KRISTEN L. MIX, Magistrate Judge.
This matter is before the Court on
On October 18, 2011, the Court set the discovery deadline for March 9, 2012. Min. Entry, [#31] at 1. The Court permitted fifteen Interrogatories per side, fifteen Requests for Production of Documents per side, and fifteen Requests for Admissions per side. Id. at 2. The Court ordered the responding party to serve its answers/objections within thirty days of service of the discovery requests. Id. The Court further ordered that written discovery must be served on the opposing party no later than thirty-three days prior to the close of discovery. Id.
Plaintiff acknowledges the Court's Order requiring service of written discovery requests no later than thirty-three days prior to March 9, 2012. See Mot., [#36] at 1. He admits that he served his requests less than thirty-three days before the March 9, 2012 deadline. See id. However, he states that his tardiness was due to Defendants' delay in providing identification of the deputies who are now named as Defendants, as well as other information allegedly provided on an unspecified date in February 2012. See id. He further states that he was unable to finish reviewing those materials until late February. See id. In addition, Plaintiff states that he has twice requested copies of his medical records but that Defendants have refused to provide them. See id. at 1-2.
In their Response, Defendants assert that Plaintiff's discovery requests: 1) exceed the number of requests he is permitted pursuant to the Court's order of October 18, 2011, and 2) are untimely (Defendants assert that Plaintiff's discovery requests were mailed on March 7, 2012 and received by Defendants two days later). See Resp., [#40] at 1, 3. They state that the discovery requests consist of fifteen interrogatories and eleven requests for admission directed at each Defendant, and also at deputies who are not named parties in this case. See id. They assert that the written discovery requests are identical for each recipient. See id.; see also Ex. 1 to Resp., [#40-1] (letter from Plaintiff enclosing a copy of "Interrogatories and Admissions for Deputy Brieske"). On March 12, 2012, Defendants responded to Plaintiff's discovery requests by objecting to them as untimely and as exceeding the numerical limits set by the Court. See Exs. 2-5 to Resp., [#40-2, -3, -4, -5]. Additionally, Defendants sent a letter to Plaintiff informing him that they would not respond to the written discovery directed at the unnamed parties. See Ex. 6 to Resp., [#40-6] at 2.
With respect to Plaintiff's request for his medical files, Defendants assert that the files were provided to him on January 17, 2012 as part of Defendants' Responses to Plaintiff's Request for Discovery. See Ex. 7 to Resp., [#40-7] at 2. In Plaintiff's Request for Discovery, he sought "all medical files related to the incident to include the pod logs, nurse reports, emails, narratives, supplementals, drugs administered to me while I was dead, after I came back to life." Id. Defendants responded in part that "[t]he medical files related to the incident, inclusive of the medication record, are being provided to Plaintiff simultaneously with this response (Bates Nos. AC000020-000073)." Id. Defendants further aver that all other discovery responses were also provided to Plaintiff on that date, including the video of the underlying incident, which they state that Plaintiff viewed on January 26, January 31, and February 22, 2012. See Resp., [#40] at 3, 3 n.3.
IT IS HEREBY