Martin v. City of Broadview Heights, No. 11-4039 (6th Cir. 2013)
Annotate this CaseOfficers responded to a call describing a male yelling for help outside an apartment, followed by a report that a naked male entered a nearby apartment. Approaching, Tieber encountered a naked male, Martin, age 19, running and speaking nonsensically. Martin asked for help, then “jogged away.” Tieber ran and fell on Martin’s back. Semanco dropped his knee into Martin’s side, fell on top of both men, and delivered “compliance body shots.” Martin bit Tieber; Tieber struck Martin’s face. Semanco struck Martin’s face, back, and ribs at least five times. Tieber folded his legs around Martin’s hips and gripped Martin’s chin with his arm. As Tieber and Semanco attempted to secure Martin’s arms, Zimmerman kneeled on Martin’s calves. Officers heard a “gurgling sound.” They rolled an unresponsive Martin onto his side, tried to resuscitate him, and called paramedics. Martin died. The coroner determined that Martin died from an acute psychotic episode with excited delirium due to LSD intoxication and cardiopulmonary arrest. The pathologist who conducted the autopsy noted injuries suggesting asphyxiation. A pathologist hired by Martin’s estate agreed. The department had a use-of-force policy, and a “Positional Asphyxia Policy” that warns that a person, psychotic due to mental illness or drugs or alcohol, is particularly susceptible to death. Two officers said they never considered this policy. In the estate’s suit under 42 U.S.C. 1983, the district court denied the officers summary judgment on qualified immunity. The Sixth Circuit affirmed.
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