Sherelle Thomas v. City of Harrisburg

88 F.4th 275
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedDecember 6, 2023
Docket21-2963
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 88 F.4th 275 (Sherelle Thomas v. City of Harrisburg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sherelle Thomas v. City of Harrisburg, 88 F.4th 275 (3d Cir. 2023).

Opinion

PRECEDENTIAL

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT ____________

Nos. 21-2963, 21-2964 & 21-3018 ____________

SHERELLE THOMAS, Administrator of the Estate of Terelle Thomas; T. T., a minor, individually, as child of decedent Terelle Thomas and as his sole survivor

v.

CITY OF HARRISBURG; OFFICER DARIL FOOSE; OFFICER SCOTT JOHNSEN; OFFICER ADRIENNE SALAZAR; TRAVIS BANNING; OFFICER BRIAN CARRIERE; HARRISBURG CITY POLICE DEPT JOHN DOE POLICE OFFICERS 1-5; DAUPHIN COUNTY ADULT PROBATION JOHN DOE SUPERVISORY OFFICERS 1-5; DAUPHIN COUNTY PRISON JOHN DOE PRISON OFFICIALS 1-5; DAN KINSINGER; DAUPHIN COUNTY; PRIMECARE MEDICAL INC; PRIMECARE JOHN DOES MEDICAL EMPLOYEES 1-5,

Appellants Appeal from the United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania (D.C. Civil Action No. 1-20-cv-01178) District Judge: Honorable Yvette Kane

Argued on January 11, 2023

Before: JORDAN, PHIPPS and ROTH, Circuit Judges

(Opinion filed December 6, 2023)

Sheryl L. Brown (ARGUED) Siana Law 941 Pottstown Pike Suite 200 Chester Springs, PA 19425

Counsel for Appellants Officer Daril Foose, Officer Brian Carriere

Frederick B. Buck (ARGUED) Rawle & Henderson 1500 Market Street 19th Floor, Centre Square West Philadelphia, PA 19102

Counsel for Appellants Officer Scott Johnsen, Officer Adrienne Salazar and Travis Banning

2 Kimberly A. Boyer-Cohen (ARGUED) Marshall Dennehey Warner Coleman & Goggin 2000 Market Street Suite 2300 Philadelphia, PA 19103

Counsel for Appellant Dan Kinsinger

Kevin V. Mincey Riley H. Ross, III (ARGUED) Mincey Fitzpatrick Ross 1650 Market Street 36th Floor Philadelphia, PA 19103

Counsel for Appellees

O P I N I ON

ROTH, Circuit Judge:

Sherelle Thomas1 sued the City of Harrisburg; PrimeCare Medical, Inc.; and several individual law enforcement officers (the Officers) on behalf of her decedent

1 The plaintiffs are Sherelle Thomas as the Administrator of the Estate of Terelle Thomas and Terelle Thomas’s minor child. For convenience, we will speak of the plaintiffs/appellees in the singular as Sherelle Thomas.

3 relative, alleging that defendants failed both to render medical care and to intervene to prevent a violation of the right to medical care. The Officers moved to dismiss on grounds of qualified immunity. The District Court denied the motion. The court rejected the Officers’ claims of qualified immunity because it found that Sherelle Thomas alleged sufficient facts to state her claims and both rights were clearly established at the time of the violations. The Officers appealed, limited to the issue of qualified immunity. Because the District Court correctly denied the Officers’ claim of qualified immunity regarding their failure to render medical care claim, we will affirm on that issue. We conclude, however, that the District Court ruled incorrectly when it recognized a claim of failure to intervene. Because neither our Court nor the Supreme Court have recognized the right to intervene in the context of the rendering of medical care, qualified immunity for the Officers on this claim is appropriate and we will remand this claim to the District Court with instructions to dismiss it as to the Officers.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Factual Background

Sherelle Thomas, Administrator of the Estate of Terelle Thomas, alleged the following: On December 14, 2019, Harrisburg Police Officer Daril Foose was partnered with Adult Probation Officer Dan Kinsinger. At approximately 6:15 p.m., Foose observed Terrelle Thomas (Thomas) and another man walk from a bar and enter a vehicle as passengers. Foose followed the vehicle and made a traffic stop. Foose then noted that Thomas “spoke to her as if he had ‘cotton mouth’

4 and a large amount of an unknown item inside his mouth.”2 She also observed “strands in his mouth that were almost like gum and paste,” that his lips were “pasty white,” and that his “face was covered with a white powdery substance.”3 She believed that Thomas had ingested something and was concealing it in his mouth.4 As a result, Probation Officer Kinsinger detained Thomas, during which time Thomas “spit out a white liquid.”5 Officer Foose then concluded that Thomas had “ingested a large amount of cocaine.”6 However, Thomas told Officer Foose “that the only drugs on his person was a small amount of marijuana and that his lips were white because he had consumed a candy cigarette.”7 Officer Foose quickly concluded this was a lie because she “observed cocaine rocks fall out of . . . Thomas’s shirt . . . and she failed to find any candy cigarettes.”8

During Thomas’s detention, four additional officers (Corporal Scott Johnsen and Officers Adrienne Salazar, Travis Banning, and Brian Carriere) arrived at the scene. Probation

2 Appx. 071. 3 Appx. 071. 4 See Appx. 102 (Officer Foose stated that Thomas spit out “a white liquid that resembled crack cocaine attempted (sic) to be swallowed” and that “Thomas’s mouth indicted (sic) to me that he had ingested a large amount of cocaine.”). 5 Appx. 071. 6 Appx. 071. 7 Appx. 072. 8 Appx. 072. The Officers found additional crack cocaine rocks in the car where he had been sitting, as well as a digital scale with cocaine residue on it and a clear plastic baggie with marijuana inside it.

5 Officer Kinsinger and Officer Foose informed each officer that they believed that Thomas had ingested cocaine. Officer Salazar independently arrived at the same conclusion after observing a white powdery substance covering Thomas’s lips, and informed Thomas that ingesting cocaine could have an “ill effect” on Thomas’s health.9 Corporal Johnsen “acknowledged the seriousness of ingesting cocaine by warning . . . Thomas that he could possibly die from ingesting drugs.”10 Officer Banning also observed a “large amount of white residue around and on . . . Thomas’ lips,” and did not find any evidence of candy cigarettes.11 Based on their observations, the Officers filed police reports indicating Thomas’s cocaine ingestion, and Officer Foose prepared and signed an Affidavit of Probable Cause noting that she had observed Thomas consume “crack cocaine in order to conceal it from police.”12

The Officers jointly determined that Thomas should be transferred to Dauphin County Booking Center at the Dauphin County Prison for detention and processing. Dauphin County contracts with PrimeCare to provide limited medical care to individuals at Dauphin County Prison. PrimeCare does not have hospital features such as x-ray or CT machines but instead transfers individuals to a nearby hospital for testing and treatment. In addition, Harrisburg Police Department policy dictates that officers take arrestees to the hospital if the arrestees have “consumed illegal narcotics in a way that could

9 Appx. 072–73. 10 Appx. 072. 11 Appx. 073. 12 Appx. 115.

6 jeopardize their health and welfare.”13 Despite this policy and the observations noted above, the Officers did not take Thomas to the hospital. Instead, Officer Carriere arrested Thomas and transported him to Dauphin County Booking Center. En route, Thomas told Officer Carriere that he was hot despite an outdoor temperature of 46 degrees.14 Officer Carriere opened the window.

Upon arrival at the Dauphin County Booking Center, Officer Carriere informed prison officials and medical staff there that Thomas “may have swallowed crack cocaine.”15 The officials and PrimeCare staff noted that Thomas had white powder covering his lips, but they also failed to send Thomas to a hospital. Instead, the officials placed Thomas in a cell without any medical care or observation. Less than two hours after Thomas’s arrest, surveillance video showed Thomas falling backwards onto the floor, hitting his head, and suffering cardiac arrest.

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88 F.4th 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sherelle-thomas-v-city-of-harrisburg-ca3-2023.