where she and her two children lived to find a police officer and the apartment manager standing outside the apartment building. The police officer informed Plaintiff that it had been reported to the police that an individual known as Sean “Snowflake” Deaton had entered her apartment. The police officer described Deaton as an armed and dangerous criminal. Plaintiff offered the key to her apartment to the officer, but he indicated that he was waiting for the return of another officer with a search warrant and that Plaintiff should stand clear from the building.

The police were on the scene at the Village Apartments as a result of a call placed to the police by Sean Deaton’s former wife, Terri Deaton, who called to alert the police that her ex-husband was at the apartment building and that he was the subject of an arrest warrant in Ohio. Officer Nicholas Myers (“Officer Myers”) was dispatched to apartment 407G at the Village Apartments and, while he made his way there, he instructed dispatch to “run the information” on Sean Deaton through the National Crime Information Center database to determine if there were any *849 outstanding warrants for his arrest. That “run” apparently confirmed the existence of an outstanding warrant, and made some mention of Deaton’s propensity for violence, though the record is without clarification as to exactly what the description was that was included in the NCIC report. The report itself was not made a part of the record. Officer Myers also contacted Officer Daniel Rosengarn (“Officer Rosengarn”) and asked for his assistance with the incident. While speaking with Officer Rosengarn, Officer Myers was contacted by dispatch once more and informed that Terri Deaton had called again to report that Sean Deaton was now outside the apartment building and that her father had also seen Deaton flee into apartment 407G. 1 The two officers proceeded to the apartment building, where they were met by Terri Deaton.

According to Officer Myers, Terri Deaton appeared nervous and was shaking in apparent fear of her ex-husband being in the area. She told Officer Myers that she had seen her ex-husband enter apartment 407G, come back outside, and then return to the apartment right before the officers arrived. She had not seen him leave the apartment. Officer Rosengarn made his way to the back of the building while Officer Myers obtained further details from Terri Deaton. She provided Officer Myers with a description of Sean Deaton and indicated he was known to possess a small handgun, but she did not report that she had seen him with the gun that evening. After speaking with the officers, Terri Deaton returned to her own apartment. Knocks on the door of apartment 407G by the officer went unanswered, as did phone calls to Sean Deaton’s cell phone. Officer Myers determined that there was a need to obtain a search warrant and he placed a call to the prosecutor’s office.

The police supervisor, who was about to come on shift, Sgt. Michael Lanning (“Sgt. Lanning”), contacted Officer Myers by phone to receive a briefing on the situation. After speaking with Officer Myers, Sgt. Lanning contacted Lieutenant Charles Evans (“Lt. Evans”), who also serves as the police department’s negotiator when circumstances warrant the use of one. Lt. Evans advised Sgt. Lanning that, because the suspect at issue was reportedly armed and not responding to efforts to communicate with him, the department’s Critical Incident Response Team (“CIRT”) should be assembled for a response. It is unclear what prompted Lt. Evans’ belief that Deaton was armed. Sgt. Lanning arrived at the Village Apartments and released Officer Myers to pursue the search warrant with the prosecutor’s office. After Officer Myers provided his affidavit, the prosecutor obtained a search warrant for entering apartment 407G to apprehend Sean Deaton and provided the same to Officer Myers.

After his arrival, Lt. Evans attempted to talk Sean Deaton out of the apartment using the PA on one of the police vehicles, while several other patrolman monitored the perimeter of the scene. Meanwhile, the CIRT squad assembled at police headquarters where they were briefed by Sgt. Lanning, who, as the ranking member of the CIRT team, approved a plan of action which called for a gradual escalation of force to obtain Sean Deaton’s surrender. After the briefing, the six member CIRT squad deployed to the scene where Lt. *850 Evans was still attempting to garner a response from inside the apartment.

Pursuant to the CIRT team plan, after arrival and upon determination that Lt. Evans’s efforts to verbally coax Sean Deaton out of the apartment were unsuccessful, the first action taken was Officer Kenneth Losekamp’s (“Officer Losekamp”) firing of wooden ferret rounds into the apartment. One was shot into a front window and another into a rear window. After waiting approximately twenty minutes while Lt. Evans again tried unsuccessfully to verbally raise a response from someone from within the apartment, four canisters of CS gas (a chemical munition) were shot into the apartment by Officer Losekamp. Approximately ten to fifteen minutes later, Officer Losekamp tossed two more canisters into the apartment. A total of six gas canisters were deployed into the apartment without any response from within. After another fifteen to twenty minute wait, all six members of the CIRT team assembled and entered the apartment, using a key that had been provided by the apartment manager. They searched the entire apartment, but found no one.

After the search of the apartment was completed, the fire department was summoned to set up exhaust fans to help rid the apartment of CS gas fumes. Photographs of the apartment taken after the search had been conducted show furniture, clothing and other possessions in disarray. Large burn marks, apparently from the gas canisters, were on the carpeting and a pillow. Broken glass was on the floor and a dusty residue covered much of the interi- or area. The apartment management moved Plaintiff to another apartment, boarded the windows and secured 407G. Plaintiff was unhappy with the results of her efforts to obtain assistance from the police in cleaning up after the incident. She claims that the cost of the clean-up was in excess of $15,000 and that the residue from the gas canisters damaged her personal belongings, which she claims have a value of between $15,000 and $20,000, and are being kept in storage pending resolution of her claims.

Plaintiff filed this lawsuit against the City of Lawrenceburg (the “City”), twelve members of the police department whom she has specifically identified and another thirteen members of the force (collectively “Defendants”) that she identifies only by “unit number.” She contends that the Defendants violated her Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights by utilizing excessive force in executing the search warrant, resulting in damage to her personal property. In addition to her claim for damages to her property, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (“Section 1983”), Plaintiff also asserts a state law tort claim for infliction of severe emotional distress.

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Related

Lockard v. CITY OF LAWRENCEBURG, IND.
815 F. Supp. 2d 1034 (S.D. Indiana, 2011)
Brown v. City of Fort Wayne
752 F. Supp. 2d 925 (N.D. Indiana, 2010)

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Bluebook (online)
693 F. Supp. 2d 846, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20279, 2010 WL 779490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/irwin-v-city-of-lawrenceburg-indiana-insd-2010.