Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Suit over boys’ detention tossed

Springdale officer’s stop justified, 8th Circuit determines

- RON WOOD

FAYETTEVIL­LE — The U.S. 8th Circuit Court of Appeals on Monday dismissed a lawsuit brought against a Springdale police officer who stopped two boys and briefly held them at gunpoint.

A federal judge in March 2020 refused to dismiss claims against Lamont Marzolf, who was accused of violating the civil rights of two youths he stopped and detained while they were walking home from their grandparen­ts’ house on a rainy night in 2018.

The lawsuit was filed by Casondra Pollreis, on behalf of herself and her sons, identified as W.Y. and S.Y.

Marzolf was helping other officers search for four suspects who had fled on foot, possibly armed, the night of Jan. 8, 2018, according to the lawsuit. Marzolf had set up a perimeter in a residentia­l neighborho­od on Lynn Street when two boys, ages 12 and 14, approached him on foot. Marzolf stopped them.

The boys were told to lie

face down on the ground at gunpoint, and they were subsequent­ly handcuffed and searched, according to the lawsuit. The boys’ mother sued on behalf of her children, claiming Marzolf and another officer, Josh Kirmer, violated their civil rights.

The officers asked U.S. District Court Judge Timothy Brooks to dismiss the case, claiming qualified immunity. Brooks released Kirmer and partially released Marzolf from the lawsuit, but stopped short of dismissing the case.

Brooks found Marzolf’s initial stop of the boys was reasonable, but ruled their continued detention presented questions of law a jury should decide.

Brooks found that facts that came to light after the initial stop didn’t support a reasonable suspicion by Marzolf that the boys were the fleeing suspects. Evidence, including police video, didn’t show suspicious behavior by the boys, they weren’t out of breath and were entirely compliant with Marzolf’s commands, the judge said.

Second, the boys’ mother was on the scene almost immediatel­y and identified herself and the boys. Instead of questionin­g her further, Marzolf directed her to return home, according to the judge’s opinion and ruling.

The boys’ stepfather then approached Marzolf and told him the boys had just been at their grandparen­ts’ home, but Marzolf continued to point his gun at the boys while they were face down on the ground, according to Brooks.

Once he knew the boys’ names, Marzolf knew they weren’t the suspects being sought, Brooks said.

Brooks denied summary judgment on four of the claims brought on behalf of the boys against Marzolf — prolonging an investigat­ive detention; illegally arresting the boys; using excessive force against the boys; and frisking one of them for weapons.

The 8th Circuit judges Monday disagreed with Brooks’ ruling.

“The issue is whether Officer Marzolf violated the boys’ clearly establishe­d constituti­onal rights. Under the governing precedent, we conclude he did not. And so, we reverse,” the judges wrote.

The appeals court held Marzolf was justified in taking the amount of time needed to identify the boys and to determine whether they were, in fact, two people fleeing from the crash.

The court said there was no de facto arrest because the entire encounter lasted seven minutes, while the boys were handcuffed at most for two minutes. In addition to the short time frame, video shows immediatel­y before Marzolf handcuffed and frisked one of the boys he had moved his left hand behind his back and touched his waist.

“Considerin­g that hand motion together with what Officer Marzolf heard before the encounter about one of the male suspects being pursued usually carrying a gun, he reasonably used handcuffs briefly to control the scene and protect officer safety,” the court said.

The judges concluded Marzolf was justified in frisking one of the boys because he had a reasonable suspicion the people he was trying to catch were armed and dangerous.

The appeals court said Marzolf didn’t use unreasonab­le force when he pointed his gun at the boys while he waited for backup and before the situation was under control.

Brooks granted summary judgment to Marzolf on claims by the boys’ mother that he used excessive force against her by pointing a stun gun at her.

All claims against Kirmer were dismissed.

Summary judgment is a decision made on the basis of statements and evidence presented in the legal pleadings and documents filed without a trial.

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