UNPUBLISHED ORDER
Not to be cited per Circuit Rule 53
United States Court of Appeals
For the Seventh Circuit
Chicago, Illinois 60604
Submitted November 14, 2005*
Decided November 15, 2005
Before
Hon. RICHARD A. POSNER, Circuit Judge
Hon. DIANE P. WOOD, Circuit Judge
Hon. TERENCE T. EVANS, Circuit Judge
No. 03-3978
RICHARD DODD, Appeal from the United States District
Plaintiff-Appellant, Court for the Northern District of
Indiana, South Bend Division
v.
No. 3:99-CV-621RM
TIM CORBETT and MARTY
DEGEYTER, Robert L. Miller, Jr.,
Defendants-Appellees. Chief Judge.
ORDER
Indiana inmate Richard Dodd went to trial in this pro se lawsuit claiming
under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 that two police officers violated his Fourth Amendment
rights when, he says, they beat him unnecessarily and ordered a police dog to
attack him without provocation during a 1997 arrest. A jury found for the
defendants. We affirm.
*
After an examination of the briefs and the record, we have concluded that
oral argument is unnecessary. Thus, the appeal is submitted on the briefs and the
record. See Fed. R. App. P. 34(a)(2).
No. 03-3978 Page 2
Dodd became the subject of a three-hour manhunt after he shot a police
officer during a botched commercial burglary. The defendants, Commander Tim
Corbett and Officer Marty DeGeyter, admitted using a dog and significant physical
force to subdue Dodd, so the focus of trial was the degree of force used and whether
its application continued without justification after Dodd was firmly in custody.
Dodd told the jury that he and an accomplice, Luke Lukasiak, broke into a gas
station after drinking beer and smoking marijuana, then fled through heavy snow
when a police officer confronted them. Dodd admitted that shots were fired and
that, as a result, he was convicted of attempted murder of a police officer but denied
that he was the shooter. He also explained that after the long chase his asthma
was making breathing difficult and he wanted to surrender, so when the pursuing
officers caught up with him and Lukasiak at a line of pine trees, he did as he was
told and lay face down with his hands showing. Dodd insisted that he was too tired
to resist, yet after he was handcuffed, he said, somebody grabbed his hair, yanked
his head back, and blasted mace into his face. When he started to black out, Dodd
said, “the kicking and the hitting started.” He could not see who was responsible
because of the mace but claimed that it was Corbett who kicked him in the ribs,
punched him, and kneed him in the head. Someone then rolled him into a sitting
position, continued Dodd, and on command a dog grabbed his leg and jerked it a
couple times. An unknown officer then led him by the nape of his neck to the squad
car and kneed him in the face a final time before taking him to the hospital where
he was treated for asthma and what he was told were minor puncture wounds.
Commander Corbett and Officer DeGeyter offered a different account,
principally while testifying as Dodd’s witnesses. Corbett recalled chasing Dodd and
Lukasiak to a line of snow-covered pines, which he feared was ideal for an ambush.
He shined his flashlight into the trees, drew his weapon, and shouted for the pair to
come out showing their hands. Dodd emerged with one hand raised but the other
at mid-breast in an area where, Corbett said, a shoulder holster could have been
concealed. Dodd at first did not lie face down on the ground as ordered, and when
he finally did, he tucked one hand under his stomach and rolled to his side to look
back at the officers. Because Corbett knew that the suspects had shot at a police
officer earlier that evening and had evaded capture for over three hours, he
believed Dodd was considering whether to run, fight, or draw a weapon. He wanted
to see Dodd’s hands because “the hands are what kills,” and, said Corbett, when
Dodd refused to bring both hands out, he had to use force. Corbett testified that he
was out in the open with nothing to hide behind, so he approached Dodd and kicked
him in his ribs. Instead of revealing his hands, though, Dodd tucked them
underneath his body. Corbett ordered Dodd to stop resisting, placed his hands on
Dodd’s shoulders, then kneed him in his head as hard as he could six times.
Corbett told the jury that he believed the situation justified using lethal force, but
he chose instead to administer blows until Dodd brought his hands into view. Only
10 to 15 seconds passed from the time he first kicked Dodd until the handcuffs were
No. 03-3978 Page 3
on, and after that, Corbett insisted, he had no further physical contact with Dodd.
Corbett also maintained that he never saw Officer DeGeyter’s dog bite Dodd after
he was cuffed.
Officer DeGeyter, for his part, acknowledged that he ordered his dog to
detain Dodd. DeGeyter testified that he responded to a “shots fired” radio dispatch,
and when he arrived at the gas station, he was told by the officer at the scene that
the business had been burglarized and that he had been shot. The officer further
advised that the suspects had fled. DeGeyter and his dog tracked the suspects over
several miles, and when they arrived at the tree line, Dodd and Lukasiak were
already laying face down with their hands concealed beneath them. DeGeyter
assisted with Lukasiak and then noticed that Dodd was still refusing to show his
hands. He thus ordered his dog to “attach” to Dodd. The dog took hold of Dodd’s
lower calf in its jaws for less than five seconds, compelling Dodd to show his hands
and allowing Commander Corbett to place handcuffs on him. DeGeyter testified
that employing the dog to subdue Dodd was justified because an officer may use a
dog to apprehend a suspect where the safety of officers is immediately threatened or
where using a dog would lower the risk of serious injury to officers. He also
maintained that his dog had no contact with Dodd after he was cuffed.
Dodd’s remaining evidence did not undermine the defendants’ testimony.
Dodd called Officer Matthew Blank, who testified that he saw Commander Corbett
strike Dodd several times while Dodd was hiding his hands. In addition, Blank
said, he did not see a dog bite Dodd, and he saw no one hit or kick Dodd after he
was handcuffed. Similarly, Lukasiak conceded that he did not see Corbett strike
Dodd nor did he see a dog bite Dodd. Lukasiak maintained that he himself was
sprayed with mace and bitten by a dog after he was handcuffed, but he said he
could not see what happened to Dodd because his face was full of snow.
The defendants’ case-in-chief consisted primarily of testimony from fellow
officers Richard Croymans and Kevin Kelsheimer, who corroborated the defendants’
statements that, prior to confronting Dodd and Lukasiak, they knew an officer had
been shot. Croymans testified that he was the first officer to arrive at the gas
station and that Dodd fired at him from inside, hitting his bulletproof vest. He
returned fire, took cover, and radioed that shots were fired. He then saw Dodd and
Lukasiak run from the building. Croymans followed until they reached an open
field where, he said, he stopped and radioed that two male suspects had fled,
providing a general description of each. Kelshiemer testified that he arrived at the
station in response to Croymans’s radio report of gunfire and immediately noticed a
bullet hole in Croymans’s uniform. Kelshiemer then radioed that an officer had
been shot because, he explained, the field officers needed to know the suspects were
dangerous.
No. 03-3978 Page 4
Having lost at trial, Dodd raises several issues on appeal, but we need
address only the two he preserved in the district court. Arguments raised for the
first time in this court are waived. See Cody v. Harris, 409 F.3d 853, 857 (7th Cir.
2005). At trial Dodd expressly agreed to try the issue of liability separate from
damages, and he did not object to proceeding to trial in his yellow prison jumpsuit
and leg shackles after he mistakenly sent his civilian clothes to the county jail
instead of to the federal courthouse. Thus Dodd cannot argue those issues now.
See Provident Sav. Bank v. Popovich, 71 F.3d 696, 699-700 (7th Cir. 1995)
(explaining that pro se litigants are subject to same waiver rules as counseled
parties).
As to the questions properly before us, we turn first to Dodd’s argument that
the district court erred in admitting the testimony of Croymans and Kelsheimer.
Dodd objected generally to Croymans’s testimony but failed to object at all to
Kelsheimer’s, so we confine our review to Croymans’s testimony. See Wilson v.
Williams, 182 F.3d 562, 568 (7th Cir. 1999) (en banc) (holding that lack of objection
at trial precludes appellate review of allegedly misused evidence). The decision to
admit testimony must stand unless the district court abused its discretion, i.e.,
unless “no reasonable person could agree with the ruling.” Mihailovich v. Laatsch,
359 F.3d 892, 906 (7th Cir. 2004).
Dodd’s argument that Croymans’s testimony was intended only to inflame
the jurors by reminding them that he shot at and hit an officer ignores the settled
principle that whether an arresting officer used excessive force is determined by
assessing the need for force in light of all the surrounding circumstances. See
Graham v. Connor, 490 U.S. 386, 396-97 (1989); Payne v. Pauley, 337 F.3d 767, 778
(7th Cir. 2003). Events leading up to the use of force are necessarily relevant
because the actions of the police are to be judged from the perspective of a
reasonable officer at the scene. Graham, 490 U.S. at 396; see, e.g., Abdullahi v.
City of Madison, 423 F.3d 763, 764-65, 768 (7th Cir. 2005); Smith v. Ball State
Univ., 295 F.3d 763, 766-67, 770-71 (7th Cir. 2002). Relevant facts include (1) the
severity of the suspected crime, (2) whether the suspect posed an immediate threat
to officer safety, and (3) whether the suspect was actively resisting arrest. Graham,
490 U.S. at 397; Payne, 337 F.3d at 778. While Croymans’s testimony touched on
Dodd’s arrest and ultimate convictions for burglary and attempted murder of a
police officer (subjects that Dodd alluded to in his own opening statement and
admitted on cross-examination), Croymans’s testimony helped explain why
Commander Corbett and Officer DeGeyter would have believed that Dodd might
still be armed and dangerous and that they could take no chances until he was fully
subdued. Thus we cannot say that the decision to allow his testimony was an abuse
of discretion. See Deering v. Reich, 183 F.3d 645, 652 (7th Cir. 1999) (explaining
that officer’s knowledge of suspect’s crime and perception of danger to himself and
others is relevant to determining whether force was reasonable).
No. 03-3978 Page 5
That leaves Dodd’s principal argument: that the district court should have
disregarded the jury’s verdict and granted judgment for him as a matter of law
because discrepancies among the witnesses prove that Commander Corbett and
Officer DeGeyter gratuitously assaulted him after he was handcuffed.1 We review
de novo the court’s decision to deny relief under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 50,
examining the record only to assure that the jury verdict is sufficiently supported
by the evidence. Gower v. Vercler, 377 F.3d 661, 666 (7th Cir. 2004). We will not
“substitute our own credibility determinations for that of the jury,” id., and will
reverse the jury’s verdict only if “no rational juror could have found for the
prevailing party.” Turner v. Miller, 301 F.3d 599, 602 (7th Cir. 2002).
Dodd correctly asserts that the evidence showed that various police officers
arrived on the scene at different times and that the timeline established by the
witnesses is not exact, but he offered only his own testimony to support his
contention that he was beaten, bit, and maced after he was handcuffed. Likewise,
Dodd offered only his own testimony to support his contention that he immediately
complied with officers’ commands to reveal his hands. The jury chose to believe the
defendants’ testimony that Dodd failed to comply with their demands and that
Commander Corbett and Officer DeGeyter used no more force than necessary to
effect Dodd’s arrest. The jury was presented with a classic swearing match, and it
was for the jury, not this court, to chose between the competing testimony. See
Appelbaum v. Milwaukee Metro. Sewerage Dist., 340 F.3d 573, 581 (7th Cir. 2003).
AFFIRMED.
1
Since the district court ruled on the merits of Dodd’s Rule 50(b) motion
despite the fact that Dodd failed to first raise a Rule 50(a) motion during trial, see
Fed. R. Civ. P. 50, we also will set aside Dodd’s procedural error to address the
substance of his claim on appeal.