Matthew Reid Hinson v. R.A. Bias

927 F.3d 1103
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedJune 14, 2019
Docket16-14112
StatusPublished
Cited by123 cases

This text of 927 F.3d 1103 (Matthew Reid Hinson v. R.A. Bias) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matthew Reid Hinson v. R.A. Bias, 927 F.3d 1103 (11th Cir. 2019).

Opinion

ROSENBAUM, Circuit Judge:

For no apparent reason, Plaintiff-Appellee Matthew Hinson stabbed a man he did not know in the neck during a chance encounter at a pub. As the man laid on the ground bleeding to death, Hinson calmly walked to the parking garage, got into his truck, and began to leave. But at the garage's checkout booth, Defendants-Appellants *1108 Jacksonville Sheriff's Office Officers caught up with him.

In this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action, Hinson alleges that the Officers violated his Fourth Amendment rights by employing excessive force in effecting his arrest. He also asserts that the Officers transgressed his Eighth Amendment rights by being deliberately indifferent to medical needs he purportedly experienced as a result of the force inflicted during the arrest.

In support of his claims, Hinson relies on surveillance footage of the parking area, as well as his father's sworn interpretation of that same surveillance recording. For their part, the Officers deny that they used excessive force, and they support their version of the facts with their sworn statements recounting what happened during the arrest. In an interesting twist, they also rely on the same video recording as Hinson, in addition to Hinson's medical records.

But what looked at first like a tale of two stories turns out to be but a single one, uncontradicted in any material way by any admissible evidence in this case. And under that single rendition of the facts, the Officers here did not use excessive force to effect Hinson's arrest. Nor were they deliberately indifferent to Hinson's medical needs. For these reasons, the Officers are entitled to qualified immunity, and we vacate the district court's contrary conclusion.

I. Facts

A. The Stabbing

Though the day ended tragically, October 6, 2012, started out usually enough for Plaintiff-Appellee Matthew Hinson. He completed his shift as a cook at the Hyatt Regency in downtown Jacksonville at around 6:00 or 7:00 p.m. Then he went home, where his wife was, and watched the end of a football game. After that, Hinson went for a few hours to his friend's house down the road, where he had several beers. While he was there, Hinson's wife, who had since gone to Fionn MacCool's Irish Pub and Restaurant at the Jacksonville Landing, started calling and texting him to pick her up.

Hinson eventually left his friend's home and went over to Fionn MacCool's. But when he arrived at the restaurant, his wife was not yet ready to leave. So Hinson took a seat at the bar and had another beer or two.

At some point, Hinson encountered Chris Pettry, a man he had never previously met, in the restaurant. The trigger, if any, for what occurred next is unclear: Hinson grabbed his pocket knife, stabbed Pettry in the neck, and inflicted a four-inch laceration wound on one side of Pettry's throat. Pettry died soon after, as a result of this wound.

B. The Arrest

After stabbing Pettry, Hinson left Fionn MacCool's and headed for the parking garage. At the garage, Hinson got into his truck and drove to the checkout booth, where officers arrested him. Hinson testified that he remembered nothing at all about his arrest after he put his hands up in response to officers' commands. So the sources of evidence concerning what happened during the arrest consist solely of the participating officers' statements and video surveillance footage. 1 We review them below.

*1109 1. The Officers' Statements

Defendants-Appellants Jacksonville Sheriff's Office ("JSO") Detective Z.M. Anderson and Officer B.K. Kremler responded to the scene after learning of the life-threatening stabbing. At the time, they knew of the suspect's description and whereabouts from a witness. Anderson and Kremler caught up with the suspect, who turned out to be Hinson, at the parking garage around midnight, as Hinson sat in his truck and tried to pay for his parking. According to Anderson, when he and Kremler approached Hinson's truck with their guns drawn, the engine was still on. Anderson saw Hinson, sitting in the truck. And he noted that Hinson matched the description of the suspect the officers had received.

Anderson and Kremler attested that Kremler instructed Hinson to put his hands up where the officers could see them. But, the officers stated, Hinson did not comply. So Kremler continued to tell Hinson to put his hands up. Eventually, Hinson raised his left hand, but Kremler was unable to see Hinson's other hand. Finally, the officers reported, Hinson put both hands up.

While this was occurring, two more JSO officers arrived on the scene in response to a radio dispatch about the life-threatening stabbing. Defendant-Appellant Officer S.T. Williams first went to Fionn MacCool's, where he saw the victim lying in a pool of his own blood, apparently dead. Then Williams learned that Anderson and Kremler had found Hinson. So he went to the parking garage to see if he could be of assistance.

There, Williams met up with Defendant-Appellant Officer R.A. Bias, who had arrived at the garage and had run to the driver's door of Hinson's truck. Bias, too, drew his gun and pointed it at Hinson. He then commanded Hinson to keep his hands up and get out of the truck, facing away from Bias (for officer safety). Hinson did not respond, so Bias continued instructing Hinson to leave the truck. At some point, Bias opened the truck's door, and after some time passed, Hinson finally put one leg on the ground. Bias took Hinson's hand and extracted him from the truck.

As Bias and Hinson left the confined area between the truck and the checkout booth, Bias told Hinson to turn around and face away from him, so Bias could handcuff Hinson. Instead, Hinson continued moving towards Bias. Again, Bias commanded Hinson to stop and turn around. But Hinson again did not comply.

Anderson, who could see this occurring, attested that he then became concerned for Bias's safety, since Bias no longer had his weapon drawn, Bias was significantly smaller in stature than Hinson, and the officers had no way of knowing whether Hinson was armed. So Anderson grabbed Hinson's wrist and shoulder and performed a police maneuver known as a "straight arm bar takedown." As a result, Hinson was in a prone position on the ground, next to the checkout booth.

Once Hinson was down, Bias stated, Bias attempted to handcuff him. Towards this end, Bias repeatedly instructed Hinson, whose hands were under him, to release his hands. But according to the officers, Hinson would not cooperate. Instead, *1110 Hinson struggled to keep his hands underneath his body.

Bias started to become concerned that Hinson might be trying to reach a weapon while his hands were under his body.

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Bluebook (online)
927 F.3d 1103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matthew-reid-hinson-v-ra-bias-ca11-2019.