Wednesday, March 26, 2014

FLORIDA WOMAN CLAIMS COPS FORCED HER TO POOP AND UNDRESS IN HER FRONT YARD

Sometimes cops go overboard in amusing themselves … at someone else’s expense.

FLORIDA WOMAN FUMBLED SUIT OVER PUBLIC POO

Courthouse News Service
March 21, 2014

ORLANDO - A Florida woman who says the police officers searching her home for methamphetamine forced her to poop on her yard in front of them must amend her civil rights claims, a federal judge ruled.

Dawn Brooks sued Volusia County and the city of New Smyrna Beach for allegedly making her defecate in her front yard during a search of her house for meth.

A March 14 ruling on her case does not reveal what the search produced.

It says Brooks had allegedly been brought outside her home and handcuffed when officers refused her requests to defecate in a private place.

They "told her to 'just use the restroom right there' in the front yard, which plaintiff did," U.S. District Judge Roy Dalton Jr. wrote, summarizing the allegations.

Brooks claimed that the officers then would not help her cleanse and dress herself after she defecated in front of them.

Eventually they allegedly made her undress and change into a plastic jumpsuit. Instead of helping, the officers looked, laughed and yelled at Brooks while she was undressing, the complaint states.

Brooks said she should have been allowed to use the restroom in her house or in the officers' truck, and that the ordeal violated her rights to be free from unreasonable search and seizure, causing her mental anguish and humiliation.

She also claimed the city failed to properly train their officers.

U.S. District Judge Roy Dalton dismissed the claims against Volusia last week, finding no allegation that deliberate indifference was responsible for the city's alleged failure to train.


Likewise Brooks did not show that the need for training was "plainly obvious" based on prior instances, the court found.

Dalton also said Brooks did not state any specific practice or policy that caused the officers to infringe her rights.

Brooks has until April 4 to amend her complaint.

No comments: