Marion v. City of Corydon, Indiana

559 F.3d 700, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 6094, 2009 WL 735959
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 23, 2009
Docket08-2592
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 559 F.3d 700 (Marion v. City of Corydon, Indiana) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marion v. City of Corydon, Indiana, 559 F.3d 700, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 6094, 2009 WL 735959 (7th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

FLAUM, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff Trent Marion brought this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the City of Louisville, the City of Corydon, the City of New Albany, the County of Harrison, and several officers from those jurisdictions and from the Indiana State Police. He alleged that the law enforcement officers and government entities violated his Fourth Amendment rights by using excessive force against him in connection with a police pursuit and subsequent shooting. All defendants, except the City of Louisville and its unknown officers, filed motions for summary judgment. Defendants supported their motions with affidavits and with video and audio recordings. Marion offered no counter-affidavit and pointed to no evidence that would call into question defendants’ submissions. Finding no triable issue of fact, the district court granted summary judgment for all named defendants. Marion appealed, and we now affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment.

I. Background

A. Facts

The facts presented here are taken from the affidavits of law enforcement officers and other witnesses to the police chase, as well as from video and audio evidence of the chase.

On January 20, 2006, police officers approached Marion on suspicion of shoplifting as he was leaving a Kroger grocery in Louisville, Kentucky. When approached, Marion admitted that he had hidden grocery items in and around a baby in an infant seat that Marion had placed in the grocery cart he was pushing. As officers escorted Marion to the store’s loss prevention office, he grabbed the infant seat, *702 pushed one officer aside, and bolted out of the store.

The police officers and store personnel followed Marion outside to the parking lot, where Marion ran to a red 1993 Ford Explorer. After tossing the baby seat, with the baby in it, into the front seat on the passenger side, Marion attempted to enter and start the vehicle. A scuffle ensued between Marion and the Louisville police officers on the scene. During the scuffle, a Kroger employee managed to grab the baby seat and remove the baby from the vehicle.

Louisville Police Officer Michael Alvey attempted to use his taser to subdue Marion, but Marion reached out and twisted the taser cartridge so that it would not fire. He backed his vehicle out of the parking space with a door open, collided with another vehicle, and fled. As Marion fled the parking lot, Alvey pursued immediately in his police car. Marion led Alvey and other Louisville police units on a high speed chase through the streets of Louisville to Interstate 64.

Marion continued on 1-64 into Indiana. As he entered Indiana, Louisville dispatchers alerted law enforcement agencies in Indiana to the chase. New Albany, Indiana Police Captain Rick Denny received a radio dispatch alert that Louisville police were pursuing an armed robbery suspect westbound on 1-64. Denny pulled into a turn-around area in the median near mile marker 120. Almost immediately, he observed Marion in his Ford Explorer traveling west in excess of 80 miles per hour. He observed several Louisville police cars in pursuit with emergency lights and sirens activated. Denny joined the chase. Because he was the first Indiana officer to join, Denny eventually took over the lead car position in the pursuit. Other officers from Corydon and Harrison County joined in the pursuit, and the Louisville officers dropped back. The video taken with a camera mounted on the dashboard of Denny’s police cruiser shows Marion’s reckless driving at high speed. As the miles ticked by, Marion’s vehicle started to emit smoke.

At approximately mile marker 113, a Harrison County Sheriffs deputy in the highway median deployed “stop sticks” in an effort to deflate the tires on Marion’s Explorer. Marion swerved to try to avoid them. The stop sticks damaged and deflated three tires, but Marion continued to drive. He slowed from approximately 80 miles per hour to about 40 miles per hour and swerved from one side of the highway to the other, eventually returning to the left lane. Debris from the shredding tires and from the Explorer began falling in the path of the pursuing police units. Different police cars pulled to the side of Marion to observe him and, in at least one instance, to signal him to pull over. The police maneuvered to block Marion from taking any exit he passed.

As the pursuit approached mile marker 105 and the Corydon exit, officers attempted to deflate the one rear tire that had survived the first set of stop sticks. Several law enforcement vehicles were parked in the median with officers outside their cars, weapons drawn and stop sticks deployed. As Marion approached the stop sticks, he swerved and drove toward several of the officers in the median area and then back into the left lane, avoiding the stop sticks. Soon thereafter, Louisville police officers pulled completely out of the chase and headed back to Kentucky.

Denny, who still was the lead pursuing officer, then coordinated over the radio a rolling roadblock on Marion. One police vehicle pulled ahead of Marion (driven by Officer James Sadler) and another pulled alongside him in the other lane (driven by Captain Brad Shepard) in an attempt to “box in” the Explorer and gradually force *703 it off the road. For a minute or so, Marion attempted numerous maneuvers to avoid the rolling roadblock. He tried to pass between the police vehicles and swung his Explorer back toward Denny, making some contact. Eventually, he tried to pull around Sadler on the shoulder to Sadler’s left. Sadler stuck his rifle out the driver’s window of his vehicle and fired four shots at Marion’s vehicle in a further effort to disable it.

Near mile marker 103, Marion slowed and then suddenly turned hard to the left into the grass median toward the eastbound lanes of the interstate, where traffic was slowing or stopped. The highway median was wet and muddy, but Marion continued to drive his Explorer toward the eastbound lanes. The Explorer slowed as he tried to cross. Officers moved on foot to surround the Explorer, and they fired them initial shots at Marion. Just as the muddy median and initial shots seemed to be bringing Marion’s vehicle to a halt, he put the Explorer into reverse and revved the engine, causing the tires to spray mud, and the Explorer moved back several feet. This maneuver scattered the officers who were approaching the Explorer from the rear. Officer Kevin Taylor, a Harrison County Sheriffs Deputy, was behind the Explorer. He and other officers yelled for Marion to stop. When Marion did not stop, Taylor fired six rounds at the Explorer as it backed toward him. As more officers approached and demanded that Marion stop and raise his hands, Marion shifted back into a forward gear and continued revving the engine to move forward. Lieutenant Roy Wiseman of the Harrison County Sheriffs Department and other officers were positioned directly in front of the Explorer. They began firing at it when it moved toward them and toward the eastbound lanes of the interstate.

All affidavits from officers who fired their weapons when Marion was in the median testified that they did so in fear of lethal danger to themselves or to others.

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559 F.3d 700, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 6094, 2009 WL 735959, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marion-v-city-of-corydon-indiana-ca7-2009.