Plakas v. Drinski

19 F.3d 1143, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 5191
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 21, 1994
Docket93-1431
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 19 F.3d 1143 (Plakas v. Drinski) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Plakas v. Drinski, 19 F.3d 1143, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 5191 (7th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

19 F.3d 1143

Jo Ann PLAKAS, Individually and as Administrator of the
Estate of Konstantino N. Plakas, Deceased,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Jeffrey DRINSKI, in both his individual and official
capacity and Newton County, Indiana, a municipal
unit of government, Defendants-Appellees.

No. 93-1431.

United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.

Argued Nov. 1, 1993.
Decided March 21, 1994.

Paul F. Michel (argued), Thomas McClure, Rosa A. Eliades, Elliott & McClure, Bourbonnais, IL, for Jo Ann PLAKAS.

Elizabeth A. Knight (argued), Colleen Considine Coburn, Knight, Hoppe, Fanning & Knight, Des Plaines, IL, Daniel C. Blaney, Blaney, Casey & Walton, Morocco, IN, Janella L. Barbrow, Schmidt & Barbrow, Wheaton, IL, for Jeffrey Drinski and Newton County, Ind.

Before CUMMINGS and COFFEY, Circuit Judges, and ZAGEL, District Judge.*

ZAGEL, District Judge.

Konstantino Plakas was shot once and killed by Jeffrey Drinski, a deputy sheriff. The only witnesses to the shooting were three police officers, Drinski and two others. All of the witnesses testified to an act of self-defense; that Plakas was moving toward Drinski and menacing him with a fireplace poker and that, moments before, Plakas had said to Drinski, "Either you're going to die here or I'm going to die here." Plakas's administrator claimed that the self-defense story was full of holes and that, even if it were not, Drinski and the county which employed him had a constitutional obligation to do more to preserve his life than they did. The district judge disagreed and granted summary judgment, 811 F.Supp. 1356. This appeal followed.

The details matter here, so we recite them.

When the police first saw Plakas, at about 9:30 p.m. on February 2, 1991, he was walking along State Road 10 in Newton County, Indiana, not far from the Illinois state line. His car had run off the road and wound up in a deep water-filled ditch. Sergeant Buddy R. King, of the Newton County Sheriff's Department thought the car had rolled over on its top and slid for 150 to 200 feet before rolling upright, striking a tree and coming to rest in the ditch. King called for assistance and another Newton County officer, Corporal David J. Koby, and two paramedics, Glen Cain and Steven Whitt, responded. On the way to the scene of the accident, Cain noticed Plakas walking along State Road 10. Cain approached Plakas and saw that Plakas's clothing was wet from the waist down. Cain stopped and spoke to Plakas who said he was fine except that he was cold. Cain examined Plakas's head and found nothing that required medical treatment. Plakas told Cain he had been the driver of the car in the ditch, and Plakas agreed to get into Cain's car in order to be driven back to the accident scene, now about a mile from where Plakas was found. Cain knew there was an ambulance at that site and that Plakas could be examined more carefully there. Cain smelled alcohol on Plakas's breath and Plakas dozed off as they rode to the place where the car had gone off the road.

When Cain and Plakas arrived, the ambulance driver examined Plakas. Cain told Corporal Koby to check Plakas for intoxication and he told Koby why. Plakas refused medical treatment and signed a written waiver of treatment. Koby spoke to Plakas who had some difficulty communicating the fact that he did not have his driver's license (which he had surrendered as bond for a traffic ticket he received in Illinois). Plakas did agree to go to the Sheriff's Department to be tested for intoxication. Koby frisked Plakas and then handcuffed him, with his hands behind his back.

Plakas complained about being cuffed behind his back. He told Koby that this hurt him because he had burn scars on his chest and thought that if he got in the car, his chest would start to bleed. Koby told Plakas that this manner of cuffing was department policy which he must follow. Koby also thought that he would have a problem with Plakas if he uncuffed him. Koby opened the rear door of his squad car, and Plakas entered the car voluntarily. In Koby's car, the rear door handles are not removed. After a brief interval, Koby got in the car and drove away. As he drove he heard a noise that suggested the rear door was opened. He hit the brakes and heard Plakas hit the screen between the front and rear seats. Then the rear door flew open, and Plakas fled into snow-covered woods.

Koby reported the escape and called for help. King, Koby, Cain and Trooper Lucien Mark Perras of the Indiana State Police responded, as did Deputy Sheriff Jeffrey Drinski.

Plakas ran to the Ailes home located on a private road north of State Road 10. He knew the Aileses, Roy and Joyce; he was engaged to marry their daughter, Rachel. They called Plakas "Dino." Joyce Ailes heard Dino banging against the house; she saw him and opened the door. He fell on his face inside the doorway, his hands still cuffed behind his back. Joyce and Rachel helped him. They noticed that his clothes were wet. Plakas told them that he had wrecked his car and that his head hurt. Joyce saw no blood, but saw bumps on his head and bruises. He appeared to be blacking out.

Roy Ailes spoke to Plakas, smelled alcohol on his breath, and found him to be upset and insistent that he did nothing wrong. Roy told him that he should not run from the police. Plakas agreed that Roy should talk to the police. Roy went out and found Cain, whom he knew, and reported that Plakas was at the Ailes home and willing to come out. Cain and some officers went to the house. Roy stayed outside to direct other police to his house.

Cain and Koby were the first to enter. Cain saw Plakas push his legs through the circle of his arms, bringing his cuffed hands to the front of his body. Plakas was calm until he saw Cain and Koby. While Cain and the others tried to explain that Cain was from the fire department and wanted only to give medical aid, Plakas was loud and combative; (Joyce Ailes said he was "hysterical"). Plakas accused Koby of hurting him, and yelled about the handcuffing behind his back and about his scar tissue. He swore Koby would not touch him. Koby sought to reassure Plakas that he was not there to hurt him. Koby gestured for Cain to back up.

Plakas backed into a corner and neared a set of fireplace tools. He picked one of them up, a 2-3 foot poker with a hook on its end. Then gripping it with both hands, he continued screaming, louder and louder at Cain and Koby. Finally he rushed at Koby and swung quite hard at Koby, striking Koby's wrist with the poker. Koby moved away and tried to come in the room from another door, but Plakas chased him away, swinging the poker. Deputy Drinski passed by the injured Koby and asked him with what he was hit; Koby told him that Plakas had a poker. Inside the house, Plakas took the poker, slammed it into the wall1 and then beat his head against the wall. Cain left.

Having driven Koby and Cain from the house, Plakas walked out of the front door. Drinski and Perras had entered the house from the garage and saw Plakas leave. They followed him out, now with guns drawn.

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Bluebook (online)
19 F.3d 1143, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 5191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/plakas-v-drinski-ca7-1994.