Terry Williams, Jr. v. Greg Sandel

433 F. App'x 353
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 13, 2011
Docket10-5220, 10-5221
StatusUnpublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 433 F. App'x 353 (Terry Williams, Jr. v. Greg Sandel) 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
Terry Williams, Jr. v. Greg Sandel, 433 F. App'x 353 (6th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

SUHRHEINRICH, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff-Appellee, Terry Williams, Jr. (‘Williams”), brought a § 1983 excessive force claim and several related state law claims against the Defendants-Appellants, Greg Sandel, Robert Fultz, and Trevor Wilkins (“Defendants”), after they arrested him on July 8, 2007, in Kenton County, Kentucky. The district court denied Defendants qualified immunity on the federal and state law claims. Because Defendants’ conduct was not objectively unreasonable, we REVERSE.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Facts

On July 7, 2007, Williams, an African-American male, planned to accompany his cousin to Lexington, Kentucky, to spend an evening out on the town. They began their trip by visiting a liquor store in Covington, Kentucky, to purchase some vodka; Williams also purchased a blue pill, which he believed to be ecstasy. With his cousin driving, the two men headed south on Interstate 75 (“1-75”). Williams took the pill and drank some of the vodka. At some point thereafter, Williams claims that he began to feel extremely hot, and as a result, he decided not to continue to Lexington. After requesting that his cousin pull over on the interstate, Williams exited the vehicle and started walking north in an attempt to return home. Now traveling by foot, Williams, who was still feeling hot, began to remove his clothing “little by little” until he was completely naked. Fully nude, Williams continued to jog north along southbound 1-75.

At approximately 11:54 p.m., a motorist traveling on 1-75 called 9-1-1 to report seeing a naked man in the southbound lanes of traffic. Kenton County Police Sergeant Greg Sandel (“Sandel”) was the first officer to respond to the call. At approximately 12:05 a.m., while driving southbound on 1-75, Sandel spotted Williams jogging north in the emergency median strip next to the high-speed lane of the interstate. The highway was not lit, and the only sources of light were the headlights of the police cruiser and passing motorists and, eventually, the officers’ flashlights.

Passing Williams, Sandel activated his emergency flashing lights, executed a U-turn into the emergency median strip, and approached Williams from behind (such that the police cruiser faced north in the southbound emergency lane, next to the center median). Williams turned to face the police vehicle and Sandel exited his vehicle to approach Williams. Events beginning at this point are recorded on video (“the video”) from a dash-mounted camera *355 in Sandel’s police cruiser. The video recorded sound audible inside the unattended cruiser including communication from the police radio, a satellite radio comedy program playing on the cruiser’s radio, and occasional, muffled yelling from the officers and Williams. Some recorded portions of the satellite radio program had racial overtones.

As Sandel walked toward Williams, he removed his electronic control device (“ECD”) or Taser and held it in his right hand. Williams raised his hands and initially got down onto his knees. Continuous traffic passed by them in the southbound lanes.

Kenton County Officer Robert Fultz (“Fultz”) then arrived on the scene from northbound 1-75 and had to scale the concrete median to join Sandel and Williams. As Fultz came over the median, Williams stood up and then resumed a kneeling position. From this kneeling position, Williams then adopted the prone position. Laying in the prone position, Williams looked up at Fultz, and initially refused to allow Fultz to grab his left hand. Fultz attempted to grab Williams’s left hand again, which Williams allowed. Fultz handcuffed Williams’s left hand.

At this point, Kentucky Vehicle Enforcement Officer, Trevor Wilkins (“Wilkins”), reached the scene, also arriving on northbound 1-75 and scaling the median to join Williams and the officers. Fultz, holding Williams’s left handcuffed hand behind his back, knelt on Williams’s back in an apparent attempt to finish securing him. Williams (who at the time of the incident weighed over 200 lbs, appeared to be quite physically fit, and stood between five-feet eight-inches and six-feet tall) used his free right arm to push himself up from a prone position into a seated position. This movement also caused Fultz to lose hold of Williams’s left arm. Following Williams’s movement, Sandel appears to use the ECD device for the first time. Fultz then appears to direct Williams to resume the prone position. Williams complied. Fultz grabbed Williams’s left arm again, at which point Wilkins and Fultz attempted to secure Williams. Williams, however, successfully pushed himself up from a prone position again, preventing Fultz and Wilkins from securing him. In response, Sandel employed his ECD. Also at this point, the off-duty officer riding with Wilkins becomes visible, standing on the northbound side of the median.

Following the ECD charge, Williams laid on his back. Fultz attempted to grab his left arm and to pull him into prone position. Williams did not permit himself to be rolled over and ended up in a seated position again. Fultz then gestured to Williams to resume prone position. Sandel appears to wait a few seconds for compliance before using the ECD again. Following the ECD charge, Williams again laid on his back. He did not resume prone position, and Fultz appears to strike Williams with his baton. Williams then resumed prone position. Fultz secured something in his own belt, possibly his flashlight or ECD, and attempted again to grab Williams’s left hand. Williams looked up at Fultz and prevented his hand from being grabbed. In response, Fultz struck Williams on the legs and it appears that Williams was subject to an ECD charge. Following the ECD activation, Williams again laid on his back. Fultz gestured that he should resume prone position. Williams initially complied. However, when Fultz grabbed his left arm, Williams rolled up into a seated position. Fultz struck him on the leg with the baton and it appears that Williams was again subjected to an ECD. All the while, the oncoming traffic did not cease.

*356 Fultz then gestured to Williams, again laying on his back, to resume prone position. Instead, Williams sat up. Wilkins appears to strike Williams on the legs with a baton. Fultz followed with another baton strike to the legs. Fultz then appears to use his baton to strike Williams’s right arm. Williams responded by scooting away from the officers toward the travel lanes of the interstate, while maintaining a seated position. The officers continued to gesture toward the ground. Wilkins appears to strike Williams’s leg. Williams scooted closer to the travel lanes of the interstate. Just as he reached the yellow line of the high-speed travel lane, it appears that Williams is again subject to an ECD, which caused him to fall from the seated position onto his back such that his head was within the high-speed lane. Fultz grabbed his legs in order to pull him from the travel lane back into the emergency lane.

Again fully in the emergency lane, Williams resumed his seated position and then stood up. Both Wilkins and Fultz appear to strike him with the baton. Rather than complying, he ran into the travel lanes of the interstate. Sandel employed his ECD and Williams dropped onto his stomach in the high-speed lane. Sandel and Fultz tried to remove him from the lane and Wilkins attempted unsuccessfully to stop a vehicle that was simultaneously passing the group.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Collazo v. Otsego County
E.D. Michigan, 2025
Pettus v. White
W.D. Kentucky, 2024
Perez v. Weaver
E.D. Kentucky, 2024
Sivatia v. Fox
D. Utah, 2024
Jeffers v. Kiser
M.D. Pennsylvania, 2024
Carroll v. Young
W.D. Kentucky, 2023
Riggs v. Wright
W.D. Kentucky, 2023
Perez v. Simpson
W.D. Kentucky, 2023
Saalim v. Walmart Inc.
N.D. Ohio, 2023
Pearlie Gambrel v. Knox Cnty., Ky.
25 F.4th 391 (Sixth Circuit, 2022)
Spradlin v. Primm
E.D. Kentucky, 2022
Wendy Browning v. Edmonson Cnty., Ky.
18 F.4th 516 (Sixth Circuit, 2021)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
433 F. App'x 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/terry-williams-jr-v-greg-sandel-ca6-2011.