Scott v. City of Cape Coral

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedJuly 6, 2023
Docket2:21-cv-00674
StatusUnknown

This text of Scott v. City of Cape Coral (Scott v. City of Cape Coral) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scott v. City of Cape Coral, (M.D. Fla. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA FORT MYERS DIVISION

ARTHUR SCOTT,

Plaintiff,

v. Case No: 2:21-cv-674-JES-NPM

CITY OF CAPE CORAL, FLORIDA, ANTHONY SIZEMORE, in his official capacity as Chief of Cape Coral Police Department, HUMBERTO VAZQUEZ, individually, and CAROLINE SEWRY-MARTINS, individually,

Defendants.

OPINION AND ORDER This matter comes before the Court on Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment. (Doc. #48.) Plaintiff filed a Response in Opposition (Doc. #52), and Defendants filed a Reply. (Doc. #62.) For the reasons set forth below, the motion is denied as moot as 1 to defendant Caroline Serwy-Martins (who was previously dismissed) and is otherwise granted.

1 Officer Caroline Serwy-Martins’ name is spelled as “Sewry- Martins” in Scott’s Complaint and his Amended Complaint. (See Docs. ##1, 35.) As a result, this is how the Officer’s name appears in the Court’s CM/ECF system. In her deposition, however, the Officer testified that her name is correctly spelled “Serwy.” Serwy- Martins Dep. 7:6. Herein, the Court will use her correct name spelling. I. The parties initially agreed that the material facts are undisputed and are largely established by video from the officers’

body cameras. (See Doc #62, p. 1) (“Indeed, the material facts are not disputed; they are on camera.”); (Doc #52, p. 1) (“Defendants are also correct in that the events of the encounter, captured on camera, are undisputed.”). Plaintiff later argued, however, that there are disputed issues of material facts which preclude summary judgment. (Doc. #52, pp. 10, 13.) In any event, for summary judgment purposes the undisputed material facts (herein the “summary judgment facts”) are as follows: On March 31, 2019, a neighbor reported to the Cape Coral Police Department that a male (later identified as plaintiff Arthur Scott) and a female (later identified as his girlfriend Samantha Malay) were yelling and screaming in a certain apartment. Police

dispatch relayed the information and officers Humberto Vazquez (Officer Vazquez) and Caroline Serwy-Martins (Officer Serwy- Martins) of the Cape Coral Police Department responded separately to the apartment complex at about 6:15 p.m. Officer Vazquez arrived first and spoke briefly with Ms. Malay in a parking lot in front of the apartment complex. Ms. Malay advised Officer Vasquez that Scott had pushed her and hit her in the face, and that she had made Scott’s nose bleed in her efforts to push him away. Officer Vazquez left Ms. Malay and went to Scott’s apartment, but no one answered when he knocked on the door. Meanwhile, Officer Serwy-Martins arrived at the apartment

complex and spoke with Ms. Malay in the parking lot. Ms. Malay said she had a verbal altercation with Scott that had become physical. Ms. Malay further stated that they had both pushed each other while inside the apartment, and Scott had received a bloody nose. Officer Serwy-Martins directed Ms. Malay to follow her, and they both headed toward a dock behind the apartment complex. Officer Vazquez arrived at the dock first and found Scott standing on it with blood drying on his face. Officer Vazquez approached Scott and said “I’m gonna need you to step over here for me, okay?” Scott responded “for what? Why?” Officer Vazquez replied, “Well they called the police and were trying to figure out what’s going on.” Officer Vazquez told Scott two more times

to “step over here.” By then Officer Serwy-Martins had arrived and she interjected, “What’s the problem? He asked you three times and you’re still like I’m not going.” Scott seemingly ignored the comment, turned his back to the officers, and slightly pivoted a chair next to him. Officer Serwy-Martins stated, “Are you fucking serious?” The comment ignited a short back and forth between the three, but Scott eventually walked off the dock and towards the officers. Officer Serwy-Martins said, “Alright, let me pat you down, I wanna see if you have any weapons on you. Come over here.” As Scott approached, she said “put your hands on your head for me.” Scott

proceeded to raise his arms but, instead of putting his hands on his head, he put them on a nearby palm tree. With Scott’s back to her, Officer Serwy-Martins reached for her handcuffs and repeated: “I want them on your head. Right now. Put your hands on your head for me.” After two or three seconds of stillness, Officer Serwy- Martins said “alright,” and grabbed Scott’s arm in an apparent attempt to handcuff him. Scott’s arm swung back, he turned to face Officer Serwy-Martins, and said “are you fuckin—you’re gonna place me in fucking handcuffs? For what?” Officer Vazquez then tackled Scott to the ground in what Scott characterizes as an “unlawful take down.” (Doc. #35, ¶ 30.) Upon impact, Scott immediately started shrieking and

groaning. After handcuffing Scott, Officer Serwy-Martins attempted to turn the facedown Scott over. Scott exclaimed “wait, wait,” “my leg, oh please, just let my leg go.” Officer Vazquez, who was still straddled over Scott, got up and slightly moved Scott’s leg. Scott screamed in apparent pain and Officer Serwy-Martins asked, “Do you want me to call EMS?” Scott responded “Yes.” Scott laid on the ground for approximately eight minutes until Fire Department personnel arrived. At that point he was uncuffed and the Fire Department personnel began evaluating him. Approximately another two minutes passed until EMS personnel arrived, and likewise started evaluating Scott. Officer Vazquez told an EMS medic: “He got into an altercation with his girlfriend,

which is why he can’t move apparently. Yeah, it’s one of those things, what do you call it, incarceritis I think?” EMS continued evaluating Scott, and after about six minutes an EMS medic declared “as far as we’re concerned, he’s good to go.” Immediately afterwards, an unidentified officer standing directly behind Scott said, “alright sir, stand up.” This command was repeated twice more before Officer Sarah Johnson stood Scott up with the aid of other officers. Scott was re-handcuffed and led to start walking by an unidentified officer. On his first step, Scott grimaced. Officer Zarillo commented “Now we’re gonna play the ‘my hip hurts game,’” and Scott retorted “I’m not playing no game, guy!”

Scott took about three steps before he shrieked and fell to the ground. The unidentified officer and Officer Zarillo picked Scott up — Officer Zarillo from the left arm and the unidentified officer from the right arm. Scott took another couple steps before his legs went limp and the officers started dragging him. These officers dragged Scott for about eight seconds before Officer Zarillo stopped and exclaimed, “Stand up and walk like an adult!” Scott responded “I can’t! My fucking leg is killing me!” whereupon the deputies continued to drag Scott with his legs dangling. The officers dragged Scott a couple more steps until they reached the front of the apartment complex. They then laid Scott on the pavement. The officers repeatedly told Scott to “get up”

and Scott repeatedly responded that he could not. The unidentified officer and Officer Johnson then picked Scott up. Scott took a couple more steps before whimpering “I really can’t walk,” and fell again. At this point, Officer Zarillo signaled for the medics and told the other officers “alright . . . drop him. Put him for medics, let medics take him.” With Scott audibly shrieking and howling in the background, Officers Vazquez and Serwy-Martins spoke with the alleged victim near the dock. The same EMS medic that initially cleared Scott returned and said: “I talked to him, he’s fine. His hip is—sorry to say—but his hip is hurting because he doesn’t want to go to jail. He doesn’t—he thinks that if he tells us his hip is hurting

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