Ralph J. Penley v. Donald F. Eslinger

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedMay 3, 2010
Docket09-13092
StatusPublished

This text of Ralph J. Penley v. Donald F. Eslinger (Ralph J. Penley v. Donald F. Eslinger) 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
Ralph J. Penley v. Donald F. Eslinger, (11th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

[PUBLISH]

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT FILED ________________________ U.S. COURT OF APPEALS ELEVENTH CIRCUIT MAY 3, 2010 No. 09-13092 JOHN LEY ________________________ CLERK

D. C. Docket No. 08-00310-CV-ORL-31-KRS

RALPH J. PENLEY, DONNA PENLEY, as Co-Personal Representatives of the Estate of Christopher David Penley, Deceased; and as natural parents of Christopher David Penley,

Plaintiffs-Appellants,

versus

DONALD F. ESLINGER, as Sheriff of Seminole County, MICHAEL W. WEIPPERT, individually,

Defendants-Appellees.

________________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida _________________________ (May 3, 2010) Before DUBINA, Chief Judge, MARTIN and COX, Circuit Judges.

MARTIN, Circuit Judge:

Christopher David Penley, a fifteen-year-old boy, modified a plastic air

pistol to look like a real weapon and brought it to school. School officials called

the police and, during the ensuing standoff, Lieutenant Michael W. Weippert fired

a single shot, striking Mr. Penley in the head. The wound proved fatal. Ralph J.

Penley and Donna Penley, acting as personal representatives of their son’s estate,

filed suit, seeking relief under both federal and state law. They alleged that under

the circumstances lethal force was unnecessary and excessive, and, therefore, that

Lieutenant Weippert had deprived their son of his Fourth Amendment rights. The

district court disagreed, finding Lieutenant Weippert’s decision reasonable and

granting Lieutenant Weippert and his co-defendant, Sheriff Donald F. Eslinger,

summary judgment.

The loss of such a young life is an undeniable tragedy. However, with their

suit, the Penleys ask us to conduct precisely the sort of 20/20 hindsight inquiry

against which the Supreme Court and this Court have repeatedly cautioned. We

therefore affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment.

2 I.

On January 13, 2006, Mr. Penley, a fifteen-year-old student at Milwee

Middle School, brought a pistol to campus. Eventually his teacher learned that he

was armed, and, as students fled from the classroom, Mr. Penley briefly held

hostage at least one classmate. By the time police officers arrived, that student had

escaped and Mr. Penley had left the classroom, making his way through campus.

When an officer of the Seminole County Sheriff’s Office confronted Mr.

Penley, commanding that he drop his weapon, the boy held the gun under his own

chin, responded that he was going to die one way or another, and “slithered” into a

bathroom. The bathroom had only one entrance, an overhead, roll up style door

which remained open throughout the standoff that followed.

As police began to arrive on the scene, Sheriff’s Deputy Christopher

Maiorano took up a position approximately sixty-five feet from the entrance to the

bathroom. He attempted to communicate with Mr. Penley, but was only able to

elicit the boy’s name. Mr. Penley walked back and forth from one side of the

bathroom to the other, pointing his weapon alternately in Deputy Maiorano’s

direction and at his own chin. In an effort to get Mr. Penley to drop his weapon,

Deputy Maiorano holstered his own and showed Mr. Penley his hands. Instead of

dropping the weapon, Mr. Penley pointed his gun directly at the officer. In his

3 deposition, Deputy Maiorano testified: “When he did that, I hugged the wall. I

didn’t want to get shot. [I] [g]rabbed back for my weapon. At that point I never

put my weapon back in the holster.” In a sworn statement, Deputy Maiorano also

acknowledged that “when [Mr. Penley] drew down on me . . . I was scared,

noticeably scared.” Operating under the belief that the weapon was real, Deputy

Maiorano announced “to everyone on scene” that Mr. Penley was wielding a large

semiautomatic pistol.

Meanwhile, Sergeant Kevin Brubaker, a trained hostage negotiator, took up

a position in front of the bathroom door. Sergeant Brubaker was still negotiating

with the boy when Lieutenant Weippert fired the fatal shot. But, because Sergeant

Brubaker had slid into a safer position, he was unable to see Mr. Penley at the

moment the fatal shot was fired. Over the course of the negotiation, Mr. Penley

had only once responded to Sergeant Brubaker’s questions—revealing his name

and age—and had refused to comply with the sergeant’s repeated requests that he

put down the gun. Sergeant Brubaker testified that not once during the negotiation

did Mr. Penley point his weapon at the sergeant, nor did the sergeant feel

threatened by the boy.

Lieutenant Weippert, a member of the SWAT team since 1989 and firearm

use and defensive tactics instructor at Seminole Community College, was called to

4 the scene. Shortly after arriving, he moved to assist Deputy Maiorano. Armed

with a scoped semiautomatic rifle, Lieutenant Weippert observed Mr. Penley as the

boy moved across the frame of the open bathroom door three times. Each time,

Mr. Penley aimed his gun at Lieutenant Weippert and Deputy Maiorano.

On Mr. Penley’s third pass, Lieutenant Weippert “began to conclude” that

the boy posed a danger to the lieutenant himself, “to others and to the children that

were exposed to that open area.” At approximately 10:20 a.m., Mr. Penley began

to make another lateral pass across the threshold of the open door, pointing his gun

at Lieutenant Weippert and Deputy Maiorano. Serving as spotter, Deputy

Maiorano gave a signal and Lieutenant Weippert fired a single shot, striking Mr.

Penley in the head. It was not until after the shot was fired that police entered the

bathroom and discovered that the gun was not real. Mr. Penley died two days later.

According to Lieutenant Weippert, during the incident, he was concerned

not only with assisting Deputy Maiorano, who was under the lieutenant’s

protection, but also with assuring the safety of the children whom he believed

occupied the surrounding classrooms. For instance, the bathroom was adjacent to a

portable classroom. This classroom, though occupied by children for at least a

portion of the standoff, was at some point evacuated. However, as Lieutenant

Weippert made his way to Deputy Maiorano, he was under the impression that

5 there were children in the room and believed that they had been instructed to stay

in that room. Once he was situated beside Deputy Maiorano, his concern turned to

children in rooms with exposed windows. The presence of children in at least

some of the surrounding buildings is corroborated by the sworn statement of

Sergeant Thomas Johnson of the Seminole County Sheriff’s Office. Sergeant

Johnson, who was positioned above the bathroom during the standoff, saw children

moving about behind the windows of several classrooms located to the rear of the

officers. He saw these students lifting up the window blinds and peering out.

Sergeant Johnson also observed the silhouette of a person behind the glass doors of

another classroom.

Following the death of their son, the Penleys filed a Complaint in the Circuit

Court of Seminole County, Florida, which Defendants Sheriff Eslinger and

Lieutenant Weippert removed to the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of

Florida. With their Amended Complaint, the Penleys sought relief pursuant to 42

U.S.C. § 1983 and the Florida Wrongful Death Act, Fla. Stat.

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