Jamie Becker v. Zachary Effriechs

821 F.3d 920, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 8703, 2016 WL 2754023
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 12, 2016
Docket15-1363
StatusPublished
Cited by109 cases

This text of 821 F.3d 920 (Jamie Becker v. Zachary Effriechs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jamie Becker v. Zachary Effriechs, 821 F.3d 920, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 8703, 2016 WL 2754023 (7th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

*923 • MANTON, Circuit Judge.

Jamie Becker sued Evansville, Indiana police officer Zachary Elfreich under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging Officer Elfreich used excessive force in arresting him in violation of his Fourth Amendment rights. Becker claimed Officer Elfreich used‘excessive force because, after Becker had surrendered, Officer Elfreich pulled, him down three steps and placed his knee on his back while allowing >a police dog, , to continue, to bite him. . Officer Elfreich moved for summary judgment, arguing he was entitled to qualified immunity because his conduct did not constitute, excessive force or, alternatively, that it did not violate clearly established constitutional law. The district court denied Officer Elfreich’s motion for summary judgment. Officer Elfreich appeals, interlocutorily, arguing that he is entitled to qualified immunity. We conclude that based on the record, Officer Elfreich has not established that he is entitled to qualified immunity.- We affirm and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I.

On March 11, 2011, four Evansville Police Department officers went to the home of Brinda Becker , in order to execute an arrest warrant for her son, Jamie Becker, who was staying at her house at thát time. The arrest warrant alleged that three weeks earlier Becker had held a knife to his brother-in-law’s neck and threatened to Mil him. One of the officers dispatched was Officer Zachary Elfreich,' who was a police dog handler. Officer Elfreich initially guarded the back door of the house with his German Shepherd, Axel, while other officers went to' the front of' the house. While at the rear of the house, Officer Elfreich saw ah individual named Brian Mortis leaving the home. Mortis told Officer Elfreich that Becker was inside the house with his mother and her sister, Delores Pfister.

Meanwhile, at the front of the house officers spoke with Brinda Becker and Pfister, informing them that they had a warrant for Becker’s arrest. Brinda Becker called upstairs to her son that the police were there to arrest him, and then she and Pfister-waited on the front porch. Brinda Becker also told officers that Becker was alone in the house. The officers called Officer Elfreich to the front of the house with Axel, After waiting about 30 seconds and not seeing or hearing Jamie, Officer Elfreich released Axel inside the house and directed the dog to “find him.”

.Officer Elfreich testified that Axel is trained, upon hearing the command “find him,” to use the “bité-and-hold” technique. Officer Elfreich explained that using this technique, Axel will bite the first person he finds, even if that person is not the target of the search and even if the person has surrendered, and hold that, person until Officer Elfreich commands him to release. Officer Elfreich further testified that Axel is capable of inflicting “lethal force” and that there is a probability of him doing so.

According to Officer Elfreich, prior to releasing Axel he gave a loud, clear warning: “Police department K.-9, come- out now or’ I will release my dog and you will get bit.” Officer Elfreich claimed that he listened for a moment and heard nothing so he repeated the warning but after hearing nothing again, he released Axel. Officer Elfreich explained that he unleashed Axel about 30 seconds after he.issued the first warning. Jamie Becker and Brinda Becker both testified that Officer Elfreich did not give a warning. Brinda Becker was on the front porch near the door at the time Officer Elfreich entered- and Jamie Becker explained that he would have heard the warning had one been given because there was a vent M his second-floor .room which was directly above the front door.

*924 Jamie Becker testified in his deposition that at the time the police arrived, he was sleeping upstairs in his bedroom, and upon hearing his mother’s announcement that the police were there to arrest him, he replied he was getting dressed and would be down. He further explained that within two minutes of his mother’s announcement, he began descending the stairs with his hands on top of his head so officers knew he was surrendering. Becker’s girlfriend followed. 1 As they were descending the stairs, Officer Elfreich released Axel. Axel immediately ran from the front door through the house to the stairway and began heading up'the stairs which the duo were then descending. Axel encountered Becker as he reached a landing on the stairs, about three steps from the bottom, and Axel bit Becker’s left ankle. At that point Becker shouted, “Call the dog off. I’m coming towards you.” Officer Elfr-eich, who had lost sight of Axel for the two seconds it took Axel to run from the front door to the stairs, then ran to the stairs, following Becker’s voice. He saw that Axel had bitten Becker’s leg and that Becker had his hands on his head, but did not command Axel to release Becker. Rather, Officer Elfreich ordered Becker to get on the floor. Becker claims he could not hear the command because his girlfriend was screaming. Officer Elfreich then grabbed Becker by his shirt collar and yanked him down the last few steps onto the floor, where he landed hard on his chest and head. .

Becker claims that as Officer Elfreich pulled him .down the steps Axel lost.his grip on his. leg, but upon hitting the ground Axel bit him again harder and then continued to bite him while violently.shaking his head. Becker testified in his .deposition that he lay still on the ground, with his hands behind his back, while Officer Elfreich continued to allow Axel to bite his leg. Becker further explained that Officer Elfi-eich told him that he could not have the dog release him until he was handcuffed. Officer Elfreich placed his knee in Becker’s back, handcuffed him, and only then ordered' Axel to release his grip. Becker was not sure how long Axel bit him, but his girlfriend estimated a few minutes. Either way; Axel severely in-' jured Becker, with Becker’s calf “torn out completely.” Officers transported Becker to a local hospital for treatment. At the hospital, a member of the medical staff told Becker it was the worst dog bite they had seen in twenty-three years. Becker required surgery and remained hospitalized for two or three days. Becker suffered permanent muscle and nerve damage and continues to suffer daily with pain.

Becker later filed suit against both Officer Elfreich and the City of Evansville. While he alleged several federal-and state law claims against the defendants, the only issue on appeal is Becker’s Fourth Amendment excessive force claim against Officer Elfreich. Additionally, while Becker had claimed that Officer Elfreich used excessive force in releasing Axel into the house and directing Axel to bite and hold him, the magistrate judge (hearing the case by consent of the parties) granted Officer Elfi-eich qualified immunity on that claim, and the initial release of Axel is not an issue on appeal. Rather, on appeal is Becker’s claim that after he had surrendered with his hands on his. head, Officer Elfi-eich used excessive force by pulling him down the steps and-placing, his knee on his back while allowing Axel to continue *925 to bite him.

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Bluebook (online)
821 F.3d 920, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 8703, 2016 WL 2754023, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jamie-becker-v-zachary-effriechs-ca7-2016.