The city of Casper and a pair of its police officers deny allegations the officers illegally roughed up and violated a local womanâs civil rights when they responded to a noise complaint in January 202.
The denials come in a response the officers and city filed earlier this month and Monday to a lawsuit the woman, Adrianah Rodriguez, filed Dec. 14, 2023, alleging the officers unlawfully arrested her Jan. 5, 2020, and in doing so used excessive force, violated her constitutional free speech right and retaliated against her.
Attorneys for Officers Michael Quirin and Ryan Lowry, who responded to the complaint about a party that night, deny Rodriguezâs claims.
Cheyenne attorney Kay Lynn Bestol, representing Lowry, filed his response to Rodriguezâs allegations Monday denying any excessive force was used during her arrest. Lowry also says that comments he made to Quirin during the alleged takedown of Rodriguez, a Black/Latina woman, were taken out of context.
Rodriguez alleges Quirin put his knee on her neck after he took her to the ground because she told the officer he was âmistreating peopleâ and that âI know my rights,â and then when allegedly asked by Quirin if she âwanted to be in custodyâ replied she did not.
Body Cam Remarks
Rodriguez states in her lawsuit that Lowry, âapparently alarmed by Officer Quinnâs disproportionate use of force after he placed his knee on Ms. Rodriguezâs neck, stated âQuirin, Qurinâ a few times but did nothing more to intervene or stop him from harming Ms. Rodriguez.â
âThis defendant admits that he made the statements on the body cam,â Lowryâs response states, adding that he âdenies the allegations (in the lawsuit) to the extent they do not accurately or completely reflect those statements. This defendant denies the remaining allegations.â
Both Lowryâs and Quirinâs responses argue for âqualified immunityâ from the lawsuit because of their role as police officers, and Lowryâs response contends he âmet the standard of care and used only necessary and reasonable force.â
Quirin in his response filed by Senior Assistant Attorney General Timothy W. Miller denies the claims related to his alleged use of force, putting a knee on her neck or handcuffing a fellow partygoer because he was on the phone with his father, whoâs an attorney, about what was going on.
Quirinâs response also denies Rodriguezâs allegations regarding his response to a sergeant who arrived on the scene and took charge. The sergeant allegedly asked Quirin, âWhat are we going to do with her?â Rodriguez claims Quirin responded: âProbably interference.â
Rodriguezâs lawsuit alleges she was then arrested by Quirin and spent a night in jail before being released the next day with the charge against her being dropped.

Charge Not âBaselessâ
Quirinâs response to the lawsuit also denies that the charge against Rodriguez was âbaseless.â
Both officersâ responses state that Rodriguez fails to state a claim âon which relief can be grantedâ and that Rodriguez âfailed to mitigate damagesâ or act appropriately in light of the circumstances.
For its part, the city of Casperâs answer to the lawsuit denies Rodriguezâs allegations that it failed to adequately train the officers or âhas a custom, practice or policy of tolerating its officerâs retaliatory violations of the First Amendment of the United States Constitution.â
The cityâs response does admit to allegations made by Rodriguez that the city settled an April 2017 lawsuit related to alleged police violations of the U.S. Constitutionâs First and Fourth amendments for $149,000 and a second civil rights lawsuit involving police actions in November 2017 for $85,000.
The cityâs response states that the officers involved in Rodriguezâs arrest acted appropriately.
âAll of the individual defendant officersâ acts were within the course and scope of his or her duties and all actions, inactions or omissions were privileged and authorized by law and reasonable in light of their training and the totality of circumstances,â the cityâs response states. âThe injuries and alleged damages complained of by the plaintiff were caused by the plaintiff or other third parties over which individual defendant officers had no control or are the result of pre-existing conditions which were not caused by individual defendant officers or this defendant.â
Rodriguez: âForce Disproportionateâ
Rodriguezâs attorneys allege that officers and the city violated Rodriguezâs Fourth Amendment right against excessive force, and that Quirinâs use of force was âdisproportionate to the need under the circumstances.â
The lawsuit also states her Fourth Amendment rights were violated by the âunlawful arrestâ because Rodriguez did not violate any law.
The lawsuit states Quirin forced her arms behind her back, put his entire body weight on Rodriguezâs back and âwedged his knee into the back of her neck.â
Rodriguez went into a âpanic attackâ and ârepeatedly stated, âI canât breatheâ as she loudly hyperventilated,â according to the lawsuit.
The lawsuit also states that the city of Casper and Quirin violated Rodriguezâs First Amendment right to free speech; and that Quirin used force to âpunishâ Rodriguez for âexercising her First Amendment rights by silencing her and deterring her from speaking in the future.â
The lawsuit seeks economic damages, compensatory damages for âphysical and emotional pain,â punitive damages to all claims, and attorney fees and costs.
Dale Killingbeck can be reached at dale@cowboystatedaily.com.




