Mark Petersen v. Stefanie Pedersen

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 10, 2025
Docket24-1206
StatusPublished

This text of Mark Petersen v. Stefanie Pedersen (Mark Petersen v. Stefanie Pedersen) 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
Mark Petersen v. Stefanie Pedersen, (7th Cir. 2025).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ No. 24-1206 MARK PETERSEN, Plaintiff-Appellant, v.

STEFANIE PEDERSEN, Defendant-Appellee. ____________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin. No. 1:22-cv-00684 — William C. Griesbach, Judge. ____________________

ARGUED SEPTEMBER 25, 2024 — DECIDED JUNE 10, 2025 ____________________

Before SCUDDER, KIRSCH, and MALDONADO, Circuit Judges. MALDONADO, Circuit Judge. Mark Petersen sued Deputy Stefanie Pedersen under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that she falsely arrested him for drunk driving and unlawfully drew his blood. The district court granted Deputy Pedersen’s mo- tion for summary judgment on both claims and also granted her qualified immunity. We affirm, concluding that probable cause supported the arrest, the blood draw was taken 2 No. 24-1206

pursuant to a valid search warrant, and, regardless, that Dep- uty Pedersen is entitled to qualified immunity. BACKGROUND I. Facts The following facts are undisputed by the parties and cor- roborated by video footage. At the summary judgment stage, we state these facts as favorably to Mr. Petersen as the record permits. Smith v. Crounse Corp., 72 F.4th 799, 804 (7th Cir. 2023). On the evening of December 27, 2018, Deputy Stephanie Pedersen of the Winnebago County Sherriff’s Office was dis- patched to a reported car crash outside a home in rural Wis- consin. An unidentified caller reported hearing a crash, look- ing outside, and seeing a car immobilized in a residential driveway. While the caller neither witnessed the crash nor saw who was driving the car, they observed a man loitering near the car. Deputy Pedersen arrived at the scene approximately fif- teen minutes after the 911 call was placed. She immediately observed tire marks running through the residence’s front yard and broken tree branches scattered on the ground. As she pulled into the driveway, her squad car stopped in front of the disabled car, where Mr. Petersen was hunched over, at- tempting to change its front-passenger tire. Five adults, either residents or guests at the home, stood nearby as Mr. Petersen, unsteady on his feet, nearly toppled over while torquing the lug nuts with a crowbar. Deputy Pedersen ran the car’s license plates and learned that it was registered to Mark Petersen. Mr. Petersen was no stranger to Deputy Pedersen or the local sheriff’s office. No. 24-1206 3

Generally, he had established a reputation for being uncoop- erative during law enforcement encounters. He had three prior charges for operating a vehicle while intoxicated (OWI), see WIS. STAT. § 346.63(1), which triggered a .002 g/100 mL blood alcohol concentration (BAC) restriction on his driver’s license. Deputy Pedersen had arrested Mr. Petersen on a pre- vious occasion and recognized him as the man changing the car’s tire. Additionally, dispatch informed her that Mr. Pe- tersen’s driver’s license and license plates were currently sus- pended. After receiving this information, Deputy Pedersen stepped out of her car and approached Mr. Petersen. Immedi- ately, he began wandering away from her. He first walked to- wards the back of his car, creating a buffer between him and Deputy Pedersen, and then suddenly rushed away from the car and through the residence’s front yard, ignoring her re- peated commands that he “Stop!” He did not make it far, however, because Deputy Pedersen quickly grabbed him by the arm. Once caught, Mr. Petersen acknowledged Deputy Peder- sen’s presence for the first time, asking in a noticeably slurred voice, “you talkin’ to me?” Deputy Pedersen confirmed that she was and asked him what happened that night. He re- sponded, “I was just coming here to get my motor vehicle, what’s going on with you?” She repeated her question, and he answered, “I said, my daughter, she’s called me out here. Came out here to fix the tire. You guys know anything about that or are you all good?” After answering, he attempted to escape Deputy Pedersen’s grip, but she took hold of his arm again and repeated her warning that he stop resisting. 4 No. 24-1206

Deputy Pedersen continued her questioning, asking how his car ended up in the driveway, to which Mr. Petersen slowly answered, “My … daughter’s … down here.” Deputy Pedersen probed where his daughter was (since she was not on the scene), and he saucily countered, “I don’t know, where’s your daughter?” When Deputy Pedersen pressed him on who was driving his car that night, he again blamed his daughter, “Trisha,” and explained, “I don’t drive any- thing. I took … the front road, like she’ll drive me right here … like I don't drive. I don’t drive anymore.” Deputy Pedersen then turned to the bystanders and asked if Mr. Petersen was the only person they saw near the car, and they responded affirmatively. At this point, Deputy Pedersen handcuffed and formally arrested Mr. Petersen for drunk driving. Other offic- ers had arrived by now and assisted in the arrest. Several factors led to Deputy Pedersen’s belief that she had probable cause to arrest Mr. Petersen for OWI. First, the tire tracks through the grass, downed branches, and flat tire suggested that the car had been pulled off the road in an er- ratic manner. Second, upon making contact with Mr. Pe- tersen, she detected a strong odor of intoxicants and noticed his eyes were glassy and bloodshot. She also observed his slurred speech and lack of balance, swaying from side-to-side as he stood. Based on her specialized drug recognition train- ing, these characteristics were consistent with intoxication. Third, based on her past familiarity with Mr. Petersen, she knew that he had been estranged from his daughter for sev- eral years, and thus was dubious of his version of events. She also knew that he had several previous OWI charges and that his license was currently suspended. Finally, the bystanders’ confirmation that he was the only person they saw near the No. 24-1206 5

vehicle gave her enough information, in her view, to make the arrest. After handcuffing him, Deputy Pedersen conducted a search incident to arrest. In his coat pockets, she found car keys, lug nuts, and a container holding a leafy green sub- stance that she suspected was marijuana. She and the sup- porting officers then placed Mr. Petersen in the back of the squad car and secured his seatbelt—overcoming his contin- ued resistance and disregarding his provocations, including his quip: “Buckle it up, buttercup!” With Mr. Petersen re- strained in the backseat, Deputy Pedersen continued her in- vestigation, including driving to the local hospital to conduct a BAC test. While en route to the hospital, despite the bystanders’ statements that they saw no second person at the scene, Dep- uty Pedersen attempted to corroborate Mr. Petersen’s account that his daughter was driving his car that evening. She asked him for his daughter’s phone number, but he did not respond to her request. Persistent in her investigation, Deputy Peder- sen then decided to call Mr. Petersen’s mother, whom she had met during a prior encounter with him. Deputy Pedersen ex- plained the situation to his mother and asked if she knew whether his daughter had driven his car. His mother was un- certain but said that it would be surprising, given the es- trangement between him and his daughter. She also con- firmed that his daughter’s name was Aubrey, not Trisha, as Mr. Petersen had previously stated. Approximately twenty minutes after leaving the crash site, they arrived at the hospital and parked outside. Deputy Pedersen asked Mr. Petersen if he would voluntarily consent to a blood draw, but he refused to answer. So she contacted 6 No. 24-1206

the on-call judge, Judge Karen L. Seifert, to request a search warrant for the BAC test.

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