Randy Cole v. Michael Hunter ( 2019 )


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  •      Case: 14-10228   Document: 00515085664    Page: 1   Date Filed: 08/21/2019
    REVISED August 21, 2019
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    No. 14-10228                     August 20, 2019
    Lyle W. Cayce
    RANDY COLE; KAREN COLE; RYAN COLE,                                     Clerk
    Plaintiffs-Appellees
    v.
    CARL CARSON,
    Defendant-Appellant
    ****************
    No. 15-10045
    RANDY COLE; KAREN COLE; RYAN COLE,
    Plaintiffs-Appellees
    v.
    MICHAEL HUNTER; MARTIN CASSIDY,
    Defendants-Appellants
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Texas
    _______________________
    ON PETITION FOR REHEARING EN BANC FOLLOWING
    REMAND FROM THE UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT
    Case: 14-10228     Document: 00515085664     Page: 2   Date Filed: 08/21/2019
    No. 14-10228 c/w No. 15-10045
    Before STEWART, Chief Judge, and HIGGINBOTHAM, JONES, SMITH,
    DENNIS, CLEMENT, OWEN, ELROD, SOUTHWICK, HAYNES, GRAVES,
    HIGGINSON, COSTA, WILLETT, HO, DUNCAN, ENGELHARDT, and
    OLDHAM, Circuit Judges.
    PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge, joined by CARL E. STEWART,
    Chief Judge, and JAMES L. DENNIS, EDITH BROWN CLEMENT,
    JENNIFER WALKER ELROD, LESLIE H. SOUTHWICK, CATHARINA
    HAYNES, JAMES E. GRAVES, STEPHEN A. HIGGINSON, GREGG COSTA,
    and KURT D. ENGELHARDT, Circuit Judges: 1
    The Supreme Court over several years has developed protection from
    civil liability for persons going about their tasks as government workers in the
    form of immunity; not the absolute immunity enjoyed by prosecutors and
    judges, but a qualified immunity. Today we again repair to issues inherent in
    the qualification. The doctrine protects at the earliest stage of litigation at
    which the defense’s application is determinable. To that end, courts have
    developed procedures and pretrial practices, including appellate review of
    pretrial denials, otherwise interlocutory and unappealable, and a reply to an
    answer under Rule 7(a) on order of the district court, particularized to address
    the defense of immunity in a motion to dismiss or for summary judgment.
    When those processes do not yield pretrial resolution, as with competing
    factual narratives, the full reach of qualified immunity gives way to a trial, the
    first point at which its application is determinable. And in obeisance to
    constitutional mandate, the worker’s defense enjoys a right to the protection of
    a jury—long a bastion interposed between the state and person, and assured
    by the Founders. And it signifies that today the district judge has multiple
    1 Judges Higginbotham and Clement, now Senior Judges of this court, are
    participating as members of the original panel.
    2
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    ways to present fully the claims and defenses to a jury to ensure the
    government worker a full draw upon his immunity defense, 2 including
    resolution of the competing factual narratives, one of which—or a meld of
    both—may foreclose liability. 3
    In this case, police officers from Sachse, Texas argue that the district
    court should have sustained their defense of qualified immunity on their
    pretrial motions to dismiss and for summary judgment. Ryan Cole and his
    parents Karen and Randy (collectively “the Coles”) sue Officer Carl Carson,
    Lieutenant Martin Cassidy, and Officer Michael Hunter of the Sachse Police
    Department under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The Coles allege that the officers violated
    Ryan Cole’s Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights during an incident in
    which Cassidy and Hunter shot Ryan without warning, and then lied about
    what happened. The officers filed dispositive pretrial motions in the district
    court, asserting the defense of qualified immunity. The district court denied
    these motions, concluding that immunity could not be determined at this stage
    of the proceeding. In Cole I, a panel of our court affirmed the denial of summary
    judgment as to the Coles’ Fourth Amendment excessive-force claim and the
    denial of the motion to dismiss the Coles’ Fourteenth Amendment false-charge
    claim, but reversed denials of the motion to dismiss the Coles’ Fourth
    Amendment and Brady claims attacking the alleged fabrication of evidence. 4
    2  See FED. R. CIV. P. 49; Fifth Circuit Civil Pattern Jury Instructions 10.3. See
    also McCoy v. Hernandez, 
    203 F.3d 371
    , 376 (5th Cir. 2000).
    3 In any treatment of the jury’s role in stepping between state-afforded process
    and an individual defendant, it bears emphasis that the district judge can impanel a
    jury of at least six and as many as twelve members whose verdict, absent the parties’
    agreement otherwise, must be unanimous.
    4 Cole v. Carson (“Cole I”), 
    802 F.3d 752
    (5th Cir. 2015), vacated sub nom.
    Hunter v. Cole, 
    137 S. Ct. 497
    (2016).
    3
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    The Supreme Court vacated Cole I, and remanded for consideration in light of
    its intervening decision in Mullenix v. Luna. 5 On remand, the panel affirmed
    the denial of summary judgment as to the excessive-force claim. Because the
    Coles’ other claims were unaffected by the reasoning of Mullenix, the panel
    reinstated Cole I’s holdings on the fabrication-of-evidence claims. We reheard
    this case en banc to reconsider disposition of the Coles’ excessive-force claim in
    light of Mullenix.
    We conclude that it will be for a jury, and not judges, to resolve the
    competing factual narratives as detailed in the district court opinion and the
    record as to the Coles’ excessive-force claim. Limited by our jurisdiction to the
    materiality of factual disputes, we AFFIRM the denial of summary judgment
    on this claim and DISMISS Cassidy and Hunter’s appeal. The Coles’ remaining
    claims are unaffected by the reasoning of Mullenix, and so, as in Cole I, we
    AFFIRM denial of the motion to dismiss the Coles’ Fourteenth Amendment
    false-charge claim; REVERSE denial of the motion to dismiss the Coles’ Fourth
    Amendment and Brady fabrication-of-evidence claims based on qualified
    immunity; and return the case to the district court for trial and resolution of
    issues consistent with this opinion.
    I
    A.
    On October 25, 2010, at around 10:30 a.m., the Sachse Police
    Department called available units to the neighboring town of Garland, Texas.
    There police were searching for Ryan Cole, a seventeen-year-old white male,
    5 Hunter v. Cole, 
    137 S. Ct. 497
    (2016) (granting certiorari, vacating, and
    remanding for consideration in light of Mullenix v. Luna, 
    136 S. Ct. 205
    (2015) (per
    curiam)).
    4
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    reported to be walking in the neighborhood with a handgun. Officer Michael
    Hunter responded by proceeding immediately to the Garland neighborhood. In
    a statement given on the day of the incident, Hunter related that on arriving
    in the neighborhood, he overheard a civilian stating that Ryan had given up
    one of his guns, and that he had unsuccessfully tried to persuade Ryan to not
    keep his handgun. Hunter searched the area, and saw two officers following
    Ryan, who was walking away from them holding his gun to his head,
    approaching a wooded area along Highway 78. Although told by officers that
    things were under control, Hunter volunteered to go behind the wooded area
    and possibly intercept Ryan, and suggested that Officer Carl Carson, who was
    also present, join him.
    Four years later, after this litigation had commenced, Hunter for the first
    time recalled that the civilian he had overheard had described an altercation
    with Ryan in which Ryan had threatened him. He also then for the first time
    recalled hearing police-radio transmissions indicating that officers were
    protecting nearby schools because of “[Ryan]’s dangerous conduct which posed
    a risk of serious harm to a great many innocent in the vicinity.” Hunter
    otherwise learned nothing “that would cause [him] to believe [Ryan] was
    violent or wanted to hurt anyone.” 6 Hunter understood that Ryan was suicidal,
    and, four years after the incident, he also raised the possibility that Ryan was
    using suicide as a pretext to evade the police.
    Meanwhile, Lieutenant Martin Cassidy had also heard the original
    dispatcher’s summons. Cassidy called the Sachse Police Department for more
    information. On the day of the incident, Cassidy swore that he learned “this
    6 In a 2014 declaration, Hunter stated that Cole refused a police officer’s order
    to surrender his weapon. Hunter did not testify that he knew this fact at the time.
    5
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    subject had shown up at [a] residence with a handgun and had just recently
    been seen walking away.” But, four years later, after this litigation had
    commenced, like Hunter, Cassidy remembered learning more, including that
    Ryan “had threatened to shoot anyone who tried to take his gun”; had refused
    an order to drop his weapon; and might be headed for Sachse High School “to
    possibly engage in violence.” Cassidy also decided to intercept Ryan on
    Highway 78.
    The three officers separately arrived at the side of Highway 78 at around
    the same time. Hunter parked his motorbike and drew his duty weapon;
    Cassidy also drew his firearm and advised Carson to be ready to use his taser.
    The officers started walking along the tree line. A steep embankment rose from
    railroad tracks to the area along Highway 78. Ryan would have to climb this
    embankment to approach the tree line. Cassidy and Hunter used both the edge
    of the embankment and the vegetation to conceal themselves as they walked.
    Hunter also removed his white motorcycle helmet in order to be less
    conspicuous. Cassidy soon heard a message over the police radio: Ryan was
    ascending to the tree line. Hunter heard movement in the brush, and signaled
    to his colleagues.
    What occurred next is disputed. Viewing the summary judgment
    evidence and drawing reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the
    non-movant Coles, the district court determined that a reasonable jury could
    find the following: Ryan backed out from the tree line in front of Hunter and
    Cassidy, “unaware of the Officers’ presence.” 7 Ryan was holding his handgun
    7 Cole v. Hunter, 
    68 F. Supp. 3d 628
    , 645 (N.D. Tex. 2014). Viewing the evidence
    in a light most favorable to the Coles, the district court relied on the physical and
    audio evidence as interpreted by the Coles’ expert crime-scene reconstructionist
    6
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    pointed to his own head, where it remained. 8 “[Ryan] never pointed a weapon
    at the Officers,” 9 and “never made a threatening or provocative gesture
    towards [the] Officers.” 10 “Officers [Cassidy and Hunter] had the time and
    opportunity to give a warning” for Ryan to disarm himself. 11 However, the
    officers provided “no warning . . . that granted [Ryan] a sufficient time to
    respond,” 12 such that Ryan “was not given an opportunity to disarm himself
    before he was shot.” 13 Hunter and Cassidy then shot Ryan multiple times.
    Officer Hunter’s first shot struck Ryan as he was oriented away from the
    officers at a 90-degree angle—that is, he was not facing Officer Hunter. 14
    Following impact of the first shot, as Ryan’s body turned or fell towards
    Hunter, he shot him a second time. 15 As an involuntary reflex to being shot,
    Ryan pulled the trigger, shooting himself in his temple. 16 But the officers did
    not know that.
    Following the shooting, the three officers remained together at the scene.
    The Coles allege that during this time the officers conspired to insulate Cassidy
    and Hunter from liability with a fabricated narrative in which Ryan was facing
    Hunter and pointed his weapon at the officer, at which point Cassidy and
    Thomas Bevel who opined that “no evidence . . . would indicate Mr. Cole was or could
    have been aware of the presence of the police officers prior to the time he was shot.”
    8 
    Cole, 68 F. Supp. 3d at 644
    .
    9 
    Cole, 68 F. Supp. 3d at 644
    ; 
    id. at 645
    (“[T]he evidence supports Plaintiffs’
    argument that Cole did not know of the Officers’ presence.”).
    10 
    Cole, 68 F. Supp. 3d at 645
    –46.
    11 
    Id. at 645.
    A reasonable jury could find the officers had up to five seconds
    during which they could have called out to Cole, sufficient time to make a warning
    according to Cole’s expert.
    12 
    Cole, 68 F. Supp. 3d at 645
    .
    13 
    Id. 644–45 (“Cole
    was shot before he had an opportunity to disarm himself.”).
    14 
    Id. at 644.
          15 
    Cole, 68 F. Supp. 3d at 644
    .
    16 
    Id. 7 Case:
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    Hunter fired on Ryan in defense. Eventually, members of the Garland Police
    Department arrived and took control of the scene, but did not follow the
    standard    procedure     of   separating       witnesses   to   ensure   independent
    recollections. Instead, Cassidy and Hunter were allowed to return to their
    police station together. Later that day, the officers provided statements to
    investigators. Hunter stated that he had no chance to issue a command to
    Ryan. Cassidy and Carson, however, swore that, when Ryan backed out from
    the brush, they heard Hunter shout a warning to him. Hunter and Cassidy
    stated that Ryan then turned towards Hunter and pointed his handgun at
    Hunter, at which point both officers—fearing for Hunter’s life—opened fire
    defensively. 17
    The Dallas County District Attorney presented the officers’ narrative to
    a grand jury, which no-billed the officers and charged Ryan with felony
    aggravated assault of a public servant. As a result of the charge, Ryan,
    incapacitated in intensive care, was placed under house arrest. About a month
    after the indictment, investigators received a ballistics report from the crime
    lab. The ballistics analysis, taken together with stippling observed around
    Ryan’s head wound, made clear that Ryan had shot himself in the temple,
    confounding the officers’ account. 18 Dallas County prosecutors then dropped
    the aggravated assault charge, accepting Ryan’s plea to misdemeanor unlawful
    carry of a weapon, a $500 fine, and forfeiture of his handgun.
    Ryan suffered permanent injuries, including cognitive impairment,
    partial paralysis, and other serious mental and physical disabilities.
    17  Carson stated he could not see Cole’s movement because Hunter obstructed
    his line of sight.
    18 Stippling refers to a discoloration of the skin caused by hot gases and residue
    released immediately around a discharging firearm.
    8
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    B.
    The Coles brought, inter alia, four Section 1983 claims against the
    officers. First, they allege a violation of Ryan’s Fourth Amendment right
    against the use of excessive force arising from the shooting. Second, the Coles
    allege a violation of Ryan’s Fourteenth Amendment right against the
    imposition of false charges arising from the fabrication of evidence. Third, they
    allege a violation of Ryan’s Fourth Amendment right against unreasonable
    seizures arising from the fabrication of evidence. Fourth, they allege a Brady
    violation arising from the fabrication of evidence. The officers filed a motion to
    dismiss these claims under Rule 12(b)(6), asserting qualified immunity
    defenses. The district court denied the motion in a January 2014 Memorandum
    Opinion and Order. 19 Carson alone appealed the denial of the motion to dismiss
    the Coles’ three fabrication-of-evidence claims based on qualified immunity.
    The district court stayed these fabrication-of-evidence claims pending Carson’s
    appeal, allowing the Coles limited discovery against Cassidy and Hunter’s
    qualified immunity defenses to the excessive-force claim. With that discovery
    complete, the two officers moved for summary judgment, rearguing qualified
    immunity. The district court denied their motion and Cassidy and Hunter
    appealed.
    The officers’ appeals were consolidated. In 2015, in Cole I, a panel of this
    court affirmed the district court’s denial of summary judgment on the Coles’
    excessive-force claim, affirmed denial of the motion to dismiss the Coles’
    19  The Coles filed an initial complaint in September 2012. The officers moved
    to dismiss or in the alternative requested that the district court order a Rule 7(a)
    reply to the immunity defense. The district court then afforded the Coles opportunity
    to file a Rule 7 reply or amended complaint. The Coles filed an amended complaint.
    The officers then filed a second motion to dismiss.
    9
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    Fourteenth Amendment false-charge claim, and reversed the denial as to the
    Coles’ Fourth Amendment and Brady fabrication-of-evidence claims, finding
    the qualified immunity defense applicable for these claims. The officers
    petitioned the Supreme Court for a writ of certiorari. In November 2016, the
    Supreme Court granted certiorari, vacated the panel’s judgment, and
    remanded the case for further consideration in light of Mullenix v. Luna, 20
    decided in the intervening time. 21
    On remand from the Supreme Court, recognizing that its jurisdiction
    was limited to determining the materiality of factual disputes that the district
    court determined were genuine, the panel once again held that the
    applicability of qualified immunity for Cassidy and Hunter could not be
    determined at the summary judgment stage. 22 Finding the Supreme Court’s
    remand order reached no further, the panel reinstated the Cole I opinion on
    the Coles’ three fabrication-of-evidence claims. 23 The officers moved for
    rehearing en banc, which we granted. 24
    20 
    136 S. Ct. 305
    (2015).
    21  As this court and others have acknowledged, when the Supreme Court
    grants, vacates, and remands (“GVRs”) a case, it does not make a decision on the
    merits of the case nor dictate a particular outcome. See Diaz v. Stephens, 
    731 F.3d 370
    , 378 (5th Cir. 2013); Kenemore v. Roy, 
    690 F.3d 639
    , 641–42 (5th Cir. 2012); see
    also Texas v. United States, 
    798 F.3d 1108
    , 1116 (D.C. Cir. 2015); In re Whirlpool
    Corp. Front-Loading Washer Prods. Liab. Litig., 
    722 F.3d 838
    , 845 (6th Cir. 2013);
    Gonzalez v. Justices of Mun. Court of Bos., 
    420 F.3d 5
    , 7 (1st Cir. 2005).
    22 Cole v. Carson, 
    905 F.3d 334
    , 347 (5th Cir. 2018), reh’g granted, 
    915 F.3d 378
    , 379 (5th Cir. 2019).
    23 
    Id. at 341–42.
          24 
    Cole, 915 F.3d at 379
    .
    10
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    II
    A.
    We hear this case on remand from the Court for further consideration in
    light of Mullenix. We do not reach issues unaddressed by the mandate on
    remand, 25 and so we hold as in Cole I with respect to the Coles’ three
    fabrication-of-evidence claims. First, we affirm the district court’s denial of the
    motion to dismiss the Coles’ Fourteenth Amendment claim regarding the
    imposition of false charges. 26 Second, finding qualified immunity applicable,
    we reverse the denial of the motion to dismiss the Coles’ claim that the alleged
    fabrication of evidence violated the Fourth Amendment. 27 Lastly, finding
    qualified immunity applicable, we reverse the denial of the motion to dismiss
    the Coles’ claim that the alleged fabrication of evidence entailed a Brady
    violation. 28
    25 Appellants argue that the Supreme Court’s 2017 decision in Manuel v. City
    of Joliet, 
    137 S. Ct. 911
    (2017), changes the legal landscape and justifies revisiting
    the Coles’ Fourteenth Amendment false-charge claim. Manuel holds that “pretrial
    detention can violate the Fourth Amendment not only when it precedes, but also
    when it follows, the start of legal process in a criminal case,” and, therefore, that the
    plaintiff in that case “stated a Fourth Amendment claim when he sought relief not
    merely for his (pre-legal-process) arrest, but also for his (post-legal-process) pretrial
    detention.” 
    Manuel, 137 S. Ct. at 918
    –19. It does not hold that the Fourth Amendment
    provides the exclusive basis for a claim asserting pre-trial deprivations based on
    fabricated evidence. We have already so determined in Jauch v. Choctaw County:
    “Manuel does not address the availability of due process challenges after a legal
    seizure, and it cannot be read to mean, as Defendants contend, that only the Fourth
    Amendment is available to pre-trial detainees.” Jauch v. Choctaw Cty., 
    874 F.3d 425
    ,
    429 (5th Cir. 2017), cert. denied sub nom. Choctaw Cty. v. Jauch, 
    139 S. Ct. 638
    (2018).
    26 See Cole 
    I, 802 F.3d at 766
    –74.
    27 See 
    id. at 764–65.
           28 See 
    id. at 765.
    11
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    B.
    The qualified immunity inquiry includes two parts. In the first we ask
    whether the officer’s alleged conduct has violated a federal right; in the second
    we ask whether the right in question was “clearly established” at the time of
    the alleged violation, such that the officer was on notice of the unlawfulness of
    his or her conduct. 29 The officer is entitled to qualified immunity if there is no
    violation, or if the conduct did not violate law clearly established at the time. 30
    On an appeal of a denial of summary judgment on the basis of qualified
    immunity, our jurisdiction is limited to examining the materiality of factual
    disputes the district court determined were genuine. 31 “[I]n an interlocutory
    appeal we cannot challenge the district court’s assessments regarding the
    sufficiency of the evidence—that is, the question whether there is enough
    evidence in the record for a jury to conclude that certain facts are true.” 32 “[W]e
    lack jurisdiction to resolve the genuineness of any factual disputes” and
    “consider only whether the district court erred in assessing the legal
    significance of the conduct that the district court deemed sufficiently supported
    for purposes of summary judgment.” 33 Like the district court, we must view
    the facts and draw reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the
    plaintiff and ask whether the defendant would be entitled to qualified
    29 Tolan v. Cotton, 
    572 U.S. 650
    , 655–56 (2014) (per curiam).
    30 
    Id. 31 Lytle
    v. Bexar Cty., Tex., 
    560 F.3d 404
    , 408 (5th Cir. 2009); see also 
    id. (“If the
    determination of qualified immunity would require the resolution of a genuinely
    disputed fact, then that fact is material and we lack jurisdiction over the appeal.”).
    32 Trent v. Wade, 
    776 F.3d 368
    , 376 (5th Cir. 2015) (quoting Kinney v. Weaver,
    
    367 F.3d 337
    , 347 (5th Cir. 2004) (en banc)).
    33 
    Id. (internal quotations
    omitted).
    12
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    immunity on those facts. 34 The Supreme Court has summarily reversed this
    court for failing to take the evidence and draw factual inferences in the non-
    movants’ favor at the summary judgment stage. 35 In doing so, the Court
    emphasized that the requirement is no less binding “even when . . . a court
    decides only the clearly-established prong of the standard.” 36 Within the
    limited scope of our inquiry, review is de novo. 37
    As instructed, we turn to the guidance provided by the Supreme Court
    in Mullenix. In that case, the Court reviewed a denial of qualified immunity to
    an officer who had shot and killed a fugitive in a car chase. This court had
    decided that the officer violated the clearly established rule that deadly force
    was prohibited “against a fleeing felon who does not pose a sufficient threat of
    harm to the officer or others.” 38 The officer in Mullenix reasonably perceived
    some threat of harm, but we had held the threat was not “sufficient.” The
    Supreme Court reversed our decision. It found that the rule we articulated
    lacked a referent to define the “sufficiency” of threats. 39 Precedents provided a
    “hazy legal backdrop,” at best. 40 Given these deficient sources, an officer could
    not reasonably derive an applicable rule to govern his or her conduct in the
    situation. 41 Finding that we had defined the applicable rule with too much
    34 
    Lytle, 560 F.3d at 409
    .
    35 
    Tolan, 572 U.S. at 660
    .
    36 
    Id. at 657.
          37 
    Trent, 776 F.3d at 376
    .
    38 
    Mullenix, 136 S. Ct. at 308
    –09 (internal quotation marks omitted).
    39 
    Id. at 309.
          40 
    Id. at 309–10.
          41 
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    “generality,” 42 the Court reversed our holding that the officer had violated
    clearly established law. 43
    Under Mullenix, application of clearly established law is undertaken
    with close attention to the relevant legal rule and the particular facts of the
    case. Here, based on the facts taken in the light most favorable to the non-
    movant Coles, and with reasonable inferences drawn in their favor, the district
    court determined there were genuine factual disputes as to Ryan’s and the
    officers’ conduct, upon which a reasonable jury could find “[Ryan] . . . did not
    pose an immediate threat to the officers” when they opened fire. 44 It held that
    “on October 25, 2010, the date of the shooting, the law was clearly established”
    that “shooting a mentally disturbed teenager, who was pointing a gun the
    entire time at his own head and facing away from the officer, in an open
    outdoor area, and who was unaware of the officer’s presence because no
    warning was given prior to the officer opening fire, was unlawful.” 45 As we will
    detail, the officers ask us to consider a different set of facts, but we cannot do
    so. We lack jurisdiction to reconsider the district court’s factual determinations
    on an appeal from denial of summary judgment on qualified immunity.
    Tennessee v. Garner announced the principle that the use of deadly force
    is permitted only to protect the life of the shooting officer or others: “Where the
    suspect poses no immediate threat to the officer and no threat to others, the
    harm resulting from failing to apprehend him does not justify the use of deadly
    42 
    Id. at 311.
          43 
    Id. at 312.
          44 
    Cole, 68 F. Supp. 3d at 645
    .
    45 
    Id. at 643.
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    force to do so.” 46 Garner also requires a warning before deadly force is used
    “where feasible,” 47 a critical component of risk assessment and de-escalation.
    The Supreme Court has repeatedly stated that this rule can be sufficient in
    obvious cases, and this court has applied it in such cases, without dependence
    on the fact patterns of other cases. 48
    The summary judgment facts, as determined by the district court, are
    that Ryan posed no threat to the officers or others to support firing without
    warning. The “Officers had the time and opportunity to give a warning and yet
    chose to shoot first instead.” 49 This is an obvious case. Indeed, Officer Hunter
    conceded that he would have had no basis to fire upon Ryan unless Ryan had
    been facing him and pointing a gun at him.
    This case is obvious when we accept the facts as we must. It is also
    informed by our precedent. Before 2010, Baker v. Putnal established clearly
    that Cassidy’s and Hunter’s conduct—on the facts as we must take them at
    this stage—was unlawful. For in Baker, members of the public told Officer
    Michael Putnal, a police officer patrolling a crowded Galveston beach area
    during spring break, that “someone had entered the crowd with a pistol-
    gripped shotgun.” 50 Minutes later, Officer Putnal heard gunfire and saw the
    46  Tennessee v. Garner, 
    471 U.S. 1
    , 11 (1985).
    47  
    Id. at 11–12;
    see also Colston v. Barnhart, 
    130 F.3d 96
    , 100 (5th Cir. 1997).
    48 See White v. Pauly, 
    137 S. Ct. 548
    , 552 (2017) (per curiam); Mason v.
    Lafayette City-Parish Consol. Gov’t, 
    806 F.3d 268
    , 277–78 (5th Cir. 2015); cf. Hope v.
    Pelzer, 
    536 U.S. 730
    , 741 (2002); Newman v. Guedry, 
    703 F.3d 757
    , 764 (5th Cir.
    2012).
    49 
    Cole, 68 F. Supp. 3d at 645
    .
    50 Baker v. Putnal, 
    75 F.3d 190
    , 193 (5th Cir. 1996).
    15
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    crowd scurrying. 51 There was “a good deal of confusion on the beach.” 52 Two
    people directed the officer to a car in which the gunman was supposedly
    sitting. 53 Putnal then saw Wendell Baker Jr. and another man sitting in a
    truck parked on the beach. 54 The parties disputed what happened next. Putnal
    stated he saw Baker loading a magazine into a handgun, that he warned Baker
    to freeze or drop the gun, that Baker instead turned the gun upon Putnal, at
    which point Putnal fired, killing Baker. 55 However, witnesses “state[d] that
    [Baker] took no threatening action . . . as the officer approached the truck,”
    that Putnal issued no warning to Baker, and that “Baker . . . may have barely
    had an opportunity to see Putnal before [the officer] fired his gun.” 56 The
    parties did not dispute that Putnal had been searching for a gunman, and that
    a gun had been recovered from Baker’s seat, although they disputed whether
    and how Baker had been holding it, that is, whether he pointed it at Putnal. 57
    It was also undisputed that Baker was turning to face Putnal from his seat,
    although medical reports indicated from “the nature of the wounds . . . that
    Baker . . . was not facing Putnal when he was shot.” 58 Baker’s survivors sued
    the officer, bringing, inter alia, a Fourth Amendment excessive-force claim. 59
    The district court granted Putnal qualified immunity, crediting his account
    51 
    Id. 52 Id.
    at 198.
    53 
    Id. at 193.
          54 Id.
    55 
    Id. at 198.
          56 
    Id. 57 Id.
          58 Id.
    59 
    Id. at 193.
    16
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    that he had fired in response to Baker turning and aiming the gun at him. 60
    On appeal, we reversed and remanded the excessive-force claim for trial. 61
    Recognizing the dispute as to the officer’s warning, Baker’s turn, and the
    position of Baker’s gun, we found “simply too many factual issues to permit the
    Bakers’ § 1983 claims to be disposed of on summary judgment.” 62 “Chaos on
    the beach and Baker[’s] mere motion to turn and face Putnal are not compelling
    reasons to find that [the officer’s] use of force was not excessive as a matter of
    law.” 63 Viewing the facts and drawing inferences “in the light most favorable
    to the nonmoving party,” we held that “[t]he number of shots and the nature
    of the wounds raise . . . more of a question of fact than a court may dispose of
    on summary judgment.” 64
    The Supreme Court’s more recent qualified immunity decisions do not
    shift this analysis. In Kisela v. Hughes, police officers in Tucson, Arizona
    responded to a call that a woman was behaving erratically with a knife and
    that she had been hacking at a tree. 65 When officers arrived on scene, the
    suspect, Amy Hughes, emerged from a house holding a large kitchen knife, and
    approached to within “striking distance” of a bystander in the driveway. 66 One
    of the officers, Andrew Kisela, whose further approach was impeded by a chain-
    link fence, repeatedly ordered Hughes to drop the knife, but Hughes did not
    60 
    Id. at 197.
          61 
    Id. at 198.
          62 
    Id. 63 Id.
          64 
    Id. at 198–99.
          65 Kisela v. Hughes, 
    138 S. Ct. 1148
    , 1151 (2018) (per curiam).
    66 Id.; 
    id. at 1154.
    17
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    follow his commands. 67 Kisela then fired on Hughes through the fence. 68
    Hughes brought a Section 1983 excessive force claim against Kisela. 69
    Reviewing a denial of qualified immunity to Kisela, the Supreme Court held
    that, in light of the officer’s limited knowledge of the situation and Hughes’s
    refusal to follow his repeated commands to drop the knife while within striking
    distance of the bystander—obstinance that heightened the risk of immediate
    harm to another—the law did not clearly establish that the officer’s resort to
    deadly force was unlawful. 70
    In this case, Officers Cassidy and Hunter found themselves in a search
    for a suicidal teenager who they knew had already encountered fellow officers
    and walked away from them with his gun to his head, non-responsive, but
    without aggressive action. The circumstances of the officers’ encounter with
    Ryan, as in Baker, remain heavily disputed: as to whether Ryan was aware of
    the officers, whether and how he turned and aimed his gun, and whether
    Hunter warned Ryan to disarm himself. The district court here defined the
    facts in a 21-page opinion, finding genuine disputes regarding these facts, and,
    viewing these disputes in a light most favorable to the Coles, concluded that a
    reasonable jury could find that Ryan made no threatening or provocative
    gesture to the officers and posed no immediate threat to them. Unlike in Kisela,
    where the officer repeatedly warned an armed suspect to disarm, yet that
    suspect, facing the officer and hearing his warnings, refused to disarm, here
    the district court concluded that a reasonable jury could find Cassidy and
    67 
    Id. at 1151.
          68 
    Id. 69 Id.
          70 
    Id. at 1153.
    18
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    No. 14-10228 c/w No. 15-10045
    Hunter opened fire upon Ryan without warning, even though it was feasible.
    On these facts, the officers’ conduct violates clearly established law.
    Rather than engage on the facts as we must take them at the summary
    judgment stage, the officers repeatedly argue from a different set of facts.
    While the district court found that Ryan was initially facing away from the
    officers when they fired the first shot, the officers now describe his “armed turn
    towards Officer Hunter.” While the district court found that Ryan kept his gun
    aimed at his own head and never pointed it at the officers, the officers now
    suggest that Ryan’s gun was “below his head,” moving towards Hunter, and
    then only momentarily turned back towards Ryan’s head at the moment he
    fired (ignoring Hunter’s sworn statement that he fired only when the gun was
    pointed toward him—a story prosecutors accepted until a ballistics report
    exposed its impossibility). And although the district court found that Ryan was
    not given an opportunity to disarm himself, the officers contend that he was
    warned to disarm before being shot. “Had the Officers delayed longer, reaction
    time lag would have precluded their ability to stop [Ryan] from shooting Officer
    Hunter,” they argue. Based on this alternative set of facts, echoed again in oral
    argument to us as a full court, and in the teeth of those found by the district
    court, the officers now contend Ryan posed a “deadly threat,” and no clearly
    established law in 2010 put the officers’ response of firing in self-defense
    beyond the law.
    The Coles and amicus Cato Institute are correct that it is beyond our
    jurisdiction to consider the officers’ set of facts, a narrative evolving over time.
    “[I]f an excessive force claim turns on which of two conflicting stories best
    captures what happened on the street,” the caselaw “will not permit summary
    19
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    No. 14-10228 c/w No. 15-10045
    judgment in favor of the defendant official. . . . [A] trial must be had.” 71
    Whereas the officers will have a chance to present their factual narrative—and
    to question the Coles’—at trial, they cannot contest the facts in the current
    appeal. 72
    The dissents also take issue with the disputed facts. Judge Duncan
    focuses on what he terms “undisputed pre-encounter events.” But, particularly
    in light of the officers’ evolving stories, it is disputed whether any of the events
    recounted were known to Hunter or Cassidy when they fired on Ryan. The
    dissent cites to the reports and affidavits of other officers and individuals to
    describe the events occurring before Hunter and Cassidy were called to the
    scene. 73 But looking at the evidence in the light most favorable to the Coles,
    Hunter and Cassidy were not aware of the disturbance at the Coles’ house the
    previous night, the alleged cache of weapons left at the Reeds’ house, Ryan’s
    alleged suicidal threat, or his threat to shoot anyone who came near him.
    And of course, what matters is what the defendant officers knew when
    they shot Ryan. See, e.g., White v. Pauly, 
    137 S. Ct. 548
    , 550 (2017) (per curiam)
    (“Because this case concerns the defense of qualified immunity . . . the Court
    71  Saucier v. Katz, 
    533 U.S. 194
    , 216 (2001) (Ginsburg, J. concurring). see also
    
    Tolan, 572 U.S. at 660
    ; 
    id. at 662
    (Alito, J., joined by Scalia, J., concurring in the
    judgment) (agreeing that “summary judgment should not have been granted” in that
    case because of the genuine issues of material fact); 
    Lytle, 560 F.3d at 408
    –09.
    72 Cf. 
    Tolan, 572 U.S. at 660
    (“The witnesses on both sides come to this case
    with their own perceptions, recollections, and even potential biases. It is in part for
    that reason that genuine disputes are generally resolved by juries in our adversarial
    system. By weighing the evidence and reaching factual inferences contrary to [the
    plaintiff’s] competent evidence, the court below neglected to adhere to the
    fundamental principle that at the summary judgment stage, reasonable inferences
    should be drawn in favor of the nonmoving party.”).
    73 Recall that Hunter was a late-arriving officer who was not instructed by the
    Sachse or Garland police departments to pursue Ryan. See supra at 4.
    20
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    considers only the facts that were knowable to the defendant officers.”);
    Kingsley v. Hendrickson, 
    135 S. Ct. 2466
    , 2474 (2015) (stressing that “a court
    must judge the reasonableness of the force used from the perspective and with
    the knowledge of the defendant officer”). The dissents overlook the
    fundamental reason most of these facts should not be part of the analysis: we
    consider only what the officers knew at the time of their challenged conduct.
    “Facts an officer learns after the incident ends—whether those facts would
    support granting immunity or denying it—are not relevant.” Hernandez v.
    Mesa, 
    137 S. Ct. 2003
    , 2007 (2017) (per curiam); see also Brown v. Callahan,
    
    623 F.3d 249
    , 253 (“An official’s actions must be judged in light of the
    circumstances that confronted him, without the benefit of hindsight.” (citing
    Graham v. Connor, 
    490 U.S. 386
    , 396–97 (1989))). Despite the many “red flags”
    listed by the dissents as known to others, only those known to Hunter and
    Cassidy are relevant to the qualified immunity analysis.
    Judge Jones’s dissent fares no better in addressing some of the key facts
    of the shooting itself. Contrary to its assertion, the district court found that
    Ryan was facing at a 90-degree angle away from the officers when he was first
    shot. 
    Cole, 68 F. Supp. 3d at 644
    . As for the “warning,” the district court found
    that a reasonable jury could conclude that Ryan “was not given an opportunity
    to disarm himself before he was shot.” 
    Id. Relitigating the
    district court’s
    assessment of factual disputes is not our role on interlocutory review.
    What Hunter and Cassidy knew before shooting at Ryan, whether they
    warned him before doing so, and what actions Ryan took before being shot are
    all disputed. The district court must afford Cassidy and Hunter qualified
    immunity at the earliest point the defense’s applicability is determinable.
    Here, we have not yet reached that point. It will be for a jury to resolve what
    21
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    happened on October 25, 2010. The district court did not err in denying the
    officers qualified immunity at the summary judgment stage.
    III
    The district court determined that genuine disputes of fact regarding
    Cassidy’s and Hunter’s entitlement to qualified immunity remain. We
    AFFIRM the district court’s denial of summary judgment on the Coles’
    excessive-force claim and DISMISS Cassidy and Hunter’s appeal; AFFIRM
    denial of the motion to dismiss the Coles’ Fourteenth Amendment false-
    charges claim; REVERSE denial of the motion to dismiss the Coles’ Fourth
    Amendment and Brady fabrication-of-evidence claims; and return the case to
    the district court for trial and resolution of issues consistent with this opinion.
    22
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    No. 14-10228 c/w No. 15-10045
    JENNIFER WALKER ELROD, Circuit Judge, joined by CARL E. STEWART,
    Chief Judge, and EDITH BROWN CLEMENT, CATHARINA HAYNES,
    STEPHEN A. HIGGINSON, GREGG COSTA, and KURT D. ENGELHARDT,
    Circuit Judges, concurring:
    I concur fully in the majority opinion.       Despite the outcry of the
    dissenting opinions, there is no new law being made or old law being ignored.
    The majority opinion takes no position on the public policy issues of the day
    regarding policing and the mentally ill. Rather, it follows the longstanding en
    banc rule that “we lack jurisdiction to review the genuineness of a fact issue”
    on an interlocutory appeal of a denial of summary judgment based on qualified
    immunity. Melton v. Phillips, 
    875 F.3d 256
    , 261 (5th Cir. 2017) (en banc)
    (quoting Allen v. Cisneros, 
    815 F.3d 239
    , 244 (5th Cir. 2016)); Kinney v. Weaver,
    
    367 F.3d 337
    , 341, 346–47 (5th Cir. 2004) (en banc). As the able district court
    determined, the facts are very much in dispute.
    23
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    No. 14-10228 c/w No. 15-10045
    EDITH H. JONES, Circuit Judge, joined by SMITH, OWEN, HO, DUNCAN
    and OLDHAM, Circuit Judges, dissenting:
    What “clearly established law” says that only a rogue cop would have
    shot at this mentally disturbed teenager within 3 to 5 seconds as the teen
    emerged from dense bushes ten to twenty feet away from Officer Hunter and,
    with his finger on the trigger of a loaded pistol pointed in the direction of his
    own head, began turning in the officer’s direction? The majority state this is
    an “obvious case” for the denial of qualified immunity: the officers could not
    shoot without first announcing themselves to Cole or looking down the barrel
    of his gun.   What is so obvious?     Contrary to the majority’s dangerously
    unrealistic proposition, “action beats reaction” every time. Ontiveros v. City of
    Rosenberg, 
    564 F.3d 379
    , 384 (5th Cir. 2009). Neither we nor the Supreme
    Court has ever held that police officers confronted in close quarters with a
    suspect armed and ready to shoot must hope they are faster on the draw and
    more accurate. The increasingly risky profession of law enforcement cannot
    put those sworn to “serve and protect” to a Hobson’s choice: place their lives on
    the line by heroic forbearance or risk their financial security in defense of
    lawsuits. The Supreme Court has repeatedly stated in plain terms that the
    purpose of qualified immunity is to prevent precisely this quandary.
    Respectfully dissenting, we are convinced that the Supreme Court’s
    remand from the original panel opinion denying immunity meant something;
    the governing Supreme Court law is foursquare in the corner of
    24
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    Officers Hunter and Cassidy; and they were entitled to receive summary
    judgment confirming their immunity from suit, not simply from liability. 1
    I. Background
    A. Undisputed facts
    The majority opinion paints a picture of the relevant facts that has
    evolved considerably from the first and second panel opinions to this final
    majority version. Compare Cole v. Carson, 
    802 F.3d 752
    , 755-56, 758 (5th Cir.
    2015), vacated sub nom. Hunter v. Cole, 
    137 S. Ct. 497
    (Cole I), with Cole v.
    Carson, 
    905 F.3d 334
    , 337-340 (5th Cir. 2018) (Cole II), 
    and supra
    . Qualified
    immunity for the use of deadly force is assessed at the moment a law
    enforcement officer confronts a suspect, Graham v. Connor, 
    490 U.S. 386
    , 397,
    
    109 S. Ct. 1865
    , 1872 (1989), but the officer’s understanding of facts leading up
    to the event color the question whether “a reasonable officer” could have
    believed his life or the lives of others were endangered.                  White v. Pauly,
    
    137 S. Ct. 548
    , 550, 552 (2017). To the majority’s picture, it is necessary to add
    undisputed facts recited in the prior opinions and undisputed evidence from
    plaintiffs’ experts. Hornbook summary judgment law holds that although
    disputed facts are viewed in the light most favorable to non-movants, the entire
    record must be considered. Scott v. Harris, 
    550 U.S. 372
    , 380, 
    127 S. Ct. 1769
    ,
    1776 (2007). Further, this court reviews de novo the materiality of the relevant
    facts. Foley v. Univ. of Houston, Sys., 
    355 F.3d 333
    , 337 (5th Cir. 2003).
    1 We do not challenge the majority’s decision to leave in place fabricated evidence
    charges against these two officers and Officer Carson. Only Carson, who was present at the
    encounter but did not shoot, appealed the district court’s refusal to dismiss that claim. The
    Supreme Court has not been clear on the constitutional basis for such a claim, so we have no
    ground to criticize the majority. Compare Manuel v. City of Joliet, 
    137 S. Ct. 911
    (2017), with
    McDonough v. Smith, 
    139 S. Ct. 2149
    (2019), (refusing to rule on the constitutional grounding
    of such claims).
    25
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    First, both officers who shot at Cole were aware that he had mental
    issues. Officer Cassidy had learned that Cole “had threatened to shoot anyone
    who tried to take his gun and had refused an order to drop his weapon.” Cole
    
    II, 905 F.3d at 338
    . Officer Hunter watched Cole walk steadily down the train
    tracks ignoring other police who were yelling at him to stop and put down his
    9 mm semi-automatic pistol. Both officers were aware that a bulletin had been
    disseminated about Cole to all law enforcement in Garland and Sachse, and
    three nearby schools in the vicinity of Highway 78, where Cole was heading,
    were being protected. Cole 
    II, 905 F.3d at 337-38
    .
    Second, Cole emerged from the vegetation, unaware of the officers’
    presence, within ten to twenty feet of Officer Hunter, and as he turned toward
    the officers, three to five seconds elapsed. That’s less time than it takes to read
    the preceding sentence. Cole initially stood at a 90 degree angle to the police
    and then began turning counterclockwise toward them. His movement is
    conceded by plaintiffs’ expert, supported by the ballistic evidence, and
    recounted in the district court opinion. Cole 
    II, 905 F.3d at 338
    (“Cole began
    to turn counterclockwise.”).      Plaintiff’s expert opines this interval was
    sufficient for the officers to command Cole to disarm and observe his reaction.
    Third, his loaded pistol was pointed within thirty inches toward his head,
    Cole 
    I, 802 F.3d at 756
    , and Cole’s finger was on the trigger.
    Next, the officers fired seven shots, two of which hit Cole.
    Officer Hunter’s first shot hit Cole in the left arm, penetrating his body from
    the left.   Another of Hunter’s shots merely grazed Cole’s left arm as he
    continued to turn and was facing Hunter. Cole 
    II, 905 F.3d at 339
    . Cole’s gun,
    according to the plaintiffs, involuntarily discharged and hit him in the head,
    “leaving stippling—gunpowder residue around the wound due to the gun being
    fired from less than thirty inches away.” Cole 
    I, 802 F.3d at 756
    .
    26
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    Finally, the bodycam evidence shows that some officer began to issue a
    warning at about the time the shooting started. Cole 
    II, 905 F.3d at 338
    .
    B. Prior panel reasoning
    The district court denied qualified immunity to Hunter and Cassidy for
    the shooting 2 and refused to dismiss the allegations of falsified evidence
    against Hunter, Cassidy, and Carson.
    The original panel opinion affirmed, 3 concluding as to the excessive force
    allegation that “if the Coles’ version of the evidence is believed, it was not
    objectively reasonable to use deadly force against Ryan Cole when the teenager
    emerged on foot from the wooded area with a gun to his own head and turned
    left.”       With regard to immunity, the panel held that by October 2010,
    “reasonable officers were on notice that they could not lawfully use deadly force
    to stop a fleeing person who did not pose a severe and immediate risk to the
    officers or others, and they had many examples of the sorts of threatening
    actions which could justify deadly force. Turning left while unaware of an
    officer’s presence is not among them.” Cole 
    I, 802 F.3d at 762
    (emphasis added)
    (footnote omitted). The panel’s principal support for its legal reasoning was
    Luna v. Mullenix, 
    773 F.3d 712
    (5th Cir. 2014), rev’d sub nom. Mullenix v.
    Luna, 
    136 S. Ct. 305
    (2015). According to the panel, “the central [disputed]
    issue” is “whether Ryan pointed his gun at Officer Hunter.” Cole I, 802 F.3d
    Query why Officer Cassidy, whose shots didn’t hit the victim, can be sued? This
    2
    court has held that qualified immunity must be applied individually to each defendant.
    Meadours v. Ermel, 
    483 F.3d 417
    , 421-22 (5th Cir. 2007). But no one raised the point here.
    The correct disposition if this court agrees there are material fact issues in dispute
    3
    regarding qualified immunity would be to dismiss the appeal, because our appellate
    jurisdiction exists only over questions of law. Mitchell v. Forsyth, 
    472 U.S. 511
    , 529-30,
    
    105 S. Ct. 2806
    , 2816-17 (1985).
    27
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    at 762.    Absent such a threatening gesture, Cole was said to present no
    sufficient threat. 
    Id. The next
    panel opinion was formulated after the Supreme Court
    reversed us in Mullenix on the grounds that “none of our [the Supreme Court’s
    own] precedents ‘squarely governs’ the facts here.                  Given [the suspect’s]
    conduct, we cannot say that only someone ‘plainly incompetent’ or who
    ‘knowingly violate[s] the law’ would have perceived a sufficient threat and
    acted as [the officer] 
    did.” 136 S. Ct. at 310
    . On this second go-round, the panel
    conceded the deficiency of the “no sufficient threat” rule, but then concluded
    that, taken in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs, Cole’s conduct posed
    “no threat” when he was shot, Cole 
    II, 905 F.3d at 343
    , and the officers
    therefore violated a clearly established “no threat” rule. Tennessee v. Garner
    is cited as the basis for this “bright line” rule. 4 
    471 U.S. 1
    , 
    105 S. Ct. 1694
    (1985). This opinion was vacated by a vote to reconsider the case en banc.
    C. The Current Majority Opinion
    Pivoting yet again, the en banc majority opinion commences with a
    paean to “the worker’s . . . right to the protection of a jury,” not even bothering
    to cite Supreme Court authorities that explain why qualified immunity is
    immunity from suit, not just liability. The majority opinion omits or ignores
    material undisputed facts recited above—the knowledge of the officers, Cole’s
    turning toward them, the significance of his finger in a loaded pistol, and the
    4The panel curiously described so-called clearly established law in both of its opinions
    with references to unpublished, non-precedential Fifth Circuit cases. The Supreme Court
    has expressed uncertainty over whether any circuit court cases, as opposed to its own
    decisions, may set out “clearly established law.” See Dist. of Columbia v. Wesby, 
    138 S. Ct. 577
    , 591 n. 8 (2018); Carroll v. Carman, 
    135 S. Ct. 348
    , 350 (2014); Reichle v. Howards,
    
    566 U.S. 658
    , 665-66, 
    132 S. Ct. 2088
    , 2094 (2012). It is incredible that this court would cite
    our avowedly non-precedential decisions for that purpose.
    28
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    three to five second interval—and hides behind the assertion that, relevant to
    qualified immunity, there are “genuine factual disputes as to Ryan’s and the
    officers’ conduct” such that a reasonable jury could find that Cole posed no
    “immediate threat” to the officers or others. Two paragraphs later, asserting
    that Cole posed “no threat . . . to support firing without warning,” the majority
    deem this an “obvious case” for denial of immunity, because the “officers had
    time and opportunity to give a warning and yet chose to shoot first instead.”
    The “obvious case” rationale again derives, in the majority’s view, from Garner,
    fortified only by one Fifth Circuit case and the Supreme Court’s decision in
    Kisela v Hughes. 5
    DISCUSSION
    The only legal question that needs to be addressed by this court is
    whether, under the circumstances of this five-second confrontation, every
    reasonable police officer would have reasonably perceived no life-threatening
    danger such that deadly force could be used to incapacitate Cole without a
    preliminary warning.         Put otherwise, as a matter of law, was it clearly
    established that officers may not fire on a suspect, armed and ready to shoot a
    pistol, who is turning in their direction with one of their brethren ten to twenty
    feet away, unless the gun barrel points at them or they first shout a warning
    and await his response?
    The majority deny qualified immunity, seeming to answer on the basis
    of “disputed fact issues” that Cole posed “no threat.” The majority’s reasoning
    5 This dissent focuses on the majority opinion because Appellees’ briefing offered
    nothing in addition to the meager authorities cited by the majority to support their “clearly
    established law” theory.
    29
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    is at too high a level of generality. And the majority ignore the critical criterion
    for qualified immunity in Fourth Amendment cases: the reasonableness of the
    officers’ reasonable perceptions. In sum, the majority here double down on the
    mistakes that got our court reversed in Mullenix. 6
    Before discussing these problems in detail, it is necessary to recapitulate
    the reasoning behind the Supreme Court’s qualified immunity cases. The
    majority’s bare mention of the standards for qualified immunity ignores the
    Court’s rationale for the defense. Beginning with Monroe v. Pape in 1961, the
    Supreme Court unleashed federal courts to enforce constitutional commands
    against state actors pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983.                  See Monroe v. Pape,
    
    365 U.S. 167
    , 187, 
    81 S. Ct. 473
    , 484 (1961). A foreseeable consequence of
    facilitating such lawsuits was that a deluge of litigation would follow, at least
    some of it ill-founded or frivolous. What was to be done to limit claims to those
    that might have merit? The Court decided in Pierson v. Ray that police officers
    sued under Section 1983 should enjoy qualified immunity accorded at common
    law. 
    386 U.S. 547
    , 556-57, 
    87 S. Ct. 1213
    , 1219 (1967).
    For over fifty years, the Court has developed the standards of qualified
    immunity, well aware from the beginning that “the local police officer” is “that
    segment of the executive branch . . . that is most frequently and intimately
    involved in day-to-day contacts with the citizenry, and hence, most frequently
    exposed to situations which can give rise to claims under Sec. 1983 . . . .”
    Scheuer v. Rhodes, 
    416 U.S. 232
    , 244-45, 
    94 S. Ct. 1683
    , 1691-92 (1974). The
    6 In Mullenix, the Supreme Court reversed this court and held an officer entitled as a
    matter of law to qualified immunity when he shot, and killed, a suspect fleeing from the police
    in his car at high speed. Following Mullenix, the Supreme Court vacated the judgment and
    remanded Cole I, no doubt in part because Cole I heavily relied on the reversed panel decision
    in Mullenix.
    30
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    No. 14-10228 c/w No. 15-10045
    breadth of this shield represents a deliberate balance between affording a
    damages remedy for constitutional abuses and the social and personal costs
    inflicted by meritless claims.      Anderson v. Creighton, 
    483 U.S. 635
    , 638,
    
    107 S. Ct. 3034
    , 3038 (1987). The costs to society include the costs of litigation,
    the diversion of limited public resources, the deterrence of able people from
    going into public service, and the danger that fear of being sued will discourage
    officials from vigorously performing their jobs.       Id.; Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
    
    457 U.S. 800
    , 814, 
    102 S. Ct. 2727
    , 2736 (1982). The devastating costs imposed
    by unfounded lawsuits on officers otherwise entitled to immunity are
    reputational, potentially employment-related, financial and emotional. For
    these reasons, the Court has repeatedly explained that qualified immunity
    shields public officials not just from liability but from suit. See Mitchell v.
    Forsyth, 
    472 U.S. 511
    , 526, 
    105 S. Ct. 2806
    , 2815 (1985); Pearson v. Callahan,
    
    555 U.S. 223
    , 231, 
    129 S. Ct. 808
    , 815 (2009) (“Qualified immunity is lost if a
    case is erroneously permitted to go to trial.”). Some in the lower federal courts
    may disapprove of the Court’s half century of authorities, but we may not
    functionally disregard them.
    Nearly as venerable as the general defense of qualified immunity are the
    decisions applying it to Fourth Amendment claims against law enforcement
    officers. Anderson v. Creighton affirmed in 1987 that a law enforcement officer
    who participates in a warrantless search may be entitled to qualified immunity
    “if he could establish as a matter of law that a reasonable officer could have
    believed the search to be 
    lawful.” 483 U.S. at 638
    , 107 S. Ct. at 3038.
    Justice Scalia’s opinion reminded that “qualified immunity protects all but the
    plainly incompetent or those who knowingly violate the law.” 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted). In determining the objective legal reasonableness
    of the allegedly unlawful action, “[i]t should not be surprising . . . that our cases
    31
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    No. 14-10228 c/w No. 15-10045
    establish that the right the official is alleged to have violated must have been
    ‘clearly established’ in a more particularized, and hence more relevant, sense:
    The contours of the right must be sufficiently clear that a reasonable official
    would understand that what he is doing violates that right.”             
    Id. at 640,
    107 S. Ct. at 3039.
    Two years later, the Court clarified that for alleged Fourth Amendment
    excessive force violations, reasonableness “must be judged from the perspective
    of a reasonable officer on the scene, rather than with the 20/20 vision of
    hindsight.” 
    Graham, 490 U.S. at 396
    , 109 S. Ct. at 1872. The calculus of
    “reasonableness must embody allowance for the fact that police officers are
    often forced to make split-second judgments—in circumstances that are tense,
    uncertain, and rapidly evolving—about the amount of force that is necessary
    in a particular situation.” 
    Id. at 396-97,
    109 S. Ct. at 1872. Ultimately, “the
    question is whether the officers’ actions are ‘objectively reasonable’ in light of
    the facts and circumstances confronting them . . . .” 
    Id. at 397,
    109 S. Ct. at
    1872. Quoting these statements from Graham, the Court later explained that
    the test for qualified immunity for excessive force “has a further dimension” in
    addition   to   the    deferential,   on-the-scene   evaluation     of     objective
    reasonableness.     Saucier v. Katz, 
    533 U.S. 194
    , 205, 
    121 S. Ct. 2151
    , 2158
    (2001). Justice Kennedy explained: “The concern of the immunity inquiry is to
    acknowledge that reasonable mistakes can be made as to the legal constraints
    on particular police conduct.” 
    Id. “Qualified immunity
    operates in this case,
    then, just as it does in others, to protect officers from the sometimes hazy
    border between excessive and acceptable force and to ensure that before they
    are subjected to suit, officers are on notice their conduct is unlawful.” 
    Id. at 206,
    121 S. Ct. at 2158 (internal citation and quotation marks omitted).
    32
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    Evaluating the qualified immunity defense is thus a two-step process.
    The first is to determine whether the Fourth Amendment has been violated by
    conduct that, viewed from the officer’s perspective and information at the time,
    is objectively unreasonable. 7 The second step assesses the objective legal
    reasonableness of the action, that is, whether every reasonable officer would
    have known that the conduct in question was illegal. See 
    Pearson, 555 U.S. at 232
    , 129 S. Ct. at 815-16. The illegality must have been apparent, as held in
    cases that are factually similar to the situation confronting the officer. 
    White, 137 S. Ct. at 542
    . Immunity must be granted to all but the plainly incompetent
    or those who knowingly violate the law. The Supreme Court has enforced
    immunity where officers acted negligently, 
    Anderson, 483 U.S. at 641
    ,
    107 S. Ct. at 3039-40; or when they could have used another method to subdue
    a suspect, Mullenix, 136 S. Ct at 310; or when the law governing their behavior
    in particular circumstances is unclear. 
    White, 137 S. Ct. at 552
    . The Court
    emphasizes that the specificity of the applicable “clearly established” rule is
    especially important in Fourth Amendment cases. 
    Mullenix, 136 S. Ct. at 308
    .
    By denying plaintiffs their “day in court” at a preliminary stage,
    qualified immunity operates as a counterintuitive, albeit vital, defense. Thus,
    the Supreme Court has regularly reversed denials of qualified immunity where
    lower courts misapplied the standards. See Wesby v. District of Columbia,
    
    816 F.3d 96
    , 102 (D.C. Cir. 2016) (Kavanaugh, J., dissenting) (citing eleven
    Supreme Court cases in five years reversing lower courts in the qualified
    immunity context including Mullenix v. Luna, 
    136 S. Ct. 305
    (2015), Taylor v.
    7 For present purposes, we “address only the qualified immunity question, not whether
    there was a Fourth Amendment violation in the first place.” 
    Mullenix, 136 S. Ct. at 308
    ;
    
    Pearson, 555 U.S. at 236
    , 129 S. Ct. at 818 (constitutional violation or qualified immunity
    may be decided first).
    33
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    Barkes, 
    135 S. Ct. 2042
    (2015); City and County of San Francisco, Calif. v.
    Sheehan, 
    135 S. Ct. 1765
    (2015); Carroll v. Carman, 
    574 U.S. 13
    , 
    135 S. Ct. 348
    (2014); Plumhoff v. Rickard, 
    572 U.S. 765
    , 
    134 S. Ct. 2012
    (2014); Wood v.
    Moss, 
    572 U.S. 744
    , 
    134 S. Ct. 2056
    (2014); Stanton v. Sims, 
    571 U.S. 3
    ,
    
    134 S. Ct. 3
    (2013); Reichle v. Howards, 
    566 U.S. 658
    , 
    132 S. Ct. 2088
    (2012);
    Ryburn v. Huff, 
    565 U.S. 469
    , 
    132 S. Ct. 987
    (2012); Messerschmidt v.
    Millender, 
    565 U.S. 535
    , 
    132 S. Ct. 1235
    (2012); Ashcroft v. al-Kidd, 
    563 U.S. 731
    , 
    131 S. Ct. 2074
    (2011)). Unfortunately, the majority here has fallen into
    the trap of “letting the jury sort out the truth” despite the gravity of the
    situation these officers faced.
    As explained above, it is undisputed that the two officers confronted and
    then shot at Cole as he emerged from dense bushes ten to twenty feet from
    Officer Hunter, unaware of their presence, and began to turn in their direction.
    This all happened within three to five seconds. While he turned, Cole held a
    loaded 9mm semiautomatic pistol, finger on the trigger, pointed in the
    direction of his own head. The officers knew he was mentally distraught, had
    ignored other police commands to disarm, had issued threats, and proceeded
    walking in the direction of nearby schools.
    For immunity purposes, the question phrased one way is whether any
    reasonable officers could have believed that Cole’s split-second turning toward
    them posed a life-threatening danger such that lethal force was necessary.
    Alternatively, what “clearly established law” held as of October 2010 that
    under all of the relevant circumstances, deadly force was not justified unless
    either a warning was given and the suspect allowed a chance to react, or the
    suspect actually turned his loaded pistol on the officer? The answer here
    directly parallels the Supreme Court’s reasoning in Mullenix, which the
    majority seriously shortchanged.
    34
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    In Mullenix, this court had denied qualified immunity to a trooper whose
    shot fatally wounded a suspect fleeing police in a high-speed chase.                   The
    Supreme Court’s basic criticism of the panel decision was this: “In this case,
    the Fifth Circuit held that Mullenix violated the clearly established rule that
    a police officer may not use deadly force against a fleeing felon who does not
    pose a sufficient threat of harm to the officer or others. Yet this Court has
    previously considered—and rejected—almost that exact formulation of the
    qualified immunity question in the Fourth Amendment context.” 
    Mullenix, 136 S. Ct. at 308
    -09 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
    The majority here posit as clearly established law, indeed an “obvious
    case,” that a police officer may not use deadly force—without prior warning—
    against an armed, distraught suspect who, with finger in the pistol’s trigger,
    posed “no threat” while turning toward an officer ten to twenty feet away. But
    in Mullenix, the Supreme Court reversed this court because “[t]he general
    principle that deadly force requires a sufficient threat hardly settles this
    matter.” 
    Id. at 309.
    Likewise, here, the majority’s “no threat” and “obvious
    case” conclusions do not settle the matter of clearly established law. 8
    That the majority here purport to extract clearly established law from
    Tennessee v. Garner was rebuked in Mullenix. The Supreme Court corrected
    this court by summary reversal because the Court itself had summarily
    rejected applying the general standard of Tennessee v. Garner to deny qualified
    immunity. 
    Mullenix, 136 S. Ct. at 309
    (citing Brosseau v. Haugen, 
    543 U.S. 194
    , 199, 
    125 S. Ct. 596
    , 599 (2004)).           Instead, the “correct inquiry” was
    8  Worse, it treats as a disputed fact issue for immunity purposes what is clearly an
    issue of law. See Wyatt v. Fletcher, 
    718 F.3d 496
    , 502-03 (5th Cir. 2013).
    35
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    whether it was clearly established that the Fourth Amendment prohibited the
    officer’s conduct in the precise situation she confronted.                   
    Id. Including Mullenix
    and Brosseau, a series of Supreme Court cases has held that
    Tennessee v. Garner does not state “clearly established law” governing the use
    of deadly force other than in Garner’s precise factual context, the shooting of
    an unarmed burglary suspect fleeing away from an officer. 9 The confrontation
    in this case with an armed, ready-to-fire suspect is “obviously” different.
    We fail to understand how the denial of qualified immunity to Officers
    Hunter and Cassidy can be rescued simply by intoning that this is an “obvious
    case” under Garner. Garner affirmed the constitutionality of deadly force
    against suspects when necessary to protect the life of officers or others “if,
    where feasible, some warning has been 
    given.” 471 U.S. at 11-12
    , 105 S. Ct. at
    1701. 10 But Garner in no way renders “clearly established” a requirement to
    give a warning, and await the suspect’s response, before shooting. Nor does it
    mandate that the suspect’s weapon be trained on the officer or others. Like
    the rest of the calculus surrounding Fourth Amendment reasonableness, the
    “feasibility” of any such potentially deadly delay or factual nuance must be
    subjected to case-specific balancing with deference paid to the officer’s
    reasonable perceptions in the midst of a tense situation. 
    Graham, 490 U.S. at 396
    , 109 S. Ct. at 1872. Indeed, in describing its holding at the outset, Garner
    states only that “[deadly] force may not be used unless it is necessary to
    prevent the escape [of an apparently unarmed suspected felon] and the officer
    9   Kisela v. Hughes, 
    138 S. Ct. 1148
    , 1153 (2018); 
    White, 137 S. Ct. at 552
    .
    10  Turning on distinctly different facts, Garner alone does not establish pertinent
    clearly established law here, and the majority does not contend as much.
    36
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    has probable cause to believe that the suspect poses a significant threat of
    death or serious physical injury to the officer or 
    others.” 471 U.S. at 3
    ,
    105 S. Ct. at 1697. 11 No mention of a warning appears in this introduction,
    and “probable cause,” not a fact-specific test, is the measure of the threat of
    harm.
    Characterizing this case as a “no threat” or “obvious” Fourth Amendment
    violation is wrong for additional reasons.             Whether, under the material
    undisputed facts, Cole presented “no threat” to a reasonable police officer is
    the relevant issue to assess a Fourth Amendment violation. But the immunity
    question, which the majority elides, is whether every reasonable officer in this
    factual context would have known he could not use deadly force. See 
    Pearson, 555 U.S. at 232
    , 129 S. Ct. at 815-816. The majority’s analysis conflates these
    inquiries. Second, the importance of grounding the inquiry in a specific factual
    context cannot be overstated. In this case, if Officer Hunter had stood a
    hundred feet away from Cole, or Cole had not been turning toward the officers,
    or Cole had put the handgun in his pocket and wasn’t touching it, the analysis
    of qualified immunity could be quite different. Third, describing a situation as
    posing “no threat” is a conclusion, not an explanation or, as the majority seems
    to think, an exception to defining clearly established law in a specific context.
    No doubt there are rare “obvious” cases of Fourth Amendment violations
    11 The majority cites Colston v. Barnhart, 
    130 F.3d 96
    , 100 (5th Cir. 1997), for the
    necessity of giving a warning “where feasible” before the use of deadly force. Oddly, Colston
    then immediately holds that the officer there “lying on his back with Colston nearby, had to
    immediately decide whether to shoot. In light of the totality of the circumstances facing
    Barnhart, Barnhart’s failure to give a warning was not objectively unreasonable.” 
    Id. The feasibility
    of a warning is part of the overall Fourth Amendment analysis, not an independent
    sine qua non of official conduct.
    37
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    committed by officers who are plainly incompetent or who knowingly violate
    the law. In the wide gap between acceptable and excessive uses of force,
    however, immunity serves its important purpose of encouraging officers to
    enforce the law, in “tense, uncertain and rapidly evolving” split-second
    situations, rather than stand down and jeopardize community safety. 12
    In their sole, erroneous dependence on Garner, the majority, “can cite no
    case from [the Supreme] Court denying qualified immunity because officers
    [entitled to apprehend Cole] selected one dangerous alternative over another.”
    
    Mullenix, 136 S. Ct. at 310
    . The Mullenix Court showed that if anything,
    “clearly established law” was contrary to the plaintiff’s position. The Court
    cited two prior Supreme Court car chase cases that resulted in immunity even
    though the fugitives—unlike the suspect in Mullenix—had not verbally
    threatened to kill any officers in their path. 
    Id. at 310
    (citing 
    Scott, 550 U.S. at 384
    , 127 S. Ct. at 1778; 
    Plumhoff, 572 U.S. at 777
    , 134 S. Ct at 2022). And
    in Mullenix itself, as here, the trooper had not warned the fugitive before
    shooting at his speeding car. These cases “reveal[ed] the hazy legal backdrop
    against which Mullenix acted,” 
    Id. at 309.
    Accordingly, the Court admonished,
    “[w]hatever can be said of the wisdom of Mullenix’s choice, this Court’s
    precedents do not place the conclusion that he acted unreasonably in these
    circumstances beyond debate.” 
    Id. at 311
    (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Not only do the majority cite “no case” in which the Supreme Court
    denied qualified immunity to an officer who used deadly force against a
    12Compare 
    Wesby, 138 S. Ct. at 590
    (“Of course, there can be the rare obvious case,
    where the unlawfulness of the officer’s conduct is sufficiently clear even though existing
    precedent does not address similar circumstances. But a body of relevant case law is usually
    necessary to clearly establish the answer with respect to probable cause.”) (internal citation
    and quotation marks omitted).
    38
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    mentally distraught individual in circumstances like the present case, but to
    the contrary, the Court required qualified immunity in two somewhat similar
    cases. In Sheehan, officers used deadly force to subdue a mentally ill woman
    during an armed confrontation.         The Court restated that the Fourth
    Amendment is not violated even if police officers, with the benefit of hindsight,
    may have made some mistakes, because “[t]he Constitution is not blind to ‘the
    fact that police officers are often forced to make split-second judgments.’”
    
    Sheehan, 135 S. Ct. at 1775
    (quoting 
    Plumhoff, 572 U.S. at 775
    , 134 S. Ct. at
    2020).
    Even closer to this case is White v. Pauly, where an officer arriving at the
    scene of an armed confrontation shot and killed a suspect without knowing
    whether his earlier-arrived colleagues had identified themselves as 
    police. 137 S. Ct. at 550-51
    .    In White, the Court chastised the lower court for
    “misunderst[anding]” the “clearly established” analysis by relying on the
    generalized pronouncements in Graham and Garner. 
    Id. at 552.
    Whether
    Officer White should have second-guessed the preceding conduct of fellow
    officers hardly presented an “obvious case” pursuant to Garner. The Court
    speculated that perhaps, given the three-minute delay between when he
    arrived and when shots rang out, Officer White “should have realized that [a
    warning about police presence] was necessary before using deadly force.” 
    Id. There is
    a world of difference between three minutes and three seconds, which
    Officer Hunter had here, and between Officer White’s securing himself behind
    a stone wall fifty feet from the suspect and Officer Hunter’s standing fully
    exposed only ten to twenty feet away from Cole. The majority cannot reconcile
    the Supreme Court’s insistence upon qualified immunity in White with their
    denial of the defense to Officers Hunter and Cassidy.
    39
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    Kisela v. Hughes, cited in support of the majority, in no way articulates
    clearly established law concerning the necessity of a warning. First, the Court
    in Kisela overturned the Ninth Circuit’s denial of qualified immunity without
    addressing the preliminary Fourth Amendment 
    violation. 138 S. Ct. at 1152
    .
    A decision holding only that there was no “clearly established law” cannot itself
    have defined “clearly established law.” The Court also criticized the Ninth
    Circuit for failing to implement correctly the rule that an officer has not
    “violated a clearly established right unless the right’s contours were
    sufficiently definite that any reasonable official in the defendant’s shoes would
    have understood that he was violating it.” 
    Id. at 1153
    (internal quotation
    marks omitted). The Court catalogued all the relevant circumstances of the
    confrontation that provoked the shooting: a knife-armed, threatening suspect,
    whose bizarre behavior had been called in to 911, disobeyed officers’ commands
    to disarm for up to one minute before they felt compelled to shoot. 
    Id. The Court
    concluded, “[t]his is far from an obvious case in which any competent
    officer would have known that shooting Hughes to protect [the third party]
    would violate the Fourth Amendment.” 
    Id. Also “far
    from obvious” is the case
    before us, in which the officers had five seconds, not a whole minute, in which
    to decide whether to shoot at Cole.
    Finally, the Supreme Court’s decision in Tolan v. Cotton adds nothing to
    the substance of the qualified immunity discussion.         In Tolan, the Court
    enumerated four critical, disputed evidentiary contentions relating to the
    officer’s perception of danger to himself and thus to qualified immunity.
    
    572 U.S. 650
    , 657-59, 
    134 S. Ct. 1861
    , 1866-67 (2014). Because this court had
    failed to credit the plaintiff’s disputed version of these facts, the Court vacated
    summary judgment for the officer and remanded without deciding any merits
    40
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    issue. 
    Id. at 657,
    134 S. Ct. at 1866. In contrast, this dissent credits only
    undisputed material facts and plaintiffs’ version of disputable facts.
    Like this court’s panel in Mullenix, the majority here offer no controlling
    Supreme Court precedent, including Garner, to support that “clearly
    established law” mandated that the officers hold their fire until they had both
    warned Cole and given him a chance to drop his gun or until he pointed the
    loaded weapon directly at them.
    For good measure, the Mullenix Court also considered the potential
    similarity of lower court decisions that dealt with qualified 
    immunity. 136 S. Ct. at 311
    . Fifth Circuit case law, the Court noted, did not “clearly
    dictate the conclusion that Mullenix was unjustified in perceiving grave danger
    and responding accordingly.” 
    Id. at 311
    (citing Lytle v. Bexar County, 
    560 F.3d 404
    , 412 (5th Cir. 2009)). But the Court quoted with approval an Eleventh
    Circuit case that granted immunity to a sheriff’s deputy who fatally shot a
    mentally unstable individual “who was attempting to flee in the deputy’s car,
    even though at the time of the shooting the individual had not yet operated the
    cruiser dangerously. The court explained that ‘the law does not require officers
    in a tense and dangerous situation to wait until the moment a suspect uses a
    deadly weapon to act to stop the suspect…’” 
    Id. at 311
    (quoting Long v. Slaton,
    
    508 F.3d 576
    , 581-82 (11th Cir. 2007)).            Here, too, the thrust of Mullenix
    contradicts the majority’s logic and holding.
    Moreover, to the extent it is relevant 13, Fifth Circuit law does not support
    denying qualified immunity to Officers Hunter and Cassidy. The district court
    13   See fn. 
    4, supra
    .
    41
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    and, inferentially, the majority demand that qualified immunity be granted
    only if the suspect either disobeys immediate commands to disarm or points
    his weapon at the officers.           The district court described such threatening
    actions as a Manis act. 14 It is true that in previous deadly force cases, this
    court approved qualified immunity for officers who reasonably believed that a
    non-compliant suspect was reaching toward where he could retrieve a weapon.
    See 
    Manis, 585 F.3d at 842
    ; see also Reese v. Anderson, 
    926 F.2d 494
    , 500-01
    (5th Cir. 1991); Young v. City of Killeen, Tx., 
    775 F.2d 1349
    , 1352 (5th Cir.
    1985). The hitch in these particular cases is that there wasn’t actually a
    weapon, yet the officer’s objectively reasonable perception was determinative
    as a matter of law. In another such officer shooting case, this court upheld
    qualified immunity where the suspect, who was being interrogated for drunk
    driving at the side of a freeway, turned to walk away from the officer, then
    appeared to turn around toward him while reaching under his shirttail for
    what the officer thought could be a concealed weapon. Salazar-Limon v. City
    of Houston, 
    826 F.3d 272
    , 278 (5th Cir. 2016).                     This court added,
    “[f]urthermore, …in the context of this case, it is immaterial whether Salazar
    turned left, right, or at all before being shot. Specifically, we have never
    required officers to wait until a defendant turns toward them, with weapon in
    hand, before applying deadly force to ensure their 
    safety.” 826 F.3d at 279
    n.
    6.
    While a “Manis act” can sustain qualified immunity even where no
    weapon is visible, it is not logical for an additional “act” to be mandated where
    the officers confront a suspect armed, ready to shoot his pistol, and turning
    toward them. An officer may be forced into shooting an unarmed suspect by a
    14   Manis v. Lawson, 
    585 F.3d 839
    (5th Cir. 2009).
    42
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    Manis act, and thus obtain qualified immunity.          But it is perverse and
    inconsistent with Fifth Circuit law to hold that the officer has no qualified
    immunity because she is constitutionally forbidden to shoot an armed suspect
    in close quarters without either looking down the barrel of the weapon or
    awaiting his response to her command.
    In fact, that is exactly what this court has not held. In Ramirez v.
    Knoulton, 
    542 F.3d 124
    , 127 (5th Cir. 2008), police shot a suspect they believed
    to be suicidal as he stood in profile to them, with a handgun in his right hand,
    and brought his hands together in front of his waist.” He “never raised his
    weapon nor aimed it at the officers.” 
    Id. at 129.
    The court held that based on
    the officers’ reasonable perception, no Fourth Amendment violation occurred,
    because the Constitution “does not require police officers to wait until a suspect
    shoots to confirm that a serious threat of harm exists.” 
    Id. at 130.
    See also
    
    Colston, 130 F.3d at 100
    ; 
    Ontiveros, 564 F.3d at 385
    (holding no constitutional
    violation where officer thought suspect was reaching into his boot for a weapon
    during confrontation in a mobile home). As the Supreme Court put it in
    Mullenix, “the mere fact that courts have approved deadly force in more
    extreme circumstances says little, if anything, about whether such force was
    reasonable in the circumstances 
    here.” 136 S. Ct. at 312
    .
    The majority describe only one Fifth Circuit police shooting case, out of
    dozens this court has decided, as an “obvious case.” Baker v. Putnal, 
    75 F.3d 190
    (5th Cir. 1996). Whether that characterization applies to the claimed
    Fourth Amendment violation in Baker, to qualified immunity analysis, or
    simply to this court’s decision to remand for trial is unclear in the majority
    opinion. Baker, however, says nothing about the merits of the case or about
    clearly established law, holding instead that “[t]here are simply too many
    factual issues to permit the Bakers’ § 1983 claims to be disposed of on summary
    43
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    judgment.” 
    Baker, 75 F.3d at 198
    . Hence, like Kisela, Baker cannot support
    any rule of clearly established law, much less explain what law is “obvious.”
    Significantly, in Baker, whether the suspect was holding a gun visible to the
    officer was an important hotly contested issue, with eyewitnesses contradicting
    the officer’s account of the incident. 
    Baker, 75 F.3d at 198
    . Cole’s case, in
    contrast, does not involve a “chaos on the beach” incident. The undisputed
    facts are starkly different here. It is undisputed, at a minimum, that Cole was
    holding a loaded weapon, his finger in the trigger, as he emerged from the
    woods; he was turning toward the officers; and they had five seconds to react.
    Baker does not show that the officers’ conduct in Cole violated clearly
    established law.
    To sum up, the majority opinion here repeats every error identified by
    the Supreme Court when it granted summary reversal in Mullenix and sent
    the instant case back for reconsideration. The majority’s “clearly established”
    rule has changed, but not its errors. Tennessee v. Garner does not formulate
    “clearly established law” with the degree of specificity required by the Supreme
    Court’s decisions on qualified immunity.      The majority’s “no threat” and
    “obvious case” statements pose the issues here at an excessive level of
    generality. The majority has no Supreme Court case law demonstrating that
    Officers Hunter and Cassidy were either plainly incompetent or had to know
    that shooting at Cole was unconstitutional under the circumstances before
    them and with the knowledge they possessed—he was mentally distraught; he
    was armed with his finger in the pistol’s trigger; he was very close to Hunter;
    he had been walking in the direction of schools for which extra police protection
    had been ordered; and he had ignored other officers’ commands to stop and
    drop his weapon. And they had three to five seconds to decide how dangerous
    he could be to them. The majority cites not one case from this court denying
    44
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    qualified immunity under similar circumstances. Mullenix aptly summed it
    up for our purposes: “qualified immunity protects actions in the hazy border
    between excessive and acceptable 
    force.” 136 S. Ct. at 312
    (internal quotation
    marks omitted). “[T]he constitutional rule applied by the Fifth Circuit was not
    ‘beyond debate.’” 
    Id. It is
    not “clearly established” that police officers confronting armed,
    mentally disturbed suspects in close quarters must invariably stand down
    until they have issued a warning and awaited the suspects’ reaction or are
    facing the barrel of a gun. “This was not a belief in possible harm, but a belief
    in certain harm. The fact that they would later discover this to be a mistaken
    belief does not alter the fact that it was objectively reasonable for them to
    believe in the certainty of that risk at that time.” Carnaby v. City of Houston,
    
    636 F.3d 183
    , 188 n.4 (5th Cir. 2011). That is the law in the Fifth Circuit, and
    the majority has pointed to no clearly established law otherwise. Shooting at
    Cole may not have been the wisest choice under these pressing circumstances,
    but the officers’ decision, even if assailable, was at most negligent. Hunter and
    Cassidy were neither plainly incompetent nor themselves lawbreakers. While
    we are confident a jury will vindicate their actions, they deserved qualified
    immunity as a matter of law. We dissent.
    45
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    No. 14-10228 c/w No. 15-10045
    JERRY E. SMITH, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    This is a “red flag” case if ever there was one. The en banc majority
    commits grave error, as carefully explained in the dissents by Judge Jones,
    Judge Willett, Judges Ho and Oldham (jointly), and Judge Duncan. Yet eleven
    judges join the majority.
    Abandon hope, all ye who enter Texas, Louisiana, or Mississippi as peace
    officers with only a few seconds to react to dangerous confrontations with
    threatening and well-armed potential killers. In light of today’s ruling and the
    raw count of judges, 1 there is little chance that, any time soon, the Fifth Circuit
    will confer the qualified-immunity protection that heretofore-settled Supreme
    Court and Fifth Circuit caselaw requires.
    Red flags abound. Judge Duncan cogently details the “rich vein of facts”
    describing this plaintiff’s undisputed actions in the hours leading up to the
    shooting. 2
    • Red flag: a 9mm semi-automatic handgun and ammunition.
    • Red flag: a double-barrel shotgun with shells.
    • Red flag: a .44 magnum revolver.
    • Red flag: a .38 revolver.
    • Red flag: a suspect who had broken into a gun safe and stolen
    an unknown quantity of weapons and ammunition.
    • Red flag: a police visit the night before to the suspect’s house
    because of a disturbance with his parents.
    1This en banc court consists of the sixteen active judges, plus two senior judges who
    were on the original panel. Of those sixteen active judges, nine join the majority opinion.
    2I especially refer the reader to Part I of Judge Duncan’s dissent, which sets forth the
    context and narrative of red-flag facts that easily justify qualified immunity. All three dis-
    sents persuasively explain the law of qualified immunity that the majority overlooks.
    46
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    • Red flag: a suspect with a dangerous knife at his parents’
    house.
    • Red flag: a suspect who had a wild look in his eye and was
    smoking K2.
    • Red flag: a suspect, distraught over breaking up with his girl-
    friend, moving toward the school where she was a student.
    • Red flag: a suspect near an elementary school.
    • Red flag: a suspect with personal issues including drug abuse.
    • Red flag: a suspect seen running through the woods with at
    least three weapons.
    • Red flag: a suspect irate and distraught.
    • Red flag: a suspect who said he would shoot anyone who came
    near him.
    • Red flag: a suspect armed with at least one handgun and pos-
    sibly three.
    • Red flag: a suspect who had refused police demands to drop his
    weapon.
    • Red flag: a suspect who deposited a cache of weapons and am-
    munition at a friend’s house after arguing with his parents.
    • Red flag: a suspect who yelled obscenities at an officer.
    • Red flag: a suspect who had threatened to kill his girlfriend
    and himself.
    • Red flag: a suspect whom the district court described as
    troubled.
    • Red flag: a suspect described in his complaint as suffering from
    obsessive compulsive disorder, treated with medications from
    numerous medical professionals, and having poor judgment and
    impaired impulse control.
    * * * * *
    Normally we expect police officers to recognize such red flags and to
    respond appropriately. Instead of protecting these officers from obvious dan-
    ger to themselves and the public, however, the en banc majority orders them
    47
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    to stand down. What is the hapless officer to do in the face of today’s decision?
    What indeed is the “clearly established law” that the majority now announces?
    The judges in the majority do not say.
    The law of qualified immunity was poignantly summarized in 2019 by a
    dissenting judge who is now in the majority. Today’s en banc ruling turns
    those words to dust. 3
    I respectfully dissent.
    3 Winzer v. Kaufman Cty., 
    916 F.3d 464
    , 482 (5th Cir. 2019) (Clement, J., dissenting),
    petition for rehearing en banc pending:
    The implications of the majority’s mistakes cannot be minimized.
    The majority decides that qualified immunity can be endangered by an
    affidavit filed at summary judgment that creates a fact issue nowhere else
    supported by record evidence.
    Worse still, it seriously undermines officers’ ability to trust their
    judgment during those split seconds when they must decide whether to use
    lethal force. Qualified immunity is designed to respect that judgment,
    requiring us to second-guess only when it clearly violates the law. The
    standard acknowledges that we judges—mercifully—never face that split
    second. Indeed, we never have to decide anything without deliberation—let
    alone whether we must end one person’s life to preserve our own or the lives of
    those around us.
    The qualified immunity standard stops this privilege from blinding
    our judgment, preventing us from pretending we can place ourselves in the
    officers’ position based on a cold appellate record. It prevents us from
    hubristically declaring what an officer should have done—as if we can expect
    calm calculation in the midst of chaos.
    The majority opinion, written from the comfort of courthouse
    chambers, ignores that deference. Instead, it warns officers that they cannot
    trust what they see; they cannot trust what their fellow officers observe; they
    cannot trust themselves when posed with a credible threat. It instructs them,
    in that pivotal split second, to wait. But when a split second is all you have,
    waiting itself is a decision—one that may bring disastrous consequences.
    48
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    DON R. WILLETT, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    I repeat what I said last month: The entrenched, judge-invented
    qualified immunity regime ought not be immune from thoughtful reappraisal. 1
    Qualified immunity strikes an uneasy, cost–benefit balance between two
    competing deterrence concerns: “the need to hold public officials accountable
    when they exercise power irresponsibly and the need to shield officials from
    harassment, distraction, and liability when they perform their duties
    reasonably.” 2 By insulating incaution, the doctrine formalizes a rights–
    remedies gap through which untold constitutional violations slip unchecked.
    The real-world functioning of modern immunity practice—essentially “heads
    government wins, tails plaintiff loses”—leaves many victims violated but not
    vindicated. More to the point, the “clearly established law” prong, which is
    outcome-determinative in most cases, makes qualified immunity sometimes
    seem like unqualified impunity: “letting public officials duck consequences for
    bad behavior—no matter how palpably unreasonable—as long as they were the
    first to behave badly.” 3
    That said, as a middle-management circuit judge, I take direction from
    the Supreme Court. And the Court’s direction on qualified immunity is
    increasingly unsubtle. We must respect the Court’s exacting instructions—
    even as it is proper, in my judgment, to respectfully voice unease with them. 4
    1 Zadeh v. Robinson, 
    928 F.3d 457
    , 474 (5th Cir. 2019) (Willett, J., concurring in part,
    dissenting in part).
    2 Pearson v. Callahan, 
    555 U.S. 223
    , 231 (2009) (flagging these “two important
    interests”).
    3 
    Zadeh, 928 F.3d at 479
    .
    4 See, e.g., State Oil Co. v. Khan, 
    522 U.S. 3
    (1997) (overruling prior precedent whose
    unsoundness had been “aptly described” by the court of appeals).
    49
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    I
    Qualified immunity protects “all but the plainly incompetent or those
    who knowingly violate the law.” 5 While this bar is not insurmountable, it is
    sky-high. And it is raised higher when courts leapfrog prong one (deciding
    whether the challenged behavior violates the Constitution) to reach simpler
    prong two: no factually analogous precedent. Merely proving unconstitutional
    misconduct isn’t enough. A plaintiff must cite functionally identical authority
    that puts the unlawfulness “beyond debate” to “every” reasonable officer. 6 Last
    month, for example, the Eleventh Circuit, noting no “materially similar case”
    (thus no “clearly established law”), granted immunity to a police officer who
    fired at a family’s dog but instead shot a 10-year-old child lying face-down 18
    inches from the officer. 7 Not only that, the court “expressly [took] no position”
    as to “whether a constitutional violation occurred in the first place.” 8
    Translation: If the same officer tomorrow shoots the same child while aiming
    at the same dog, he’d receive the same immunity. Ad infinitum.
    The Supreme Court demands precedential specificity. But it’s all a bit
    recursive. There’s no earlier similar case declaring a constitutional violation
    because no earlier plaintiff could find an earlier similar case declaring a
    constitutional violation. “Section 1983 meets Catch-22. Plaintiffs must produce
    precedent even as fewer courts are producing precedent. Important
    constitutional questions go unanswered precisely because no one’s answered
    5 District of Columbia v. Wesby, 
    138 S. Ct. 577
    , 589 (2018) (quoting Malley v. Briggs,
    
    475 U.S. 335
    , 341 (1986)).
    6 Ashcroft v. al-Kidd, 
    563 U.S. 731
    , 741 (2011); see also, e.g., Kisela v. Hughes, 138 S.
    Ct. 1148, 1153 (2018) (per curiam); Mullenix v. Luna, 
    136 S. Ct. 305
    , 308 (2015) (per curiam).
    7 Corbitt v. Vickers, 
    929 F.3d 1304
    , 1307–08 (11th Cir. 2019).
    8 
    Id. at 1323.
    50
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    them before. Courts then rely on that judicial silence to conclude there’s no
    equivalent case on the books. No precedent = no clearly established law = no
    liability. An Escherian Stairwell.” 9
    II
    In recent years, individual Justices have raised concerns with the Court’s
    immunity caselaw. 10 Even so, the doctrine enjoys resounding, even hardening
    favor at the Court. Just three months ago, in a case involving the warrantless
    strip search of a four-year-old preschooler, a strange-bedfellows array of
    scholars and advocacy groups—perhaps the most ideologically diverse amici
    ever assembled—implored the Court to push reset. 11 To no avail. This much is
    certain: Qualified immunity, whatever its success at achieving its intended
    policy goals, thwarts the righting of many constitutional wrongs.
    Perhaps the growing left–right consensus urging reform will one day win
    out. There are several “mend it, don’t end it” options. The Court could revisit
    Pearson 12 and nudge courts to address the threshold constitutional merits
    rather than leave the law undeveloped. 13 Even if a particular plaintiff cannot
    9  
    Zadeh, 928 F.3d at 479
    –80 (Willett, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part).
    10  Four sitting Justices “have authored or joined opinions expressing sympathy” with
    assorted critiques of qualified immunity. Joanna C. Schwartz, The Case Against Qualified
    Immunity, 93 NOTRE DAME L. REV. 1797, 1800 (2018) (including Justices Thomas, Ginsburg,
    Breyer, and Sotomayor, plus recently retired Justice Kennedy); see, e.g., Ziglar v. Abbasi, 
    137 S. Ct. 1843
    , 1872 (2017) (Thomas, J., concurring in part and concurring in the judgment) (“In
    an appropriate case, we should reconsider our qualified immunity jurisprudence.”); see also
    Kisela v. Hughes, 
    138 S. Ct. 1148
    , 1162 (2018) (per curiam).
    11 Doe v. Woodard, 
    912 F.3d 1278
    (10th Cir. 2019), cert. denied, No. 18-1173, 
    2019 WL 1116409
    , at *1 (May 20, 2019). As for congressional reform, Congress’s refusal to revisit §
    1983 suggests Article I acquiescence.
    
    12 555 U.S. at 236
    .
    13 As observers have cautioned, unfettered Pearson discretion contributes to
    “constitutional stagnation” by impeding the development of precedent. Aaron L. Nielson &
    Christopher J. Walker, The New Qualified Immunity, 89 S. CAL. L. REV. 1, 23–24 (2015).
    51
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    benefit (due to the “clearly established law” prong), this would provide moving-
    forward guidance as to what the law prescribes and proscribes. Short of that,
    the Court could require lower courts to explain why they are side-stepping the
    constitutional merits question. 14 Or the Court could confront the widespread
    inter-circuit confusion on what constitutes “clearly established law.” 15 One
    concrete proposal: clarifying the degree of factual similarity required in cases
    involving split-second decisions versus cases involving less-exigent situations.
    The Court could also, short of undoing Harlow and reinstating the bad-faith
    prong, permit plaintiffs to overcome immunity by presenting objective evidence
    of an official’s bad faith. 16 Not subjective evidence of bad faith, which Harlow,
    worried about “peculiarly disruptive” and “broad-ranging discovery,” forbids. 17
    And not unadorned allegations of bad faith. But objective evidence that the
    official actually realized that he was violating the Constitution.
    Prudent refinements abound. But until then, as Judge Jones explains in
    today’s principal dissent, the Supreme Court’s unflinching, increasingly
    emphatic application of “clearly established law” compels dismissal.
    III
    I remain convinced that contemporary immunity jurisprudence merits
    “a refined procedural approach that more smartly—and fairly—serves its
    14  
    Id. at 7.
           15   See, e.g., RICHARD FALLON, JR., ET AL., HART AND WECHSLER’S THE FEDERAL
    COURTS AND THE FEDERAL SYSTEM 1047–50 (7th ed. 2015) (noting the difficulties of applying
    the clearly-established-law test); Karen M. Blum, Section 1983 Litigation: The Maze, the
    Mud, and the Madness, 23 WM. & MARY BILL RTS. J. 913, 925 n.68 (2015) (“[W]hether a right
    is found to be ‘clearly established’ is very much a function of which circuit (and I would add,
    which judge) is asking the question, and how that question is framed.”).
    16 Harlow v. Fitzgerald prevents plaintiffs from relying on subjective evidence of bad
    faith. 
    457 U.S. 800
    , 815–16 (1982).
    17 
    Id. at 817.
    52
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    intended objectives.” 18 Yet I also remain convinced that a majority of the
    Supreme Court disagrees. My misgivings, I believe, are well advised. But we
    would be ill advised to treat the reform of immunity doctrine as something for
    this court rather than that Court. 19
    For these reasons, I respectfully dissent.
    18 
    Zadeh, 928 F.3d at 481
    (Willett, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part).
    19 As for the sidelong critique of me in the dissenting opinion of Judges Ho and
    Oldham, it is, respectfully, a pyromaniac in a field of straw men. I have not raised originalist
    concerns with qualified immunity. My concerns, repeated today, are doctrinal, procedural,
    and pragmatic in nature. Nor has my unease with modern immunity practice led me to wage
    “war with the Supreme Court’s qualified-immunity jurisprudence.” I am a fellow dissenter
    today, notwithstanding my unease, precisely because I believe the Court’s precedent compels
    it. In short, I have not urged that qualified immunity be repealed. I have urged that it be
    rethought. Justice Thomas—no “halfway originalist”—has done the same. 
    Ziglar, 137 S. Ct. at 1872
    (Thomas, J., concurring in part and concurring in the judgment) (“In an appropriate
    case, we should reconsider our qualified immunity jurisprudence.”).
    53
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    No. 14-10228 c/w No. 15-10045
    JAMES C. HO and ANDREW S. OLDHAM, Circuit Judges, joined by JERRY
    E. SMITH, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    Apparently SUMREVs mean nothing.
    In Luna v. Mullenix, 
    773 F.3d 712
    (5th Cir. 2014), we sent a state trooper
    to a jury “in defiance” of “the concept and precedents of qualified immunity.”
    
    777 F.3d 221
    , 222 (5th Cir. 2014) (Jolly, J., dissenting from denial of rehearing
    en banc). The Supreme Court summarily reversed us. Mullenix v. Luna, 
    136 S. Ct. 305
    (2015) (per curiam). Then they GVR’d us in this case and ordered
    us to reconsider our obvious error in light of Mullenix.
    The en banc majority instead doubles down. That is wrong for all the
    reasons Judge Jones gives in her powerful dissent, which we join in full. We
    write to emphasize the en banc majority’s unmistakable message: Four years
    after Mullenix, nothing has changed in our circuit.
    I.
    The Supreme Court has not hesitated to redress similar intransigence
    from our sister circuits—often through the “extraordinary remedy of a
    summary reversal.” Kisela v. Hughes, 
    138 S. Ct. 1148
    , 1162 (2018) (Sotomayor,
    J., dissenting) (quotation omitted). See, e.g., City of Escondido v. Emmons, 
    139 S. Ct. 500
    (2019) (per curiam) (summarily reversing the Ninth Circuit); Kisela,
    
    138 S. Ct. 1148
    (per curiam) (same); District of Columbia v. Wesby, 
    138 S. Ct. 577
    (2018) (reversing the D.C. Circuit); White v. Pauly, 
    137 S. Ct. 548
    (2017)
    (per curiam) (summarily reversing the Tenth Circuit); City and County of San
    Francisco v. Sheehan, 
    135 S. Ct. 1765
    (2015) (reversing the Ninth Circuit);
    Carroll v. Carman, 
    574 U.S. 13
    (2014) (per curiam) (summarily reversing the
    Third Circuit); Wood v. Moss, 
    572 U.S. 744
    (2014) (reversing the Ninth Circuit);
    Plumhoff v. Rickard, 
    572 U.S. 765
    (2014) (reversing the Sixth Circuit); Stanton
    v. Sims, 
    571 U.S. 3
    (2013) (per curiam) (summarily reversing the Ninth
    Circuit); Reichle v. Howards, 
    566 U.S. 658
    (2012) (reversing the Tenth Circuit);
    54
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    Ryburn v. Huff, 
    565 U.S. 469
    (2012) (per curiam) (summarily reversing the
    Ninth Circuit); Ashcroft v. al-Kidd, 
    563 U.S. 731
    (2011) (same); Brosseau v.
    Haugen, 
    543 U.S. 194
    (2004) (per curiam) (same).
    In each of these cases, the Supreme Court reminded lower courts that
    qualified immunity requires us not only to identify a clearly established rule
    of law, but to do so with great specificity. Everyone agrees, of course, that Ryan
    Cole has a constitutional right not to be seized unreasonably. But “that is not
    enough” to subject a police officer to the burdens of our civil litigation system.
    Saucier v. Katz, 
    533 U.S. 194
    , 202 (2001). The Supreme Court has “repeatedly
    told courts . . . not to define clearly established law at [that] high level of
    generality.” 
    al-Kidd, 563 U.S. at 742
    . Rather, “[t]he dispositive question is
    whether the violative nature of particular conduct is clearly established.”
    
    Mullenix, 136 S. Ct. at 308
    (citation omitted).
    Only by identifying a specific and clearly established rule of law do we
    ensure that the officer had “fair notice”—“in light of the specific context of the
    case, not as a broad general proposition”—that his or her particular conduct
    was unlawful. 
    Brosseau, 543 U.S. at 198
    (citation omitted). See also, e.g.,
    
    Sheehan, 135 S. Ct. at 1776
    (“Qualified immunity is no immunity at all if
    ‘clearly established’ law can simply be defined as the right to be free from
    unreasonable searches and seizures.”); Wilson v. Layne, 
    526 U.S. 603
    , 615
    (1999) (same); Anderson v. Creighton, 
    483 U.S. 635
    , 640 (1987) (same).
    So where is our clearly established law at issue here? Unbelievably, the
    en banc majority says we don’t need any. That’s so, they say, because “[t]his is
    an obvious case.” Ante, at 16. That’s obviously wrong for three reasons.
    First, the Supreme Court to date has never identified an “obvious” case
    in the excessive force context. And the majority thinks this is the first? A case
    where a mentally disturbed teenager—who has a loaded gun in his hand with
    55
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    his finger on the trigger; who has repeatedly refused to be disarmed; who has
    threatened to kill anyone who tries to disarm him; who poses such a deadly
    threat that police have been deployed to protect innocent students and teachers
    at his nearby high school—turns toward the officers just ten to twenty feet
    away, giving them only seconds to decide what to do in response. Really?
    Second, the Supreme Court has granted qualified immunity in much
    tougher cases than this one. In Plumhoff, for example, officers fired 15 shots
    and killed two unarmed men who fled a traffic stop. In Brosseau, an officer
    shot an unarmed man who refused to open his truck window. In Kisela, officers
    shot a woman who was hacking a tree with a kitchen knife. In Sheehan,
    officers shot an old woman holding a kitchen knife in an assisted-living facility.
    In all of these cases, the Court held the officers were entitled to qualified
    immunity.
    Third, this is Mullenix all over again. There our court relied on clearly
    established law as articulated in Tennessee v. Garner, 
    471 U.S. 1
    (1985).
    Garner involved an unarmed man who fled from police after stealing $10. An
    officer fatally shot Garner in the back of the head as he attempted to climb a
    fence. Our court then extended Garner to Mullenix’s case—which involved a
    man who led police on a high-speed car chase after violating his probation. A
    state trooper attempted to end the chase by shooting the speeding car’s engine
    block—but he missed the engine, hit the driver in the face, and killed him. See
    
    Luna, 773 F.3d at 719
    –20 (discussing Garner). The Supreme Court summarily
    reversed us because—as should be painfully obvious from the Court’s serial
    reversals in this area—that’s not how qualified immunity works. See 
    Mullenix, 136 S. Ct. at 308
    –09 (holding our court erred in our extrapolation of Garner to
    56
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    new facts). And they GVR’d us in this very case to fix our mistakes in light of
    Mullenix. The Supreme Court’s message could not be clearer. 1
    Still, somehow, today’s majority does not get it. Here, as in Mullenix, the
    majority attempts to rely on Garner to establish the governing rule of law.
    From Garner, the majority somehow divines a rule that an officer cannot shoot
    a mentally disturbed teenager holding a gun near his school.                         This is
    demonstrably erroneous. In fact, one thing that unites the Supreme Court’s
    recent reversals in cases involving qualified immunity and excessive force is
    the attempt by lower courts to extrapolate Garner to new facts. See 
    Mullenix, 136 S. Ct. at 308
    –09; Scott v. Harris, 
    550 U.S. 372
    , 381–82 (2007) (same); Allen
    v. City of West Memphis, 509 F. App’x 388, 392 (6th Cir. 2012) (extrapolating
    Garner), rev’d by 
    Plumhoff, supra
    .
    Moreover, there are additional parallels between Mullenix and this case.
    Consider the supposed requirement that an officer take some sort of non-lethal
    measure before using lethal force. In Mullenix, our court used the power of 20-
    20 hindsight to say that a reasonable officer should have used spike strips to
    1 The Supreme Court issues GVRs when, as here, legal error infects the judgment
    below. See, e.g., Hicks v. United States, 
    137 S. Ct. 2000
    , 2000–01 (2017) (Gorsuch, J.,
    concurring) (defending GVR because “[a] plain legal error infects this judgment” and because
    petitioner “enjoys a reasonable probability of success” in getting judgment reversed on the
    merits); 
    id. at 2002
    (Roberts, C.J., dissenting) (“[W]ithout a determination from this Court
    that the judgment below was wrong or at least a concession from the Government to that
    effect, we should not, in my view, vacate the Fifth Circuit’s judgment.”). As the cert petition
    explained, our panel denied qualified immunity “based on the same rationale” on “which this
    Court reversed in Mullenix.” Pet. at i, 
    2016 WL 4987324
    . We think it obvious the Supreme
    Court GVR’d because it agreed. And tellingly, the majority does not offer an alternative
    theory to explain the GVR. We ignore the Court’s message at our peril. See, e.g., Smith v.
    Mitchell, 
    437 F.3d 884
    (9th Cir. 2006) (granting habeas relief to a state prisoner because the
    evidence was insufficient to prove she shook her grandbaby to death); Patrick v. Smith, 
    550 U.S. 915
    (2007) (GVR’ing i/l/o Carey v. Musladin, 
    549 U.S. 70
    (2006)); Smith v. Patrick, 
    519 F.3d 900
    (9th Cir. 2008) (again granting habeas relief); Patrick v. Smith, 
    558 U.S. 1143
    (2010)
    (GVR’ing i/l/o McDaniel v. Brown, 
    558 U.S. 120
    (2010)); Smith v. Mitchell, 
    624 F.3d 1235
    (9th
    Cir. 2010) (again granting habeas relief); Cavazos v. Smith, 
    565 U.S. 1
    (2011) (SUMREV’ing).
    57
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    stop the chase. 
    See 773 F.3d at 720
    –21. The Supreme Court emphatically
    rebuked us. 
    See 136 S. Ct. at 310
    . They told us that an officer does not have
    to expose himself or other officers to harm when the suspect has already
    refused to be disarmed. That meant Trooper Mullenix did not have to wait to
    see if the fleeing felon would shoot or run over the officer manning the spike
    strips. See 
    id. at 310–11.
          So too here. In this case, the majority complains that the officers did not
    provide sufficient warning. But there was no clearly established law requiring
    Officers Cassidy and Hunter to announce themselves—while caught in an open
    and defenseless position—and hope not to get shot. That is particularly true
    here because officers previously ordered Cole to put down his gun, he refused,
    and he threatened to kill anyone who attempted to disarm him.
    And in Mullenix, as here, we accused the police officers of being cowboys.
    Earlier on the day of the shooting, Trooper Mullenix received a negative
    performance review for “not being proactive enough as a Trooper”; so in the
    aftermath of the shooting, Mullenix said to his supervisor, “How’s that for
    
    proactive?” 773 F.3d at 717
    ; see 
    also 136 S. Ct. at 316
    (Sotomayor, J.,
    dissenting). The panel opinions and en banc majority opinion in this case
    likewise seethe with innuendo that Officers Hunter and Cassidy were wannabe
    cowboys looking for a gunfight. We are in no position to make such accusations.
    No member of this court has stared down a fleeing felon on the interstate or
    confronted a mentally disturbed teenager who is brandishing a loaded gun
    near his school. And the Mullenix Court held that the qualified-immunity
    standard gives us no basis for sneering at cops on the beat from the safety of
    our chambers. 
    See 136 S. Ct. at 310
    –11 (majority op.) (citing Brief for National
    Association of Police Organizations et al. as Amici Curiae). Yet here we are.
    Again.
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    II.
    The majority cannot dodge responsibility for today’s decision by pointing
    to the limits of appellate jurisdiction. See ante, at 13–14 (majority op.); ante,
    at 1 (Elrod, J., concurring).      We obviously lack interlocutory appellate
    jurisdiction to review the genuineness of an officer’s fact dispute. See, e.g.,
    Johnson v. Jones, 
    515 U.S. 304
    , 313–14 (1995); Kinney v. Weaver, 
    367 F.3d 337
    ,
    346–47 (5th Cir. 2004) (en banc) (applying Johnson v. Jones).
    But that does nothing to defeat jurisdiction where, as here, the factual
    disputes are immaterial. That is why the Supreme Court repeatedly has
    rejected such no-jurisdiction pleas from those who wish to deny qualified
    immunity. See, e.g., 
    Plumhoff, 572 U.S. at 771
    –73; 
    id. at 773
    (noting existence
    of genuine fact dispute did not defeat appellate jurisdiction in Scott v. Harris).
    All the fact disputes in the world do nothing to insulate this legal
    question:   Is this an “obvious case” under Garner—notwithstanding a
    mountain of SUMREVs, GVRs, and pointed admonitions from the Supreme
    Court?   The majority says yes.       Ante, at 16.   They obviously must have
    jurisdiction to say so.     With respect, it makes no sense to say we lack
    jurisdiction to disagree with them.
    III.
    What explains our circuit’s war with the Supreme Court’s qualified-
    immunity jurisprudence? Two themes appear to be at play.
    First, the majority suggests we should be less than enthused about
    Supreme Court precedent in this area, because it conflicts with plaintiffs’ jury
    rights. To quote the panel: “Qualified immunity is a judicially created doctrine
    calculated to protect an officer from trial before a jury of his or her peers. At
    bottom lies a perception that the jury brings a risk and cost that law-
    enforcement officers should not face, that judges are preferred for the task—a
    59
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    judgment made by appellate judges.” Cole v. Carson, 
    905 F.3d 334
    , 336 (5th
    Cir. 2018). Or in the words of today’s majority: “The Supreme Court over
    several years has developed protection from civil liability for persons going
    about their tasks as government workers” (a rather curious way to describe the
    men and women who swear an oath to protect our lives and communities).
    Ante, at 2.    But “the worker’s defense” must yield, in cases like this, “in
    obeisance to [the] constitutional mandate” of a jury trial. 
    Id. We appreciate
    the majority’s candor. But inferior court judges may not
    prefer juries to the Justices.
    Second, some have criticized the doctrine of qualified immunity as
    ahistorical and contrary to the Founders’ Constitution. Ante at 2 (suggesting
    denial of qualified immunity is commanded by “the Founders”); compare
    William Baude, Is Qualified Immunity Unlawful?, 106 CALIF. L. REV. 45, 49–
    61 (2018), with Aaron L. Nielson & Christopher J. Walker, A Qualified Defense
    of Qualified Immunity, 93 NOTRE DAME L. REV. 1853, 1856–63 (2018); see also
    Zadeh v. Robinson, 
    902 F.3d 483
    , 498 (5th Cir. 2018) (Willett, J., concurring
    dubitante), revised on petition for reh’g en banc, 
    928 F.3d 457
    , 473 (5th Cir.
    2019) (Willett, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part).
    As originalists, we welcome the discussion. But separate and apart from
    the fact that we are bound as a lower court to follow Supreme Court precedent,
    a principled commitment to originalism provides no basis for subjecting these
    officers to trial.
    The originalist debate over qualified immunity may seem fashionable to
    some today. But it is in fact an old debate. Over two decades ago, Justices
    Scalia and Thomas noted originalist concerns with qualified immunity. But
    they also explained how a principled originalist would re-evaluate established
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    doctrines. See Crawford-El v. Britton, 
    523 U.S. 574
    , 611–12 (1998) (Scalia, J.,
    joined by Thomas, J., dissenting).
    A principled originalist would not cherry pick which rules to revisit based
    on popular whim. A principled originalist would fairly review decisions that
    favor plaintiffs as well as police officers. As Justice Scalia explained in a
    dissent joined by Justice Thomas, a principled originalist would evenhandedly
    examine disputed precedents that expand, as well as limit, § 1983 liability:
    [O]ur treatment of qualified immunity under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 has
    not purported to be faithful to the common-law immunities that
    existed when § 1983 was enacted . . . . [But] [t]he § 1983 that the
    Court created in 1961 bears scant resemblance to what Congress
    enacted almost a century earlier. I refer, of course, to the holding
    of Monroe v. Pape, 
    365 U.S. 167
    (1961), which converted an 1871
    statute covering constitutional violations committed “under color
    of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage of any
    State,” Rev. Stat. § 1979, 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (emphasis added), into
    a statute covering constitutional violations committed without the
    authority of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage
    of any State, and indeed even constitutional violations committed
    in stark violation of state civil or criminal law.
    
    Id. at 611.
           Justices Scalia and Thomas ultimately concluded that it is better to leave
    things alone than to reconfigure established law in a one-sided manner. If
    we’re not willing to re-evaluate all § 1983 precedents in a balanced and
    principled way, then it “is perhaps just as well” that “[w]e find ourselves
    engaged . . . in the essentially legislative activity of crafting a sensible scheme
    of qualified immunities for the statute we have invented—rather than
    applying the common law embodied in the statute that Congress wrote.” 
    Id. at 611–12.
           Translation: If we’re not going to do it right, then perhaps we shouldn’t
    do it at all.
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    Subjecting these officers to trial on originalist grounds is precisely the
    unprincipled practice of originalism that Justices Scalia and Thomas railed
    against. And not just for the procedural reasons they identified in Crawford-
    El. What about the original understanding of the Fourth Amendment, which
    the plaintiffs here invoke as their purported substantive theory of liability in
    this case? Does the majority seriously believe that it is an “unreasonable
    seizure,” as those words were originally understood at the Founding, for a police
    officer to stop an armed and mentally unstable teenager from shooting
    innocent officers, students, and teachers?
    And make no mistake: Principled originalism is not just a matter of
    intellectual precision and purity. There are profound practical consequences
    here as well, given the important and delicate balance that qualified immunity
    is supposed to strike. As the Supreme Court has explained, qualified immunity
    ensures that liability reaches only “the plainly incompetent or those who
    knowingly violate the law.” 
    Mullenix, 136 S. Ct. at 308
    (quotation omitted).
    And absent plain incompetence or intentional violations, qualified immunity
    must attach, because the “social costs” of any other rule are too high:
    [I]t cannot be disputed seriously that claims frequently run
    against the innocent as well as the guilty—at a cost not only to the
    defendant officials, but to society as a whole. These social costs
    include the expenses of litigation, the diversion of official energy
    from pressing public issues, and the deterrence of able citizens
    from acceptance of public office. Finally, there is the danger that
    fear of being sued will dampen the ardor of all but the most
    resolute, or the most irresponsible public officials, in the
    unflinching discharge of their duties.
    Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 
    457 U.S. 800
    , 814 (1982) (alterations and quotations
    omitted); see also, e.g., 
    Sheehan, 135 S. Ct. at 1774
    n.3 (noting “the importance
    of qualified immunity to society as a whole”).
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    For those who have expressed concerns about a “one-sided approach to
    qualified immunity,” 
    Kisela, 138 S. Ct. at 1162
    (Sotomayor, J., dissenting); see
    also 
    Zadeh, 902 F.3d at 499
    & n.10 (Willett, J., concurring dubitante) (quoting
    
    Kisela, 138 S. Ct. at 1162
    (Sotomayor, J., 
    dissenting)); 928 F.3d at 480
    & n.61
    (Willett, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part) (same), look no further
    than the majority opinion. The majority undoes the careful balance of interests
    embodied in our doctrine of qualified immunity, stripping the officers’ defenses
    without regard to the attendant social costs. 2
    Now that is a one-sided approach to qualified immunity as a practical
    matter. And as Justices Scalia and Thomas have observed, it’s also a one-sided
    approach to qualified immunity as an originalist matter: It abandons the
    defense without also reconsidering the source and scope of officers’ liability in
    the first place. See 
    Crawford-El, 523 U.S. at 611
    –12 (Scalia, J., joined by
    Thomas, J., dissenting). To quote Justice Alito: “We will not engage in this
    halfway originalism.”        Janus v. Am. Fed’n of State, Cty., & Mun. Emps.,
    Council 31, 
    138 S. Ct. 2448
    , 2470 (2018). See also 
    id. (criticizing litigants
    for
    “apply[ing] the Constitution’s supposed original meaning only when it suits
    them”); Gundy v. United States, 
    139 S. Ct. 2116
    , 2131 (2019) (Alito, J.,
    2Those social costs are particularly stark today given widespread news of low officer
    morale and shortages in officer recruitment. See, e.g., Ashley Southall, When Officers Are
    Being Doused, Has Police Restraint Gone Too Far?, N.Y. TIMES, July 25, 2019, at A22; Martin
    Kaste & Lori Mack, Shortage of Officers Fuels Police Recruiting Crisis, NPR (Dec. 11, 2018,
    5:05 AM), https://n.pr/2Qrbrnq; Jeremy Gorner, Morale, Policing Suffering in Hostile
    Climate, Cops Say; ‘It’s Almost Like We’re the Bad Guys,’ Veteran City Officer Says, CHI. TRIB.,
    Nov. 27, 2016, at 1.
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    concurring in the judgment) (“[I]t would be freakish to single out the provision
    at issue here for special treatment.”). 3
    ***
    Our circuit, like too many others, has been summarily reversed for
    ignoring the Supreme Court’s repeated admonitions regarding qualified
    immunity. There’s no excuse for ignoring the Supreme Court again today. And
    certainly none based on a principled commitment to originalism.
    Originalism for plaintiffs, but not for police officers, is not principled
    judging. Originalism for me, but not for thee, is not originalism at all. We
    respectfully dissent.
    3 In a footnote, Judge Willett notes that his criticism of the Supreme Court’s qualified
    immunity precedents is not based on originalist grounds. Ante, at 4 n.19. To our minds, that
    makes his criticism harder, not easier, to defend. If his concerns are based on practical and
    not originalist considerations, then he should address them to the Legislature, rather than
    attack the Supreme Court as “one-sided.” 
    Zadeh, 902 F.3d at 499
    & n.10 (Willett, J.,
    concurring dubitante) (quoting 
    Kisela, 138 S. Ct. at 1162
    (Sotomayor, J., dissenting)). He
    also invokes Justice Thomas’s opinion in Ziglar v. Abbasi, 
    137 S. Ct. 1843
    , 1872 (2017). But
    that opinion cites Justice Scalia’s opinion in Crawford-El, which (as we explained above)
    warns qualified immunity skeptics not to engage in halfway originalism.
    64
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    STUART KYLE DUNCAN, Circuit Judge, joined by SMITH, OWEN, HO, and
    OLDHAM, Circuit Judges, dissenting:
    The majority opinion overlooks or omits undisputed material facts
    showing that any reasonable officer would have viewed Ryan Cole as a severe
    threat. Before the shooting, the defendant officers: (1) were tracking a
    distraught suspect wandering through the woods armed with a loaded 9mm
    semi-automatic handgun; (2) who had earlier that morning off-loaded a cache
    of weapons and ammunition at a friend’s house; (3) who had already refused to
    give up his pistol when confronted by the police; and (4) who had threatened to
    “shoot anyone who came near him.” Cole did not dispute those facts and,
    indeed, convinced the district court they were irrelevant. Joining Judge Jones’
    dissent in full, I respectfully dissent on the additional grounds provided by
    these pre-encounter facts.
    No one doubts some of the events on October 25, 2010—when the officers
    violently encountered Cole in the woods near Garland, Texas—are disputed.
    The question is whether those disputes are material. See, e.g., Bazan ex rel.
    Bazan v. Hidalgo Cty., 
    246 F.3d 481
    , 483 (5th Cir. 2001) (“threshold issue” on
    qualified immunity appeal “is whether the facts the district judge concluded
    are genuinely disputed are also material”). Judge Jones’ dissent compellingly
    shows they are not: Resolving all disputes in Cole’s favor, the undisputed facts
    still show the officers violated no clearly established law. Jones Dissent at 2–
    3, 11–22. The majority thus errs by concluding that “competing factual
    narratives” bar it from deciding qualified immunity. Maj. at 3.
    I write separately to emphasize what led up to the shooting, and also to
    explain why those undisputed events provide further reasons to reverse. The
    majority and Judge Jones focus on the shooting itself, as did the district court.
    But the prelude to the shooting gives unavoidable context for evaluating the
    65
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    officers’ actions. 1 Surprisingly, the district court did not even analyze those
    stage-setting facts, which it mistakenly deemed irrelevant. See Cole v. Hunter,
    No. 3:13-CV-02719-O, 
    2014 WL 266501
    , at *13 n.5 (N.D. Tex. Jan. 24, 2014);
    Cole v. Hunter, 
    68 F. Supp. 3d 628
    , 642–43 (N.D. Tex. 2014). So, to assess their
    impact, we must “undertake a cumbersome review of the record.” Johnson v.
    Jones, 
    515 U.S. 304
    , 319 (1995). That extra work is sometimes imperative, as
    here, “to ensure that the defendant’s right to an immediate appeal on the issue
    of materiality is not defeated solely on account of the district court’s failure to
    articulate its reasons for denying summary judgment.” Colston v. Barnhart,
    
    146 F.3d 282
    , 285 (5th Cir. 1998), denying reh’g in 
    130 F.3d 96
    (5th Cir. 1997).
    This detailed record review (see Part I) compels two conclusions (see Part
    II). First, the district court erred by excluding the undisputed events before the
    shooting. That error—based on a misreading of our precedent—truncated the
    qualified immunity analysis. That alone requires reversing the summary
    judgment denial. Second, in light of those pre-encounter facts, the majority’s
    insistence that this is an “obvious case” collapses. Maj. at 16. Given what
    confronted the officers, the majority cannot say what they did was “obviously”
    unlawful. The only thing obvious is that no case told the officers, clearly or
    otherwise, how to respond when they met Cole that morning, emerging from
    the woods with his finger on the trigger of a loaded gun.
    By denying qualified immunity and making the officers run the gauntlet
    of trial, the majority sets a precedent that “seriously undermines officers’
    ability to trust their judgment during those split seconds when they must
    1See, e.g., Kingsley v. Hendrickson, 
    135 S. Ct. 2466
    , 2474 (2015) (courts “must judge
    the reasonableness of the force used from the perspective and with the knowledge of the
    defendant officer”); Tennessee v. Garner, 
    471 U.S. 1
    , 9 (1985) (whether a “particular” seizure
    was justified depends on “the totality of the circumstances”).
    66
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    decide whether to use lethal force.” Winzer v. Kaufman Cty., 
    916 F.3d 464
    , 482
    (5th Cir. 2019) (Clement, J., dissenting).
    I.
    The majority begins “around 10:30 a.m.,” less than an hour before the
    shooting. Maj. at 4. But events began to unfold much earlier. 2 Around 2 a.m.
    that morning, Cole knocked on the door of his friend, Eric Reed Jr., to show
    him “a 44 magnum revolver.” Awakened by the knocking, Eric Jr.’s father (Eric
    Sr.) left his room, saw Cole with the gun, and told him to leave. Eric Jr.
    convinced Cole to leave the revolver because “he [did not] need to be carrying
    a weapon around.”
    Around 8 a.m., Eric Jr. gave his father Cole’s gun. Eric Sr., a retired
    Sachse police officer, then notified Officer Vernon Doggett, who came to the
    Reeds’. Eric Jr. told his father and Doggett that “[Cole] told him there were
    more guns on the side of the house.” There, they found “a double barrel shot
    gun with some shot gun shells and what appeared to be a plastic bag with 9mm
    bullets,” which Doggett secured. Eric Jr. also explained Cole “had broken up
    with his girlfriend and was going to kill himself and his girlfriend.”
    Doggett was a resource officer for Sachse High School, where Cole and
    his girlfriend attended. He contacted Sergeant Garry Jordan, told him about
    the guns, and asked to meet at the school. Doggett reported that Cole “may be
    at school with a 9mm handgun.” Another officer checked whether Cole was in
    class, and Jordan searched the parking areas for Cole.
    2 All of these facts come from reports and transcriptions of radio transmissions made
    within a day or two of the incident. None come from affidavits submitted by the officers years
    later. And, as explained below, none of these pre-encounter facts was disputed by Cole or
    analyzed by the district court.
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    Not finding him, Jordan went to Coles’ and spoke to his parents. He
    learned that, the previous evening, officers had responded to a disturbance
    there. Officers had found Cole’s father “holding Ryan down” because “he did
    not want [Cole] to leave the residence with the pocket knife that he had.” He
    said “his son had a wild look in his eye and . . . had been smoking K2.” While
    the officers found there had been no assault, all agreed it was “a good idea for
    Cole to stay the night with a friend.” The Coles had not seen Ryan since then
    but reported he had “apparently returned home during the night and had
    opened the gun safe, removed an unknown amount [sic] of weapons, and reset
    the combination.”
    Meanwhile, Eric Jr. noticed Cole was back. He asked Cole if he was
    armed and Cole showed him a “38 revolver” and a “9mm semiauto.” He
    convinced Cole to give him the revolver, but Cole told him he was not “getting
    the 9mm.” Cole also said that the 9mm was loaded and that he did not “wanna
    use it on [Eric Jr.]” Cole stated that “he would shoot anyone who came near
    him.” Cole left, and Eric Jr. called his father, who called the police.
    Around 10:49 a.m., Officer Stephen Norris radioed “all available Sachse
    officers” to respond to the area of the Reed residence. He reported Cole was
    “observed running south of the location with 3 weapons, one a loaded 9mm.”
    He also reported Cole was “irate and distraught and stated he would shoot
    anyone who came near him.” Around the same time, Sachse Officer Michael
    Hunter was dispatched to assist Jordan at the Coles’, but on arrival he was
    told by Sachse Officer Carl Carson he was not needed. As Hunter was leaving,
    he heard Norris’ call advising Cole was “in the area . . . with a gun.” Hunter
    68
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    stated he “did not know the specifics of the call at this point,” but proceeded to
    the Reeds’ residence. In response to Norris’ call, Jordan also left the Coles’.
    Sachse Officer Martin Cassidy also received Norris’ dispatch and went
    to the area Norris indicated. He was given Cole’s description and advised that
    Cole was “armed with at least one handgun and possibly three.” Cassidy spoke
    with Norris on the phone about “the proximity of Armstrong Elementary
    School to the location where [Cole] was last seen.” Cassidy therefore went to
    check on the school and a nearby shopping center for any signs of Cole.
    Meanwhile, Hunter arrived at the Reeds’, where he met Jordan and
    Carson. Hunter overheard Eric Jr. say he had gotten “one gun” from Cole but
    that Cole had left “armed with a 9mm handgun.” “Hunter put [Cole’s]
    description out to other officers,” and then he and Carson went to search for
    Cole. After speaking with the officers, Eric Jr. checked for more guns and found
    “6 firearms around [his] house.”
    Jordan then observed Officers Elliott and Sneed pass by in a patrol unit.
    Those officers found Cole nearby. Elliott reported that “Sneed . . . advised
    [Cole] to show his hands.” Instead, Cole “reached into his waist band and pulled
    a pistol and placed it to his head after about three steps and refused to obey
    Lt. Sneed[’s] commands.” When Jordan arrived, Sneed “drew his duty weapon
    and yelled at [Cole] to drop the weapon,” but Cole refused. As Cole continued
    eastbound towards Highway 78, Sneed “warned [Cole] that [he] would shoot
    him in the back if he tried to get to the highway or walk toward any innocent
    bystanders.” Cole “would occasionally turn his head and yell obscenities at
    [Sneed].” Two other officers then parked “directly in front of [Cole’s] path.” To
    avoid them, Cole turned “northbound and began walking the railroad tracks.”
    Jordan was constantly updating dispatch about Cole’s movements. “Suddenly,
    [Sneed] observed [Cole] cut eastbound and run up a hill and into the brush
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    towards Highway 78.” Dispatch reported that Cole was “off tracks coming
    through tree lines towards [Highway] 78.”
    Hunter, Carson, and Cassidy were monitoring Cole’s movements from
    the dispatches. They arrived separately at the part of Highway 78 where Cole
    was thought to be. Hunter noted “[Cole] appeared to be walking towards the
    railroad track,” and he advised Carson “[they] needed to go out to the highway
    and intercept [him].” Cassidy advised Carson to get out his taser and follow
    Cassidy. Hunter “parked further south on Highway 78 as [he] figured [Cole]
    would be on the railroad track paralleling Highway 78 at about [his] location.”
    He guessed correctly. As Hunter “began to look for cover since [he] was out in
    the open,” Cole “walked out from the brush approximately 10 to 20 feet from
    [Hunter].”
    What followed was the shooting.
    II.
    Cole did not dispute these stage-setting events in opposing summary
    judgment. To the contrary, he argued any “prior events” before the shooting
    were “irrelevant.” The district court agreed, excluding from its qualified
    immunity analysis the “events” from “earlier that morning,” Cole, 
    2014 WL 266501
    , at *13 n.5, and focusing solely on what happened “immediately before
    and during the shooting.” 
    Cole, 68 F. Supp. 3d at 644
    . That mistake skewed
    the district court’s analysis and provides yet another reason why we should
    reverse.
    First, the district court erred by excluding everything that happened
    before the officers’ five-second encounter with Cole. That approach artificially
    truncates the qualified immunity analysis. In assessing qualified immunity,
    we “[c]onsider[ ] the specific situation confronting [officers],” City & Cty. of San
    Francisco v. Sheehan, 
    135 S. Ct. 1765
    , 1778 (2015), which “must be judged from
    70
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    the perspective of a reasonable officer on the scene[.]” Graham v. Connor, 
    490 U.S. 386
    , 396 (1989). A “reasonable officer” does not shape his decisions based
    only on the seconds when he confronts an armed suspect; instead, he acts based
    on all relevant circumstances, including the events leading up to the ultimate
    encounter. See, e.g., Escobar v. Montee, 
    895 F.3d 387
    (5th Cir. 2018) (courts
    evaluate excessive force claims “from the perspective of a reasonable officer on
    the scene, paying ‘careful attention to the facts and circumstances of each
    particular case’”) (quoting 
    Graham, 490 U.S. at 396
    ). That is precisely how the
    Supreme Court has instructed lower courts to assess whether force is
    excessive: The seminal case, Tennessee v. Garner, asks whether a seizure was
    justified, based not only on the immediate seizure, but on “the totality of the
    circumstances” facing the officers. 
    471 U.S. 1
    , 9 (1985). And qualified immunity
    cases, both from the Supreme Court and our court, routinely consider the
    background facts that shaped an officer’s confrontation with a suspect in order
    to evaluate the officer’s ultimate use of force. 3
    The district court’s sole contrary authority was our statement in
    Rockwell v. Brown, 
    664 F.3d 985
    , 991 (5th Cir. 2011), that the excessive force
    inquiry “is confined to whether the [officer or another person] was in danger at
    the moment of the threat.” But the district court overread Rockwell. We made
    that statement in Rockwell to reject the notion that officers’ negligence before
    3  See, e.g., Mullenix v. Luna, 
    136 S. Ct. 305
    , 306 (2015) (assessing officer’s shooting of
    suspect during car chase beginning with events preceding the “18-minute chase”); Plumhoff
    v. Rickard, 
    572 U.S. 765
    , 768–70 (2014) (assessing officer’s shooting of suspects in Memphis,
    Tennessee after lengthy car chase beginning with traffic stop in “West Memphis, Arkansas”);
    Brosseau v. Haugen, 
    543 U.S. 194
    , 195 (2004) (evaluating officer’s shooting of fleeing suspect
    beginning with events “[o]n the day before the fracas”); 
    Colston, 130 F.3d at 100
    (determining
    officer’s failure to warn was not objectively unreasonable “[i]n light of the totality of the
    circumstances facing [the officer]”) (citing 
    Garner, 471 U.S. at 10
    ).
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    a confrontation determines whether they properly used deadly force during the
    confrontation. See 
    id. at 992–93
    (rejecting argument that “circumstances
    surrounding a forced entry” bear on “the reasonableness of the officers’ use of
    deadly force”). The cases Rockwell cited say that plainly. See, e.g., Fraire v. City
    of Arlington, 
    957 F.2d 1268
    , 1276 (5th Cir. 1992) (“[R]egardless of what had
    transpired up until the shooting itself, [the suspect’s] movements gave the
    officer reason to believe, at that moment, that there was a threat of physical
    harm.”). 4 And the key case Rockwell quoted for the “moment-of-the-threat”
    point recognized that pre-confrontation events could “set the stage for what
    followed in the field.” 
    Bazan, 246 F.3d at 493
    .
    By misreading our cases, the district court blinded itself to a rich vein of
    facts—facts Cole did not dispute below—that round out the picture of the
    officers’ violent encounter with Cole. At a minimum, that error alone requires
    reversing the denial of summary judgment and remanding for reconsideration
    of the officers’ actions in light of all relevant undisputed facts. See, e.g., White
    v. Balderama, 
    153 F.3d 237
    , 242 (5th Cir. 1998) (concluding “limited remand”
    was appropriate given “lack of specificity in . . . district court’s order denying
    summary judgment on the basis of qualified immunity”).
    Second, the undisputed pre-encounter events underscore why, contrary
    to the majority’s view, this is far from an “obvious case.” Maj. at 16. An “obvious
    case,” the Supreme Court has explained, is one where an officer’s actions are
    4 Our cases continue to apply the Rockwell “moment-of-the-threat” principle in this
    way. See, e.g., Shepherd v. City of Shreveport, 
    920 F.3d 278
    (5th Cir. 2019) (explaining that,
    because the excessive force inquiry is “confined to whether the officer was in danger at the
    moment of the threat[,] . . . [t]herefore, any of the officers’ actions leading up to the shooting
    are not relevant”) (emphasis added) (internal quotes and citation omitted); Harris v. Serpas,
    
    745 F.3d 767
    , 772–73 (5th Cir. 2014) (same) (discussing Rockwell).
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    plainly unlawful under a generalized legal test, even if those actions do not
    contravene a “body of relevant case law.” 
    Brosseau, 543 U.S. at 199
    (citing Hope
    v. Pelzer, 
    536 U.S. 730
    , 738 (2002)); see also, e.g., White v. Pauly, 
    137 S. Ct. 548
    ,
    552 (2017) (an “obvious case” means that “in the light of pre-existing law the
    unlawfulness [of the officer’s actions] must be apparent”) (citing Anderson v.
    Creighton, 
    483 U.S. 635
    , 640 (1987)) (cleaned up). As I understand the majority
    opinion, it believes this is an obvious case because a jury could find that
    (1) Cole “posed no threat” to the officers; (2) the officers fired “without
    warning”; and (3) the officers had “time and opportunity” to warn Cole, but did
    not. Maj. at 15. According to the majority, this scenario would plainly violate
    Garner’s generalized test that an officer may not use deadly force to apprehend
    a suspect who “poses no immediate threat to the officer,” unless he warns the
    suspect “where feasible.” 
    Id. (quoting Garner,
    471 U.S. at 11–12).
    Judge Jones’ dissent shows that, even resolving all disputed facts in
    Cole’s favor, the officers did not “obviously” violate Garner’s generalized test
    during the immediate shooting—that is, when in the space of five seconds at
    most, the officers met Cole at a distance of 10–20 feet as he backed out of the
    woods, still armed, and began to turn. Jones Dissent at 11–12. But if we include
    the undisputed facts leading up to the shooting, the notion that this is an
    “obvious case” crumbles. To believe that, we would have to blind ourselves to
    the facts that (1) the officers were searching for an irate, distraught suspect;
    (2) who was wandering through the woods armed with a loaded semi-automatic
    handgun; (3) who had refused police demands to turn over his weapon; (4) who
    had just that morning deposited a cache of weapons and ammunition at his
    friend’s house; and (5) who had threatened to “shoot anyone who came near
    him.” Those were the “totality of the circumstances” facing the officers, 
    Colston, 130 F.3d at 100
    , and they were not disputed by Cole or the district court. Given
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    those circumstances, the officers might have taken any number of actions when
    they met Cole in the woods that morning—they might have warned him, or
    shot him, or shot in the air, or retreated, or remained frozen in place to see
    what he would do. But to say it is “obvious” what they should have done is to
    denude the concept of an “obvious case” of any meaning.
    Once stripped of the conceit that this is an “obvious case,” the majority
    has nothing left to justify its holding. The Supreme Court has bluntly told us
    that, outside the “obvious case” scenario, “Garner . . . do[es] not by [itself]
    create clearly established law[.]” White v. 
    Pauly, 137 S. Ct. at 552
    . And, of
    course, the majority does not try to claim that the facts of Garner are anything
    like this case. In Garner, a police officer shot a fleeing, unarmed burglar in the
    back of the head. The officer admitted he did not even suspect the burglar was
    armed. 
    See 471 U.S. at 3
    (noting the officer “saw no sign of a weapon” at the
    time he shot and, afterwards, admitted “[he] was ‘reasonably sure’ and ‘figured’
    that [the suspect] was unarmed”). Apples and oranges does not capture the
    chasm between that case and this one.
    The majority does claim that our 1996 decision in Baker v. Putnal,
    “clearly established” that the officers’ conduct here was unlawful. Maj. at 16
    (citing 
    75 F.3d 190
    , 193 (5th Cir. 1996)). That is mistaken. In Baker, Officer
    Putnal was patrolling a crowded beach area when gunfire erupted. 
    Id. Witnesses directed
    Putnal “toward a red car which they said contained the
    shooters.” 
    Id. He approached
    that car, but then saw two people sitting in
    another vehicle, a truck. 
    Id. One of
    the truck’s passengers, Wendell Baker,
    “turned in Putnal’s direction . . . [and] Putnal shot and killed [him].” 
    Id. While a
    pistol was recovered from the truck, the plaintiffs denied Baker “was holding
    a pistol” when shot. 
    Id. at 196.
    In other words, a jury could have found Baker
    was not holding a gun when Putnal killed him.
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    No. 14-10228 c/w No. 15-10045
    It is not hard to grasp the key difference between Baker and this case.
    When shot, Baker was possibly not even holding a gun. When shot, Cole was
    undisputedly holding a gun. Imagine this conversation between a police officer
    and the police department’s lawyer:
    OFFICER:      I heard the Fifth Circuit just decided this Baker case. What
    does it tell me I should or shouldn’t do in the field?
    LAWYER:       Well, Baker says you lose qualified immunity if you shoot
    someone sitting in a car doing nothing more threatening
    than just turning in your direction. In other words, someone
    you don’t even see holding a weapon.
    OFFICER:      Makes sense. But tell me this. What if the person I approach
    is holding a gun?
    LAWYER:       Well, Baker doesn’t speak clearly to that situation. I mean,
    the jury in Baker could have found the guy didn’t even have
    a gun in his hand when the officer shot him.
    In other words, contrary to the majority’s view, Baker could not have
    “established clearly that Cassidy’s and Hunter’s conduct . . . was unlawful”
    when they shot Cole as he emerged from the woods with his finger on the
    trigger of a loaded gun. Maj. at 16. To guide officers in the field, a controlling
    precedent must be “sufficiently clear that every reasonable [officer] would have
    understood that what he is doing violates” the Constitution. Mullenix, 136 S.
    Ct. at 308 (cleaned up). Baker does not come close.
    The officers deserve qualified immunity on the excessive force claims. I
    respectfully dissent.
    75