Thomas v. Tewis

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedMay 12, 2025
Docket2:21-cv-00698
StatusUnknown

This text of Thomas v. Tewis (Thomas v. Tewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas v. Tewis, (E.D. La. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA

DEANNA THOMAS CIVIL ACTION

VERSUS NO: 2:21-698

ROBERT TEWIS, et al. SECTION: T (3)

ORDER AND REASONS Before the Court is Defendants’, Lieutenant Kirt Arnold and Officer Robert Tewis (collectively “the Officers”), Motion for Summary Judgment. R. Doc. 179. For the following reasons, the motion is DENIED. BACKGROUND A. Factual History This is an alleged Section 1983 excessive force case. Plaintiff, Deanna Thomas, is a 59- year-old homeless woman who has been living in and around public locations in Kenner, Louisiana. R. Doc. 182-1. On April 6, 2020, Lieutenant Arnold was patrolling the Lake Pontchartrain levee when a cyclist reported that an individual was setting up camp on the levee near the Treasure Chest Casino. R. Doc. 179-5 at pp. 4-5. Lieutenant Arnold instructed Officer Tewis to respond to the report. R. Doc. 179-5 at p. 6; R. Doc. 179-6 at p. 5. When responding to the area, Officer Tewis discovered Plaintiff sitting near the levee with her belongings, a canopy type tent, a cot, and personal amenities. R. Doc. 179-6 at pp. 5-6. Lieutenant Arnold also reported to the scene in a different police truck. R. Doc. 182-1 at ¶ 9. Officer Tewis instructed Plaintiff to leave the levee and collect her belongings because their presence violated La. R.S. 1 38:225(A)(1)(a), which prohibits the placement of any object, material, or matter of any kind which obstructs or interferes with the safety of the levees or is an obstacle to the inspection, construction, maintenance, or repair of any levee. R. Doc. 179-6 at pp. 6-7; La. R.S. 38:225. Plaintiff however argues that La. R.S. 38:225(B) only allows objects to be removed after “forty-

eight hours’ notice” and claims that she could not move the objects by herself due to her size, age, and weight. R. Doc. 182 at pp. 3-4. Plaintiff maintains that she asked Officer Tewis if she could remove her belongings when her friend came by later that day. R. Doc. 182-2 at ¶¶ 1-2. Officer Tewis allegedly denied the request and Plaintiff claims that at this moment he intended to arrest her. R. Doc. 115 at p. 8. Plaintiff then alleges she told Officer Tewis that she needed to retrieve her charged phone, plugged in away from her but visible to the Officers, to stay in contact with her children, but Officer Tewis did not acknowledge the request. See R. Doc. 182- 1 at ¶¶ 10-12. When walking away to get her phone, Plaintiff contends Officer Tewis grabbed her from behind and handcuffed her. Id. The parties dispute when Officer Tewis put handcuffs on Plaintiff or if he told her that she was under arrest. Id. at ¶ 13; R. Doc. 179-6 at p. 11.

While in handcuffs, Plaintiff alleges Officer Tewis “grabbed her and forcibly slammed her body to the ground.” R. Doc. 182-2 at ¶ 5. Plaintiff claims that the force broke her glasses, scraped her face and knuckles, and caused her to release her bowels involuntarily. Id.; R. Doc. 182-2 at ¶ 16. When on the ground, Plaintiff asserts Officer Tewis drove his knee into her left shoulder, bent her right shoulder, and jammed her thumbs against the cuffs. R. Doc. 182-2 at ¶ 16. During this incident, Plaintiff alleges Lieutenant Arnold observed the incident and never intervened. R. Doc. 182-1 at ¶ 19. The Officers dispute this account and contend that Plaintiff went down on her own 2 accord when being escorted to the police truck. R. Doc. 179-6 at p. 11. The issue in this motion for summary judgment is the alleged injuries. Through declarations and her own statements, Plaintiff claims Officer Tewis caused her various physical, mental, and emotional injuries. Plaintiff attests that when she was allegedly thrown to the ground,

she suffered injuries to her “face, nose, knuckles, shoulders, and wrists,” and suffered “severe pain to [her] back and shoulder” when Officer Tewis forced his knee into her back. R. Doc. 182-1 at p. 12 (citing R. Doc. 115-2 at ¶¶ 11, 13). She claims ongoing pain in her “neck, shoulder, arm, hip, and three fingers on her right hand,” from the incident and that she has “not regained full mobility of [her] wrist.” R. Doc. 182-1 at ¶¶ 24, 28. Plaintiff also complains of mental and emotional injuries alleging anxiety, fear, difficulty sleeping, and intimidation in the presence of police vehicles. R. Doc. 57 at p. 19-20; R. Doc. 182-1 at ¶¶ 25-26. However, the Officers assert that none of the alleged injuries is supported by medical documentation. R. Doc. 179. Plaintiff concedes that she did not seek medical treatment because of “the shock of her arrest, fear of contracting COVID-19, her anxiety around, and distrust of law

enforcement during and after the arrest, and her inability to pay for such treatment.” R. Doc. 182 at p. 15. Despite not seeking custodial medical treatment, Plaintiff asserts that a correctional officer noticed that she soiled her clothes, offered new underwear, and washed her garments. R. Doc. 182- 1 at ¶¶ 23-24; R. Doc. 115 at p. 5. B. Procedural History In Plaintiff’s First Amended Complaint, she levied multiple claims against the Officers. R. Doc. 53. The Court disposed of most of the allegations in a motion to dismiss. R. Doc. 107. The 3 Officers then sought summary judgment to dispose of Plaintiff’s remaining claims—including the Section 1983 excessive force and failure to intervene/bystander liability claims. R. Doc. 112. There, the Officers argued Plaintiff was unable to establish with competent evidence that she suffered more than a de minimis injury. Id. at pp. 9-11. They contended that because Plaintiff failed

to support her injuries with medical evidence, i.e., “medical records” or “photographs,” Plaintiff could not establish a required element for excessive force and without a viable excessive force claim, she could not sustain her failure to intervene claim. Id. at pp. 9-12. The Court agreed and granted summary judgment for the Officers holding that Plaintiff could not prove she sustained more than a de minimis injury. R. Doc. 122. The Court accepted the Officers’ argument that Plaintiff’s mere declarations did not offer objective proof of her physical or mental injuries. Id. at pp. 6-9. Plaintiff appealed. R. Doc. 124. The Fifth Circuit reversed. R. Doc. 133.1 It held “[Plaintiff] did produce evidence to support her claim that [Officer] Tewis used excessive force by throwing her to the ground while she was restrained and subdued.” R. Doc. 133 at p. 4. The Fifth Circuit also held “while the extent

of [Plaintiff’s] damages is unclear, she produced some evidence suggesting the officers’ actions resulted in an injury that is more than de minimis under our precedents. See Alexander v. City of Round Rock, 854 F.3d 298, 309 (5th Cir. 2017).” Id. Because Plaintiff’s excessive force claim survived summary judgment, the Fifth Circuit also vacated dismissal for the failure to intervene claim. Id. at p. 5.

1 The Fifth Circuit affirmed the Court’s grant of summary judgment to dismiss the unreasonable seizure claim. R. Doc. 133 at p. 4. 4 After remand, the parties conducted additional discovery. The Officers now file this renewed motion for summary judgment and again argue that Plaintiff offers no evidence to support her injuries or that at best, such injuries are de minimis. R. Doc. 179 at pp. 11-15. Specifically, the Officers contend that Plaintiff offers no affirmative evidence that she suffered “general ‘physical

and emotional injury’” because Plaintiff confirmed “(1) she never sought medical treatment for the alleged injuries; (2) she accordingly has incurred no bills or expenses in connection with the alleged injury and/or damages; and (3) she does not possess any medical data, documents or things which would prove (or raise a genuine issue of fact as to) the injuries.” Id. at p. 12.

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Thomas v. Tewis, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-tewis-laed-2025.