JULIE A. ROBINSON, District Judge.
This is a case that began with road rage fueled by egos and unwarranted self-righteousness, and aggravated by disguised identity. A Drug Enforcement Administration Agent ("DEA agent"), acting in an undercover capacity—but with the authoritative sentiments and expectations of an on-duty, uniformed law enforcement officer in a marked police vehicle—commits a traffic offense, expects an unwitting but equally self-righteous civilian motorist to yield, and then explodes with rage after the ensuing collision and damage to his government-owned vehicle. The Court heard nineteen days of testimony, from law enforcement officers, eyewitnesses to the events transpiring after the collision, as well as from expert witnesses on excessive force, the likely cause of the collision, and the consequential medical and psychological damages suffered by plaintiff. As
Ultimately, this Court concludes that the preponderance of the evidence establishes that DEA Special Agent Timothy McCue assaulted and battered plaintiff Barron Bowling, and used excessive force in arresting and taking plaintiff into custody; and that DEA Special Agent Brendan Fitzpatrick and federally-deputized DEA Task Force Officer Brandon Collins did not stop McCue from committing assault, battery and using excessive force. This Court further concludes that plaintiff sustained a closed head injury, a concussion and has since, as a proximate result, suffered from post-concussion syndrome, which presents with a panoply of symptoms ranging from the annoying and aggravating to the impairing. The Court thus grants judgment on plaintiff's claims of assault, battery and excessive force, and orders damages in the total amount of $833,250.
Plaintiff had three other theories or claims for relief in this action brought against defendant under the Federal Tort Claims Act ("FTCA"), 28 U.S.C. § 2671 et seq. The Court grants defendant's motion to dismiss these three other claims on jurisdictional grounds. In Part I of this Memorandum and Order, the Court addresses defendant's motion to dismiss these three claims. In Part II of this Memorandum and Order, the Court makes findings of fact and conclusions of law on the sole remaining claims under the FTCA for assault, battery and excessive force, and grants judgment to plaintiff on these claims.
Plaintiff Barron Bowling brought this action against the United States, under the FTCA, and against the Unified Government of Wyandotte County Kansas and certain law enforcement officers of the Kansas City, Kansas Police Department, an arm of the Unified Government, under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The claims against the
As set forth in the Pretrial Order, the remaining claims at the time of trial were claims against the United States for assault, battery, excessive force and civil conspiracy. Specifically, the four remaining claims were: (1) DEA Special Agent McCue, DEA Special Agent Fitzpatrick, or DEA Task Force Officer Collins used excessive and unreasonable force on, assaulted, or battered plaintiff in the course of arresting him or after his arrest; (2) McCue, Fitzpatrick and Collins, or any two of them, engaged in a civil conspiracy to use excessive and unreasonable force on, to assault, or to batter plaintiff in the course of arresting him or after his arrest; (3) McCue, Fitzpatrick, and Collins, or any two of them, engaged in a civil conspiracy among themselves to subject plaintiff to malicious prosecution on the charge of criminal damage to property; or (4) McCue, Fitzpatrick, or Collins engaged in a civil conspiracy with Steven Culp, Dennis Ware or Robert Lane, who were Kansas City, Kansas police officers, to subject plaintiff to malicious prosecution on the charge of criminal damage to property.
This case was presented in a highly unusual procedural posture at trial. Defendant filed no dispositive motions prior to trial; the parties represented to the Court that as part of settlement negotiations, the defendant agreed not to file any dispositive motions. Only after a nineteen-day bench trial, defendant has moved to dismiss, on jurisdictional and other grounds, three of the four claims brought by plaintiff. Because federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction, a party may question the Court's subject matter jurisdiction at any time, including on appeal.
Thus this matter now comes before the Court on Defendant United States of America's Motion to Dismiss All of Plaintiff's Claims Except Assault Based on Lack of Subject Matter Jurisdiction, and Motion for Judgment as a Matter of Law Based on Plaintiff's Failure to Satisfy His Burden of Proof on Various Claims with Memorandum in Support Included (Doc. 386). The Court directed the parties to brief the issues raised in defendant's motion to dismiss. The matter is now fully briefed and the Court is prepared to rule. For the reasons set forth in detail in Part I of the Memorandum and Order, defendant's motion to dismiss is granted in part and denied in part. The Court dismisses the conspiracy claims, but does not dismiss the claims of assault, battery and excessive force. In Part II of this Memorandum and Order, the Court sets forth its findings of fact and conclusions of law, in denying defendant's motion for judgment and in granting plaintiff judgment on his claims of assault, battery and excessive force, under the FTCA.
In its motion, defendant argues that this Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction over certain claims, in that plaintiff failed to exhaust his administrative remedies on all claims except assault, and because Kansas law does not recognize a conspiracy claim against a governmental entity based on the actions of its employees while acting within the scope of their employment. Because such claims are not recognized under state law, defendant argues that the FTCA does not accord a waiver of sovereign immunity allowing such claims to be brought against the United States.
"The FTCA waives the federal government's sovereign immunity to suits for money damages arising out of the negligence of government agents."
In determining what level of specificity satisfies § 2675(a), the Tenth Circuit adopted the "pragmatic approach," "requiring only that the administrative claim contain sufficient facts to enable the agency to begin its own investigation of the alleged events."
"[A] plaintiff cannot `present one claim to the agency and then maintain suit on the basis of a different set of facts.'"
Here, plaintiff's two-page SF 95 form administrative claim included a seven-page attachment setting forth the facts and circumstances supporting his claims. In addition to these documents, plaintiff attached affidavits, deposition excerpts, photographs and copious medical records prepared by other people, totaling 298 pages. The Court reviewed the attached documents, although many of the pictures and handwritten notes prepared by plaintiff's doctors were illegible. The attachment provided sufficient notice, as well as sufficient detail to support plaintiff's claims of assault, battery, and excessive force.
Plaintiff's claims of a conspiracy to assault, batter, and/or use excessive force, are less apparent, but still supported by the facts provided in the administrative claim. Plaintiff alleged that the three federal agents beat him in concert. Because conspiracy may be inferred from circumstantial evidence,
Further, plaintiff's claim of conspiracy among the three federal agents to commit malicious prosecution is sufficiently supported by the facts alleged in the administrative claim. Plaintiff alleges that he was charged in state court with criminal damage to property, arising out of the collision, a charge for which he was innocent. And, he alleges that the arrest and charges were part of the federal agents' effort to conceal that plaintiff was illegally stopped, arrested without probable cause and beaten, despite never having resisted the officers and never having given them reason to use any force.
But, the facts set forth in the administrative claim do not support plaintiff's claim that the Kansas City, Kansas police officers (hereinafter "police officers") were involved in a conspiracy with federal agents to maliciously prosecute plaintiff. First, while the administrative claim specifically lists "[p]ersons involved" as plaintiff, DEA Agents McCue and Fitzpatrick and DEA task force officer Collins, it does not identify the police officers involved. And, the claim provided very few facts about the police officers' involvement in the incident. Plaintiff claimed that after the beating, other DEA agents and police officers arrived on the scene. "One of the police officers, Detective Robert Lane, interviewed Bowling ... [and] Lane told Bowling he would do what he could to help him in the situation." Later, police officers interviewed eyewitnesses who confirmed that plaintiff had been beaten and threatened after his arrest even though he offered no resistance. The administrative claim further states that despite the absence of probable cause, the three federal agents "arrested Bowling and turned him over to the Kansas City, Kansas Police Department, which detained him overnight, then released him." Further, "[t]he arrest and charging of Bowling is part of the agents' effort to cover up the fact that Bowling was illegally stopped and beaten"; and "[t]he unconstitutional actions of all three defendants [presumably the DEA agents and TFO identified] included the unconstitutional use of excessive force and the seizure of Bowling without probable cause, all in violation of the Fourth and Fifth Amendments."
Because the Court concludes that the claim of civil conspiracy between the federal agents and police officers was not administratively exhausted, the Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction over this claim. Thus, the Court need not address whether such claim would be actionable under the FTCA. Nonetheless, the Court concludes that such claim is not actionable, as more fully explained in subsection B, below.
Plaintiff claims that the three federal agents conspired among themselves to commit assault and battery, to use excessive force and to maliciously prosecute him. Defendant argues such claims are not actionable under the FTCA because Kansas law would not recognize such conspiracy claims involving, and against, a single legal entity. More specifically, defendant argues that Kansas law would apply the intracorporate conspiracy doctrine to plaintiff's conspiracy claims. Plaintiff responds that this defense is not jurisdictional but factual, and that defendant waived this defense by failing to assert it in its answer or the pretrial order. Finally, plaintiff argues that the intracorporate conspiracy doctrine has no application under the FTCA, because the United States is made liable under a respondeat superior theory for all the tortious conduct of its employees.
At issue, is whether these conspiracy claims are within the scope of the FTCA, a statute that grants a limited waiver of the sovereign immunity otherwise accorded to the United States.
In § 2680, the FTCA has excluded certain state law claims that might otherwise be actionable under § 1346, and the Tenth Circuit has held that these exclusions affect the subject matter jurisdiction of federal courts.
A court must first decide whether plaintiff's claims come within the limited waiver of immunity set forth in § 1346(b) before proceeding to the exclusions and exceptions in § 2680.
The Court focuses on the sixth element of § 1346(b) to determine whether the United States has consented to be made liable for civil conspiracy. Under § 1346(b), the United States's liability is equivalent to that of a "private person." Section 2674 provides that the United States's liability is determined "in the same manner and to the same extent as a private individual under like circumstances." Under both provisions, the government is a single individual. If there is no analogous private liability under Kansas law, then this Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction over plaintiff's conspiracy claims under the FTCA.
The Court must apply "the law of the place where the act or omission complained of occurred."
Under § 1346(b)'s general waiver of immunity, the United States is treated as a singular individual. Under Kansas law, a single person cannot engage in the first and third elements of civil conspiracy unless a second defendant is also sued. The very nature of civil conspiracy requires a meeting of the minds between "two or more persons" to perform an underlying tort.
Plaintiff argues that the scope of the § 1346(b) waiver should be determined with reference to the respondeat superior theory, but he cites not a single Kansas authority imposing vicarious liability on an employer for a civil conspiracy among its employees while acting within the scope of their employment. Other courts have questioned whether the United States is even capable of engaging in a conspiracy.
Similarly, under Kansas law, "[a] civil conspiracy is not actionable ... without commission of some wrong giving rise to a tortious cause of action independent of conspiracy."
Finally, the FTCA is focused on "act[s] or omission[s]" that are "negligent or wrongful."
Defendant also encourages the Court to consider the United States' liability as co-extensive with that of a private corporation and argues that Kansas tort law does not recognize conspiracy claims against corporations, municipalities, or their officers because of the intracorporate conspiracy doctrine whereby a corporation cannot conspire with itself. Analogizing the United States liability with that of a private corporation is well-taken. In waiving the United State's sovereign immunity, Congress only opened the government to liability "in the same manner and to the same extent as a private individual under like circumstances,"
Moreover, under Kansas law, the intracorporate conspiracy doctrine holds that "officers and directors of a corporation cannot conspire with themselves when [1] acting on behalf of the corporation and [2] within the scope of their authority"
As discussed above, plaintiff failed to administratively exhaust his claims of a civil conspiracy between the federal agents and the police officers. In any event, such a claim is not actionable under the FTCA. The government has waived sovereign immunity only for those torts committed by its own "employee[s],"
For the reasons explained above, the Court has previously found that it lacks subject matter jurisdiction over plaintiff's claim of a civil conspiracy between the federal agents and the police officers to commit malicious prosecution. Moreover, the Court concludes that this civil conspiracy claim exceeds the scope of the waiver of sovereign immunity in § 1346(b) because it imposes joint and several liability on the United States for the actions of persons who are not "government employees" within the definition of the Act, or persons over whom the federal government exercises direct control.
Having dismissed the claims for conspiracy, the Court turns now to the remaining claims of assault, battery and excessive force. Under the Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. 2671, et seq., a plaintiff's claims against the United States are governed by the law of the state where the alleged tortious activity took place.
The Court heard nineteen days of testimony and reviewed three boxes of exhibits, including documents, photographs, diagrams, and transcripts of trial and deposition testimony. Essentially, these are state law claims, brought under the FTCA, that require the Court to consider these essential questions: (1) did any of the federal agents assault and/or batter plaintiff in the process of arresting and securing him; (2) did any of the federal agents commit excessive force in the process of arresting and securing plaintiff; (3) did plaintiff sustain injuries; (4) what was the nature and extent of injuries sustained; and (5) what are plaintiff's damages.
The parties presented conflicting versions of the events leading up to the collision, traffic stop and arrest of plaintiff, and different versions of what transpired at the scene of the arrest. The parties presented much evidence on questions such as where did the accident occur, and how did the accident occur—did plaintiff intentionally ram his car into McCue's car, or was it an accidental sideswipe? These questions are not directly germane to the elements of plaintiff's claims, but the answer to these and other questions greatly informs the Court's evaluation of the credibility of McCue and plaintiff, the only eyewitnesses to the actual collision, as well as the Court's evaluation of the credibility of the three federal agents and other eyewitnesses as their testimony related to all or part of the events surrounding the arrest of plaintiff. While the Court does not wish to belabor the analysis of these tangential issues, since this cases rises and falls substantially on the credibility of McCue, plaintiff, and the other percipient witnesses, the Court will spend some time discussing the evidence. Likewise, although the Court has dismissed plaintiff's claims for conspiracy, the Court nonetheless will discuss some of the evidence pertaining to the conspiracy claims, to the extent that evidence informs and explains the Court's analysis and evaluation of credibility and the issues surrounding the claims of assault, battery and excessive force.
Highly summarized, plaintiff, through his testimony and the testimony of a number of witnesses, contends that the following occurred. On July 10, 2003, plaintiff was driving his Lincoln Continental northbound on Tenth Street in Kansas City, Kansas. Plaintiff was on his way to fill a prescription at a nearby pharmacy for a pain medication prescribed by his dentist after a recent dental procedure. Plaintiff stopped at a stop sign at Tenth and Montana, before proceeding northbound. As plaintiff proceeded, he slowed slightly as he passed his house, on the right side of Tenth Street, then accelerated as he climbed the slight incline of Tenth Street before the intersection of Tenth and Ray
As plaintiff began to alight from his car, he saw the driver of the Monte Carlo rushing toward him, yelling, with a gun aimed at him. Shocked by this, plaintiff began to lean back into his car. The man, later identified as DEA Special Agent Timothy McCue, grabbed plaintiff and pulled him out of his car. McCue and DEA Special Agent Brendan Fitzpatrick then forced plaintiff onto the pavement. It was only at this point that plaintiff heard the agents identify themselves as law enforcement. McCue and Fitzpatrick attempted to handcuff him. Plaintiff did not resist, but he tried to push himself off the blistering hot pavement with his right arm. Plaintiff was shirtless, and the hot pavement was burning his torso and his face.
By this time, DEA Task Force Officer Brandon Collins joined McCue and Fitzpatrick. As the three federal agents attempted to handcuff plaintiff's right arm, Fitzpatrick restrained part of plaintiff's body and Collins put his knees in plaintiff's back. Despite plaintiff being secured by the three federal agents, McCue struck plaintiff multiple times, apparently with his closed fist, as well as with his Glock pistol. Plaintiff felt the lance of a blow in the back of his head and believes he lost consciousness briefly. The three federal agents then raised plaintiff to his feet, walked him over to the curb, and made him sit on the pavement, behind his own vehicle. DEA Task Force Officer Todd Dolato arrived by this time, and plaintiff told Dolato that plaintiff's head hurt, and that he felt that he might have a concussion. Dolato moved plaintiff to the passenger side of plaintiff's parked car where there was a bit of shade. As plaintiff laid by the side of the car, McCue struck him again, and kicked or stomped him in the head. McCue not only struck plaintiff, he unleashed a string of profane and insulting names, calling him "white trash," and "inbred hillbilly," among other names. When McCue learned that dispatch had just advised that plaintiff had no criminal history or warrants, McCue called plaintiff "system dodging white trash." McCue delivered these words in a loud, threatening voice, and also threatened to kill plaintiff. At some point, plaintiff declared that McCue was fierce to hit someone with handcuffs on, but next time it might be a fight without anyone in handcuffs. McCue remained so agitated, profane and angry, that three of his fellow DEA agents, on three occasions in quick succession, walked McCue away from the scene in an attempt to settle him down.
Kansas City, Kansas Police Detective Robert Lane arrived at some point, and placed plaintiff in his police vehicle. Neither Lane, nor any other agent or police officer ever patted plaintiff down, nor did
Task Force Officer Dolato called an ambulance. But plaintiff, observing the camaraderie and interaction of the fire department paramedics and the agents and officers, was afraid and refused to go in the ambulance. Paramedics determined that plaintiff had stable vital signs, and left the scene.
Plaintiff was taken into custody, transported to jail, and later charged with felony criminal damage to property, for intentionally ramming McCue's car. Plaintiff was also charged with a misdemeanor offense, possession of drug paraphernalia, for a marijuana pipe that plaintiff voluntarily surrendered to Lane while he sat in Lane's police car at the scene.
Defendant's version, told largely through the testimony of McCue and to a lesser extent the other agents, diverges from plaintiff's version on some key points: where and how the accident occurred; and when and how McCue struck plaintiff. Highly summarized, defendant's version is as follows. McCue and other DEA agents and task force officers were conducting surveillance the afternoon of July 10, 2003 in Kansas City, Kansas. The agents and officers were driving separately, in unmarked, undercover government-owned vehicles. McCue stopped at the stop sign at Tenth and Montana, either directly behind plaintiff, or to the right of plaintiff's vehicle, as McCue was already maneuvering to pass plaintiff on the right side. After making a complete stop at the sign, McCue continued northbound on Tenth Street and attempted to pass plaintiff on the right side of the lane, admittedly an illegal pass. As McCue attempted to pass, plaintiff sped up. As McCue pulled parallel with plaintiff's car, plaintiff looked over at McCue, smiled, and then turned his car sharply into McCue's vehicle, ramming McCue's vehicle, forcing it into the curb and almost causing McCue to hit a utility pole at the bus stop. The collision occurred south of the bus stop, thus between the intersection with Montana street and the bus stop. Plaintiff continued driving, despite McCue activating his siren; and plaintiff did not stop but drove for more than a block, until he was north of Ray Street and near the school. McCue radioed Fitzpatrick, who was south of McCue on Tenth Street, advising that plaintiff had just rammed his vehicle. Together McCue and Fitzpatrick effected a traffic stop on plaintiff. As McCue and Fitzpatrick rushed toward plaintiff's stopped vehicle, McCue with his gun drawn, they loudly announced that they were police. Fitzpatrick pulled plaintiff out of his vehicle; and Fitzpatrick and McCue forced plaintiff face down, prone on the pavement. Soon joined by Collins, they attempted to secure plaintiff, with McCue using his handcuffs. Plaintiff was shirtless, sweaty and squirming and, despite repeated commands, refused to surrender his right arm so they could handcuff both hands behind his back. Instead, plaintiff used his right arm to attempt to push himself up from the pavement.
This is a case of road rage. Plaintiff stopped at Tenth and Montana, and continued northbound, looking over at his house, just north of the intersection of Tenth and Montana, as he passed his house and the bus stop in front of it. Around this time, in the vicinity of the bus stop, or just north of the bus stop, but before the intersection of Tenth and Ray, McCue attempted to pass plaintiff on the right, even as plaintiff was accelerating. Plaintiff accelerated because Tenth Street began to go upgrade at that point, but he also accelerated to prevent McCue from passing him. Plaintiff was irritated; he lived in this block and had seen people making such illegal passes before. As plaintiff accelerated, McCue accelerated, determined to get around plaintiff's car. Although McCue was in an unmarked, undercover vehicle, he was at work, conducting surveillance, and likely considered the illegal pass of no consequence as he attempted to perform his official law enforcement duties. Just as plaintiff was incensed at McCue's attempt to pass him on the right; McCue was incensed at plaintiff's attempt to prevent him from passing on the right.
The cars collided north of the bus stop and south of the intersection of Tenth and Ray. McCue's version—that the cars collided south of the bus stop—is not credible. McCue testified in his deposition and at trial that he stopped at the stop sign. Fitzpatrick corroborated that McCue stopped at the stop sign. Given that McCue stopped at the stop sign and that plaintiff was either a full or at least partial car-length ahead of McCue at the time McCue proceeded northbound from a full stop, there simply was not sufficient time or space for McCue's and plaintiff's vehicles to collide at the bus stop. The bus stop was the equivalent of no more than two or three small city lots north of the intersection of Tenth and Montana. If one were to believe McCue's version, in that short distance: (1) his car caught plaintiff's car; (2) his car pulled parallel with plaintiff's car; (3) he observed plaintiff look over and smile at him; and (4) plaintiff rammed his vehicle sharply into McCue's vehicle.
The Court found highly persuasive the testimony of plaintiff's accident reconstruction expert, James Loumiet, who opined that the accident could not physically have taken place in the situs identified by McCue. Loumiet's opinion was rendered on the basis of measurements, acceleration rates of the vehicles and the laws of physics. Defendant's expert, Cline Young, who
Furthermore the photographs of the so-called skid marks, which are white streaks and lines on the grey pavement, are entirely unpersuasive and in fact useless. These photographs purport to show a set of tires veering to the right and another set of tires making a sharp swerve parallel to the other set of tire tracks. First, the photographs do not allow the Court to orient these tracks to any particular situs. But, even if the Court accepts the testimony of Agents McCue and Fitzpatrick that these photos were taken near the bus stop on Tenth Street, the Court cannot associate these white streak marks with the vehicles involved. As plaintiff's expert Loumiet pointed out, these marks cannot be tied to the vehicles, either by tire tread, tire width, or any other objective measure. More importantly, the Court has examined the many photographs of this stretch of Tenth Street, spanning from the Montana intersection to north of the Ray intersection. Notably, the surface of Tenth Street is rough, uneven, and replete with many such faded, amorphous white lines and markings. There is no reason to believe that these particular marks were made by these particular vehicles. The marks are not apparently fresh, and they are not distinguishable in intensity of color. They are not the dark marks typically characteristic of skid marks. They are the same thin, faded, white marks that pervade the surface of this rough surfaced street, as demonstrated by the numerous photographs in evidence. In short, the photographs cannot be associated with the collision, in time or space and do not inform the Court's determination of where the accident occurred.
As the Court previously mentioned, where the accident occurred is not germane to anything other than the credibility of the parties and witnesses. As to the situs of the accident, plaintiff's testimony is far more credible than McCue's. But, it is important to note that even if the Court found McCue's testimony on this point more credible, there are a number of other factual issues in this case in which the Court finds McCue's version not credible. In other words, even if the Court's determination of where the accident occurred is erroneous, the Court's determination of the respective credibility of the parties in this case would not change. There is other substantial evidence that points the Court to its ultimate conclusion concerning the credibility of the divergent versions of what happened in the immediate aftermath of the collision.
Another factual issue, also tangential, is whether the collision was an accidental sideswipe as plaintiff contends, or an intentional ramming as McCue contends. The Court finds, based on the testimony of plaintiff, Fitzpatrick, and McCue, the photographs of the damage to these vehicles and the testimony of the parties' experts, that the collision was an accidental sideswipe. Plaintiff did not intentionally ram McCue's vehicle. Indeed, a jury previously reached the same conclusion, acquitting
The damage to the vehicles was minor. Plaintiff's expert Loumiet and defendant's expert Young agree that this was a sideswipe collision; and both experts testified that there is simply no way to tell from the damage itself whether the collision was caused by an intentional act. The experts depart, however, on one point: defendant's expert Young opined that the damage to the driver's side of McCue's vehicle could have been caused by plaintiff ramming or sharply turning his vehicle into McCue's vehicle. But, Young's opinion is largely influenced by his favorable reception of the photographs taken by McCue and Fitzpatrick of the purported skid marks. The Court finds far more persuasive the well-considered opinion of Loumiet that the damage to the vehicles was the product of a sideswipe, not one vehicle veering into another. Loumiet illustrated to the Court's satisfaction that even a minor veering, at an angle of five to seven degrees, would have caused structural damage to the vehicles; but this collision caused only longitudinal scratches in the paint along most of the length of the vehicles, as well as damage to the wheel well of McCue's vehicle that was likely caused by plaintiff's vehicle, given that plaintiff's vehicle was heavier and had a slightly higher profile. Defendant's expert points to damage to McCue's car: a dent running horizontally along the driver's side door; and a dent in the driver's door jamb, where the door swings open. But the Court found convincing Loumiet's explanation of this damage to the door jamb area. The sideswipe caused a misalignment that caused the door to push an indentation into that area when the door was opened. As Loumiet ably explained, had that indentation been caused by plaintiff's vehicle ramming into McCue's vehicle, there would have been other damage to the door, and structural damage as well.
The Court views McCue's lack of credibility concerning the nature of the collision as more problematic than his questionable credibility on the location of the collision, although the Court finds his testimony on that point not credible as well. How the collision occurred is more closely related to the issues that are directly germane to the elements of plaintiff's claims. Although the conduct underlying plaintiff's claims did not begin until McCue and Fitzpatrick encountered plaintiff after plaintiff had stopped his car, the defendant partially justifies McCue's conduct based on the alleged nature of the collision. The defendant contends that plaintiff intentionally rammed McCue's vehicle, then did not stop immediately after the accident, all fueling McCue's and Fitzpatrick's perception that plaintiff was resistant to arrest, and justifying their tactics in controlling him as they attempted to arrest and secure him into custody.
But, by all objective evidence, the Court concludes that how the collision occurred is much closer to plaintiff's version than McCue's version. McCue violated a traffic law in passing on the right. Plaintiff had no legal duty to allow McCue to pass. Plaintiff had no duty to slow down, or veer to the left; in fact, had plaintiff veered to the left he risked hitting oncoming traffic. This accident was McCue's fault, although plaintiff did nothing to avoid the accident. This undisputedly enraged McCue; he committed a traffic violation that resulted in a collision and damage to the government-owned vehicle he was driving. This in turn resulted in an internal affairs investigation by the DEA. In that light, McCue's rage and anger was not entirely without explanation; he potentially faced
While the Court does not discredit McCue's testimony on the events occurring after the accident solely on the basis of his lack of credibility on key events leading up to the accident, it is fair to say that the Court is not inclined to give McCue's testimony great weight. Nonetheless, as the Court further explains below, the Court does not fully accept plaintiff's version of the events after the accident either, but analyzes all of the evidence in determining the totality of what occurred.
After the collision, McCue radioed Fitzpatrick and the two of them followed plaintiff's vehicle up Tenth Street, past the Ray Street intersection. At some point, McCue activated his siren. Plaintiff finally stopped past the school. Plaintiff heard the siren but did not associate it with McCue's undercover vehicle. As plaintiff sat in his vehicle, preparing to get out, McCue and Fitzpatrick rushed toward him, yelling at him to get out of the car. Running with McCue's gun drawn, they likely announced at least once that they were law enforcement. Plaintiff saw two men in plainclothes, one with a gun, and may not have heard them say they were police. An eyewitness, Trevor Trober, watched these unfolding events from the front yard of his grandmother's house, directly across the street. Trober did not recall hearing the men announce they were police.
In any event, Fitzpatrick or McCue pulled plaintiff out of his car and forced him to the ground. They laid plaintiff face down, prone on the blistering hot pavement. It was approximately 98 degrees at that time. McCue grabbed his handcuffs, and as Fitzpatrick held plaintiff down, McCue grabbed plaintiff's left arm behind his back. McCue was not able to immediately secure plaintiff's right arm; in fact, plaintiff tried to lift his face and torso off the hot pavement by pushing up with his right arm. Fitzpatrick and McCue perceived this as plaintiff resisting. By then, Collins had joined McCue and Fitzpatrick. Collins knelt with his knees in plaintiff's back. Before securing plaintiff's right arm in the handcuffs, McCue hit plaintiff multiple times. McCue may or may not have used pressure point control, or super scapula strikes, a distraction technique applied to the back or shoulders. Collins witnessed McCue hit plaintiff with his closed fist. Collins testified that he was not sure how many times McCue struck plaintiff, but on cross-examination testified that it was two to five times. Notably, McCue admits that he hit plaintiff's face with a closed fist, causing a black eye. McCue also does not deny that his fists may have struck the back of plaintiff's head.
The real question is whether McCue also hit plaintiff with his pistol. At this point in time, the only witnesses on the scene were plaintiff, McCue, Fitzpatrick, Collins, and Trevor Trober. Plaintiff's testimony about being hit with a pistol is equivocal; at one point he testified he was unsure but that it felt like an object other than a closed fist struck the back of his head. At another point plaintiff testified that McCue struck him with the pistol. The Court discounts plaintiff's testimony on this point, as it is possible he was confused, had momentary loss of consciousness, and in any event could not definitively see what hit him in the back of the head. Trober testified that McCue hit plaintiff with his pistol before handcuffing him as well as after plaintiff was handcuffed and laying beside his car. The Court finds that in all
McCue then cuffed both arms behind plaintiff's back and the three federal agents lifted plaintiff up and placed him in a seated position behind plaintiff's car. Next, they moved plaintiff to a reclining position on the side of the car. The Court believes that from this point on, McCue did not strike plaintiff with his fists or the gun. The Court believes McCue's gun was holstered. And, the Court heard no credible evidence that McCue was in a position from which he could have struck the reclining plaintiff with his fists.
But, the Court finds that McCue did kick plaintiff multiple times while plaintiff was reclining by the car. These kicks may well have landed on plaintiff's skull, the type of force that could also cause the closed head injury that plaintiff sustained. The Court gives credit to the testimony of Trober that after plaintiff was reclining beside the car, McCue kicked plaintiff several times. Trober's testimony was corroborated by plaintiff's testimony that McCue kicked him in the head as he lay there. By this time, Trober was not the only non-law enforcement eyewitness; Trober's mother, Paula Pavlich and grandmother, Brenda Davidson were observing the scene from the front yard across the street. Their line of sight was partially obstructed; in fact they all testified that they had only a partial view of plaintiff's body. They could see his legs extending out from the back of his vehicle and they could see part of his torso. They all testified that they could see McCue swing his foot backward and then forward. They could tell his foot connected with plaintiff because they could see the visible jolt to plaintiff's body upon impact. The Court found their testimony credible in this regard. The defendant sought to impeach the credibility of Davidson with a 38-year old conviction for felony welfare fraud, and Pavlich with her felony convictions. The defendant also sought to impeach the credibility of Trober because he did not graduate from high school. Yet there was no evidence from which Trober's intelligence could be questioned, nor was there any evidence that he suffered any cognitive impairment. In any event, the Court considered and weighed the testimony of these eyewitnesses with great care, and found their testimony largely consistent with testimony and other evidence the Court finds to be true. These eyewitnesses were cautious and measured in describing to the Court what each of them saw, as well as what they did not see, and what they inferred from what they were able to see.
Moreover, the actions and statements of Detective Lane tend to corroborate that these eyewitnesses witnessed plaintiff being assaulted and battered, and subjected to excessive force. Detective Lane took the names of these eyewitnesses, but pointedly declined to take their statements. At trial, Lane could only explain that he failed to take their statements for "no particular reason," but further explained that he thought taking the eyewitnesses' statements might "escalate the situation," a remarkable statement that he did not further explain. There was absolutely no evidence that these eyewitnesses were acting out or presenting a problem to law enforcement.
In any event, when Detective Seifert interviewed these three eyewitnesses a day or two later, he found them to be pleasant, objective and cooperative. Seifert even tape recorded the statements of these eyewitnesses. Notably, after Seifert turned the tape recording over to his superiors, the tape recording went missing and it has never been recovered. These three eyewitnesses did not exhibit the alleged hostility to law enforcement that Detective Lane claimed they had, and the Court found their testimony coherent, credible and objective.
When Detective Lane arrived, he placed plaintiff in his car. Notably, despite McCue's allegation that plaintiff had intentionally rammed his car, and the agents' allegations that plaintiff resisted arrest, none of the agents or police officers patted plaintiff down or searched his person or his car. Apparently there was no genuine concern that plaintiff posed a threat to their safety. As plaintiff sat in Lane's car, Lane assured plaintiff that he would not be charged for what was just an accident. Yet Lane also cautioned that this was a "mess," a "clusterfuck," and that the DEA could do what they wanted. Lane repeated these or similar statements to Paula Pavlich, as well as to Elisa Bowling and Patricia Kalb, plaintiff's criminal defense lawyer. As they sat in his car, Lane asked plaintiff if he had anything on his person, which prompted plaintiff to hand Lane an empty marijuana pipe that was in plaintiff's pocket. This resulted in a misdemeanor charge for possession of drug paraphernalia; and the jury convicted plaintiff of this charge.
At a minimum, the Court finds that McCue struck plaintiff in the face and in the back of the head, with a closed fist and/or with his Glock pistol, with sufficient force to cause a closed head injury, as well as other visible and not visible injuries which the Court will discuss more fully in the following section. McCue struck plaintiff at a time when plaintiff was prone, face down on the hot pavement, but before his right arm was fully secured. McCue struck plaintiff before he was fully handcuffed, but at a time when he and two other agents were restraining plaintiff; Collins had his knees in plaintiff's back while Fitzpatrick was restraining another part of plaintiff's body. The Court further finds that McCue kicked plaintiff several times, while plaintiff was fully handcuffed and laying on the ground. But, even if that Court found that McCue did not strike or kick plaintiff after he was handcuffed and moved to the side of the car, the Court would conclude that McCue acted with excessive force, based on the force he used before plaintiff was fully handcuffed.
Plaintiff and defendant called expert witnesses on excessive force. Each witness had extensive law enforcement experience, coupled with second-career experience in consulting, teaching, researching or writing about the use of excessive force.
While the Court cannot find definitively that McCue hit plaintiff with his pistol, the Court can and does definitively find that McCue hit plaintiff in his face and in the back of his head with a closed fist. McCue admittedly used a closed fist, and also admittedly hit plaintiff behind the neck and ear. Plaintiff's expert Faggiano opined that it is excessive force to apply a closed fist to those areas of the body. Faggiano opined that it is excessive force to strike the back of someone's head, an area vulnerable to head and spinal injuries, which, as Faggiano explained, is why there is a firm rule against such blows in the sport of boxing. The Court wholly rejects the opinions of defendant's expert, Breci. Notably, he was the only law enforcement witness or expert who also opined that McCue broke no traffic laws in making an (illegal) pass on the right. One police officer quoted the precise traffic law that McCue violated. Based on what is undisputed, admitted, or confirmed by the weight of the evidence, the Court finds that Agent McCue assaulted, battered and acted with excessive force in arresting plaintiff, and to the extent other agents witnessed these acts, they did nothing to stop McCue.
Incredibly, defendant suggested that plaintiff sustained no serious injuries at the scene, and implied that whatever injuries plaintiff presented with at the jail were sustained during his two-day stay at the jail. But the contusion and blood on plaintiff's face was visible at the scene, according to police officer Ronald Schumaker. Trevor Trober testified that he saw plaintiff limping at the scene. And although plaintiff refused the ambulance, he confided to Dolato that he was in pain and felt he might have a concussion. When plaintiff was transported to the jail that afternoon, he was placed on medical observation at the jail because of his visible injuries and his complaints.
Moreover, although the photographs, taken through a glass window in the jail visitor area, are not the best quality, plaintiff's injuries are quite visible: the contusion on his cheek; swelling on both sides of his head and around his eyes; two black eyes; a large bruise on his back; and a large red bruised area in the back of his head. Both Seifert, who interviewed plaintiff in the jail, and Elisa Bowling, who visited plaintiff in jail the night of the incident, testified that they observed all of these injuries. And, Donna McCurry, a nurse practitioner and the Health Services Administrator at the jail, made the same observations of visible injuries, noting that plaintiff had sustained trauma to his head and neck. Elisa Bowling became concerned about a concussion the night of the arrest when plaintiff described his injuries and his severe headache. Donna McCurry, who treated plaintiff during the first twenty-four hours, noted that plaintiff had
By the time plaintiff was released from jail, the bruising and black eyes were even more visible, and in visits to two emergency rooms, plaintiff presented with symptoms characteristic of a concussion, according to the neurologist and other physicians who testified in this case. In addition to the visible injuries, the emergency room personnel recorded plaintiff's complaints of pain, memory loss, dizziness, confusion, nausea and seizures. Released to go home, plaintiff went to another emergency room the next day; Elisa Bowling told medical providers there that plaintiff was mumbling, stumbling and not acting like himself. The hospital advised plaintiff to see a neurologist.
Plaintiff went to Dr. James Appelbaum, a neurologist. Notably, Dr. Appelbaum testified that one month after the incident, plaintiff still had visible injuries, swelling and bruising on both sides of his head and face, most markedly around his left eye. Dr. Appelbaum testified that the presence of swelling and bruising this long after the incident was indicative of a major trauma and severe injury. In fact, Dr. Appelbaum testified that plaintiff sustained two discrete head injuries: from the blows to the back of his head, and from the front of his head hitting the pavement. The visible contusions, bruising and swelling were consistent with these dual injuries.
The great weight of the evidence establishes that plaintiff sustained a concussion, which developed into post-concussion syndrome and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder ("PTSD"). The attack has left plaintiff, the family breadwinner and father of four, with substantial physical and emotional impairments. Since the arrest, he has suffered from a myriad of physical and mental symptoms and problems, including disabling migraine headaches almost daily, dizziness, hearing loss, constant tinnitis (ringing in his ears), problems with balance and stumbling, nausea (especially when working in the heat), flashbacks, insomnia, nightmares, panic attacks, depression, suicidal ideation and one incident of attempted suicide. These symptoms and problems were described in great detail by a number of witnesses, including: plaintiff; Elisa Bowling; plaintiff's criminal defense attorney; plaintiff's in-laws; a number of plaintiff's friends; a number of plaintiff's former co-workers, some who were friends of plaintiff, some who were not; plaintiff's former construction crew supervisor; as well as plaintiff's physicians, psychologist and counselor. The testimony of these various percipient witnesses was consistent and painted for the Court a picture of plaintiff's life before the incident and the profound suffering and impairment he has suffered as a consequence of the assault, battery and excessive use of force upon him.
Plaintiff has been diagnosed with post-concussion syndrome and PTSD. His treating physicians, psychologist and licensed clinical social worker all agree that, although some concussions resolve without long-term effects, some people such as plaintiff suffer concussions that persist, for months, years, even the rest of their lives. Although his treating providers have seen improvement in some symptoms over the years, plaintiff's concussion and PTSD have persisted seven years. His treating
The treating providers also agree that plaintiff's conditions are the product of "blunt force trauma" and significantly limit his ability to work in his craft as a construction worker and laborer. Plaintiff has extreme difficulty working in the heat, and also has difficulty working on scaffolding or at elevated locations because of problems with his balance. Light has such an adverse effect on plaintiff that his neurologist prescribed dark tint on his car windows exceeding the degree of tint otherwise allowable under the law in Kansas. He has repeatedly become ill with nausea at work and has vomited in front of co-workers. He suffers from excruciating migraine headaches and suffers bouts of disabling fear and panic attacks. Plaintiff's future income potential is significantly impaired. Linda Divine, a licensed clinical social worker who has worked with plaintiff on vocational possibilities, testified that with plaintiff's lifelong learning disabilities, and his work experience being limited to construction and other manual labor, his possibility of securing work that does not involve heavy labor or outside labor is limited.
During the course of this trial, the stress and fear plaintiff suffered from being in close proximity to McCue and the other agents, necessitated multiple breaks for plaintiff to gather his composure or flee to the restroom. Not surprisingly, his continuing injuries have strained his relationship with his wife, children and other family members, financially and emotionally. Patricia Kalb saw plaintiff soon thereafter and throughout the course of representing him in his criminal case, and noted that he had debilitating headaches, anxiety, and panic attacks, necessitating her request for a continuance. Elisa Bowling and other family and friends described plaintiff's socially and physically active lifestyle before the incident and his reclusive existence now. He is unable to engage in his beloved outdoor activities because heat-induced migraines and nausea substantially limit or preclude those activities.
Defendant argues that plaintiff's symptoms are subjective and that he is a malingerer. Although many of the symptoms are based on plaintiff's subjective complaints, the Court heard evidence not just from plaintiff and his friends and family, but evidence from former co-workers, some of whom had no close relationship with plaintiff. The Court finds no reason to disbelieve the consistent accounts of plaintiff's severe symptoms and impairments. Defendant points to a battery of neuropsychological testing performed by defendant's expert Lyle Baade who opined, based on plaintiff's performance on several tests, and in particular his performance on the so-called "fake bad" scale of a certain test, that plaintiff was a malingerer. Although Baade's opinion was based on a test that is accepted in the field as evidence of malingering, there were a number of other tests, administered by Baade as well as plaintiff's expert, Richard Wetzel, that did not show any signs of malingering or manipulation. Furthermore, the Court discounts Baade's opinion because Baade refused to take into account that plaintiff had a migraine during one day of testing and further failed to account for the fact that plaintiff has never performed well on tests because of his lifelong learning impairments.
Moreover, neither Baade nor any other expert could refute the objective findings of Dr. Gregory Ator, an otolaryngologist, that plaintiff had suffered significant hearing loss in his left ear, and that this type of asymmetrical hearing loss was due to a
Plaintiff's construction skills and work ethic have been fruitful, as he primarily or single-handedly rehabilitated two houses that he and his wife resided in over the years. But after the incident, plaintiff has not been able to work on such home projects. Nor has he ever been able to perform duties essential to construction work for more than fifteen days a month. Plaintiff is not malingering; he has tried to work, repeatedly. The Court heard evidence from former employers who described plaintiff's strong work ethic and valiant efforts to work even when he was sick. These employers noted that it was often their decision to send plaintiff home, not plaintiff's decision, for his impaired efforts were placing a burden on the other members of the construction crew.
Plaintiff presented extensive evidence on his damages incurred to date and his projected future damages. The Court has reviewed the documents provided as well as the testimony and is prepared to assess damages. At the close of the evidence, in the interests of time, the Court advised counsel that the Court would call upon them to present closing arguments in writing at a later time, and in particular after the Court decided defendant's motion to dismiss, which might narrow the claims in this case. Thus, the Court has not had the benefit of the parties' closing arguments, but based on the extensive evidence admitted in this case, the Court is prepared to assess damages, understanding the itemization of damages that plaintiff seeks, as spelled out in the Pretrial Order, as well as in plaintiff's proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law.
Plaintiff seeks punitive damages of $50,000,000. But under the FTCA, the United States shall be liable "in the same manner and to the same extent as a private individual under like circumstances, but shall not be liable for interest prior to judgment or for punitive damages."
With respect to compensatory damages, under the FTCA, damages are determined by the law of the state where the tortious act was committed,
The Court finds that as a consequence of the injuries plaintiff sustained in this matter, he has incurred past damages, comprising: (1) medical bills ($17,000); (2) lost wages ($45,000); (3) mileage ($250); (4) property damage to his vehicle ($400); (5) cost of window tinting to his vehicle ($200); (5) loss of ability to perform certain household repairs ($10,000); (6) child care costs arising from inability to perform those duties ($20,000); (7) pain, suffering, humiliation and loss of function (non-economic damages of $100,000).
The Court further finds that as a consequence of the injuries plaintiff sustained in this matter, he will incur future damages. Plaintiff is 36 years old and the Court assumes a life expectancy of 77 years, and a wage-producing work expectancy of 30 years, based on the evidence presented on this issue. His future damages comprise: (1) projected medical expenses ($220,000); (2) projected lost wages ($200,000 based on 60 days of lost income a year for 30 years); (3) projected expenses arising from inability to perform certain household repairs for 44 years ($41,000); (4) projected expenses arising from inability to perform child care ($20,000); (5) projected mileage for doctor's appointments ($5000); (6) future window-tinting cost ($4400); (7) pain, suffering, humiliation and loss of function (non-economic damages of $150,000). Thus, plaintiff's total damages, past and future are $833,250.