N.H. v. Soisson

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedJuly 26, 2023
Docket5:21-cv-01034
StatusUnknown

This text of N.H. v. Soisson (N.H. v. Soisson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
N.H. v. Soisson, (N.D. Ohio 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO EASTERN DIVISION

) N.H., et al., ) Case No. 5:21-cv-1034 ) Plaintiffs, ) ) JUDGE BRIDGET MEEHAN BRENNAN v. ) ) DYLAN SOISSON, et al., ) MEMORANDUM OPINION ) AND ORDER Defendants. )

This is an action brought under Section 1983 and Ohio law by a minor and her mother against Officer Dylan Officer Soisson and the Village of Lakemore. (Doc. No. 31-1.) The defendants moved for summary judgment. (Doc. Nos. 32 & 37.) The plaintiffs later moved to strike certain evidence and sought leave to file a sur-reply in response to Officer Soisson’s arguments on reply. (Doc. Nos. 42 & 48.) This Order resolves all pending motions. I. Facts On the evening of June 5, 2020, Officer Soisson was on duty in the Village of Lakemore. He responded to a call for assistance from another officer at a local skating rink. (Doc. No. 39-1 at PageID 386-87.) When Officer Soisson arrived, another officer was there outside along with a handcuffed African American female juvenile (the “juvenile suspect”). She was suspected of being involved in a fight at the rink. (Id. at 389-90 & 399.) A white female juvenile (“detained juvenile”), also handcuffed, was sitting in a police car. (Id. at 390-91.) Officer Soisson spoke to the detained juvenile, and then assisted other officers with the investigation. (Id.) The juvenile suspect was released to her parent. Afterward, Officer Soisson and other officers viewed a mobile phone video showing part of the earlier incident. In Officer Soisson’s words during deposition, “it wasn’t just a fight, it was a beat down,” and the detained juvenile’s mother came to the scene and was irate. (Id. at 393.) Other officers apparently did not receive any contact information for the juvenile suspect. (Id.) The detained juvenile’s mother saw the video and told officers that she believed what happened to her daughter was an assault. (Soisson Body Camera Footage (“Soisson Body Cam.”) at 17:40.)

The detained juvenile told police that the juvenile suspect’s cousin was still inside the rink. Officer Soisson asked her to accompany him into the rink to point out the juvenile suspect’s cousin. Officer Soisson wanted to ask the cousin for the juvenile suspect’s phone number. (Id. at 393-94; Soisson Body Cam at 22:10; Doc. No. 39-1 at PageID 394.) Inside the rink, N.H. was identified as the cousin. (Id. at 394.) Officer Soisson asked N.H. to step into the breezeway. She complied. N.H. was 13 years old. (Doc. No. 42 at PageID 1016.) Officer Soisson asked to speak with her. He told N.H. that she was not in trouble. (Soisson Body Cam at 22:39.) While asking about her cousin’s phone number, Officer Soisson

observed a vaping device (or vape pen) in N.H.’s hand. (Id.; see also id. 23:10.) Officer Soisson asked “can I have the vape, too?” N.H. initially became indignant. She claimed she had not “hit it” (i.e., smoked). N.H. asked “am I going to get it back?” N.H. also asked “why?” – to which Officer Soisson responded “because how old are you?” “Old enough,” N.H. replied. (23:10-28.) N.H. testified in deposition that she was confused because Officer Soisson “came up to me to ask me about my cousin, not to approach me about the vape.” (Doc. No. 34-2 at PageID 233.) N.H. acknowledged that Officer Soisson would not have seen or known about the vape until he saw her holding it. N.H. also testified that Officer Soisson did not know that “other kids in the skating rink had vapes also.” (Id. at PageID 234.) Q: Okay. So Officer Soisson sees you with the vape in your hand and asks you to give it to him and you didn’t want to give it to him, right? A: Correct. (Id.) N.H. admitted that her friend standing next to her (who N.H. claimed also owned a vape) did not have the vape in her hand or in view. (Id. at PageID 236.) N.H. handed the vape pen to Officer Soisson. (Soisson Body Cam at 23:28.) Officer Soisson said “do you want to get arrested? This is illegal.” In deposition, N.H. admitted: Q: Did you know that possession of a vape was illegal? A: Yes. Q: The vape was full of a liquid, is that correct? A: Yes. (Doc. No. 34-2 at PageID 236.) N.H. turned and began to walk away from Officer Soisson. He told N.H. not to walk away. (Soisson Body Cam 23:55.) As N.H. recounted during her deposition: “I walked away

and [the friend] tried to stop me but I kept walking and that’s when the officer grabbed me and like forced me and just put me in handcuffs.” (Doc. No. 34-2 at PageID 236.) Officer Soisson testified that after he obtained the vape, he told N.H. not to walk away and that she needed to step outside. He testified that N.H. disobeyed his lawful command to step outside. When asked why N.H. needed to step outside, Officer Soisson testified “[b]ecause now I need her information as well as her mother’s information . . . [b]ecause she was in possession of a vape.” (Doc. No. 39-1 at PageID 423.) Officer Soisson testified that possession of a vape by a minor was “an arrestable offense” based on his “training and experience.” (Id.) “We’ve had multiple reports and calls at the Springfield High School for vapes, where they get charged with it; we’ve had multiple incidents at the skating rink where juveniles have been charged with it; and the Ohio Revised Code.” (Id.) Officer Soisson believed it was a minor misdemeanor. (Id. at PageID 424.) Officer Soisson said “let’s go outside.” He put his left hand on N.H.’s left arm, put his right hand under her shoulder blade, and escorted her through the doorway. (24:00-24:10.) Officer Soisson’s body camera footage shows that he physically escorted her out of the rink, but

that N.H. remained on her feet, did not fall over, and did not bump into anything. (24:00-24:10.) Once outside, Officer Soisson told N.H. to put her hands behind her back. (24:08.) N.H. did not comply. Officer Soisson grabbed her left wrist and put her arm behind her. (24:10.) N.H. told her friend to call her mother. (24:11.) After handcuffing N.H., Officer Soisson directed N.H. to a marked police car. (24:44.) The body camera evidence shows N.H. stepped into the vehicle. (24:45.) N.H. testified that Officer Soisson had one of his hands above her head and the other on the cuffs as she got into the car. “But I still got in on my own, yes. He didn’t completely force me.” (Doc. No. 34-2 at PageID 239.) After instructing N.H. to put her feet inside the car, Officer Soisson shut the door.

(24:55.) Officer Soisson walked over and spoke to the victim’s mother. (25:20.) N.H.’s friend approached Officer Soisson and told him that she had T.H., N.H.’s mother, on the phone. (26:57.) Officer Soisson spoke to T.H., mentioning that N.H. had a vape pen in her hand. (27:30.) He informed her that someone needed to come pick up N.H. (27:40.) After speaking to T.H., Officer Soisson spoke to N.H.’s friend and said “she’s not arrested” and “she just needs to leave.” (28:00-15.) Officer Soisson is heard on his body cam also saying that N.H. was in the car “because she wants to scream and holler and walk away from me.” (28:27.) In his deposition, Officer Soisson testified that once N.H. was in the car, she was under arrest for possession of the vape and for disobeying his lawful commands. (Doc. No. 39-1 at PageID 423.) When asked in deposition about being in the police car, N.H. answered: “I don’t know how long I was in there.” (Doc. No. 34-2 at PageID 240.) Officer Soisson estimated that N.H.

was in the car for around 20 minutes while she waited for someone to pick her up. (Doc. No. 39- 1 at PageID 435 & 436-37.) N.H. testified: “I asked him to turn the air on or roll my window down and that’s when he came in the front seat and turned the heat up, turned it up. And then after that it’s like I passed out. Like I don’t remember after he turned the heat up.” (Doc. No. 34-2 at PageID 240.) Officer Soisson denied turning on or turning up the heat in the police car. (Doc. No. 39-1 at PageID 433-34.) T.H.

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