Facts
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In June 2023, Jonathan Bates Nunemaker, a Medina County deputy sheriff, was on routine patrol in Castroville, Texas. He saw an automobile with its emergency lights flashing, ran the license plates, and learned there was a report that the vehicle had been stolen and used during an aggravated robbery. Nunemaker initiated a stop, handcuffed the driver — Branden Sanchez — and placed him in the back of Nunemaker’s cruiser.
Over approximately the next 50 minutes, Nunemaker searched the vehicle and found drugs, a rifle-style pellet gun, and other items. Eventually, four other law enforcement officers arrived on scene to assist. During this time, Sanchez repeatedly yelled and kicked the inside of the cruiser’s doors, demanding to be taken to jail. In response, Nunemaker and another officer warned Sanchez several times that he would be pepper-sprayed or otherwise subdued if he continued his behavior.
After being detained for about 45 minutes, Sanchez began sitting on his knees and moving around in the back of the cruiser. Nunemaker told Sanchez to sit with his back against the seat. Sanchez initially complied but then resumed moving around. Nunemaker again ordered Sanchez to sit, but Sanchez protested that his handcuffs were too tight. Nunemaker reiterated his order that Sanchez sit and stated that if he did not do so, Nunemaker would make him. Nunemaker grabbed Sanchez’s arm and sharply twisted him, forcing him into the seat and causing his head to hit the cruiser’s hard cage partition.
Once the door was closed, Sanchez began kicking it again, yelling, and refusing to stay seated. Nunemaker walked to the other side of the cruiser and opened the door, causing Sanchez to turn towards him. Nunemaker then aimed a pepper-spray device called a Centurion Law Enforcement Deployment System (“CLE”) at Sanchez’s face. He fired the device from approximately 3.6 feet away from Sanchez, about half the seven-foot distance the manufacturer’s instructions state to be safe. The CLE discharged a high-velocity jet of pepper spray into Sanchez’s left eye, permanently blinding that eye.
Sanchez brought suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that Nunemaker violated Sanchez’s Fourth Amendment rights by using excessive force. Nunemaker filed a motion to dismiss or, in the alternative, for judgment on the pleadings, in which he asserted that qualified immunity barred Sanchez’s Section 1983 claim. The district court denied Nunemaker’s motion, concluding that Sanchez had sufficiently pled that Nunemaker used excessive force in violation of clearly established law. The 5th affirmed.
Analysis
A. Constitutional Violation
An officer’s use of excessive force constitutes an unreasonable seizure. See SCOTUS Graham v. Connor, 490 U.S. 386 (1989). To establish a Fourth Amendment excessive-force claim, a plaintiff must show two things: (1) a seizure occurred; and (2) the force used was unreasonable. See Estate of Parker. It is undisputed that Nunemaker’s use of pepper spray was a seizure that injured Sanchez. Thus, the question is whether the officers’ actions are objectively reasonable in light of the facts and circumstances confronting them, without regard to their underlying intent or motivation. This analysis requires examining the totality of the circumstances, with careful attention to the facts and circumstances of the particular case, including the severity of the crime at issue, whether the suspect poses an immediate threat to the safety of the officers or others, and whether he is actively resisting arrest or attempting to evade arrest by flight.
It is true that here the crimes at issue were quite severe, given that Sanchez was suspected of armed robbery and was found driving a reportedly stolen car with weapons inside. Nevertheless, at the time of the seizure, Sanchez did not pose a threat to the safety of the officers or others. The physically slight seventeen-year-old was handcuffed, seat-belted in the cruiser, and surrounded by five officers. Of course, Sanchez was disruptive and resisted Nunemaker’s commands to sit properly and face forward in the seat. Earlier, Sanchez had complied with Nunemaker’s orders to exit the BMW, lie on the ground, place his hands behind his back to be cuffed, and enter the cruiser. Sanchez was making no attempt to flee and instead was repeatedly demanding to be taken to jail rather than be required to wait while Nunemaker searched the vehicle.
Viewing the complaint and the video recordings it incorporates in the light most favorable to Sanchez, we conclude that Sanchez stated a plausible claim that Nunemaker’s discharging high-velocity pepper spray directly into Sanchez’s eye from half the manufacturer-provided minimum safe distance constituted excessive force.
B. Clearly Established Law
A right is clearly established when it would be clear to a reasonable officer that his conduct was unlawful in the situation he confronted. See Jones. A plaintiff may demonstrate a violation of clearly established law by identifying a case that would have put a reasonable officer on notice that his specific conduct was unlawful.
Sanchez’s complaint cites Ramirez. There, after the suspect Ramirez resisted arrest by pulling his arm away, the defendant officer Martinez tased Ramirez in the chest. Several officers then forced Ramirez to the ground and handcuffed him. Martinez next used a taser on the restrained Ramirez a second time. Holding that a constitutional violation occurred, this court stated that Ramirez’s pulling his arm out of Martinez’s grasp, without more, was insufficient to find an immediate threat to the safety of the officers. Martinez’s conduct was unconstitutional because, after Ramirez resisted arrest by pulling his arm away, Martinez twice tased Ramirez — including once when he was handcuffed, on the ground, and surrounded by several officers.
Here, after Sanchez resisted commands by kicking the cruiser’s doors and refusing to sit properly, Nunemaker pepper-sprayed Sanchez in the face when he was handcuffed, seat-belted, and surrounded by several officers. Given the factual similarities, Ramirez would have put a reasonable officer in Nunemaker’s position on notice that it is unlawful to discharge pepper spray directly into the eye of a handcuffed, restrained, outnumbered suspect not posing an immediate threat or attempting to flee.
Nunemaker, in contending that his conduct did not violate clearly established law, analogizes to Brothers. There, police attempted to stop a heavily intoxicated man from driving his truck. The suspect repeatedly refused to comply with officers’ instructions to exit the truck. Officers opened the driver’s-side door, grabbed both of his arms, and pulled him out of the elevated truck. The suspect slammed hard into the ground, which broke his vertebrae and rendered him quadriplegic. This court held that the officers’ use of force was not excessive, reasoning that the force they employed was moderate and that they slowly escalated the amount of force until it was enough to extract the suspect.
The distinctions from Brothers are obvious. There, officers were attempting to remove the suspect from his truck and detain him. The force used was reasonable given that the suspect might have had access to a weapon or could have tried to drive his huge, elevated truck into the police car blocking his truck. Here, Nunemaker had already removed Sanchez from the BMW, handcuffed him, and placed him in the cruiser. The threat of harm posed by Sanchez, who was restrained and known to be unarmed, was at most to the officer’s cruiser, not to any person. It was thus a significantly less serious threat than in Brothers.
Nunemaker also cites Baldwin. In that case, officers were transporting 19 inmates to a more restrictive facility. After the inmates were loaded onto the bus, and while it was parked in an unfenced area of the prison next to the armory, some of the inmates . . . began jumping on the seats, spitting at the officers outside the bus, rocking the bus, and otherwise causing a disturbance. After the inmates ignored three orders to stop, an officer discharged pepper spray down the middle of the bus. This court held that the officer’s use of force was constitutionally permissible because it was a good faith effort to maintain or restore discipline in what he perceived to be a highly volatile and potentially dangerous situation.
A situation where 19 inmates pose a threat of escaping and obtaining firearms is much more dangerous than one where five officers surround one suspect who does not pose any significant threat of fleeing or acquiring a weapon. The level of force used in Baldwin was also lower; although the officer there faced a volatile situation, he fired the spray down the middle of the bus — not into the inmates’ faces at close range. The facts of Baldwin are therefore distinguishable from this case.
In sum, Nunemaker could be found to have violated clearly established law by discharging high-velocity pepper spray from half the manufacturer-provided minimum safe distance into the face of a suspect. That suspect was handcuffed and restrained by his seat belt in a law enforcement officer’s vehicle, not attempting to flee, and not posing an immediate threat. Sanchez has sufficiently pled facts to support an excessive-force claim, and those facts overcome Nunemaker’s qualified immunity defense at the stage of a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim.
AFFIRMED.
https://www.ca5.uscourts.gov/opinions/pub/25/25-50596-CV0.pdf