Rafael A. Llovera Linares v. Broward Co. Sheriff's

347 F. App'x 424
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedSeptember 8, 2009
Docket08-14674
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 347 F. App'x 424 (Rafael A. Llovera Linares v. Broward Co. Sheriff's) 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
Rafael A. Llovera Linares v. Broward Co. Sheriff's, 347 F. App'x 424 (11th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Rafael Linares appeals pro se the judgment against his complaint that Deputies Felix Vasconez and Jeremy Grant of the Sheriff’s Office of Broward County, Florida, used excessive force to apprehend Linares. Linares challenges the denial of his motions to appoint counsel, produce and compel discovery, and amend his complaint; the summary judgment in favor of Grant; the jury verdict in favor of Vasconez; and the denial of his motion for a new trial. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

Our discussion of the background is divided into two parts. We first discuss the facts that led to Linares’s complaint. We then discuss the parties’ filings and the ruling of the district court.

A. Linares’s Traffic Offenses and Arrest

As Deputies Vasconez and Grant investigated a traffic accident, they observed Linares driving on the wrong side of the highway. When Linares drove his vehicle toward the accident, the deputies signaled for Linares and his passenger to stop. Linares slowed and drove between the damaged vehicles as Vasconez and Grant approached Linares’s sport utility vehicle. Linares then accelerated suddenly and forced the deputies to move to avoid being hit. Linares’s vehicle struck Grant on the wrist.

Vasconez and Grant feared Linares posed a danger to the public and pursued Linares’s vehicle. Linares maintained his course and eventually turned on a second street, where he continued to drive against the flow of traffic. Linares then entered Interstate 95, where he drove at speeds between 80 and 125 miles per hour. Linares exited Interstate 95 and lost control on the off-ramp, where his vehicle eventually rested.

Vasconez and Grant approached Linares’s vehicle with their guns drawn, with Grant walking to the driver’s side and Vasconez walking to the passenger’s side. Linares suddenly placed his vehicle in drive and sped toward the deputies. Grant, who was in the path of the vehicle, jumped out of the way and shot at the vehicle until it was out of range. Vasconez, who could not see Grant but heard gunfire and feared that Grant had been struck or run over, shot at the vehicle until he saw Grant.

Vasconez and Grant returned to their patrol cars and chased Linares until he stopped the vehicle in a parking lot. Linares attempted to flee on foot, but Vasconez apprehended Linares within a few feet of his vehicle. Vasconez forced Linares to the ground and handcuffed him. Grant detained the passenger of Linares’s vehicle.

Both Linares and Grant were treated for their injuries. Linares was treated for a gunshot wound to his left side, fractures in his right hand, and bruises on his face, *426 arms, and legs. Grant received treatment for his right wrist.

B. The Filings by Linares and Deputies Grant and Vasconez and the Ruling of the District Court

Linares filed a complaint that alleged the use of excessive force by the Sheriffs Office of Broward County and Deputies Grant and Vasconez. Linares alleged that Grant and Vasconez shot at him and his vehicle and, after Linares left his vehicle, he was shot in the abdomen by Vasconez or some other officer. Linares also alleged that, after he fell to the ground, Vasconez and another officer jumped on and injured Linares.

Linares moved for appointed counsel and for the production of documents. Linares requested counsel on the ground that he did not speak English and he had limited legal knowledge. In his motion to produce, Linares sought to compel copies of Grant’s and Vasconez’s employment histories; test results on the projectiles recovered from the vehicle; videos and radio communications made of the chase and arrest; internal investigation reports of the incident; and internal policies of the Sheriffs Office of Broward County regarding the use of excessive force. A magistrate judge denied both motions, and Linares appealed to the district court to appoint counsel.

The district court ruled that Linares failed to “show[ ] that this excessive force case is so exceptional as to require the assistance of counsel.” The court “[found] that Mr. Linares proved himself to be capable of pro se litigation on the issues at hand at trial.” Linares moved four additional times for the appointment of counsel, which the district court denied on the same grounds.

After the district court dismissed the complaint against the Sheriffs Office of Broward County for failure to state a claim, Grant and Vasconez moved for summary judgment and argued they were entitled to qualified immunity. The deputies argued that they were allowed to use deadly force to respond both to Linares’s attempt to harm Grant and the danger Linares posed to the public. In their affidavits, Grant alleged that he shot at Linares in self-defense, and Vasconez alleged that he shot at Linares after Vasconez thought that Grant had been struck by Linares’s vehicle. The deputies also submitted the affidavit of Deputy Christian Silva, who pursued Linares on Interstate 95 and saw Grant and Vasconez shoot at and arrest Linares. Silva stated that both Grant and Vasconez shot at Linares’s vehicle when it stopped on the off ramp; Vasconez did not draw his weapon or shoot Linares in the parking lot; and shots were fired only while Linares was inside his vehicle.

Linares responded that Grant and Vasconez lacked authority to shoot at him while he was inside his vehicle because it was not being used as a weapon. Linares alleged that he was drunk and drove through the accident scene under the belief it was a traffic safety checkpoint, and that he did not hit Grant with his vehicle. Linares alleged that neither he nor his passenger were harmed while inside his vehicle and that he was shot as he surrendered to the police. Linares submitted with his response fifteen exhibits, including two crime scene reports. In one report, Detective Caperton opined that a bullet penetrated the rear tailgate of Linares’s vehicle, traveled through the left rear passenger seat, the driver’s seat, and Linares, and lodged in the dashboard. In a second report, Detective Berrena suggested that Linares was shot from the front.

After Grant and Vasconez filed a reply, Linares filed a second response with additional exhibits, and Grant and Vasconez *427 moved to strike Linares’s second response. The district court denied the motion, allowed Grant and Vasconez to oppose the response, and admonished Linares not to “file anything further in Reply.” Linares filed a third response allegedly to oppose medical records. Grant and Vasconez moved to strike the response, and the magistrate judge granted that motion.

Linares moved to amend his complaint to add several defendants. Grant and Vasconez opposed the motion as untimely. The magistrate judge found that Linares’s motion was untimely because it was filed three months after the deadline established in the scheduling order. The district court later dismissed the motion as untimely.

The magistrate judge recommended that the district court grant in part and deny in part summary judgment to the deputies. The magistrate judge recommended a summary judgment in favor of Grant against the complaint that he beat Linares in the absence of evidence that Grant was near Linares when he was apprehended.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
347 F. App'x 424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rafael-a-llovera-linares-v-broward-co-sheriffs-ca11-2009.