Wood v. Farmington City

910 F. Supp. 2d 1315, 2012 WL 5829634, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 164283
CourtDistrict Court, D. Utah
DecidedNovember 16, 2012
DocketCase No. 2:10-cv-00933-DN
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 910 F. Supp. 2d 1315 (Wood v. Farmington City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. Farmington City, 910 F. Supp. 2d 1315, 2012 WL 5829634, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 164283 (D. Utah 2012).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER GRANTING MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

DAVID NUFFER, District Judge.

Davis County Deputy Sheriff Joshua Boucher (“Deputy Boucher”) filed a Motion for Summary Judgment.1 The claims by Elizabeth Wood, Jerry Wood and Becky Wood (collectively “Plaintiffs”) relate to the September 22, 2008 shooting of Brian Wood (“Mr. Wood”) by Deputy Boucher during an arrest attempt.2

BACKGROUND3

A. Early Morning Domestic Dispute4

On the morning of September 22, 2008, Mr. Wood’s wife, Elizabeth Wood (“Elizabeth”), woke up to take a shower and get ready for the day.5 As Elizabeth was coming out of the shower, Mr. Wood “came up from behind[,] ... grabbed [her,] ... threw [her] on the bed” and proceeded to try and have sex with her.6 When Elizabeth tried to get away, Mr. Wood used physical force to stop her,7 and, at one point, “started punching [Elizabeth].” 8 During this confrontation, Jerry Wood (“Jerry”), Mr. Wood’s father, called the house. Mr. Wood answered the call and told Jerry what had just occurred.9 [1320]*1320Shortly after Jerry’s phone call, Mr. Wood “started getting out his guns and putting them in his pockets.” 10 At approximately 9:19 a.m., shortly after speaking with Jerry, Mr. Wood called 911 dispatch and told dispatch what he had done to his wife.11 After the 911 call, and while Mr. Wood was getting his guns, Jerry arrived at Mr. Wood’s home.12

When Jerry arrived, Mr. Wood “left the home[,] to the rear[,] and got into his Ford pickup truck.”13 Jerry first “discuss[ed] the situation with Elizabeth” and then “went out and spoke to [Mr. Wood] while he was locked in his truck, pleading with him to come out.”14 While Jerry pleaded with Mr. Wood, Mr. Wood “open[ed] the passenger window of the truck and fired a single shot from one of the hand guns ... into the utility trailer filled with trash that was located in [Mr. Wood’s] driveway, just west of his truck.”15

B. Police Arrive

At approximately 9:19 a.m. the Davis County dispatch notified the Farmington City Police Department of the domestic dispute at the Wood residence.16 Officers arrived on scene and observed Mr. Wood enter his vehicle, holding two handguns.17 Shortly after their arrival, officers heard a gunshot.18

Deputy Boucher arrived on scene after receiving a backup request from the Farmington Police Department.19 Upon his arrival, Deputy Boucher spent approximately two hours relaying information to other officers that were just arriving on scene.20 During those two hours, Deputy Boucher witnessed Mr. Wood, still in his vehicle, pointing a gun at his “father — as he would move it across[ ], so as it came up and over and then down out of ... view.”21 Officers attempted to convince Mr. Wood to exit his vehicle and surrender but Mr. Wood resisted officers’ requests.22 To better facilitate negotiations, officers threw a phone into Mr. Wood’s vehicle, but Mr. Wood refused to use the phone.23

C. Afternoon Events

After Mr. Wood refused to cooperate with officers or surrender, tear gas was eventually fired into Mr. Wood’s vehicle.24 [1321]*1321The tear gas caused Mr. Wood to exit his vehicle, but “he still had a gun with him and he was alternating [the gun] from being pointed to his head to his chest and back.”25 During the tear gas deployment, sometime around noon, Deputy Boucher was relieved of his position of observing and providing information to other officers and asked to assist the tactical operations center.26 Mr. Wood stood by his vehicle for several hours, and during that time was asked “more than fifty (50) times to drop the gun or give up,” but officers “never saw him drop the gun.”27 Negotiations were unsuccessful during the afternoon.

D. Evening Events

At approximately 4 p.m. Deputy Boucher was assigned by the tactical operations center to be an advanced observer marksman, along with Officer Merino, Officer Marshall, and Officer Hudson.28 In the evening, after more than a twelve-hour standoff and several failed negotiation attempts, a deliberate action plan (“action plan”) was agreed upon to achieve Mr. Wood’s surrender.29 The action plan consisted of using less-lethal ammunitions, such as .40-mm foam baton rounds, pepper balls, taser, and noise flash diversionary devices, in an attempt to force Mr. Wood to drop his weapon.30 During the deployment of the action plan, Deputy Boucher, and the other advanced observer marksmen, were required to remain “in the position that [they] were in to provide cover for the teams that were up close and provide cover for the deliberate action teams when the plan was set in place and initiated.” 31

At the start of the action plan, noise flash diversionary devices were deployed and Mr. Wood was hit with pepper balls and foam baton rounds. During these events, Mr. Wood was continuously ordered to drop his weapon. Because the noise flash diversionary devices, the pepper balls and the foam baton rounds failed to achieve their purpose, Mr. Wood was then tasered. Todd Barton (“Barton”), a non-officer eyewitness, Officer Justin Hudson (“Officer Hudson”), Detective Break Merino (“Detective Merino”), Officer Dustin Marshall (“Officer Marshall”) and Deputy Boucher, each provided an account of what transpired during the time Mr. Wood was tasered and shortly before Mr. Wood was fatally shot:

(1) Barton
[H]e was hit [with the taser], and when he was hit, he went to his arms to his chest. And then when he — he dropped to his knees, and when he dropped to his knees, his — his whole body just — I don’t know if it was a natural trying to catch himself, if he was going down or what, but his body motion went to the gun in the hand to straight down to where the gun was gone.... [H]is hands dropped to his sides as if he was catching himself. He raised his hands back up, and that’s when I noticed that there was— his hands were free.... He had noth[1322]*1322ing in his hands when he dropped to his knees.32
(2) Officer Hudson:
He was pointing his handgun right at the team that I’d just left. I didn’t know if they could see it or not. I was going to acquire the best sight I could and end the threat.33
(3) Detective Merino:
Detective Olsen came over the fence and deployed a taser, and I remember thinking in my mind — the exact thought was, what the hell are you doing, because we don’t do that with people.

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Bluebook (online)
910 F. Supp. 2d 1315, 2012 WL 5829634, 2012 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 164283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-farmington-city-utd-2012.