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No. 10585747
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Estate of Decedent Lolomania Soakai v. Abdelaziz
No. 10585747 · Decided May 16, 2025
No. 10585747·Ninth Circuit · 2025·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Decided
May 16, 2025
Citation
No. 10585747
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
ESTATE OF DECEDENT No. 23-4466
LOLOMANIA SOAKAI; LAVINIA
D.C. No.
SOAKAI, an individual and personal
3:23-cv-00381-SK
representative of Estate; DANIEL
FIFITA, an individual; SAMIEUELA
FINAU, an individual; INA OPINION
LAVALU, an individual,
Plaintiffs - Appellees,
v.
WALID ABDELAZIZ, in his
individual capacity as a police officer
for the city of Oakland; JIMMY
MARIN-CORONEL, in his
individual capacity as a police officer
for the city of Oakland,
Defendants - Appellants,
and
CITY OF OAKLAND, a municipal
corporation,
Defendant.
2 ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Northern District of California
Sallie Kim, Magistrate Judge, Presiding *
Argued and Submitted November 20, 2024
San Jose, California
Filed May 16, 2025
Before: Susan P. Graber, Michelle T. Friedland, and Patrick
J. Bumatay, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge Graber;
Dissent by Judge Bumatay
SUMMARY **
Qualified Immunity
The panel affirmed the district court’s denial of
defendant police officers’ motion for judgment on the
pleadings based on qualified immunity in a 42 U.S.C. § 1983
action brought by innocent bystanders, who were injured by
a fleeing suspect who lost control of his car and crashed into
them as a result of a high-speed car chase.
*
The parties consented to proceed before a magistrate judge. See 28
U.S.C. § 636(c).
**
This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ 3
Plaintiffs alleged that defendants violated their
Fourteenth Amendment substantive due process rights by
(1) conducting a high-speed chase for the purpose of
harming the fleeing suspect in a manner that exceeded any
legitimate law enforcement purpose, and (2) failing to
summon or render emergency services for plaintiffs after the
crash that defendants affirmatively helped to cause.
Addressing plaintiffs’ purpose-to-harm claim, the panel
held that plaintiffs stated a substantive due process claim by
plausibly alleging that, as bystanders, they were injured
when defendants conducted a high-speed chase with a
purpose to harm the suspect in a manner that exceeded any
legitimate law enforcement purpose. Because the law was
clearly established before the date of the car chase that
defendants’ conduct was unconstitutional, defendants were
not entitled to qualified immunity. The panel rejected
defendants’ assertion that to state a Fourteenth Amendment
substantive due process claim, a bystander injured by a high-
speed police chase must plausibly allege that the officer
acted with an improper purpose to harm the bystander
specifically. This Circuit’s precedent recognizes that an
officer owes a duty to all those in the vicinity, including
bystanders, to limit their intent to harm to legitimate law
enforcement purposes.
Addressing plaintiffs’ alternative, narrower state-created
danger claim, the panel held that—although the Fourteenth
Amendment generally does not confer any affirmative right
to governmental aid—plaintiffs plausibly alleged that
defendants affirmatively created danger by initiating a car
chase that led to a crash and then acted with deliberate
indifference to plaintiffs’ worsening medical condition by
failing to summon help. If plaintiffs’ allegations are true,
defendants violated clearly established law by acting with
4 ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ
deliberate indifference to the injuries that resulted from the
collision that defendants affirmatively helped to cause.
Dissenting, Judge Bumatay wrote that the officers were
entitled to qualified immunity. The majority adopted a
brand-new theory of substantive due process—contrary to
precedent and to the Supreme Court’s admonition against
such judicial overreach—by ruling for the first time that a
bystander may assert a substantive due process claim against
an officer if the bystander can show that the officer intended
to harm someone else. Given that this novel theory of due
process conflicts with Supreme Court and Ninth Circuit
precedent, the law was not clearly established at the time of
the accident that intent to harm a suspect is enough to press
a due process claim for injuries to bystanders. The majority
also expanded the state-created-danger doctrine to create a
new constitutional duty requiring law enforcement officers
to render or summon medical aid for civilians harmed by
private actors under certain circumstances.
COUNSEL
Patrick M. Buelna (argued), Matthew Norman, and Lateef
H. Gray, Pointer & Buelna LLP, Oakland, California;
Adante D. Pointer, Burris Nisenbaum Curry & Lacy LLP,
Oakland, California; for Plaintiffs-Appellees.
David B. Newdorf (argued), Newdorf Legal, Oakland,
California; Richard W. Osman and Sheila D. Crawford,
Bertrand Fox Elliot Osman & Wenzel, San Francisco,
California; Aimee G. Hamoy, Kaufman Dolowich & Voluck
LLP, Oakland, California; for Defendants-Appellants.
ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ 5
OPINION
GRABER, Circuit Judge:
Plaintiffs, a group of innocent bystanders, were injured
by a driver who lost control of his car and crashed into them
as a result of a high-speed car chase. Plaintiffs sued two
police officers, claiming that the officers violated Plaintiffs’
substantive due process rights in two ways: by initiating and
conducting the chase for the purpose of harming the fleeing
suspect and by failing either to call for emergency services
or to render aid after the crash. Assessing only the pleadings,
the district court ruled that the officers are not entitled to
qualified immunity. The officers timely appeal. In the
highly unusual circumstances of this case—including
plausible allegations that the officers intentionally caused
harm for reasons unrelated to any legitimate law
enforcement purpose connected to the chase, and that they
witnessed the crash yet drove away and later stated that they
hoped that the crash caused a fatality—we affirm.
BACKGROUND
The facts alleged in this case are jarring and tragic. We
must take all plausible allegations as true at this stage of the
proceeding. Al Saud v. Days, 50 F.4th 705, 709 (9th Cir.
2022).
On June 25, 2022, in Oakland, California, Officers
Jimmy Marin-Coronel and Walid Abdelaziz, police officers
of the Oakland Police Department and Defendants in this
action, spotted a person who, they believed, had participated
in an illegal car rally. Even though the Oakland Police
Department’s policy authorized high-speed car chases only
in cases involving certain violent crimes, Defendants began
6 ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ
pursuing the suspect through busy city streets at speeds
exceeding 60 miles per hour. Allegedly intent on making the
suspect crash, Defendants did not turn on their lights or
sirens, nor did they report the chase to the dispatcher. Those
actions, too, violated departmental policy.
The chase ended when the suspect’s car smashed into an
area near a popular taco truck, where Lolomania Soakai
(“Lolomania”) had stopped with his family and friends on
the way home from a graduation ceremony. Lolomania
suffered a direct hit and died of his injuries in front of his
mother, Plaintiff Lavinia Soakai (“Lavinia”), who broke her
back in the crash. Other members of their group, including
Plaintiffs Daniel Fifita, Ina Lavalu, and Samiuela Finau, also
suffered severe injuries.
Despite witnessing the crash, Defendants neither stopped
to render aid nor summoned emergency services. Instead,
Defendants drove by the scene—still with their lights and
sirens off—and did not return until they heard other officers
approaching the area of the crash. When they did return,
Defendants pretended not to have been at the scene
previously. While still at the site of the crash, Defendants
were overheard saying that “they were satisfied the [suspect]
appeared injured and hoped that the [suspect] had died in the
crash.”
Lolomania’s estate and the individual Plaintiffs sued,
asserting claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for violations of the
Fourteenth Amendment. 1 Defendants moved for judgment
1
Plaintiffs also brought a claim for liability against the City of Oakland
under Monell v. Department of Social Services, 436 U.S. 658 (1978),
and a claim for violations of California’s Bane Act against the individual
Defendants and the City. Those claims, which the district court
dismissed, are not presently before us.
ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ 7
on the pleadings, arguing that they were entitled to qualified
immunity. The district court denied the motion with respect
to Plaintiffs’ § 1983 claim, and Defendants filed this timely
interlocutory appeal.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review de novo the denial of a motion for judgment
on the pleadings premised on qualified immunity, Carrillo v.
County of Los Angeles, 798 F.3d 1210, 1218 (9th Cir. 2015),
employing the same standards used when reviewing a
motion to dismiss, Gregg v. Haw., Dep’t of Pub. Safety, 870
F.3d 883, 887 (9th Cir. 2017). Consequently, in evaluating
the parties’ arguments, “[w]e view the allegations in the
complaint as true and in the light most favorable to
[Plaintiffs].” Al Saud, 50 F.4th at 709.
DISCUSSION
Plaintiffs claim that Defendants violated their
constitutional rights by (A) conducting a high-speed chase
for the purpose of harming a fleeing suspect unrelated to any
legitimate law enforcement purpose and (B) failing to
summon or render emergency services after the crash. Both
of those theories sound in the Fourteenth Amendment’s
guarantee of substantive due process, which protects against
“executive abuse[s] of power” that “shock[] the conscience.”
County of Sacramento v. Lewis, 523 U.S. 833, 846 (1998). 2
For each theory, which we will address in turn, Defendants
2
In addition to representing her son’s estate, Lavinia seeks to recover for
two different violations of her own due-process rights. The first stems
from the injuries she personally suffered, and the other arises from the
loss of a familial relationship. Because the same shocks-the-conscience
standard applies to both types of claims, Porter v. Osborn, 546 F.3d 1131,
1137 (9th Cir. 2008), we will not differentiate between them in this
opinion.
8 ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ
are entitled to qualified immunity if they can show (1) that
the allegations in the operative complaint, accepted as true,
“do not make out a violation of a constitutional right”; or
(2) “that any such right was not clearly established at the
time of the alleged misconduct.” Hampton v. California, 83
F.4th 754, 765 (9th Cir. 2023).
A. Purpose-to-Harm Claim
Plaintiffs first contend that the complaint states a claim
that Defendants violated clearly established law by chasing
the fleeing suspect for an improper purpose, harming
bystanders in the process. We agree.
1. Constitutional Violation
a. Legal Framework
To violate the substantive component of the Due Process
Clause, official conduct must “shock[] the conscience.”
Porter, 546 F.3d at 1137 (quoting Lewis, 523 U.S. at 846).
Because behavior “that shocks in one environment may not
be so patently egregious in another,” Lewis, 523 U.S. at 850,
courts have developed two methods for defining conscience-
shocking conduct: the deliberate-indifference test and the
purpose-to-harm test, Scott v. Smith, 109 F.4th 1215, 1228
(9th Cir. 2024). We decide which test to apply by “ask[ing]
‘whether the circumstances are such that actual deliberation
[by the officer] is practical.’” Wilkinson v. Torres, 610 F.3d
546, 554 (9th Cir. 2010) (second alteration in original)
(quoting Porter, 546 F.3d at 1137).
Because officers engaged in a high-speed chase must
“operate under great pressure and make repeated split-
second decisions” with “precious little time for
deliberation,” Bingue v. Prunchak, 512 F.3d 1169, 1176 (9th
Cir. 2008), we apply the more stringent purpose-to-harm test
ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ 9
“to all high-speed chases,” id. at 1177 (emphasis omitted).
Under that test, a police officer violates substantive due
process only if the officer “act[s] with the purpose to harm a
civilian” for reasons “unrelated to the legitimate law
enforcement objectives of arrest, self-defense, or the defense
of others.” A.D. v. Cal. Highway Patrol, 712 F.3d 446, 454
(9th Cir. 2013).
Satisfying the purpose-to-harm test is inherently difficult
for those injured by high-speed chases. Officers almost
always chase a suspect for a legitimate law enforcement
purpose and, even when they might not, legitimate
justifications are readily available. See Porter, 546 F.3d at
1137 (explaining that officers chasing a suspect are generally
“reacting to the urgent public safety threat of fleeing
motorists in a situation where inaction could be the most
dangerous option”); Lewis, 523 U.S. at 853 (noting that
police pursuits can serve “the need to stop a suspect and
show that flight from the law is no way to freedom”); cf.
Scott v. Harris, 550 U.S. 372, 383 (2007) (stating, in a Fourth
Amendment case, that the fleeing suspect had “posed an
actual and imminent threat to the lives of any pedestrians
who might have been present, to other civilian motorists, and
to the officers involved in the chase”). Indeed, we are
unaware of any car-chase case in this circuit in which a
plaintiff passed the purpose-to-harm test on the merits. See
Onossian v. Block, 175 F.3d 1169, 1172 (9th Cir. 1999)
(affirming grant of summary judgment to officers because
the evidence suggested that “they were attempting to remove
a dangerous driver from the streets,” not to cause harm);
Bingue, 512 F.3d at 1177 (similar).
The task is not impossible, however, because the
purpose-to-harm test turns on the officer’s subjective intent.
See A.D., 712 F.3d at 453 (“The purpose to harm standard is
10 ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ
a subjective standard of culpability.”). A court employing
that test will not second-guess an officer’s decision—even if
seemingly ill-advised in hindsight—if the officer “acts with
a legitimate purpose . . . in mind.” Tan Lam v. City of Los
Banos, 976 F.3d 986, 1003–04 (9th Cir. 2020). But the
availability of an otherwise plausible excuse will not shield
the officer from liability if the officer acts with an “ulterior
motive[]” to harm that is unrelated to legitimate law
enforcement purposes. Gonzalez v. City of Anaheim, 747
F.3d 789, 798 (9th Cir. 2014) (en banc); see also A.D., 712
F.3d at 453 (noting that, even if an officer ultimately arrests
the suspect, “he still violates the [D]ue [P]rocess [C]lause if
he used force with only an illegitimate purpose in mind”).
At the motion-to-dismiss stage, the key question is
whether, accepting all well-pleaded allegations of fact as
true, the officer subjectively intended to act, not to further a
legitimate law enforcement purpose, but instead to induce
lawlessness, to terrorize, to cause harm, to kill, to teach the
suspect a lesson, or to get even. Porter, 546 F.3d at 1140–
41; see also Zion v. County of Orange, 874 F.3d 1072, 1077
(9th Cir. 2017) (holding that an officer could be liable for a
physical assault if he “was acting out of anger or emotion
rather than [to achieve] any legitimate law enforcement
purpose”).
b. Analysis
Here, Defendants concede that the complaint adequately
pleaded that they acted with a purpose to harm the fleeing
suspect for reasons unrelated to a legitimate law enforcement
objective. The complaint alleges that Defendants acted “in
an effort to make [the] suspect lose control, severely injure
himself[,] and die.” Defendants admit that we must treat as
true that allegation, see Opening Br. at 21 n.2 (“[T]he Court
ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ 11
must accept as true the allegation of the [complaint] that
[D]efendants had intended to harm the suspect.”), the
plausibility of which Defendants do not challenge. 3 The
complaint also alleges that “Defendants use[d] their law
enforcement powers to cause unnecessary harm to a person,”
(emphasis added), and Defendants do not clearly and
distinctly argue otherwise. To the contrary, Defendants
premise their argument on the assumption that Plaintiffs
pleaded a purpose to harm the suspect unrelated to a
legitimate law enforcement objective. See id. at 21 (“If the
officer has evil intent that shocks the conscious [sic] when it
comes to the suspect, does that matter if the plaintiffs are the
bystanders? That is the key question in the present case.”
(emphasis added)).
Defendants’ sole contention on appeal is that any
improper intent to harm the fleeing suspect is irrelevant here
because, in the context of a purpose-to-harm claim, the
object of an officer’s improper intent to harm and the injured
plaintiff must be one and the same. Put another way,
Defendants assert that, to state a claim, a bystander injured
by a high-speed police chase must plausibly allege that the
officer acted with an improper purpose to harm the bystander
specifically.
We reject Defendants’ argument. In Lewis, the Supreme
Court applied “a much higher standard of fault than
deliberate indifference,” Lewis, 523 U.S. at 852, because an
officer deciding whether to give chase must quickly balance
the benefits of pursuit with the risks involved, id. at 853.
When addressing the benefits, the Supreme Court
3
Defendants did not raise the issue of plausibility in their opening brief.
And at oral argument, Defendants’ lawyer confirmed that Defendants
were not contesting the plausibility of Plaintiffs’ allegation.
12 ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ
concentrated on suspects, citing “the need to stop a suspect
and show that flight from the law is no way to freedom.” Id.
That focus makes sense; an officer chasing a suspect is,
presumably, typically motivated by something related to that
suspect. When discussing the risks, though, Lewis took a
broader view, noting “the high-speed threat to all those
within stopping range,” including “suspects, their
passengers, other drivers,” and “bystanders.” Id. (emphasis
added). Implicit in Lewis’s discussion is the recognition
that, although the object of a high-speed police chase might
be to catch the fleeing motorist, an officer owes a duty to all
those in the vicinity, including bystanders. See Onossian,
175 F.3d at 1171 (noting that, in Lewis, “the duty of the
pursuing police officer is defined generally, without specific
reference to the suspect being pursued”).
Lewis thus confirms what common sense dictates: High-
speed car chases create a clear, known risk of harm, not only
to the fleeing driver and to the officers, but also to passengers
and bystanders. Because the risks taken by those
participating in the chase generate—and, thus, cannot be
isolated from—the peril faced by bystanders, it would be
illogical to distinguish between those dangers when
considering whether an officer ought to be liable for injuries
that result from the decision to give chase.
Lewis’s application of the purpose-to-harm test
solidifies that principle. Lewis involved an officer’s pursuit
of a motorcycle carrying two teenagers—the driver and his
passenger—that ended with the passenger’s death. Lewis,
523 U.S. at 836–37. Even though the sole question before
the Supreme Court was whether the officer had violated the
passenger’s rights, the Court applied the purpose-to-harm
ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ 13
test by considering the officer’s intentions and actions only
in relation to the driver:
[The officer] was faced with a course of
lawless behavior for which the police were
not to blame. They had done nothing to cause
[the driver’s] high-speed driving in the first
place, nothing to excuse his flouting of the
commonly understood law enforcement
authority to control traffic, and nothing
(beyond a refusal to call off the chase) to
encourage him to race through traffic at
breakneck speed forcing other drivers out of
their travel lanes. [The driver’s] outrageous
behavior was practically instantaneous, and
so was [the officer’s] instinctive response.
While prudence would have repressed the
reaction, the officer’s instinct was to do his
job as a law enforcement officer, not to
induce [the driver’s] lawlessness, or to
terrorize, cause harm, or kill.
Id. at 855. Indeed, the Supreme Court did not comment on
whether the officer might have intended to harm the
passenger specifically. Lewis thus established that an officer
can—though the officer in Lewis ultimately did not—violate
the substantive due process rights of one individual by
chasing another for illegitimate purposes.
If Lewis left any doubt regarding bystanders, we have
since resolved it. In Moreland v. Las Vegas Metropolitan
Police Department, 159 F.3d 365 (9th Cir. 1998), officers
accidentally shot and killed a bystander while attempting to
incapacitate an active shooter. Id. at 368–69. Reviewing the
14 ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ
substantive due process claim brought by the bystander’s
family, we held that Lewis’s test applies, not just to “high-
speed police chases,” but wherever “an officer inadvertently
harm[s] a bystander while responding to a situation in which
the officer [is] required to act quickly to prevent an
individual from threatening the lives of others.” Id. at 372
(emphases added). Defendants’ reading of our caselaw
would render that statement nonsensical. How could an
officer be said to have intended to harm the person that they
“inadvertently” injured?
Further contradicting Defendants’ argument, our
purpose-to-harm analysis in Moreland did not consider only
the officers’ intentions with respect to the bystander.
Instead, we affirmed the grant of summary judgment to the
officers because they (1) had sought to harm the suspect for
legitimate reasons and (2) did not intend to harm the
bystander at all. See id. at 373 (noting that the plaintiffs
neither “dispute[d] that [the officers] w[ere] entitled to use
deadly force to halt the gunfight,” nor contended that the
officers “intended to harm [the bystander]”). The decisive
question was, in other words, whether the officers had
intended to harm someone—rather than the bystander,
specifically—for reasons unrelated to a legitimate law
enforcement objective.
In Onossian, we clarified that Moreland’s reading of
Lewis applies equally in car-chase cases. See Onossian, 175
F.3d at 1172 (“It is a small step from applying Lewis to a
bystander harmed in a gunfight to applying it to another
driver harmed in the very situation in which the Lewis test
originated.”). Accordingly, we held that bystanders may
recover for injuries caused by a high-speed chase, but only
ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ 15
if they satisfy the purpose-to-harm test. 4 Id. at 1171–72.
And when addressing the merits, we followed Lewis’s and
Moreland’s leads by looking for “evidence that [the]
deputies . . . intended to cause harm to anyone,” id. at 172
(emphasis added), rather than to any one specific individual.
Nearly a decade later, we reaffirmed that approach in another
car-chase case involving an injured bystander. See Bingue,
512 F.3d at 1177 (asking whether the officer “acted with an
intent to harm,” without specifying a particular object of that
intent).
Adopting Defendants’ position would require us to
overrule Onossian and Bingue, which, of course, we cannot
do. See, e.g., In re Complaint of Ross Island Sand & Gravel,
226 F.3d 1015, 1018 (9th Cir. 2000) (per curiam) (“A three
judge panel of this court cannot overrule a prior decision of
this court.”). Because officers generally must follow a route
chosen by the fleeing suspect, officers engaged in a high-
speed chase presumably cannot predict precisely where the
pursuit will take them or, more importantly, who specifically
will be endangered when they get there. We thus have
difficulty imagining a scenario in which an officer forms the
intent to harm a bystander in the brief moments during which
4
It was suggested during oral argument that this decision was merely
dictum because the plaintiffs in Onossian did not win. We disagree for
two reasons. First, a reasoned decision on an issue actually presented on
appeal creates binding law, “regardless of whether [addressing the issue]
was in some technical sense ‘necessary’ to our disposition of the case.”
Barapind v. Enomoto, 400 F.3d 744, 751 (9th Cir. 2005) (en banc) (per
curiam). The decision identified in Onossian was certainly reasoned;
indeed, half of the opinion is dedicated to it. Second, the decision was
technically necessary to the result. By deciding that Lewis’s purpose-to-
harm test applied to claims brought by bystanders, the panel determined
the applicable legal standard—a step the panel was required to take
before it could address the merits.
16 ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ
the bystander is in their line of sight. Given that reality,
adopting Defendants’ rule would make it all but impossible
for any bystander to recover for injuries caused by a high-
speed police chase. We have held, however, that “a
bystander injured in a high-speed police chase ‘must show
that the behavior of the police in his case meets the Lewis
standard.’” Bingue, 512 F.3d at 1175 (alterations adopted)
(quoting Onossian, 175 F.3d at 1172). And implicit within
that holding is the idea that Lewis’s standard can actually be
satisfied in at least some cases involving bystanders.
Even were we permitted to set our caselaw aside,
Defendants’ position would remain flawed. The
fundamental question for the purpose of deciding whether
Plaintiffs have stated a substantive due process claim is
whether Defendants’ alleged conduct shocks the conscience.
Porter, 546 F.3d at 1137. “[C]onduct intended to injure in
some way unjustifiable by any government interest” sits at
the far “end of the culpability spectrum” and, therefore, “is
the sort of official action most likely to rise to the
conscience-shocking level.” Lewis, 523 U.S. at 849. We
see no reason to think that conduct is any less shocking when
it injures someone other than the intended target, particularly
when harm to a third party is a clear, known risk and is
entirely foreseeable. 5
We therefore hold that Plaintiffs have stated a
substantive due process claim by plausibly alleging that
they, as bystanders, were injured when Defendants engaged
5
Suppose that an officer walks into a crowd and shoots at an unarmed
civilian purely for the purpose of causing pain. Surely, such conduct
would shock the conscience whether the officer hits the intended target
or instead strikes a bystander standing a few feet away.
ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ 17
in a high-speed chase for the purpose of harming the fleeing
suspect without a legitimate law enforcement objective.
2. Clearly Established Law
For many of the same reasons discussed above, we also
hold that Defendants violated clearly established law. The
“unlawfulness of an officer’s conduct [is] ‘clearly
established’” if, “at the time of the officer’s conduct, the law
was sufficiently clear that every reasonable official would
understand that what he is doing is unlawful.” Hampton, 83
F.4th at 769 (quoting District of Columbia v. Wesby, 583
U.S. 48, 63 (2018)) (some internal quotation marks omitted).
Lewis, Moreland, and Onossian provided such clarity well
before June 25, 2022—the date of the alleged car chase. To
recap, Lewis established that conducting a high-speed chase
“with [the] intent to harm suspects physically or to worsen
their legal plight” violates substantive due process. Lewis,
523 U.S. at 854. Moreland held that Lewis’s standard
applies when “an officer inadvertently harm[s] a bystander”
in other high-pressure situations. Moreland, 159 F.3d at 372
(emphasis added). And Onossian made clear that
Moreland’s interpretation of Lewis governs car-chase cases
involving injured bystanders. Onossian, 175 F.3d at 1172.
Defendants make much of the fact that neither the
Supreme Court nor our court has ruled in favor of a
bystander injured in a high-speed chase when addressing the
merits of a substantive due process claim. But whether the
plaintiffs in prior cases succeeded in establishing a
substantive due process claim is beside the point. Instead,
we must determine whether the law provided “fair warning
that [Defendants’ alleged] conduct [was] unconstitutional.”
Ballentine v. Tucker, 28 F.4th 54, 66 (9th Cir. 2022)
(quoting Ellins v. City of Sierra Madre, 710 F.3d 1049, 1064
18 ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ
(9th Cir. 2013)) (internal quotation marks omitted). And
here, the constitutional rule set forth in Lewis, Moreland, and
Onossian “appl[ies] with obvious clarity” to the conduct
alleged in this case. Dodge v. Evergreen Sch. Dist. #114, 56
F.4th 767, 784 (9th Cir. 2022); see also A.D., 712 F.3d at
454–55 (explaining that, given controlling precedent, “it
would be ‘clear to a reasonable officer’ that killing a person
with no legitimate law enforcement purpose violates the
Constitution” (quoting Brosseau v. Haugen, 543 U.S. 194,
199 (9th Cir. 2004))).
B. State-Created Danger Claim
As an alternative, narrower theory of relief, Plaintiffs
allege that Defendants’ failure to summon aid after the crash
delayed Plaintiffs’ receiving medical treatment, resulting in
additional harm to Plaintiffs. The claim is narrow because it
addresses only those additional harms that Plaintiffs would
not have suffered had Defendants provided or summoned aid
right after the crash, not the injuries caused by the crash
itself. And the claim is an alternative one because, if
Plaintiffs prevail on their purpose-to-harm claim, they will
be entitled to recover for all injuries sufficiently connected
to the crash—including both their initial injuries and those
caused by delayed medical treatment. See Borunda v.
Richmond, 885 F.2d 1384, 1389 (9th Cir. 1988) (“A plaintiff
who establishes liability for deprivations of constitutional
rights actionable under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 is entitled to
recover compensatory damages for all injuries suffered as a
consequence of those deprivations.”).
Because the state-created danger claim is relevant only
if Defendants fail to prove the primary theory, described
above, we will assume in this part of the opinion that
Defendants did not give chase with a purpose to harm
ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ 19
unrelated to a legitimate law enforcement objective. With
that in mind, we hold that Defendants are not entitled to
qualified immunity with respect to Plaintiffs’ state-created
danger claim.
1. Constitutional Violation
The Fourteenth Amendment “generally does not confer
any affirmative right to governmental aid.” Patel v. Kent
Sch. Dist., 648 F.3d 965, 971 (9th Cir. 2011). But there are
exceptions to that rule, including, as relevant here, the “state-
created danger” exception, which applies when the state fails
“to protect a plaintiff that it affirmatively place[d] in danger
by acting with deliberate indifference to a known or obvious
danger.” Sinclair v. City of Seattle, 61 F.4th 674, 680 (9th
Cir. 2023) (quoting Martinez v. City of Clovis, 943 F.3d
1260, 1271 (9th Cir. 2019)) (internal quotation marks
omitted).
To make use of the state-created danger exception, a
plaintiff must satisfy two requirements, both of which relate
to the defendant-officer’s conduct. First, the plaintiff must
establish that the officer’s affirmative conduct exposed the
plaintiff “to a foreseeable danger that she would not
otherwise have faced.” Martinez v. High, 91 F.4th 1022,
1028 (9th Cir.), cert. denied, No. 24-130, 145 S. Ct. 547
(2024). Second, the plaintiff must show that the officer acted
with “deliberate indifference to a known or obvious danger.”
Id. (quoting Murguia v. Langdon, 61 F.4th 1096, 1111 (9th
Cir. 2023)) (internal quotation marks omitted).
Those two requirements can fit together in different
ways. Often, the affirmative conduct at issue under the
exception’s first prong will be the same conduct that
illustrates the officer’s deliberate indifference for purposes
of the second. In such circumstances, officers are held liable
20 ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ
for “demonstrat[ing] deliberate indifference in creating a
danger.” Bracken v. Okura, 869 F.3d 771, 779 n.7 (9th Cir.
2017); see also Kennedy v. City of Ridgefield, 439 F.3d
1055, 1065 (9th Cir. 2006) (concluding that sufficient
evidence existed to suggest that the officer “acted
deliberately and indifferently to the danger he was
creating”).
By contrast, a substantive due process violation also can
arise if (1) an officer’s affirmative conduct exposes the
plaintiff to danger, and (2) the officer then acts with
deliberate indifference when “responding”—or, as the case
may be, failing to respond—to that danger. Bracken, 869
F.3d at 779 n.7. Simply put, “[w]hen an officer’s affirmative
conduct creates a foreseeable risk of harm to the plaintiff, the
officer will be liable for failing to intercede if the officer
demonstrates ‘deliberate indifference’ to the plaintiff’s
plight.” Id. at 778–79; see also L.W. v. Grubbs, 92 F.3d 894,
896 (9th Cir. 1996) (“[D]eliberate indifference on the part of
the responsible official, to the safety of employees in the
presence of known danger, created by official conduct, is
sufficient to establish a due process violation . . . .”
(emphasis added)).
Bracken exemplifies the second category of cases.
There, an officer prevented the plaintiff from leaving an
event. Bracken, 869 F.3d at 775. Private security guards
also working at the event then arrived and began to assault
the plaintiff. Id. The officer still refused to let the plaintiff
leave, and the security guards eventually tackled the plaintiff
to the floor. Id. at 779. Reviewing the plaintiff’s substantive
due process claim, we concluded that the doctrine’s first
prong was satisfied because the officer’s “active
participat[ion] in the incident” exposed the plaintiff to
danger that he would not have faced had the officer allowed
ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ 21
him to leave. Id. (emphasis added). We then went on to hold
that a reasonable jury could find that the officer acted with
deliberate indifference when he “chose to do nothing” as the
security guards continued their assault. Id. at 780 (emphasis
added). In other words, the officer created the danger by
preventing the plaintiff’s departure, and the officer then was
deliberately indifferent by failing to intervene in the assault.
Wood v. Ostrander, 879 F.2d 583 (9th Cir. 1989)—
where we first considered the doctrine of state-created
danger—illustrates the same principle. The officer in that
case pulled a car over, had it towed, and arrested its
intoxicated driver. Id. at 586. The officer then drove away,
stranding the driver’s passenger in an area with a high crime
rate, and an unknown man later attacked the passenger. Id.
As in Bracken, the officer’s affirmative conduct—arresting
the driver and impounding the car—exposed the passenger
to risks that she would not have faced otherwise. And by
driving off on his own, without helping the passenger in any
way, the officer failed to address that risk. We thus held that,
by showing that the officer did nothing to ameliorate the
danger he had created, the passenger had “raised a genuine
issue of fact tending to show that [the officer] acted with
deliberate indifference to [the passenger’s] interest in
personal security under the [F]ourteenth [A]mendment.” Id.
at 588.
Plaintiffs’ state-created danger theory fits the mold of
Bracken and Wood. Plaintiffs argue that they have satisfied
both of the doctrine’s requirements by plausibly alleging that
Defendants affirmatively created danger by initiating a car
chase that led to a crash and then acting with deliberate
indifference to Plaintiffs’ worsening medical condition by
failing to summon help. Accepting Plaintiffs’ allegations as
22 ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ
true and drawing all reasonable inferences in Plaintiffs’
favor, we agree.
a. Affirmative Conduct
To satisfy the state-created danger exception’s first
prong, Plaintiffs must plausibly allege that Defendants’
affirmative actions (1) placed Plaintiffs in a worse position
than they would have occupied had Defendants not acted at
all; (2) created or exposed Plaintiffs to an actual and
particularized danger; and (3) resulted in foreseeable harm
to Plaintiffs. Polanco v. Diaz, 76 F.4th 918, 926 (9th Cir.
2023), cert. denied, No. 23-842, 144 S. Ct. 2519 (2024).
The first of those elements requires little discussion.
Plaintiffs allege that Defendants “sped after the suspect”
without alerting the suspect to pull over by turning on their
lights and sirens. We can plausibly infer from those
allegations that, in the absence of Defendants’ affirmative
actions, the suspect would not have raced through the city
and lost control of his vehicle and, therefore, that Plaintiffs
would not have required urgent medical attention to keep
their conditions from deteriorating further. So, even if
Defendants initiated the chase for a legitimate purpose,
Defendants undoubtedly “increased the level of danger”
faced by Plaintiffs “above the counterfactual baseline level
of danger that would have existed without [Defendants’]
intervention.” Sinclair, 61 F.4th at 682. 6
6
Not all car crashes that follow a pursuit will satisfy this element. For
example, if a fleeing suspect was already driving erratically and if the
officers’ conduct did not increase the risk of a crash, then this element
likely would not be met. No liability would attach if Defendants’ actions
“did not place [Plaintiffs] in any worse position than they would have
been in had [Defendants] not [done anything] whatsoever.” Johnson v.
City of Seattle, 474 F.3d 634, 641 (9th Cir. 2007).
ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ 23
Foreseeability of harm is also easily addressed. It is
entirely predictable that allowing seriously wounded
individuals to go without aid for longer than necessary
would increase the risk of further injury or death. Cf.
Maxwell v. County of San Diego, 708 F.3d 1075, 1083 (9th
Cir. 2013) (“It was obvious that delaying a bleeding gun shot
victim’s ambulance increased the risk of death.”).
Regarding the last remaining element, Defendants argue
that they did not create a “particularized” danger because the
high-speed chase “threatened the safety of the public at
large.” Were we focused on the danger wrought by the car
chase alone, Defendants would have a valid point. See
Polanco, 76 F.4th at 927 (“Affirmative state action that
exposes a broad swath of the public to ‘generalized dangers’
cannot support a state-created-danger claim.”). As we have
explained, however, Plaintiffs’ state-created danger claim
targets not the injuries caused by the crash itself but the
additional risk faced by Plaintiffs after the crash due to
delayed medical treatment. Only a small and distinct
group—those few people injured by the collision—had to
contend with that danger. Plaintiffs therefore rely on a
sufficiently particularized danger. See id. (explaining that a
danger can be particularized if experienced by “a ‘discrete
and identifiable group’” (quoting Sinclair, 61 F.4th at 683)).
b. Deliberate Indifference
Next, we ask whether Defendants showed deliberate
indifference in the presence of the known danger that they
created. Bracken, 869 F.3d at 779. In this context, we
employ a subjective “deliberate indifference” standard.
Polanco, 76 F.4th at 928. To satisfy that standard, Plaintiffs
must show that Defendants knew that their intentional
actions would expose Plaintiffs to an unreasonable risk.
24 ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ
Murguia, 61 F.4th at 1117 n.16. Put differently, Plaintiffs
must allege facts from which we can plausibly infer that
Defendants “kn[ew] that something was going to happen,
but ‘ignored the risk and exposed [Plaintiffs] to it anyway.’”
City of Clovis, 943 F.3d at 1274 (quoting Hernandez v. City
of San Jose, 897 F.3d 1125, 1135 (9th Cir. 2018)).
Plaintiffs have carried their burden. Defendants
allegedly saw the “carnage, injuries[,] and death” caused by
the collision but did not render aid or call for help, even
though the police department had a policy—and had trained
Defendants to follow the policy—that officers “provide and
summon emergency medical services for injured persons.”
Instead, Defendants allegedly kept driving, without turning
on their sirens or lights, before doubling back and pretending
to arrive at the scene for the first time after hearing other first
responders arrive. From those allegations, we can
reasonably infer that Defendants saw that Plaintiffs needed
immediate medical attention, knew from their training—and
common sense—that the danger to Plaintiffs would increase
the longer they went without help, and—like the officer in
Bracken—still “chose to do nothing about it.” Bracken, 869
F.3d at 780.
Defendants characterize Plaintiffs’ reliance on the state-
created danger doctrine as an attempt to circumvent the rule
that only a purpose to harm, and not deliberate indifference,
can support a substantive due process violation in cases
involving high-speed chases. Some of the broad phrasing in
our prior decisions appears to support that assertion. See,
e.g., Bingue, 512 F.3d at 1170–71 (holding that “police
officers involved in all high-speed chases are entitled to
qualified immunity . . . unless the plaintiff can prove that the
officer acted with a deliberate intent to harm”). But those
cases focused on injuries that resulted from an officer’s
ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ 25
“decision to join the chase in the first place or the serial
decisions about how best to pursue the suspect.” Id. at 1176.
Requiring a more demanding showing of fault before
penalizing such choices makes sense because all of those
decisions must be made without “the luxury of delay.” Id.
The same logic does not apply, however, to Defendants’
decision to leave the scene of the crash, a choice Defendants
made only after the chase was over and the suspect was no
longer mobile. On the contrary, we can readily infer from
Plaintiffs’ allegations that Defendants had time to deliberate
before driving away.
Relatedly, the unique aspects of this case ensure that our
decision will not undermine the holdings of Onossian and
Bingue. Deliberate indifference remains a “stringent
standard of fault,” Murguia, 61 F.4th at 1111 (quoting Patel,
648 F.3d at 974), requiring a “culpable mental state,” id. Not
even gross negligence will do. Id. Failing to aid victims of
a car crash will thus rarely constitute deliberate indifference;
if, for instance, an officer did not summon emergency
services because the officer was distracted by the need to
locate the suspect, did not see the victims, or was injured, the
officer almost certainly would lack the “culpable mental
state” required. Id. In the universe of high-speed chase
cases, this one, with its particularly unusual allegations, is an
outlier.
We therefore hold that Plaintiffs have stated a claim
under the state-created danger exception.
2. Clearly Established Law
We also hold that, if Plaintiffs’ allegations are true,
Defendants violated clearly established law by acting with
deliberate indifference to the injuries that resulted from the
collision that Defendants affirmatively helped to cause.
26 ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ
As Defendants point out, Plaintiffs do not identify—nor
are we aware of—a controlling case applying the state-
created danger theory to injuries suffered by bystanders after
a high-speed police chase. But “[t]here need not be a case
directly on point for a right to be clearly established.” City
of Clovis, 943 F.3d at 1275; see also Hope v. Pelzer, 536
U.S. 730, 741 (2002) (“[O]fficials can still be on notice that
their conduct violates established law even in novel factual
circumstances.”). We ask only whether existing precedent
has placed the constitutional question “beyond debate.” City
of Clovis, 943 F.3d at 1275 (quoting Shafer v. County of
Santa Barbara, 868 F.3d 1110, 1117 (9th Cir. 2017)). Here,
two lines of cases settle the debate.
First, in cases like Wood and Bracken, we established
that officers violate substantive due process when they
affirmatively place an individual in danger and then, with
deliberate indifference, do nothing to address that danger.
See Wood, 879 F.2d at 588 (allowing the state-created
danger claim to proceed when the officer deprived the
passenger of her ride and then “left [her] by the side of the
road at night in a high-crime area”); Bracken, 869 F.3d at
778–79 (“When an officer’s affirmative conduct creates a
foreseeable risk of harm to the plaintiff, the officer will be
liable for failing to intercede if the officer demonstrates
‘deliberate indifference’ to the plaintiff’s plight.”).
Also relevant are cases like Maxwell, in which we held
that “[i]mpeding access to medical care” both (1) “amounts
to leaving a victim in a more dangerous situation” and
(2) constitutes deliberately indifferent conduct when it is
“obvious” that delaying a seriously wounded individual’s
access to treatment will “increase[] the risk of death.”
Maxwell, 708 F.3d at 1082–83; cf. Penilla v. City of
Huntington Park, 115 F.3d 707, 710 (9th Cir. 1997) (per
ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ 27
curiam) (affirming denial of qualified immunity when
officers allegedly took affirmative actions that “made it
impossible for anyone to provide emergency medical care to
[the decedent]”).
Considered together, the foregoing authorities show that
Defendants’ alleged conduct violated a clearly established
right. See Polanco, 76 F.4th at 930 n.8 (“We routinely rely
on the intersection of multiple cases when holding that a
constitutional right has been clearly established.”). True,
Maxwell and Penilla involved affirmative steps taken to
delay aid that was already underway. In Maxwell, for
example, the officers “prevent[ed] [the injured individual’s]
ambulance from leaving.” Maxwell, 708 F.3d at 1082. But
those cases nevertheless put officers on notice that
hampering an individual’s access to emergency treatment
can constitute a substantive due process violation when the
“affirmative conduct” prong of the state-created danger
exception is also satisfied. And Bracken and Wood make
clear that an officer’s inaction—such as failing to provide
aid—can violate the Due Process Clause if the officer
previously put another in danger, even if the officer’s earlier
danger-creating conduct served legitimate law enforcement
objectives. See Bracken, 869 F.3d at 775 (reasoning that an
officer affirmatively placed the plaintiff in danger when the
officer acted with a legitimate law enforcement purpose);
Wood, 879 F.2d at 588 (holding that the officer was not
entitled to summary judgment when he may have
endangered the plaintiff after carrying out legitimate law
enforcement purposes).
RESPONSE TO THE DISSENTING OPINION
The dissenting opinion’s heated rhetoric ignores what
this opinion says and what our precedents provide. We
28 ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ
answer briefly the dissenting opinion’s two central
unsupported claims.
First, the dissenting opinion reads our precedent to
require that the intent to harm must be the intent to harm the
injured bystander specifically. Dissent at 34–40. Not so. In
Moreland, we affirmed the summary judgment entered in the
officers’ favor “because the officers were responding to the
extreme emergency of public gunfire and did not intend to
commit any harm unrelated to the legitimate use of force
necessary to protect the public and themselves.” 159 F.3d at
373 (emphasis added). In other words, the Moreland
plaintiffs lost because there was no evidence that the officers
acted with an impermissible purpose to harm, as to either the
suspect (whom the officers intended to shoot) or the
bystander (whom the officers shot accidentally). And in
Onossian, a car-chase case in which we applied Moreland’s
interpretation of Lewis, we asked simply whether the
deputies “intended to cause harm to anyone.” Onossian, 175
F.3d at 1172 (emphasis added). Those cases, on their own,
clearly establish the law regarding bystanders. But we also
note that in Porter, 546 F.3d at 1140, we quoted with
approval Judge McKee’s concurring opinion in Davis v.
Township of Hillside, 190 F.3d 167 (3rd Cir. 1999)—a case
brought by a bystander who was injured as a result of a high-
speed police car chase—to explain that “[i]t is the intent to
inflict force beyond that which is required by a legitimate
law enforcement objective that shocks the conscience and
gives rise to liability under § 1983.” In that opinion, Judge
McKee explained that “if the record supported a finding that
police gratuitously rammed [the fleeing suspect’s] car, and
if [the] plaintiff[-bystander] properly alleged that they did so
to injure or terrorize [the suspect], liability could still attach
ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ 29
under Lewis.” Id. at 172–73 (McKee, J., concurring)
(emphasis added).
Second, the dissenting opinion alleges that we have ruled
that officers are required to render or summon medical aid
for civilians who are harmed by private actors. Dissent at
43–45. Again, not so. Setting aside the dissenting opinion’s
more general disagreement with our precedents concerning
the state-created danger doctrine, we have faithfully
followed those precedents. Here, according to the
complaint, after intentionally causing the crash, the officers
saw the resulting “carnage, injuries[,] and death” but decided
to drive away and to return later, pretending to arrive at the
scene for the first time. That sequence of events is no
ordinary failure to render aid. Instead, the complaint alleges
that Defendants deliberately abandoned Plaintiffs in a
dangerous situation which, because of the affirmative
actions taken by the Defendants in the lead-up to the crash,
was of Defendants’ own making. See Bracken, 869 F.3d at
779–80 (rejecting the assertion of qualified immunity when
a jury could find that (1) the defendant “engaged in
affirmative conduct that exposed [the plaintiff] to
foreseeable harm”; and (2) the defendant knew that plaintiff
was being harmed “and deliberately chose to do nothing
about it”).
CONCLUSION
We hold that Defendants are not entitled to qualified
immunity with respect to either of Plaintiffs’ theories of
substantive due process liability. Given the unique facts of
this case, we also emphasize that “our decision at the
motion-to-dismiss stage sheds little light on whether the
government actors might ultimately be entitled to qualified
immunity” at later stages of the proceeding. Keates v. Koile,
30 ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ
883 F.3d 1228, 1235 (9th Cir. 2018). We thus express no
opinion on what the district court might conclude at
summary judgment or, should the case proceed to trial, what
a jury might find.
AFFIRMED.
BUMATAY, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
No doubt this case presents jarring facts. According to
the complaint, two Oakland Police Department officers,
Walid Abdelaziz and Jimmy Marin-Coronel, began chasing
a suspect from an illegal car rally. The officers followed the
suspect’s car through the highly populated streets of
Oakland—at speeds up to 100 mph. Even more, the officers
engaged in a “ghost chase”—they pursued the suspect
without their lights and sirens, and they didn’t radio in the
chase to police dispatch. They did this because the Oakland
Police Department prohibits police chases with rare
exception. Sadly, the suspect lost control of his vehicle and
crashed into cars and motorcycles parked by a late-night taco
truck. Several bystanders waiting for food at the taco truck
were struck; Lolomania Soakai died from his injuries. The
officers witnessed the crash but did not stop or summon
medical aid. The officers came on scene—acting as if they
had only just arrived—after they heard other officers had
already responded. The officers were overheard
commenting that they hoped the suspect had died in the
crash. The family of Soakai and other injured bystanders
sued (“Plaintiffs”).
As shocking as these allegations appear, we must always
adhere to our constitutional role. That means following
ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ 31
established law and not grasping at rulings to reach certain
outcomes. As I’ve said previously, “[f]aced with tragic
facts, . . . we may be tempted to expand the scope of
constitutional rights . . . . But our job is to look to the text
and history of the Constitution for the scope of constitutional
remedies—not simply to make good the wrong done.”
Murguia v. Langdon, 73 F.4th 1103, 1103 (9th Cir. 2023)
(Bumatay, J., dissenting from denial of rehearing en banc)
(simplified).
Indeed, qualified immunity’s “clearly established”
standard “protects the balance between vindication of
constitutional rights and government officials’ effective
performance of their duties” by making sure that government
officials can “reasonably anticipate when their conduct may
give rise to liability for damages.” Reichle v. Howards, 566
U.S. 658, 664 (2012) (simplified). “A clearly established
right is one that is sufficiently clear that every reasonable
official would have understood that what he is doing violates
that right.” Mullenix v. Luna, 577 U.S. 7, 11 (2015) (per
curiam) (simplified). “This exacting standard gives
government officials breathing room to make reasonable but
mistaken judgments by protecting all but the plainly
incompetent or those who knowingly violate the law.” City
& Cnty. of San Francisco v. Sheehan, 575 U.S. 600, 611
(2015) (simplified). Thus, qualified immunity weeds out
claims premised on novel or opaque theories of
constitutional violation. Yet the majority greenlights exactly
that sort of claim—offering a string of unprecedented rulings
untethered from the Constitution.
First, the majority adopts a brand-new theory of
substantive due process—contrary to precedent and to the
Supreme Court’s admonition against such judicial
overreach. See Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Org., 597
32 ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ
U.S. 215, 239–40 (2022). For the first time, the majority
rules that a bystander may assert a substantive due process
claim against an officer if the bystander can show that the
officer intended to harm someone else. In other words, the
majority contends that the bystander Plaintiffs here showed
a clearly established due process violation even though the
allegations establish that the police officers intended to harm
only the suspect—not the bystanders. But neither the
Supreme Court nor the Ninth Circuit has ever endorsed this
theory. So it’s no wonder that the majority can’t point to a
single Supreme Court or Ninth Circuit opinion stating that
intent to harm someone else violates the Due Process Clause.
In fact, the Ninth Circuit precedent goes completely the other
way. More than 25 years ago, we concluded that similar
bystander plaintiffs “failed to state a viable substantive due
process claim because” they failed to satisfy “the controlling
question of whether [the officer] acted with a purpose to
harm Douglas [the bystander] that was unrelated to his
attempt to stop the [suspect in the case] from endangering
others.” Moreland v. Las Vegas Metro. Police Dept., 159
F.3d 365, 373 (9th Cir. 1998) (simplified). So we
definitively held that bystanders must establish intent to
harm the bystanders to sustain a due process claim. To get
around this, the majority completely misreads Moreland and
elevates opaque legalese, convoluted innuendo, a single-
judge concurrence, and snippets from different cases to
“clearly established” law. Simply unprecedented.
Second, the majority expands the state-created-danger
doctrine to create a new constitutional duty requiring law
enforcement officers to render or summon medical aid for
civilians harmed by private actors under certain
circumstances. Under this judicially created doctrine,
government officials violate substantive due process if they
ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ 33
affirmatively place plaintiffs in danger. The Supreme Court
has never recognized the state-created-danger doctrine, and
its roots are both ahistorical and atextual. So we shouldn’t
casually expand the doctrine. That means following our
precedent closely. And at a minimum, what’s needed to
make a claim under the doctrine is “affirmative conduct” by
a state actor that exposed plaintiffs to “actual, particularized
danger.” Polanco v. Diaz, 76 F.4th 918, 926 (9th Cir. 2023)
(simplified). But under the majority’s novel theory of state-
created danger, no state action with a particularized danger
is necessary. All that’s needed now is state action without
particularized danger coupled with state inaction with
apparent particularized danger. So the majority creates a
state duty to render aid whenever a private actor harms
civilians if police officers acted in any way in the causal
chain of harm. This is a confusing expansion of a dubious
doctrine.
Only by reaching novel holding after novel holding can
the high standard of “clearly established law” be overcome.
This was not our role. Rather than hack together
unprecedented rulings to create not one—but two—new due
process rights, we should have simply followed the law and
precedent and granted qualified immunity.
I respectfully dissent.
I.
Due Process Claim From the Police Chase
To begin, the Supreme Court has endorsed only a narrow
substantive due process claim for suspects injured during a
police chase. In County of Sacramento v. Lewis, 523 U.S.
833 (1998), the Court held that a police officer with “a
purpose to cause harm unrelated to the legitimate object of
34 ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ
arrest” violates due process by causing injuries to a suspect
during a high-speed chase. Id. at 836. Thus, it is clearly
established that “a police officer who acted with the purpose
to harm a civilian, unrelated to the legitimate law
enforcement objectives of arrest, self-defense, or the defense
of others, violated the Fourteenth Amendment due process
clause.” A.D. v. Cal. Highway Patrol, 712 F.3d 446, 454
(9th Cir. 2013).
The majority denies qualified immunity to the Officers
on Plaintiffs’ due process claim based on the injuries they
sustained after the Officers pursued the suspect during the
“ghost chase.” In other words, the majority holds that a
bystander may assert a due process violation if a police
officer intends to harm someone else as long as the bystander
is injured somewhere in the causal chain. But that’s wrong
for two reasons. First, even assuming that Plaintiffs
adequately alleged an intent to harm the suspect unrelated to
a legitimate objective, there’s no basis under the
Constitution to find liability for injuries to bystanders from
the officers’ conduct. Second, it wasn’t clearly established
law at the time of the accident that intent to harm a suspect
is enough to press a due process claim for injuries to
bystanders.
First, the Constitution doesn’t support expanding due
process protections to a bystander harmed by an officer who
intends to harm someone else. The majority reasons that
high-speed car chases endanger “the fleeing driver and . . .
the officers,” and “passengers and bystanders.” Maj. Op. 12.
It then claims it is “illogical” to distinguish between the two
“dangers” in deciding the scope of the Due Process Clause.
Id. That’s because, to the majority, harm to bystanders is a
“clear, known risk and is entirely foreseeable.” Id. at 16.
ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ 35
The majority ignores that this is constitutional law—not
tort law. The language of “risks” and “foreseeability” is the
language of negligence—not the Due Process Clause. Of
course, a police chase causing injuries to a bystander may
give rise to a tort action against the city. See, e.g., City of
Sacramento v. Superior Ct., 131 Cal. App. 3d 395 (Ct. App.
1982); Est. of Aten v. City of Tucson, 817 P.2d 951 (Ariz. Ct.
App. 1991). But the question here is whether the
Constitution protects against such unintended injuries. And
that answer is clearly no. As Lewis itself recognized, we
can’t “demote[]” the Constitution to a “font of tort law.” 523
U.S. at 847 n.8. Lewis understood that we “need to preserve
the constitutional proportions of constitutional claims[.]” Id.
Lewis thus stressed that the Due Process Clause can’t be used
“to supplant traditional tort law” and it may not “lay[] down
[the] rules of conduct to regulate liability for injuries that
attend living together in society.” Id. at 848 (simplified).
Thus, “the Constitution does not guarantee due care on the
part of state officials” and “liability for negligently inflicted
harm is categorically beneath the threshold of constitutional
due process.” Id. It is only “deliberate decisions of
government officials to deprive a person of life, liberty, or
property” that offends the Due Process Clause. Id.
(simplified).
Because an officer doesn’t deliberately intend for any
harm to the “life, liberty, or property” of bystanders if the
officer’s intent is trained on a suspect, at most, the officer
shows a reckless disregard for bystanders’ lives by engaging
in a police chase. And Lewis expressly rejected the “reckless
disregard for life” standard when it comes to due process
claims from a high-speed chase. Id. at 854. Lewis then
confirmed that, for a due process violation to occur, an
officer must have an intent to “terrorize, cause harm, or kill”
36 ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ
the person. Id. at 855. That doesn’t happen when an
officer’s actions inadvertently injure a bystander. So the
majority was wrong to endorse this newfound facet of
substantive due process. Indeed, the Ninth Circuit has
already answered this question and concluded that, to state a
due process claim, the “controlling question” is whether the
officer “acted with a purpose to harm” the bystander “that
was unrelated to” a legitimate law enforcement purpose. See
Moreland, 159 F.3d at 373.
Second, given how this novel theory of due process
conflicts with Supreme Court and Ninth Circuit precedent,
there’s no way it is “clearly established law.” Recall the
“clearly established law” standard “protect[s] all but the
plainly incompetent or those who knowingly violate the
law.” Sheehan, 575 U.S. at 611 (simplified). But under the
majority’s reading of the standard, it protects no one except
those with four law clerks and a Westlaw subscription. It
requires police officers to ignore directly controlling
authority, to squint at our caselaw, and to string together
creative interpretations across multiple cases. Indeed, look
at the majority’s tortured path to get to clearly established
law:
To recap, Lewis established that conducting
a high-speed chase “with [the] intent to harm
suspects physically or to worsen their legal
plight” violates substantive due process.
Lewis, 523 U.S. at 854. Moreland held that
Lewis’s standard applies when “an officer
inadvertently harm[s] a bystander” in other
high-pressure situations. Moreland, 159 F.3d
at 372 (emphasis added). And Onossian made
clear that Moreland’s interpretation of Lewis
ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ 37
governs car-chase cases involving injured
bystanders. Onossian, 175 F.3d at 1172.
Maj. Op. 17. That’s about as clear as a cloudy day. One
would expect that, for something to meet the high standard
of clearly established law, the majority could point to a
single Supreme Court or Ninth Circuit statement that makes
“every reasonable official” understand “that what he is doing
violates” the law. Mullenix, 577 U.S. at 11. We have
nothing of the sort here. Instead, we have a string cite of
opaque legalese.
And even then, the majority’s reading of these cases is
dubious. As the majority admits, Lewis did not directly
approve of a bystander’s due process claim based on an
officer’s intent to harm someone else. See Maj. Op. 13
(“[T]he Supreme Court did not comment on whether the
officer might have intended to harm the passenger
specifically.”). That’s because the issue of bystander
liability never came up in that case. Indeed, it’s even a
stretch to say that a bystander was part of Lewis. In that case,
the police officers were pursuing two teenage boys on a
motorcycle—with the passenger being killed, 523 U.S. at
836–37—so it’s not a case involving a completely innocent
bystander inadvertently injured by a high-speed chase. See
also Onossian v. Block, 175 F.3d 1169, 1171 (9th Cir. 1999)
(observing that Lewis itself referred to the two teens as
“suspects”).
And, as stated earlier, Moreland adopts the opposite
conclusion—it endorses that a plaintiff bystander must show
intent to harm the bystander before due process liability can
attach. Thus, the majority completely misreads the decision
to claim it as clearly established law going the other way.
Moreland involved a midnight gunfight in a parking lot
38 ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ
where officers fired on an armed suspect but shot a
bystander, Damon Douglas. 159 F.3d at 367. We first
decided what due process standard to apply:
The question we face today is whether
[Lewis’s] newly minted explanation of the
“shocks the conscience” standard also
controls in cases where it is alleged that an
officer inadvertently harmed a bystander
while responding to a situation in which the
officer was required to act quickly to prevent
an individual from threatening the lives of
others. We conclude that it does.
Id. at 372. From this question, which mostly just describes
the facts of the case, the majority sees “bystander liability.”
But all this statement does is adopt the legal framework for
analyzing the bystander’s due process claim. It says nothing
about whether the intent to harm someone else is sufficient
for a bystander to bring a due process claim against officers.
In answering that question, however, Moreland goes the
other way. When applying the legal standard to the facts of
the case, Moreland dismissed the case because “Appellants
do not contend Burns [the officer] intended to harm Douglas
[the bystander], physically or otherwise.” Id. at 373. If there
was any doubt, Moreland made it crystal clear: “Appellants
have failed to state a viable substantive due process claim
because these matters are not material to the controlling
question of whether Burns acted with a purpose to harm
Douglas that was unrelated to his attempt to stop the male in
the parking lot from endangering others.” Id. So the
“controlling question” in Moreland was whether the
bystander showed that the officer “acted with a purpose to
harm” the bystander. Id. That settles it clearly. The majority
ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ 39
thus overturns Moreland in reaching its decision, which it
can’t properly do.
Next, the majority relies on Onossian. In that case, a
family sued sheriff’s deputies after a suspect being chased
by deputies crashed into their vehicle. 175 F.3d at 1170–71.
Onossian expressly limited itself to two questions—neither
of which is our question today. Id. at 1171 (“We must decide
two questions in this case.”). The first question was: “[D]oes
the Lewis test apply not only to harm caused to those pursued
in a high speed chase, but also to harm caused to other
drivers?” Id. We answered that question affirmatively—
yes, Lewis governs police chases leading to injury of
bystanders. And in examining that question, we observed
that “the duty of the pursuing police officer is defined
generally [in Lewis], without specific reference to the
suspect being pursued.” Id. We then read Lewis to provide
the following rule: “[I]f a police officer is justified in giving
chase, that justification insulates the officer from
constitutional attack, irrespective of who might be harmed
or killed as a consequence of the chase.” Id. This doesn’t
resolve whether bystanders must show intent to harm the
bystanders to assert a due process claim.
The second question Onossian confronted was: “[D]oes
the conduct in this case ‘shock the conscience’ within the
meaning of Lewis?” Id. at 1172. We answered no. We held
that “no reasonable trier of fact could find that defendants’
actions shock the conscience” because there “is no evidence
that deputies . . . intended to cause harm to anyone.” Id. at
1172. The majority latches onto these three words from
Onossian—“harm to anyone”—to assert that the Ninth
Circuit has definitively ruled for bystander liability. Those
words do no such thing. However those three words can be
interpreted, they neither serve as a holding or even binding
40 ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ
well-reasoned dicta on the issue. Nor are they unambiguous
enough to provide clearly established law. Whether intent
to harm the suspect satisfies bystander liability was not
squarely raised in Onossian. At most, the language meant to
convey that the plaintiffs’ allegations didn’t come close to
asserting a due process foul because the deputies had no
intent to harm anyone, which “insulates the officer[s] from
constitutional attack.” Id. at 1171.
Finally, the majority belatedly tries to justify its holding
based on Porter’s citation to a concurrence by a single out-
of-circuit judge. Maj. Op. 28–29. But Porter cited Judge
McKee’s concurrence for a simple proposition—that “the
intent to inflict force beyond that which is required by a
legitimate law enforcement objective . . . ‘shocks the
conscience.’” See Porter, 546 F.3d at 1140 (quoting Davis
v. Twp. of Hillside, 190 F.3d 167, 172 (3d Cir. 1999)
(McKee, J., concurring)). Nowhere did Porter adopt the
other parts of Judge McKee’s concurrence on which the
majority now relies. While creative, this doesn’t prove
clearly established law.
We should have granted qualified immunity to the
Officers on this new substantive due process claim. Even
though the prospect of bystander liability for intent to harm
a suspect is unprecedented in its own right, what makes this
more extraordinary is the assertion that this novel doctrine is
clearly established law—apparently hiding in plain sight
among our caselaw. That’s not how we determine clearly
established law.
ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ 41
II.
Due Process Claim From Failure to Render Aid
Plaintiffs also bring another substantive due process
claim revolving around the allegations that the Officers
failed to render or summon medical help after they witnessed
the suspect crash his car into the vehicles next to the taco
truck. Under this theory of due process, the Officers aren’t
liable for causing the crash but are for the injuries Plaintiffs
suffered from their failure to immediately provide medical
attention after the crash. This species of judge-made law is
often called the “state-created danger” doctrine—but
Plaintiffs argue for its expansion beyond anything courts
have recognized. The majority thus wrongly endorses this
newfangled claim.
The Due Process Clause imposes no “affirmative
obligation on the State” to protect a person’s life, liberty, or
property, and it serves only as a “limitation on the State’s
power to act” rather than a “guarantee of certain minimal
levels of safety and security.” DeShaney v. Winnebago Cnty.
Dep’t of Soc. Servs., 489 U.S. 189, 195 (1989). So ordinarily
Plaintiffs’ claim would fail from the start because they seek
to charge government actors with injuries caused by the
unnamed suspect. But the state-created-danger doctrine
creates “an exception to the rule that the Due Process Clause
does not obligate the State to protect its citizens from harm
caused by private actors.” Murguia, 73 F.4th at 1103
(Bumatay, J., dissenting from denial of rehearing en banc).
Instead, under the doctrine, government actors “may be
liable for their roles in creating or exposing individuals to
danger they otherwise would not have faced.” Polanco, 76
F.4th at 926 (simplified). If this sounds untethered from the
Due Process Clause, it is. The “state-created danger
42 ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ
exception finds no support in the text of the Constitution, the
historical understanding of the ‘due process of law,’ or even
Supreme Court precedent.” Murguia, 73 F.4th at 1104
(Bumatay, J., dissenting from denial of rehearing en banc).
It was manufactured out of whole cloth by courts and
aggressively expanded by the Ninth Circuit. Given its
dubious pedigree, we should reject the doctrine’s “undue
expansion” and “align it with the text of the Due Process
Clause and Supreme Court precedent to the extent possible.”
Id.
Rather than rein in the doctrine, the majority continues
its ever-expansion—this time creating a new state duty to
provide immediate medical aid. To assert a due process
claim under the state-created-danger doctrine, plaintiffs
must first “allege affirmative conduct on the part of the state”
that “exposed” them to “an actual, particularized danger”
that they “would not otherwise have faced,” and, second, that
the state official “acted with deliberate indifference to that
known or obvious danger.” Polanco, 76 F.4th at 926.
So the first hurdle for plaintiffs is alleging “affirmative
conduct” that exposed them to a “particularized danger.” Id.
That’s a tough one for Plaintiffs given that their allegations
stem from a car crash—the dangers of which are of the most
general kind. Car accidents are an unfortunate but
ubiquitous risk on our roadways. They can strike almost
anyone at almost any time. It would be nearly impossible to
predict where a suspect in flight will crash or who might be
injured. And an “[a]ffirmative state action that exposes a
broad swath of the public to ‘generalized dangers’ cannot
support a state-created-danger claim.” Id. at 927; see also
Sinclair v. City of Seattle, 61 F.4th 674, 682 (9th Cir. 2023)
(observing that “[a] particularized danger, naturally,
contrasts with a general one” and must be “directed at a
ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ 43
specific victim”) (simplified). So even if the Officers played
a role in causing the crash, Plaintiffs can’t plausibly allege
that the danger was “particularized” to them. Indeed, under
the allegations of the complaints, Plaintiffs can’t show that
Officers knew of the particular danger to them because the
Officers didn’t even know of their existence until after the
crash. Even the majority admits that Plaintiffs can’t assert a
state-created-danger claim based on the car crash. See Maj.
Op. 23 (“Were we focused on the danger wrought by the car
chase alone, Defendants would have a valid point.”).
But the majority waves away the flaws in Plaintiffs’
claim by instituting a novel state affirmative duty to render
or summon medical aid. Id. (“Plaintiffs’ state-created
danger claim targets not the injuries caused by the crash
itself but the additional risk faced by Plaintiffs after the crash
due to delayed medical treatment.”). In the majority’s view,
then, the Officers are liable under the state-created-danger
doctrine because they engaged in “affirmative conduct” after
the crash—by doing nothing. But inaction is not affirmative
conduct by definition. See Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary
of Law 17 (1996) (defining “affirmative” as “resulting from
an intentional act” or “involving or requiring application of
effort”). Merely failing to help or summon help—however
heartless—doesn’t amount to affirmative governmental
conduct sufficient to sustain a due process claim.
And the majority’s new reading of due process flatly
contradicts our precedent. Under our precedent, we ask
whether state actors “placed the plaintiff in a worse position
than he would have been in had the state not acted at all.”
Polanco, 76 F.4th at 926 (simplified). But when officers fail
to render medical assistance, they are, by definition, “not
act[ing] at all.” So the majority rewrites the inquiry. Now,
we must ask—could officers have helped plaintiffs if they
44 ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ
had acted? The majority thus transforms the Due Process
Clause into a mandate of government assistance against
harm from private actors.
The majority’s conception of the Due Process Clause
defies both its text and historical understanding as well as
Supreme Court precedent. As a matter of text and history,
the focus of the Due Process Clause was a protection against
the arbitrary use of the “exclusive sovereign prerogative to
coerce or restrain action.” See Matthew Pritchard, Reviving
DeShaney: State-Created Dangers and Due Process First
Principles, 74 Rutgers U. L. Rev. 161, 192 (2021). The
notion of an affirmative duty to help comes nowhere from
our history or the meaning of the text. And under Court
precedent, the Clause is “not . . . a guarantee of certain
minimal levels of safety and security.” DeShaney, 489 U.S.
at 195. The Clause was meant “to protect the people from
the State, not to ensure that the State protected them from
each other.” Id. at 196. And so “a State’s failure to protect
an individual against private violence simply does not
constitute a violation of the Due Process Clause.” Id. at 197.
Under the proper understanding of the Due Process Clause,
outside the custodial context, the government bears no duty
to act to protect or help others—even faced with devastating
and tragic actions by private actors. And combining non-
particularized affirmative acts with non-affirmative acts
doesn’t save the majority’s novel construction of the
Fourteenth Amendment.
The implications of this ruling are again far-reaching.
Under the majority’s reasoning, under some circumstances,
state officials now bear an affirmative constitutional
obligation to ensure the safety and security of any civilian
who encounters a violent or dangerous private actor. It’s
hard to see how this isn’t a transformative reading of the Due
ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ 45
Process Clause. Now, instead of government action being
the basis for a constitutional claim, inaction may violate due
process. The majority tries to downplay the significance of
its ruling by claiming that it doesn’t apply to “ordinary
failure to render aid.” Maj. Op. 29. But that is no solace—
and it only adds confusion to a confusing doctrine.
And, unsurprisingly, as a product of the majority’s
judicial innovation, this new interpretation of the state-
created-danger doctrine was not clearly established law. The
majority all but concedes this. See Maj. Op. 26 (“[N]or are
we aware of . . . a controlling case applying the state-created
danger theory to injuries suffered by bystanders after a high-
speed police chase.”). Indeed, the majority doesn’t even try
to suggest that its creative approach to manufacturing
“affirmative conduct” through a combination of non-
particularized affirmative conduct and inaction is clearly
established law. But the majority presses ahead based on the
broadest of generalities. It proclaims it “established that
officers violate substantive due process when they
affirmatively place an individual in danger and then . . . do
nothing to address that danger.” Id. at 26. Once again, we
ignore the Supreme Court’s “repeated[]” admonition to “the
Ninth Circuit in particular” “not to define clearly established
law at a high level of generality.” Ashcroft v. al-Kidd, 563
U.S. 731, 742 (2011).
The majority seeks to satisfy the clearly established law
prong by invoking four cases: Wood v. Ostrander, 879 F.2d
583 (9th Cir. 1989), Bracken v. Okura, 869 F.3d 771 (9th
Cir. 2017), Maxwell v. Cnty. of San Diego, 708 F.3d 1075
(9th Cir. 2013), and Penilla v. City of Huntington Park, 115
F.3d 707 (9th Cir. 1997). None of these decisions place the
Officers’ duty to summon or render medical assistance
46 ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ
“beyond debate.” See Kisela v. Hughes, 584 U.S. 100, 104
(2018).
First, Wood only ruled that an officer who affirmatively
“abandon[ed]” a woman on the side of the road in a high-
crime area in the middle of the night violated the state-
created-danger doctrine. 879 F.2d at 592. There, the
officer’s actions were affirmative conduct—the plaintiff
asked the officer how she would get home after the officer
arrested the driver of her car for a DUI. Id. at 586. In
response, the officer simply told her she needed to get out of
the car and then left her on the side of the road. Id. She was
later raped that night. Id. According to our court, the Due
Process Clause was implicated because of the “police
officer’s roadside abandonment of non-arrested third
parties.” Id. at 592. We then held that an officer “stranding
a lone woman in a high-crime area at 2:30 a.m.” was a
constitutional violation. Id. So Wood is about a police
officer’s actions—and it was a due process violation for an
officer to “abandon[] passengers of arrested drivers under
circumstances which expose[d] them to unreasonable
danger.” Id. at 593 (emphasis added). Thus, Wood doesn’t
put the Officers on notice that they must affirmatively call
for or render medical assistance. Wood only says that
officers can’t affirmatively abandon civilians in dangerous
situations.
Second, Bracken embraced a state-created-danger claim
when an off-duty police officer moonlighting as a hotel
security guard affirmatively participated in the beating of a
man at a hotel party by other security guards. 869 F.3d at
775. During the incident, the off-duty officer warned the
man that he was trespassing and asked for his identification.
Id. at 779. After being “jostl[ed]” and “yell[ed]” at, the man
repeatedly asked if he could leave, but the officer “asserted
ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ 47
his authority over” the man, continued to ask for his
identification, and blocked his exit. Id. Soon after, other
hotel security guards arrived and beat the man unconscious.
Id. at 775. We held that the officer was not entitled to
qualified immunity because the officer “affirmatively
prevented [the man] from leaving the party and ensured that
[the man] remained under the control of the hotel’s security
guards.” Id. at 779. In other words, even though he didn’t
throw any punches, the officer “was still an active participant
in the incident.” Id. If the officer “let him leave,” the man
would have left uninjured. Id. Again, this case provides no
notice to the Officers here. By failing to summon assistance,
they didn’t block or otherwise interfere with medical
services. Nor did they affirmatively exacerbate their injuries
by doing nothing.
Third, Maxwell allowed a state-created-danger claim
after police officers affirmatively “refused to let [an]
ambulance leave immediately” with a gunshot victim
because the officers thought the victim needed to be
interviewed first. The victim died en route even though her
injuries were survivable. 708 F.3d at 1081. We concluded
that “[i]mpeding access to medical care” was sufficient
government affirmative action to sustain a due process
claim. Id. at 1082. Indeed, the evidence showed that officers
“affirmatively increased that danger [to the gunshot victim]
by preventing her ambulance from leaving.” Id. Thus, the
Maxwell affirmative conduct was obvious—impeding an
ambulance from leaving. Here, we have nothing of the sort.
At most, the Officers failed to call an ambulance—that’s
very different than stopping one.
And finally, Penilla affirmed the denial of qualified
immunity after police officers affirmatively “made it
impossible for anyone to provide emergency medical care
48 ESTATE OF SOAKAI V. ABDELAZIZ
to” a victim in medical distress. 115 F.3d at 710. In that
case, police officers responded to a 911 call by neighbors
and a passerby about a man in “grave need” of medical care.
Id. at 708. Rather than permitting medical help, the officers
affirmatively cancelled the request for paramedics. Id. at
710. They then dragged the man from his porch in public
view and left him in an empty house alone and locked the
door behind them. Id. The man was found dead the next
day. Id. Again, the officers engaged in several affirmative
steps that left the man in a place where he could receive no
medical attention. If they simply did nothing, the man would
have received the help he needed. The Officers’ conduct
here bears no resemblance to these many affirmative steps.
The Officers neither interfered with Plaintiffs receiving
medical attention nor placed them in a position rendering
medical attention impossible.
So in these cases, the state actors affirmatively
abandoned a plaintiff in a dangerous situation, affirmatively
prevented a plaintiff from leaving a dangerous situation,
affirmatively impeded medical assistance from helping the
plaintiff, or affirmatively made it impossible to assist the
plaintiff. None of those situations would put Officers on
notice of the alleged constitutional violation here—that they
did nothing after a tragic accident. There’s simply no clearly
established law here.
III.
For the reasons discussed above, the Officers were
entitled to qualified immunity, and we should have reversed
the district court’s order.
I respectfully dissent.
Plain English Summary
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT ESTATE OF DECEDENT No.
Key Points
01FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT ESTATE OF DECEDENT No.
02SOAKAI, an individual and personal 3:23-cv-00381-SK representative of Estate; DANIEL FIFITA, an individual; SAMIEUELA FINAU, an individual; INA OPINION LAVALU, an individual, Plaintiffs - Appellees, v.
03WALID ABDELAZIZ, in his individual capacity as a police officer for the city of Oakland; JIMMY MARIN-CORONEL, in his individual capacity as a police officer for the city of Oakland, Defendants - Appellants, and CITY OF OAKLAND, a municipal
04ABDELAZIZ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of California Sallie Kim, Magistrate Judge, Presiding * Argued and Submitted November 20, 2024 San Jose, California Filed May 16, 2025 Before: Susan P.
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FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT ESTATE OF DECEDENT No.
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