Kameron Evans v. John Dodd

114 F.4th 946
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 15, 2024
Docket22-3290
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 114 F.4th 946 (Kameron Evans v. John Dodd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kameron Evans v. John Dodd, 114 F.4th 946 (8th Cir. 2024).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals For the Eighth Circuit ___________________________

No. 22-3290 ___________________________

Kameron Evans; Noah Evans

Plaintiffs - Appellees

v.

Cabot School District; Tony Thurman, Superintendent; Henry Hawkins, Principal

Defendants

John Dodd, Individually; Brittany Taunton, Individually

Defendants - Appellants ____________

Appeal from United States District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas - Central ____________

Submitted: April 10, 2024 Filed: August 15, 2024 ____________

Before LOKEN, MELLOY, and KOBES, Circuit Judges. ____________

MELLOY, Circuit Judge.

Two high school brothers were arrested for disorderly conduct after wearing tactical vests to school. After an Arkansas state court acquitted the brothers, they brought § 1983 and state tort claims against two school resource officers. The officers moved for summary judgment and asserted they were entitled to qualified immunity, which the district court denied. The officers appeal. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

I.

Kameron and Noah Evans (collectively, the “Evanses”) started attending public school in Cabot, Arkansas when they were 13. Prior to that, the Evanses lived in Cambodia, where they were born. Kameron and Noah have brown skin and allege that, since attending the Cabot School District, they have been bullied and subjected to near-daily name-calling because of their race and ethnicity. For example, the Evanses have been called “terrorists” and told to show their green cards or “go back to where they came from.” In eighth grade, students spread a false rumor about Kameron based on a video of a slim, brown-skinned person burning a flag. As a result, a group of students gathered and threatened Kameron to the point that he had to be escorted to class by a police officer for multiple days following the incident. When the Evanses reported bullying to school officials, the brothers faced more retaliatory bullying from students. They allege the school officials were unresponsive.

During the 2017–18 school year, Kameron openly supported the Black Lives Matter movement and Colin Kaepernick’s decision to kneel during the singing of the National Anthem at football games. Although Kameron himself did not kneel during the National Anthem, he expressed his support on social media. As a result, students again made threats to Kameron. When one of Kameron’s instructors learned of these threats, the instructor reported them to the principal because he was afraid for Kameron’s safety.

That same school year, the Evanses were both cadets in the Cabot High School Air Force Junior Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (“ROTC”). The Evanses participated in ROTC in part because they were enthusiastic about the military and military-related things, including war-related games. The Evanses would play these -2- games with other kids using Airsoft guns, which are plastic toy guns that look real and shoot soft plastic pellets. Airsoft guns and games are geared toward both adults and children.

Defendants are Officers John Dodd and Brittany Taunton (collectively, “Officers”). Officers Dodd and Taunton were school resource officers at Cabot High School during the 2017–18 school year. School resource officers are members of the Cabot Police Department who are assigned to provide security to high schools. The Cabot School District partners with the City of Cabot to employ two-to-four school resource officers each year and cover a portion of the officers’ salaries. The Officers were familiar with the Evanses and had spoken with them on occasions prior to the events giving rise to the instant case.

On February 13, 2018, Kameron and Noah both wore military-style tactical vests to school. Kameron’s vest had a “U.S. Army” patch on it. The parties agree that the vests were not real tactical or military vests, nor were they bulletproof. Kameron’s vest was mostly obscured under a large winter coat he was wearing. Noah did not have his coat on over his vest. Kameron also carried a green duffle bag that he used to carry his ROTC equipment. The Officers describe the bag as a “military-style duffle bag,” but the Evanses dispute that the duffle bag was military- style. Kameron alleges that he regularly used the bag to carry his marching band and ROTC equipment, in addition to his Airsoft war game equipment.

Cabot High School’s assistant principal, Adam Koehler, testified that the Evanses’ vests did not violate the Cabot High School dress code. Indeed, the parties agree that prior to the Evanses wearing their vests to school, at least two white students had worn similar tactical-style vests to school and were not disciplined. One of these students wore a full military uniform including a bullet-proof vest, a nerf gun, and a helmet.

On the day the Evanses wore their vests to school, Cabot High School was screening a video on what to expect and how to respond in the event of an active -3- shooter at school. School officials had notified students and parents a week prior, alerting them to the screening. Kameron and Noah’s mother received a robocall informing her of the video, but the brothers maintain they were unaware of the screening that was taking place that day. Kameron asserts that he did not know the screening was taking place until it started playing in his second-period class. Noah says he was unaware of the video until after he was arrested.

After Kameron’s first period, two students in the class approached the teacher, Ms. Heather Nelson McGhee, to tell her that Kameron was wearing a tactical vest underneath his coat. According to a school incident report written by of one of the students, the students were irritated that Kameron was wearing a vest with military patches affixed to it, including a U.S. Army patch. The Evanses argue that the two students reported Kameron’s vest “because they were mad at him for calling them racist.” It is unclear from the facts whether the two students had safety concerns in mind when they reported Kameron, but Ms. McGhee testified that the two students appeared nervous to tell her about the vest and waited for Kameron to leave before they told her. Based on the students’ report, Ms. McGhee immediately contacted Mr. Koehler out of concern.

After receiving Ms. McGhee’s call, Mr. Koehler contacted Officer Taunton. Mr. Koehler then pulled Kameron from class to discuss his vest and bag. In the hallway, Officer Dodd and Officer Taunton met Mr. Koehler and Kameron. Both Officers’ body cameras recorded the interaction between Mr. Koehler, the Officers, and Kameron. In the school hallway, Officer Dodd asked Kameron to open his coat so he could see the vest. Officer Dodd explained to Kameron that if they thought a student was wearing a Kevlar vest to school, they could infer the student was going to do something wrong. Officer Dodd then explained that, even though he personally knew Kameron, they needed to search his clothes and bag.

Officer Dodd asked Kameron to take off his coat and vest, which Kameron willingly did. Mr. Koehler searched Kameron’s person, while the Officers searched the vest. Mr. Koehler found nothing, and the Officers found no weapons, ballistic -4- panels, or plates in the vest. Mr. Koehler and the Officers then handed the vest and coat back to Kameron, which Kameron held onto but did not put back on. Mr. Koehler then searched Kameron’s green duffle bag. While Mr. Koehler searched the bag, the Officers asked if Kameron could understand how carrying the duffle bag and wearing his vest on the same day as an active-shooter training could cause alarm, and Kameron agreed that he saw how it could.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
114 F.4th 946, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kameron-evans-v-john-dodd-ca8-2024.