Keith v. Griffiths

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedApril 30, 2024
Docket1:22-cv-01809
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Keith v. Griffiths, (N.D. Ohio 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO EASTERN DIVISION

Rita Keith, as Administrator of the ) CASE NO.1:22 CV 1809 Estate of Arthur Keith, Deceased, ) and Individually as the Natural Parent ) and Mother of Arthur Keith, ) JUDGE PATRICIA A. GAUGHAN Plaintiff ) vs. ) ) ) James Griffiths, ) Memorandum of Opinion and Order Defendant. ) Introduction This matter is before the Court upon defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment. (Doc. 78). This case arises from the fatal shooting of Arthur Keith by defendant. For the following reasons, the motion is GRANTED. Facts Plaintiff Rita Keith, as Administrator of the Estate of Arthur Keith, Deceased, and Individually as the Natural Parent and Mother of Arthur Keith, filed this Complaint against defendant James Griffiths, in his individual capacity and capacity as an employee of the 1 Cuyahoga Metropolitan Housing Authority. The Complaint alleges that plaintiff’s son, Arthur Keith (“Keith”), was shot and killed on November 13, 2020, by defendant, an officer with the Cuyahoga Metropolitan Housing Authority Police Department (“CMHA PD”), at the King Kennedy Housing Complex located in Cuyahoga County, Ohio.

The undisputed facts establish that defendant has been employed as a police officer with the CMHA PD since 1992. On November 12, 2020, CMHA PD received a call from a male reporting that a black van with tinted windows, suspected of being involved in the recent discharge of a firearm and illegal activity, was parked in a parking lot near 6201 Haltnorth, a CMHA property.1 Officers were dispatched to the location, but the van was not located. On November 13, 2020, CMHA PD received another call, believed to be from the same male who had called the previous day, again reporting that a black van with tinted windows, suspected of being involved in illegal activity, was parked in the same parking lot. CMHA PD Officers Robert Lenz and defendant and Sergeant Paul Styles responded to the call.

(CMHA PD Chief of Police Andres Gonzalez decl.). Defendant arrived on the scene, followed by Sergeant Styles and Officer Lenz. Defendant proceeded to the front, passenger side of the vehicle. The other officers went to the opposite side. A male, later identified as Keith, exited on the passenger side. Styles and Lenz heard defendant yell that Keith had a gun. Then they heard gunshots. Keith ran a short distance and fell to the ground. Styles arrived first to his prone body and observed a gun which was then secured, photographed, and examined by the Cuyahoga County Regional Forensic Science Laboratory. The DNA on the gun matched only Keith’s DNA.

1 Audio of the dispatch calls has been filed. (Doc. 77). 2 Members of the Cleveland Division of Police Use of Deadly Force Investigation Team (“UDFIT”) responded to the scene and interviewed Sergeant Styles and Officer Lenz. They then did further investigation, including follow-up interviews and an interview of the defendant. Styles told the UDFIT that he received a call for a male suspect with a firearm in

the area of 6201 Haltnorth in a vehicle with an out-of-state plate. He spotted the vehicle in the parking lot. Defendant and Officer Lenz also arrived on the scene. Styles was at the rear of the suspect vehicle while defendant was at the front. Styles heard defendant yell, “Drop the gun, drop the gun!” Styles heard several gunshots, but did not know who fired the shots. He saw the suspect run south and then west through the courtyard. All three officers pursued the suspect on foot. When Styles rounded the corner, he saw the suspect lying supine on the ground. The suspect’s Glock model 19 was on the ground near the suspect’s right hand. After observing that the suspect had been shot, Styles notified CMHA radio to send EMS and additional units. Defendant secured the suspect’s firearm. (Doc. 81 Ex. 2).

Styles provided a videotaped interview to the UDFIT on December 11, 2020. A summary of the interview provides that Styles stated he was closer to the back of the van when he heard defendant state, “He’s got a gun!”2 Styles heard gunshots, a slight pause, and more gunshots. Styles did not see who was shooting. Styles then saw Keith lying prone on the ground near a tree stump. Styles ran over to Keith and saw a black firearm on the ground near Keith’s right hand. After requesting EMS, and finding no pulse on Keith, defendant secured the firearm which looked like a Glock with an extended magazine. Lenz started

2 Upon viewing the videotaped interview, Sgt. Styles said that he heard defendant say, “Stop, don’t move, gun.” This was followed by multiple shots. 3 administering first aid, and residents began arriving on the scene who were hostile towards the police officers. (Doc. 81 Ex. 11). Styles testified at a deposition that when he walked up to the vehicle he did not see Keith holding a gun, did not see Keith pointing a gun at defendant, and did not see a gun

when he was chasing Keith. (Styles depo. at 84). Styles also submitted a declaration with the Motion for Summary Judgment. He states that he arrived on the scene after defendant and before Lenz. The van was backed into the parking spot and was running. Just behind the back bumper of the van was a sidewalk. Defendant’s vehicle was stopped beyond the passenger side of the van which had tinted windows. Defendant approached the van from the passenger side and Styles from the driver’s side. Lenz was behind Styles. Once they confirmed no one was in the driver’s seat or front passenger seat, Styles moved toward the backseat. It was difficult to see because of the tinted windows, but Styles could see a silhouette of a person in the back passenger side move

forward. The van had a sliding door and it was opening. He heard defendant say, “Stop, don’t move” and “gun.” He then heard shots fired but could not see who had fired or if someone had been shot. As he was making his way around the van toward the other side, defendant yelled, “He has a gun, he has a gun.” Styles did not see a suspect, but then looked down the sidewalk and saw a male wearing blue running toward 6201 Haltnorth. Styles started to run after him, but lost sight of him as he rounded the corner. When he peered around the corner of the building, Styles saw the suspect on the ground in front of 6201 Haltnorth by a tree. Styles was the first to reach the suspect where he had fallen and observed his gun on the ground a

few inches from his right hand. Defendant arrived next and also saw the gun. The two secured 4 the suspect in handcuffs and when Styles realized he had been shot, he called EMS. Lenz arrived and administered aid. A very angry and hostile crowd gathered quickly. While Styles watched the crowd, defendant secured the gun. (Styles decl.) The on-scene statement that Officer Lenz provided to the UDFIT stated that defendant

and Styles were the first to arrive on scene. Lenz exited the zone car and walked up to the suspect vehicle. He heard defendant yell, “Drop the gun, drop the gun!” He then heard several gunshots, but did not know who fired the shots. He saw the suspect run south and then west through the courtyard. All three officers pursued the suspect who he then saw lying supine in the courtyard and not responding to verbal commands. First aid was administered. (Doc. 81 Ex. 2). Lenz’s December 11, 2020 videotaped interview stated that he heard defendant yell “show me your hands,” and that “moments later gunshots happened.” (Doc. 82). Lenz testified at deposition that he first saw Keith when he was fleeing and he did not

see him with a gun. (Lenz depo. at 59). In his declaration, Lenz states that defendant arrived first on the scene, followed by Styles, and then himself. The van had very dark tinted windows and the officers were unable to see inside, even with the spotlight. Defendant approached the van from the passenger side and Styles approached from the driver’s side.

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Keith v. Griffiths, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keith-v-griffiths-ohnd-2024.