Azucena Zamorano Aleman v. City of Charlotte
Citation80 F.4th 264
Date Filed2023-08-16
Docket21-2223
Cited43 times
StatusPublished
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
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PUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
No. 21-2223
AZUCENA ZAMORANO ALEMAN, individually and as Administrator of the
Estate of RUBEN GALINDO CHAVEZ,
Plaintiff â Appellant,
v.
CITY OF CHARLOTTE; DAVID GUERRA, individually and officially,
Defendants â Appellees,
and
COURTNEY SUGGS, individually and officially,
Defendant.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of North Carolina, at
Charlotte. Robert J. Conrad Jr., District Judge. (3:19-cv-00491-RJC-DCK)
Argued: December 7, 2022 Decided: August 16, 2023
Before KING and RICHARDSON, Circuit Judges, and KEENAN, Senior Circuit Judge.
Affirmed in part, vacated in part, and remanded by published opinion. Judge King wrote
the majority opinion, in which Senior Judge Keenan joined. Judge Richardson wrote a
dissenting opinion.
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ARGUED: S. Luke Largess, TIN FULTON WALKER & OWEN, Charlotte, North
Carolina, for Appellant. Lori R. Keeton, LAW OFFICERS OF LORI KEETON, Charlotte,
North Carolina; Roger A. McCalman, OFFICE OF THE CITY ATTORNEY, Charlotte,
North Carolina, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Brian R. Hochman, Bradley W. Butler,
BUTLER, QUINN & HOCHMAN, PLLC, Charlotte, North Carolina, for Appellant.
Clarence E. Matherson, Jr., OFFICE OF THE CITY ATTORNEY, Charlotte, North
Carolina, for Appellee City of Charlotte.
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KING, Circuit Judge:
This civil action on appeal from the Western District of North Carolina arises from
the September 2017 fatal police shooting of Ruben Galindo Chavez (who used the surname
âGalindoâ) during an encounter with officers of the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police
Department. The action was initiated by plaintiff Azucena Zamorano Aleman â Galindoâs
girlfriend and the mother of his child â both as the administrator of Galindoâs estate and
in her individual capacity. The plaintiffâs five causes of action include a 42 U.S.C. § 1983
claim against defendant David Guerra, the police officer who fired the lethal shots, for use
of excessive force in violation of Galindoâs Fourth Amendment rights, plus the following
state law claims: a claim against Guerra for assault and battery; claims against both Guerra
and the City of Charlotte for wrongful death caused by negligence and for negligent
infliction of emotional distress; and a claim against the City alone for negligent police
officer training.
After amassing an assortment of evidence during discovery, including video footage
from body cameras worn by the officers present at the shooting scene, the parties filed
cross-motions for summary judgment. For reasons outlined in its Order of September
2021, the district court awarded summary judgment to the defendants on each of the
plaintiffâs claims. See Aleman v. City of Charlotte, No. 3:19-cv-00491 (W.D.N.C. Sept.
30, 2021), ECF No. 50 (the âOpinionâ). The court therein determined that â because it
was objectively reasonable for Officer Guerra to shoot Galindo, in that Galindo posed an
immediate threat to Guerra and others â Guerra is entitled to qualified immunity on the
Fourth Amendment claim. For the same reason, the court awarded summary judgment to
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Guerra and the City on the assault and battery, wrongful death, and negligent infliction of
emotional distress claims. Citing a lack of sufficient evidence, the court also awarded
summary judgment to the City on the negligent training claim.
The appeal now being pursued by the plaintiff presents several close questions on
the facts and applicable law, against a backdrop of tragic and dangerous circumstances. As
we recently acknowledged in another fatal police shooting case, â[i]t is not lost on us that
we issue this decision from the calm of a courthouseâ and that, â[u]nlike us, [the defendant
officer] could not press pause or rewind before determining whether [the decedent] posed
an imminent threat.â See Franklin v. City of Charlotte, 64 F.4th 519, 539 (4th Cir. 2023).
Upon careful consideration of the video footage and the other evidence in the record, we
are satisfied to affirm the district courtâs summary judgment award to the City on the
negligent training claim. On the other hand, we vacate the award of qualified immunity to
Officer Guerra on the Fourth Amendment claim, as well as the related summary judgment
awards to Guerra and the City on the balance of the state law claims. Rather than directing
the entry of judgment in favor of the plaintiff on any of those claims, we remand for further
proceedings as to all of them.
I.
A.
The plaintiff initiated this action in August 2019 in a state court in Mecklenburg
County, North Carolina, and the defendants removed the matter in September 2019 to the
Western District of North Carolina. Of the plaintiffâs five causes of action, four were
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asserted on behalf of Galindoâs estate: the Fourth Amendment and assault and battery
claims against Officer Guerra; the wrongful death claim against Guerra and the City of
Charlotte; and the negligent training claim against the City. The plaintiff alleged the
remaining cause of action â the negligent infliction of emotional distress claim against
Guerra and the City â on her own behalf.
The parties engaged in extensive discovery proceedings, securing not only the video
footage from the body cameras worn by Officer Guerra and the other police officers present
at the shooting scene, but also copies of relevant 911 dispatch records, depositions of
Guerra and his colleagues, and records of the officersâ interviews during the Charlotte-
Mecklenburg Police Departmentâs internal investigation of the shooting. In addition, the
parties presented expert witnesses on the reasonableness of Guerraâs actions and the
adequacy of the Cityâs police officer training.
By their respective summary judgment motions, Officer Guerra and the City
requested judgment as to all the plaintiffâs claims. The plaintiffâs cross-motion for
summary judgment sought only a partial judgment, on the Fourth Amendment, assault and
battery, and negligent infliction of emotional distress claims.
1.
As the plaintiff has highlighted in the summary judgment proceedings, the record
reflects that at the time of the September 2017 shooting, Galindo was a 30-year-old
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Mexican man who worked in the Charlotte area and did not speak English. 1 He had
recently been diagnosed with paranoia, without being deemed a danger to himself or others.
Galindo was facing North Carolina charges of misdemeanor assault by pointing a firearm
and simple assault, but he had no other known history of criminal activity.
a.
(1)
On September 6, 2017, at about 9:04 p.m., Galindo placed the first of two 911 calls
seeking assistance from the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department. To accommodate
Galindo, that call was transferred to a Spanish-speaking dispatcher available through the
Departmentâs Spanish language phone line. During the call, which lasted approximately
18 minutes, Galindo said that he sought to turn himself in for impending court proceedings
and that he wanted police officers to pick him up at his apartment, located at 1918 Prospect
Drive, in Charlotte. Galindo also gave the following reason for requesting the officers:
âBecause I have a gun in my hand.â See J.A. 243. 2
1
Of course, pursuant to the applicable summary judgment standard, we must view
the facts and all reasonable inferences drawn therefrom in the light most favorable to the
nonmoving party. See Henry v. Purnell, 652 F.3d 524, 531 (4th Cir. 2011) (en banc). That
means we must view the facts in the plaintiffâs favor when considering the summary
judgment motions of Officer Guerra and the City, and in those defendantsâ favor when
considering the plaintiffâs cross-motion for partial summary judgment.
2
The English language transcripts of the two 911 calls quoted herein are unverified
translations that the defendants provided in discovery and that the plaintiff has invoked in
the summary judgment proceedings. See J.A. 243-48. (Citations herein to âJ.A. __â refer
to the contents of the Joint Appendix filed by the parties in this appeal.)
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When asked by the dispatcher what he was âgoing to do with the gun,â Galindo
responded with the query, âAre you going to help me or are you not going to help me?â
See J.A. 243. Pressed about his intentions, Galindo said that the dispatcher should âtell me
if [the officers] are coming or not so that I can put my firearm there in the front or
whatever,â suggesting that he intended to surrender the firearm. Id. at 244.
Meanwhile, Galindo repeatedly failed to provide information expressly requested
by the dispatcher, including whether he was suicidal or homicidal. Some of Galindoâs
remarks to the dispatcher evidenced his paranoia. For example, Galindo first claimed his
name was âEl Dios Estrellaâ (which translates to âthe Star Godâ), before giving the name
âRuben Galindo.â See J.A. 244-45. He complained of police officers and other people
âfollowing me,â and he said that âI canât take it any longer.â Id. at 245. Galindo also
admitting to drinking alcohol that day but denied using drugs.
Throughout the first 911 call, Galindo asked whether he was going to receive any
help, prompting the dispatcher to periodically assure him that police officers were on the
way. At one point, having heard a womanâs voice in the background, the dispatcher asked
Galindo how many people were in his apartment. Galindo did not provide that information.
Rather, he answered: âLook, I only need [the officers] to come for me[.] Itâs only for me
[and] I will be outside of the apartment.â See J.A. 245. Galindo elaborated, âI only need
the police to come for me, for them to take me.â Id. He also requested that a responding
officer be âsomeone that speaks Spanish.â Id.
Near the end of the first 911 call, the dispatcher elicited from Galindo that he was
still inside the apartment but would go outside once the police officers were there. When
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specifically asked if he was âthinking of harming the officersâ or âanyone in [his] house,â
Galindo responded, âNo.â See J.A. 246. He again expressed that âI want to turn myself
inâ and that âI prefer for [the officers] to lock me up.â Id. The dispatcherâs last statement
to Galindo during the call was that âthe officers are in route, they are on their way and they
will be there as soon as possible, thank you.â Id. Galindo responded before the call was
disconnected, âAre they coming or not because [I] canât take it anymore.â Id.
(2)
A few minutes later, Galindo placed his second 911 call, which lasted for nearly 12
minutes and remained connected until after the fatal shooting. During that call, Galindo
and the Spanish-speaking dispatcher mainly discussed Galindoâs firearm. At the outset,
Galindo said that the firearm was â[i]n my bagâ and that âif you want I will take it out.â
See J.A. 247. The dispatcher then repeatedly instructed Galindo to leave the firearm in a
safe place and not to have it when the police officers arrived to meet him outside his
apartment. Specifically, the dispatcher advised: âleave it in a safe place and when you see
the officers, show your hands, I donât want you to have the [firearm]â; â[n]o please, no, no
please [do not have the firearm with you]â; âplease leave itâ âfor your safety and of
everyoneâsâ; âI need you to assure me that you will leave the gun pleaseâ; and âI need you
to please put that gun somewhere please.â Id. at 247-48.
Even as the dispatcher gave those instructions, Galindo continually indicated that
he planned to have his firearm with him when he met the police officers. He also suggested,
as he had during the first 911 call, that he intended to surrender the firearm. That is,
Galindo asked the dispatcher, âHow do you want me to show a firearm?â See J.A. 248.
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Soon thereafter, he stated that âas long as [the officers] donât shoot me I will throw them
the gun.â Id. While reportedly âgigglingâ during the second 911 call, Galindo asserted
that the firearm âdoesnât have bullets.â Id. at 247. He then said approximately 11 more
times that âI donât have bullets.â Id. at 247-48. Galindoâs last words to the dispatcher
before the shooting were, âLook I know that you are nervous, and all of that, I know, well
me too,â followed by, âCan you help me or not?â Id. at 248.
b.
At about 9:10 p.m., approximately six minutes into Galindoâs first 911 call, a request
had gone out for officers of the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department to respond to a
Spanish-speaking caller who âadv[ised] heâs armed with a gun and wants officers to come
help him.â See J.A. 108. That request was promptly entered into the Departmentâs
computer system as an âevent.â The computer system identifies and records the officers
who respond to such an event and allows the dispatcher to provide updates as relevant
information becomes available. The responding officers receive the updated event
information in real time on laptops in their patrol vehicles.
Information about the âGalindo eventâ was updated throughout his first 911 call,
with the dispatcher relaying the following to the responding officers:
⢠âRefuses to give . . . further informationâ;
⢠âUnk[nown] what he wants to do with the gunâ;
⢠âUnk[nown] if the comp[lainant] is homicidal or suicidalâ;
⢠âAdv[ises] he wants to turn himself in, unk[nown] reason, unk[nown]
warrantâ;
⢠âComp[lainant] is not cooperatingâ;
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⢠âSee El Dios Estrella (Rub[e]n Galindo)â; 3
⢠âComp[lainant] has been drinking, neg [denies] drugsâ;
⢠âUnk[nown] how many times the res[idence] is occupied. Heard a
female in the b[ackground]â; and
⢠â***Use Caution. Comp[lainant] sounds delusional.***â
See J.A. 108-09.
The Galindo event information was not updated during his second 911 call. In radio
communications, however, the responding officers were informed that Galindo had told
the dispatcher that his âgun has no bullets.â See J.A. 241. The officers were also advised
that Galindo had âsaid that he would put down the gun when [the officers] arrived.â Id. at
313.
c.
Officer Guerra and three of his colleagues â Officers Ryan Tran-Thompson,
Courtney Suggs, and David Batson â responded to the Galindo event. As explained in
their depositions in this civil action, none of the four responding officers was fluent in
Spanish. The officers initially met in a parking lot near their police station to review the
information they had about Galindo, to discuss concerns that he could be intending an
ambush, and to make a plan for safely approaching him. During the meeting, Officer
Batson searched law enforcement databases for Galindoâs name and found that a âRuben
Galindoâ had been charged in April 2017 with assault by pointing a firearm. Additionally,
3
The Galindo event information thus reported the two names that he gave the
dispatcher â âEl Dios Estrellaâ and âRuben Galindoâ â without explaining that âEl Dios
Estrellaâ translates to âthe Star God.â See J.A. 113.
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Officer Tran-Thompson asked his colleagues how to say âhands upâ in Spanish and got the
reply âmanos arriba.â See J.A. 628.
Consistent with the request made by Galindo during his first 911 call, a Spanish-
speaking officer was summoned from a neighboring division to assist the responding
officers. At about 9:21 p.m., the Spanish-speaking officer announced that he was en route.
By then, however, the responding officers had received the event update that included
â[h]eard a female in the b[ackground].â See J.A. 109. That update, which came at about
9:18 p.m., alerted the responding officers that there was a woman or girl in the apartment
with Galindo and caused them to fear that the situation could escalate to domestic violence.
Consequently, the responding officers decided to proceed to Galindoâs apartment without
waiting for the Spanish-speaking officer.
Based on his police experience with Spanish speakers, Officer Guerra expected
Galindo to understand simple English phrases such as âare you okayâ and âwhat can I do
for you.â See J.A. 303. Guerra also thought he could speak enough Spanish to convey the
message, âHey, I donât speak Spanish, but someone who speaks Spanish is coming soon.â
Id. As for the dispatcherâs warning that Galindo âsounds delusional,â see id. at 109, Guerra
âwasnât sure if it was a clinical diagnosis that [Galindo] was delusional or if it was
figurative or what.â Id. at 295. Guerra thought âto assess the situation accurately,â he
âwould have to do it best in personâ and âtry to establish an open line of communication
[with Galindo] and basically feel him out.â Id. at 296.
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d.
Between 9:28 and 9:29 p.m., after dark, the four responding officers arrived at the
large apartment complex where Galindo resided and parked several buildings away from
Galindoâs Building 1918. His residence was in an apartment located at an end of the
building and abutted by a small, wooded area. The patio entrance to Galindoâs apartment
faced a wall of Building 1920 containing the patio entrances to the apartments located
therein. A bright streetlight illuminated the walkway right outside of Galindoâs apartment,
affording a clear view of where Galindo would stand when he exited through his screen
patio door. No other person was present in the outside area between the apartment
buildings.
The four responding officers approached Galindoâs apartment at approximately
9:30 p.m. Officer Guerra took a position alongside the closest corner of Building 1920,
approximately 10 yards from Galindoâs patio entrance. Meanwhile, Officer Tran-
Thompson took a position several yards farther away, in the wooded area behind and to the
left of Guerra. Both Tran-Thompson and Guerra were armed with rifles. For their part,
Officers Batson and Suggs carried handguns and took positions on the opposite corner of
Building 1920, approximately 20 yards from Galindoâs patio entrance. Each of the
responding officers had a position that provided cover.
Each officer also wore a body camera, with the video footage from Officer Tran-
Thompsonâs camera being the footage that most fully shows the scene as it unfolded.
Because of the stance of his body during the encounter, Officer Guerraâs camera was
largely blocked by the corner of Building 1920, with just a partial view of Galindo.
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Moreover, the footage from Officer Batsonâs and Officer Suggsâs cameras shows
Galindoâs left arm only. But Tran-Thompsonâs camera was unobstructed and filmed both
Guerra and Galindo throughout the encounter, including the moments when the fatal shots
were fired.
e.
As the plaintiff has described it, the video footage from the responding officersâ
body cameras reveals that, upon taking his position alongside the corner of Building 1920,
Officer Guerra called out âRubenâ to a man standing behind the screen patio door of
Galindoâs apartment. That man â Ruben Galindo â responded in the affirmative and
opened the door, prompting Guerra to call out, in Spanish, âRuben, policia, manos, manosâ
(which translates to âRuben, police, hands, handsâ). Guerra moved out from his cover to
engage with Galindo, such that Galindo could view Guerraâs entire body.
Immediately after opening the screen patio door, Galindo stood in the doorway,
facing Officer Guerra. Galindoâs left arm was down at his side, and his right arm was
similarly at his side but just behind the door frame. Guerra pointed his rifle at Galindoâs
lower body and quickly said âmanosâ two more times. Concomitantly, Guerra raised his
right arm off the barrel of his rifle, demonstrating to Galindo to raise his hand.
In response to Officer Guerraâs Spanish commands of âmanos,â Galindo raised his
left hand â in which he was holding a pistol â to about waist level. According to the
plaintiff, it is unclear from the video footage whether the pistol had already been in
Galindoâs left hand or whether Galindo grasped the pistol just before raising the hand, but
the video footage suggests that the pistol had already been in Galindoâs left hand. After
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raising the hand to about waist level, Galindo paused, which the plaintiff asserts was a
demonstration of Galindoâs uncertainty as to whether he should throw the pistol or continue
holding it in his raised hand.
The sight of the pistol caused Officer Guerra to yell, now in English, âput it down,
drop the gun, put it down.â Galindo reacted to those English commands by quickly raising
his left arm above his shoulder and extending his left hand â still holding the pistol â
past the end of the opened screen patio door. Galindoâs left arm was then extended about
45 degrees from the center of his body and pointing toward the wall of Building 1920,
leaving it about 45 degrees away from Guerra.
When Galindo raised his left arm, he also began to raise his right arm. From there,
the four responding officers shouted over each other, still in English, to âdrop the gunâ and
âput it down.â As they shouted, Galindo swiftly raised his right arm and extended it out
like his left, above shoulder height and about 45 degrees from the center of his body.
The plaintiff does not contend that any of the video footage from the responding
officersâ body cameras is clear enough to conclusively show how Galindo was holding the
pistol in his left hand or where the pistol itself was pointing as he raised his left and then
right arms. But the plaintiff maintains that the video footage firmly establishes that Galindo
was ultimately standing still with both his arms frozen in place and both his hands in the
air, in a universally recognized position of surrender. And Galindoâs left arm remained
pointing at the wall of Building 1920, not at Officer Guerra.
It was at that point that Officer Guerra fired at Galindo twice. Under the plaintiffsâ
interpretation of the video footage, the first shot caused Galindo to collapse and fall
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forward, and the second shot hit him in the top of the head as he fell. Approximately four
seconds had elapsed between Guerraâs first English commands to âput it down, drop the
gun, put it downâ and his first shot at Galindo, who died at the scene. 4
f.
Two days later, on September 8, 2017, investigators with the Charlotte-
Mecklenburg Police Department interviewed Officer Guerra about the fatal shooting.
Notably, Guerra had not yet viewed the video footage from his and the other responding
officersâ body cameras.
In his interview with the shooting investigators, Officer Guerra asserted that when
Galindo opened his screen patio door, Guerra called out âmanos arribaâ (âput your hands
upâ). See J.A. 446. Guerra described Galindo as facing Guerra, with the door open behind
Galindo. Additionally, Guerra demonstrated that Galindo fully raised both his arms in
response to Guerraâs âmanos arribaâ command. Guerra then said that â after Galindo
fully raised both his arms â Galindo kept his right arm raised but lowered his left arm,
reached into his pocket, and pulled out his pistol. According to Guerra, Galindo had the
pistol âgripped high in the palm of the handâ and âhis fingers were wrapped around the
4
Plaintiff Azucena Zamorano Aleman was inside the apartment at the time of the
fatal shooting and was heard screaming in the background of Galindoâs still-connected
second 911 call, which had been made on a cell phone that Galindo was carrying during
the encounter with Officer Guerra and his colleagues. The plaintiff has described the video
footage from the officersâ body cameras as showing her rushing outside, shouting âRuben,â
and becoming hysterical when she saw Galindoâs body on the ground. The plaintiff asserts
that she has since been diagnosed with severe chronic depression and post-traumatic stress
disorder related to the shooting.
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pistol gripâ such that he was âabout to fire.â Id. at 447. Guerra also recounted that, upon
his subsequent instructions to âdrop the gun,â Galindo âpivot[ed] the firearm towards meâ
with âthe muzzle raised in my direction.â Id. at 448-49. In Guerraâs words, âI had the
conscious thought of I have to shoot this guy because I immediately felt a threat [of] death
[or] serious bodily injury from him pointing a firearm at me.â Id. at 449. Guerra explained
that he fired the second shot at Galindo because Galindo remained standing after the first
shot, making it unclear whether the first shot had hit him.
At Officer Guerraâs subsequent deposition in this civil action, after viewing the
video footage from the responding officersâ body cameras, Guerra conceded that he had
called out only âmanosâ to Galindo, not âmanos arriba.â See J.A. 315. Guerra confirmed
that Galindo had been facing Guerra during the encounter. He also reiterated, based on his
âmemoryâ rather than the video footage, that Galindo initially raised both his arms and
then kept his right arm raised while lowering his left arm and retrieving his pistol from his
pocket. Id. at 318.
Upon rewatching the video footage during his deposition, Officer Guerra admitted
that, when he shot Galindo, both of Galindoâs arms were raised and extended about 45
degrees from the center of his body, with his left arm pointed at the wall of Building 1920,
away from Guerra. Further, Guerra acknowledged that he would consider that to be a
position of surrender â[f]or an unarmed subject.â See J.A. 326.
In any event, Officer Guerra stood by his previous account that Galindo had pivoted
his pistol toward Guerra, justifying Guerraâs shooting of Galindo. Guerra sought to clarify
that Galindo had pivoted his left elbow and thereby pointed his pistol at Guerra. Further,
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Guerra asserted that, although Galindoâs left arm continued to point at the wall of Building
1920, âit is possible to hold your arm up and still point [a pistol] in a separate direction.â
See J.A. 332. Guerra did not claim that any pivot of Galindoâs left elbow, or the direction
in which the pistol was pointed, can be seen in the video footage.
Regarding his prior statement that he fired the second shot at Galindo because
Galindo remained standing after the first, Officer Guerra conceded that the second shot hit
Galindo in the top of the head. But Guerra allowed only that it was âpossibleâ that Galindo
must have been falling from the first shot in order for the second shot to have hit where it
did. See J.A. 340.
Finally, as for the issue of how Galindo had been holding his pistol, Officer Guerra
continued to insist that Galindo held the pistol âhigh and firm with a pistol grip,â which is
âhow you hold [a pistol] before you fire it.â See J.A. 317. Prior to Guerraâs deposition,
however, Officer Batson had related in his interview with the shooting investigators that
he saw Galindo holding the pistol upside down, with the grip pinched between his thumb
and fingers â not in the shooterâs position described by Guerra. Batson later, in his
deposition testimony, reiterated that description of how Galindo had been holding his
pistol. Confronted with Batsonâs account during his own deposition, Guerra acknowledged
that the manner in which Batson saw Galindo holding the pistol was âpretty much the
oppositeâ from the way in which Guerra saw it. Id. at 333. Guerra then suggested that he
was in a better position than Batson to discern how the pistol was actually being held, as
his âvantage pointâ had âbetter lightingâ and was âmuch closerâ than Batsonâs. Id. at 335.
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Indeed, Guerra confirmed that he âcould see the gun and the details of the gunâ throughout
the encounter with Galindo. Id. at 338.
2.
For their parts, Officer Guerra and the City of Charlotte have highlighted much of
the same foregoing evidence in the summary judgment proceedings, with an emphasis on
inferences that can be drawn in their favor. The defendants have also raised some
additional aspects of the record. Those include Officer Batsonâs deposition testimony that
Galindo could have fired his pistol while holding it upside down by either using his pinky
finger or changing his grip, along with deposition testimony of Batson, as well as Officer
Suggs, that Galindoâs pistol had been pointed toward Guerra.
In other deposition testimony invoked by the defendants, Officer Tran-Thompson
recounted hearing Officer Guerra shout out âmanos arribaâ to Galindo and seeing a metallic
object in Galindoâs left hand. Tran-Thompson stated that, as he then joined Guerra in
yelling âdrop the gunâ and âdrop it,â Galindo raised both his hands upward, turned his
body toward Guerra, took a small step in Guerraâs direction, and began to lower his left
arm or elbow. According to Tran-Thompson, it appeared to him that âGalindo was getting
ready to punch out and take a shooterâs stance by punching his arm straight forward out
towards Officer Guerra and possibly begin shooting at Officer Guerra.â See J.A. 619. That
is, Tran-Thompson said he âobserved movements [indicating that Galindo] was going to
take a shooterâs stance and start firing at Guerra.â Id. at 624. Once the deposition
proceeded to a viewing of the video footage from the responding officersâ body cameras,
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however, Tran-Thompson acknowledged that the footage does not show any of the
threatening movements that he had described.
3.
Turning to the expert witnesses, the parties collectively presented three experts on
the use of force and police officer training: Jon Blum for the defendants, and William
Harmening and Melvin Tucker for the plaintiff. Upon reviewing the evidence in the
summary judgment record, those witnesses opined â by written reports and, in the case of
the plaintiffâs experts, by deposition testimony â on both the reasonableness of Officer
Guerraâs actions and the adequacy of the training provided by the City of Charlotte. 5
a.
Regarding the issue of whether Officer Guerraâs actions were reasonable, each
expert witness considered the totality of the circumstances facing Guerra when he fired the
fatal shots at Galindo. Those circumstances included that Galindo: had called 911 for
unclear reasons and admitted to drinking and being armed with a âgunâ; was described by
the Spanish-speaking dispatcher as being uncooperative and seemingly âdelusionalâ; was
suspected of having committed a previous firearm-related offense; presently posed a threat
5
We note that, in summary judgment proceedings, a court may consider an expert
report that would itself be inadmissible at trial where âthe party submitting the evidence
shows that it will be possible to put the information into an admissible form.â See
Humphreys & Partners Architects, L.P. v. Lessard Design, Inc., 790 F.3d 532, 538 (4th
Cir. 2015) (alterations and internal quotation marks omitted). That showing must be made
where there has been an objection to the courtâs consideration of the expert report on
grounds of inadmissibility. Id. at 538-39 (citing Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c)(2)). Here, however,
no such objection was lodged.
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of domestic violence to a âfemaleâ inside his apartment and of ambush to the responding
police officers; brandished his pistol when he met the other officers outside the apartment,
in contravention of the dispatcherâs repeated Spanish instructions to leave the firearm
behind; and failed to drop the pistol in response to Guerraâs and the other officersâ English
commands to âdrop the gunâ and âput it down.â See J.A. 108-09.
As part of the analysis in his report, the defendantsâ expert (Blum) also accepted as
true â based on Officer Guerraâs post-shooting statements, and not on the video footage
from the body cameras worn by Guerra and the other responding officers â that Galindo
had âpivoted his left elbow backwardsâ after raising his left arm and hand holding his
pistol. See J.A. 203. According to Blum, that movement âled officers on the scene and in
the moment to believe that [Galindo] was going to point the handgun at and shoot Officer
Guerra.â Id. at 206. Consequently, Blum concluded that Guerraâs use of deadly force
against Galindo was justified in the totality of the circumstances. In Blumâs words, âit was
reasonably necessary for Guerra . . . to use deadly force and defend [himself] because Mr.
Galindo posed an imminent threat of death or great bodily harm.â Id. at 211 (emphasis
omitted).
Of the plaintiffâs experts, the first (Harmening) readily acknowledged in his
deposition testimony that the circumstances created a âvolatile and dangerous situationâ
â âespecially with a gun involved.â See J.A. 731. Harmening also recognized that, even
if Galindo had been holding his pistol upside down as Officer Batson described, the pistol
could have been fired. Id. at 734 (explaining that âa gun can always be fired no matter how
theyâre holding itâ). Nonetheless, based on Batsonâs description of Galindo pinching the
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pistolâs grip between his thumb and fingers â as well as what Harmening could see on the
video footage from the responding officersâ body cameras â Harmening concluded that
Galindo was not holding the pistol in âa firing stanceâ or in such a way âto indicate that
heâs going to use it.â Id. at 733-34.
The video footage further led Harmening to reject Officer Guerraâs account that
Galindo had pivoted his left elbow and thereby pointed the pistol toward Guerra. As
Harmening interpreted the video footage and Galindoâs demeanor therein, Galindo ânever
pointed a gun at [Guerra] and never demonstrated anything to indicate that he was going
to point a gun at [Guerra].â See J.A. 733. Harmening elaborated:
[M]y perception of the video and what I see is a man whoâs trying to comply
with everything heâs being told. I get it, [Galindo] didnât leave the gun
inside, he didnât drop the gun yet, but I think thereâs also a communication
barrier and some confusion here, but I think for the most part he was trying
to comply.
Id. at 734. Similarly, Harmening interpreted Galindoâs 911 calls and discussion with the
dispatcher to indicate that he did not intend to harm any of the responding officers.
Harmening specifically mentioned Galindoâs assurances that his pistol had no bullets,
explaining that although Guerra could not assume the pistol was unloaded, âitâs part of the
totality of the consideration here that [Galindo] says itâs not loaded.â Id. at 733.
Additionally, Harmening suggested that Guerra should have considered that he and the
other officers had âgood coverâ available. Id.
All told, Harmening opined âthat a gun is always a threat,â but that âthere has to be
an active threat before [police officers] shoot somebody.â See J.A. 733, 735. In
Harmeningâs view, there was no active threat justifying Officer Guerraâs shooting of
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Galindo, because Galindo was âcomplying with [Guerra and his colleagues],â albeit ânot
perfectly,â and âbecause at the moment [Galindo] got shot, both [his] arms [were] in the
air, [and] he [was] clearly showing [the officers] the gun that I believe [was] not pointed at
anyone, nor [was] it even being held in a manner that could be fired accurately at anyone.â
Id. at 736.
Much like Harmening, the plaintiffâs second expert (Tucker) opined that Officer
Guerra âdid not have any justification on September 6, 2017 to use deadly force against
Ruben Galindoâ because Galindo had not been âposing an immediate threat of serious body
harm or death to anyone,â i.e., âa threat that is going to occur at that moment in time absent
intervention.â See J.A. 650, 652. As Tucker explained in his report, he based that opinion
on the video footage from the responding officersâ body cameras, which Tucker interpreted
to show that Galindo ânever pointed [his pistol] at anyone before he was shot and killedâ
and that âthe officers had cover available, nobody else was in danger[,] and [the] firearm
in [Galindoâs] left hand was up in the air.â Id. Tucker âreaffirm[ed]â his opinion by his
subsequent deposition testimony, saying that â in reviewing the contrary opinion of
defendantsâ expert Blum that deadly force was reasonable and necessary in the totality of
the circumstances â âI kept thinking necessity, necessity, where in the heck is necessity
here?â Id. at 785-86.
b.
With further respect to the reasonableness of Officer Guerraâs actions, as well as to
the adequacy of the police officer training provided by the City of Charlotte, the plaintiffâs
experts Harmening and Tucker acknowledged that the City had relevant policies in place
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concerning the use of force and interacting with non-English speakers and persons
suffering from mental illness. Those experts also acknowledged that the City had trained
Guerra and his colleagues on those policies. Rather than questioning the sufficiency of the
policies or the attendant training, Harmening and Tucker criticized Guerra and the other
responding officers for disregarding their training and violating the Cityâs policies. Indeed,
Tucker testified in his deposition that he âthought the officers were either plainly
incompetent or intentionally violated the laws and protocols.â See J.A. 785.
Specifically addressing the responding officersâ decision not to await the arrival of
a Spanish-speaking officer before confronting Galindo, Harmening opined in his report
that the officers should have recognized from their training âthat a Spanish-speaking officer
was going to be critical,â in that the Galindo event âshould have been viewed as a crisis
intervention, and as such, effective communication (i.e., de-escalation) was going to be
needed, especially with the presence of a gun.â See J.A. 693. Harmening further asserted
that Officer Guerra should have yet followed his training by, inter alia, âask[ing] [Galindo]
in a calm voice if he spoke Englishâ; âreassur[ing] him that [the officers] were there to
helpâ; âask[ing] him in a non-threatening voice to lay the gun down on the groundâ; and,
â[i]f he indicated in some manner that he did not speak English, . . . motion[ing] to him
with hand gestures to lay the gun down.â Id. at 695. Instead, Harmening underscored,
Guerra simply said âmanosâ (âhandsâ) in Spanish and then he and the other officers
âcommanded Galindo to drop the gun in English,â thereby increasing â[t]he possibility of
confusion.â Id. at 693.
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The defendantsâ expert Blum countered that the responding officersâ conduct was
consistent with both the Cityâs policies and the training provided by the City to the officers.
Blum focused on Officer Guerraâs use of deadly force against Galindo, opining that Guerra
followed his training and the applicable policies on the use of such force when he fatally
shot Galindo after âMr. Galindo refused to follow repeated officer instructions to âManosâ
and âDrop the gun!ââ and then âbegan to point [his pistol] at Officer Guerra (as perceived
by officers in the moment and on the scene).â See J.A. 210-11.
4.
By his summary judgment motion, Officer Guerra sought qualified immunity on the
Fourth Amendment claim, arguing that his fatal shooting of Galindo was objectively
reasonable (such that he did not contravene Galindoâs Fourth Amendment rights by using
excessive force) and that there was no controlling legal precedent at the time of the shooting
that indicated otherwise (such that any constitutional right violated was not, in any event,
clearly established). See, e.g., Mays v. Sprinkle, 992 F.3d 295, 301 (4th Cir. 2021)
(explaining that, to defeat a claim of qualified immunity, a plaintiff must âplead[] facts
showing (1) that the official violated a statutory or constitutional right, and (2) that the right
was clearly established at the time of the challenged conductâ (internal quotation marks
omitted)). Based on the alleged objective reasonableness of the shooting, Guerra and the
City of Charlotte also sought summary judgment on the assault and battery, wrongful death,
and negligent infliction of emotional distress claims.
The defendants have insisted that the shooting was objectively reasonable in that
Officer Guerra shot Galindo only after perceiving that Galindo was poised to fire his pistol
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at Guerra or others â a perception that the defendants admit may have been mistaken, but
that they contend was nonetheless reasonable. In so arguing, the defendants have relied on
supportive deposition testimony of Guerra and his colleagues, along with the report of the
defendantsâ expert Blum. To the extent that the video footage from the responding officersâ
body cameras conflicts with or fails to corroborate Guerraâs account of the shooting, the
defendants maintain that the video footage does not reflect what Guerra could reasonably
perceive because it was largely taken from the body cameras of other officers whose
positions were different from his. The defendants also emphasize that the video footage is
not clear in all details and did not capture everything that occurred at the shooting scene.
The plaintiff generally has not disputed that the video footage is neither entirely
clear nor complete. But in opposing the defendantsâ summary judgment motions, and in
advancing her own request for partial summary judgment, the plaintiff has argued that the
video footage is decisive in that it âquite clearly establish[es] that Galindo was not a threat
to anyone at the moment Guerra killed him.â See Br. of Appellant 22 (internal quotation
marks omitted) (echoing arguments made in district court). As the plaintiffâs experts
Harmening and Tucker opined after studying the video footage, the plaintiff contends that
the video footage shows that Guerra and the other responding officers had cover available;
that Galindo was apparently confused by but attempted to comply with the officersâ mix
of Spanish and English commands; that Galindo quickly assumed a position of surrender;
that Galindo did not seem to be pointing his pistol at Guerra; and that Galindo did not make
any movement suggesting that he intended to fire his pistol, whether at Guerra or anyone
else.
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Additionally, the plaintiff has argued that the video footage âblatantly contradictsâ
Officer Guerraâs account of the shooting. See Br. of Appellant 22; see also Scott v. Harris,
550 U.S. 372, 380 (2007) (recognizing that â[w]hen opposing parties tell two different
stories, one of which is blatantly contradicted by the record, so that no reasonable jury
could believe it, a court should not adopt that version of the facts for purposes of ruling on
a motion for summary judgmentâ). Specifically, under the plaintiffâs interpretation of the
video footage, it establishes the following:
â In response to Officer Guerraâs initial Spanish commands of âmanos,â
Galindo kept his right hand down while raising his left hand, in which
he held his pistol (and apparently had already been holding the pistol),
to about waist level;
â Next, after Guerra commanded in English to âput it down, drop the
gun, put it down,â Galindo continued to hold the pistol in his left hand
while raising his left arm above his shoulder and extending it about
45 degrees from the center of his body, and then similarly raising and
extending his right arm;
â Thereafter, Galindo was standing still with both his arms frozen in
place, leaving his left arm pointing at the wall of Building 1920, not
at Guerra; and
â Galindo remained in that position until he was hit by Guerraâs first
shot, which caused Galindo to collapse and fall forward, such that
Guerraâs second shot hit Galindo in the top of the head as he fell.
According to the plaintiff, the video footage thereby contradicts these aspects of Guerraâs
account of the shooting:
â Guerraâs assertion that Galindo initially raised both his arms and then
kept his right arm raised while lowering his left arm and retrieving his
pistol from his pocket;
â Guerraâs assertion that â although Galindo subsequently had both his
arms raised and extended about 45 degrees from the center of his
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body, with his left arm pointed at the wall of Building 1920, away
from Guerra â Galindo then pivoted his left elbow and thereby
pointed his pistol at Guerra;
â Officer Tran-Thompsonâs assertion that, just before being shot,
Galindo took a small step in Guerraâs direction and began to lower his
left arm or elbow, making it appear that Galindo was preparing to
âpunch out,â i.e., to take a shooterâs stance and fire his pistol at
Guerra; and
â Guerraâs assertion that Galindo remained standing after the first shot,
explaining why Guerra fired the second shot. 6
The plaintiff has further highlighted the discrepancies between Guerraâs assertion that
Galindo had been holding his pistol âhigh and firm with a pistol gripâ â as if he was about
to fire it â and Officer Batsonâs statements that Galindo was holding the pistol upside
down, with the grip pinched between his thumb and fingers.
Even if the video footage is not so unambiguous as to merit an award of partial
summary judgment against Officer Guerra and the City, the plaintiff argues that she is at
least entitled to a trial on the Fourth Amendment, assault and battery, wrongful death, and
negligent infliction of emotional distress claims. In that regard, the plaintiff contends that
a jury could rely on the video footage and other evidence not only to find that Galindo
posed no immediate threat to Guerra or anyone else at the time of the shooting, but also to
6
The plaintiff has also pointed out that the video footage contradicts the assertions
of both Guerra and Tran-Thompson that Guerraâs Spanish command to Galindo was
âmanos arribaâ (âput your hands upâ), rather than simply âmanosâ (âhandsâ). After
viewing the video footage, Guerra conceded during his deposition that he said only
âmanos.â
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find that Guerra knew that the shooting was unjustified and that he concocted âa
remarkably false storyâ to evade liability. See Br. of Appellant 23.
As for the negligent training claim against the City, the City sought summary
judgment as to that claim on the ground, inter alia, of inadequate evidentiary support, as
the plaintiffâs own experts Harmening and Tucker criticized not the Cityâs training of its
police officers, but the failure of Officer Guerra and his colleagues to act in accordance
with that training. That is, the plaintiffâs experts acknowledged that the City had trained
the officers on relevant policies concerning the use of force and interacting with non-
English speakers and persons suffering from mental illness, and those experts identified no
deficiencies in either the policies or the attendant training. In her summary judgment
briefing, however, the plaintiff has suggested that negligent training can be inferred from
the conduct of Guerra and his colleagues, particularly their decision to approach Galindo
without the assistance of a Spanish-speaking officer.
B.
Based on the analysis in its Opinion of September 2021, the district court granted
the defendantsâ summary judgment motions and denied the plaintiffâs cross-motion for
partial summary judgment. The Opinion began with the Fourth Amendment claim against
Officer Guerra, recognizing that Guerra would be entitled to qualified immunity if he did
not âuse[] unreasonable and excessive force in violation of Rub[e]n Galindoâs Fourth
Amendment rights.â See Opinion 8. The court thus assessed the Fourth Amendment claim
on the first prong of the qualified immunity analysis (whether Guerra had âviolated a
statutory or constitutional rightâ), and not on the second prong (whether âthe right was
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clearly established at the time of the challenged conductâ). Id.(quoting Mays,992 F.3d at 301
).
From there, the district court explained that â[w]hether excessive force was used is
an objective inquiry assessing what a âreasonable officer on the sceneâ would have done,
taking into account [factors that include] whether the suspect posed an immediate threat to
the safety of the officers or others.â See Opinion 8 (quoting Graham v. Connor, 490 U.S.
386, 396 (1989)). The Opinion elaborated that, âif at the moment Galindo was shot, he
posed an immediate threat to officers and others, then Officer Guerraâs actions were
objectively reasonable. Conversely, if Galindo did not pose an immediate threat, [the
plaintiff] would be entitled to partial summary judgment or at least the right to a jury trial.â
Id. at 9.
In the course of analyzing the Fourth Amendment claim, the district court rendered
its own interpretation of the video footage from the body cameras worn by Officer Guerra
and his colleagues. As the court saw it, the video footage shows the following:
Guerra can be heard yelling out âmanos, manosâ (hands, hands) as Galindo
came out [his screen patio] door with his right arm initially hidden from view
behind the door frame and his left hand empty. Galindo then reached his left
hand down to his left pocket and pulled out a gun . . . . As officers yelled
âput it downâ and âdrop the gun, drop the gun,â Galindo raised the gun half-
way up to shoulder height and lowered it again. As officers continued to yell
âput it downâ and âdrop the gun,â Galindo raised his left arm then his right
arm above shoulder height. At this point it can be seen from the [vantage
points of Officers Batson and Suggs] that Galindo is holding the firearm
upside down, but from the [video footage from Officer Tran-Thompsonâs
body camera], the same cannot be said. Galindoâs left hand began to drop
just before shots were fired.
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See Opinion 5. The court thereby interpreted the video footage in ways different from both
the plaintiff and the defendants. For example, no party has asserted that the video footage
establishes that Galindoâs left hand was initially empty or that he reached into his pocket
and then pulled out his pistol. Nor has any party contended that the video footage shows
that Galindoâs left hand began to drop just before he was fatally shot by Officer Guerra.
Additionally, the district court rejected the plaintiffâs contention that the video
footage âblatantly contradict[s]â Officer Guerraâs account of the shooting and criticized
the plaintiff for âsometimes hyperbolic characterizations of what is contained in the video
footage.â See Opinion 5 n.2. The Opinion also emphasized that the video footage
âinclude[s] angles of observation unavailable to Officer Guerraâ â particularly the Batson
and Suggs video footage â and that âGuerraâs view was split-second and of course not
subject to slow-motion or replay.â Id. Indeed, the court went so far as to declare that the
Batson and Suggs video footage is from âa view that cannot be the view of a reasonable
officer in Guerraâs position.â Id. at 10.
In any event, the district courtâs ruling on the Fourth Amendment claim was
ultimately premised on what it deemed to be âthe core uncontested and most probative fact
of this caseâ: âthat Galindo ignored the [Spanish-speaking dispatcherâs] directive to leave
the gun in the house and in response to the officerâs command âmanos,â . . . drew [the]
gun.â See Opinion 12. As the Opinion characterized it, Galindoâs conduct âcould hardly
be more provocative,â even if it âwas done in an ill-conceived attempt at surrender.â Id.
That is, once Galindo brandished his pistol, â[a] reasonable officer in Guerraâs position did
not have to wait; did not have to trust a man believed to be delusional, and possibly
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homicidal or suicidal; a man who had refused every law enforcement directive aimed at
keeping him and others safe.â Id. at 11. Accordingly, the court concluded that Galindo
posed an âimminent threat to officers and othersâ by being âa non-compliant, armed
subject,â such that it was objectively reasonable for Guerra to shoot him. Id. at 13.
The district court relied for its conclusion that Officer Guerra acted reasonably on
this Courtâs decisions in Anderson v. Russell, 247 F.3d 125 (4th Cir. 2001), Sigman v. Town
of Chapel Hill, 161 F.3d 782(4th Cir. 1998), and Slattery v. Rizzo,939 F.2d 213
(4th Cir.
1991). Those decisions, the Opinion observed, stand for the legal principle âthat an officer
does not have to wait until a gun is pointed at the officer before the officer is entitled to
take action.â See Opinion 11 (quoting Anderson, 247 F.3d at 131).
Turning to the state law claims against Officer Guerra and the City of Charlotte for
assault and battery, wrongful death, and negligent infliction of emotional distress, the
district court incorporated the Opinionâs analysis concerning the reasonableness of
Guerraâs actions, as conducted for purposes of the Fourth Amendment claim. See Opinion
18. The court then concluded that â because âGuerraâs conduct was justified and
reasonableâ â each of the state law claims fails as a matter of law. Id.
Finally, in assessing the state law claim against the City for negligent training, the
district court ruled that the plaintiff had failed to produce evidence sufficient to establish
any alleged training failure. See Opinion 18-20. The Opinion observed, inter alia, that the
plaintiffâs own expert witnesses had acknowledged that the City both had relevant policies
in place and had trained Officer Guerra and his colleagues on those policies. Id. at 19. The
court then emphasized that â without criticizing the policies or the training â the
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plaintiffâs experts simply opined that Guerra and the other responding officers disregarded
their training and violated the Cityâs policies in their encounter with Galindo. Id. at 19-20.
Consistent with its Opinion, the district court awarded summary judgment to the
defendants on each of the claims against them â to Officer Guerra on the Fourth
Amendment, assault and battery, wrongful death, and negligent infliction of emotional
distress claims, and to the City on the wrongful death, negligent infliction of emotional
distress, and negligent training claims. Having done so, the court denied the plaintiffâs
cross-motion for partial summary judgment. The plaintiff has timely noted this appeal, and
we possess jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
II.
We review de novo district court decisions on motions for summary judgment and
qualified immunity. See Franklin v. City of Charlotte, 64 F.4th 519, 529 (4th Cir. 2023).
Summary judgment is appropriate only âif the movant shows that there is no genuine
dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.â
See Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). A fact is material if it âmight affect the outcome of the suit under
the governing law,â and a genuine dispute exists âif the evidence is such that a reasonable
jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving party.â See Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
477 U.S. 242, 248 (1986).
When cross-motions for summary judgment are before us, we âexamine[] each
motion separately, employing the familiar standard under Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure.â See Fusaro v. Howard, 19 F.4th 357, 366 (4th Cir. 2021) (internal
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quotation marks omitted). Applying that standard, the facts and all reasonable inferences
drawn therefrom must be viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party. See
Henry v. Purnell, 652 F.3d 524, 531 (4th Cir. 2011) (en banc). That means âwe may not
credit [the movantâs contrary] evidence, weigh the evidence, or resolve factual disputes in
the [movantâs] favor,â even if âa jury could well believe the evidence forecast by the
[movant].â See Hensley ex rel. North Carolina v. Price, 876 F.3d 573, 579 (4th Cir. 2017).
III.
On appeal, the plaintiff contests the district courtâs awards of summary judgment to
Officer Guerra and the City of Charlotte on all her claims, and she renews her own request
for partial summary judgment. As previously stated, we are satisfied to affirm the summary
judgment award to the City on the negligent training claim. We vacate, however, the award
of qualified immunity to Guerra on the Fourth Amendment claim, as well as the summary
judgment awards to Guerra and the City on the assault and battery, wrongful death caused
by negligence, and negligent infliction of emotional distress claims. Because there are
genuine disputes of material fact as to the objective reasonableness of Guerraâs actions, we
remand for further proceedings on each of those claims, without directing the entry of a
judgment in the plaintiffâs favor.
A.
We first address the plaintiffâs Fourth Amendment claim against Officer Guerra,
brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for the alleged use of excessive force. Section 1983
âcreates a cause of action against any person who, acting under color of state law, abridges
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a right arising under the Constitution or laws of the United States.â See Cooper v. Sheehan,
735 F.3d 153, 158 (4th Cir. 2013). Law enforcement officers sued in their individual
capacities under § 1983 may invoke the doctrine of qualified immunity, which shields
âgovernment officials from liability for civil damages insofar as their conduct does not
violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person
would have known.â See Pearson v. Callahan, 555 U.S. 223, 231 (2009) (internal
quotation marks omitted). Qualified immunity is designed to âprotect[] law enforcement
officers from bad guesses in gray areas and ensures that they are liable only for
transgressing bright lines.â See Willingham v. Crooke, 412 F.3d 553, 558 (4th Cir. 2005)
(internal quotation marks omitted).
As the district court recognized, the qualified immunity analysis consists of two
prongs: (1) whether a statutory or constitutional violation occurred, and (2) whether the
right was clearly established at the time of the violation. See Mays v. Sprinkle, 992 F.3d
295, 301(4th Cir. 2021) (citing Ashcroft v. al-Kidd,563 U.S. 731
, 735 (2011)). If the
answer to either question is âno,â the officer being sued is entitled to qualified immunity.
See Pearson, 555 U.S. at 232. Courts possess discretion concerning which prong to address
first. Id. at 236. In reviewing an award of qualified immunity to a defendant officer at the
summary judgment stage, our job is to âconsider whether there are any material disputes
of fact . . . that, when resolved, would amount to the violation of a clearly established
constitutional right.â See Stanton v. Elliott, 25 F.4th 227, 234 (4th Cir. 2022). âIf there
are, summary judgment is inappropriate.â Id.
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1.
We begin, as did the district court, with the first prong of the qualified immunity
analysis: here, whether â viewing the facts in the light most favorable to the plaintiff â
Officer Guerra may have contravened the Fourth Amendment by employing excessive
force when he fatally shot Ruben Galindo. On the premise that Guerraâs use of deadly
force was objectively reasonable, the district court concluded that there was no
constitutional violation and thus that Guerra is entitled to qualified immunity.
a.
(1)
Pursuant to the Supreme Courtâs precedent in Graham v. Connor, any claim âthat
law enforcement officers have used excessive force â deadly or not â in the course of an
arrest, investigatory stop, or other âseizureâ of a free citizen should be analyzed under the
Fourth Amendment and its âreasonablenessâ standard.â See 490 U.S. 386, 395 (1989). In
conducting that analysis, â[t]he âreasonablenessâ of a particular use of force must be judged
from the perspective of a reasonable officer on the scene, rather than with the 20/20 vision
of hindsight.â Id. at 396. âThe calculus of reasonableness must embody allowance for the
fact that police officers are often forced to make split-second judgments â in
circumstances that are tense, uncertain, and rapidly evolving â about the amount of force
that is necessary in a particular situation.â Id. at 396-97. Moreover, the analysis ârequires
careful attention to the facts and circumstances of each particular case,â including âwhether
the suspect poses an immediate threat to the safety of the officers or others,â as well as âthe
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severity of the crime at issueâ and whether the suspect âis actively resisting arrest or
attempting to evade arrest by flight.â Id. at 396.
Where deadly force has been used, the Graham factor of whether the suspect posed
an immediate threat âis particularly important.â See Franklin v. City of Charlotte, 64 F.4th
519, 531 (4th Cir. 2023). In such cases, this Court considers whether a reasonable officer
on the scene would have had âprobable cause to believe that the suspect pose[d] a threat of
serious physical harm, either to the officer or to others.â See Waterman v. Batton, 393 F.3d
471, 477(4th Cir. 2005) (quoting Tennessee v. Garner,471 U.S. 1, 11
(1985)). We assess
the objective reasonableness of an officerâs use of deadly force âbased on the totality of the
circumstances,â see Hensley ex rel. North Carolina v. Price, 876 F.3d 573, 582 (4th Cir.
2017) (citing Yates v. Terry, 817 F.3d 877, 883 (4th Cir. 2016)), âand based on the
information available to the [officer] âimmediately prior to and at the very moment [he]
fired the fatal shots,ââ id.(quoting Greenidge v. Ruffin,927 F.2d 789, 792
(4th Cir. 1991)).
It has long been âestablished in this circuit that the reasonableness of an officerâs
actions is determined based on the information possessed by the officer at the moment that
force is employed.â See Waterman, 393 F.3d at 481(citing Elliott v. Leavitt,99 F.3d 640, 643
(4th Cir. 1996)); see also Betton v. Belue,942 F.3d 184, 191
(4th Cir. 2019) (âWe
assess the reasonableness of the officerâs conduct based on the circumstances confronting
the officer immediately prior to and at the very moment he fired his weapon.â (internal
quotation marks omitted)). As such, we have recognized âthat force justified at the
beginning of an encounter is not justified even seconds later if the justification for the initial
force has been eliminated.â See Waterman, 393 F.3d at 481. That is, our reasonableness
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âdetermination must focus on the moment that deadly force was used, not the whole
episode,â and we must be mindful that âthe justification for deadly force can fall away in
seconds.â See Stanton, 25 F.4th at 233.
(2)
In our 2013 decision in Cooper v. Sheehan, we clarified when a reasonable officer
is â and is not â entitled to use deadly force against an armed suspect. See 735 F.3d at
159. Specifically, we explained that âthe mere possession of a firearm by a suspect is not
enough to permit the use of deadly force.â Id. âThus, an officer does not possess the
unfettered authority to shoot a member of the public simply because that person is carrying
a weapon.â Id. âInstead,â as we illuminated, âdeadly force may only be used by a police
officer when, based on a reasonable assessment, the officer or another person is threatened
with the weapon.â Id.
We recognized in Cooper that âthere are many circumstances under which a police
officer could reasonably feel threatened,â such that the use of deadly force would be
permissible. See 735 F.3d at 159 n.9. Those circumstances include, of course, when a
firearm-brandishing suspect âpoint[s], aim[s], or fir[es] his weapon.â Id.; accord Elliott,
99 F.3d at 642-44 (concluding that a fatal police shooting was justified where the
handcuffed suspect had grasped a handgun, pointed it at officers with his finger on the
trigger, and ignored an officerâs directive to drop the firearm). To be sure, â[n]o citizen
can fairly expect to draw a gun on police without risking tragic consequences.â See
Cooper, 735 F.3d at 159(quoting Elliott,99 F.3d at 644
).
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The circumstances under which a police officer could reasonably feel threatened
also include when a suspect who is armed, or mistakenly believed to be armed, makes some
other threatening movement. As examples of those circumstances, Cooper identified three
of our earlier cases: Anderson v. Russell, 247 F.3d 125 (4th Cir. 2001), wherein âthe
officers ordered a detainee to his hands and knees, and then shot him when he reached for
a bulge in his waistband that turned out to be a radioâ; McLenagan v. Karnes, 27 F.3d 1002
(4th Cir. 1994), wherein âa bystander was shot as he ran toward a police officer moments
after the officer learned that an armed arrestee was on the loose in the areaâ; and Slattery
v. Rizzo, 939 F.2d 213 (4th Cir. 1991), wherein âan officer shot a suspect who ignored
commands to show his hands before turning quickly toward the officer with what turned
out to be only a beer bottle in a clinched fist.â See Cooper, 735 F.3d at 159; see also
Sigman v. Town of Chapel Hill, 161 F.3d 782, 787 (4th Cir. 1998) (recognizing that police
officers reasonably felt threatened by a suspect who â after wielding a knife and issuing
threats against the officers and others â walked toward the officers, appeared to still be
armed, and disobeyed commands to stop).
As we explained in Cooper, deadly force has been deemed constitutionally
permissible where âthe objective basis for the threat was real, but the [suspectâs weapon]
was not.â See 735 F.3d at 159. Crucially, however, deadly force has proven to violate the
Fourth Amendment where the suspectâs weapon âwas real,â but âthe threat was not.â Id.
Moreover, although Cooper and the decisions that preceded it reflect that deadly
force may be allowable where a suspect has ignored or defied a police officerâs commands,
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those precedents establish that noncompliance alone is an insufficient justification. Under
those precedents,
the failure to obey commands by a person in possession of, or suspected to
be in possession of, a weapon only justifies the use of deadly force if that
person makes some sort of furtive or other threatening movement with the
weapon, thereby signaling to the officer that the suspect intends to use it in a
way that imminently threatens the safety of the officer or another person.
See Knibbs v. Momphard, 30 F.4th 200, 225 (4th Cir. 2022) (summarizing Cooper,
Anderson, Sigman, Elliott, McLenagan, and Slattery, plus this Courtâs post-Cooper
decision in Hensley). Our precedents further reflect that, in order for deadly force to be
justified, the commands defied by the suspect must have been âclear commands.â See
Franklin, 64 F.4th at 533 (citing Elliott, Slattery, and Hensley).
(3)
Applying the foregoing principles in Cooper, we concluded that it was not
objectively reasonable for law enforcement officers to fire on a suspect holding a shotgun,
in that the evidence showed, inter alia, that the muzzle of the shotgun was âpointed at the
groundâ and the suspect âmade no sudden movesâ or âthreatsâ and âignored no
commands.â See 735 F.3d at 159. As we put it, âthe facts fail[ed] to support the proposition
that a reasonable officer would have had probable cause to feel threatened by [the
suspectâs] actions.â Id. Since Cooper, we have similarly and repeatedly ruled that it was
not objectively reasonable for officers to fire on suspects who, though armed, were not
threatening the officers or others with their weapons at the moment they were shot. See
Hensley, 876 F.3d at 583 (suspect kept a âhandgun pointed toward the ground at all times,â
ânever raised the gun to the officers,â and ânever otherwise threatened themâ); Betton, 942
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F.3d at 192 (suspect âwas holding a firearm âdownââ by his hip and had no opportunity to
raise it); Knibbs, 30 F.4th at 217 (suspect was âholding a loaded shotgun that was not aimed
at [the officer]â and had not âmade any furtive movement towards [the officer] that would
indicate his intent to cause physical harmâ); Franklin, 64 F.4th at 533-34 (suspect âpointed
[his handgun] at no oneâ and âheld it with just one hand from the top of the barrel,â such
that he âwould have had to reposition his grip to become a threatâ).
In those cases, we were reviewing the grant or denial of qualified immunity to the
defendant officers at the summary judgment stage, and we thus viewed the facts in the light
most favorable to the plaintiffs. 7 Consequently, we disregarded contrary evidence
proffered by the defendants, including sworn statements that certain suspects had actually
pointed their firearms at the officers just before the officers shot those suspects. See, e.g.,
Hensley, 876 F.3d at 579 (explaining that âwe may not take as true the [officersâ] assertion
that [the suspect] had the muzzle of the gun pointed toward them in a âshoot-from-the-hipâ
positionâ).
Moreover, we highlighted additional circumstances that â if found by a jury â
would undermine the officersâ claims that they reasonably felt threatened by the suspects
and their weapons. For example, in Cooper, it was apparent that the suspect had a
7
In the cases wherein qualified immunity had been denied, we were also required
to accept the facts as viewed by the district court. See, e.g., Cooper, 735 F.3d at 157
(recognizing that our jurisdiction under the collateral order doctrine was limited to the
âclaim that there was no violation of clearly established law accepting the facts as the
district court viewed themâ (quoting Winfield v. Bass, 106 F.3d 525, 530 (4th Cir. 1997)
(en banc))).
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âperfectly reasonable rationaleâ for being armed: The officers had gone onto the suspectâs
property at night without announcing their presence or identifying themselves. See 735
F.3d at 160 (internal quotation marks omitted). Nevertheless, without giving any
commands or having any âinformation suggesting that [the suspect] might harm them,â the
officers âfired on [the suspect while] he stood at the threshold of his home.â Id. at 159.
Similarly, in Betton, the officers made a violent, unannounced entry into the suspectâs
residence and then âfired 29 shots without warning or issuing any commands.â See 942
F.3d at 192. And in Knibbs, the officer knocked on the suspectâs door and announced
himself, but he was not âreadily recognizable as a law enforcement officer in the middle of
the night on [the] unlit porch.â See 30 F.4th at 217. The suspect thus âracked his shotgun
in order to load it while investigating who was on his porchâ and understandably ignored
two commands to drop the firearm, without aiming his shotgun at the officer or making
any furtive movements before the officer shot him through a window. Id. at 220-21.
In Hensley, although the officers had witnessed the suspect striking his daughter
with his handgun on the front porch of his home, that âbrief altercationâ had ended with
the suspect walking away from his daughter into his yard and thereafter making âno
threatening statements or actions toward anyone.â See 876 F.3d at 583-84. Meanwhile,
the officers never spoke to the suspect and ânever ordered [him] to drop the gun or warned
that they would shoot.â Id. at 585. Rather, the officers âopened fire on [the suspect] and
killed him,â apparently for the simple reason that âhe had possession of a firearm.â Id. at
583.
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Most recently, in Franklin, the officers âreceiv[ed] 911 accounts of a man
terrorizing people [with a handgun] at a fast-food restaurant.â See 64 F.4th at 532. But
âthe officers arrived at a very different scene than the one described in those reports,â in
that the suspect âwas no longer inside the restaurantâ and no longer being âaggressive or
outwardly threatening.â Id. Instead, the suspect was âcrouched down next to the [open]
passenger side of a Honda sedan parked in the restaurant parking lot,â about a foot away
from and facing a restaurant employee who was sitting in the passenger seat. Id. at 525-
26. As the officers had been advised as they were en route to the scene, the restaurant
employee had been âcalming [the suspect] downâ and âpray[ing] with him.â Id. at 526 n.1.
Notably, video footage from the officersâ body cameras showed how their ensuing
encounter with the suspect unfolded. See Franklin, 64 F.4th at 526. Upon arrival, while
approaching the suspect and before they could see him, the officers shouted four commands
for the suspect to show his hands, without being able to visually ascertain whether the
suspect was complying. Id. Once the suspect came into one officerâs view, the suspectâs
handgun was out of sight and his âhands appeared to be clasped together between his legs.â
Id.The officers then yelled 22 commands for the suspect to drop his firearm.Id.
at 526-
27, 532. In the midst of those commands, another ârestaurant employee felt comfortable
enough to walk up to [the suspect],â only to be ordered by the officers âto get back.â Id.
at 526, 532. The commands were so loud and frequent that the officers could not hear
whether the suspect said anything back to them. Id. The suspect did not immediately
comply with the commands and retained what appeared to be a âpassiveâ demeanor. Id.
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As it turned out, the suspect had not â as the officers âapparently assumedâ â been
holding his firearm in his hands when commanded to drop the weapon. See Franklin, 64
F.4th at 532. Rather, the suspectâs âgun was concealed under his jacket, not in his hands.â
Id. Thus, âthe only way for him to obey the officersâ commands to drop the gun was to
reach into his jacket to retrieve it.â Id. âWhen he did just that,â however, the one officer
who could see the suspect âinterpreted his movement as a threatening maneuver.â Id.
Although the suspect then held his handgun âin a non-firing grip, pointed away from
everyone,â the officer promptly shot the suspect twice and killed him. Id.
In those circumstances, we concluded that a reasonable jury could find that the fatal
shooting ârested on [the suspectâs] âmere possession of a firearm.ââ See Franklin, 64 F.4th
at 532(quoting Cooper,735 F.3d at 159
). That was due, in part, to âthe non-threatening
way [the suspect] handled the weapon once he retrieved it.â Id. at 534. It was also because
â âobserving the facts in the light most favorable to [the plaintiff] â there was nothing
furtive or menacing about [the suspectâs] response to the officersâ commands.â Id. at 532.
Indeed, the officersâ âcommands simply were too ambiguous to transform [the suspectâs]
hesitation into recalcitrance.â Id. at 533 (recapping that, âafter demanding to see [the
suspectâs] hands, the officers then pivoted to an inconsistent instruction, ordering him to
drop his gunâ). As we explained, when the suspect âhesitated through twenty-some-odd
commands as if contemplating something,â he may have been âdeciding how to drop a gun
he was not holdingâ or he may have been âjust frightened by the torrent of shouting and
gun-pointing.â Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). We also noted the officersâ failure
to act in accordance with their training, including their training âto give various commands
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to achieve specific results precisely because one misjudgment could endanger the officers
or the public.â Id.
Lastly, we related in Franklin that â although the district court had ruled in favor
of the defendant officer who fatally shot the suspect â the district court recognized that,
âin hindsight,â the officer likely made a mistake in perceiving the suspect to pose an
immediate threat. See 64 F.4th at 531-32 (internal quotation marks omitted). In refusing
to affirm the district court, we emphasized that âthe question [was] whether [the officerâs]
mistake was reasonable.â Id. at 532. Given the evidence, particularly âthe body camera
footage depicting the encounter,â we concluded that a reasonable jury could find that any
mistake by the officer was not a reasonable one. Id.
b.
Here, viewing the facts in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, 8 Ruben Galindo
sought help from police officers because â in the throes of paranoia â he wanted to
surrender his pistol and turn himself in for impending court proceedings. Although he was
firmly instructed by the Spanish-speaking 911 dispatcher to leave the firearm inside his
apartment when he met the responding officers outside, Galindo insisted that he would
have the firearm with him. He also denied any plan to harm the officers or anyone else,
and he repeatedly asserted that he had no bullets for his pistol. Before they reached
8
Our recitation of the facts in the light most favorable to the plaintiff is drawn from
the record before us, including the 911 dispatch records, the video footage from the
responding officersâ body cameras, the officersâ deposition testimony and records of their
interviews with police department investigators, and the reports and deposition testimony
of the partiesâ expert witnesses.
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Galindoâs apartment, the responding officers were advised by the dispatcher of both
Galindoâs assurances that he had no bullets and his intention to âput down the gunâ only
after the officers arrived. See J.A. 313.
Unquestionably, the responding officers had good reason to be skeptical of Galindo
and to treat him as a potential threat to the safety of the officers and others. Galindoâs
purported reason for summoning the officers was dubious, he was refusing to disarm
himself, and he was otherwise being uncooperative with the dispatcher and âsound[ing]
delusional.â See J.A. 109. Moreover, he had admitted to consuming alcohol, was
suspected of a previous firearm-related offense, and posed a threat not only of ambush to
the officers, but also of domestic violence to a âfemaleâ inside his apartment. Id.
Before proceeding to Galindoâs apartment, Officer Guerra recognized that, âto
assess the situation accurately,â he âwould have to do it best in personâ and âtry to establish
an open line of communication [with Galindo] and basically feel him out.â See J.A. 296.
Furthermore, Guerra and the other responding officers had been trained to regard an event
like the Galindo event âas a crisis interventionâ necessitating âeffective communicationâ
and âde-escalation.â Id. at 693. Notwithstanding that training â and despite that they
were not fluent in Spanish, could speak only a few Spanish words, and could only presume
that Galindo would be able to understand simple English phrases â the officers decided
to proceed to Galindoâs apartment without awaiting the assistance of a Spanish-speaking
colleague. Even then, the officersâ training would have had them calmly asking Galindo
if he spoke English, conveying their intent to help him, non-threateningly asking him to
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lay his pistol on the ground, and using recognizable physical gestures in lieu of English
words and phrases that Galindo may not have understood.
Instead, Officer Guerra greeted Galindo with a Spanish command of âmanosâ
(âhandsâ), rather than the more precise âmanos arribaâ (âput your hands upâ), albeit with
a physical gesture demonstrating to Galindo what he should do. When Galindo then raised
his left hand and showed himself to be holding the pistol that he had advised he would have
with him, Guerra and the other responding officers immediately shouted English
commands â neither calmly nor non-threateningly â to âdrop the gunâ and âput it down.â
Those commands, unlike the âmanosâ command, were not accompanied by any physical
gestures that would illustrate what the officers meant.
In the midst of the Spanish and then English commands, Galindo demonstrated
uncertainty as to whether he should throw his pistol or continue holding it in his raised left
hand. He also demonstrated that he was trying to understand and comply with the officersâ
instructions. Quickly, Galindo assumed a position of surrender, with both his arms raised
above shoulder height and about 45 degrees from the center of his body. Galindoâs left
arm was pointing toward the wall of the apartment building across from his own, away
from Officer Guerra and his colleagues. Galindo was holding the pistol upside down, with
the grip pinched between his thumb and fingers. Although he could have fired the pistol
while holding it in that position, he could not have done so accurately. Moreover, Galindo
never pointed his pistol toward Guerra or another officer, and no other person was present.
Galindo also did not make any movement suggesting that he was about to fire the pistol.
Rather, Galindo remained frozen in his position of surrender until he fell as a result of the
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first of the two shots fired at him by Guerra. Throughout the encounter, Guerraâs rifle had
been aimed at Galindo, Guerra had backup from his colleagues, and cover had been
available to all the officers, with only Guerra choosing to step away from his.
Two days later, during his interview with police department investigators, Officer
Guerra gave an account of the fatal shooting in which he asserted the following: that he
had greeted Galindo with the Spanish command âmanos arribaâ; that, in response, Galindo
raised both his arms and only then lowered his left arm, reached into his pocket, and pulled
out his pistol; that Galindo pivoted the pistol and pointed it toward Guerra just before
Guerra fired his rifle at Galindo; and that Galindo remained standing after Guerraâs first
shot, such that Guerra was compelled to fire the second. Following the interview, however,
the video footage from the responding officersâ body cameras was shown to either flatly
refute or at least fail to corroborate each of those assertions.
Somewhat undeterred, Officer Guerra continued to claim during his deposition that
Galindo raised then lowered his left arm to reach into his pocket to retrieve his pistol, and
that he pivoted the pistol toward Guerra after subsequently taking his position of surrender.
Guerra has also endorsed the deposition testimony of Officer Tran-Thompson that, just
before being shot, Galindo took a small step toward Guerra and began to lower his left arm
or elbow in such a way that he appeared to be âgetting ready to punch out and take a
shooterâs stance.â See J.A. 619. Tran-Thompsonâs account, however, varies from Guerraâs
account and also lacks corroboration in the video footage. Additionally, although Guerra
asserted in his police department interview and subsequent deposition that Galindo was
holding his pistol in a shooterâs position â i.e., âhigh and firm with a pistol grip,â id. at
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317 â that assertion has been contradicted by Officer Batsonâs statements that Galindo
was less-threateningly holding the pistol upside down, with the grip pinched between his
thumb and fingers.
In his statements, Officer Guerra has confirmed that he had a clear view of Galindo
and his pistol throughout the encounter. Guerra has also proposed that differences between
his account of the fatal shooting and those of other officers on the scene â as well as
differences between his account and the video footage from the other officersâ body
cameras â are the result of the officersâ varying vantage points. See, e.g., J.A. 335
(suggesting that, because his vantage point was better lit and closer than Officer Batsonâs,
he was in superior position to discern how Galindoâs pistol was actually being held).
Furthermore, it is generally undisputed in these proceedings that the video footage is not
clear in all details and did not capture everything that occurred at the shooting scene.
c.
Under the foregoing view of the facts â which, again, is necessarily in the light
most favorable to the plaintiff â Galindo posed a threat to the safety of the responding
officers at the moment he was shot, but a reasonable officer on the scene would not have
had probable cause to believe that he posed an âimmediate threatâ such that deadly force
could constitutionally be used against him. See Graham, 490 U.S. at 396; Waterman,393 F.3d at 477
. Simply put, Officer Guerra fired at Galindo while Galindo was standing still
in a position of surrender. Although Galindo was armed with a pistol, he did not threaten
anyone with the pistol by âpointing, aiming, or firing his weapon.â See Cooper, 735 F.3d
at 159 n.9. And although Galindo failed to obey the officersâ English commands to âdrop
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the gunâ and âput it down,â he made no âfurtive or other threatening movement with the
weaponâ that would have signaled an âinten[t] to use it in a way that imminently
threaten[ed] the safety of [Guerra] or another person.â See Knibbs, 30 F.4th at 225. 9
Indeed, the Spanish-speaking Galindo may not have even understood the English
commands to âdrop the gunâ and âput it down.â He seemed to want to comply with the
officersâ instructions, while being confused by what they were commanding. As we have
explained, a suspectâs failure to obey commands may not justify deadly force if the
commands were unclear. See Franklin, 64 F.4th at 533 (observing that âour cases support
[the] position that if [the suspect] defied clear commands, then his actions may have
provoked deadly forceâ).
Moreover, although it may not have been âperfectly reasonable,â Galindo had a
ârationaleâ for being armed: In a state of paranoia, he wanted to surrender his pistol and
turn himself in for impending court proceedings. Cf. Cooper, 735 F.3d at 160 (recognizing
suspectâs âperfectly reasonable rationaleâ for being armed, i.e., officersâ unannounced
nighttime incursion on his property (internal quotation marks omitted)). Galindo so
advised the Spanish-speaking 911 dispatcher, who in turn informed the responding officers
9
We focus herein on the Graham factor of whether the suspect posed an immediate
threat because, where deadly force has been used, it âis particularly important.â See
Franklin, 64 F.4th at 531. In any event, due to the facts of this case, the other factors
specified in Graham â âthe severity of the crime at issueâ and whether the suspect was
âactively resisting arrest or attempting to evade arrest by flight,â see 490 U.S. at 396 â
are ânot particularly germane to our analysis.â See Knibbs, 30 F.4th at 215-16 (concluding
same where the defendant officer âwas only trying to investigate a dispute between
neighbors that may have involved an attempted misdemeanor property crimeâ).
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that Galindo planned to âput down the gunâ only after the officers arrived outside his
apartment. See J.A. 313. The dispatcher also relayed to the officers that Galindo had given
assurances that he had no bullets. That is not to say that the officers were obliged to believe
Galindo or trust that he was not dangerous. But the fact that Galindo disclosed that he
would be carrying the pistol so that he could surrender it, as well as the fact that Galindo
affirmatively indicated that he intended the officers no harm, can be seen as further
weakening the case for probable cause to believe that Galindo posed an immediate threat.
Cf. Sigman, 161 F.3d at 787 (including in probable cause analysis that suspect had recently
wielded knife while issuing verbal threats against officers and others).
It also may be deemed significant that Officer Guerra and his colleagues went into
the Galindo event knowing that it should be treated âas a crisis interventionâ with a person
who âsound[ed] delusional,â and knowing that they therefore needed âto establish an open
line of communicationâ with someone who spoke Spanish and may have understood no
English. See J.A. 109, 296, 693. Yet they proceeded to confront Galindo without the
assistance of a Spanish-speaking officer, and they otherwise disregarded their training on
how to properly interact with non-English speakers and persons suffering from mental
illness. See Franklin, 64 F.4th at 533 (noting officersâ failure to follow their training to
issue clear commands).
Viewing the video footage and the other evidence in the light most favorable to the
plaintiff, it may further be concluded that Officer Guerraâs account of the fatal shooting
was either contrived or unreasonably mistaken. See Franklin, 64 F.4th at 532 (recognizing
that deadly force will be justified where officer erroneously perceived immediate threat
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only if âmistake was reasonableâ). That is, at this stage of the proceedings, Guerraâs
account cannot be credited, nor can inaccuracies in his account be excused as innocent
misperceptions. See id. at 529-30 (underscoring that, in considering a request for qualified
immunity made by summary judgment motion, â[w]e may not credit [the movantâs]
evidence, weigh the evidence, or resolve factual disputes in the [movantâs] favorâ (quoting
Hensley, 876 F.3d at 579)).
At bottom, a reasonable jury could review and interpret the video footage, consider
the other evidence, and decide that Galindo did not pose an immediate threat to Officer
Guerra or anyone else at the moment Guerra shot him. A reasonable jury could also find
that Guerra fabricated his account of the fatal shooting because he knew that the real facts
showed that the shooting was not justified. Or a reasonable jury could find that Guerra
mistakenly perceived that Galindo posed an immediate threat, but that Guerraâs mistake
was not reasonable. As such, it very well may be concluded that Guerra used excessive
force in contravention of the Fourth Amendment, meaning that he is not presently entitled
to qualified immunity under the first prong of the qualified immunity analysis.
d.
In ruling to the contrary, the district court erred. As an initial matter, the court
rendered its own interpretation of the video footage from the responding officersâ body
cameras and failed in several instances to view the facts in the light most favorable to the
plaintiff. For example, the court declared that the video footage shows that âGalindoâs left
hand began to drop just before shots were firedâ â something not even Officer Guerra has
claimed â and it dismissed the video footage from the body cameras of Officers Batson
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and Suggs as being from âa view that cannot be the view of a reasonable officer in Guerraâs
position.â See Opinion 5, 10.
Because one of the few important things that is undisputed about the video footage
is that it is not clear in all details and did not capture everything that occurred at the shooting
scene â and because our own review of the video footage has confirmed that it is subject
to different interpretations â neither the district court nor this Court is permitted to decide
at the summary judgment stage of these proceedings what the video footage shows or what
it did not capture. Like ours, the role of the district court is limited to viewing the facts in
the light most favorable to the plaintiff and leaving material factual disputes to be resolved
by a jury. See Hensley, 876 F.3d at 579 (explaining that, under the summary judgment
standard, we may not âweigh the evidenceâ or âresolve factual disputesâ).
Its error in improperly viewing the facts aside, the district court ultimately ruled in
favor of Officer Guerra based on the uncontested evidence âthat Galindo ignored the
[Spanish-speaking dispatcherâs] directive to leave the gun in the house and in response to
the officerâs command âmanos,â . . . drew [the] gun.â See Opinion 12. According to the
court, once Galindo brandished his pistol, Guerra was immediately entitled to use deadly
force against him because he posed an immediate threat to the responding officers by being
âa non-compliant, armed subject.â See id. at 11, 13. In other words, the court concluded
that the fatal shooting was justified because of Galindoâs conduct before he assumed a
position of surrender and then allegedly pivoted his pistol toward Guerra and indicated he
was about to fire.
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The district courtâs theory is at odds, however, with the well-established principle
âthat the reasonableness of an officerâs actions is determined based on the information
possessed by the officer at the moment that force is employed,â so that âforce justified at
the beginning of an encounter is not justified even seconds later if the justification for the
initial force has been eliminated.â See Waterman, 393 F.3d at 481. Even accepting that
deadly force was justified at the moment Galindo brandished his pistol, that justification
would have vanished once Galindo assumed his position of surrender.
Additionally, the district courtâs theory disregards our precedents that deadly force
cannot be used simply because a suspect is armed and has ignored commands. To be sure,
the decisions invoked by the district court â Anderson, Sigman, and Slattery â stand for
the legal principle âthat an officer does not have to wait until a gun is pointed at the officer
before the officer is entitled to take action.â See Opinion 11 (quoting Anderson, 247 F.3d
at 131). But those and other decisions make clear that there must be some basis, other than
a suspectâs mere possession of a weapon and failure to obey commands, for the officer to
reasonably feel threatened. That is, the suspect must âmake[] some sort of furtive or other
threatening movement with the weapon, thereby signaling to the officer that the suspect
intends to use it in a way that imminently threatens the safety of the officer or another
person.â See Knibbs, 30 F.4th at 225 (summarizing Anderson, Sigman, and Slattery, as
well as Cooper, Elliott, McLenagan, and Hensley). Here, the allegation is that Galindo
made such a furtive or threatening movement with his pistol only after taking the position
of surrender.
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In these circumstances, the district court erred in concluding at the summary
judgment stage that Officer Guerraâs use of deadly force was objectively reasonable, such
that no Fourth Amendment violation occurred. Consequently, the court erred in awarding
qualified immunity to Guerra under the first prong of the relevant analysis.
e.
Although we conclude that Officer Guerra is not presently entitled to qualified
immunity under the first prong of the qualified immunity analysis, we also rule that the
plaintiff is not entitled to summary judgment on her Fourth Amendment claim. In seeking
such relief, the plaintiff has largely relied on the video footage from the responding
officersâ body cameras, arguing that the video footage is sufficiently unambiguous both to
âquite clearly establish that Galindo was not a threat to anyone at the moment Guerra killed
himâ and to âblatantly contradict[]â Guerraâs account of the shooting. See Br. of Appellant
22 (internal quotation marks omitted); see also Scott v. Harris, 550 U.S. 372, 380 (2007)
(recognizing that â[w]hen opposing parties tell two different stories, one of which is
blatantly contradicted by the record, so that no reasonable jury could believe it, a court
should not adopt that version of the facts for purposes of ruling on a motion for summary
judgmentâ).
We cannot agree with the plaintiff that the video footage is unambiguous enough
either to prove the lack of an immediate threat or to wholly discredit Officer Guerraâs
version of events. As the plaintiff has not disputed, the video footage is inconclusive as to
key issues such as how Galindo was holding his pistol and where the pistol was pointing.
Moreover, it is generally agreed that the video footage did not capture everything that
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occurred at the shooting scene, rendering it possible that, just before Guerra shot him,
Galindo made threatening movements that the video footage does not show. Thus, the
video footage provides only âsome supportâ to the plaintiff, and it does not compel an
award of summary judgment in her favor. See Witt v. W. Va. State Police, Troop 2, 633
F.3d 272, 276 (4th Cir. 2011) (observing that âScott does not hold that courts should reject
[the nonmoving partyâs] account on summary judgment whenever documentary evidence,
such as a video, offers some support for [the movantâs] version of eventsâ).
It bears emphasis that â although a reasonable jury could rule in favor of the
plaintiff after reviewing the video footage and other evidence â a reasonable jury could
instead find that Galindo did pose an immediate threat at the moment Officer Guerra fatally
shot him or that Guerra was reasonably mistaken in perceiving an immediate threat. We
therefore decline to direct the entry of a judgment in the plaintiffâs favor on her Fourth
Amendment claim.
2.
That brings us to the second prong of the qualified immunity analysis with regard
to the Fourth Amendment claim: whether the constitutional right allegedly violated was
clearly established in September 2017 when Officer Guerra fatally shot Galindo. In light
of its ruling in Guerraâs favor under the first prong, the district court did not reach this
issue. We address it, however, because if the right was not clearly established, Guerra
would yet be entitled to qualified immunity and we would have an alternative ground for
affirming the district court.
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In assessing whether a right was clearly established, we look to decisions of the
Supreme Court and this Court to âconsider whether officers within our jurisdiction have
been provided fair warning, with sufficient specificity, that their actions would constitute
a deprivation of an individualâs constitutional rights.â See Betton, 942 F.3d at 193-94. âIt
is not enough that a rule be suggested by then-existing precedent; the ruleâs contours must
be so well defined that it is clear to a reasonable officer that his conduct was unlawful in
the situation he confronted.â See City of Tahlequah v. Bond, 142 S. Ct. 9, 11 (2021)
(internal quotation marks omitted). Nevertheless, â[a] right need not be recognized by a
court in a specific factual context before such right may be considered âclearly establishedâ
for purposes of qualified immunity.â See Wilson v. Prince Georgeâs Cnty., 893 F.3d 213,
221 (4th Cir. 2018).
Here, the question is whether it was clearly established in September 2017 that an
officer would contravene the Fourth Amendment by using deadly force against a suspect
who is holding a firearm in his hand and ignoring commands to drop the weapon, but who
is standing still in a position of surrender, is not firing the weapon or aiming it at any
person, and is not otherwise making a furtive or threatening movement that would suggest
he had an intent to use the weapon to harm the officer or anyone else. The answer is plainly
âyesâ under our 2013 decision in Cooper, as well as our earlier decisions in Anderson
(2001), Sigman (1998), Elliott (1996), McLenagan (1994), and Slattery (1991).
Precisely on point, we have held that those six decisions â along with our
November 2017 decision in Hensley â âtogether clearly establishâ the following:
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[T]he failure to obey commands by a person in possession of, or suspected
to be in possession of, a weapon only justifies the use of deadly force if that
person makes some sort of furtive or other threatening movement with the
weapon, thereby signaling to the officer that the suspect intends to use it in a
way that imminently threatens the safety of the officer or another person.
See Knibbs, 30 F.4th at 225(emphasis added); see also Franklin,64 F.4th at 534-35
(explaining that we had âlittle trouble concluding that [the suspectâs] Fourth Amendment
right was clearly established by our precedents,â including Cooper and Hensley). That is,
we not only have decisions that clearly establish the very right at issue in these proceedings,
but we also have decisions that already recognize the right was clearly established under
the earlier precedents.
Notably, Officer Guerra â who bears the burden of proof under the second prong
of the qualified immunity analysis, see Stanton, 25 F.4th at 233 â does not argue that the
aforementioned right did not become clearly established until we decided Hensley, two
months after he fatally shot Galindo. And there is good reason for that, as it is not Hensley
that clearly established the right. At best, Hensley simply made even clearer the right that
was clearly established by Cooper, Anderson, Sigman, Elliott, McLenagan, and Slattery.
Officer Guerra is thus left to assert that a different right is at issue in these
proceedings â a right that has never been clearly established. Specifically, Guerra
maintains that there is no precedent of this Court or the Supreme Court ruling that where
an officer is âinteracting with a subject who has a gun in his hand which the officer
reasonably believes the subject is preparing to fire,â and where âthe officer has announced
his presence and the subject has been commanded repeatedly to disarm,â that officer âis
not allowed to defend himself, his fellow officers and others with deadly force.â See Br.
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of Appellees 41. The critical problem for Guerra is that his argument assumes that he shot
Galindo based on a reasonable belief that Galindo was about to fire his own pistol, but that
is not what the plaintiff contends.
Considering, as we must, the Fourth Amendment right that the plaintiff alleges was
violated, we are readily satisfied that the right was clearly established at the time of the
September 2017 fatal shooting. We therefore vacate the district courtâs award of qualified
immunity to Officer Guerra and reinstate the plaintiffâs Fourth Amendment claim for
further proceedings.
B.
We next address the plaintiffâs state law claims against Officer Guerra for assault
and battery, and against both Guerra and the City of Charlotte for wrongful death caused
by negligence and negligent infliction of emotional distress. The district court awarded
summary judgment to the defendants on those claims, based on its conclusion with respect
to the Fourth Amendment claim that Guerraâs use of deadly force was objectively
reasonable. As we have explained, however, there are genuine disputes of material fact as
to the objective reasonableness of Guerraâs actions. Thus, as with the Fourth Amendment
claim, we reinstate the assault and battery, wrongful death, and negligent infliction of
emotional distress claims for further proceedings, without directing the entry of judgment
in the plaintiffâs favor as to any of the claims.
C.
Finally, we address the plaintiffâs state law claim against the City of Charlotte for
negligent training police officer training. The district court awarded summary judgment to
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the City on the negligent training claim because of the plaintiffâs failure to produce
evidence sufficient to establish any alleged training failure. In so doing, the court observed
that the plaintiffâs own expert witnesses acknowledged that Officer Guerra and his
colleagues received appropriate training from the City, as the plaintiffâs experts blamed the
officers for disregarding their training and did not criticize the training itself. Despite that
evidence, the plaintiff suggests that negligent training can somehow be inferred from the
officersâ conduct, particularly their decision to approach Galindo without the assistance of
a Spanish-speaking officer. We agree with the district court, however, that there is an
insufficient evidentiary basis for the negligent training claim, and we therefore affirm the
summary judgment award to the City as to that claim.
IV.
Pursuant to the foregoing, we affirm the district courtâs summary judgment award
to the City of Charlotte on the plaintiffâs negligent training claim. We vacate the courtâs
award of qualified immunity to Officer Guerra on the Fourth Amendment claim, as well as
the related summary judgment awards to Guerra and the City on the assault and battery,
wrongful death caused by negligence, and negligent infliction of emotional distress claims.
We remand for such other and further proceedings as may be appropriate.
AFFIRMED IN PART,
VACATED IN PART, AND REMANDED
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RICHARDSON, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
In its fifty-seven-page opinion, the majority devotes a mere three pages to whether
Officer Guerra violated clearly established law. Its brevity is telling. While the law may
be established now, we must consider the law as it stood when Galindo was shot in
September 2017. And the law at that time did not clearly establish that Officer Guerra
violated the Fourth Amendment.
Determining whether an official violates clearly established law is a two-step
process. We first must specifically define the right. City of Tahlequah v. Bond, 142 S. Ct.
9, 11 (2021). Then, based on that right, we look to see if caselaw at the time of the conduct
places the constitutional question âbeyond debate.â Kisela v. Hughes, 138 S. Ct. 1148,
1152(2018) (quoting White v. Pauly,580 U.S. 73, 79
(2017)). âIt is not enough that the
rule be suggested by then-existing precedent; the ruleâs contours must be so well defined
that it is clear to a reasonable officer that his conduct was unlawful in the situation he
confronted.â Bond, 142 S. Ct. at 11 (quoting District of Columbia v. Wesby, 138 S. Ct.
577, 590 (2018)) (internal quotation marks omitted). This does not require an existing case
directly on point. But it does demand that officers are entitled to qualified immunity
âunless existing precedent âsquarely governsâ the specific facts at issue.â Kisela, 138 S.
Ct. at 1153(quoting Mullinex v. Luna,577 U.S. 7, 13
(2015)). This clarity requires an
existing âbody of relevant case lawâ that actually finds âa Fourth Amendment violation
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âunder similar circumstances.ââ 1 Wesby, 138 S. Ct. at 590â91 (first quoting Brosseau v.
Haugen, 543 U.S. 194, 199(2004), and then quoting White,580 U.S. at 79
).
It is here that the majority goes astray. Even were one to accept its definition of the
right, 2 the majority does not identify a single case published before this September 2017
shootingâlet alone a âbody of relevant case lawâââfinding a Fourth Amendment
violation under similar circumstances.â Wesby, 138 S. Ct. at 590â91. Its conclusory
analysis instead relies on cases after the shooting and cases finding no violation.
The majority rests on our decisions in Knibbs v. Momphard, 30 F.4th 200 (2022),
and Franklin v. City of Charlotte, 64 F.4th 519 (4th Cir. 2023). But both were decided
well after the shooting here, so they could not be part of the law that was clearly established
by September 2017. Wesby, 138 S. Ct. at 589 (âTo be clearly established, a legal principle
must have a sufficiently clear foundation in then-existing precedent.â (emphasis added));
Kisela, 138 S. Ct. at 1154 (finding a case decided after the shooting at issue was of no use
in the clearly established inquiry). To get around this problem, the majority reads Knibbs
to say that our pre-shooting caselaw clearly established the right. The majority says that
1
There is an exceptionâwhich the majority doesnât purport to rely onâfor when
the constitutional violation is âobvious . . . even though existing precedent does not address
similar circumstances.â Wesby, 138 S. Ct. at 590.
2
The majority defines the question as âwhether it was clearly established in
September 2017 that an officer would contravene the Fourth Amendment by using deadly
force against a suspect who is holding a firearm in his hand and ignoring commands to
drop the weapon, but who is standing still in a position of surrender, is not firing the weapon
or aiming it at any person, and is not otherwise making a furtive or threatening movement
that would suggest he had an intent to use the weapon to harm the officer or anyone else.â
Majority Op. at 56.
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the right at issue in Knibbs is the same as the one at issue here. Andâaccording to the
majorityâKnibbs said that right was clearly established âunder . . . earlier precedents.â
Majority Op. at 57.
But Knibbs doesnât say that. Knibbs lists seven cases that it says âtogetherâ clearly
establish the right as of April 2018. Knibbs, 30 F.4th at 224â25. One of those cases,
Hensley, was decided after Galindoâs shooting. Nor can the majority reasonably rely on
Hensley as holding that the right was, prior to that decision, clearly established, because
Hensley expressly refused to consider whether any right was clearly established. 3 876 F.3d
at 580. So Knibbs doesnât say that our pre-shooting cases clearly establish the right; it says
our pre-shooting cases plus one post-shooting case do. And if it takes all seven cases
âtogetherâ to clearly establish the right, and the majority canât rely on all seven, then the
majority canât rely on Knibbs. This is especially true in relation to Hensley, which the
Knibbs majority said âapplied [the] right more directly to the particular situation presented
in this appealâ than did any of the other cases discussed. Id. at 224; see also Franklin, 64
F.4th at 531, 535 (including Hensley as an important part of the analysis). In fact, Knibbs
is a better case for Officer Guerra since it implies that the majority with its six cases comes
up one short.
The majority speeds right past this hole in its logic, pausing only to half-heartedly
assert that âHensley simply made even clearer the right that was clearly establishedâ by the
3
We specifically noted in Hensley that the officers âfailed to raiseâand, therefore,
have waivedâany argument that the right at issue was not clearly established.â Id. at 580.
So the only question was whether a constitutional violation occurred. Id. at 580â81.
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other six cases. Majority Op. at 57. But now the majority is adding its gloss to Knibbsâs
gloss. And if our precedent needs that many coats to paint a right as clearly established,
itâs obvious that right was never clearly established at all.
Plus, the majorityâs gloss isnât even correct. Without Knibbs, Franklin, or Hensley,
and looking only to the caselaw that existed in September 2017, see Wesby, 138 S. Ct. at
589, Officer Guerra is entitled to qualified immunity. The majority cites six pre-shooting
cases: (1) Cooper v. Sheehan, 735 F.3d 153(4th Cir. 2013); (2) Anderson v. Russell,247 F.3d 125
(4th Cir. 2001); (3) Sigman v. Town of Chapel Hill,161 F.3d 782
(4th Cir. 1998);
(4) Elliot v. Leavitt, 99 F.3d 640(4th Cir. 1996); (5) McLenagan v. Karnes,27 F.3d 1002
(4th Cir. 1994); and (6) Slattery v. Rizzo, 939 F.2d 213 (4th Cir. 1991). But together or
separately, none of these make it clear to âevery reasonable officialâ that the use of deadly
force in this case was clearly unlawful. Wesby, 138 S. Ct. at 589.
Start with Cooper. There, we denied qualified immunity when officers shot a man
who stepped onto his front porch carrying a shotgun. Cooper, 735 F.3d at 154â56. Key to
that holding was the officersâ failure to present themselves as law enforcement officials.
Id. at 159 (âImportantly, the Officers never identified themselves.â (emphasis added)).
This failure made their assumption that the man was threatening less reasonable. Id. But
Officer Guerra identified himself. So Cooper is âsimply too factually distinct to speak
clearly to the specific circumstances here.â Mullenix, 577 U.S. at 18; cf. Knibbs,30 F.4th at 224
(noting that Cooper only defined the right âat a higher level of generalityâ).
And, to the extent it does speak to these circumstances, Cooper actually suggests
that Officer Guerra acted reasonably. We explained in Cooper that, if the officers had
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identified themselves, âthey might have been safe in the assumption that a man who greets
law enforcement with a firearm is likely to pose a deadly threat.â Cooper, 735 F.3d at 159.
We also said that âan armed suspect need not engage in some specific actionâsuch as
pointing, aiming, or firing his weaponâto pose a threat.â Id. at 159 n.9. So, after Cooper,
Officer Guerra might have reasonably assumed he could respond with deadly force to a
man approaching him with a drawn weapon. Doubly so since Galindo was in fact drunk,
delusional, and had repeatedly ignored commands to leave the firearm in his home. Cooper
therefore did not put the constitutionality of Officer Guerraâs actions âbeyond debate.â See
Kisela, 138 S. Ct. at 1152.
The majorityâs other casesâAnderson, Sigman, Elliot, McLenagan, and Slatteryâ
are even less helpful. The district court used all but one of them to hold that Officer Guerra
did not violate the Fourth Amendment. Aleman v. City of Charlotte, No. 3:19-cv-00491,
2021 WL 4495907, at *6â7 (W.D.N.C. Sept. 30, 2021). Officer Guerra argued the same.
And Aleman argued that they have âno application here.â 4 Appellantâs Br. at 32â35. None
of them help show that Officer Guerra violated clearly established law.
In Anderson, Sigman, and Elliot, we held the officerâs use of deadly force was
reasonable. Anderson, 247 F.3d at 127; Sigman,161 F.3d at 784
; Elliot,99 F.3d at 641
.
Officer Guerra and the district court could thus be forgiven for thinking they are evidence
4
You might think the majority would be concerned that every actor involved in this
litigation disagrees with it. Ordinarily this wouldnât be much of a problem. That others
might think us wrong should not stop us from doing what we think is right. But when the
question is whether something is beyond debate, it should give us pause when both parties
and the district court judge go the other way.
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of what a police officer can legally do. Instead, the majority uses them as evidence of what
a police officer cannot legally doâpresumably on the theory that if Galindo posed less of
a threat than the plaintiffs in those cases, then his shooting was unreasonable. But the
Supreme Court has rejected this reasoning: â[t]he mere fact that courts have approved
deadly force in more extreme circumstances says little, if anything, about whether such
force was reasonable in the circumstances here.â Mullenix, 577 U.S. at 18. So these cases
cannot demonstrate that Officer Guerra violated clearly established law.
Whatâs more, those cases could reasonably be readâlike Cooperâto support
Officer Guerraâs position. In Anderson we noted that â[t]his Circuit has consistently held
that an officer does not have to wait until a gun is pointed at the officer before the officer
is entitled to take action.â 247 F.3d at 131. Similarly, in Elliot we explained that â[n]o
citizen can fairly expect to draw a gun on police without risking tragic consequences.â 99
F.3d at 644. We also said that â[o]fficers need not be absolutely . . . sure of the nature of
the threat or the suspectâs intent to cause them harmâ before using deadly force. Id. Given
their holdings and dicta, a reasonable officer could look at these casesâwhere we
condoned the use of deadly force against drunk, armed individualsâand infer that Officer
Guerraâs use of deadly force was reasonable. So these casesâwhere there was no
constitutional violation at allâdo nothing to place the unlawfulness of Officer Guerraâs
conduct âbeyond debate.â
McLenagan and Slattery are no better. In McLenagan, we granted qualified
immunity to an officer who shot a handcuffed detainee that was running towards him
because another officer was shouting â[t]he [detainee] has got a gun.â 27 F.3d at 1005â
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06. The officer did not check to see if the detainee was armed or command him to stop.
Id. at 1007. Nor did the detainee move his hands. Id. Yet we still condoned the officerâs
use of deadly force: âWe will not second-guess the split-second judgment of a trained
police officer merely because that judgment turns out to be mistaken, particularly where
inaction could have resulted in death or serious injury to the officer or others.â Id. at 1007â
08. Iâalong with the district court and the partiesâfail to see how a reasonable officer
would know from McLenagan that Officer Guerraâs use of deadly force was clearly
unlawful.
Lastly, in Slattery, we granted qualified immunity to an officer who shot a man who
ignored the officerâs commands and began reaching for what the officer thought was a
weapon. 939 F.2d 215. We noted that â[a] police officer should prevail on an assertion of
qualified immunity if a reasonable officer possessing the same information could have
believed that his conduct was lawful.â Id. at 216. Outside of that statement, there is scant
analysis of the qualified immunity issue. Id. at 216â17. So Slattery does not clearly
establish that Officer Guerraâs conduct was unlawful; it hardly bears on the issue at all.
The point is not that the dicta in these cases is binding, or that officers are entitled
to qualified immunity unless weâve held otherwise on identical facts. Itâs simply that using
cases in which there was no constitutional violation at all to show that an officer violated
clearly established Fourth Amendment principles is a fraught endeavor. Such cases might
show a constitutional violation, but they are unlikely to put the question âbeyond debate.â
All told, the majority has âfailed to identify a case where an officer acting under
similar circumstances . . . was held to have violated the Fourth Amendment.â White, 580
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U.S. at 79. It has not shown thatâbased on our caselaw in September 2017âa reasonable
officer would have known that using deadly force in these circumstances was clearly
unlawful, beyond debate. Officer Guerraâs conduct at least falls in the âhazy borderâ
between the unreasonable use of force in Cooper and the reasonable uses of force in
Anderson, Sigman, Elliot, McLenagan, and Slattery. See Mullenix, 577 U.S. at 18 (quoting
Brosseau, 543 U.S. at 201). That means he is entitled to qualified immunity. Wilson v.
Prince Georgeâs County, 893 F.3d 213, 223 (4th Cir. 2018).
* * *
âQualified immunity is controversial, contested, and binding.â Stanton v. Elliott,
25 F.4th 227, 237 (4th Cir. 2022) (cleaned up). While many criticize the doctrine, lower
court judges are duty-bound to faithfully apply it so long as it exists. The majority does
not. It instead joins the lengthy list of courts of appeals to improperly deny qualified
immunity in a Fourth Amendment case. 5 I refuse to join that list and respectfully dissent.
5
See, e.g., Bond, 142 S. Ct. 9; Rivas-Villegas v. Cortesluna,142 S. Ct. 4
(2021);
City of Escondido v. Emmons, 139 S. Ct. 500(2019); Kisela,138 S. Ct. 1148
; Wesby,138 S. Ct. 577
; White,580 U.S. 73
; Mullenix,577 U.S. 7
; City and County of San Francisco v.
Sheehan, 575 U.S. 600(2015); Plumhoff v. Rickard,572 U.S. 765
(2014); Caroll v.
Carman, 574 U.S. 13(2014); Stanton v. Sims,571 U.S. 3
(2013); Ryburn v. Huff,565 U.S. 469
(2012); Ashcroft v. al-Kidd,563 U.S. 731
(2011); Brosseau,543 U.S. 194
.
67