Tenisha Jiggets v. Christopher Long

510 F. App'x 278
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 22, 2013
Docket11-1124
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 510 F. App'x 278 (Tenisha Jiggets v. Christopher Long) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tenisha Jiggets v. Christopher Long, 510 F. App'x 278 (4th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

Affirmed by unpublished opinion.

Judge Davis wrote the opinion, in which Judge NIEMEYER and Judge GREGORY joined.

Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.

DAVIS, Circuit Judge:

In this interlocutory appeal, defendant-appellant Deputy Sheriff Christopher T. Long seeks review of the district court’s denial of qualified immunity as to damages claims asserted pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for alleged violations of the Fourth Amendment. Appellee Tenisha Jiggetts brought suit on behalf of her minor child, S.J. (“Jiggetts”), based on Long’s forcible arrest of Jiggetts at a shopping mall. The district court held that because genuine disputes of material fact exist as to Jig-getts’ claims, Long had not established at an early stage of the case his entitlement to qualified immunity. For the following reasons, we affirm.

I.

In this de novo review of a district court’s denial of summary judgment, we view and set forth the material facts in the light most favorable to Jiggetts, the non-movant. See Ga. Pac. Consumer Prods. v. Von Drehle Corp., 618 F.3d 441, 445 (4th Cir.2010). Then, because of their relevance to the parties’ dispute, we set forth the facts as attested to by Long.

A.

Jiggetts and two of her friends went to the St. Charles Towne Center Mall (sometimes hereinafter “the mall”) in Waldorf, Maryland, on April 28, 2007. Jiggetts was 14 years old, stood 5-foot-2, and weighed 100 pounds. She and her friends first went to the Forever 21 store (sometimes hereinafter “the store”), where Jiggetts purchased a navy shirt, for which she received a receipt with a time stamp of 5:44 p.m. Then, after shopping elsewhere in the mall, the group returned to Forever 21, apparently around 7:00 p.m. Jiggetts tried on three pairs of jeans, but did not purchase any of them. After trying on the jeans, she left them on a rack outside the dressing room. Jiggetts continued looking around the store and found a green jacket that she liked. She paid for the jacket and was given a receipt with a time stamp of 7:15 p.m. She and her friends then left the store.

Back in the mall, Jiggetts and her friends were approached by two mall security officers — Dina Rodriguez and Christopher Eusantos — who asked them to return to the store. The security officers advised Jiggetts and her friends they were suspected of shoplifting, which Jiggetts denied. Still, they agreed to return to the store. A store employee asked her to “take off the jeans under your jeans,” implying that Jiggetts had stolen jeans by putting them on under her own jeans. J.A. 17. Jiggetts showed that she had no other jeans on by lifting the bottom of her pants leg and pulling down her waistband. The store employee then said, “I’m sorry. You are free to go.” J.A. 17, 98.

Jiggetts and her friends left the store, but once back in the mall and going up an escalator, Jiggetts noticed that the same two mall security guards were following her. She called her mother from her cell *280 phone to report what was happening. Her mother told her to go outside, where she would pick her up. However, Officer Long, a local deputy sheriff working, in uniform, a part-time security job at the mall, had been alerted by the mall security officers and met Jiggetts at the top of the escalator. While Long conferred with one of the security officers, Jiggetts started walking across the food court, heading for the exits as instructed by her mother. Long caught up with her, asked her to stop, and, when she continued walking, grabbed her arm. Jiggetts managed to free herself — she said she “snatched” her arm away — and continued walking toward the exit. J.A. 106. Long pursued her, caught up with her, and grabbed her arm again, this time with a “tight grip.” Id.

Long, still holding Jiggetts’ arm, led her through a set of double doors off the food court into a hallway. The two mall security officers were present throughout the encounter. Jiggetts acknowledged that she resisted going to the hallway, stating, “I was trying to pull away, but his grip was too tight.” J.A. 117. Jiggetts remained on her phone, first talking with her mother, and then with her father, who asked to speak to Long. Long refused to take the phone to speak to Jiggetts’ father, declaring that he would speak to him when he arrived at the mall. Jiggetts continued to “ignor[e]” Long and his requests for her to get off the phone, instead continuing to speak to her father, which angered Long. J.A. 122-23. She explained what happened next as follows:

So to get the phone, Officer Long and [the male security] officer with the Mohawk grabbed my arm and slammed me against the wall and pinned my arm around my back and take the phone out of my hand and then slam me on the floor, and my face hit the floor, and then handcuffed me.

J.A. 123. Eusantos put his knee on her back, so she was flat on her stomach on the floor, and he and Long handcuffed her. In her deposition, Jiggetts used various verbs to describe how she was taken down to the floor: “slammed,” J.A. 124, 126; “pushed,” J.A. 126; and “threw,” J.A. 127. Jiggetts was “crying” and “hysterical,” and her friends were outside the double doors, crying and screaming. J.A. 128. Jiggetts told Long he could look in her purse for the receipts for the two items she had bought from Forever 21; Long did so and found the receipts. Notably, Jiggetts testified that Long did not tell her that she was under arrest until after she had been handcuffed.

Jiggetts’ mother and father arrived at the mall and asked what was going on; they directed Long to take the handcuffs off their daughter. She was unhandcuffed, and told her parents that her shoulder was hurting, so they called an ambulance. Jig-getts had a cut under her left eye, and the part of her face that had hit the floor was swollen. The ambulance took her to a hospital, where doctors determined she had a strained ligament, gave her Tylenol, and told her to refrain from physical activity-

The incident had a physical, psychological, and emotional impact on Jiggetts: “After the incident, I didn’t want to do a lot of things that I used to like to do.” J.A. 142. She stopped playing basketball for a year after the incident. She saw a psychiatrist about 20 times because “I was very angry.” J.A.144.

B.

Owing to the somewhat tangled procedural course of the proceedings, neither Long nor either of the two security officers, Rodriguez and Eusantos, was ever deposed in the action. Rather, in seeking an early ruling that he was entitled to *281 qualified immunity as a matter of law, Long’s version of the incident was put forward in his affidavit, together with certain arrest documents he created shortly after the incident, and selected portions of Jiggetts’ deposition.

Long was a member of the Charles County, Maryland, Sheriffs Office; he was working approved secondary employment at the St. Charles Towne Center Mall on April 28, 2007. Shortly after 7:00 p.m.

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510 F. App'x 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tenisha-jiggets-v-christopher-long-ca4-2013.