Sarah Curry v. William Cotton

639 F. App'x 325
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 26, 2016
Docket15-3562
StatusUnpublished

This text of 639 F. App'x 325 (Sarah Curry v. William Cotton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sarah Curry v. William Cotton, 639 F. App'x 325 (6th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

HELENE N. WHITE, Circuit Judge.

Defendant-Appellant William Cotton (Cotton), a Hamilton County Sheriffs Deputy, seeks interlocutory review of the district court’s denial of his motion for summary judgment asserting qualified and statutory immunity in this action alleging excessive force under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and state-law battery. The district court held that disputed issues of fact preclude summary judgment. We AFFIRM in part and DISMISS in part.

I.

This case arises out of events that occurred the night of November 24-25, 2012, outside the Inner Circle Night Club in Cincinnati, Ohio. After getting into a verbal altercation with other patrons, Plaintiff-Appellee Sarah Curry (Curry) and her boyfriend Jesus Aleman (Aleman) were asked to leave the club. Kasey Igwegbe (Igwegbe), the head of security at the club, stated that Curry was aggressive towards bar staff and other patrons and that she directed racial slurs at him when he asked her to leave the club. 1

That evening, Deputy Cotton and Deputy Roy Berry (Berry) were working a se *327 curity detail at the club. 2 According to Curry, while she and Aleman waited outside the club for someone to retrieve Curry’s coat, Cotton “demanded” that Curry and Aleman go to their vehicle. (Curry Aff., PID 270, ¶ 12.) Curry replied that she “did not know why [she] was being asked to leave or why Deputy Cotton was being so demanding.” (Id., ¶ 13.) According to Cotton, Curry would not comply with his request, was combative and belligerent, and shouted racial slurs at Cotton and Berry, who are African American. At the plea hearing where she pleaded guilty of resisting arrest, Curry admitted being intoxicated that evening, and “swip[ing] at” and becoming combative with Cotton. (Id., PID 123,127-28.)

Surveillance cameras outside the club captured the initial interaction between the parties. 3 (See generally Ex. 2, Surveillance Videos. 4 ) The footage shows Curry waving her arms and apparently yelling at Berry and swiping at him before Cotton walks behind her, puts his arm around her neck, and throws Curry to the ground. Curry and Cotton continue to struggle, with Curry alternately kicking, squirming, and staying still. Cotton then stands up, at which point Curry continues to kick and squirm, but appears to be quickly subdued. At one point, Curry crawls away from Cotton and stands up; she then appears to swing her arms at him, but he pushes her away. Curry appears to continue yelling and waving her arms at Cotton, who at one point pushes her up against a table, and later up against a railing with his hand on her neck. The footage ends with Cotton walking Curry to the parking lot; he is standing behind her with his arm around her neck, in what he refers to as the “escort position,” (Cotton Br. 3). Curry was not handcuffed, nor did she appear to be bleeding when she walked out of view of the cameras. Curry contends that she was not resisting when Cotton walked her to the parking lot.

The parties dispute the events occurring immediately after Cotton and Curry were out of view of the surveillance cameras. Curry alleges that once in the parking lot, Cotton immediately cuffed her hands behind her back, then “beat [her] to the point [of] bleeding profusely.” (Curry Aff., PID 272, ¶¶ 38-39.) Curry’s affidavit suggests this happened before other officers responded to the scene. Curry alleges the back part of her arm was exposed while her hands were cuffed behind her back, and photos show “marks left by [Cotton’s] baton blows.” (Id., ¶40.) Photos taken after the incident show Curry with blood on her face, apparently from a cut on her forehead, extensive bruising on one arm, and additional cuts and bruises on her arms and body.

Cotton disputes this account and contends that after he walked Curry to the parking lot, she began resisting again and grabbed at his collar, at which point he grabbed Curry and they both fell to the ground. Berry and Igwegbe corroborate *328 this account. While Curry was on the ground, Berry came over to help put her in handcuffs. Cotton admitted that, to get control of Curry, he struck her with his baton twice in the ribcage and once on her arm. Berry stated that he grabbed Curry’s wrist and bicep to force her arm behind her back and that Cotton did the same. Berry also stated that when Curry got up, she had a cut on her head. Cotton contends that when he and Berry saw Curry had cut her forehead, Berry called for assistance.

Igwegbe told the Sheriffs Office that there was no further altercation or physical force used after Curry was in handcuffs. Cotton stated that “once [Curry] was placed in cuffs, she began to struggle and move around on the ground,” and when she tried to get up again, she was told to sit until the squad car arrived. (Cotton Interview, 12:47-13:02.) He also stated that when the first responder arrived, Curry “[went] after” him, and would not sit down even after he instructed her to do so. (Id., 13:02-13:14.) At Curry’s plea hearing, Cotton testified that once other officers arrived at the scene, Curry “attacked one city officer while she was cuffed.” (Plea Hr’g Tr, PID 121.) Then-Sergeant Brian Stapleton (Stapleton) similarly stated that when he arrived at the scene, “Curry was irate, she was beyond verbal control and could not follow along with any instruction that [he] provided her.” (Sheriffs Office Report, PID 71; see also Stapleton Aff., PID 192, ¶ 11 (stating the report is a true and accurate representation of what he observed and what was reported to him).) Berry stated that Curry would not allow the officers to assess the cut on her head and that “she continued to be disruptive.” (Berry Investigation Statement, PID 67.)

Dashboard cameras from two Cincinnati police cruisers that responded to the scene depict some of what occurred once they arrived. The videos generally show Curry sitting on the ground with her hands cuffed behind her back, alternately rocking back and forth and moving along the ground slowly while seated, and appearing to yell. (See generally Ex, 12, Dashboard Camera Videos.) 5 A few times, an officer attempts to hold Curry in place, but most of the time the officers either stand near her or walk slowly alongside her. Although Curry appears to try to stand, she is not successful. At times, the camera pivots to follow Curry around. At certain points, officers out of the camera’s view are heard telling Curry to stop moving around, and to “get away from [the] car,” (Dashboard Camera 2, 04:49-05:04), and asking her to stop talking, (id,, 08:00-08:03). Curry is heard saying, “Help me,” (id., 04:11-04:14), and asking “What’s going on?” (id., 08:03-08:07). Later, an officer is heard asking Curry for certain biographical information; although not all of Curry’s answers are clear, she can be heard saying, “I want somebody please,” “My head hurts,” “What’s going on,” and “Where is everybody.” (Id.,

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Bluebook (online)
639 F. App'x 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sarah-curry-v-william-cotton-ca6-2016.