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Thursday, December 23, 2010

Somerset County Warden HENRY v. PURNELL Spanked In Federal Court

On August 5, 2008 Salisbury News did THIS STORY referencing this matter. Below are the court findings in this case. I have inserted just a small portion of the findings but gave a link to allow you to read it in its entirety. Briefly, Purnell shot a man in the back while serving a warrant but claimed he thought it was his taser gun. WHOOPS!

Robert Purnell, a deputy sheriff in Somerset County, Maryland, attempted to execute a warrant for Frederick Henry's arrest. Henry fled on foot and Deputy Purnell gave chase, mistakenly drawing his firearm, instead of his taser, and shooting Henry in the elbow. As a result of this incident, Henry filed a § 1983 suit against Deputy Purnell in the United States District Court for the District of Maryland, asserting that Purnell used excessive force in effecting his arrest. The district court ultimately concluded that Deputy Purnell's mistake was reasonable and granted his motion for summary judgment. For the following reasons, we affirm in part and reverse in part the judgment of the district court, and remand with instructions.

I do not say, as the majority claims, that there is no room for a qualified immunity analysis in excessive or deadly force cases. My point is, rather, that the inquiries are fundamentally different. Officer Purnell would still be entitled to qualified immunity in this case if his actual conduct were reasonable, even if unlawful, under the circumstances. He could, for instance, argue that he reasonably believed that Henry was dangerous, even though he lacked probable cause to shoot him. Or that he reasonably believed that Garner did not apply to suspects fleeing in the specific manner in which Henry fled. But he cannot successfully argue that his intended conduct would have been legal, given that his failure to do that which he intended was objectively unreasonable. Accepting this argument requires us to extend qualified immunity to the “plainly incompetent.” See Malley v. Briggs, 475 U.S. 335, 341 (1986).

Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded with instructions by published opinion. Judge Agee wrote the majority opinion, in which Senior Judge Siler joined. Judge Gregory wrote a dissenting opinion.

GO HERE to read the findings in this case.

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

You are quoting from the dissenting opinion. Anytime you see "I" in a legal opinion, the judge writing it was in the minority and his decision is not the opinion of the court.

Anonymous said...

Another cop trying to lie his way out of a charge. Not a snowballs chance in hell he thought that gun was a taser it probably weights teice as much and doesnt even look like a taser. What a joke, a armed COP pulls the excuse "I didnt know it was a real gun...." what a joke.

Anonymous said...

so, don't run. it's not like he was looking at life in jail.

Anonymous said...

10:09 AM

But he cannot successfully argue that his intended conduct would have been legal, given that his failure to do that which he intended was objectively unreasonable. Accepting this argument requires us to extend qualified immunity to the “plainly incompetent.” See Malley v. Briggs, 475 U.S. 335, 341 (1986).

Looks like he said 'us' to me. Regardless, it was determined he was incompetent due to his level of training or lack thereof in the use of the taser.

It is a long opinion granted, but if the time were taken to read it, that fact would have been realized.

Anonymous said...

I guess the idiot won't run next time will he!?????!!! HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAA...That's some funny stuff right there! Merry Christmas!

Anonymous said...

So what does all of this mean? I don't have a clue what this action means. Is Henry going to be compensated for this action or not? Is the case still ongoing or closed? Maybe some lawyer can explain this decision.

Anonymous said...

this decision opens the door to many possibilities.

Anonymous said...

just another cop crossing the line!
What else is new, guess if he would have shot the guy in the back and killed him that would be acceptable too? Wonder how far that line of reasoning would get the average business or property owner in court?

Anonymous said...

Is this guy still carrying a gun. I know that he is the warden but I think I've seen him driving a sheriffs vehicle. This whole matter would have been over with a long time ago if Kristy Hickman hadn't cleared the man fifteen minutes after he shot the guy. I'm also wondering why Somerset gave him the Wardens job after this incident and with the lawsuit unresolved. I suspect it was politics, just like rehiring James Henderson after he was forced to resign the Wardens job for abusing inmates.

Chimera said...

So who wins?And if Henry was such an innocent choirboy why was he running?For a child support warrant?Innocent people dont flee from the police.For all Purnell knew this guy could have been getting a weapon he had hidden.
HOWEVER,If Purnell confuses a Tazer with a real gun,he might not be cop material and probably should get a different job.