Nazareth Brown v. David Weber

555 F. App'x 550
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 13, 2014
Docket13-5708
StatusUnpublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 555 F. App'x 550 (Nazareth Brown v. David Weber) 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
Nazareth Brown v. David Weber, 555 F. App'x 550 (6th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

ROGERS, Circuit Judge.

Nazareth Brown sued Sergeant David Weber under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for the alleged use of excessive force when Weber arrested Brown at a local Hardee’s restaurant. Weber appeals the district court’s denial of summary judgment on the basis of qualified immunity. Weber and another police officer were dispatched to Hardee’s after two 911 callers reported an apparently intoxicated man at the restaurant “falling everywhere,” removing his shirt, and using foul language. The man, Nazareth Brown, had climbed onto the counter at Hardee’s and, when the police arrived, was nonresponsive and sitting in a fetal position with his shirt over his head. Weber swiftly arrested Brown, and in the process tased Brown three times within sixteen seconds. Under the facts assumed by the district court, Brown was not armed or threatening, was not committing a crime, and was not fleeing from the officers. Under these facts, he had a clearly established constitutional right to be free from the repeated use of the taser. Thus the district court was correct in denying Weber’s motion for summary judgment on the basis of qualified immunity.

On the afternoon of December 22, 2010, two restaurant patrons called 911, reporting that an apparently intoxicated man was creating a disturbance at the local Hardee’s. The first caller was hiding in the Hardee’s restroom with her child and recounted that the man had fallen over chairs, dropped his coffee, and was stumbling around and using foul language. The surveillance video reveals that Brown also attempted to drink from the soda fountain and climbed over the counter to the employees-only area of the restaurant.

Nazareth Brown is a type 1 insulin-dependent diabetic. Brown asserts that the 911 caller “misunderstood the nature of his condition,” and that he was experiencing very low blood sugar levels. Brown has no memory or recollection of what happened at Hardee’s independent of the surveillance video.

Sergeant Weber and Deputy Jeremy Pratt, of the Decatur County Sheriffs Department, arrived at the scene within several minutes of the 911 calls. When they arrived, Brown was seated on the counter pulling his shirt over his head, and an employee was imploring him to get off of the counter. Brown did not respond or move when Weber and Pratt spoke to him, and Brown tried to take his shirt off. Weber quickly walked behind the counter with his taser and pulled Brown by his left arm off of the counter, and immediately thereafter discharged the taser into Brown’s back. Weber claims that he grabbed Brown’s arm, and Brown suddenly jumped off the counter, landed on his feet, raised his fists, and stood in a “fighting stance.” Weber states that only after Brown assumed the fighting stance did Weber fire the taser on Brown. The sur *552 veillance video shows Brown in a reactive position after being pulled off of the counter, and he appears to be regaining his footing in the moment prior to being tased, which caused him to fall to the ground.

The first taser cycle lasted five seconds. The taser was employed in dart mode, which caused Brown to lose control of his muscular function through neuromuscular incapacitation. Brown fell to the floor, face down, and began to state that his blood sugar was low. Weber and Pratt stated that, while Brown was on the floor, he was combative and would not remove his arms from underneath his body to be placed in handcuffs. Brown was then tased a second time, also for a five second taser cycle. A moment later, Weber’s ta-ser discharged a third time, for a four second taser cycle. The parties dispute whether Brown was capable of complying with Pratt’s attempt to handcuff him between the taser cycles, but it is undisputed that there was only one second in between each of the three instances the taser was discharged. The officers were trained to try to allow suspects to at least be compliant before firing a second taser shock.

After the tasing, Weber and Pratt handcuffed Brown, lifted him, and took him to the parking lot, where he was placed on the ground and in leg shackles. Brown asserts that the officers forcibly placed him face down in a police car. Next, Brown was transported to the hospital, where he tested negative for all drugs and his blood sugar level was found to be less than 34 mg/dL, approximately one-half Qk) of the minimum of the normal range, a dangerously low level. Brown was later released from the hospital to his parents’ care and was not charged with any criminal offense.

Brown asserted that throughout the encounter he was “obviously” emotionally disturbed and disabled with diabetes, which required medical attention for diabetic hypoglycemia/shock as well as special police procedures and tactics, which Weber and Pratt allegedly failed to use. Brown also asserted that during the interaction he was “continuously stating his blood sugar was low.” Brown was carrying his Tennessee driver’s licence, which bears a medical alert emblem in the top left corner and notes a Restriction Code Fourteen (14), identified on the back of his license as “insulin dependent diabetic.” Brown argued that this indicator should have alerted the police of his disability, but that Weber and Pratt failed to notice it. Brown stated that he did not display any weapons or pose a “substantial” threat to anyone at any time, and committed no criminal offense in the officers’ presence. Brown believes that his behavior was typical of an individual suffering from diabetic hypoglycemia.

Brown brought suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and 1988, against Weber and Pratt in their individual and official capacities, as well as Decatur County, Tennessee, which was their employer. Brown alleged that Sergeant Weber used excessive force against him, resulting in an unreasonable seizure under the Fourth Amendment. 1 Brown asserted that his hypoglycemia caused his behavior at the restaurant, and that Weber and Pratt’s use of force was allegedly done “at least in part” because of Brown’s disability and state as an emotionally disturbed person. Brown also alleged that he was seized without probable cause, reasonable suspicion, or other legal right, that his seizure lasted an excessive amount *553 of time, and that the seizure was conducted unreasonably. Brown sought compensatory and punitive damages and attorneys fees, and asserted state law claims of assault, battery, false arrest, and false imprisonment.

Weber, along with co-defendant Deputy Jeremy Pratt, asserted qualified immunity as a defense in his answer to Brown’s complaint. Weber and his co-defendants filed a motion for summary judgment, which the district court granted in part and denied in part. The court dismissed Brown’s claim against Pratt and certain claims against Decatur County, but denied summary judgment as to Brown’s excessive force claim against Weber. The court determined that under the version of the facts posited by Brown, he was tased three times even though he was not actively resisting, and that if a jury accepted this account, it could reasonably conclude that Weber’s use of the taser amounted to force that was excessive under clearly established law in December 2010. Weber appealed.

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555 F. App'x 550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nazareth-brown-v-david-weber-ca6-2014.