Raymond Gray v. William Kern

702 F. App'x 132
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJuly 27, 2017
Docket16-1523
StatusUnpublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 702 F. App'x 132 (Raymond Gray v. William Kern) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Raymond Gray v. William Kern, 702 F. App'x 132 (4th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.

PER CURIAM:

While being trained by the Baltimore Police Department in 2013, Raymond Gray was shot in the head and grievously *134 wounded by Officer William Scott Kern, one of the Department’s officers teaching the training course. In this appeal, Gray and his wife seek the reinstatement of state and federal claims against Officer Kern, Officer Efren Edwards, Major Erie Russell, Commissioner Anthony Batts, and the Department itself. As explained below, we affirm the district court’s judgment in part, vacate in part, and remand for further proceedings.

I.

A.

The dilapidated buildings of the Rosewood Center, established on the outskirts of Baltimore in 1888 as the Maryland Asylum and Training School for the Feeble Minded, have largely gone unused since the Center closed in 2009. On February 12, 2013, however, the Rosewood campus was being utilized for tactical training courses conducted by the Baltimore Police Department for its own recruits and recruits of other nearby police agencies, totalling about twenty trainees. That day, Raymond Gray—then forty-three years old and a trainee with the University of Maryland Police Department—was participating in the training courses. A duo of Officers Kern and Edwards was teaching the courses. No other official of the Baltimore Police Department was then present at Rosewood, including Commissioner Batts and Major Russell, the Department’s director of education and training.

The tactical training courses involved the use of Simunition weapons, i,e., copies of the service weapons (Glock 22 pistols) issued to Baltimore police officers. The Simunition weapons fire only non-lethal paintball-like rounds and are almost entirely blue, distinguishing them visually from the deadly, all-black service weapons generally used by Baltimore’s officers. Nevertheless, the blue Simunition weapons feel nearly identical to the black service weapons. Because of the dangers that would be posed in tactical training courses by live weapons—including the risk that they would be confused with Simunition weapons or otherwise accidentally discharged—no live weapons are permitted to be carried during tactical training or even to be present in the physical location where such training is being conducted. That prohibition is spelled out in both Si-munition instructional materials and Baltimore Police Department rules and regulations.

Despite the prohibition against live weapons, Officer Kern was carrying his loaded black service weapon during the tactical training courses being conducted at the Rosewood campus on February 12, 2013. By then, he and Officer Edwards had periodically worked together teaching tactical training courses for nearly ten years. Kern had a total of approximately nineteen years of police service, and Edwards more than twenty-five. That day’s training courses were their first at Rosewood, where they planned to continue working with trainees for the next three days. After lunch, Edwards taught room clearing and hallway observation to a group of trainees in the upper east side of a Rosewood building, and Kern conducted bunker training with the other trainees two floors below in a gymnasium on the same building’s lower west side. Kern worked with his trainees a few at a time, and the remainder of the trainees waited in a hallway outside the gymnasium.

While Gray was among the trainees waiting for bunker training, he peered through a window in a closed wooden door between the hallway where he was standing and vthe gymnasium. Contemporaneously, Officer Kern removed his live black service weapon from its holster, took aim *135 at the door, and fired, propelling a bullet through the window glass' and shooting Gray in the head.

According to Officer Edwards, Officer Kern then ran upstairs to Edwards to report that “I shot somebody” and “shot him with my gun.” See J.A, 272. 1 On their way back downstairs, Edwards asked Kern, “What the f**k were you doing with a gun in the building?” Id. at 274. Kern responded, “That’s not important right now.” Id. Kern also failed to offer Edwards any explanation as to why Kern had fired at Gray. Edwards asked Kern several times for his loaded service weapon, but Kern refused to give the weapon to Edwards.

B.

As a result of the shooting by Officer Kern", Raymond Gray suffered permanent brain damage and has been estimated to require more than $7 million in round-the-clock care over the remainder of his life. The shooting resulted in this civil action, as well as state criminal charges against Kern.

At his criminal trial, Officer Kern testified that he intended to fire his blue Si-munition weapon—not his black service weapon—in the direction of Gray. His purpose, Kern asserted, was to teach the trainees to avoid “fatal funnels,” e.g., doorways, hallways, stairways, and windows that “are the biggest areas that police get killed in.” See J.A. 123-24. Kern explained that he “saw individuals walking back and forth in the hallway in front of the door,” and that he only “intended to withdraw [his Simunition] weapon, and fire one round at the door,” to “remind them that that is an area in which you do not need to be.” Id. According .to Kern, firing the Simunition weapon at the door would have posed “no risks whatsoever,” because a round from the Simunition weapon “has no capabilities of penetrating anything like that.” Id. at 124.

Officer Kern further testified at trial, however, that the “distinctive sound” of the firing made him realize immediately that he had fired his service weapon, rather than his Simunition weapon. See J.A. 125. Kern admitted carrying his loaded black service weapon in a holster at his right-side waist, while his blue Simunition weapon was tucked nearby in his right pants pocket. Kern claimed he was armed with his live service weapon by agreement with Officer Edwards out of concern that the Rosewood building in which they were conducting that day’s training courses “wasn’t a secure facility like we had used in the past.” Id. at 112; see also id. at 114 (Kern’s testimony that he and 'Edwards agreed that Kern “would be the one, for the first two days [at the Rosewood campus], to remain armed,” and that Edwards “would be the one for the second two days to remain armed”). 2

At depositions conducted in these proceedings, Officer Kern similarly testified, again stating that he had been armed with his live service weapon by agreement with Officer Edwards and “accident[al]ly withdrew the wrong weapon” before shooting *136 Gray. See J.A. 139, 166-67. Kern’s account was disputed, however, by Edwards.

First of all—consistent with his description of being surprised and bewildered in the immediate wake of the shooting by the fact that Officer Kern had been carrying his live service weapon—Officer Edwards testified at deposition that he never discussed or agreed with Kern that one of them would be armed with a loaded service weapon during the training courses at the Rosewood campus.

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702 F. App'x 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raymond-gray-v-william-kern-ca4-2017.