Jurors could find Officer Mathew Grashorn acted unreasonably by shooting a puppy who had come over to see him, Judge Raymond Moore concluded
A jury will decide whether a Loveland police officer violated a couple's constitutional rights when he shot their puppy in the head and torso, after a federal judge decided against granting immunity last week.
Officer Mathew Grashorn had pulled up in an empty parking lot on a weekend to find Wendy Love and Jay Hamm parked with their dogs. The animals trotted toward Grashorn when he exited his vehicle, but the younger dog, 14-month-old Herkimer, did not immediately turn around when called. Grashorn quickly shot him twice.
Although Grashorn invoked qualified immunity, which shields government officials from liability unless they violate a person's clear constitutional rights, U.S. District Court Senior Judge Raymond P. Moore concluded jurors should have their say about the reasonableness of Grashorn's conduct.
"Although a reasonable jury could decide that Herkimer posed a danger to Defendant," he wrote in a Nov. 15 order, "it could also decide that he did not pose an immediate danger. Because there is sufficient evidence of the latter, this factor weighs in Plaintiffs’ favor."
The sequence of events, as captured on Grashorn's body-worn camera, was undisputed. Love and Hamm were delivering firewood for their business on the evening of June 29, 2019, when they stopped in the parking lot of a commercial building. It was a Saturday and there were no other people in the vicinity, so Love and Hamm let their dogs out of their truck to stretch while Hamm made repairs to some equipment.
The owner of the building at 995 N. Wilson Ave. saw the couple on his surveillance feed and called Loveland police to investigate. After Grashorn parked several yards away from Love and Hamm, the footage showed Bubba, a 16-year-old dog, get up from the pavement and begin running toward Grashorn. The officer immediately pointed his gun at Bubba, and Love and Hamm called for Bubba to return.
Although Bubba turned around before reaching Grashorn, Herkimer, who had been resting in the couple's truck, came outside at the commotion. Herkimer also ran toward Grashorn, and the officer shot him in the head and in the torso.
"Get back to the truck," Grashorn screamed at Love when she tearfully approached her wounded puppy.
"Please let me see him," Love wailed, and Grashorn again ordered her back to the truck. Love nonetheless cradled Herkimer, while Grashorn warned Love, "He will bite you, he's hurt." The video did not depict Herkimer biting anyone.
"You're not gonna be able to help him," Grashorn continued to yell at the couple.
Although Herkimer survived the shooting, Grashorn had paralyzed him and his owners were forced to euthanize him after they could not afford sugery.
Love and Hamm sued Grashorn, alleging an unlawful seizure under the Fourth Amendment. Moore declined to dismiss their claim last year, but Grashorn then filed a motion for summary judgment — asking Moore to resolve the case without a trial if the key, undisputed facts showed he acted reasonably.
Large swaths of Grashorn's filings were dedicated to blaming Love and Hamm for the encounter, and his lawyers emphasized nearly two dozen times that Grashorn only had "a mere three seconds" to react to a puppy coming to see him.
"Plaintiffs were trespassing and Officer Grashorn was merely doing his job," wrote attorneys Jonathan M. Abramson and Yulia Nikolaevskaya. "Officer Grashorn believed his well-being was in danger and he did not have to wait to find out if Herkimer really intended to bite Officer Grashorn’s leg."
Love and Hamm countered that no reasonable person would have believed it was necessary to use deadly force on a puppy when there were other options available to Grashorn, like stepping back into his patrol car.
"There was no urgency to do anything to Herkimer. It was a garden variety dog encounter. Herkimer was trotting up to greet Grashorn in the manner that Grashorn admitted any friendly dog would," wrote attorney Sarah Schielke.
Moore considered multiple factors in deciding whether to resolve the case in Grashorn's favor. He acknowledged Herkimer looked like a pit bull, which could have reasonably caused Grashorn concern. But Herkimer was in the presence of his owners and non-lethal options were available.
Most importantly, Moore could not say whether Herkimer posed a danger. Because a jury could find Grashorn's reaction was unreasonable, Moore green-lit the case for trial.
At the same time, he dismissed Love and Hamm's related claim against Grashorn under Colorado's 2020 police accountability law. Grashorn argued the law was inapplicable to him because the legislature enacted it after he shot Herkimer, and the plaintiffs did not contest that.
A jury trial is scheduled for November 2024.
The case is Love et al. v. Grashorn.
Have you met many American cops? US police shoot dogs so often that a Justice Department expert calls it an “epidemic”
Shooting peoples dogs is every US police officers favorite hobby. It's been happening for so long that the memes about it could be tried as adults.
~~That's rude and inconsiderate with no basis on actual facts~~. That's like saying all Mexicans are criminals or all lawyers are hard to deal with.
Edit: Its not completely baseless but it isn't justification to hate all police officers. They work hard and deal with the bottom of society so show them some respect.
DoJ claimed something like 25 to 30 dogs were being shot by police every single day and called it an epidemic.
But sure, no basis on facts.
Well your source provides its sources which is good but they exaggerate and make it sound blown up so you must be careful making statements like all police shoot dogs.
After some checking it looks like there is more killings of dogs than I though but it is still fairly rare.
TIL: ~25 to 30 a day is "rare".
For comparison, about 102 people die in car accidents per day (based on 2016 data)
And for a comparison that people would agree qualifies as "rare":
About 0.5 to 0.7 people die in plane crashes every day on average.
Every cop can eat my whole ass, then my asshole. That includes the cop you know that makes you so quick to defend them without knowing the facts. Every cop either breaks the law or ignores it when their coworkers do, because the cops are a state sponsored street gang.
Again with the every. That is a very broad statement that can be disproven if a single cop doesn't meet that criteria.
Its silly to hate the people who protect society and its even sillier to use words like every and all
Anyway, try not to believe all of the propaganda we call "news". The left hates the police and Republicans and the right hates the crazy socialists who are spending too much and destroying national security.
This isn't a attack from a political stand point. Its just a reminder to stop commenting in the extreme.
I realize I'm not totally perfect (see my previous comment) but I am so extreme that I hate groups of people.
98% of cops make the rest look bad.
Where did you get that number from?
Too generous?
As of a few years ago, the statistics were that US cops shoot an average of 40 dogs every single day. And not because they're all attacking. They see a dog, they shoot it.
~~Bullshit
Check your sources~~
Edit: whoops its more common than I thought. Be nice to police though
https://qz.com/870601/police-killing-dogs-is-an-epidemic-according-to-the-justice-department
Was your claim of bullshit an emotional response to someone criticizing your coworkers? Or did you just know it was maybe actually closer to 30 and didn't feel like sharing for the class?
It was nice back when Lemmy didn't have this sort of reddit aggression. Maybe the person just made a mistake.
I may of wrote this when I was a bit tired. Never use Lemmy while tired apparently. Apologies
The next time you're about to comment about something based on your intuition without any knowledge of the facts on the ground, remember this moment. Fuck every cop. The only reason to be nice to cops is that if you make them feel bad they'll murder your whole family and get away with it.
That would be quite the orgy.
Anyway your local police do there best believe it or not. They have families and want the best for there community. What needs to be addressed is the mental health crisis in the armed forces.
Share yours.
I don't have any. However, its not a justification to hate police.
Police are the justification for hating police.
You scare me