St. Clair v. Mutz

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedApril 15, 2024
Docket8:21-cv-00168
StatusUnknown

This text of St. Clair v. Mutz (St. Clair v. Mutz) 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
St. Clair v. Mutz, (M.D. Fla. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA TAMPA DIVISION

ALBERT LEE ST. CLAIR, JR.,

Plaintiff,

v. Case No. 8:21-cv-168-WFJ-UAM

DEANGELO M. ANTHONY, et al.,

Defendants. /

ORDER

Before the Court is Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment. (Docs. 110, 115). Plaintiff Albert Lee St. Clair, Jr. has responded in opposition, and Defendants have replied. (Docs. 111, 112). The Court heard oral argument on the Motion and received supplemental briefs from the parties. (Docs. 118, 121, 122). Upon careful consideration, the Court GRANTS in part and DENIES in part Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment. I. Background A. Facts This civil-rights action arises from the arrest of Mr. St. Clair after he stole a government vehicle and engaged the police in two car chases. On the morning of April 8, 2019, Mr. St. Clair stole an unoccupied pickup truck in Polk County, Florida. (Doc. 110-5 at 21, 25). The truck belonged to the City of Lakeland and was hitched to a trailer that contained “lawn equipment.” (Id. at 24, 28). Mr. St. Clair drove the truck to neighboring Hillsborough County, where he went “joyriding” and led police on what he later described as a “small chase.” (Id. at 21-22). Law enforcement ultimately called off the pursuit, and Mr. St. Clair made his way back to Polk County. (Id. at 31-32).

As he approached the Polk County line, Mr. St. Clair looked back and saw “three or four” Lakeland Police vehicles with their emergency lights on. (Id. at 33, 35). Mr. St. Clair did not pull over. Instead, he “started going fast” and led police on a roughly fourteen- minute chase. (Id. at 33, 35-36; see also Doc. 108-1, Peterman Dashcam Video). During the pursuit, Mr. St. Clair exceeded the speed limit, drove into oncoming traffic, ignored traffic signals, knocked over a garbage can, and rode over at least one median. (Doc. 110-

5 at 37-38; see also Doc. 108-1, Peterman Dashcam Video). A review of the chase on the police dashcams shows Mr. St. Clair’s behavior to be wild and reckless in the extreme. (E.g., Doc. 108-1, Peterman Dashcam Video). At one point, Mr. St. Clair tried to “intimidate” a pursuing officer by changing lanes and driving toward the officer’s vehicle. (Doc. 110-7 at 9-11; see also Doc. 108-6, Fetz Dashcam Video at 2:10-20). He later

admitted to “ramm[ing]” a police car that “tried to pull [him] over” in Hillsborough County. (Doc. 110-5 at 30). Mr. St. Clair also “ate” methamphetamine during the chase to avoid police finding it. (Doc. 110-7 at 4-5). Police attempted to deploy “stop sticks,” but Mr. St. Clair eluded the first attempt by driving over the median. (Doc. 108-1, Peterman Dashcam Video at 6:20-35). On the

second attempt, law enforcement succeeded in deflating the truck’s tires, and the chase ended on a highway overpass. (Doc. 110-5 at 43). As the truck slowed to a crawl, Mr. St. Clair exited the vehicle and began to run. (Id. at 65; see also Doc. 108-2, Gulledge Dashcam Video at 14:21-38). Sgt. Aaron Peterman opened the driver’s side door of his vehicle, released his K-9 partner, and ordered the dog to “bite” Mr. St. Clair. (Doc. 109-14 at 3; see also Doc. 108-3, Martin Dashcam Video at 14:00-20). Mr. St. Clair ran for approximately

thirty feet before the dog caught up with him. (Doc. 110-5 at 65; see also Doc. 108-2, Gulledge Dashcam Video at 14:21-38). He was standing when the dog began to bite him, but he was quickly taken to the ground—either by “the dog or the cops,” according to Mr. St. Clair. (Doc. 110-5 at 68; see also Doc. 108-2, Gulledge Dashcam Video at 14:21-38). The parties disagree about what happened next.1 Mr. St. Clair’s first two complaints assert he stopped and went to his knees with hands up. (Doc. 1 at 8; Doc. 9 at 15). This is

plainly refuted by the dashcam footage, which shows him fleeing from the K-9. (Doc. 108- 1, Peterman Dashcam Video at 15:00-15; Doc. 108-2, Gulledge Dashcam Video at 14:21- 38). At the point the dog is preparing to latch on, the activity moves off camera. (Doc. 108- 2, Gulledge Dashcam Video at 14:21-38). At his deposition, Mr. St. Clair testified that he immediately “gave up” and “wasn’t resisting.” (Doc. 110-5 at 67, 69). Despite his lack of

resistance, officers allegedly “swarm[ed] around” him and began punching him in the face. (Id. at 57-59). Mr. St. Clair testified that the punches continued even after he was handcuffed and had screamed, “You’re killing me, you’re hurting me.” (Id. at 23, 57). He also stated that officers “beat[] [him] with batons” and kept “whacking” and “hitting” him. (Id. at 70). Furthermore, one officer allegedly “kicked [him] in the testicles after [he] had

the handcuffs on.” (Id. at 23). In Mr. St. Clair’s telling, the encounter lasted approximately

1 Defendants’ dashcam footage depicts the car chase in Polk County, the end of the pursuit on the highway overpass, and Mr. St. Clair’s attempt to flee on foot. But the footage does not show the officers’ physical apprehension of Mr. St. Clair once the K-9 caught up with him and he stopped running. fifteen to twenty seconds, the handcuffs “were on [him] within the first couple seconds,” and the dog bit him for five to ten seconds.2 (Id. at 62, 95). Mr. St. Clair also estimated that

he was struck approximately thirty times. (Id. at 62). Defendants offer a different version of the arrest. Officer Zachary Simmons, for example, claims that Mr. St. Clair was “non-compliant” throughout the encounter, “refus[ing] to permit officers to place his hands in handcuffs.” (Doc. 109-15 at 3). According to Officer Simmons, he struck Mr. St. Clair’s right arm two or three times in an effort to “gain control of [Mr.] St. Clair’s hands.” (Id.) Several other officers submitted

affidavits describing their role in the arrest. All claim to have used physical force against Mr. St. Clair only because he was non-compliant and resisting arrest: • Officer Eric Strom states that he held Mr. St. Clair’s legs in place to prevent his “active[] resist[ance].” (Doc. 109-17 at 3).

• Officer DeAngelo Anthony recounts delivering “approximately four knee strikes to [Mr.] St. Clair’s right leg in an effort to distract him from his efforts to resist.” (Doc. 109-1 at 3).

• Officer Derek Gulledge claims that he “kicked [Mr. St. Clair] one time in the right shoulder” after observing him “tens[e], brac[e], and refus[e] to place his hands behind his back.” (Doc. 109-4 at 3).

• Officer Nicholas Rex describes “deliver[ing] two closed fist strikes to [Mr.] St. Clair’s face in an effort to distract him from his efforts to resist.” (Doc. 109-19 at 2).

• Officer Justin King claims that, in order to “gain compliance,” he “delivered two closed-hand compliance strikes to [Mr.] St. Clair’s head with [his] right hand.” (Doc. 109-18 at 3).

2 Sgt. Peterman estimated that the dog held the bite for “approximately fifteen to thirty seconds.” (Doc. 109-14 at 3). • Sgt. Peterman avers that, after the K-9 bit Mr. St. Clair’s left arm, he “directed [Mr.] St. Clair to the ground” and “attempted to get [Mr.] St. Clair’s hands behind his back” while the latter “continued to resist by tucking his right arm underneath his body.” (Doc. 109-14 at 3).

After Mr. St. Clair was subdued and handcuffed, he was placed in the back of a patrol vehicle and driven to Lakeland Regional Health, a nearby hospital. (Doc. 110-5 at 84-85, 87). According to Mr. St. Clair, he arrived at the hospital within ten to twenty minutes of his arrest. (Id. at 87). There, he was treated for his dog bite, receiving sutures for a 4.3-centimeter laceration on his left arm. (Doc. 110-2 at 13). The examining physician noted “bruising to the right side of [Mr. St. Clair’s] face,” but found “no bleeding” in his mouth and “no bleeding, [] tenderness, [] or swelling” in his nose. (Id. at 14, 17). A CAT scan of Mr. St.

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St. Clair v. Mutz, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-clair-v-mutz-flmd-2024.