Jeffrey Saunders v. Cuyahoga Metro. Housing Authority

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 23, 2019
Docket18-3119
StatusUnpublished

This text of Jeffrey Saunders v. Cuyahoga Metro. Housing Authority (Jeffrey Saunders v. Cuyahoga Metro. Housing Authority) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jeffrey Saunders v. Cuyahoga Metro. Housing Authority, (6th Cir. 2019).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 19a0200n.06

No. 18-3119

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

FILED JEFFREY SAUNDERS, ) Apr 23, 2019 ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) v. ) ON APPEAL FROM THE ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT CUYAHOGA METROPOLITAN HOUSING ) COURT FOR THE AUTHORITY, et al., ) NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ) OHIO Defendants ) ) OFFICER HARUN ABDUL-ALI, ) ) Defendant-Appellant. )

BEFORE: SILER, SUTTON, and WHITE, Circuit Judges.

HELENE N. WHITE, Circuit Judge.

Defendant-Appellant Officer Harun Abdul-Ali (Officer Ali) appeals the district court’s

denial of his motion for summary judgment based on qualified immunity in this action arising from

his use of a taser and pepper spray on Plaintiff-Appellee Jeffrey Saunders (Saunders). We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND1

Officer Ali is a police officer for the Cuyahoga Metropolitan Housing Authority Police

Department (CMHA PD). During the afternoon of January 20, 2014, he was dispatched to Unit

1 In considering Officer Ali’s motion for summary judgment, the district court was required to view the evidence and draw all reasonable factual inferences in favor of Saunders. Accordingly, we recite Saunders’s version of the facts, except where otherwise noted. No. 18-3119, Saunders v. Cuyahoga Metro. Hous. Auth. et al.

612 of an apartment complex to respond to a noise complaint. Saunders, a custodian at the

apartment complex, was inside Unit 612 delivering a soda to the tenant’s sister, Jamila Williams

(Williams), when Officer Ali arrived. There was no music playing, nor was the TV on. When

Saunders opened the door, Officer Ali asked where the leaseholder was. Saunders identified

himself as the custodian of the apartment complex, told Officer Ali that the leaseholder was not in

the apartment, and asked what was going on. Officer Ali then asked to enter the apartment, which

Williams and Saunders allowed, and requested identification from Williams and Saunders.

Williams did not have identification but provided Officer Ali with identifying information and

informed Officer Ali that she was the leaseholder’s sister. As Williams was providing Officer Ali

her information, Saunders attempted to show his driver’s license to Officer Ali, who gestured for

Saunders to wait. Saunders tried again, but again Officer Ali motioned for him to wait, so Saunders

put his driver’s license back into his jacket.

Once Officer Ali finished with Williams, he turned to Saunders, cracked his knuckles and

rolled his head around—“as if he was preparing for combat”—and asked for Saunders’s

identification. (R. 61 at 162, 166.) Saunders asked why Officer Ali was trying to intimidate him,

and Officer Ali responded that he was going to call his supervisor. Saunders then placed his hands

in his pockets while waiting for Officer Ali’s supervisor to arrive. Officer Ali told Saunders to

remove his hands from his pockets and to come towards him. Saunders responded by placing his

hands in the air. Saunders did not move toward Officer Ali because “[a]fter [Officer Ali was]

cracking his knuckles and rolling his head around, the way his aggression was going on, I didn’t

need to have anything to do with Officer Ali at that time.” (R. 61 at 164, 199.) He said to Officer

Ali, “I am not going to come over there towards you[;] I don’t need to come over there towards

you, Officer.” (Id. at 199.) According to the dispatch log, Officer Ali reported a “male claiming

-2- No. 18-3119, Saunders v. Cuyahoga Metro. Hous. Auth. et al.

to be maintenance refusing to show ID,” and, three minutes later, a “male refusing to give ID and

take his hands out of his pockets.” (R. 62-5, PID 1093, 1097-1098.)

Saunders was standing in the entryway by the door, looking down. When he looked up,

Officer Ali was holding his taser. Saunders asked, “Well what are you going to do with that?” (R.

61 at 178.) Officer Ali gave no additional commands. Saunders decided to put his hands down

and turn around to open the door; when he did, Officer Ali deployed his taser, striking Saunders

in the right shoulder and lower waist of his jacket. The taser had no impact on Saunders, however,

likely because he was wearing a thick jacket. Saunders proceeded into the hallway with Officer

Ali following and deploying his taser. Officer Ali did not command Saunders to stop. As Saunders

was walking through the hallway, Officer Ali pulled out his pepper spray and began spraying it at

Saunders. Saunders called for help and knocked on neighbors’ doors before being allowed inside

Unit 616 by the tenant, Hoover Wilson (Wilson).

Officer Ali asked for permission to enter Wilson’s apartment but was denied. A few

minutes later, without commanding him to exit the unit, two other officers, Officer Reynolds and

Officer Collins, entered Wilson’s unit and approached Saunders. Saunders put his hands out and

was handcuffed. At that point, Officer Ali entered the apartment and drive stunned Saunders with

his taser.2 Saunders asked, “Why is he tasering me?” (Id. at 213.) Officer Reynolds then

instructed Officer Ali to “[s]uspend tasing.” (Id.) The officers pulled Saunders out of Wilson’s

apartment and laid him face down on the carpet in front of Wilson’s door. Although Saunders was

not resisting, Officer Ali drive stunned Saunders several more times while the officers were giving

2 Sergeant James Neal stated in his declaration that “[a] drive stun is a secondary function of the taser that delivers an isolated shock, similar to a bee sting, where the taser contacts the body. A drive stun does not incapacitate a suspect but is for pain compliance.” (R. 62-5, PID 1093-94.) Saunders testified that the drive stuns he received were not like a bee sting; rather, he felt like he was being shocked, and they caused him to jolt.

-3- No. 18-3119, Saunders v. Cuyahoga Metro. Hous. Auth. et al.

commands and Saunders was saying, “You got me cuffed, you got me cuffed. Please tell him to

stop. Please tell him to stop.” (Id. at 214, 229-34.)

A video recorded a twenty-five-second span near the end of this encounter. The video

shows four officers in a hallway. Two of the officers are bending down, and two are standing.

The officers are tending to Saunders, who is on the ground and not visible in the video. The

officers are talking, but it is not clear what they are saying. What is clear is Saunders screaming,

“You got me cuffed. You got me cuffed. Please tell him to stop it.” One of the officers then

calmly tells Saunders to “roll on your side, facing me. Roll on your side.” Saunders replies

frantically, “Which way, left or right?” and states that he works in the building as a custodian. An

officer then says in a louder voice, “Relax.” Saunders responds, “I’ve been relaxed.” An officer

then yells, “Hands down, head down.” The video cuts off shortly thereafter.

CMHA PD ran a report on Officer Ali’s taser, which indicated that Officer Ali fired his

taser thirteen times. Eight firings occurred within forty-six seconds; four minutes later, five firings

occurred within one minute and eighteen seconds.

Saunders was charged with assault, burglary, and obstructing official business. The

burglary charge was dismissed, and Saunders was found not guilty of assault, but guilty of

obstructing official business. That conviction was reversed on appeal because “the trial court []

committed reversible error by failing to conduct a Batson hearing and allowing the state to explain

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