Molina v. St. Louis, Missouri, City of

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Missouri
DecidedMarch 31, 2021
Docket4:17-cv-02498
StatusUnknown

This text of Molina v. St. Louis, Missouri, City of (Molina v. St. Louis, Missouri, City of) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Molina v. St. Louis, Missouri, City of, (E.D. Mo. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MISSOURI EASTERN DIVISION

SARAH MOLINA, et al., ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) vs. ) Case No. 4:17-CV-2498-AGF ) CITY OF ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI, ) et al., ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER This matter is before the Court on Defendants’ motion for summary judgment in this civil rights case brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. ECF No. 169. Plaintiffs are St. Louis area residents Sarah Molina, Christina Vogel, and Peter Groce. Defendants are the City of St. Louis and several officers of the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department (SLMPD).1 Plaintiffs assert that Defendants violated their First and Fourth Amendment rights by deploying chemical munitions at them after they dispersed from a protest. For the reasons set forth below, the motion will be granted in part and denied in part. BACKGROUND Facts Viewed in the light most favorable to Plaintiffs for purposes of the present motion,

1 The Defendant police officers are Lieutenant Stephen Dodge, Sergeant Michael Mayo, and Officers Daniel Book, Joseph Busso, Lance Coats, Joseph Mader, Mark Seper, and William Wethington. Officer Jason Chambers was also named in the complaint but later voluntarily dismissed. ECF No. 173. Plaintiffs also move to dismiss the facts are as follows. On August 19, 2015, Plaintiffs attended a protest near the intersection of Walton and Page Avenues in St. Louis following the police shooting of Mansur Ball-Bey during the execution of a search warrant. Molina and Vogel, both lawyers, attended the protest as legal observers and wore neon green hats to designate themselves as such. Defendant Dodge was a supervising lieutenant on the scene. The other individual Defendants were onboard an armored vehicle deployed to release chemical munitions to disperse protestors. Police Chief Sam Dotson and Lieutenant Colonel Gerald Leyshock, not parties to this action, were also on the scene. The record contains several cell phone videos recorded from different vantage points on Page Avenue and an ariel photo of the area. The image below (ECF No. 171- 12) shows Page curving east-west at the top of the photo and Euclid running north-south in the center. Molina’s house is the red pin near the bottom center. The street to the east of Euclid is Bayard. To the east out of view are Walton and Marcus Avenues. ie ce □ Eon □□ 2 ma a □

1 ry ri 5 i be : ue A res al □□ ae — a □□ □□ Th , — ; a a 7 i □□ i | □ af 2 ee : a rd a F rf “oe iF md a ae ia F . — fertele| | □

Video footage from the early evening shows a crowd of roughly 150 people in the street on Page and over 40 officers spanning across Page at Marcus in a skirmish line facing west toward the crowd. At 6:55 p.m., the police gave two dispersal orders informing protestors that they were impeding the flow of traffic and would be subject to

chemical munitions if they did not disperse west on Page or north or south on side streets. About ten minutes later, the police gave a third dispersal order and deployed inert smoke. By 7:10 p.m., most people were on the sidewalk, and traffic was flowing slowly at the intersection of Page and Walton. A few stragglers threw rocks, and the officers responded with small munitions as the police line marched west toward Walton chanting

“move back.” At 7:12 p.m., the police gave a fourth dispersal order. By this point, Molina and Vogel were heading west on Page as instructed. At 7:15 p.m., at the order of Defendant Dodge, an SLMPD armored vehicle known as a Ballistic Engineered Armored Response Counter Attack Truck (the “BEAR”) traveled west on Page from the intersection of Walton and Page to Euclid and Page,

deploying tear gas. According to Molina, officers were shooting projectiles at people who were retreating. ECF No. 171-1 at 23 (“We’re not talking about just into an area, we’re talking about at people to hit people.”). Molina and Vogel fled south on Bayard and through an alleyway to Molina’s property on Euclid, approximately two and a half blocks (550 feet) south of the intersection of Euclid and Page and even farther (over a

block west) from the police line then on Page between Bayard and Walton. By 7:24 p.m., most of the protestors had dispersed from Page Avenue and scattered in different directions. The police issued another dispersal order, and Defendant Dodge instructed Defendant Mayo’s team in the BEAR to patrol the area south of Page, while Dodge and other officers in a BearCat tactical vehicle patrolled the area north of Page.2 An observer named Heather DeMian, who was recording events and following the BEAR west on Page at that time (from the sidewalk), says on video, “the people have

dispersed, and [the police] appear to be chasing them.” DeMian video at 7:00. When DeMian arrives at the corner of Page and Euclid, the BEAR is out of view headed south on Euclid. She asks a bystander, “What the f--- are they doing?” to which the bystander replies, “I think they’re chasing some people.” Id. By that time (roughly 7:28 p.m.), Molina and Vogel and a few others were

standing on the sidewalk in front of Molina’s house on Euclid. Vogel testified that there were also “maybe five to ten” other people on Euclid south of Page at that time. ECF No. 171-5 at 83. Molina described her property as a safe meeting place away from the protest site. ECF No. 171-1 at 25. The record contains no evidence of prior protest activity at this location. Molina observed a police helicopter hovering overhead and speculated that

they could see Molina’s and Vogel’s neon green hats and were communicating with officers by radio. ECF No. 171-1 at 25, 35. Defendant Mader generally confirmed that police helicopters have the ability to give updates on where people are located. ECF No. 171-15 at 26. Defendant Book also knew that legal observers are “the ones with the yellow hats.” ECF No. 171-18 at 12. Defendant Dodge knew that individuals wearing

green hats were legal observers, and he recalled seeing some that day. ECF No. 171-6 at

2 The BearCat and its team from St. Clair County, Illinois, were on site to assist. The St. Clair County officers are not named as defendants in this case. 16. Defendant Dodge was the commander in charge of the helicopter at the time (ECF No. 171-18 at 11) and was the commanding officer who gave the order for the BEAR’s patrol down Euclid (ECF No. 171-6 at 16). Seeing the BEAR approaching and canisters flying toward other people on Euclid,

the small group at Molina’s property sought cover in the gangway between her house and a neighboring house. Plaintiffs allege that chemical weapons were deployed directly at them in the space between the houses. Though neither Vogel nor Molina actually saw canisters released from the BEAR as they were attempting to flee from it, Vogel noticed “the smell of tear gas” and said “the sound that it makes when it comes out started hitting

and we had a fog, a cloud of smoke coming up at that point.” ECF No. 171-5 at 92. Vogel recovered one of the canisters from the street. Around 7:30 p.m., Plaintiff Groce turned south onto Euclid following the BEAR on his bicycle. He does not recall whether he saw the BEAR deploy tear gas at that time. Groce followed the BEAR to Fountain Park at the end of the street, where the BEAR had

stopped. Groce approached it and told the police to leave the park. Though Groce claimed not to remember his precise wording, Molina testified that Groce told her that he told the police to “get the f--- out of my park.” ECF No. 171-1 at 32. Groce was then hit in the hip by what he believed to be a tear gas canister. Groce believed that the canister came from the BEAR because, he explained, “I was oriented to the BEAR and didn’t see

anyone else around me.

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