Susan Stricker v. Twp. Of Cambridge

710 F.3d 350, 2013 WL 141695
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 14, 2013
Docket11-1998
StatusPublished
Cited by62 cases

This text of 710 F.3d 350 (Susan Stricker v. Twp. Of Cambridge) 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
Susan Stricker v. Twp. Of Cambridge, 710 F.3d 350, 2013 WL 141695 (6th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

DAMON J. KEITH, Circuit Judge.

Various members of the Strieker family appeal a grant of summary judgment for Defendants on their § 1983 claims. Local and state police officers responded to a 911 call from Susan Strieker requesting help for her son, Andrew, who was suffering from an apparent drug overdose. Consistent with policy requirements, police officers responded to the call to secure the premises for EMS. When officers arrived at the scene, Susan and her husband, Kevin Strieker, refused the officers entry into the house without a warrant. After unsuccessfully trying to convince the Strickers to let the officers in or to have Andrew come out, the officers forced their way in, conducted a search of the house, and placed Andrew’s parents in handcuffs while EMS administered care to Andrew.

In December 2010, various members of the Strieker family sued various police officers and municipal entities under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging Fourth Amendment violations in connection with the police’s response to the 911 call. Defendants consisted of the Township of *354 Cambridge, Lenawee County, and the following persons in their official and individual capacities: Greg Hunt, sergeant of the Cambridge Township Police Department; Larry Wibbler, police chief of the Cambridge Township Police Department; Christopher Kourt and Christopher VanDyke, deputy sheriffs of the Lenawee County Sheriffs Department; Jack Welch, sheriff of the Lenawee County Sheriffs Department; Frank Riley, assistant prosecutor of Lenawee County; Amy McMullen, trooper of the Michigan State Police; Michelle Stuck, sergeant of the Michigan State Police; and Peter Munoz, director of the Michigan State Police (collectively, “State Defendants”). The district court granted summary judgment for State Defendants, finding that exigent circumstances justified all of the police’s actions. On appeal, the Strickers assert that the district court erred in dismissing their claims, primarily arguing that reasonable minds could differ as to the existence of exigent circumstances. Upon due consideration, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.

BACKGROUND

Although the parties dispute some of the facts, the disputed facts are presented as characterized by the Strickers because on summary judgment the court views all of the facts and draws all reasonable inferences in favor of the non-moving party. Tysinger v. Police Dep’t of City of Zanesville, 463 F.3d 569, 572 (6th Cir.2006).

A. The 911 Call

On December 22, 2008, at 7:49 p.m., Susan Strieker called 911 from her residence to report that her twenty-year-old son, Andrew Strieker, had “overdosed on some kind of drugs” and requested EMS assistance at her home in Onsted, Michigan. R.76, Ex. I at 1. When asked if she knew what drugs her son had taken, she admitted that she had “no clue.” Id. She related that he was “falling down, ... losing consciousness, [was] not in touch with reality, [could not] talk to [her or tell her] his name or what he [was] doing, and he just [could not] stand up straight and he [could not] move.” Id.

B. Arrival of Sergeant Hunt

Although Cambridge Township Fire and Rescue personnel were the first to arrive at the Strieker home, they waited at the end of the driveway for police to secure the scene per township policy. The 911 dispatcher sent Sergeant Greg Hunt of the Cambridge Police Department (“Sgt. Hunt”) to secure the premises. While en route, Sgt. Hunt informed dispatch that he had previously arrested two heroin addicts who lived at the address provided — i.e., Andrew and his brother, William Strieker.

Around 8:00 p.m., Sgt. Hunt arrived at the Strieker home, knocked, and was allowed in by Kevin Strieker, Andrew’s father and Susan’s husband. Upon entry, Sgt. Hunt asked Kevin how Andrew was, and Kevin answered that Andrew was not doing well. Sgt. Hunt observed Andrew sitting in a chair at a table and noted that he looked very pale. Before Sgt. Hunt could secure the premises and invite the paramedics into the home, Susan entered the room and asked him if he was a police officer. When he answered affirmatively, Susan asked that he leave the premises. She elaborated that she did not call the police and that she would call the state police if he did not leave immediately. Sgt. Hunt explained that, when 911 is called, rescue personnel have a duty to check on the welfare of the reported victim, but will not enter a home without a police officer present for their safety. Susan told Sgt. Hunt that she was a regis *355 tered nurse, that she had examined Andrew and he was fíne, and that there was no longer any need for EMS. Sgt. Hunt then left the Strieker home and waited at the end of their driveway with medical personnel.

C. Arrival of Deputy VanDyke

Deputy sheriff Christopher VanDyke of the Lenawee County Sheriffs Department (“Deputy VanDyke”) was also sent to the Strieker home. Dispatch told him that he was to assist on a reported drug overdose and that Sgt. Hunt was going to the residence to secure the scene until he arrived. "While en route, Deputy VanDyke heard Sgt. Hunt tell dispatch that the Strickers had ejected him from their property. When Deputy VanDyke arrived, Sgt. Hunt briefed him on his encounter with the Strickers and his observation of Andrew. They also discussed arresting Andrew for a bond violation. Deputy VanDyke and Sgt. Hunt then pounded on the Strickers’ front door and shined flashlights through their windows, demanding that the door be opened or that Andrew be sent outside to be checked out.

Through the door, Susan and Kevin took turns reiterating that Andrew was fine, that the officers would not get into the house without a warrant, and that they were going to call the officers’ supervisors to get them to stop pounding on their front door. Deputy VanDyke again explained that the township had a duty to check on a reported victim of a 911 call. The Strick-ers continued to insist that the police get a warrant. Susan declared that she wanted to talk to the Michigan State Police and that she would file charges against the officers for being on her property. At that point, Deputy VanDyke and Sgt. Hunt left the porch and waited for state police.

At about 8:19 p.m., Susan called the Lenawee County Sheriffs Department and requested that a supervisor be sent to her home to make the two officers stop banging on her front door. Kevin called 911 and reported Susan’s earlier call as a false alarm and asked that the request for help be cancelled. The dispatch operator reiterated the township’s duty to check the welfare of a reported victim.

D. Arrival of State Trooper McMullen

State trooper Amy McMullen of the Michigan State Police (“Trooper McMul-len”) was also dispatched to the Strieker home on a possible heroin overdose and in response to Susan’s specific request for state police. While en route, dispatch told her that the same woman who had called 911 from her home to report that her son was overdosing on drugs was now refusing to let officers into the house.

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Bluebook (online)
710 F.3d 350, 2013 WL 141695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/susan-stricker-v-twp-of-cambridge-ca6-2013.