Stephen Gilbert v. Steven French

364 F. App'x 76
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 2, 2010
Docket08-20296
StatusUnpublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 364 F. App'x 76 (Stephen Gilbert v. Steven French) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stephen Gilbert v. Steven French, 364 F. App'x 76 (5th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

PER CURIAM: *

Plaintiff-Appellant Stephen Gilbert appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the Defendant-Appel-lees for Gilbert’s 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claims, arising from acts Gilbert contends constituted excessive force and a failure to intervene, in violation of his constitutional rights. Finding no error in the district court’s grant of judgment in favor of the Defendant-Appellees, we AFFIRM.

I. BACKGROUND

Summary judgment proof establishes that on December 19, 2004, at approximately 9:30 p.m., Gilbert and another man, Michael Hall, entered a Taquería Arandas restaurant in Bryan, Texas. Gilbert and Hall were both wearing masks over their faces; Gilbert was armed with a piece of pipe and Hall was carrying a gun. Upon entering the restaurant, Gilbert and Hall assaulted and restrained four of the five employees in the building. Hall used the back of his gun to beat one employee, Edmundo Cruz, who almost bled to death as a result of his resulting head injury and cracked skull. While the fifth employee exited the building to call the police, Gilbert and Hall demanded money from and robbed the other four employees at gunpoint. The four employees were placed in one of the restaurant’s food storage rooms, and Hall removed Santo Domingo Reyes from the room to use as a hostage. The three employees remaining in the storage room reported hearing the sounds of a beating, but the record is unclear as to what injuries Reyes may have suffered prior to exiting the restaurant. Cruz and the other two employees left in the storage room eventually escaped through the front door, completely oblivious to what events subsequently took place behind the restaurant.

Soon after the fifth employee had run across Texas Avenue to call the police, numerous police units arrived on the scene and began to circle the restaurant. While strategically positioning themselves, the police learned that a dispatcher had just heard, over an open telephone line to the restaurant, a male stating: “If he does not get any money, somebody is going to die.” At this same time, one police officer observed a masked man armed with a gun through one of the restaurant’s windows.

*78 After Officers French, Oliver, Bona, Pot-tinger, and Swartzlander positioned themselves near the back door of the restaurant, Hall, still masked, opened and looked out of the back door of the restaurant. The police announced themselves and ordered Hall to surrender, but he refused and instead went back into the restaurant. A few minutes later, the door opened again and this time three men — Gilbert, Hall, and a hostage (Reyes) — exited. Reyes was bleeding from his left arm and was being used by Gilbert and Hall as a shield between them and the police.

Although the police ordered Gilbert ánd Hall to show their hands and get down on the ground, neither complied. Instead, Hall shoved the hostage towards the police, revealing a large black handgun pointed at the officers. Officer French reported he was the first to see the gun in Hall’s hand, and that he began to fire first. 1 After the officers began to shoot at Hall, both Hall and Gilbert took off running. French claims that both Officers Hauke and Oliver also fired at Hall. 2 Officer Oliver indicated that he shot at Hall three times. French reported that he fired three rounds at Hall as Hall attempted to flee. Hall ultimately died from the injuries he sustained in his attempt to flee.

The record establishes that three officers shot at Gilbert: Officer Hines, Officer Harrison, and Officer Schooler. Hines and Harrison were stationed on the opposite (front side) of the restaurant, behind a car they were using for protection. Officer Schooler was positioned with Officer Ama-ya (who did not shoot at Gilbert) — and they were hiding behind another car. The evidence does not establish whether it was Hines’s, Harrison’s, or Schooler’s shots that actually hit Gilbert (he sustained two gunshot wounds). 3 Gilbert, in his complaint, various pleadings, and now in his brief before this court, maintains that he was running away with his arms raised, in an apparent attempt to surrender. 4 The record is not entirely clear whether his arms were in fact raised as he ran across Texas Avenue. 5

The record is clear that Officer Schooler was the first to open fire on Gilbert. Her police report, in pertinent part, states as follows:

*79 At some point I became aware that other officers were behind the building. I heard Sgt. S. French advise on the radio that the robbery was in progress ... I heard Pottinger and possibly French on the radio advising a suspect was coming out the back door. I heard some type of scuffle coming from the northwest corner of the building. I then heard a gunshot at the same time I saw a muzzle flash from that area. Then a suspect ran from that area toward Texas Avenue. I shouted once or twice for the suspect to stop but he continued running. I then fired my shotgun at the suspect. He continued running toward Texas Avenue so I fired at him again. He still was running so I attempted to fire a third time. My shotgun did not discharge so I racked it once and fired it a third time at the suspect. By this time the suspect had reached Texas Avenue and ran across. As soon as the suspect reached the grass east of the street, he collapsed onto the ground face-down....

Officer Amaya, who was the closest officer to Schooler during the shooting, reported that he saw Gilbert running across the street and witnessed Schooler shooting at Gilbert while he crossed the street. Ama-ya, however, does not state whether Gilbert’s arms were up or down as he crossed Texas Avenue.

Hines reported that as he watched Gilbert run by Schooler, Gilbert turned to his right and “almost stopped.” Hines claims that Gilbert then faced both Schooler and Amaya — although Hines admits that his view of this scene was partially blocked by Schooler and Amaya. Hines then watched as Gilbert turned and began once again to run across Texas Avenue. Hines claims he fired four rounds at Gilbert as Gilbert crossed the street.

Harrison’s account of this same scene is similar to Hines’s, as he states, in pertinent part:

[Gilbert] then slowed down and turned to face his body and hands toward us. Officer Schooler then fired her shotgun at the subject. The subject then turned back and continued to run towards and across Texas. As the suspect started crossing Texas, he again slowed and faced towards us with his hands slightly extended in front of him. I started firing and the suspect turned around and started running again. I believe I fired two or three rounds at the subject.

After sustaining two gunshot wounds, Gilbert was transported to St. Joseph Hospital, where he received medical treatment. Gilbert was eventually arrested, yet he remained in the hospital for three days until he was released to police custody-

On December 14, 2006, Gilbert filed his

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Bluebook (online)
364 F. App'x 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephen-gilbert-v-steven-french-ca5-2010.