Nancy Hooks v. City of Warren, Mich.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 30, 2025
Docket24-1375
StatusUnpublished

This text of Nancy Hooks v. City of Warren, Mich. (Nancy Hooks v. City of Warren, Mich.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nancy Hooks v. City of Warren, Mich., (6th Cir. 2025).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 25a0266n.06

Case No. 24-1375

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

NANCY HOOKS, ) FILED ) May 30, 2025 Plaintiff - Appellee, ) KELLY L. STEPHENS, Clerk ) v. ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED CITY OF WARREN, MICHIGAN, ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE Defendant, ) EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN ) LUCAS DOE and BRYAN MUNAFO, ) OPINION Officers; ANTHONY GIANNOLA; ) MARCHELLOE DELOS BROWN, ) ) Defendants - Appellants. )

Before: COLE, McKEAGUE, and RITZ, Circuit Judges.

RITZ, Circuit Judge. In April 2019, 57-year-old Nancy Hooks stopped her car in Warren,

Michigan to assist a teenage victim of a street fight. She stayed on the scene to help police officers

locate the mob who had beaten him. Police officers dismissed her help, calling her a “white trash

bitch.” Hooks then pulled out her cell phone and walked away, apparently to film the officers.

The police chased after her, telling her to leave. But as Hooks was walking away, an officer

approached her, causing her to throw up her arm. The officer slammed Hooks to the ground,

handcuffed her, and took her away.

Hooks was prosecuted in Michigan state court for “hindering,” and a jury acquitted her.

She then sued the officers, the City of Warren, and the Warren Police Department in federal court,

alleging claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and Michigan law. The defendants moved for summary

judgment on various grounds, and the district court granted in part and denied in part their motion. No. 24-1375, Hooks v. City of Warren, et al.

The officers now appeal the portions of the order denying them summary judgment. For the

following reasons, we dismiss this appeal for lack of jurisdiction and remand for further

proceedings in the district court.

BACKGROUND

Where the district court has “correctly applied the standard for summary judgment” in a

§ 1983 case, we may “adopt the district court’s recitation of the facts, including casting them in

the light most favorable to” the plaintiff. Gillispie v. Miami Township, 18 F.4th 909, 912 (6th Cir.

2021) (citations omitted). We do so here.

In the early evening of April 8, 2019, Nancy Hooks, then 57 years old, was driving south

on Lorraine Avenue in Warren, Michigan, to visit a friend. While en route, Hooks saw police cars

leaving the intersection of Lorraine and Ford Street. Hooks stopped her car to speak with another

friend who was standing near the intersection, and this friend told her that the police had arrested

someone for shooting a gun. Not long after Hooks stopped, a group of fifteen to twenty teenagers

ran through the intersection and started beating a teenage boy.

Hooks reported the altercation to 911 and got out of her truck to tell the boy that help was

on the way. Meanwhile, the group of teenagers ran away. Approximately five minutes after Hooks

called 911, police and other first responders arrived. Responding police officers included

defendant-appellant Officers Marchelloe Brown, Anthony Giannola, Lucas Doe, and Bryan

Munafo.

What happened after police officers converged on the scene at Lorraine and Ford is the

subject of dispute. Some of what occurred is captured in two videos: dashcam footage from

Brown’s police car and cellphone footage taken by a bystander. Neither of these videos completely

-2- No. 24-1375, Hooks v. City of Warren, et al.

corroborates either party’s account, but they are useful in determining what happened and where

the parties’ stories diverge.

I. The dashcam video

Brown’s dashcam video footage shows approximately ten to fifteen people, including

officers, when he arrived at the intersection of Ford and Lorraine. Brown claims that, when he

arrived, there were “well in excess of 100 people” on the scene “arguing with officers.” RE 36-3,

Trial Tr. – Vol. 1, at PageID 454. He also claims that “fights were breaking out” and that he had

to “assist other officers.” RE 36-10, Brown Dep., at PageID 682. For her part, Hooks claims there

were no other fights or shouting happening when officers arrived and only between thirty to forty

people present. Because of its limited vantage point, the dashcam footage does not confirm or

refute either account.

The dashcam video then shows Brown and Giannola walking toward the group of people

clustered at the intersection. Hooks, who is wearing a pink shirt and a dark jacket, approaches

them. Hooks tells the officers that she was a witness to the fight. The officers instruct her to move

to the side so that they can make sure nobody has a weapon, and Hooks responds: “You’re not

even looking for the kids. . . . They’re already on that block right there.” Ex. 11 to Defs.’ Mot. for

Summ. J., at 05:00-18. An officer asks Hooks what the suspects looked like, and when Hooks

responds, the officer says, “That doesn’t really narrow it down.” Id. at 05:22-27. Hooks then tells

the officers again that she was a witness to the fight and the location where the group of teenagers

ran.

As this exchange occurs, another woman comes up to the group to tell officers that they

nearly hit her and her daughter with one of their cars. Giannola tells her to “get the fuck off the

street then,” at which point the woman starts yelling. Id. at 05:48-6:00. One can hear an officer

-3- No. 24-1375, Hooks v. City of Warren, et al.

say, “Get in your house. You’re not going to be told again. You can shut the fuck up.” Id. at

06:00-22. The dashcam video then shows people leaving the intersection, but Hooks stays behind

to try to continue to speak with officers. At one point, she goes over to speak with a motorcyclist

in the intersection, and then returns to the huddled officers.

Finally, Hooks is able to approach Giannola one-on-one in the intersection. The two appear

to speak. Hooks then backs up from Giannola and walks past him as if to walk away. Next, she

turns as if she has heard him say something to her and says, “Bitch? White trash?” Id. at 07:20-

49. In her deposition, Hooks testified that Giannola called her a “white trash bitch.” RE 36-12,

Hooks Dep., at PageID 752. On the video, Hooks is told to “go home” and “walk away,” but

Hooks says that she is “57 years old, [and] you’re not gonna call me white trash.” Ex. 11 to Defs.’

Mot. for Summ. J., at 07:49-57.

Hooks then walks away from the officers toward a small group of approximately five

people who are standing on the corner. She takes out her phone and tells the officers that she is

going to call their sergeant. Officers tell her to “go home” and to “[k]nock yourself out.” Id. at

08:06-30.

Hooks next walks away from the group of officers and toward her truck. She pauses once

she has nearly crossed the street, turns around, and takes out her phone. Officers notice her filming

them and turn to chase her away, telling her to “Go!” Id. at 08:41. Hooks complies and walks

away toward her truck. Two officers, however—Doe and Munafo—are already walking toward

her. Brown says to them, “[I]f she doesn’t leave—she can go!” Id. at 08:43-44.

The view of Hooks in the dashcam footage is not clear at this point because the car is

parked some distance away. But seconds later, officers tackle her to the ground and there is a

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