Lon Brown v. Daniel Lynch

524 F. App'x 69
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 16, 2013
Docket12-30042
StatusUnpublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 524 F. App'x 69 (Lon Brown v. Daniel Lynch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lon Brown v. Daniel Lynch, 524 F. App'x 69 (5th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

PER CURIAM: *

This is an appeal from a summary judgment dismissing plaintiff Lon Brown’s claims against police officer Daniel Lynch, the city that employed him, and the chief of the city’s police department. Brown alleged that during an investigatory stop outside a convenience store, he was subjected to a wrongful arrest and excessive force, in violation of state and federal law. Defendants moved for summary judgment, which the district court granted. We reverse with respect to Brown’s claims against Officer Lynch concluding that genuine issues of material fact preclude summary judgment for that officer on the basis of qualified immunity. We affirm the summary judgment for the City of Shreveport and former Police Chief Whitehorn, finding no facts in the record to support a claim against either of them.

*71 I. FACTS AND PROCEEDING

A. Facts

During a traffic stop on the evening of August 13, 2009, Shreveport Police Department Officer Daniel Lynch discovered marijuana in the driver’s possession. The driver explained that she had bought the marijuana outside a convenience store on the corner of Pierre Avenue and Garden Street from a dark-skinned black male with long dreadlocks and a short, stocky build. The driver added that she had purchased marijuana twice before from the same man, whom she knew as “Bam Bam,” and that he drove a gold or tan Pontiac Sunfire. To attend to a call of higher priority, Officer Lynch released the driver with a warning and left.

The next day, Officer Lynch advised Cpl. Jon Flores and Officer Leroy Bates of the traffic stop and asked that they remain on the lookout for a gold or tan Sunfire. At about 9:45 p.m. that night, Officer Lynch spotted a gold Pontiac Sunfire parked outside a Fil-A-Sac convenience store on the corner of Pierre Avenue and Garden Street. 1 He observed plaintiff Lon Brown — who roughly fit the physical description obtained the night before — walk away from the general vicinity of the Sun-fire. Officer Lynch requested backup from Cpl. Flores and Officer Bates before parking his patrol car.

Audio and video recordings from that patrol car show the events as they transpired. Officer Lynch walked to the store with Officer Bates, while Cpl. Flores followed just behind. From the store’s threshold, Officer Lynch asked Brown, who was standing inside the store, how he had arrived there. Brown responded that he had driven the gold car parked outside. Officer Lynch asked that Brown follow him outside the store. Brown did so, and once outside, Officer Lynch requested identification and instructed Brown to turn around and place his hands against the wall. Brown obliged both requests, and the officer frisked him for weapons.

At this point, the affiant officers’ presentations of the facts differ substantially from Brown’s and from the objective audio and video- evidence. By the officers’ account, when Brown was informed during the pat-down that he was being stopped on suspicion of selling drugs, he denied involvement and began “cussing loudly and reacting to [ ] questions in a hostile manner.” Asked if he drove the gold Sunfire parked on the side of the store, Brown answered in the negative and told Officer Lynch that he drove a gold Lexus instead. Officer Lynch concluded the pat-down and instructed Brown to walk toward the patrol car. As the three officers and the suspect walked, Brown “became belligerent and turned towards [Officer Lynch] in an aggressive manner, shaking his finger in [Lynch’s] face.” Officer Lynch grabbed Brown’s arm and “directed him” toward the outer wall of the convenience store, where Brown grabbed the store window’s burglar bars and, despite orders to place his hands behind his back, continued to clench the bars. As the officers struggled to place Brown’s right hand behind his back, Cpl. Flores saw Brown’s left hand move toward the front waistband of his pants. Fearing that he might be reaching for a weapon, Flores threw a “distraction strike” to Brown’s face. When Brown did not then release the bars and place his hands behind his back, Officer Lynch struck Brown in the face two more times, causing Brown to release the bars.

Officers Lynch and Bates brought Brown to the ground immediately in front of the patrol car. Brown continued to *72 resist, so Officer Lynch struck Brown three more times to force Brown to submit and place his hands behind his back. Once Officers Lynch and Bates were able to secure Brown’s hands, Cpl. Flores cuffed them. Brown was searched, placed in the back of Officer Lynch’s patrol car, and taken to the Shreveport City Jail, where he was booked for resisting an officer, in violation of La. R.S. § 14:108. 2

From the time of the frisk, Brown’s version of the events, .supported in great part by the audio and video evidence, presents a different story. 3 While frisking Brown, Officer Lynch informed the suspect: “Reason I stopped you today is we got numerous complaints that you’re selling drugs.” Brown responded: “You ain’t got no complaint; I ain’t selling no fucking drugs.” The volume of his voice was not unusual for a direct denial of criminal activity. Officer Lynch replied: “You can lose the attitude: I’m stopping you now and letting you know why I’m stopping you, you understand?” Brown again responded: “You ain’t got no complaint about me selling no drugs.” A loud police radio renders the next several seconds of discourse inaudible, but from what we can tell, Brown had not raised his voice. The conversation again becomes audible with Officer Lynch, still frisking Brown, asking Brown whether he drove a gold Sunfire. Brown denied doing so, insisting that he drove the gold Lexus parked in the lot.

At that time, Officer Lynch concluded the pat-down, which appears to have taken about 60 seconds and produced no weapons or evidence of illegal activity. Lynch instructed Brown to walk with the officers toward the police car. Brown complied, removing his hands from the wall and walking a few steps ahead of the officers. While he walked, Brown mumbled something inaudible on the tape that ignited Officer Lynch, 4 who shouted: “Hey, let me tell you something, bro. Look at me. Look at me. You can lose that fucking attitude.” Brown then turned to face the officer, as he was instructed. Despite Officer Lynch’s contention that Brown was “aggressive” and “belligerent,” Brown actually can be seen taking a step backward when he began to challenge the officer’s accusations, insisting “you don’t have to tell me about selling no drugs.” What Officer Lynch described as Brown’s “shaking his finger in my face” was in fact Brown’s repeatedly pointing downward in emphasis. His finger appears to have been no closer than 18-24 inches from Officer Lypch’s face, never at eye level, and never pointed at the officer.

At this point, the video depicts Officer Lynch grabbing Brown’s right arm and turning him counterclockwise against the wall and, incidentally, out of view of the camera. The other officers then closed in around Brown and, for the next twenty seconds, moved in and out of the camera’s view.

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Bluebook (online)
524 F. App'x 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lon-brown-v-daniel-lynch-ca5-2013.