Seekamp v. Michaud

                  UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                      FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

No. 96-1923

                      HENRY C. SEEKAMP, JR.,

                      Plaintiff, Appellant,

                                v.

                     RONALD MICHAUD, et al.,

                      Defendants, Appellees.

                                           
                                                     

           APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

                    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MAINE

             [Hon. Gene Carter, U.S. District Judge]
                                                             

                                           
                                                     

                              Before

                       Cyr, Circuit Judge,
                                                   

                  Coffin, Senior Circuit Judge,
                                                        

                    and Lynch, Circuit Judge.
                                                      

                                           
                                                     

   Michael J. Waxman for appellant.
                              
   Leanne  Robbin, Assistant  Attorney  General,  with  whom  Andrew
                                                                              
Ketterer,  Attorney General,  and Peter  J. Brann,  Assistant Attorney
                                                         
General, were on brief for appellees.

                                           
                                                     

                          March 26, 1997
                                           
                                                     


          CYR, Circuit  Judge.  Appellant Henry  C. Seekamp, Jr.,
                    CYR, Circuit  Judge.
                                       

challenges a summary judgment ruling disallowing his civil rights

claims against  various Maine  State Police ("MSP")  officers and

their supervisor, based on  an alleged Fourth Amendment violation

stemming from  a roadblock established by  the defendant officers

on the Maine Turnpike.  We affirm the district court judgment.

                                I
                                          I

                            BACKGROUND
                                      BACKGROUND
                                                

          The material facts are not in dispute.  At approximate-

ly 1:00 a.m.  on July 14, 1994,  Seekamp left his  parents' resi-

dence in Scarborough, Maine, for  the asserted purpose of picking

up the pieces of his former life in Arkansas, where his relation-

ship with a girlfriend  and his career in  the United States  Air

Force  were abruptly ended  by an  automobile accident  in April,

1993, which left him with a brain injury. 

          As  Seekamp was  proceeding south  through a  50 m.p.h.

zone on  Route 1, his  Chevrolet Monte  Carlo was  clocked at  63

miles  per hour  by Scarborough  Police Sergeant  Eugene O'Neill.

After Seekamp  failed to heed Sergeant O'Neill's  signal to stop,

O'Neill followed  him into Saco  where local police  units joined

the  pursuit.  Undeterred, Seekamp not  only ignored the pursuing

police  vehicles but drove through  the Maine Turnpike toll plaza

at Saco, and onto a southbound lane, without stopping.  

          Alerted by Sergeant  O'Neill, the  MSP assumed  further

responsibility for the pursuit after learning  that the driver of

the Monte  Carlo had eluded  a police officer     a felony  under

                                2


Maine law.  See  Me. Rev. Stat.  Ann., tit. 29-A,  2501-A  (1994)
                         

(repealed  and replaced on January 1, 1995  by P.L. 1995, Ch. 65,

codified as Me.  Rev. Stat.  Ann. tit. 29-A,    2414(3)  (1996)).

Situated  farther  south near  the  Biddeford  exit, MSP  Trooper

Ronald Michaud took up the pursuit at approximately 1:35 a.m.  In

an effort to force Seekamp to a stop, Trooper Michaud attempted a

"rolling roadblock" by driving  in front of the Monte  Carlo then

decelerating  to force  Seekamp to  slow as  well.   Michaud soon

abandoned  the  rolling  roadblock when  Seekamp  responded  with

reckless attempts to get around the police cruiser. 

          At approximately 1:45 a.m., Trooper Michaud  received a

radio dispatch  to the effect  that Seekamp's father  had advised

that  his brain-injured son was operating the Monte Carlo but was

unarmed and neither suicidal nor  under the influence of  alcohol

or drugs.   Trooper Michaud considered the information both stale

and unverifiable because Seekamp, Sr., could  not have known what

happened to his son after leaving the family home some 45 minutes

earlier. 

          Meanwhile,  MSP Sergeant  Steven  Beal and  MSP Trooper

Thomas Arnold had  joined the  pursuit north of  the Wells  exit.

During this phase, Seekamp continued his erratic driving  and was

clocked by Trooper  Michaud at speeds  up to  97 miles per  hour.

About  the same time and  at Trooper Michaud's  request, MSP Ser-

geant  Beal directed  MSP  Trooper Larry  McAfee  to establish  a

roadblock north of the York toll plaza.  

          The roadblock  was set up approximately  800 feet north

                                3


of the York  toll plaza, at the end  of a 1500-foot straightaway.

First, Trooper McAfee commandeered a flatbed tractor-trailer unit

loaded with lumber sheathed in white plastic and directed that it

be  parked across the three southbound travel lanes, with its cab

at  the  guardrail.    Once in  place,  the  tractor-trailer unit

extended  almost  entirely across  the  southbound travel  lanes.

McAfee completed the blocking  of the southbound travel  lanes by

parking his  police cruiser  at the rear  of the  tractor-trailer

unit, with  its headlights pointing  north in the  direction from

which Seekamp would be approaching. 

          After turning on the cruiser's headlights, blue lights,

and  flashers, McAfee  directed  other tractor-trailers  to  park

along the breakdown lane parallel to the blocked travel lanes.  A

fifty-foot gap was left between two of  the tractor-trailer units

parked in  the breakdown  lane, to  permit  vehicular traffic  to

proceed  onto the breakdown lane and around the roadblock at slow

speed,  with police assistance.   The headlights  of the tractor-

trailer unit at the northern end of the fifty-foot gap illuminat-

ed the avenue of vehicular egress along the breakdown lane.  

          The entire roadblock  area was brightly  illuminated by

overhead street lights, the lights from Trooper McAfee's cruiser,

and the  headlights of the commandeered  tractor-trailer blocking

the  southbound travel lanes.   In addition, upon  arrival at the

roadblock site to assist Trooper McAfee, MSP Trooper Kevin Curran

parked  his cruiser in a southbound travel lane with its flashers

on and its headlights directed at the roadblock as well.

                                4


          What with the bright white plastic sheathing around the

lumber on the tractor-trailer unit blocking the southbound travel

lanes,  the roadblock  area was  visible from  approximately 1500

feet along the straightaway approaching the York toll plaza.1  As

the  Monte Carlo approached  the roadblock, it  appeared to brake

several  times yet failed to come  to a complete stop even though

the  pursuing police cruisers had slowed to allow Seekamp room to

maneuver.   Ultimately,  it collided  with the  rear axle  of the

tractor-trailer unit  parked across the southbound  travel lanes,

causing  Seekamp  a hairline  fracture of  the  hip and  a severe

facial laceration.

          Seekamp brought suit under 42 U.S.C.   1983 against the

subordinate MSP defendants, alleging Fourth Amendment violations;

and  against  MSP  Chief  Alfred Skofield,  Jr.,  for  failure to

provide adequate  training and  supervision.  The  district court

awarded  summary judgment  to all  defendants on  the alternative

grounds that the roadblock was reasonable and all defendants were

entitled  to qualified immunity.  Seekamp v. Michaud, 936 F. Supp
                                                              

23, 28-30 (D. Me. 1996).

                    
                              

     1Defendants  produced  the  uncontroverted affidavit  of  an
expert who attested that  a motor vehicle traveling at  100 miles
per hour can  come to  a stop within  400 feet.   He opined  that
there was  ample room for Seekamp  to bring the Monte  Carlo to a
full stop without contacting the roadblock.  Moreover, the record
reflects that Seekamp did slow to between 35 and 50  m.p.h. as he
approached the roadblock.   Finally, Seekamp testified at deposi-
tion that  he could have stopped the Monte Carlo but for the fact
that its brakes were not functioning properly.

                                5


                                II
                                          II

                           DISCUSSION2
                                     DISCUSSION
                                               

1.   Subordinate MSP Defendants
          1.   Subordinate MSP Defendants
                                         

          Seekamp  claims the subordinate MSP defendants violated

his Fourth Amendment right to be free  from unreasonable seizures

of his person.   Since Seekamp acknowledges probable cause  for a

warrantless arrest, we need  only determine whether the roadblock

effected  a Fourth Amendment seizure  and, if so,  whether it was

reasonable.3  

     A.   Did the Roadblock Effect a Fourth Amendment Seizure?
               A.   Did the Roadblock Effect a Fourth Amendment Seizure?
                                                                        

          The  defendants  contend  that  the  roadblock did  not

constitute  a  Fourth  Amendment  seizure  because  it  permitted

vehicular  traffic  to maneuver  through  the fifty-foot  opening

designedly left  between two of the  tractor-trailer units parked

in the breakdown lane to the right of the westernmost, southbound
                    
                              

     2We review a grant of summary judgment  de novo.  Sanchez v.
                                                                        
Alvarado, 101 F.3d 223, 227 (1st Cir. 1996).   The district court
                  
will  be  affirmed if  "the  pleadings,  depositions, answers  to
interrogatories, and  the admissions  on file, together  with the
affidavits,  if any,  show  that there  is  no genuine  issue  of
material  fact, and that the moving party is entitled to judgment
as a matter of law."  Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c).

     3As eluding a police officer is a felony, see Me. Rev. Stat.
                                                            
Ann. tit.  29-A,  2501-A (1994),  and Seekamp  had been  observed
doing  so, see  supra at  p. 2,  there was  probable cause  for a
                               
warrantless arrest.   See  United States  v. Sepulveda, 102  F.3d
                                                                
1313, 1316 (1st Cir. 1996)  ("[P]robable cause requires only that
the  police have 'reasonable  grounds to believe'  that [the sus-
pect]  had  committed [a]  crime."); see  also  Joyce v.  Town of
                                                                           
Tewksbury,  104  F.3d  507,  510-11 (1st  Cir.  1997)  (upholding
                   
warrantless  arrest based  on probable  cause in  exigent circum-
stances  such as pursuit of  fleeing felon); Me.  Rev. Stat. Ann.
tit. 17-A,   15 (A)(3) (West Supp. 1996)  (permitting warrantless
arrest  by police officer with probable cause to believe arrestee
committed or is committing Class C crime).  

                                6


travel lane.  We do not agree.4

          Almost a  decade ago,  the Supreme  Court dealt  with a

vehicular collision involving  a so-called "deadman's roadblock,"

designed and  constructed  to  block off  an  entire  roadway  by

placing an unilluminated tractor-trailer unit just beyond a curve

and  locating a police cruiser directly in front of the roadblock

with its headlights aimed at the oncoming target vehicle, thereby

blinding the  driver to  the impassable highway  obstruction just

around the  curve.   Brower  v. Inyo  County, 489  U.S. 593,  594
                                                      

(1989).   Brower nevertheless enunciates a rule  that renders its
                          

egregious facts largely immaterial  to the required Fourth Amend-

ment inquiry into whether a roadblock "seizure" has occurred. 

          Writing for the Court,  Justice Scalia explained that a

Fourth Amendment seizure occurs "only when there  is a governmen-

tal termination of freedom of movement through means intentional-
                                                                           

ly  applied," id. at 597;  see also Landol-Rivera  v. Cruz Cosme,
                                                                          

906 F.2d 791,  795 (1st  Cir. 1990) (same),  explaining that  "it

[is] enough  for a seizure that  a person be stopped  by the very

instrumentality set in  motion or  put in place  to achieve  that

                    
                              

     4We note that  a great many   1983 claims are resolved under
the  doctrine  of  qualified  immunity,  see,  e.g.,  Hegarty  v.
                                                                       
Somerset  County,  53 F.3d  1367,  1379, 1381  (1st  Cir.), cert.
                                                                          
denied, 116 S. Ct. 675  (1995), without considering their consti-
                
tutional  merit.  Our  most recent decision  involving an alleged
seizure by roadblock, Horta v.  Sullivan, 4 F.3d 2, 15  (1st Cir.
                                                  
1993) (declining to  consider whether  partial roadblock  consti-
tuted  a seizure),  was such  a case.   With  that constitutional
issue squarely presented in  the case now before us,  however, we
take the occasion  to discuss the  merits in some  detail with  a
view  to  affording a  modicum  of  concrete  guidance not  often
warranted in our earlier cases. 

                                7


result."  Brower, 489 U.S. at 599.  The majority  opinion went on
                          

to say: 

          [A] roadblock is not just  a significant show
          of authority  to induce a voluntary stop, but
          it is designed to  produce a stop by physical
          impact if  voluntary compliance does  not oc-
          cur.  It may  well  be that  respondents here
          preferred, and indeed  earnestly hoped,  that
          Brower  would stop on his own, without strik-
          ing the barrier, but we do not think it prac-
          ticable to  conduct such an inquiry into sub-
          jective intent.  Nor do we think it possible,
          in determining whether there  has been a sei-
          zure in  a case such as  this, to distinguish
          between a roadblock that  is designed to give
          the oncoming driver the option of a voluntary
          stop  (e.g., one  at the  end of  a straight-
                               
          away), and  a roadblock that is designed pre-
          cisely  to  produce  a  collision  (e.g., one
                                                            
          located just around a bend).

Id. at 598 (citations omitted).  
            

          Thus, for purposes of determining whether the roadblock

in  this case worked a Fourth Amendment seizure under Brower, the
                                                                      

controlling consideration is not  whether it was brightly illumi-

nated, located at the  end of a long straightaway, or  afforded a

restrictive  avenue of egress.5   Rather, it constituted a Fourth

Amendment seizure because Seekamp "was meant to be stopped by the

physical  obstacle of  the  roadblock     and  . .  .  he was  so

stopped."  Id. at 599.6  
                       
                    
                              

     5The district court found that "[t]he escape route consisted
of  making a 90-degree turn into a corridor []invisible to oncom-
ing  traffic."   Seekamp, 936  F. Supp.  at 28  n.5.   Thus, even
                                  
though the  entrance to the invisible  corridor was approximately
50 feet  wide, it  was necessary  for McAfee to  point it  out to
approaching vehicles.  Id.  These findings are not in dispute.
                                    

     6The dictum in  Horta v. Sullivan, 4 F.3d at  15 ("It may be
                                                
that  the illuminated blocking of  a single lane  at a point some
distance  from where  the  block could  be  seen by  the  pursued

                                8


          The Brower  standard for  determining whether  a Fourth
                              

Amendment  seizure  has occurred  applies  whenever  "there is  a

governmental  termination  of freedom  of movement  through means

intentionally applied."   Id. at 597  (emphasis omitted).   Thus,
                                      

for  example,  if the  MSP troopers  had  resorted to  some other

method, such as the use of spike mats, a Fourth Amendment seizure

would have occurred  provided Seekamp  was "stopped  by the  very

instrumentality set in  motion or  put in place  to achieve  that

result."   Id. at 599.   See also Landol-Rivera, 906  F.2d at 796
                                                         

("It  is  intervention directed  at  a  specific individual  that

furnishes the basis for a Fourth Amendment claim.").

     B.   Did the Roadblock Effect an Unreasonable Seizure?
               B.   Did the Roadblock Effect an Unreasonable Seizure?
                                                                    

          We determine the "reasonableness" of a Fourth Amendment

seizure by balancing "'the nature and quality of the intrusion on

the individual's Fourth Amendment interests' against the counter-

vailing governmental interests at stake."   Graham v. Connor, 490
                                                                      

U.S. 386, 396 (1989) (quoting Tennessee v. Garner, 471  U.S. 1, 8
                                                           

(1985)).    The  Fourth  Amendment  reasonableness test  requires

careful attention  to the  circumstances in the  particular case.

McCabe  v. Life-Line Ambulance Serv., Inc., 77 F.3d 540, 546 (1st
                                                    

Cir.), cert. denied,  117 S. Ct. 275 (1996).  Moreover, "a viable
                             

excessive  force claim  must demonstrate  that the  police defen-

                    
                              

vehicle would not amount to a seizure."), relied on by appellees,
not only  describes a  distinctively different roadblock,  but is
prefaced  by the explicit observation that the court did not need
to  decide whether "this partial roadblock  amounted to a seizure
under  the  Fourth  Amendment[,]"  id.,  because  defendants were
                                                
entitled to qualified immunity.  Id. at 9, 11-15. 
                                              

                                9


dant['s] actions were not objectively reasonable, viewed in light

of the facts and circumstances confronting him and without regard

to his  underlying intent or  motivation."  Alexis  v. McDonald's
                                                                           

Restaurants of Massachusetts,  Inc., 67 F.3d  341, 352 (1st  Cir.
                                             

1995).  See also Graham, 490 U.S. at 397.  
                                 

          Graham identifies three  factors for evaluating whether
                          

the force used  to effect a  seizure was objectively  reasonable:

(1) the severity of the crime,  (2) whether there was "an immedi-

ate  threat to  the safety of  the officers  or others";  and (3)

whether the  suspect was, inter alia,  "actively resisting arrest
                                              

or  attempting to  evade arrest  by flight."   Id.  at 396.   See
                                                                           

Alexis,  67 F.3d at 352-53.   Under these  standards, we conclude
                

that the  district court  correctly ruled  that no rational  jury

could have found this  roadblock unreasonable in the circumstanc-

es.  See Seekamp, 936 F. Supp. at 28.
                          

          Seekamp contends that  the roadblock  was set  up in  a

manner likely to kill him.   See Brower, 489 U.S. at  599 (noting
                                                 

that the potential for recovery by Brower arose "only because the

unreasonableness . . . allege[d] consist[ed] precisely of setting

up the roadblock in such a manner as to be likely to kill him.").

In  that  event,  he  argues, the  more  particularized  analysis

employed  in Garner,  471 U.S.  at 11,  prohibiting  deadly force
                             

against fleeing  suspects  who pose  no immediate  danger to  the

officers or the public,  displaces the Graham analysis.   We need
                                                       

only consider the evidence  material to the threshold requirement

that  the roadblock  be shown  to have  been set  up in  a manner

                                10


likely to kill Seekamp. 

          Unlike the "deadman's roadblock" in Brower, 489 U.S. at
                                                              

594  (unilluminated  roadblock hidden  beyond  sharp  curve), the

Seekamp roadblock was brightly illuminated and located at the end

of a long straightaway.  The undisputed evidence established that

it was visible from approximately 1500 feet to the north and that

the  Monte Carlo  could  have been  brought  to a  complete  stop

without contacting  the roadblock equipment but  for its malfunc-

tioning brakes.   An adequate corridor  for circumvention, though

not readily apparent to  vehicles approaching at excessive speed,

had enabled many motorists to bypass the roadblock before Seekamp

arrived.7   The Seekamp roadblock thus  stands in marked contrast

to  the  "deadman's roadblock"  in  Brower and  the  bullet which
                                                    

stopped the fleeing suspect  in Garner.  Compare Donovan  v. City
                                                                           

of Milwaukee,  17 F.3d 944, 949-50 (7th Cir. 1994) (differentiat-
                      

ing, based on  relative likelihood  of death  or serious  injury,

between  the nondeadly force employed by ramming a police cruiser

into a  speeding car and the  deadly force employed  by driving a

cruiser into a speeding motorcycle).  

          At the time  Trooper McAfee established  the roadblock,

there existed  probable  cause  to  believe that  Seekamp  was  a

fleeing felon who  had eluded local  law enforcement officers  in

Scarborough and  Saco  and continued  to elude  the pursuing  MSP
                    
                              

     7Even though the district  court found the roadblock reason-
able without regard  to the  corridor designedly  left to  permit
safe  passage for vehicles traveling at  slow speed, see Seekamp,
                                                                          
936 F.Supp at 29, its existence, whether or not determinative, is
a circumstance material to the reasonableness of the roadblock.  

                                11


troopers, see  Me. Rev.  Stat.  Ann., tit.  29-A,  2501-A  (1994)
                       

(class C crime to  elude officer at reckless speeds  resulting in

chase);  see also  Me. Rev.  Stat. Ann.  tit. 17-A,    1252(2)(C)
                           

(1964) (class  C crime  punishable by five  years' imprisonment).

Seekamp  committed  lesser  crimes  as  well,  which  nonetheless

endangered  the  pursuing  officers  and  the  traveling  public:

driving  at 97 m.p.h. in a 65  m.p.h. zone on the Maine Turnpike,

see Me.  Rev. Stat. Ann. tit.  29-A,   2074(3) (West  Supp. 1996)
             

(class E  crime to  exceed  posted speed  limit by  more than  30

m.p.h.), and  driving to  endanger  by maneuvering  to evade  the

rolling  roadblock, see  Me. Rev.  Stat. Ann.  tit. 29-A,    2413
                                 

(class E crime) (1964); see also Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 17-A,  
                                          

1252(2)(E)  (1964)  (class E  crimes  punishable  by six  months'

imprisonment).  Moreover, Seekamp  had been evading  apprehension

throughout  the  chase.   See Graham,  490  U.S. at  396 (evading
                                              

arrest  by  flight  a  factor in  determining  reasonableness  of

seizure).  Thus, the factors for determining reasonableness under

Graham all weighed heavily in  favor of employing nondeadly force
                

to contain Seekamp. 

          Finally,  even assuming the  information transmitted to

Trooper  Michaud  regarding the  identity  and  condition of  the

driver of the Monte Carlo was neither stale nor unverifiable, the

outcome  under Graham would not be altered.  Relying on firsthand
                               

observation  and  eyewitness reports  from other  law enforcement

officers  engaged in  the pursuit,  Trooper Michaud  had probable

cause to  believe  that a  fleeing  felon, driving  at  excessive

                                12


speeds,  had resorted  to reckless efforts  to evade  the rolling

roadblock  and  refused to  stop.    In these  circumstances  the

information regarding the purported identity and condition of the

person driving the Monte Carlo could not have affected the Graham
                                                                           

analysis because the officers were  faced with a situation  which

fully  warranted a  nondeadly  roadblock based  on the  available

objective  information and  the  serious  danger  posed,  without

regard  to  the  particular  influences  prompting  the  driver's

dangerous actions.  See id. at 396-97.  
                                     

          The  Supreme Court  has  held, in  a closely  analogous

context, that the constitutionality of  a seizure based simply on

reasonable suspicion  does not depend exclusively  on whether the

police  employed  the  "least  intrusive  [investigatory]  means"

available.  United States v. Sokolow, 490 U.S. 1, 11 (1989) ("The
                                              

reasonableness of the officer's  decision to stop a suspect  does

not  turn on  the  availability of  less intrusive  investigatory

techniques.").  See also United States v. LaFrance, 879 F.2d 1, 5
                                                            

(1st Cir. 1989) (same).  As the Court has explained:

          A creative judge engaged in post hoc  evalua-
          tion  of  police  conduct can  almost  always
          imagine  some alternative means  by which the
          objectives  of the  police  might  have  been
          accomplished.   But "[t]he fact that the pro-
          tection of the public might have  been accom-
          plished  by less  intrusive  means  does  not
          itself render the  search unreasonable."  The
          question is  not  simply whether  some  other
          alternative  was  available, but  whether the
          police acted unreasonably  in failing to rec-
          ognize or pursue it.

United  States v. Sharpe, 470 U.S.  675, 686-87 (1985) (citations
                                  

omitted)  (upholding duration  of investigatory  stop as  reason-

                                13


able).         Moreover, Seekamp proffers no  reasonable alterna-

tive for  resolving the  safety threat  posed by  his persistent,

irresponsible  conduct.    True,  the  defendant  officers  never

resorted  to the  alternative Seekamp  now proposes:   abandoning

their  pursuit.  Implicit in  this suggestion, of  course, is the

premise that fleeing felons  must be allowed to proceed  on their

reckless way without answering for their criminal conduct despite

the ongoing risk to the traveling public.  The defendant officers

recognized  that inaction  on their  part was  not a  responsible

option  in the  circumstances.  We  do likewise  by acknowledging

that  their actions in setting up the roadblock and effecting the

seizure through nondeadly force were reasonable.8

3.   Supervisory Liability
          3.   Supervisory Liability
                                    

          Seekamp  contends  that  MSP Chief  Skofield  failed to

provide  the defendant  MSP troopers  with adequate  training and

supervision.  Supervisory liability under 42 U.S.C.   1983 cannot

be predicated on  a respondeat superior theory, Hegarty,  53 F.3d
                                                                 

at 1379, but "'only on  the basis of [the supervisor's]  own acts

or  omissions[,]'"  Sanchez v.  Alvarado, 101 F.3d  223, 227 (1st
                                                  

Cir. 1996) (quoting  Figueroa v. Aponte-Roque, 864  F.2d 947, 953
                                                       

(1st Cir. 1989))  (alteration in  original).  As  we pointed  out

almost a decade ago, a supervisor:

          can  be held liable . . . if (1) the behavior
          of  [his] subordinates results in a constitu-
          tional violation, and (2)  the [supervisor]'s
                    
                              

     8Therefore,  we  need  not address  the  qualified  immunity
claims.  See  Horta, 4  F.3d at 9  (bypassing qualified  immunity
                             
claims in favor of decision on merits).

                                14


          action   or  inaction   was  "affirmative[ly]
          link[ed]" to  that behavior in  that it could
          be  characterized as  "supervisory encourage-
          ment, condonation or acquiescence"  or "gross
          negligence amounting  to deliberate indiffer-
          ence."

Lipsett v. University of Puerto Rico, 864 F.2d 881, 902 (1st Cir.
                                              

1988) (citations  omitted).  Moreover, the  indifference required

to  support  supervisory liability  under  section  1983 must  be

"deliberate,  reckless  or   callous."    Gutierrez-Rodriguez  v.
                                                                       

Cartagena, 882 F.2d 553, 562 (1st Cir. 1989).   Thus, the "affir-
                   

mative  link" required between the action or inaction of a super-

visor and  the behavior of subordinates  "contemplates proof that

the  supervisor's conduct  led inexorably  to the  constitutional

violation."  Hegarty, 53 F.3d at 1380.
                              

          The present  claim fails  at a  primitive level,  as it

meets neither test under Lipsett.  First, because the behavior of
                                          

the subordinate MSP officers was reasonable in the circumstances,

see supra pt. II,  B, the required predicate     a constitutional
                   

violation  by  the subordinate      cannot be  established.   See
                                                                           

Lipsett, 864 F.2d at 902.  Second, Seekamp adduced no evidence of
                 

supervisory indifference to proper police training on the part of

defendant Skofield, let alone  a level of indifference sufficient

to sustain  a  section 1983  supervisory  liability claim.    See
                                                                           

Sanchez, 101 F.3d at 229 (mere laxity insufficient to establish  
                 

1983 supervisory liability).  Quite the contrary, it is undisput-

ed  that each  subordinate  defendant received  training on  high

speed pursuit and roadblocks, including a refresher course on MSP

high speed pursuit policy, within the year preceding the incident

                                15


sub judice which itself  reflected no inadequate training whatso-
                    

ever.

                               III
                                         III

                            CONCLUSION
                                      CONCLUSION
                                                

          The district court judgment is affirmed. 
                                                   affirmed
                                                           

                                16