Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Celia Palmer v. Keith Wrede, Et Al.
Celia Palmer v. Keith Wrede, Et Al.
CELIA PALMER,
Plaintiff,
v.
Defendants.
______________________________________________________________________________
Plaintiff Celia Palmer, by and through her attorneys, Andy McNulty and Mari Newman
of KILLMER, LANE & NEWMAN, LLP, respectfully alleges for her Complaint and Jury Demand as
follows:
INTRODUCTION
wrote those words on Facebook about peaceful Black Lives Matter protesters. Defendant Wrede
was not fired by Defendant Colorado Springs for advocating the murder of Black Lives Matter
protesters on his computer screen. But, this was not the first indication that Defendant Wrede
was unfit to be a police officer, let alone fit to police a Black Lives Matter protest. During the
Black Lives Matter protests that erupted after George Floyd was murdered, Defendant Wrede
repeatedly brutalized protesters because they showed up and spoke out in support of black lives,
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3. One of the individuals brutalized by Defendant Wrede was Plaintiff Celia Palmer.
On June 2, 2020, Ms. Palmer took to the streets to honor the life of George Floyd. She joined a
crowd of her fellow Colorado Spring residents to speak out against police brutality. For a few
hours that night, Ms. Palmer was part of a growing nationwide chorus demanding accountability
and an end to racism in law enforcement. Ms. Palmer’s feeling of optimism about a future free
from law enforcement brutality was short-lived. That night, CSPD officers tired of crowds of
citizens criticizing them, issued an unconstitutional order to disperse. Ms. Palmer, not wanting to
end up another name chanted at protests, obeyed these unlawful orders and began to leave the
protest. However, as Ms. Palmer left, Defendant Wrede (along with his partner-in-crime
Defendant Wesley Woodworth) ambushed her, slammed her to the ground for no reason,
arrested her, and charged her with a crime in a blatant attempt to cover-up this excessive use of
force.
from Defendants’ Wrede and Woodworth’s unconstitutional, and outrageous, actions. Yet, to this
day, Defendants Wrede and Woodworth have felt no real consequences for their illegal conduct.
They continue to wear badges and carry guns. The fact that Defendant Colorado Springs still
allows Defendant Wrede, in particular, to do so says everything that one needs to know about the
utterly broken culture of the CSPD, a department that allows its officers to engage in such
5. Ms. Palmer files this lawsuit with the hope that Defendants Wrede and
Woodworth might face some accountability for their actions, and the CSPD will cease to tolerate
its officers’ blatant flouting of civilians’ constitutional rights. She seeks to vindicate her rights
and the rights of all others in Colorado Springs who speak out against police brutality.
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PARTIES
6. At all times relevant to this Complaint, Plaintiff Celia Palmer was a citizen of the
8. At all times relevant to this Complaint, Defendant Keith Wrede was a citizen of
the United States and resident of the State of Colorado. At all relevant times, Defendant Wrede
was acting within the scope of his official duties and employment and under color of state law in
citizen of the United States and resident of the State of Colorado. At all relevant times,
Defendant Woodworth was acting within the scope of his official duties and employment and
under color of state law in his capacity as a law enforcement officer for Colorado Springs,
Colorado.
10. This action arises under the Constitution and laws of the United States, and is
brought pursuant to Title 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Jurisdiction is conferred on this Court pursuant to 28
U.S.C. § 1331. Jurisdiction supporting Plaintiff’s claim for attorney fees and costs is conferred
by 42 U.S.C. § 1988.
11. Venue is proper in this District according to 28 U.S.C. § 1391(b) because the
events giving rise to the claims occurred in this District and all Defendants reside in this District.
FACTUAL ALLEGATIONS
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12. George Floyd was murdered on May 25, 2020. Minneapolis police officers
arrested Mr. Floyd, a 46-year-old Black man, after a convenience store employee called 911 and
told the police that Mr. Floyd had bought cigarettes with a counterfeit twenty-dollar bill. Those
officers pinned Mr. Floyd to the ground. Then one officer, Derek Chauvin, put his knee on Mr.
Floyd’s neck. He would suffocate Mr. Floyd for eight minutes and forty-six seconds while Mr.
Floyd repeatedly told him that he couldn’t breathe; while numerous other officers callously
looked on and did absolutely nothing; while bystanders pleaded for Officer Chauvin to stop
killing Mr. Floyd; while Officer Chauvin mocked Mr. Floyd. Among Mr. Floyd’s final words
13. Mr. Floyd’s murder, and the system of police violence that caused it, sparked
millions of people to gather across this nation, and world, to mourn and call for the abolition and
reform of modern policing. Colorado Springs was among the cities where there was a strong
reaction to Mr. Floyd’s death with thousands taking to the streets in protest. The response to Mr.
Floyd’s death particularly resonated in Colorado Springs because its police department had
recently killed De’von Bailey, a young, black man, by shooting him in the back as he ran away;
yet, the police officer who shot and killed Mr. Bailey faced no criminal charges or even
14. Ms. Palmer, a graduate of Colorado College, was among the millions of
Americans outraged by the murder of George Floyd at the hands of police, and wished to attend
the protests as an ally so as to show her support for the Black Lives Matter movement. On June
2, 2020, Celia Palmer attended one of the Black Lives Matter protests sparked by George
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15. The protesters, including Ms. Palmer, marched throughout downtown Colorado
Springs, ending up near the CSPD police headquarters at East Rio Grande Street and South
Nevada Avenue. Ms. Palmer joined others in calling for accountability for police brutality. Little
did she know she would later be a victim of the exact brutality she was protesting.
16. At approximately 10:43 p.m., CSPD officers ordered the crowd to disperse. There
was no basis for declaring the assembly unlawful. There was no violence or property destruction
occurring. There was no threat of imminent violence or property destruction. The protest was
completely peaceful.
17. Even though Ms. Palmer was simply peacefully protesting, she complied with the
18. Ms. Palmer walked away from the CSPD headquarters down Nevada Avenue and
headed toward her car. Approximately ten minutes later, Ms. Palmer had walked multiple blocks
away (and well out of the area where the dispersal order was given), near the intersection of
19. When Ms. Palmer reached the intersection of South Nevada Avenue and East
Cimarron Street, she witnessed a CSPD officer harassing a young Black man. Ms. Palmer stood
at a distance, over twenty feet away, and watched the officer with the hope that her presence
would prevent CSPD officers from turning the young Black man into the next De’Von Bailey,
George Floyd or Breonna Taylor. Ms. Palmer’s friend stepped closer to the young Black man to
try to diffuse the situation, but Ms. Palmer continued to stand at a distance. The CSPD officer
harassing the young Black man, suddenly and without warning, sprayed Ms. Palmer’s friend in
the face with OC spray for no apparent reason. Ms. Palmer was also hit with the impact of the
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OC spray. Confused, and incapacitated by the OC spray, Ms. Palmer and her friend fled the area,
20. While Ms. Palmer and her friend were leaving the area, two CSPD officers,
Defendants Keith Wrede and Wesley Woodworth, targeted them. Defendant Wrede purposefully
ambushed Ms. Palmer and her friend, tackling both from behind without any warning
whatsoever. The force of Defendant Wrede’s tackle slammed Ms. Palmer to the ground and her
head bounced off the pavement. Ms. Palmer went limp and was completely within Defendant
Wrede’s control.
21. Defendant Woodworth watched Defendant Wrede inflict this grossly excessive
force and did nothing to intervene. Then, Defendant Woodworth jumped on Ms. Palmer and
grabbed her by the hair. Defendant Woodworth jerked Ms. Palmer’s head around using her hair
and slammed it against the ground. The force used to pull Ms. Palmer’s hair would cause a
22. Defendants Wrede’s and Woodworth’s uses of force caused Ms. Palmer to suffer
23. Defendants Wrede and Woodworth arrested Ms. Palmer. There was no basis to
believe that Ms. Palmer had committed any crime whatsoever. Indeed, Ms. Palmer was arrested
for leaving the protest in compliance with an unlawful order to disperse. No officer told Ms.
Palmer to leave the area of South Nevada Avenue and East Cimarron Street, and she was given
no warning prior to being arrested that she would subject to arrest if she did not disperse from
that area.
24. Ms. Palmer was walking away from the protest on public streets and sidewalks
when she was tackled and arrested by Defendants. She was not disrupting traffic in any way. Ms.
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Palmer was peacefully leaving a protest – as she had been instructed to do – at the time that
25. Defendants tackled, arrested, jailed, and concocted charges against Ms. Palmer
because she was speaking in support of the Black Lives Matter movement and criticizing law
enforcement actions. Had she been speaking out in favor of law enforcement, Defendants would
not have taken these retaliatory actions against her. In other words, Defendants’ actions were a
26. There was absolutely no basis for using force against Ms. Palmer. She was not
fleeing from police when she was tackled. Ms. Palmer had committed no crime when Defendants
Wrede and Woodworth used force against her. Ms. Palmer had not threatened, let alone used,
violence against Defendants Wrede and Woodworth, or anyone else. Ms. Palmer was simply
leaving a peaceful protest, in compliance with unlawful CSPD commands, when she Defendants
27. Ms. Palmer was booked into the El Paso County Jail. She was charged with
obstruction for allegedly failing to disperse, but those charges were dismissed.
28. The only reason that Defendants Wrede and Woodworth initiated charges against
Ms. Palmer was to cover-up the obvious excessive force that they had used. Defendant
Woodworth falsely wrote in his report that Ms. Palmer attempted to push Defendant Wrede and
that she had grabbed onto Defendant Wrede at multiple points. Neither of these things happened.
These false statements were the only basis for prosecuting Ms. Palmer.
29. There was no basis for the charges or Defendant Woodworth’s statements, which
were relied on by the prosecutor in the continued prosecution of Ms. Palmer. When the
prosecutor assigned to the case actually looked at the facts, it became clear that there was no
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probable cause for the charges against Ms. Palmer. The prosecutor assigned to the case knew that
she could not prove that Ms. Palmer had committed any crime and dropped the charges against
her. Despite the fact that the baseless charges were ultimately dismissed, Ms. Palmer endured
30. Although she would have liked to have done so, Ms. Palmer did not return to a
protest for some time after being brutalized by Defendants. The injuries she sustained at the
hands of Defendants significantly impacted her life, and she feared further injury at the hands of
CSPD officers. Defendants’ actions stopped Ms. Palmer from gathering with others in the streets
31. Both Defendants made the affirmative decision not to activate their body-worn
cameras until after using grossly excessive force against Ms. Palmer. This was not the first time
that Defendant Wrede had chosen not to activate his body-worn camera so as to cover-up his
brutalization of protesters. The day prior, Defendant Wrede used excessive force against a Black
Lives Matter protester. Defendant Wrede chose not to turn on his body-worn camera during this
32. Defendant Wrede’s true purpose in brutalizing Ms. Palmer was revealed one
month later when he posted on Facebook “KILL THEM ALL” about Black Lives Matter
Colorado Springs did not terminate Defendant Wrede’s employment, even after he advocated
murdering Black Lives Matter protesters. It is clear that Defendant Wrede was trying to injure
Ms. Palmer simply because she supported the Black Lives Matter movement and that Defendant
Colorado Springs has no qualms continuing to employ police officers who have – and openly
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Defendant Colorado Springs abjectly failed to discipline the Defendants Wrede and
Woodward for their unconstitutional conduct.
Woodworth for their use of force against Ms. Palmer, violation of her First Amendment rights,
unlawful arrest of her, and their institution of a malicious prosecution against her to cover up
34. Defendant Colorado Springs has not even conducted an investigation into its
officers’ clearly unconstitutional actions. Defendant Colorado Springs has condoned the conduct
of Defendant Wrede and Woodworth, and Defendants Wrede and Woodworth knew prior to
violating Ms. Palmer’s constitutional rights that they would not be disciplined by Defendant
35. Through its failure to supervise and discipline Defendants Wrede and Woodward,
Defendants Colorado Springs ratified the unconstitutional actions of Defendants Wrede and
Woodward.
36. Even before Defendant Wende’s violation of Ms. Palmer’s constitutional rights,
Defendant Colorado Springs was aware of and ratified his repeated misconduct and abuse of
protesters.
37. On May 29, 2019, Defendant Wrede was accused of excessive force by a member
of the public. Defendant Wrede purposefully failed to activate his body-worn camera, claimed it
malfunctioned, and did not record the interaction that formed the basis for the complaint.
Defendant Colorado Springs did not discipline for using excessive force.
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38. On May 31, 2020, Defendant Wrede was policing a Black Lives Matter protest in
downtown Colorado Springs. During that protest, Defendant Wrede arrested a protester without
probable cause, on the basis of an unlawful dispersal order, and used grossly excessive force
against him. Defendant Woodworth stood by and watched Defendant Wrede use this excessive
force. Defendant Wrede purposefully did not turn on his body-worn camera, but a bystander on a
cell phone filmed Defendant Wrede’s use of excessive force. Despite having clear evidence that
Defendant Wrede used excessive force against the protester, Defendant Colorado Springs did not
take any disciplinary action against Defendant Wrede for his misconduct, or against Defendant
Woodworth for failing to intervene. Defendant Wrede would go on to brutalize Ms. Palmer the
39. Had Defendant Colorado Springs removed Defendant Wrede from active duty the
first time he brutalized a Black Lives Matter protester during the George Floyd protests, he
would not have gone on to brutalize Ms. Palmer. In other words, Defendant Colorado Springs’
inaction caused the violation of Ms. Palmer’s constitutional rights. And, Defendant Colorado
Springs actively chose not to take Defendant Wrede off the streets with the knowledge that he
Defendant Wende publicly voiced his murderous intentions toward peaceful Black
Lives Matter protesters on social media.
40. On June 30, 2020, a Black Lives Matter protest occurred in downtown Colorado
Springs during which protesters marched on Interstate 25. A local news station aired a live feed
of this protest on its Facebook page. Defendant Wrede, while watching that feed, posted three
times some iteration of “KILL THEM ALL” on the feed from a pseudonymous Facebook
account. Defendant Wrede also posted “Solid move BLM way to make your point. I hope you
are proud you damn Terrorist.” Defendant Wrede made these statements to show his support for
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the officers on scene murdering the Black Lives Matter protesters. Demonstrating that Defendant
Colorado Springs was aware of Defendant Wrede’s murderous statements toward peaceful
protesters and false characterization of them as so-called terrorists, he was suspended for one
41. Defendant Wrede’s repeated statements on June 30, 2020 demonstrate his state of
mind relating to Black Lives Matter protesters, and his illegal motivation for arresting and
brutalizing Ms. Palmer. Defendant Wrede retaliated against Ms. Palmer because she attended a
Black Lives Matter protest and was associated with the Black Lives Matter movement. The
actions that Defendant Wrede took on June 2, 2020, were based on the content and viewpoint of
Ms. Palmer’s speech and her associations. Had she been speaking out in favor of police brutality
and/or associating with those supporting police, Defendant Wrede would not have tackled her,
slammed her head into the pavement, arrested her, jailed her, and filed bogus charges against her.
Defendant Wrede sought to punish those who supported the Black Lives Matter movement and
his June 30, 2020 statements are probative evidence of his state of mind during his contact with
Ms. Palmer and other Black Lives Matter protesters, including on June 2, 2020.
42. All of the acts described herein were done by Defendants intentionally,
knowingly, willfully, wantonly, maliciously and/or recklessly in disregard for Ms. Palmer’s
federally protected rights, and were done pursuant to the preexisting and ongoing deliberately
indifferent custom, policy, practice, training, and supervision of Defendant Colorado Springs
Springs’ customs and/or practices of unlawful conduct, including but not limited to:
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b. Using force against individuals who exercise their free speech rights to criticize
and
44. Upon information and belief, Defendant Colorado Springs has provided no
45. Defendants unlawful conduct, as set forth in detail herein, was in accordance with
a custom and widespread practice instituted by Defendant Colorado Springs, even if not
authorized by written law or express municipal policy, so permanent and well settled as to
prosecutions, excessive force, and stifling of free speech critical of public officials, Defendant
47. Defendant Colorado Springs failed to properly train and/or supervise its
employees to avoid inhibiting free speech, the use of excessive force, unlawful seizure, and
unlawful search.
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48. Defendant Colorado Springs knew, or should have known, that its employees
would retaliate against Ms. Palmer for speaking critically of public officials thereby violating
constitutional rights, because Defendant Colorado Springs knew that individuals in Ms. Palmer’s
50. Defendant Colorado Springs could have and should have pursued reasonable
methods for the training and supervising of such employees but failed to do so.
train and/or supervise its employees were the moving force and proximate cause of the violation
encouraging, condoning, tolerating, and ratifying the retaliation against those who criticize
public officials, as described herein, was the moving force behind, and proximate cause of, the
53. The acts or omissions of Defendant Colorado Springs caused Ms. Palmer
damages in that she suffered physical and mental pain, among other injuries, damages, and
losses.
54. The actions of Defendant Colorado Springs as described herein deprived Ms.
Palmer of the rights, privileges, liberties, and immunities secured by the Constitution of the
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55. The incident involving Ms. Palmer, standing alone, is sufficient evidence of these
customs, policies and/or practices. Yet, there is more evidence of Defendant Colorado Springs’
Defendant Colorado Springs has a custom and practice of arresting and using
excessive force against individuals in retaliation for their exercise of their First
Amendment rights, particularly in response to criticism of law enforcement officials,
and failing to discipline officers who retaliate against those who criticize of law
enforcement officials.
56. Defendant Colorado Springs has a history of retaliating against individuals who
protest police officers—an issue that should have long since been addressed by Defendant
Colorado Springs. The following cases show that at the time of Ms. Palmer’s arrest, there was a
formal or informal custom and practice, that was known to Defendant Colorado Springs, of
retaliating against individuals who criticize police officers. These cases also illustrate an obvious
need, of which Defendant Colorado Springs was aware at the time of Ms. Palmer’s arrest and
brutalization, for Defendant Colorado Springs to provide further supervision, discipline, and
training to CSPD officers on the necessity of not retaliating against individuals who criticize
police officers. CSPD has also ratified and condoned this custom by failing to discipline its
officers for arresting and brutalizing individuals for criticizing law enforcement and their
57. On July 4, 2013, CSPD officers arrested Grant Bloomquist without probable
cause after he verbally protested two CSPD officers’ beating of another man outside of a
nightclub. Mr. Bloomquist walked outside of Cowboys Night Club in downtown Colorado
Springs and saw officers brutally beating a black man, so he stepped to about 7 feet away and
said, “get the fuck off him.” At that point, Mr. Bloomquist was blindsided and struck by an
officer, who hit him right in the face. Multiple CSPD officers then struck Mr. Bloomquist
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repeatedly in the groin area with knee strikes and pinned him against a police vehicle. The CSPD
officers then threw him in the police car and arrested him. These actions were taken by CSPD
officers solely because Mr. Bloomquist was speaking out in order to protect a victim of police
misconduct. Mr. Bloomquist was subsequently prosecuted in an effort to cover-up the officers’
unconstitutional actions. No officers were disciplined or reprimanded for their conduct that
58. On March 25, 2015, CSPD officers unlawfully arrested and brutalized Ryan
Brown because he filmed a traffic stop, protested CSPD officers’ misconduct during that traffic
stop, and asserted his rights. Mr. Brown was in the passenger seat of a vehicle that CPSD officers
pulled over because he and his brother (the driver of the vehicle) were Black men driving
through a predominantly white neighborhood in Colorado Springs. Once CSPD officers initiated
the stop, Mr. Brown immediately asked them why the vehicle had been pulled over and started
filming. In response to this free speech activity, the CSPD officers held Mr. Brown at gunpoint,
forced him out of the vehicle, slammed him into a snowy parkway, and stopped his recording.
Mr. Brown was subsequently prosecuted in an effort to cover-up the officers’ unconstitutional
actions. Mr. Brown filed a lawsuit against Colorado Springs. Colorado Springs settled Mr.
Brown’s claims against the officers and itself. No officer was disciplined or reprimanded for
59. On November 2, 2017, CSPD officers arrested Terrell Clayton for simply filming
police activity in Colorado Springs and protesting police officers who attempted to intimidate
him into taking actions he was not legally required to take, namely providing CSPD officers with
identification. On that day, Mr. Clayton drove to the Colorado Springs Police Department
substation at 7850 Goddard Street, Colorado Springs, Colorado. Mr. Clayton set out to film
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officers, and the station itself, for his YouTube channel, which is activity protected by the First
Amendment. To do so, he carried with him a handheld camera and his cellphone. Mr. Clayton
was filming outside of the substation when he was approached by two Colorado Springs police
officers, Officer Steve Pugsley and Sergeant Brad Pratt. When they approached Mr. Clayton, the
officers almost immediately asked Mr. Clayton for identification. Mr. Clayton politely refused,
correctly informing the officers that they needed reasonable suspicion that he had committed a
crime in order to demand identification from him. One officer responded that the officers had
reasonable suspicion that Mr. Clayton had committed a crime because he was “outside of a law
enforcement facility acting suspicious.” He falsely told Mr. Clayton that acting “suspicious”
meets the elements of the crime of disorderly conduct. They then told Mr. Clayton that he was
“required” to identify himself. Mr. Clayton told the officers that he had a constitutional right to
record police activity and that he would not produce identification without reasonable suspicion
that he had committed a crime. Immediately after Mr. Clayton’s assertion of his rights, the CSPD
officers forcibly detained him. They aggressively searched Mr. Clayton and seized his camera,
placing it on the trunk of the police car. The officers then placed Mr. Clayton in the back of their
police car. While in the back of the police car, Mr. Clayton began filming on his cell phone. As
one of the officers was speaking to Mr. Clayton, while Mr. Clayton was detained against his will
in the back of the police car, the officer falsely told Mr. Clayton that his detention was a Terry
stop. The officer then seized Mr. Clayton’s cell phone and stopped his recording. Unbeknownst
to the officers, Mr. Clayton’s camera (which had been seized initially by the officers and placed
on the trunk of their police car) was continuing to film. On film, the officers stated that, if Mr.
Clayton didn’t provide his identification, they were going to book him into jail. Sergeant Pratt
then told the other officers that he didn’t want to hear Mr. Clayton “barkin’ laws and all that.”
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Sergeant Pratt then, seemingly knowing that his detention of Mr. Clayton was unconstitutional,
told the other officers that “if this ends up going to the court bullshit... then literally fuck my
life.” Sergeant Pratt then told Officer Pugsley to “keep him detained out here.” The officers
eventually told Mr. Clayton that he had a choice: either provide his name and identification or
spend the evening in jail. Despite his belief that the officers had no reasonable suspicion to
require him to produce identification, Mr. Clayton eventually provided the officers with his
identification so as to avoid spending the night in jail. He was then released with no citation. Mr.
Clayton has never been cited, or charged, with any crime arising out of the incident on
November 2, 2017. The officers were not disciplined or reprimanded for violating Mr. Clayton’s
constitutional rights.
60. On January 30, 2019, Michael Sexton was filming police activity in downtown
Colorado Springs. Mr. Sexton observed CSPD police officers perform a traffic stop on a vehicle
at the intersection of Bijou Street and Nevada Avenue. Mr. Sexton was standing on the sidewalk
while filming the officers. While interacting with the officers, Mr. Sexton never left the
sidewalk, never stood closer than five to seven feet away from the officers, and never came in
between the officers and the motorist he had stopped. While the officers performed their traffic
stop, Mr. Sexton began to criticize the officers, including saying “fuck the police.” One of the
officers told Mr. Sexton, wrongly, that “fuck the police” is profanity and that it violates the
disorderly conduct statute. The officers arrested Mr. Sexton because he kept saying the word
“fuck” and cited him with disorderly conduct. Mr. Sexton was arrested for simply saying “fuck
the police.” Mr. Sexton was prosecuted for almost one year in an attempt to cover-up the CSPD
police officers’ unconstitutional arrest. On the eve of trial, the prosecution dismissed the case
against him. The case was dismissed because there was an abject lack of any probable cause
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whatsoever to charge Mr. Sexton with a crime. The officers were not disciplined or reprimanded
61. On June 7, 2019, Mr. Sexton was leaving the 7-11 near the intersection of 30th
Street and Colorado Avenue in Colorado, Springs, Colorado. As he stood in the parking lot,
Officer Matthew Anderson, a CSPD officer, drove by in a police car. As Officer Anderson
drove by, Mr. Sexton flipped off Officer Anderson. Immediately after seeing Mr. Sexton flipping
off the car, Officer Anderson made an illegal U-turn across four lanes of traffic to contact Mr.
Sexton and ask if he needed any help. Mr. Sexton told Officer Anderson that he did not need
help, and Anderson began to drive away on 30th Street. As Officer Anderson drove away, Mr.
Sexton looked both ways and, seeing no cars in the area, safely crossed 30th Street. Again,
Officer Anderson made another illegal U-turn and drove toward Mr. Sexton, at which point Mr.
Sexton began recording the incident on his phone. As Officer Anderson approached, Mr. Sexton
flipped him off again while standing on the sidewalk. Immediately after Mr. Sexton flipped him
off again, Officer Anderson activated the police lights on his car and pulled over. Officer
Anderson jumped out of his vehicle and grabbed Mr. Sexton. Officer Anderson used force
against Mr. Sexton within seconds of the initiation of the interaction. Officer Anderson pulled
Mr. Sexton to the police car by his wrist and shoved Mr. Sexton against, and over, the hood of
his vehicle. Though Mr. Sexton repeatedly asked Officer Anderson to please “calm down,” he
escalated the situation by using excessive force because he was angry that Mr. Sexton had
flipped him off and filmed him. Officer Anderson pinned Mr. Sexton to the hood of the car and
wrenched his arm behind his back. Mr. Sexton continued to tell Anderson that he was not
fighting him, indicated that he was not resisting arrest with his body language, and asked
Anderson not to rough him up. After a half an hour, Officer Anderson released Mr. Sexton from
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handcuffs and issued a citation for jaywalking under COLO. SPRINGS MUN. CODE 10.18.104. Mr.
Sexton was prosecuted for almost three months in an attempt to cover-up Officer Anderson’s
unconstitutional conduct before dismissing the charges against him for a lack of probable cause.
Officer Anderson was not disciplined for violating Mr. Sexton’s constitutional rights.
62. Several of these representative cases resulted in the City of Colorado Springs
paying hundreds of thousands of dollars to settle First Amendment retaliation claims, yet the
facts surrounding Ms. Palmer’s case make apparent that Defendant Colorado Springs continues
to condone behavior by its police officers, including the use of excessive force and violations of
the First Amendment. This custom and practice caused the violation of Ms. Palmer’s
constitutional rights and Defendant Colorado Springs was on notice of this custom and practice
based on these past incidents, which resulted in litigation and significant payouts by Defendant
unconstitutional conduct, as described above, Defendant Colorado Springs has condoned the
conduct of its officers and sent the message that it will not discipline them for violating the
Constitution.
64. Defendant Colorado Springs knew or had constructive knowledge, based on the
customary actions of its officers described above and its condoning of those actions, that its
officers would retaliate against those who criticized the police, like Ms. Palmer.
65. Defendant Colorado Springs could have and should have pursued reasonable
methods for the training and supervising of its officers, but failed to do so.
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train and supervise its employees were a moving force and proximate cause of their violation of
67. Plaintiff hereby incorporates all other paragraphs of this Complaint as if fully set
forth herein.
68. Defendants acted under color of state law, and within the course and scope of
their employment, in their capacities as law enforcement officers at all times relevant to the
71. The actions of Defendants can be expected to chill a reasonable person from
72. Plaintiff’s expression was on a matter of public concern and did not violate any
law.
Plaintiff’s expression.
75. Defendants’ actions were not a reasonable time, place, and manner restriction on
speech.
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76. At the time when Defendants stopped Plaintiff from speaking, expressing herself,
and gathering, Plaintiff had a clearly established constitutional right under the First Amendment
to the United States Constitution to gather, express herself, and speak freely. Any reasonable law
enforcement officer knew or should have known of this clearly established right.
violations of the First Amendment of the United States and Colorado Constitutions.
80. The actions of the Individual Defendants were authorized (before and during the
fact), and ratified (after the fact), by final policymakers for Defendant Colorado Springs.
81. Defendant Colorado Springs’ customs, policies, and/or practices, and the
decisions of its final policymakers, were the moving force behind the Individual Defendants’
acts and omissions, described above, Plaintiff suffered injuries, damages, and losses.
83. Defendants’ herein described acts or omissions were the moving force and the
legal, direct, and proximate cause of Plaintiff’s injuries and losses, including but not limited to
non-economic damages, economic damages, the physical and mental pain and anguish Plaintiff
suffered during and after the protest, and other compensatory and special damages.
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deprived Plaintiff of due process and of rights, privileges, liberties, and immunities secured by
85. Plaintiff hereby incorporates all other paragraphs of this Complaint as if fully set
forth herein.
86. Defendants acted under color of state law, and within the course and scope of
their employment, in their capacities as law enforcement officers at all times relevant to the
the protest.
89. Plaintiff’s expression was on a matter of public concern and did not violate any
law.
91. Defendants jointly and on their own accord responded to Plaintiff’s First
Amendment protected activity with retaliation, including but not limited to use of physical force.
93. By unlawfully using force against Plaintiff, Defendants sought to punish Plaintiff
for exercising her First Amendment rights, to silence her, and to deter her from gathering and
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speaking in the future. Defendants’ retaliatory actions would chill a person of ordinary firmness
95. At the time when Defendants retaliated against Plaintiff for exercising her First
Amendment rights, Plaintiff had a clearly established constitutional right under the First
Amendment to the United States Constitution to be free from retaliation. Any reasonable law
enforcement officer knew or should have known of this clearly established right.
98. Defendant Colorado Springs has a custom, practice or policy of tolerating its
officers’ retaliatory violations of the First Amendment of the United States and Colorado
Constitutions.
99. The actions of Defendants were authorized (before and during the fact), and
ratified (after the fact), by final policymakers for Defendant Colorado Springs.
100. Defendant Colorado Springs’ customs, policies, and/or practices, and the
decisions of its final policymakers, were the moving force behind Defendants’ violation of
acts and omissions, described above, Plaintiff suffered injuries, damages, and losses.
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102. Defendants’ herein described acts or omissions were the moving force and the
legal, direct, and proximate cause of Plaintiff’s injuries and losses, including but not limited to
non-economic damages, economic damages, the physical and mental pain and anguish Plaintiff
deprived Plaintiff of due process and of rights, privileges, liberties, and immunities secured by
104. Plaintiff hereby incorporates all other paragraphs of this Complaint as if fully set
forth herein.
105. Defendants acted under color of state law, and within the course and scope of
their employment, in their capacities as law enforcement officers at all times relevant to the
107. Plaintiff had a protected Fourth Amendment interest against being victimized by
108. Defendants did not have, at any time, a legally valid basis to seize Plaintiff.
111. Each Defendant failed to intervene to prevent the other Defendant from violating
Plaintiff’s constitutional rights, and is thereby liable for such failure to intervene.
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confronting them.
113. Plaintiff had committed no crime (nor could any of the Defendants have
reasonably believed she had committed any crime) that would legally justify arrest or detention,
Plaintiff gave Defendants no reason to fear for their safety or the safety of any member of the
public. Plaintiff was obviously unarmed and Plaintiff was not resisting arrest or fleeing.
114. Defendants did not have a legally valid basis to seize Plaintiff in the manner
and/or with the level of force used under the circumstances presented.
115. Defendants recklessly created the situation in which they used force.
117. At the time when Defendants used excessive force against Plaintiff, Plaintiff had a
clearly established constitutional right under the Fourth Amendment to the United States
Constitution to be secure from unreasonable seizure through excessive force. Any reasonable law
enforcement officer knew or should have known of this clearly established right.
demonstrating deliberate indifference to, and a reckless disregard for, Plaintiff’s constitutionally-
protected rights.
120. The actions of the Individual Defendants were authorized (before and during the
fact), and ratified (after the fact), by final policymakers for Defendant Colorado Springs.
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121. Defendant Colorado Springs’ customs, policies, and/or practices, and the
decisions of its final policymakers, were the moving force behind Defendants’ violation of
acts and omissions, described herein, Plaintiff suffered injuries, damages, and losses.
123. Defendants’ herein described acts or omissions were the moving force and the
legal, direct, and proximate cause of Plaintiff’s injuries and losses, including but not limited to
non-economic damages, economic damages, the physical and mental pain and anguish Plaintiff
deprived Plaintiff of due process and of rights, privileges, liberties, and immunities secured by
125. Plaintiff hereby incorporates all other paragraphs of this Complaint as if fully set
forth herein.
126. Defendants acted under color of state law, and within the course and scope of
their employment, in their capacities as law enforcement officers at all times relevant to the
128. Plaintiff had a protected Fourteenth Amendment Substantive Due Process interest
against being unreasonably harmed by the use of excessive force at the hands of law enforcement
personnel.
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129. Defendants did not have, at any time, a legally valid basis to use force against
Plaintiff.
131. Defendants acted with malice and/or excessive zeal amounting to an abuse of
power.
132. Defendants acted for the purpose of causing harm unrelated and unnecessary to
133. Defendants’ actions were arbitrary and/or conscience shocking in light of the
demonstrating deliberate indifference to, and a reckless disregard for, Plaintiff’s constitutionally-
protected rights.
135. At the time when Defendants used excessive force against Plaintiff, Plaintiff had a
clearly established constitutional right under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States
Constitution to be secure from excessive force. Any reasonable law enforcement officer knew or
136. The actions of Defendants were authorized (before and during the fact), and
ratified (after the fact), by final policymakers for Defendant Colorado Springs.
137. Defendant Colorado Springs’ customs, policies, and/or practices, and the
decisions of its final policymakers, were the moving force behind Defendants’ violation of
acts and omissions, described above, Plaintiff suffered injuries, damages, and losses.
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139. Defendants’ herein described acts or omissions were the moving force and the
legal, direct, and proximate cause of Plaintiff’s injuries and losses, including but not limited to
non-economic damages, economic damages, the physical and mental pain and anguish Plaintiff
deprived Plaintiff of due process and of rights, privileges, liberties, and immunities secured by
141. Plaintiff hereby incorporates all other paragraphs of this Complaint as if fully set
forth herein.
142. Defendants acted under color of state law, and within the course and scope of
their employment, in their capacities as law enforcement officers at all times relevant to the
144. The orders issued by Defendants, and the authority on which those orders were
145. The orders issued by Defendants, and the authority on which those orders were
based, offered no clear and measurable standard by which Plaintiff and others could act lawfully.
ordinance, state law, or otherwise, to order the dispersal of Plaintiff and, thereby, there were no
explicit standards to govern the order of dispersal or limits on law enforcement’s authority to
order dispersal.
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147. The orders issued by Defendants, and the authority on which those orders were
what conduct they prohibited, and authorized or encouraged arbitrary and discriminatory
enforcement, or both.
148. At the time when Defendants violated Plaintiff’s due process rights, Plaintiff had
a clearly established constitutional right under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States
Constitution to be afforded due process of law. Any reasonable law enforcement officer knew or
demonstrating deliberate indifference to, and a reckless disregard for, Plaintiff’s constitutionally-
protected rights.
150. The actions of Defendants were authorized (before and during the fact), and
ratified (after the fact), by final policymakers for Defendant Colorado Springs.
151. Defendant Colorado Springs’ customs, policies, and/or practices, and the
decisions of its final policymakers, were the moving force behind Defendants’ violation of
152. Defendants’ herein described acts or omissions were the moving force and the
legal, direct, and proximate cause of Plaintiff’s injuries and losses, including but not limited to
non-economic damages, economic damages, the physical and mental pain and anguish Plaintiff
deprived Plaintiff of due process and of rights, privileges, liberties, and immunities secured by
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154. Plaintiff hereby incorporates all other paragraphs of this Complaint as if fully set
forth herein.
155. Defendants acted under color of state law, and within the course and scope of
their employment, in their capacities as law enforcement officers at all times relevant to the
157. Defendants did not have probable cause or any other legal basis to believe that
Plaintiff had committed or was committing any violating of the law prior to initiating a stop of
159. Defendants who did not personally detain or arrest Plaintiff failed to intervene to
prevent the other Defendants from searching Plaintiff without a warrant, probable cause, or
exigent circumstances.
160. No legally recognizable exigent circumstances existed which would have justified
confronting them.
herein, was solely based on Plaintiff’s exercise of her First Amendment rights.
163. Defendant Wrede, as the supervisor on scene, caused, and is liable for, the actions
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165. Defendant Colorado Springs’ customs, policies, and/or practices were the moving
166. Defendants’ herein described acts or omissions were the moving force and the
legal, direct, and proximate cause of Plaintiff’s injuries and losses, including but not limited to
non-economic damages, economic damages, the physical and mental pain and anguish Plaintiff
deprived Plaintiff of due process and of rights, privileges, liberties, and immunities secured by
168. Plaintiff hereby incorporates all other paragraphs of this Complaint as if fully set
forth herein.
169. Defendants acted under color of state law, and within the course and scope of
their employment, in their capacities as law enforcement officers at all times relevant to the
171. Plaintiff has a legitimate expectation of privacy in her body and her property
172. Defendants had no warrant authorizing any such search of Plaintiff’s body or
property.
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confronting them.
175. Defendants who did not personally search Plaintiff failed to intervene to prevent
the other Defendants from searching Plaintiff without reasonable suspicion, a warrant, or exigent
circumstances.
178. Defendant Colorado Springs’ customs, policies, and/or practices were the moving
179. Defendants’ herein described acts or omissions were the moving force and the
legal, direct, and proximate cause of Plaintiff’s injuries and losses, including but not limited to
non-economic damages, economic damages, the physical and mental pain and anguish Plaintiff
deprived Plaintiff of due process and of rights, privileges, liberties, and immunities secured by
181. Plaintiff hereby incorporates all other paragraphs of this Complaint as if fully set
forth herein.
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182. Defendants acted under color of state law, and within the course and scope of
their employment, in their capacities as law enforcement officers at all times relevant to the
184. Defendants initiated charges against Plaintiff, knowing that there was no basis for
those charges or probable cause to believe Plaintiff had committed any crime, by arresting
Plaintiff.
prosecution.
186. Defendants’ motivation was not to bring to justice a person thought to have
187. Defendants acted with malice in initiating the charges against Plaintiff and her
continued prosecution.
188. Defendants engaged in the above actions and omissions knowingly, maliciously,
189. Defendants who did not personally initiate the malicious prosecution of Plaintiff
191. Defendant Wrede, as the supervisor on scene, caused, and is liable for, the actions
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192. The charges against Plaintiff resulting from the actions/omissions of Defendants
described herein were dismissed; thus, the original action against Plaintiff terminated in her
favor.
193. Defendants’ actions caused Plaintiff damages. As a legal and proximate result of
Defendants’ actions or omissions described herein, including the unconstitutional custom, policy,
or practice of making arrests without probable cause described above from which this malicious
prosecution claim arises, Plaintiff has suffered and continues to suffer humiliation, lost earnings,
emotional distress, loss of enjoyment of life, and other significant injuries, damages and losses.
violations of the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution, particularly condoning
195. Defendant Colorado Springs’ customs, policies, and/or practices were the moving
WHEREFORE, Plaintiff respectfully requests that this Court enter judgment in her
favor and against each Defendant, and award her all relief allowed by law, including but not
distress, humiliation, loss of enjoyment of life, and other pain and suffering on all
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at trial;
F. Attorneys’ fees and the costs associated with this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1988,
H. Any other appropriate relief at law and equity that this Court deems just and
proper.
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