Lindell Briscoe v. St. Louis County

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 10, 2026
Docket25-1668
StatusPublished

This text of Lindell Briscoe v. St. Louis County (Lindell Briscoe v. St. Louis County) 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
Lindell Briscoe v. St. Louis County, (8th Cir. 2026).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals For the Eighth Circuit ___________________________

No. 25-1668 ___________________________

Lindell Briscoe, individually; Brittany Arlesia Shamily, individually and as next friend of her minor children; B.M.C.; B.A.S.; B.L.B.D.; B.R.C.B.; B.A.B.

Plaintiffs - Appellants

v.

St. Louis County; Joseph Percich, in his individual capacity

Defendants - Appellees ____________

Appeal from United States District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri - St. Louis ____________

Submitted: January 15, 2026 Filed: April 10, 2026 ____________

Before SMITH, BENTON, and ERICKSON, Circuit Judges. ____________

SMITH, Circuit Judge.

The St. Louis County Police Department’s Tactical Operations Unit (colloquially known as a SWAT team) executed a search warrant at a home in connection with an armed carjacking. As it turns out, the family living at the home had no connection to the carjacking. The family—Lindell Briscoe, Brittany Arlesia, and their five minor children (collectively, Appellants)—sued St. Louis County and Detective Joseph Percich, the author of the search warrant affidavit. The complaint alleged claims related to the search warrant affidavit, the execution of the search warrant, and St. Louis County’s use of its SWAT team to execute search warrants. They also alleged that St. Louis County violated Missouri’s Sunshine Law. The district court 1 granted St. Louis County and Detective Percich’s motion to dismiss Appellants’ claims. Appellants appeal. We affirm.

I. Background One morning, two teenagers leaving a Waffle House restaurant got into their vehicle, a black Dodge Charger. Before they could drive away, two carjackers ordered them out of the Charger at gunpoint. The teenagers complied, and the carjackers drove away in the Charger. Four other individuals who arrived at Waffle House with the carjackers also drove away in two separate vehicles.

St. Louis County police officers responded to the incident and began to investigate. A friend of the victims informed the officers that his Apple AirPods were in the back seat of the stolen vehicle. AirPods have a feature that enables them to be located electronically through the Find My application. Using that feature, the officers believed that the AirPods could be located at 1022 Wylin Court. Accordingly, Detective Percich applied for a search warrant. He submitted the following affidavit with the application:

1. This affiant, Detective Joseph Percich . . . has been a St. Louis County Police Officer for over sixteen years, the last eleven assigned as a detective to the Bureau of Crimes Against Persons. Your affiant also serves as a credentialed Task Force Officer for the Federal Bureau of Investigation, serving on the Violent Crimes Safe Streets Task Force. Your affiant has led numerous complex investigations into various homicides, assaults, police officer-involved shootings and other violent crimes. Your affiant has had vast specialized training regarding the investigation of violent crime.

1 The Honorable Matthew T. Schelp, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri. -2- 2. On Friday, May 26, 2023, at approximately 6:26 AM, police officers . . . responded to the Waffle House, located at 3154 Telegraph Road in St. Louis County, for a report of a First Degree Robbery/Vehicle Hijacking.

3. The victims . . . reported they were at the restaurant to eat breakfast with friends prior to the last day of school at Oakville High School. While the victims ate, a black male in a light blue hooded sweatshirt entered the restaurant and sate [sic] at the counter. The subject then returned to two vehicles in the parking lot. Those vehicles were described as a white Kia passenger car and a silver Chevrolet passenger car.

4. After breakfast, the victims exited the business and entered the vehicle, described as a 2021 Dodge Charger, black in color. The victims were approached by two masked black male suspects. It was reported both suspects displayed firearms, with at least one equipped with a drum magazine. Both suspects provided verbal directives to the victims to exit the vehicle. The suspects entered the vehicle and departed the scene.

5. Video surveillance footage revealed the suspects arrived in the aforementioned silver and white passenger cars. One suspect was dressed in a red hooded sweatshirt. The suspects take possession of the vehicle and flee.

6. A witness and friend to the victims . . . reported his Apple AirPods were inside the Dodge Charger at the time of the vehicle hijacking. [He] assisted investigators by tracking the AirPods using Apple’s “Find My” application. After a short time, the stolen AirPods were determined to be at the residence of 1022 Wylin Court, St. Louis, Missouri 63135.

7. Surveillance was initiated at 1022 Wylin Court.

8. At 8:10 AM . . . patrol officers . . . located the stolen Dodge Charger. The vehicle was occupied by a driver and four passengers. The patrol officers attempted to initiate a felony stop . . . however, the driver fled at a high speed. A vehicle pursuit was initiated.

-3- 9. The pursuit ultimately culminated in the 1700 block of Foley Drive. Two males abandoned the vehicle and fled on foot. Two females also abandoned the vehicle but were immediately taken into custody. The unoccupied stolen Dodge Charger then struck the front of a marked police vehicle.

10. Police officers initiated a foot chase of the two male suspects. Both were taken into custody . . . . In the area along the path of the foot chase, police officers located two pistols with drum magazines and a satchel containing the victim’s property.

11. The driver [and passenger] of the Dodge Charger w[ere] positively identified . . . . [The passenger] was dressed in a red sweatsuit. It appeared as if [the driver] disrobed himself of a gray hooded sweatshirt at the time of the foot chase. The article of clothing was seized as evidence. The female passengers were [also] identified . . . .

12. Detectives conducted a[n] . . . interview of [one of the females]. She reported being presented [sic] with [the other female] and the above [mentioned] males, along with two other unknown males, near the St. Louis Riverfront throughout the overnight hours. The group then went to White Castle for food which was verified by a receipt in [the female’s] possession. She reported the group, occupying a white Kia sedan, then proceeded to Waffle House. [She] reported the male in the red sweatshirt . . . and the male in the blue sweatshirt, whose identity remained unknown, approached the victims and relieved them of the Dodge Charger.

13. [The female] said she remained in the Kia sedan. The occupants of the Kia followed behind the Dodge Charger until reaching a gas station in/near the City of Normandy. While at the gas station, [she] reported the suspects discarded several backpacks from the victim’s Dodge Charger into a green trash can . . . . Based upon the description of the trash can, detectives believed the group stopped at a BP gas station.

14. After departing the gas station, the group separated. [The female] entered the Dodge Charger . . . . [The other female] and the subject in the red sweatshirt . . . were [also] passengers.

-4- 15. Detectives responded to the BP gas station . . . and located three backpacks containing property associated with the robbery victims. . . . Video surveillance footage revealed three vehicles, the Dodge Charger, white Kia and silver Chevrolet sedan arrived and departed in tandem. The occupants of the vehicles appeared to communicate with one another. The vehicles were last seen departing the parking lot northbound on S. Florissant Road, toward Woodstock Road.

16.

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Bluebook (online)
Lindell Briscoe v. St. Louis County, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lindell-briscoe-v-st-louis-county-ca8-2026.