ROBERT B. KUGLER, District Judge.
This matter arises out of alleged prisoner abuse at the Bayside State Prison during the "lockdown" period following the murder of a prison official in 1997. Presently before the Court is Plaintiff Michael Washington's motion to modify the Opinion/Report ("Opinion") of the Special Master,
In July 1997, an inmate murdered a corrections officer at Bayside State Prison. The murder was followed by a "lockdown" of the prison, wherein the Department of Corrections ordered the Special Operations Group ("SOG") to assist the regular staff. The SOG was comprised of corrections officers from other state facilities who were specially trained. Many of the inmates alleged that during the approximately thirty-day lockdown, the Bayside corrections officers and SOG officers used excessive force in the course of prison operations. Plaintiff Michael Washington was one of those inmates.
Plaintiff was housed at Bayside during July and August of 1997, after which he was housed at East Jersey State Prison. Plaintiff alleges that during the lockdown period at Bayside, he was kicked in the back and injured by members of the SOG. Plaintiff reported the cause of his injuries to infirmary personnel. However, Plaintiff did not submit an administrative remedy form ("ARF")—the standard vehicle for prisoner complaints—or otherwise inform administrators at either Bayside or East Jersey about the incident. Plaintiff claims the reason he did not submit an ARF, despite being familiar with the administrative remedy process, is that he feared retribution from prison officials. Instead, Plaintiff filed a claim for use of excessive force in violation of his civil rights, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, even though the Prison Litigation Reform Act of 1996 ("PLRA") requires plaintiffs to exhaust all available administrative remedies before bringing their complaints to federal court.
Because of the sheer volume of claims arising from the lockdown period at Bayside, most of the individual proceedings, including Plaintiff's, have been conducted before Special Master Bissell pursuant to an agreement ("the Agreement") of the parties under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 53.
Further, Special Master Bissell found that Plaintiff's assertion that he did not adhere to the administrative remedy process because he feared retribution from administrators was without merit. Special Master Op. 6:19-21. Special Master Bissell acknowledged that "direct instigation or threats by prison authorities"
Moreover, Special Master Bissell found that while Plaintiff was housed at East Jersey, Plaintiff "was in a position to pursue and file administrative remedy forms" that would have addressed the alleged injury at Bayside. Special Master Op. 7:8-12. Special Master Bissell noted that although the prisoner handbook for East Jersey did not explicitly state that an ARF could be filed regarding a grievance at another institution, that handbook did not preclude it either. Special Master Op. 7:22-8:8. In fact, the parties themselves stipulated that an ARF filed at East Jersey regarding an incident at Bayside would have been relayed to authorities, who could have then investigated the incident. Special Master Op. 7:12-21.
Plaintiff now objects to the Opinion of the Special Master, claiming the report should be rejected because material issues of fact exist. Pl.'s Br. 2. Specifically, Plaintiff claims, in light of recent Third Circuit caselaw, that there is an issue as to whether Plaintiff exhausted his remedies when he told infirmary personnel at Bayside about the cause of his injuries.
Under the Agreement, all findings of fact by the Special Master are binding. Civ. No. 08-2571, Doc. No. 2, Ex. B, at ¶ 4. Also, pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 53(f)(4), all conclusions of law may be reviewed de novo by this Court.
The question before the Court is whether
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The Third Circuit, however, found that summary judgment was inappropriate because certain evidence that this Court found unpersuasive gave rise to genuine issues of material fact.
Given this testimony, the Third Circuit found several issues of material fact, including "whether Bayside began accepting letter complaints in lieu of ARFs" and "whether Baez's letter to Internal Affairs was, in fact, converted to an ARF, forwarded to the Special Investigations division, and adjudicated by Bayside in a timely manner."
At the outset, the Court acknowledges an important procedural distinction between the
Plaintiff argues
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Plaintiff's second argument is similarly obtuse. Plaintiff appears to claim that there is a question with regard to the availability of an administrative remedy while he was housed at East Jersey. Pl.'s Br. 2. However, Plaintiff does not point to, nor is the Court aware of, any reason why there would be such a question. In fact, although Special Master Bissell acknowledged that the East Jersey prisoner handbook does not explicitly provide for the filing of grievances based on incidents at other facilities, the parties stipulated that such grievances could be filed and that those grievances would be investigated properly. Moreover, Plaintiff was familiar with the administrative remedy procedures, and he could have filed an ARF at East Jersey, but he did not. In light of these facts, the Court finds Special Master Bissell's legal finding—i.e., that there was an administrative remedy available to Plaintiff while housed at East Jersey that would have remedied his injury at Bayside—completely appropriate. Therefore, Plaintiff failed to exhaust the administrative remedies available to him, as contemplated by the PLRA.
For the foregoing reasons, Plaintiff's motion to modify the Opinion/Report of the Special Master is