Lee v. Metropolitan Government of Nashville

596 F. Supp. 2d 1101, 78 Fed. R. Serv. 592, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6030, 2009 WL 211051
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 26, 2009
DocketCase 3:06-0108
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 596 F. Supp. 2d 1101 (Lee v. Metropolitan Government of Nashville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee v. Metropolitan Government of Nashville, 596 F. Supp. 2d 1101, 78 Fed. R. Serv. 592, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6030, 2009 WL 211051 (M.D. Tenn. 2009).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

ALETA A. TRAUGER, District Judge.

A substantial number of motions are pending before the court in this case, which concerns a police altercation involving tasers and the subsequent death of a twenty-one-year-old man outside of a Nashville, Tennessee nightclub on September 22, 2005. First, all ten police officer-defendants in this case have moved for summary judgment. Five officer-defendants (Fisher, Mays, Pinkelton, Scott, and Wright) have moved for summary judgment in one motion (Docket No. 232), and the other five officer-defendants (Cregan, Mallery, Smith, Scruggs, and Brooks) have moved for summary judgment via their own, independent motions. (Docket Nos. 241, 248, 255, 272, and 309, respectively.) Additionally, Cregan, Mallery, and Smith have moved to dismiss the plaintiffs’ state-law negligence claim (Count IX) as to them. (Docket Nos. 238, 245, and 252, respectively.) Further, Fisher, Mays, Pinkelton, Scott, Wright, and Brooks have filed motions to exclude two of the plaintiffs’ proffered experts, Ernest Burwell and Roger Clark. (Docket Nos. 221, 223, and 308.) Also, Fisher, Mays, Pinkelton, Scott, Wright, Brooks, and Scruggs have filed a motion to strike various documents filed by the plaintiffs in the course of summary judgment briefing, a motion joined by defendant Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County (“Metro”). (Docket Nos. 411, 413, 427, 438, and 442.) Metro has also moved for summary judgment. (Docket No. 279.)

Defendant Taser International, Inc., (“Taser”) has filed a motion for summary judgment (Docket No 259) and motions to exclude the plaintiffs’ proffered causation experts and failure-to-warn expert. (Docket Nos. 275 and 289.) Finally, Taser has filed its own motion to strike various documents that the plaintiffs filed in the *1107 course of their summary judgment briefing. (Docket No. 436.) For their part, the plaintiffs have filed a motion to re-open discovery and to compel as to Taser (Docket No. 414) and a motion for leave to manually file CDs. (Docket No. 447.)

For the reasons discussed below: (1) the motions to dismiss of Cregan, Mallery, and Smith will be granted; (2) the summary judgment motions of seven individual officer-defendants (Fisher, Pinkelton, Scott, Wright, Brooks, Mallery, and Smith) will be granted, and the summary judgment motions of the other three officer-defendants (Mays, Scruggs, and Cregan) will be granted in part and denied in part; (3) the officer-defendants’ and Metro’s motion to strike will be denied as moot, along with the plaintiffs’ motion to manually file CDs; (4) the motions to exclude Burwell and Clark will be denied; (5) Metro’s motion for summary judgment will be granted in part and denied in part; and, finally, (6) Taser’s motion for summary judgment will be granted, its remaining motions denied as moot, and the plaintiffs’ motion to reopen discovery and to compel denied.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

This case involves the death of twenty-one-year-old Patrick Lee, who died following an altercation with Nashville police officers outside of the Mercy Lounge nightclub in Nashville, Tennessee on September 22, 2005. 1

A. The Incident

On the night of the 22nd, Lee was attending a concert at the Mercy Lounge, and owners of the club asked Lee to leave for repeatedly getting too close to the stage and generally acting strangely in the club. Once Lee was removed from the club, club owner Chark Kinsolving and a bouncer known as “Big Rob” tried to talk to Lee and move him away from the club. During this interaction, Lee acted strangely, laughing and yelling incoherently, flipping his shoes off and then putting them back on, talking about the sky, and walking in circles, among other strange, but not aggressive, behavior. After repeated efforts to get Lee to leave the area around the Mercy Lounge, Kinsolving became tired of Lee’s antics and called the Metro Nashville Police Department and asked them to send an officer out to help with Lee’s removal from the premises.

The first officer to arrive on the scene was officer-defendant Brooks, who arrived shortly after 11:30 p.m. Brooks and his civilian rider pulled up to the scene and were immediately approached at their car by Lee, who was in front of the club. Brooks got out of his car and asked Lee what was going on, and Lee pointed to the sky. When Brooks again asked what was going on, Lee kneeled down and pointed to the ground. Brooks asked for identification, which Lee provided. Lee continued to act strangely, however, stating that his name was “Blue.” After this, Lee began walking toward Brooks. Brooks held out his arm indicating that Lee should stop, but Lee walked into Brooks’ hand. In response, Brooks asked Lee to put his hands behind his back, which Lee did. *1108 But, when Brooks’ hand touched Lee’s hand, Lee reacted, jerking away, turning around, ripping his shirt off and moving toward Brooks. Perceiving these maneuvers as aggressive, Brooks pepper-sprayed Lee. After he was pepper-sprayed, Lee began running away from Brooks, back into the parking lot of the club, with Brooks in pursuit. Lee disregarded Brooks’ repeated commands to get on the ground. During this “chase” through a contained, outdoor parking area, Lee stopped and took off all of his remaining clothes and began running through the parking lot naked, in between cars, with Brooks continuing his pursuit. At some point during this pursuit, Brooks radioed for other officers. A group of officers, including officer-defendants Cregan, Mallery, and Smith, were at the “Tiger Mart” nearby and responded to Brooks’ radio request for assistance.

At 11:37:44 p.m., officer-defendant Mays, an officer certified by Metro to carry and operate a taser device, entered the parking lot armed with his department-issued Taser X-26, which is a product manufactured by defendant Taser. 2 Mays and Brooks were joined six seconds later by officer-defendant Scott. At or a few seconds before 11:38:00 p.m., Mays, unable to immediately gain compliance from Lee using voice commands, deployed his first taser cartridge, meaning that, by activation of a trigger on the taser device, Mays released two probes from the taser in the direction of Lee. These probes are tethered by wires that conduct an electrical charge, so that, when the probes attach to the person, an electrical charge is passed down the wires, to the probes, and to the person through the probes, the shock of which is designed to incapacitate the person for a brief period of about five seconds. As long as the probes remain attached to the person, subsequent or sustained trigger pulls of the taser device will deliver the same or continued shock to the target. Mays’ first activation of the device, as intended, incapacitated Lee, who fell to the ground and ended up flat, partially under a parked Mustang, near a parked Jeep.

After Lee went down, Brooks and Scott began scuffling with Lee, in an effort to get him handcuffed. While they were able to get one handcuff on Lee, Lee broke away from them and started evading the officers again, ignoring Brooks’ verbal commands to stop.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
596 F. Supp. 2d 1101, 78 Fed. R. Serv. 592, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6030, 2009 WL 211051, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-metropolitan-government-of-nashville-tnmd-2009.