Patricia Juanita Wate v. Kenneth Kubler

839 F.3d 1012, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 18365, 2016 WL 5929633
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 12, 2016
Docket15-15611
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 839 F.3d 1012 (Patricia Juanita Wate v. Kenneth Kubler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patricia Juanita Wate v. Kenneth Kubler, 839 F.3d 1012, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 18365, 2016 WL 5929633 (11th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

DAVIS, District Judge:

James Clifton Barnes and his aunt Paula Yount went to the beach to conduct a baptismal ritual. While in the water, Barnes became agitated. After Barnes was pulled out of the water and, following a struggle, he was handcuffed and pinned on the beach by two law enforcement officers. He was then “tased”. five times, and.. at least two of those tases occurred after Barnes had ceased resisting. Barnes died two days later. The district court denied Pinellas County Deputy Sheriff Kenneth Kubler’s motion for summary judgment seeking qualified immunity, determining that Kubler’s use of the Taser gun amounted to an unconstitutional use of excessive force in violation of the Fourth Amendment, that was clearly established at the time. Because the record evidence, construed in favor of Plaintiff, demonstrates that Barnes was not a flight risk or a threat to the safety of the officers or the public prior to the conclusion of the tas-ings, we affirm.

I. Background

A. The Tasing

The' incident giving rise to this action occurred at midday on March 17, 2012, at the north end of Honeymoon Island State Park, located in Pinellas County, Florida. Honeymoon Island is a 400-acre barrier island with four miles of beach, located in the Gulf of Mexico off of the west coast of Florida, and is accessible via a causeway. While in the water with his aunt, Barnes began acting erratically by flailing, flopping, and thrusting his arms and body, and yelling loudly about a demon. Barnes was a big man, standing at 5 feet 10 inches tall, and weighing 290 pounds. Barnes’ conduct drew attention on the crowded beach. The rapidly unfolding facts in this case are framed, by a stipulated timeline, and painted by the testimony of sixteen witnesses.

Officer Joseph Tactuk of the Florida Department of Environmental Protection, was the only law enforcement officer on Honeymoon Island that day. Tactuk stopped his All Terrain Vehicle (“ATV”) when he saw Barnes, and Yount left the water to speak to the officer. Barnes did not comply with Tactuk’s and Yount’s admonitions to calm down and leave the water. Tactuk entered the water and ordered Barnes out of the water, believing that he had probable cause to arrest Barnes for battery on Yount. A struggle ensued and Tactuk repeatedly struck Barnes in the *1016 face. Barnes continued to physically resist, and Tactuk repeatedly ordered Barnes to cooperate.

Tactuk got Barnes to the shallow water and placed a handcuff on one of Barnes’ hands. Barnes pulled Tactuk into waist-deep water, and Tactuk hit Barnes in the face with his fist while the two continued to struggle. Tactuk placed Barnes in a choke hold around the neck, and dragged Barnes out of the water by the head, assisted by a bystander. Barnes was yelling for help and pleading for the officer to “Please stop,” as Tactuk continued to hit him. Tactuk broadcast his call sign over the police radio at 12:30:52 p.m., and two bystanders who witnessed the struggle called 911 at 12:31 p.m.

Barnes was eventually pulled from the water at approximately 12:35:24, and at 12:35:53 p.m., a bystander reported to 911 that it looked as though Barnes had “calmed down,” and was “just laying on the beach now with the state park ranger next to him.” Tactuk kneeled beside Barnes on the beach and tried to secure Barnes’ other arm in the handcuffs, but was unsuccessful because Barnes was resisting and not cooperating. Tactuk got on top of Barnes and hit him, as he attempted to place Barnes’ other arm in the handcuffs.

Three bystanders assisted Tactuk in placing the handcuff on Barnes’ second arm, holding Barnes’ legs and positioning Barnes’ free aim, as Barnes continued to resist, and to loudly grunt and growl. The handcuff was not placed on Barnes’ second arm in the normal fashion, and instead, one of Barnes’ arms was pulled over his head, with his elbow pointing toward the sky, and his other arm was twisted behind his back, in a manner that looked like a figure-eight. One bystander observed that an “eruption of blood and fluids” spewed from Barnes’ mouth with each breath, and that Barnes was struggling to breathe.

At this point, Tactuk got off of Bames and pulled him further up onto the shore, and then straddled him while Barnes continued to resist. Tactuk pressed the emergency button on his radio at 12:36:09 p.m., identified himself, and said that he had a violent, mentally-ill person in custody. Tac-tuk broadcast that he needed “help” at the north end of the island, and that the location was accessible only by ATV. As Barnes continued to struggle, Tactuk deployed pepper spray, shooting it into Barnes’ eyes. Tactuk struck Barnes in the face multiple times, and Barnes continued to resist.

Officer Kubler, who was assigned to the Sheriffs Marine Unit, responded to the dispatch call. As he got closer to the scene, he eventually saw Tactuk and Barnes struggling on the beach. Kubler radioed that he had arrived, ran his boat aground, and jumped off boat at 12:36:59 p.m. Ku-bler observed that the officer on the scene had “somebody on the ground.”

When Kubler arrived, Barnes was on his back with his face out of water, struggling to get Tactuk off of him. Barnes had blood on his mouth and face and Tactuk was covered in blood. Tactuk was straddling Barnes, sitting on Barnes’ stomach with his knees pinned under Barnes’s armpits, and Barnes was screaming and yelling. One eyewitness said he thought that Barnes was starting to “wear down at that point” and that “he wasn’t fighting as much,” and that the situation was “under control.” Kubler positioned himself between Barnes’s hips and knees and tried to stop Barnes from kicking, instructing Barnes to quit resisting.

Starting at 12:37:37 p.m., Kubler and Tactuk radioed dispatch requesting other units and an ambulance. Kubler also reported over the radio that transporting *1017 Barnes would be problematic. Tactuk requested hobble restraints. Barnes can be heard yelling and screaming on the radio transmissions, and Tactuk can be heard on the dispatch call at 12:41:49 saying “stop resisting.”

Kubler and Tactuk rolled Barnes onto his stomach in an attempt to position the handcuffs correctly, as Barnes resisted and kicked. Tactuk continued to hit Barnes, striking him in the face three times after Barnes bit Tactuk’s hand. Witnesses said that Kubler stood over Barnes and put his foot on Barnes’s buttocks, arid one testified that Barnes was arching his back. Another witness testified that Kubler put his kriee on Barnes’s back, and that Barnes was immobilized.

Kubler warned Barnes to stop raising up or the officer would tase Barnes, but Barnes continued to resist. Kubler drew the Taser and gave Barnes a second warning, but Barnes kept struggling, and at 12:43:18 p.m., he can be heard again yelling in the background on the dispatch radio transmission.

Seventeen seconds later, at 12:43:35 p.m., Kubler deployed his Taser, and the probes struck Barnes in the mid-back, 2.95 inches (7.5 centimeters) apart. Six, and a half minutes had passed between Kubler’s arrival on the beach and his deployment of the Taser. Kubler activated the Taser on Barnes a total of five times for 5, 3, 5) 4, and 5 seconds respectively, over a nearly two-minute period (12:43:35; . 12:43:49; 12:44:20; 12:44:43; and 12:45:17).

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839 F.3d 1012, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 18365, 2016 WL 5929633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patricia-juanita-wate-v-kenneth-kubler-ca11-2016.