Mitchell v. Parker

271 F. Supp. 3d 1364
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedSeptember 25, 2017
DocketCIVIL ACTION FILE NUMBER 1-16-cv-00253-TCB
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 271 F. Supp. 3d 1364 (Mitchell v. Parker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mitchell v. Parker, 271 F. Supp. 3d 1364 (N.D. Ga. 2017).

Opinion

ORDER

Timothy C. Batten, Sr., United States District Judge

This case comes before the Court on Sergeant O.B. Parker and Officer Aaron Dowling’s motion for partial summary judgment on the claims filed against them by Plaintiff Keith Dashaun Mitchell [29-1]. Defendants also argue that partial summary judgment is warranted on nearly all the remaining claims stemming from the November 27, 2013 arrest of Mitchell at the Tanqueray Lounge in Decatur, Georgia.

I. Background

The facts surrounding the arrest are disputed by the parties. Both Sgt. Parker and Officer Dowling were employees of the DeKalb County Police Department. At the time, Parker also worked as an off-duty security guard at the lounge. Mitchell had been a periodic customer of the lounge since it opened. approximately twenty yeárs ago. Non-party Stacie Friday was also a periodic customer of the lounge and was a witness to several of the relevant events. ■ '

: On February 23, 2012, Parker and Mitchell had’ their first encounter at the lounge. Mitchell was engaged in a heated exchange with other customers in the-lounge, including Friday. Parker intervened and told Mitchell to leave. Mitchell stated he was about to leave. Once outside the lounge, Parker and Mitchell had their own heated exchange, which resulted in Parker arresting Mitchell for disorderly conduct and public intoxication. Parker testifies that during this incident, with the permission of the lounge manager, he gave Mitchell a criminal trespass warning and told him not,to return to the lounge.

On April 14, 2012, Parker and Mitchell had another encounter at Echelon Bistro, where Parker was also working off-duty security. Another argument occurred, wherein Parker yelled, “Oh, am I reckless eyeballing you now;?” and told Mitchell he could not enter Echelon Bistro. Mitchell left the establishment without being arrested.

On April 17, 2012, Mitchell filed a complaint against Parker with DeKalb County Police Internal Affairs alleging Parker had falsely arrested him in February and further harassed him during the Echelon Bistro incident.

Parker testifies that in early 2013, following Mitchell’s ongoing ban from the Tanqueray Lounge, Friday requested that Mitchell be allowed back into the lounge. Parker refused the request, telling Friday, “[Mitchell] already made an Internal Affairs complaint on me, which Internal Affairs referred to my supervisor, it came down to what they call a line-level complaint.” [29-3] at 78. Mitchell and Friday both testify that Parker’s alleged warning and ban on February 23, 2012 never occurred. Friday asserts that her alleged conversations with Parker regarding Mitchell’s ban from the lounge were also fabricated by Parker.

On November 27, 2013, Parker again saw Mitchell inside the lounge. Parker requested an officer be dispatched due to Mitchell’s trespassing. Officer Dowling arrived and Parker informed him that there was a patron in the lounge trespassing who needed to leave. Parker and Dowling approached Mitchell, who was sitting at the bar, and Parker informed him that he was not supposed to be in the lounge. Mitchell refused to leave, and a physical altercation, ensued among Mitchell, Parker, Dowling, and Deputy A. B. Malone, who was off-duty in the lounge and came to assist Parker and Dowling. Eventually, Mitchell was handcuffed, stood up, escorted outside, and placed in a patrol car.

On July 13, 2015, Mitchell’s criminal case' from February 2012 was dismissed. The dismissal stated that the investigation revealed Mitchell “may have had permission from one of the three owners of the establishment to continue his patronage of the business.”

A. Disputed Material Facts Asserted by Parker and Dowling

Parker’s and Dowling’s versions of the events are similar to each other. Parker testifies that during the prior incidents with Mitchell, Mitchell was belligerent and threatening, specifically making threats of violence and retaliation against Parker. Parker testifies that while he knew Friday, he did not have a substantial relationship with her and at no point had or expressed any romantic interest in her, nor did he have any personal ax to grind with Mitchell. Parker testifies that after banning Mitchell from Tanqueray Lounge in February 2012, Friday requested he be allowed to return to the lounge and after Parker denied this request Friday became angry and “cursed [him] out” in front of the lounge. [29-3] at 79.

Parker testifies that on November 27, 2013 he saw Mitchell in the Tanqueray Lounge for the first time since giving Mitchell the criminal trespass warning in February 2012. Parker then spoke with the lounge’s manager and confirmed that Mitchell was not supposed to be in the lounge. After Dowling arrived, Dowling and Parker approached Mitchell and Parker told Mitchell he was not supposed to be in the lounge. Mitchell responded that he was not going anywhere. Parker reached for Mitchell’s beer bottle as a safety precaution, and a physical altercation ensued. Mitchell resisted arrest and refused to comply with the officers’ verbal commands. Mitchell was eventually handcuffed, taken outside, and. placed in a patrol car. Mitchell continued making threats and resisting the officers before,, during, and after his arrest.

B. Disputed Material Facts Asserted by Mitchell and Friday

Mitchell and Friday present a different version of these events. Friday alleges that she met Parker in 2008, when he began working at the Tanqueray Lounge. Shortly afterwards, Parker began making repeated romantic advances toward Friday that she consistently rebuffed. Since then, as Friday continued to frequent the lounge, Parker often became visibly upset when Friday spoke with other men. Around the same time, Friday met and became friends with Mitchell, and the two eventually began dating.1

"' After the February 2012 arrest, Friday testified that Parker bragged to her about having arrested Mitchell, played her' an audio recording of the arrest, and informed her that Mitchell was married and had children. In May or June 2012, Parker approached Friday in a restaurant and told her about the incident with Mitchell at the Echelon Bistro. Parker made a number of disparaging comments regarding Mitchell,- including that - Parker- would make it his business to send Mitchell to prison if he did not shoot Mitchell first. Parker also told Friday about the internal affairs complaint Mitchell filed.

Friday denies ever speaking with Parker about allowing Mitchell back into the lounge-after the criminal trespass warning; She also testifies that she saw Mitchell at the lounge at least thirty times- between the summer of 2012 and the incident in November 2013. She testifies that Parker was also at the lounge on nights she was with Mitchell more than fifteen times during that time frame. On those occasions, Parker glared or stared threateningly at Mitchell when Mitchell and Friday were together.

On November 27, 2013, Friday and Mitchell had been seated at the bar in the lounge for a few hours while Parker stared at them. After Donald Harris, an owner1 of the bar - with whom Friday and Mitchell were friends, left for the night, Parker approached the two with Dowling and Malone.

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Bluebook (online)
271 F. Supp. 3d 1364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-parker-gand-2017.