Thompson v. City of Lebanon, No. 14-5711 (6th Cir. 2016)
Annotate this CaseOn April 28, 2010, Thompson was driving his car erratically on a two-lane Tennessee highway. After nearly colliding head-on with City of Lebanon Police Officer McKinley, Thompson sped away. McKinley gave chase, later joined by Officer McDannald. After approximately six minutes of high-speed driving, Thompson swerved, spun 360 degrees, and ran off the road into a ditch. McKinley ran toward Thompson’s crashed car and fired one round. McDannald then aimed at Thompson’s car and fired 13 rounds. The shooting ended within 19 seconds of the crash. Thompson sat behind the wheel of his vehicle the entire time and did not make any threatening moves. Thompson died at the scene, from gunshot wounds. In his estate’s suit under 42 U.S.C. 1983, the court held that the officers were not entitled to qualified immunity and denied the city summary judgment on Thompson’s claims of failure to screen, train, supervise, investigate, and discipline. The Sixth Circuit affirmed. If a jury believed the plaintiff’s asserted facts, it could find that a reasonable officer would have been on notice that firing into Thompson’s vehicle and person violated his Fourth Amendment rights “when Thompson had been seen to do nothing more than flee from police during the vehicular pursuit for potential driving under the influence.”
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