Gonzalez Ex Rel. Gonzalez v. City of Anaheim , 747 F.3d 789 ( 2014 )


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  •                   FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    RAFAEL GONZALEZ, individually and          No. 11-56360
    as successor in interest to Adolph
    Anthony Sanchez Gonzalez,                     D.C. No.
    Plaintiff,   2:10-cv-04660-
    PA-SH
    and
    F.E.V., a minor, individually and as         OPINION
    successor in interest to Adolph
    Anthony Sanchez Gonzalez, by and
    through her Guardian Ad Litem
    David Vasquez; ANTOINETTE
    SANCHEZ, individually and as
    successor in interest to Adolph
    Anthony Sanchez Gonzalez,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    CITY OF ANAHEIM, DARON WYATT,
    and MATTHEW ELLIS,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Central District of California
    Percy Anderson, District Judge, Presiding
    2               GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM
    Argued and Submitted En Banc
    December 11, 2013—San Francisco, California
    Filed March 31, 2014
    Before: Alex Kozinski, Chief Judge, and Stephen S. Trott,
    Barry G. Silverman, Susan P. Graber, M. Margaret
    McKeown, Ronald M. Gould, Marsha S. Berzon, Richard
    C. Tallman, Richard R. Clifton, Carlos T. Bea, and Morgan
    Christen, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion by Judge Clifton;
    Partial Concurrence and Partial Dissent by Judge Trott;
    Dissent by Chief Judge Kozinski
    SUMMARY*
    Civil Rights
    The en banc court reversed the district court’s summary
    judgment and remanded on a Fourth Amendment excessive
    deadly force claim, and affirmed the district court’s summary
    judgment as to a Fourteenth Amendment claim and a non-
    deadly force portion of the Fourth Amendment claim, in a
    
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
     action brought by successors of Adolph
    Gonzalez, who was shot and killed during an encounter with
    two Anaheim police officers.
    *
    This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
    been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
    GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM                     3
    The court held that based on the record, it could not say
    that a verdict in favor of the defendants on the claim of
    excessive deadly force was the only conclusion that a
    reasonable jury could reach. The court noted that there was
    significant inconsistency in the officers’ testimony regarding
    what happened during the few seconds before Gonzalez was
    shot in the head, specifically whether Gonzalez’s vehicle,
    which contained Officer Wyatt, was rapidly accelerating and
    posed an immediate threat to safety.
    The court held that the constitutional standard for using
    force less than deadly force was lower and that given the
    circumstances, defendants were entitled to summary
    judgment on the uses of force leading up to the gunshot.
    The court affirmed the district court’s summary judgment
    for defendants as to plaintiffs’ claim that they had been
    deprived of a familial relationship with Gonzalez in violation
    of their Fourteenth Amendment right to substantive due
    process. The court held that plaintiffs produced no evidence
    that the officers had any ulterior motives for using force
    against Gonzalez.
    Dissenting in part and concurring in part, Judge Trott,
    joined by Chief Judge Kozinski and Judges Tallman, and
    Bea, wrote that given that Officer Wyatt was trapped in
    Gonzalez’s van, his act of self-defense was objectively
    reasonable, and he would therefore affirm the district court.
    Dissenting, Chief Judge Kozinski, joined by Judges Trott,
    Tallman, and Bea, wrote that how fast the vehicle was
    moving and how far it had traveled was beside the point
    given that it was undisputed that at the time he fired the fatal
    shot, Officer Wyatt was trapped inside a moving vehicle
    4             GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM
    driven by a man who had resisted the verbal commands,
    physical restraints, lethal threats and the bodily force of two
    uniformed officers.
    COUNSEL
    Paul L. Hoffman (argued), Schonbrun, DeSimone, Seplow,
    Harris & Hoffman, Venice, California; Dale K. Galipo and
    Melanie T. Partow, Woodland Hills, California, for Plaintiffs-
    Appellants.
    Moses W. Johnson (argued) and Cristina L. Talley, Anaheim,
    California, for Defendants-Appellees.
    OPINION
    CLIFTON, Circuit Judge:
    Adolph Anthony Sanchez Gonzalez was shot and killed
    during an encounter with two Anaheim police officers. His
    successors brought an action seeking damages under
    
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    . The district court entered summary
    judgment in favor of defendants.
    Because Gonzalez is dead, the police officers are the only
    witnesses able to testify as to the events that led to
    Gonzalez’s death. In such a circumstance, we must carefully
    examine the evidence in the record to determine whether the
    officers’ testimony is internally consistent and consistent with
    other known facts. After conducting such a review, we
    conclude that a significant inconsistency in the officers’
    testimony was sufficient to present a genuine dispute of
    GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM                    5
    material fact. Based on the current record, summary
    judgment on the plaintiffs’ claim for deadly excessive force
    was inappropriate. We reverse and remand that claim for
    further proceedings.
    In addition to the excessive force claim brought on behalf
    of Gonzalez, the plaintiffs also brought claims in their own
    right for the denial of a familial relationship. The district
    court granted summary judgment for defendants as to those
    claims as well. As to that portion of the judgment, we affirm.
    I. Background
    As noted above, the only testimony concerning the events
    that led to Gonzalez’s death came from the two police
    officers involved in the incident, Anaheim Police Department
    Officers Daron Wyatt and Matthew Ellis. They testified that
    they first noticed Gonzalez when they were responding in
    their patrol car to an unrelated call at about 2 a.m. on
    September 25, 2009. A Mazda minivan cut them off as they
    were making a turn. The minivan turned into a gas station,
    and the officers continued on their way.
    A few minutes later, the officers returned to the area
    where they had been cut off and noticed that the minivan was
    still at the gas station. Gonzalez got in the car and began
    driving southbound. The officers followed him. They
    observed the minivan weaving within its traffic lane.
    Although weaving within a lane was not a traffic violation, as
    Ellis later acknowledged, the officers decided to make a
    traffic stop and pulled Gonzalez over.
    At that time, the officers did not recognize the driver from
    any prior contacts. They did not have any information that the
    6             GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM
    minivan had been stolen or had outstanding warrants or
    citations. They had no information that the driver had
    previously committed any crime, had any prior contact with
    law enforcement, or had any involvement with weapons. At
    no point during the entire incident did either officer ever see
    a weapon in the minivan.
    The officers exited their vehicle and approached the
    minivan from both sides. Ellis approached from the driver’s
    side, and Wyatt approached from the passenger side. Wyatt
    drew his gun. Wyatt thought he saw Gonzalez reach for
    something between the driver and passenger seats and warned
    Gonzalez that if he reached down again, Wyatt would shoot.
    Gonzalez at that point complied and held his fists in his lap.
    The officers told Gonzalez to turn off the vehicle and
    open his hands, which he held clenched. Ellis tried to open
    the driver’s side door, but it was locked. The officers reached
    through the minivan’s open windows and opened the driver
    and passenger side doors. Ellis saw Gonzalez pull his hand
    out of a bag located between the two front seats. Ellis
    observed a plastic bag in Gonzalez’s right fist. Ellis told
    Gonzalez to turn off the vehicle and give him his hands.
    Gonzalez did not respond to that command.
    Wyatt reached into the car, struck Gonzalez’s elbow three
    times with a flashlight, and told Gonzalez to open his hand.
    Gonzalez then raised his hand up to his mouth, as if to
    swallow what he was holding. Ellis grabbed Gonzalez. Wyatt
    testified that he thought Ellis was trying to apply a carotid
    restraint, but Ellis testified that he was only trying to gain
    control of Gonzalez’s hands. Wyatt also observed that
    Gonzalez had a clenched fist and was reaching downward
    with his left hand. Wyatt called for assistance on his police
    GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM                     7
    radio. Wyatt went around to the driver’s side to try to help
    Ellis restrain Gonzalez, but was not able to do so.
    Wyatt went back to the passenger side, entered the
    minivan, and began punching Gonzalez in the head. Ellis
    observed Gonzalez reaching for the minivan’s gear shift with
    his right hand. Ellis thought Gonzalez was attempting to shift
    the car into drive so Ellis used his flashlight to hit Gonzalez
    on the back of the head to try to stop him.
    Despite the officers’ efforts, Gonzalez managed to shift
    the minivan into drive, and the minivan began moving. Ellis
    withdrew from the vehicle as it began moving and struck
    Gonzalez in the head as he did so. The front passenger door
    closed behind Wyatt, who remained in the vehicle.
    Ellis stated that Gonzalez “stomp[ed]” on the accelerator.
    Wyatt said that Gonzalez “floored the accelerator” and that
    the vehicle “violently accelerated.”
    Wyatt yelled at Gonzalez to stop the car, but he kept
    going. Gonzalez swatted Wyatt’s hand away as he tried to
    turn off the ignition or shift the transmission to neutral or
    park. Unable to stop or gain control of the car, Wyatt drew his
    weapon and shot Gonzalez in the head, killing him. He shot
    from a distance of less than six inches. The minivan hit a
    parked car and came to a stop.
    Wyatt testified that he fired the shot less than ten seconds
    after the car started moving, and it could have been less than
    five seconds. He estimated that the car moved approximately
    50 feet in that time and was going 50 miles per hour at the
    time of the shot.
    8             GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM
    Gonzalez’s father sued the officers and the City of
    Anaheim under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    . He brought claims as his
    son’s successor for excessive force in violation of the Fourth
    Amendment and on behalf of himself for denial of a familial
    relationship in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment.
    Gonzalez’s mother and daughter filed a similar action that
    also raised various state law claims. The district court
    consolidated the actions.
    The defendants moved for summary judgment, and the
    district court granted the motion. The district court held that
    the force the officers used during their encounter with
    Gonzalez was reasonable and that their conduct did not
    violate the Fourteenth Amendment. Having disposed of the
    federal claims, the district court declined to exercise
    supplemental jurisdiction over the remaining state law claims.
    Gonzalez’s mother and daughter appeal the district court’s
    grant of summary judgment.
    II. Discussion
    We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment
    de novo to determine whether there are any genuine disputes
    of material fact and whether the moving party is entitled to
    judgment as a matter of law. Johnson v. Poway Unified Sch.
    Dist., 
    658 F.3d 954
    , 960 (9th Cir. 2011). We view the
    evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.
    
    Id.
    A. Fourth Amendment Claim
    Gonzalez’s representatives argue that genuine disputes of
    material fact preclude summary judgment on their claim that
    GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM                     9
    the officers used unreasonable deadly force against Gonzalez.
    We agree.
    “An officer’s use of deadly force is reasonable only if ‘the
    officer has probable cause to believe that the suspect poses a
    significant threat of death or serious physical injury to the
    officer or others.’” Scott v. Henrich, 
    39 F.3d 912
    , 914 (9th
    Cir. 1994) (emphasis omitted) (quoting Tennessee v. Garner,
    
    471 U.S. 1
    , 3 (1985)). Factors relevant to assessing whether
    an officer’s use of force was objectively reasonable include
    “the severity of the crime at issue, whether the suspect poses
    an immediate threat to the safety of the officers or others, and
    whether he is actively resisting arrest or attempting to evade
    arrest by flight.” Graham v. Connor, 
    490 U.S. 386
    , 396
    (1989). The immediacy of the threat posed by the suspect is
    the most important factor. Mattos v. Agarano, 
    661 F.3d 433
    ,
    441 (9th Cir. 2011) (en banc). These factors are not exclusive,
    and we consider the totality of the circumstances. Bryan v.
    MacPherson, 
    630 F.3d 805
    , 826 (9th Cir. 2010).
    In general, we have recognized that an officer must give
    a warning before using deadly force “whenever practicable.”
    Harris v. Roderick, 
    126 F.3d 1189
    , 1201 (9th Cir. 1997)
    (citing Garner, 
    471 U.S. at
    11–12). Also relevant to
    reasonableness are the “alternative methods of capturing or
    subduing a suspect” available to the officers. Smith v. City of
    Hemet, 
    394 F.3d 689
    , 703 (9th Cir. 2005) (en banc).
    We take the perspective of an officer on the scene without
    the benefit of 20/20 hindsight and consider 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.” Graham, 
    490 U.S. at
    396–97.
    10               GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM
    The key issue in this case is whether a reasonable jury
    would necessarily find that Wyatt perceived an immediate
    threat of death or serious physical injury at the time he shot
    Gonzalez in the head.1 That requires us to consider exactly
    what was happening when the shot was fired.
    As described above, Ellis testified that Gonzalez
    “stomp[ed]” on the accelerator, and Wyatt said that Gonzalez
    “floored” it. Wyatt specifically testified that the minivan
    “violently accelerated.” But that is not entirely consistent
    with Wyatt’s other testimony. His story was that the minivan
    1
    The primary dissenting opinion, by Judge Trott, suggests, at 24, that
    the question at summary judgment of whether a law enforcement officer’s
    actions were objectively reasonable is a question of law, not a question of
    fact for the jury, citing Scott v. Harris, 
    550 U.S. 372
    , 381 n.8 (2007). But
    as that footnote in Scott makes clear, that does not change the standard to
    be applied to the question presented by this case. The footnote as a whole
    states:
    Justice STEVENS incorrectly declares this to be “a
    question of fact best reserved for a jury,” and complains
    we are “usurp[ing] the jury’s factfinding function.” At
    the summary judgment stage, however, once we have
    determined the relevant set of facts and drawn all
    inferences in favor of the nonmoving party to the extent
    supportable by the record, the reasonableness of Scott’s
    actions—or, in Justice STEVENS’ parlance, “[w]hether
    [respondent’s] actions have risen to a level warranting
    deadly force” —is a pure question of law.
    
    Id.
     (citations omitted) (emphasis in original). The dispute in this case
    concerns the relevant set of facts, in particular whether the minivan had
    violently accelerated and was moving at a high rate of speed. That remains
    a question of fact for the jury, as to which we must draw all inferences in
    favor of the nonmoving party at the summary judgment stage.
    GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM                     11
    moved 50 feet in five to ten seconds but was going 50 miles
    per hour when he shot.
    That combination of facts appears to be physically
    impossible. There are three pieces to this puzzle: the speed
    of the minivan at the time of the shot, the distance it traveled,
    and the time that elapsed. These pieces don’t fit together. As
    plaintiffs argued to the district court, a vehicle that traveled
    50 feet in ten seconds would have an average speed of only
    3.4 miles per hour. If the time period is cut to five seconds,
    the average speed increases only to 6.8 miles per hour. Even
    accepting that the minivan would be gaining speed while
    accelerating, an average speed of 3 to 7 miles per hour
    appears inconsistent with Wyatt’s testimony as to the speed
    of the vehicle and with the testimony of both Wyatt and Ellis
    that Gonzalez floored or stomped down on the gas.
    “Deadly force cases pose a particularly difficult problem
    . . . because the officer defendant is often the only surviving
    eyewitness.” Henrich, 
    39 F.3d at 915
    . This is one of those
    difficult cases. Gonzalez cannot testify because he is dead,
    and no other witnesses saw the incident. In such cases, we
    “must ensure that the officer is not taking advantage of the
    fact that the witness most likely to contradict his story—the
    person shot dead—is unable to testify.” 
    Id.
     Accordingly, we
    carefully examine “all the evidence in the record, such as
    medical reports, contemporaneous statements by the officer
    and the available physical evidence, . . . to determine whether
    the officer’s story is internally consistent and consistent with
    other known facts.” 
    Id.
     We must also examine “circumstantial
    evidence that, if believed, would tend to discredit the police
    officer’s story.” 
    Id.
     We have held that summary judgment
    should be granted sparingly in excessive force cases. Glenn
    v. Washington County, 
    673 F.3d 864
    , 871 (9th Cir. 2011).
    12            GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM
    This principle applies with particular force where the only
    witness other than the officers was killed during the
    encounter.
    Based on the record before us, a jury could believe
    Wyatt’s testimony that the minivan traveled about 50 feet
    before the shot was fired and that less than five or ten seconds
    passed between the time the vehicle started moving and the
    time Wyatt fired the shot. See Long v. Johnson, 
    736 F.3d 891
    ,
    896 (9th Cir. 2013) (explaining that “we must respect the
    exclusive province of the jury to determine the credibility of
    witnesses, resolve evidentiary conflicts, and draw reasonable
    inferences from proven facts” (internal quotation marks and
    brackets omitted)).
    Although it was argued that the actual distance traveled
    by the minivan by the time the shot was fired was
    substantially greater than 50 feet, defendants did not submit
    evidence to that effect. There was plenty of time after the
    episode took place to check how far the minivan traveled. It
    seems likely that there would have been an incident report
    that would have included descriptions and precise
    measurements taken afterwards, but defendants did not offer
    anything like that into evidence. Based on the record, a
    rational jury was not required to assume that the distance
    traveled was greater than Wyatt’s estimate. Moreover, as it is
    our obligation to view the evidence in the light most
    favorable to the nonmoving parties at summary judgment, we
    cannot simply dismiss the internal contradictions in Wyatt’s
    testimony. Johnson, 
    658 F.3d at 960
    .
    A reasonable jury could accept at face value Wyatt’s
    statements that the car moved approximately 50 feet in about
    five to ten seconds before he shot Gonzalez. It could thus
    GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM                             13
    find that the minivan was not traveling at a high rate of speed
    and Wyatt did not reasonably perceive an immediate threat of
    death or serious bodily injury at the time he shot Gonzalez in
    the head.
    The primary dissenting opinion, by Judge Trott, suggests,
    at 47, that because the plaintiffs did not dispute that Gonzalez
    “stomp[ed]” down on the gas pedal, summary judgment must
    be affirmed. But it was the speed of the minivan, not whether
    Gonzalez stomped on the gas pedal, that was the key disputed
    material fact.
    The premise of the primary dissent is that the officer
    acted in response to an immediate threat to his safety or the
    safety of others. We do not disagree with most of what the
    primary dissent says.2 But the existence of an immediate
    threat to safety in this case is based on the sudden
    acceleration and speed of the van. Gonzalez’s action could
    not have presented a threat sufficient to justify the use of
    deadly force unless it caused the car to move in a way that
    immediately threatened the safety of the officers or the
    public. The defendants did not argue that such a threat was
    2
    We disagree with the view in the separate dissent by Chief Judge
    Kozinski, at 54, that any “sane officer” would have shot Gonzalez in the
    head, no matter “[h]ow fast the van was moving.” The defendants have
    not tried to make that argument, and we are not compelled by either logic
    or existing precedent to accept that proposition. As explained below, if the
    jury found, as it could, that Officer Wyatt was in the passenger seat of a
    slowly rolling vehicle, it could conclude that he did not face an immediate
    threat to safety sufficient to justify the immediate use of deadly force. Our
    decision simply identifies a disputed issue of material fact. If, as Chief
    Judge Kozinski’s dissent bemoans, that gives plaintiffs “a bludgeon with
    which to extort a hefty settlement,” 
    id.,
     it will only be because the
    defendants are concerned that a jury might not view the evidence as the
    dissent does.
    14            GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM
    posed if the minivan was actually going only 3 to 7 miles per
    hour. They argued that “[t]he undisputed evidence is that
    decedent was speeding down the street going approximately
    40 to 50 MPH with Officer Wyatt trapped inside the van.” If
    that were true, we agree that summary judgment in favor of
    defendants would be appropriate, as the primary dissenting
    opinion contends. There was a genuine dispute about that
    fact, however, based on Wyatt’s own testimony. This case is
    about the standard for summary judgment, not whether law
    enforcement officers face danger and are permitted to use
    deadly force when faced with an immediate threat to safety.
    A jury that found that the minivan was moving slowly
    could reasonably infer that Gonzalez did not stomp on the
    accelerator, or that he let off the accelerator even if he
    stomped down at first, or that a mechanical failure prevented
    the car from reaching dangerous speeds. Regardless of
    whether they disputed the use of the word “stomp,” the
    plaintiffs explicitly argued to the district court and to us that
    the minivan was not going very fast, based on Wyatt’s own
    testimony, and thus that Wyatt did not face an immediate
    threat of death or serious bodily injury. On this record, the
    “stomping” does not preclude a triable issue on Wyatt’s use
    of deadly force.
    Our decision in Wilkinson v. Torres, 
    610 F.3d 546
     (9th
    Cir. 2010), a case that also involved an accelerating minivan,
    does not require the conclusion that the use of deadly force
    against Gonzalez was reasonable as a matter of law. In
    Wilkinson, we did not hold that the threat of sudden
    acceleration always justifies the use of deadly force. Instead,
    we emphasized the importance of considering all the facts in
    excessive force cases. 
    Id. at 551
    . The officer in Wilkinson was
    standing near a minivan that was trying to accelerate. 
    Id.
     The
    GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM                   15
    minivan’s wheels were spinning and throwing up mud
    because the driver was attempting to accelerate in a slippery
    area. 
    Id.
     The officer thought his partner may have already
    been run over by the minivan once and was lying or standing
    in the mud nearby, possibly disoriented, at risk of being hit
    again. 
    Id.
     The officer shot the driver. 
    Id.
     The plaintiffs
    argued that the vehicle was moving too slowly to endanger
    the officers. 
    Id.
     We decided that, even so, the car “could have
    gained traction at any time, resulting in a sudden acceleration
    in speed,” while the officer believed his partner to be
    vulnerable. 
    Id. at 552
    . Given these facts, we concluded that
    there was no genuine dispute of material fact as to whether
    the officer’s use of deadly force was reasonable.
    Here, Wyatt was not on foot next to a vehicle that might
    run him over at any moment should it have accelerated, and
    he did not express concern that his partner was vulnerable to
    being run over. The defendants presented no evidence of
    anyone else in danger. Instead, Wyatt was inside a car that
    might have been slowly rolling forward. Wilkinson does not
    answer the question in this case. Based on the current record,
    a jury could find that Wyatt did not act reasonably.
    Similarly, a jury could find that Wyatt reasonably
    perceived a threat, but not one that justified the immediate
    use of deadly force. As noted above, the jury may consider
    the availability of other methods to subdue a suspect. Wyatt
    had a police baton, pepper spray, and a taser. He could have
    used any of them, or he could have shot Gonzalez in a
    nonlethal area of the body to try to stop him from driving
    further. Instead, he used his gun and intentionally shot
    Gonzalez in the head. If the jury found that the car was
    moving slowly at the time, it could also find that other
    16               GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM
    alternatives could have been used and that the use of deadly
    force was unreasonable. See Smith, 
    394 F.3d at 703
    .
    A jury could also find that Wyatt failed to give a warning
    before he shot Gonzalez in the head. The absence of a
    warning does not necessarily mean that Wyatt’s use of deadly
    force was unreasonable. See Scott, 
    550 U.S. at 383
    (explaining that there is no “easy-to-apply-legal test” in
    excessive force cases). A rational jury may find, however,
    that if the car was moving at an average speed of 3 to 7 miles
    per hour, a warning was practicable and the failure to give
    one might weigh against reasonableness. See Deorle v.
    Rutherford, 
    272 F.3d 1272
    , 1283–84 (9th Cir. 2001).
    We do not hold that a reasonable jury must find in favor
    of the plaintiffs on this record, only that it could. The jury
    could also reasonably find, to the contrary, that the minivan
    was moving dangerously fast and that Wyatt reasonably
    perceived an immediate threat to his safety sufficient to
    support the use of deadly force. Other factors identified in
    Graham would support a verdict in favor of the defendants
    here, as well. By the time Wyatt pulled the trigger, the
    crimes at issue were relatively severe and Gonzalez was
    plainly resisting arrest or attempting to evade arrest by flight.
    See Graham, 
    490 U.S. at 396
    . But based on the record before
    us, we cannot say that a verdict in favor of the defendants on
    the claim for excessive force is the only conclusion that a
    reasonable jury could reach.3
    3
    The constitutional standard for using force less than deadly force is
    lower. See Gregory v. County of Maui, 
    523 F.3d 1103
    , 1106–07 (9th Cir.
    2008) (holding that “officers had substantial grounds for believing that
    some degree of force was necessary” where suspect was possibly under
    the influence of drugs, acting bizarrely, trespassing, and refusing repeated
    GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM                          17
    B. Fourteenth Amendment Claim
    The plaintiffs also assert on their own behalf, as
    Gonzalez’s relatives, that they have been deprived of a
    familial relationship with Gonzalez in violation of their
    Fourteenth Amendment right to substantive due process. Such
    a claim requires the plaintiffs to prove that the officers’ use
    of force “shock[ed] the conscience.” Porter v. Osborn,
    
    546 F.3d 1131
    , 1137 (9th Cir. 2008). Based on the record, a
    reasonable jury could not so find. Where, as here, the officers
    did not have time to deliberate, a use of force shocks the
    conscience only if the officers had a “purpose to harm” the
    decedent for reasons unrelated to legitimate law enforcement
    objectives. 
    Id.
     The plaintiffs produced no evidence that the
    officers had any ulterior motives for using force against
    Gonzalez, and the district court properly granted summary
    judgment on this claim. See Karam v. City of Burbank,
    
    352 F.3d 1188
    , 1194 (9th Cir. 2003) (explaining that
    “speculation as to . . . improper motive does not rise to the
    level of evidence sufficient to survive summary judgment”).
    III.      Conclusion
    For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s grant of
    summary judgment as to the Fourth Amendment excessive
    deadly force claim is reversed and remanded. The district
    court’s grant of summary judgment as to the Fourteenth
    commands to drop a pen). Because it is undisputed that Gonzalez did not
    respond to the officers’ directions before any force was applied, appeared
    to be trying to swallow potential evidence, and began driving away, the
    defendants were entitled to summary judgment on the uses of force
    leading up to the gunshot, such as striking Gonzalez with a flashlight or
    hitting him in the head as he shifted the minivan into gear.
    18             GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM
    Amendment claim and the non-deadly force portion of the
    Fourth Amendment claim is affirmed.
    Each party shall bear its own costs.
    AFFIRMED IN PART AND REVERSED IN PART;
    REMANDED.
    TROTT, Circuit Judge, with whom KOZINSKI, Chief Judge,
    and TALLMAN and BEA, Circuit Judges, join dissenting in
    part and concurring in part:
    Instead of cooperating with the police, Gonzalez stomped
    on his van’s accelerator and fled from a traffic stop, igniting
    a dangerous chase. What makes this chase unusual is that
    Officer Wyatt was trapped in Gonzalez’s van. After yelling
    at Gonzalez to stop and unsuccessfully trying to disable the
    vehicle, Officer Wyatt ended Gonzalez’s violent attempt to
    escape by shooting him. As much as one might have wished
    for a different outcome, I conclude that Officer Wyatt’s act in
    self-defense was objectively reasonable. Thus, I would
    affirm the district court.
    I
    The issue here is different from our usual two-part fare in
    Fourth Amendment excessive force litigation. Officers Wyatt
    and Ellis do not request qualified immunity under prong two
    GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM                19
    of the Saucier v. Katz,1 Pearson v. Callahan2 test on the
    ground that what they did had not been clearly established to
    be a violation of the excessive force prohibition of the Fourth
    Amendment. When questioned during oral argument why his
    clients were not asking for qualified immunity, counsel
    pointed out that the summary judgment threshold issue under
    either approach — which we call “prong one” in judicial
    short form — is the same, i.e., whether “[t]aken in the light
    most favorable to the party asserting the injury, do the facts
    alleged show the officer’s conduct violated a constitutional
    right?” Saucier, 533 U.S. at 201. If not, the question of
    immunity becomes moot. See Pearson, 555 U.S. at 236 (“In
    some cases, a discussion of why the relevant facts do not
    violate clearly established law may make it apparent
    that . . . the relevant facts do not make out a constitutional
    violation at all.”).
    Focusing on prong one, these officers maintain that the
    law covering their actions was established twenty five years
    ago; and pursuant to that established law, what they did
    shortly after midnight on September 25, 2009, was
    objectively reasonable and therefore constitutional. The
    Supreme Court law they relied on as to their encounter with
    Gonzalez is this: when faced with a suspect who is resisting
    arrest and attempting to evade apprehension by flight from
    serious crimes under circumstances that pose an immediate
    threat to their safety or the safety of others, police officers
    may use deadly force to protect themselves and the public at
    large.
    1
    
    533 U.S. 194
     (2001).
    2
    
    555 U.S. 223
     (2009).
    20            GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM
    This case perforce is not just about how officers handle
    criminal suspects, but also what the judiciary has consistently
    said is constitutionally permissible when those suspects
    endanger peace officers’ lives or safety. Accordingly, the
    ramifications of our decision radiate far beyond this particular
    lawsuit.
    II
    Every day of the year, law enforcement officers leave
    their homes to police, protect, and serve their communities.
    Unlike most employees in the workforce, peace officers carry
    firearms because their occupation requires them on occasion
    to confront people who have no respect either for the officers
    or for the law. Chief Judge Kozinski put it well in Mattos v.
    Agarano when he said,
    By asking police to serve and protect us,
    we citizens agree to comply with their
    instructions and cooperate with their
    investigations. Unfortunately, not all of us
    hold up our end of the bargain. As a result,
    officers face an ever-present risk that routine
    police work will suddenly become dangerous.
    
    661 F.3d 433
    , 453 (9th Cir. 2011) (en banc) (Kozinski, C.J.,
    concurring in part and dissenting in part).
    This case inexorably requires us to answer two related
    questions involving officer safety on the job. First, to what
    extent are those officers entitled to protect themselves during
    dangerous situations so they may return home as healthy as
    before? Second, can they, or can they not, rely on the
    authoritative constitutional guidance the judiciary has
    GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM                 21
    provided for them as to what they may do when confronted
    by a suspect who poses an immediate threat to their safety
    and the safety of others?
    III
    The men and women who become officers of the law
    have been selected by their agencies according to demanding
    criteria of suitability for their profession. Many officers have
    degrees from colleges and universities in law enforcement.
    Police departments in California — including the Anaheim
    Police Department — almost uniformly require that a
    candidate graduate from a police academy approved by the
    State Commission know as POST, which stands for Peace
    Officer Standards and Training.3 Once employed, officers
    receive in-service and special training from their departments.
    What are they taught in the classroom and in POST
    academies? What the law is, and how to enforce it. Peace
    officers’ primary sources of information and guidance are not
    only the Constitution and the statutes passed by the legislative
    branch, but more importantly in connection with the
    resolution of this controversy, case law. Because the
    principles in our Constitution, such as the Fourth
    Amendment’s prohibition against unreasonable seizures,
    appear in broad abstract terms, justices and judges use
    published opinions — case law — to provide police
    departments and individual officers with more specific
    guidance, such as the general rule that the use of excessive
    force to make an arrest is an unreasonable seizure, and is
    therefore actionable in civil court pursuant to 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    . Just as I am certain that no law student graduates
    3
    See 
    Cal. Penal Code §§ 13500
    , 13510.
    22            GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM
    without taking a course in contracts, I am equally certain that
    all police officers have been instructed as to the acceptable
    use of deadly force.
    The core of their curriculum is the Supreme Court’s
    constitutional guidance in Tennessee v. Garner, 
    471 U.S. 1
    (1985), and Graham v. Connor, 
    490 U.S. 386
     (1989), which
    law enforcement regards as orthodox scripture. Those cases
    provide fair warning of what police cannot do, but also what
    they can. And, just as officers are required to follow the law,
    so too are they entitled to be protected by it as they confront
    the daily challenges of their work responsibilities. Precisely
    what we have said and what we have held about the
    vulnerable circumstances Officer Wyatt found himself in are
    central to understanding the reasonableness of Officer
    Wyatt’s use of deadly force and his exercise of his right of
    self-defense. Therefore, I choose not to paraphrase or
    summarize our opinions, but to quote from them at length.
    IV
    What have we, the federal judiciary, said about how
    officers may react to facts and circumstances such as those
    encountered by Officers Daron Wyatt and Matthew Ellis
    when they stopped Adolph Anthony Sanchez Gonzalez on
    September 25, 2009?
    In Tennessee v. Garner and Graham v. Connor, the
    Supreme Court ruled that an officer may use deadly force in
    self-defense or in the defense of others if
    (1) confronted with a serious crime,
    GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM                   23
    (2) the suspect poses an immediate threat to
    the safety of the officer or the safety of others,
    and
    (3) the suspect is actively resisting arrest or
    attempting to evade arrest by flight.
    Garner, 
    471 U.S. at
    11–12; Graham, 
    490 U.S. at 396
    . Of
    these three factors, the most important is number two: the
    immediacy of the threat posed by the suspect. Mattos,
    
    661 F.3d at 441
    .
    The operative word in the second factor is “threat.” The
    word “threat” denotes an indication of impending danger or
    harm. The law does not require an officer who immediately
    faces physical harm to wait before defending himself until the
    indication of impending harm ripens into the onslaught of
    actual physical injury. This distinction becomes crucial
    when, without warning, a criminal suspect begins to use force
    to resist an officer in the discharge of the officer’s sworn
    responsibilities.
    In this connection, the Supreme Court has admonished us
    in the trial and appellate courts (1) to evaluate the
    reasonableness of an officer-in-the-field’s response “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
    ,
    and (2) to make “allowance for the fact that police officers
    are often forced to make split-second judgments — in
    circumstances that are tense, uncertain, and rapidly evolving,”
    
    id. at 397
    . The Court added that the test is not whether “in
    the peace of a judge’s chambers” it seems that what officers
    did in the field was unnecessary. 
    Id. at 396
    . And in Ryburn
    v. Huff, the Court warned that “judges should be cautious
    24            GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM
    about second-guessing a police officer’s assessment, made on
    the scene, of the danger presented by a particular situation.”
    565 U.S. at _____, 
    132 S. Ct. 987
    , 991–92 (2012) (per
    curiam).
    The threshold question at the summary judgment stage of
    whether or not an officer’s actions were objectively
    reasonable under the Fourth Amendment is “a pure question
    of law,” not a question of fact reserved for a jury. Scott v.
    Harris, 
    550 U.S. 372
    , 381 n.8 (2007). Included in this “pure
    question of law” is whether a suspect’s actions have risen to
    a level warranting deadly force. 
    Id.
     In handing down this
    ruling, the Scott Court explicitly rejected Justice Stevens’s
    dissenting view that the objective reasonableness of an
    officer’s actions should always be a question for the jury. 
    Id.
    The status of this threshold issue as “a pure question of law”
    makes it all the more important that what we say about it can
    be relied upon by those who must act accordingly in the field.
    Fair warning is sine qua non of a rule when it applies to
    officers who must react quickly in tense situations.
    V
    A.
    Did Gonzalez Pose “an Immediate Threat”
    to the Safety of the Officers and to Others?
    Because this case arises from a stop at 2:00 a.m. of a van
    being driven erratically, I begin with the Supreme Court’s
    longstanding recognition of the perils of the “traffic stop.”
    This common event has attendant personal-safety hazards that
    peace officers face thousands of times a day throughout our
    country and about which they receive basic training. In
    GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM                   25
    summary, an officer must presume that a traffic stop, such as
    the one we evaluate here, is dangerous until he is satisfied of
    his safety.
    The lead case in this area is Terry v. Ohio, 
    392 U.S. 1
    (1968), the seminal “stop-and-frisk” decision that presented
    the Court with “serious questions concerning the role of the
    Fourth Amendment in the confrontation on the street between
    the citizen and the policeman investigating suspicious
    circumstances.” 
    Id. at 4
    . In holding that the circumstances of
    Terry’s detention justified an officer’s “invasion of Terry’s
    personal security by searching him for weapons,” 
    id. at 23
    ,
    the Court embraced the stark realities of the street to explain
    its holding.
    We are now concerned with more than the
    governmental interest in investigating crime;
    in addition, there is the more immediate
    interest of the police officer in taking steps to
    assure himself that the person with whom he
    is dealing is not armed with a weapon that
    could unexpectedly and fatally be used against
    him. Certainly it would be unreasonable to
    require that police officers take unnecessary
    risks in the performance of their duties.
    American criminals have a long tradition of
    armed violence, and every year in this country
    many law enforcement officers are killed in
    the line of duty, and thousands more are
    wounded. Virtually all of these deaths and a
    substantial portion of the injuries are inflicted
    with guns and knives.
    26             GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM
    In view of these facts, we cannot blind
    ourselves to the need for law enforcement
    officers to protect themselves and other
    prospective victims of violence in situations
    where they may lack probable cause for an
    arrest. When an officer is justified in
    believing that the individual whose suspicious
    behavior he is investigating at close range is
    armed and presently dangerous to the officer
    or to others, it would appear to be clearly
    unreasonable to deny the officer the power to
    take necessary measures to determine whether
    the person is in fact carrying a weapon and to
    neutralize the threat of physical harm.
    
    Id.
     at 23–24 (emphasis added).
    The Court’s footnote twenty-one is equally enlightening.
    Fifty-seven law enforcement officers were
    killed in the line of duty in this country in
    1966, bringing the total to 335 for the seven-
    year period beginning with 1960. Also in
    1966, there were 23,851 assaults on police
    officers, 9,113 of which resulted in injuries to
    the policemen. Fifty-five of the 57 officers
    killed in 1966 died from gunshot wounds, 41
    of them inflicted by handguns easily secreted
    about the person. The remaining two murders
    were perpetrated by knives. See Federal
    Bureau of Investigation, Uniform Crime
    Reports for the United States – 1966, at
    45–48, 152 and Table 51.             The easy
    availability of firearms to potential criminals
    GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM                 27
    in this country is well known and has
    provoked much debate. See e.g., President’s
    Commission of Law Enforcement and
    Administration of Justice, The Challenge of
    Crime in a Free Society 239–243 (1967).
    Whatever the merits of gun-control proposals,
    this fact is relevant to an assessment of the
    need for some form of self-protective search
    power.
    
    Id.
     at 24 n.21.
    Next, we come to Pennsylvania v. Mimms, 
    434 U.S. 106
    (1977) (per curiam).
    We think it too plain for argument that the
    State’s proffered justification — the safety of
    the officer — is both legitimate and weighty.
    “Certainly it would be unreasonable to require
    that police officers take unnecessary risks in
    the performance of their duties.” And we have
    specifically recognized the inordinate risk
    confronting an officer as he approaches a
    person seated in an automobile. “According
    to one study, approximately 30% of police
    shootings occurred when a police officer
    approached a suspect seated in an automobile.
    Bristow, Police Officer Shootings—A
    Tactical Evaluation, 54 J.Crim.L.C. & P.S. 93
    (1963).” We are aware that not all these
    assaults occur when issuing traffic summons,
    but we have before expressly declined to
    accept the argument that traffic violations
    necessarily involve less danger to officers
    28           GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM
    than other types of confrontations. Indeed, it
    appears “that a significant percentage of
    murders of police officers occurs when the
    officers are making traffic stops.”
    
    Id. at 110
     (emphasis added) (citations omitted).
    Now to 1983, and to Michigan v. Long, 
    463 U.S. 1032
    (1983).
    In Adams v. Williams, 
    407 U.S. 143
     (1972),
    we held that the police, acting on an
    informant’s tip, may reach into the passenger
    compartment of an automobile to remove a
    gun from a driver’s waistband even where the
    gun was not apparent to police from outside
    the car and the police knew of its existence
    only because of the tip. Again, our decision
    rested in part on our view of the danger
    presented to police officers in “traffic stop”
    and automobile situations.
    Finally, we have also expressly recognized
    that suspects may injure police officers and
    others by virtue of their access to weapons,
    even though they may not themselves be
    armed. . . .
    Our past cases indicate then that
    protection of police and others can justify
    protective searches when police have a
    reasonable belief that the suspect poses a
    danger, that roadside encounters between
    police and suspects are especially hazardous,
    GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM                    29
    and that danger may arise from the possible
    presence of weapons in the area surrounding
    a suspect.
    
    Id.
     at 1048–49 (emphasis added) (footnote and citations
    omitted).
    The Michigan Supreme Court appeared to
    believe that it was not reasonable for the
    officers to fear that Long could injure them,
    because he was effectively under their control
    during the investigative stop and could not get
    access to any weapons that might have been
    located in the automobile. This reasoning is
    mistaken in several respects. During any
    investigative detention, the suspect is “in the
    control” of the officers in the sense that he
    “may be briefly detained against his will . . . .”
    Just as a Terry suspect on the street may,
    despite being under the brief control of a
    police officer, reach into his clothing and
    retrieve a weapon, so might a Terry suspect in
    Long’s position break away from police
    control and retrieve a weapon from his
    automobile. In addition, if the suspect is not
    placed under arrest, he will be permitted to
    reenter his automobile, and he will then have
    access to any weapons inside. Or as here, the
    suspect may be permitted to reenter the
    vehicle before the Terry investigation is over,
    and again, may have access to weapons. In
    any event, we stress that a Terry investigation,
    such as the one that occurred here, involves a
    police investigation “at close range,” when
    30            GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM
    the officer remains particularly vulnerable in
    part because a full custodial arrest has not
    been effected, and the officer must make a
    “quick decision as to how to protect himself
    and others from possible danger . . . .” In
    such circumstances, we have not required that
    officers adopt alternate means to ensure their
    safety in order to avoid the intrusion involved
    in a Terry encounter.
    
    Id.
     at 1051–52 (emphasis added) (footnote and citations
    omitted).
    In Maryland v. Wilson, 
    519 U.S. 408
     (1997), Chief Justice
    Rehnquist elaborated one of the main reasons the Court has
    extended constitutional protection to officers conducting
    traffic stops, a reason with pungent applicability to our case.
    It would seem that the possibility of a violent
    encounter stems not from the ordinary
    reaction of a motorist stopped for a speeding
    violation, but from the fact that evidence of a
    more serious crime might be uncovered
    during the stop. And the motivation of a
    passenger to employ violence to prevent
    apprehension of such a crime is every bit as
    great as that of the driver.
    
    Id. at 414
     (emphasis added).
    As authority for this holding as to not just the driver but
    also a passenger, the Court relied on its opinion in Michigan
    v. Summers, 
    452 U.S. 692
     (1981), which highlighted the
    danger to police searching for narcotics.
    GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM                   31
    Although no special danger to the police is
    suggested by the evidence in this record, the
    execution of a warrant to search for narcotics
    is the kind of transaction that may give rise to
    sudden violence or frantic efforts to conceal
    or destroy evidence. The risk of harm to both
    the police and the occupants is minimized if
    the officers routinely exercise unquestioned
    command of the situation.
    Wilson, 
    519 U.S. at 414
     (quoting Summers, 
    452 U.S. at
    702–03) (emphasis added).
    To support its observations, the Court updated the grim
    statistics about traffic stops taken from the FBI’s Uniform
    Crime Reports (1994). “[I]n 1994 alone, there were 5,762
    officer assaults and 11 officers killed during traffic pursuits
    and stops.” Wilson, 
    519 U.S. at 416
    . In 2011, Chief Judge
    Kozinski observed that “[i]n the last decade, more than half
    a million police were assaulted in the line of duty. More than
    160,000 were injured, and 536 were killed — the vast
    majority while performing routine law enforcement tasks like
    conducting traffic stops and responding to domestic
    disturbance calls.” Mattos, 
    661 F.3d at 453
     (Kozinski, C.J.,
    concurring in part and dissenting in part).
    Writing in 2009 for a unanimous Court, Justice Ginsburg
    reaffirmed the Court’s unyielding view that traffic stops are
    “especially fraught with danger to police officers.” Arizona
    v. Johnson, 
    555 U.S. 323
    , 330 (2009) (quoting Long,
    
    463 U.S. at 1047
    ). Yet again, she recognized that: “‘The risk
    of harm to both the police and the occupants [of a stopped
    vehicle] is minimized, . . . if the officers routinely exercise
    unquestioned command of the situation.’” 
    Id.
     (brackets in
    32               GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM
    original) (quoting Wilson, 
    519 U.S. at 414
    ). In Brendlin v.
    California, Justice Souter called the principle of unquestioned
    police command, a reflection of “a societal expectation.”
    
    551 U.S. 249
    , 258 (2007). We recognized the need for
    unquestioned obedience to lawful commands during a car
    stop in Ruvalcaba v. City of Los Angeles, 
    64 F.3d 1323
    ,
    1325–28 (9th Cir. 1995).
    Relying on Mimms, the Sixth Circuit has acknowledged
    another safety concern arising from of a traffic stop where, as
    here, the officers have reason to believe that the driver is
    under the influence of a mind-altering substance.
    While safety considerations are always
    relevant, they have even greater salience here,
    as Ford had grounds to suspect that Everett
    was intoxicated. See Marvin v. City of Taylor,
    
    509 F.3d 234
    , 246 (6th Cir. 2007) (noting that
    “[d]runk persons are generally unpredictable,”
    such that extra police precautions may be
    justified in confronting an intoxicated
    suspect).
    United States v. Everett, 
    601 F.3d 484
    , 495 (6th Cir. 2010).4
    We made similar observations in Gregory v. County of Maui,
    where we held that the possibility that a suspect was under
    the influence of drugs justified the use of “some degree of
    force” to confront him. 
    523 F.3d 1103
    , 1106 (9th Cir. 2008).
    4
    “Police officers are entitled to rely on existing lower court cases
    without facing personal liability for their actions.” Pearson, 
    555 U.S. at
    244–45.
    GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM                    33
    Gonzalez’s representatives accept as “undisputed” the
    officers’ reason for stopping the decedent: erratic and unsafe
    driving. Gonzalez had earlier made an illegal left turn in
    front of them, almost causing a collision with their police car.
    Later, the officers saw him driving on the wrong side of the
    street and then weaving within the van’s lane as they
    attempted to make the stop. Added to these observations at
    2:00 a.m. was their knowledge learned from the mobile data
    terminal in their patrol car that Gonzalez’s van had been
    involved in a prior narcotics stop.
    The California Supreme Court understood the
    ramifications of erratic driving, such as Gonzalez exhibited,
    when it published its opinion in People v. Wells, 
    136 P.3d 810
    (Cal. 2006). That court held that it was reasonable to stop a
    motorist on no more than an anonymous uncorroborated
    phoned-in tip that she was “weaving all over the roadway” —
    even though the officers who stopped her had not seen
    anything to validate the caller’s information. 
    Id.
     at 811–12.
    The court believed the stop was “reasonable” because of the
    grave danger to public safety posed by drunken drivers. 
    Id. at 813
    . The court likened an impaired driver to a “‘bomb,’
    and a mobile one at that.” 
    Id. at 815
     (citation omitted). The
    court continued: “Police officers undoubtedly would be
    severely criticized for failing to stop and investigate a
    reported drunk driver if an accident subsequently occurred
    . . . . [T]he public rightfully expects a police officer to
    inquire into such circumstances.” 
    Id.
     (internal quotation
    marks and citations omitted). The same can be said for
    Officers Ellis and Wyatt when they decided to pull Gonzalez
    over at a time of night notorious for a ubiquity of drunk
    drivers.
    34            GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM
    B.
    The Undisputed Facts Leading
    Up to the Use of Deadly Force.
    We come to the undisputed material facts. These facts
    come almost verbatim from “Plaintiff’s Separate Statement
    of Disputed and Additional Undisputed Material Facts in
    Opposition of Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment”
    filed in the district court on June 20, 2011. Gonzalez’s
    acceptance of these facts as “undisputed” ensures that they
    represent a view of the case understood in the light most
    favorable to his interests. Because they are not contested,
    these facts are more than just “evidence”: they are the givens
    from which we begin our analysis.
    The majority correctly points out that when the only
    remaining witnesses are the officers, we must look with great
    care at their testimony, but I have obviated this concern by
    using only those facts that the plaintiffs have accepted as
    “undisputed.” These facts establish beyond any doubt that
    when Officer Wyatt shot Gonzalez, (1) he and his partner
    were confronted with multiple serious crimes, and
    (2) Gonzalez was actively fleeing to evade arrest.
    I present the material facts in two segments. First, those
    immediately leading up to Officer Wyatt’s use of deadly
    force; and second, those that in a matter of seconds placed
    Officer Wyatt in immediate peril and caused the shooting.
    1.
    As the officers followed Gonzalez’s van, Ellis observed
    it weaving within its traffic lane. At 2:11 a.m., Wyatt advised
    GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM             35
    headquarters over his police radio of their intended traffic
    stop for the van’s previous left-turn violation, and he
    activated their patrol car’s emergency lights. The van
    continued westbound and subsequently made a wide
    northbound turn on Bond Street, driving left of center of the
    roadway, northbound in the southbound lane. Gonzalez came
    to a stop along the east curb of Bond Street. As Wyatt
    approached Gonzalez in the van, and in response to a sudden
    movement by the driver on his approach, Wyatt immediately
    drew his service weapon, pointed it at Gonzalez, and gave
    him a warning: “If you reach down there again, I’m gonna
    shoot you.” Ellis heard Wyatt’s warning. Ellis observed
    Gonzalez’s right hand clenched into a fist and it appeared he
    was holding something.5 Ellis told Gonzalez to turn off the
    van and show his hands. Gonzalez did not comply. The
    van’s engine remained running. Ellis tried to open the
    driver’s door. However, it was locked. The driver’s window
    was open approximately six to eight inches. Ellis reached
    through the opening with his right hand and tried
    unsuccessfully to unlock the door by pulling up the lock. On
    the other side of the car, Wyatt holstered his weapon and
    unlocked the passenger door by reaching through the partially
    opened passenger door window. Both officers then used
    physical force in an attempt to control an uncooperative
    Gonzalez. During this process, Gonzalez reached downward
    with his left hand between the driver’s seat and the door, as
    he simultaneously raised his right hand up toward his mouth.
    Ellis observed a plastic bag protruding from Gonzalez’s right
    fist. Suspecting the bad might contain narcotics, Wyatt
    commanded Gonzalez to open his hands. Wyatt also
    observed that Gonzalez had a clenched right fist and was
    reaching downward with his left hand. Wyatt, who had
    5
    Detectives later recovered a knife at the scene.
    36             GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM
    reached into the vehicle from the passenger side, radioed for
    backup assistance. Wyatt ran around the rear of the van to
    the driver’s side to assist Ellis who was grappling with
    Gonzalez through the window. When Wyatt found he was
    unable to help from the driver’s side, he returned to the
    passenger’s door. Wyatt then entered the van on the
    passenger side and punched Gonzalez in the head in an
    attempt to subdue him. Ellis then observed Gonzalez reach
    toward the van’s gear shift. He believed Gonzalez was trying
    to shift the van into drive, so he struck Gonzalez with his
    flashlight in an attempt to stop him. Gonzalez did not
    comply.
    2.
    Now, we arrive at the undisputed events that placed
    Officer Wyatt in danger and precipitated the shooting. These
    events occurred in as little as five and at most in ten seconds,
    and they address what the majority concedes is “the most
    important” Graham factor: the immediacy of the threat.
    Mattos, 
    661 F.3d at 441
    .
    Wyatt tried to control Gonzalez’s right arm, however,
    Gonzalez reached forward toward the gear shift and slapped
    it into drive and “stomped down” on the gas pedal. Fearing
    he would be pulled forward with the van, Ellis pulled himself
    out of the driver’s door window, hitting Gonzalez on the head
    as he withdrew. Ellis stepped back as the van moved
    forward. He ran to his patrol car to chase after the van. Still
    in the van, Wyatt yelled at Gonzalez to stop. Gonzalez did
    not comply. Wyatt reached with his left hand and attempted
    to turn off the ignition or shift the transmission into neutral or
    park. Gonzalez hit his hand away. This sequence occurred
    two to three times. With Gonzalez driving and Wyatt in the
    GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM                     37
    van on the passenger side, the van went through the cross-
    street intersection of Bond Street and Willow Street. Wyatt
    yelled at Gonzalez to stop, but Gonzalez did not comply.
    Wyatt unholstered his weapon and shot Gonzalez in the head,
    killing him. Wyatt grabbed the steering wheel with both
    hands. In an attempt to stop the van, he steered it into a
    parked truck. The collision with the truck dislodged Wyatt’s
    gun from his right hand. The van continued to roll after the
    collision, stopping finally at the intersection of Bond Street
    and Elm Street, a block from Willow Street. After the van
    stopped, Ellis, who had followed in his patrol car, observed
    a bag lying on the street beneath the van’s open passenger
    door. A knife was also found later when detectives processed
    the scene.
    C.
    The Legal Consequences
    of Gonzalez’s Behavior
    Now, let’s translate the undisputed facts into their legal
    consequences, a step Garner and Graham require to
    determine whether the officers were “confronted with a
    serious crime.”
    When Officer Ellis and Officer Wyatt walked up to
    Gonzalez’s van, they entered a zone of personal danger.6 In
    that zone, the Supreme Court has approved of requiring
    Gonzalez to turn off his vehicle, of removing him from the
    6
    See Terry, 
    392 U.S. at
    23–24; Mimms, 
    434 U.S. at
    110–11; Long,
    
    463 U.S. at
    1046–47.
    38                GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM
    van,7 of patting him down for weapons, and of taking
    command of the situation.8
    Gonzalez’s uncooperative, suspicious, and menacing
    behavior when first approached by the uniformed officers
    gave them reason to believe he had in his possession either a
    weapon or contraband — or both. Officer Wyatt then warned
    Gonzalez, as contemplated by Garner, that if he “reached
    down there again he would be shot.” Gonzalez did not obey
    this warning, and he did not turn off the car’s engine or
    unlock its doors.
    By now, Gonzalez’s recalcitrant behavior violated
    California Penal Code (“CPC”) § 148, resisting, delaying, or
    obstructing a peace officer in the discharge or attempt to
    discharge his duties. Then, Gonzalez attempted to eat a
    plastic baggie, giving Officer Ellis and Officer Wyatt
    probable cause to believe he was in possession of an illegal
    substance — another crime — and destroying evidence. This
    set of facts is precisely what the Court had in mind in
    Michigan v. Summers, when it discussed a narcotics suspect’s
    willingness to use violence in an attempt to avoid
    apprehension. See 
    452 U.S. at
    702–03.
    As Gonzalez “stomped” on the van’s accelerator and
    attempted to flee, he struck Officer Wyatt’s hands numerous
    times with his own, adding to his offenses — in a matter of
    seconds — the additional crimes of (1) battery against a peace
    officer in violation of CPC §§ 242, 243; (2) felonious false
    imprisonment of Officer Wyatt in violation of CPC §§ 236,
    7
    Mimms, 
    434 U.S. at
    111 & n.6
    
    8 Johnson, 555
     U.S. at 330; Brendlin, 
    551 U.S. at 258
    .
    GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM                     39
    237; (3) felonious kidnaping of Officer Wyatt in violation of
    CPC § 207; and (4) flight from a pursuing officer (Officer
    Ellis) in violation of California Vehicle Code § 2800.1. It is
    beyond argument that had Officer Wyatt not stopped
    Gonzalez, Gonzalez would have accelerated his van and
    continued to attempt to escape with Officer Wyatt trapped
    inside the van, and with Officer Ellis — and probably others
    — in hot pursuit.
    D.
    Now we come to an aspect of this case the majority does
    not discuss: Gonzalez’s choice to flee in his vehicle from the
    scene — with Officer Ellis in pursuit. Gonzalez’s dangerous
    choice weighs heavily on whether or not Officer Wyatt faced
    an immediate indication of impending danger while trapped
    in Gonzalez’s van.
    In Scott v. Harris the Supreme Court published its take on
    the hazards of a motorist engaged in public-endangering
    flight. As Justice Scalia expressed the question in that case,
    “Can an officer take actions that place a fleeing motorist at
    risk of serious injury or death in order to stop the motorist’s
    flight from endangering the lives of innocent bystanders?”
    
    550 U.S. at 374
    . The Court’s answer? Yes. Why? Because
    car chases place “police officers and innocent bystanders
    alike at great risk of serious injury.” 
    Id. at 380
    . By
    comparison, continued the Court, unlike the flight of the
    young, slight, unarmed burglary suspect who was on foot in
    Garner, Harris’s “flight itself (by means of a speeding
    automobile) . . . posed the threat of ‘serious physical harm . . .
    to others.’” 
    Id.
     at 382 n.9. “It was [Harris], after all, who
    intentionally placed himself and the public in danger by
    unlawfully engaging in the reckless, high-speed flight that
    40            GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM
    ultimately produced the choice between two evils that
    [Deputy] Scott confronted.” 
    Id. at 384
    .
    The Court deemed it “appropriate in this process to take
    into account not only the number of lives at risk, but also
    their relative culpability.” Id.; see also Mattos, 
    661 F.3d at 445
     (a defiant suspect “bears some responsibility for the
    escalation” of an incident resulting in the use of force). The
    culpable person here was Gonzalez.
    Sykes v. United States, _____ U.S. _____, 
    131 S. Ct. 2267
    (2011), is even more on point than Scott v. Harris regarding
    the potential for injury caused by a motorist fleeing to avoid
    apprehension. In Sykes, the motorist fled after an officer had
    ordered him to stop. The question for the Court was whether
    Sykes’s flight was “violent.”
    When a perpetrator defies a law
    enforcement command by fleeing in a car, the
    determination to elude capture makes a lack
    of concern for the safety of property and
    persons of pedestrians and other drivers an
    inherent part of the offense. Even if the
    criminal attempting to elude capture drives
    without going at full speed or going the wrong
    way, he creates the possibility that police will,
    in a legitimate and lawful manner, exceed or
    almost match his speed or use force to bring
    him within their custody. A perpetrator’s
    indifference to these collateral consequences
    has violent — even lethal — potential for
    others. A criminal who takes flight and
    creates a risk of this dimension takes action
    similar in degree of danger to that involved in
    GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM                  41
    arson, which also entails intentional release of
    a destructive force dangerous to others. This
    similarity is a beginning point in establishing
    that vehicle flight presents a serious potential
    risk of physical injury to another.
    Another consideration is a comparison to
    the crime of burglary. Burglary is dangerous
    because it can end in confrontation leading to
    violence. The same is true of vehicle flight,
    but to an even greater degree. The attempt to
    elude capture is a direct challenge to an
    officer’s authority. It is a provocative and
    dangerous act that dares, and in a typical
    case requires, the officer to give chase. The
    felon’s conduct gives the officer reason to
    believe that the defendant has something more
    serious than a traffic violation to hide. In
    Sykes’ case, officers pursued a man with two
    prior violent felony convictions and marijuana
    in his possession. In other cases officers may
    discover more about the violent potential of
    the fleeing suspect by running a check on the
    license plate or by recognizing the fugitive as
    a convicted felon.
    Because an accepted way to restrain a
    driver who poses dangers to others is through
    seizure, officers pursuing fleeing drivers may
    deem themselves duty bound to escalate their
    response to ensure the felon is apprehended.
    Scott v. Harris rejected the possibility that
    police could eliminate the danger from a
    vehicle flight by giving up the chase because
    42         GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM
    the perpetrator “might have been just as likely
    to respond by continuing to drive recklessly as
    by slowing down and wiping his brow.” And
    once the pursued vehicle is stopped, it is
    sometimes necessary for officers to approach
    with guns drawn to effect arrest.
    Confrontation with police is the expected
    result of vehicle flight. It places property and
    persons at serious risk of injury.
    Risk of violence is inherent to vehicle
    flight. Between the confrontations that
    initiate and terminate the incident, the
    intervening pursuit creates high risks of
    crashes. It presents more certain risk as a
    categorical matter than burglary. It is well
    known that when offenders use motor vehicles
    as their means of escape they create serious
    potential risks of physical injury to others.
    Flight from a law enforcement officer invites,
    even demands, pursuit. As that pursuit
    continues, the risk of an accident
    accumulates. And having chosen to flee, and
    thereby commit a crime, the perpetrator has
    all the more reason to seek to avoid capture.
    Unlike burglaries, vehicle flights from an
    officer by definitional necessity occur when
    police are present, are flights in defiance of
    their instructions, and are effected with a
    vehicle that can be used in a way to cause
    GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM                        43
    serious potential risk of physical injury to
    another.
    
    Id.
     at 2273–74 (emphasis added) (citations omitted).
    E.
    In summary starting with the three Graham factors, I
    conclude that the facts in the record compel one conclusion,
    and only one conclusion a jury could reach: Officer Wyatt’s
    use of deadly force to stop Gonzalez’s behavior was
    objectively reasonable. First, Officer Wyatt was “confronted
    with a serious crime,” indeed multiple crimes. Second,
    Gonzalez posed “an immediate threat” to Officer Wyatt’s
    safety and to the safety of others. Third, Gonzalez was
    “actively resisting arrest” and attempting to evade arrest by
    flight. I cannot envision any scenario wherein this case might
    survive a motion for judgment as a matter of law pursuant to
    Rule 50(a)(B).
    VI
    A.
    The “factual dispute” my colleagues in the majority see
    as “material” is the speed Gonzalez was driving when Officer
    Wyatt shot him. Because the only summary judgment
    disputes that matter are those that are “material,” I disagree.9
    The actual or the estimated speed of the van at the moment of
    the shooting is not material. Neither is the “average speed”
    9
    Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp., 
    475 U.S. 574
    ,
    586–87 (1986) (only issues of “material fact” can defeat a motion for
    summary judgment) (emphasis added).
    44              GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM
    of an accelerating vehicle in flight from the police. What is
    material is that Gonzalez suddenly accelerated his van away
    from the traffic stop with Officer Wyatt trapped inside and
    traveled for a block before it crashed. Who cares how fast the
    van was going? Gonzalez’s representatives admit that
    Gonzalez unexpectedly tried to flee without warning, and that
    when Officer Wyatt tried to stop him, Gonzalez physically
    fought him off. I do not comprehend how this constellation
    of facts fails to demonstrate a real threat of impending harm
    to Officer Wyatt, as well as to members of the public.
    The majority’s discussion of speed cannot be squared
    with Justice Kennedy’s declaration in Sykes that “[e]ven if the
    criminal attempting to elude capture drives without going at
    full speed . . . , he creates the possibility that police will . . .
    use force to bring him within their custody. A perpetrator’s
    indifference to these collateral consequences has violent —
    even lethal — potential for others.” 
    131 S. Ct. at 2273
    (emphasis added). Gonzalez certainly posed a direct threat to
    Officer Wyatt when he chose to flee.
    In an unconvincing attempt to make this dispute over
    speed “material,” the majority unwittingly engages in exactly
    the type of rear-view-mirror microanalysis the Supreme
    Court has told us to eschew. The majority has converted
    Officer Wyatt’s precarious ten-second episode in Gonzalez’s
    van into an ex post facto exercise in calculus, the world of the
    derivative and the integral.10 They impose a new duty on
    10
    Professor Michael Starbird of the University of Texas at Austin
    demonstrates how calculus can be used to determine the velocity of a
    moving vehicle. POST might want to include this exercise in its officer
    training programs.
    GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM                           45
    police officers: when you are in a zone of immediate danger
    involving a moving vehicle in which you are being kidnaped,
    you must calculate the speed of the vehicle as you try to turn
    off the ignition and to disengage the gearshift. Then, you
    must refrain from using deadly force until the vehicle speeds
    up to a point where a crash will surely threaten your life (or
    have the presence of mind to try something else). At that
    point, the use of deadly force too late will not only disable the
    driver, but probably you, too. And let us not forget, the
    majority thinks it would be nice if you would give one more
    warning before you shoot.
    Here, I agree with Judge O’Scannlain’s discussion of this
    issue, as the author of the three-judge panel majority opinion.
    Gonzalez’s representatives . . . argue that
    Wyatt’s testimony that the van traveled
    approximately fifty feet either contradicts his
    If we think of function v(t) as measuring the velocity of
    a moving car at each time t, then the integral is a
    number that is equal to the distance traveled, because
    the integral is obtained by dividing the time from a to
    b into small increments and approximating the distance
    traveled by assuming that the car went at a steady speed
    during each of those small increments of time. By
    taking increasingly smaller increments of time,
    approximations converge to a single answer, the
    integral. This sounds complicated, but the naturality of
    it is the topic of Lecture 3. The integral is also equal to
    the area under the graph of v(t) and above the t-axis.
    The integral is related to the derivative (as an inverse
    procedure) via the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus.
    Michael Starbird, Change and Motion: Calculus Made Clear 10 (The
    Great Courses 2d ed. 2006).
    46            GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM
    testimony that the events took “less than ten”
    and possibly “less than five seconds” or
    indicates that the van was traveling so slowly
    that it could not have been a threat.
    First, even assuming that the van was
    traveling relatively slowly, the threat of
    acceleration—and the threat to Wyatt’s
    life—remained. . . . Thus, the van’s speed is
    not a material fact, even if it were actually
    disputed. The dissent does not address this
    point.
    Second, the rough estimates of time taken
    and distance traveled stated in Wyatt’s
    deposition were just that—rough estimates.
    Wyatt’s story is “internally consistent” if we
    do not ascribe unfounded precision to his
    estimates. It would be surprising if an officer
    could recount precise quantitative details
    about an incident which took mere seconds
    over a year later. A minor inconsistency in
    officer testimony does not alone create a
    dispute of material fact.
    Gonzalez v. City of Anaheim, 
    715 F.3d 766
    , 771–72 (9th Cir.
    2013) (footnote omitted).
    Judge O’Scannlain’s reference to the “threat of
    acceleration” came from our decision in Wilkinson v. Torres,
    
    610 F.3d 546
     (9th Cir. 2010). In that case, an officer shot and
    killed the driver of a slow-moving minivan that the officer
    thought might run over his partner.             The driver’s
    representatives contended that the minivan posed no threat
    GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM                   47
    because it was moving too slowly to endanger the officers.
    We flatly rejected that argument, saying that the vehicle
    “could have gained traction at any time, resulting in a sudden
    acceleration in speed.” 
    Id. at 552
    .
    Why did we acknowledge in Wilkinson that vehicles
    driven by fleeing criminals can suddenly accelerate only to
    brush aside this indisputable fact here? Moreover, we
    rebuked the plaintiff in Wilkinson for giving us a “sanitized
    version of the incident” because it omitted the “urgency of the
    situation.” 
    Id.
     at 551–52. When Officer Wyatt shot
    Gonzalez, his situation was every bit as urgent as Officer
    Torres’s, if not more so. We held in Wilkinson, involving
    facts quite similar to this case, that Officer Torres “did not
    violate a constitutional right.” 
    Id. at 551
    . The majority’s
    claim of “no evidence of anyone else in danger” is technically
    true only because Officer Wyatt ended the chase before news
    helicopters had the opportunity to film Gonzalez as he raced
    around Southern California freeways. Now, stopping a chase
    before it gets completely out of control inures to Officer
    Wyatt’s detriment.
    B.
    The majority also errs in suggesting that the speed-
    distance-time information would support a jury conclusion
    that “Gonzalez had not stomped down on the accelerator.”
    What they overlook is that this issue is before us as a matter
    of summary judgment, and that Gonzalez’s representatives do
    not dispute the fact that Gonzalez stomped down on the gas
    pedal. I quote again from the record. “Gonzalez reached
    forward toward the gear shift and ‘slapped’ the gear shift into
    a driving gear, and ‘stomps down’ on the gas pedal.”
    Gonzalez’s representatives objected only to what Officer Ellis
    48            GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM
    was doing at this time, saying nothing about Gonzalez or
    Officer Wyatt.        It is this simple.      If Gonzalez’s
    representatives accept for the purposes of summary judgment
    that Gonzalez stomped on the gas pedal, it is not for us to
    claim that he did not. Moreover, both officers said that when
    Gonzalez “floored” it, the van’s tires squealed on the
    roadway. That sound is exactly what occurs when a vehicle
    is violently accelerated.
    C.
    Back to the question of the van’s speed, Officer Wyatt
    wasn’t looking out the van’s window as Gonzalez drove
    away, calculating elapsed time, distance covered, and
    integrals. Officer Wyatt was yelling at Gonzalez to stop. He
    was looking at the ignition and the gearshift as he tried
    physically to stop the van and prevent Gonzalez’s attempt to
    escape. Moreover, it was dark outside. I defy anyone under
    these circumstances to have the presence of mind and the
    ability to calculate the speed of a moving vehicle. Without
    exterior visual cues, it is next to impossible. The majority
    makes the mistake of failing to place themselves in
    Gonzalez’s van and in Officer Wyatt’s shoes, engaging
    instead in a classroom exercise in determining speed from
    time and distance. The majority’s approach violates the rule
    that we are (1) to make allowance for the fact that officers are
    often forced to make split-second judgments in tense,
    uncertain, and rapidly evolving circumstances, and (2) to be
    cautious about second-guessing a police officer’s assessment,
    made on the scene, of the danger presented by a particular
    situation.
    GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM                 49
    D.
    Next, we get to the majority’s should-have-shot-the-gun-
    out-of-his-hand suggestion, which comes from Hollywood
    westerns, certainly not from the streets of our cities. The
    Seventh Circuit has a clear-eyed take on the assertion that
    alternative methods short of deadly force must be used to
    resolve a dangerous situation. In Plakas v. Drinski, 
    19 F.3d 1143
     (7th Cir. 1994), Plakas’s administrator argued that the
    defendant officer, instead of shooting Plakas, should have
    used a non-lethal cannister of CS Gas he carried on his belt,
    or used a canine unit on the scene to take Plakas down, or
    tried to isolate him while keeping a safe distance. The
    argument was that failing to use these available methods
    rendered unreasonable the use of deadly force. In rejecting
    this contention, the court said,
    There is no precedent in this Circuit (or
    any other) which says that the Constitution
    requires law enforcement officers to use all
    feasible alternatives to avoid a situation where
    deadly force can justifiably be used. There
    are, however, cases which support the
    assertion that, where deadly force is otherwise
    justified under the Constitution, there is no
    constitutional duty to use non-deadly
    alternatives first.
    
    Id. at 1148
     (footnote omitted).
    It is true we consider the whole of the event as
    it appears to the officer involved, but we
    recognize that the decision to shoot can only
    be made after the briefest reflection, so brief
    50               GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM
    that “reflection” is the wrong word. As
    Plakas moved toward Drinski, was he
    supposed to think of an attack dog, of Perras’s
    CS gas, of how fast he could run backwards?
    Our answer is, and has been no, because there
    is too little time for the officer to do so and
    too much opportunity to second-guess that
    officer.
    
    Id. at 1149
    .
    The majority says Officer Wyatt could have used a baton,
    pepper spray, or maybe a Taser. The record does not contain
    a shred of evidence that such methods would have been
    effective — to the contrary. To speculate that such methods
    would have safely ended the chase disregards the officers’
    escalating reasonable use of nonlethal force against Gonzalez,
    hitting him with their fists, trying to put him in a carotid hold,
    and striking him with a flashlight, but nothing worked.11
    Officer Wyatt warned him that he would be shot if he
    continued to display dangerous behavior, but even a threat of
    that magnitude did not register. Officer Wyatt ordered him
    to stop the van. Verbal commands and warnings had no
    effect. Under these circumstances, giving him another
    warning was neither feasible nor required, nor would it have
    caused Gonzalez to stop. He was determined, albeit
    foolishly, to try to escape. As we said in Forrett v.
    Richardson, 
    112 F.3d 416
    , 421 (9th Cir. 1997), superseded on
    other grounds as stated in Chroma Lighting v. GTE Prods.
    Corp., 
    127 F.3d 1136
     (9th Cir. 1997), another excessive force
    11
    I do agree with the majority that this use of force was reasonable and
    that the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the officers
    on these theories and Gonzalez’s due process claim was appropriate.
    GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM                    51
    shooting case, “[t]he only objectively reasonable conclusion
    to be drawn from this evidence is that if [the officers] had not
    shot him, he would have continued taking whatever measures
    were necessary to avoid capture.”
    The Supreme Court said in Michigan v. Long that a
    vulnerable officer — which Officer Wyatt surely was —
    “must make a ‘quick decision as to how to protect himself
    and others from possible danger . . . .’ In such circumstances,
    we have not required that officers adopt alternate means to
    ensure their safety . . . .” 
    463 U.S. at 1052
     (emphasis added)
    (citation omitted). We said the same thing in Wilkinson: “A
    reasonable use of deadly force encompasses a range of
    conduct, and the availability of a less-intrusive alternative
    will not render conduct unreasonable.” 
    610 F.3d at 551
    .
    E.
    Finally, the majority observes that the officers had no
    information that the driver had previously committed any
    crime, had any prior contact with law enforcement, had any
    involvement with weapons, or that the van might be stolen.
    All of this what-the-event-wasn’t information is irrelevant
    because it is irreconcilable with what the Supreme Court has
    said about the inherent hazards of ordinary traffic stops and
    car chases. Read the Court’s discussion in Terry v. Ohio,
    Pennsylvania v. Mimms, Michigan v. Long, Maryland v.
    Wilson, Michigan v. Summers, Arizona v. Johnson, Scott v.
    Harris, and Sykes v. United States. Moreover, when
    Gonzalez began to resist, to flee, and to strike Officer Wyatt,
    everything the majority finds missing from their sterile
    scenario became irrelevant.
    52            GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM
    VII
    Given the undisputed facts in the record, the officers’
    actions that led to the unfortunate death of Adolph Gonzalez
    fall squarely and objectively within the Supreme Court’s
    description of a regrettable situation justifying the use of
    deadly force. My colleagues on the other side, “far removed
    from the scene and with the opportunity to dissect the
    elements of the situation,” have failed to heed the Court’s
    warning not to second guess from the peace, safety, and
    comfort of our chambers a split-second decision in the field,
    a decision Officer Wyatt made under extreme pressure in a
    perilous situation. Ryburn, 
    132 S. Ct. at 991
    . Their opinion,
    rendered “with the benefit of hindsight and calm
    deliberation,” will become the subject of confusing law
    enforcement training and can only impede and endanger all
    law enforcement officers in the discharge of their sworn
    duties with respect to patrolling our streets and keeping the
    peace in our neighborhoods. 
    Id.
     at 992
    The Sixth Circuit has taken to heart the Supreme Court’s
    cautionary instructions about our task in these cases. After
    quoting Garner’s admonitory language, the Sixth Circuit
    said,
    This passage carries great weight in this case,
    since all parties agree that the events in
    question happened very quickly. Thus, under
    Graham, we must avoid substituting our
    personal notions of proper police procedure
    for the instantaneous decision of the officer at
    the scene.      We must never allow the
    theoretical, sanitized world of our
    imagination to replace the dangerous and
    GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM                    53
    complex world that policemen face every day.
    What constitutes “reasonable” action may
    seem quite different to someone facing a
    possible assailant than to someone analyzing
    the question at leisure.
    Smith v. Freland, 
    954 F.2d 343
    , 347 (6th Cir. 1992).
    The unmistakable message that comes from this case will
    cause officers inappropriately to hesitate in the face of danger
    in a confrontation with a combative suspect who refuses to
    obey lawful commands and warnings. The result in turn will
    endanger both the police and the public at large as officers
    worry that they may (this case) or may not (Wilkinson) end up
    in court for years.
    I end where I began, with the Supreme Court’s message
    to both the police as well as to lawbreakers like Gonzalez.
    [W]e are loath to lay down a rule requiring the
    police to allow fleeing suspects to get away
    whenever they drive so recklessly that they
    put other people’s lives in danger. It is
    obvious the perverse incentives such a rule
    would create: Every fleeing motorist would
    know that escape is within his grasp, if only
    he accelerates to 90 miles per hour, crosses
    the double-yellow line a few times, and runs
    a few red lights. The Constitution assuredly
    does not impose this invitation to impunity-
    earned-by-recklessness. Instead, we lay down
    a more sensible rule: A police officer’s
    attempt to terminate a dangerous high-speed
    car chase that threatens the lives of innocent
    54            GONZALEZ V. CITY OF ANAHEIM
    bystanders does not violate the Fourth
    Amendment, even when it places the fleeing
    motorist at risk of serious injury or death.
    Scott, 
    550 U.S. at
    385–86 (emphasis in original).
    Where the officer has probable cause to
    believe that the suspect poses a threat of
    serious physical harm, either to the officer or
    to others, it is not constitutionally
    unreasonable to prevent escape by using
    deadly force.
    Garner, 
    471 U.S. at 11
     (emphasis added).
    Chief Judge KOZINSKI, with whom Circuit Judges TROTT,
    TALLMAN and BEA join, dissenting:
    It’s undisputed that, at the time he fired the fatal shot,
    Officer Wyatt was trapped inside a moving vehicle driven by
    a man who had resisted the verbal commands, physical
    restraints, lethal threats and bodily force of two uniformed
    officers. How fast the van was moving and how far it had
    traveled are beside the point. What matters is that Officer
    Wyatt was prisoner in a vehicle controlled by someone who
    had already committed several dangerous felonies. No sane
    officer in Wyatt’s situation would have acted any differently,
    and no reasonable jury will hold him liable. The only thing
    this remand will accomplish is to give plaintiffs a bludgeon
    with which to extort a hefty settlement. The Supreme Court
    should foil the plan with a swift summary reversal.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 11-56360

Citation Numbers: 747 F.3d 789

Judges: Alex, Barry, Bea, Clifton, Graber, Kozinski, Margaret, Silverman, Stephen, Susan, Tallman, Trott

Filed Date: 3/31/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/31/2023

Authorities (32)

United States v. Everett , 601 F.3d 484 ( 2010 )

Patricia Smith, Individually and as Administratrix of the ... , 954 F.2d 343 ( 1992 )

Richard Leo Deorle v. Greg Rutherford, Butte County Deputy ... , 272 F.3d 1272 ( 2001 )

Enrique Ruvalcaba v. City of Los Angeles Darryl Gates, ... , 64 F.3d 1323 ( 1995 )

Gregory v. County of Maui , 523 F.3d 1103 ( 2008 )

jo-ann-plakas-individually-and-as-administrator-of-the-estate-of , 19 F.3d 1143 ( 1994 )

doris-a-scott-individually-and-as-personal-representative-of-the-estate , 39 F.3d 912 ( 1994 )

97-cal-daily-op-serv-7610-97-daily-journal-dar-12280-kevin-l , 126 F.3d 1189 ( 1997 )

Porter v. Osborn , 546 F.3d 1131 ( 2008 )

Johnson v. Poway Unified School District , 658 F.3d 954 ( 2011 )

Mattos v. Agarano , 661 F.3d 433 ( 2011 )

Bryan v. MacPherson , 630 F.3d 805 ( 2010 )

Wilkinson v. Torres , 610 F.3d 546 ( 2010 )

theresa-karam-v-city-of-burbank-a-municipality-burbank-police-department , 352 F.3d 1188 ( 2003 )

People v. Wells , 45 Cal. Rptr. 3d 8 ( 2006 )

Arizona v. Johnson , 129 S. Ct. 781 ( 2009 )

Brian Forrett v. Linford Richardson, Terry Frizell Ronald O.... , 112 F.3d 416 ( 1997 )

thomas-smith-v-city-of-hemet-a-municipal-corporation-hemet-police , 394 F.3d 689 ( 2005 )

Michigan v. Summers , 101 S. Ct. 2587 ( 1981 )

Terry v. Ohio , 88 S. Ct. 1868 ( 1968 )

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