Fifth Circuit Denies Qualified Immunity Defense to Texas Deputy Who Allegedly Forced a Woman to Expose Herself to Him While He Masturbated – Law &…

Melissa Tyson, David Boyd

A federal appeals court in Texas has sent a case back down to a lower court after deciding that a local sheriffs deputy who allegedly forced a woman to expose her genitals to him while he masturbated isnt entitled to a qualified immunity defense.

On Thursday, a three-judge panel on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit ruled that David W. Boyd had likely violated the civil rights of Melissa Tyson during what was supposed to be a welfare check, and therefore he cant claim qualified immunity, as a lower court had previously ruled.

On Sept. 18, 2018, Tysons husband had called the Sheriffs Department of Sabine County, Texas, to request a welfare check on his wife. According to court documents, Tyson was at home alone and distressed while Wade Tyson was out of town.

Boyd called Melissa Tyson that night, introducing himself as a sheriff and telling her he would stop by the next morning. At the time, he told Tyson that he handled welfare checks because he was a preacher, although as the Fifth Circuit ruling notes, Boyds ministerial credentials had actually been revoked eleven years prior because of prohibited sexual conduct. As a minister, Boyd had also been sued by church members for alleged sexual misconduct.

Boyd did indeed go to Tysons house the next day, but rather than address Tysons well-being, Boyd allegedly engaged in disturbing conduct that left her traumatized and afraid.

The appeals court described what allegedly took place in explicit detail:

The next morning, Deputy Boyd showed up alone at Tysons home in a plain car and wearing a shirt identifying himself as a Sheriff. He was not visibly carrying a weapon. Tyson offered a handshake but, instead, Deputy Boyd hugged her. Deputy Boyd asked if there was a place that they could talk. She led him to chairs and a table on the side porch of the house. Before sitting down, Deputy Boyd asked if she had security cameras or neighbors, and he began to search the exterior of the home. Tyson said that she did not have cameras and her neighbors were usually not home. He commented that Tyson must be lonely with [her] husband being gone and living . . . by [herself] the majority of the time at a dead-end road. Tyson said that she wasnt lonely, she was fine. She testified that she thought the officers behavior was strange, but she gave him the benefit of the doubt because he was helping her.

Deputy Boyd stayed for approximately two hours, during which time he made numerous inappropriate sexual statements and commands, which the district court found were neither invited nor consensual. For example, Deputy Boyd told Tyson that he and fellow officers had recently seen her at a restaurant, and he repeated sexual comments that the officers made about her body. For example, he said that the officers talked about what they would like to do to [her] if they could. He also compared the size of Tysons breasts with his wifes breasts. He pressed her to answer invasive questions about her sex life, such as whether she and her husband would consider a threesome and whether her husband would allow someone to watch them having sex. And he asked for nude pictures of her husband.

[. . .]

Tyson alleges that Deputy Boyd then sexually assaulted her on the porch of her home. He commanded her to expose her breasts and her vagina, and spread her labia to expose her clitoris. After a prolonged hesitation, Tyson complied. Deputy Boyd then masturbated to ejaculation in front of her. She closed her eyes and waited for him to finish, at which point he left.

Tyson said that immediately afterwards, she felt distressed and cried.

Boyd continued to contact her, texting her messages such as I saw you today or I havent heard from you, but she didnt respond. She told a friend she was worried about him hurting her.

She began frequently seeing a psychotherapist and a hypnotherapist, her intimacy with her husband significantly decreased, she gained thirty pounds, she started carrying a gun, she put cameras up, and she generally stopped leaving her home, the Fifth Circuit said in the ruling. In short, the incident changed [her] whole life, and she isnt who [she] used to be.'

According to Tyson, she felt forced to submit to Deputy Boyds sexual misconduct because she was isolated and alone, as Deputy Boyd had pointed out; she felt intimidated by his authority; and she was frightened that the sexual harassment would escalate if she did not comply.

In July of 2021, U.S. District Judge Michael Truncale, a Donald Trump appointee, granted Boyds motion for summary judgment, ruling that the facts didnt support Tysons allegation that Boyd violated her civil rights.

Certainty [sic], Deputy Boyds conduct toward Tyson was inappropriate and uninvited, Truncale wrote. But after careful consideration of the case law, Deputy Boyds conduct does not shock the conscience for purposes of the Fourteenth Amendment. As such, Tysons substantive due process claim fails as a matter of law and cannot support her Section 1983 claim.

On Thursday, three judges on the Fifth Circuit reversed that decision in part, sending it back to Truncales court for further analysis.

In an opinion penned by U.S. Circuit Judge Edith Brown Clement, a George H.W. Bush appointee, and joined by U.S. Circuit JudgesGregg Jeffrey Costa and James Earl Graves, Jr., both Barack Obama appointees, the judges didnt overturn Truncales ruling completely. They agreed that Tyson hadnt shown that there had been a seizure such that her Fourth Amendment rights against unreasonable search and seizure had been violated.

They had a different take, however, when it came to Tysons 14th Amendment Due Process rights.

It is beyond dispute that no legitimate state interest can justify an officers use of coercion to compel the subject of a welfare check to expose her most private body parts for his sexual enjoyment, the ruling says. Nor does Deputy Boyd argue that any legitimate state interest could justify his instructions to Tyson to perform nonconsensual sexual acts while he masturbated.

The panel of judges said that Boyds alleged actions did, indeed, shock the conscience, despite Truncales finding otherwise, and therefore werent covered by a claim of qualified immunity.

[T]his is not a case of recklessness, negligence, or overzealous policing, the ruling said. The record supports a premeditated intent to introduce sexual abuse into the welfare check because Deputy Boyd misrepresented to Tyson that he was on duty and searched the exterior of the home for cameras immediately upon arrival.

Deputy Boyds alleged conduct was an outrageous abuse of power thatshocks the conscience and violated Tysons right to bodily integrity, the judges later added.

In a footnote, the judges noted that criminal proceedings against Boyd are ongoing. He was indicted in 2019 on sexual assault, indecent exposure, and official oppression charges, the court said.

We are proud that Justice was served today in the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, attorney Jason Byrd said in an email. We look forward to trial in the coming months and the opportunity to hold true wrongdoers responsible.

Representatives for Boyd did not immediately respond to Law&Crimes request for comment.

Read the Fifth Circuits ruling, below.

[Image via screengrab/KFDM.]

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Fifth Circuit Denies Qualified Immunity Defense to Texas Deputy Who Allegedly Forced a Woman to Expose Herself to Him While He Masturbated - Law &...

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