JAMES S. GWIN, District Judge.
Plaintiff Ioanni Konstantinou sues Ohio Department of Youth Services Youth Specialists Andrew Samijlenko and Leonor Rivera and Operations Manager Ceasar Vanderpool under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Plaintiff Konstantinou says Defendants were deliberately indifferent when they failed to protect Plaintiff while Plaintiff was housed at Cuyahoga Hills Juvenile Correctional Facility.
On May 4, 2014, while Konstantinou was detained at the Cuyahoga Hills Juvenile Correctional Facility, another juvenile detainee assaulted Plaintiff Konstantinou. Plaintiff Konstantinou alleges that Samijlenko, Rivera, and Vanderpool were deliberately indifferent towards Konstantinou's safety when they allowed another juvenile, V.B., to leave open-door seclusion and assault plaintiff.
Defendants Samijlenko, Rivera, and Vanderpool move for summary judgment.
On May 4, 2014, Ohio detained Plaintiff Konstantinou in the Huron Unit of the Cuyahoga Hills Juvenile Correctional Facility.
That afternoon, correctional facility staff moved V.B. to the minimum-security Huron Unit. Previously, Ohio housed V.B. in the primarily medium security Cuyahoga Unit. Ohio placed V.B. in "open door seclusion" in the Huron Unit.
On May 4, 2014, before being moved to the Huron Unit, V.B. had threatened corrections officers and had been involved in a number of confrontations with corrections officers. Corrections officers described the May 4, 2014, 2:00 PM incident with V.B.:
Somewhat improbably, after V.B. assaulted and threatened corrections officers at 2:00 PM, V.B. was moved to a detention area typically assigned to minimal security youths and was improbably given open door seclusion privileges.
On the evening of May 4, 2014, Defendants Samijlenko and Rivera worked the Huron Unit 10:00 p.m. to 6:00 a.m. shift. They worked at the "podium" adjacent to the bed area of the unit.
Late in the May 4, 2014, evening, detainee V.B. asked Defendant Samijlenko for permission to take a shower. Defendant Samijlenko gave the request to Defendant Vanderpool in Operations. Vanderpool granted the request.
Operations Manager Vanderpool had authority to deny V.B.'s request because on May 4, 2014, V.B. had been involved in violent behavior.
After Operations Manager Vanderpool gave V.B. permission to take a shower, V.B. moved around the Huron Unit bed area unescorted. Plaintiff Konstantinou says V.B. approached Defendants Samijlenko and Rivera and asked to make a phone call. When they refused, V.B. allegedly threatened to attack detainee Konstantinou who was in a cell adjacent to the guard's podium.
Defendants respond to Konstantinou's claims by saying that V.B. was calm while going to and from the shower, up until he unexpectedly assaulted Plaintiff Konstantinou.
On February 16, 2016, Defendants Leonor Rivera, Andrew Samijlenko, and Ceasar Vanderpool filed for summary judgment.
Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56, "[s]ummary judgment is proper when `there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.'"
When parties present competing versions of the facts on summary judgment, a district court adopts the non-movant's version of the facts unless those facts are blatantly contradicted by record before the court.
Plaintiff Konstantinou brings claims against Defendants under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for Eighth Amendment violations. Plaintiff brings these claims under a theory of deliberate indifference. Plaintiff says Defendants were deliberately indifferent in failing to protect Plaintiff from V.B.
To seek relief under § 1983, a plaintiff must allege facts showing that he was deprived of a right secured by the Constitution or law of the United States by a person acting under color of law. "A prison official's `deliberate indifference' to a substantial risk of serious harm to an inmate violates the Eighth Amendment."
To make out a claim under the Eighth Amendment a plaintiff must show (1) that "he is incarcerated under conditions posing a substantial risk of serious harm" and (2) that the defendants exercised deliberate indifference towards the safety of the plaintiff.
The deliberate indifference standard tracks criminal recklessness and has an objective and a subjective component:
In this case Plaintiff testified that immediately before V.B. assaulted Plaintiff, V.B. told Defendants Rivera and Samijlenko that V.B. would beat Plaintiff up if Rivera and Samijlenko did not allow phone use. Under this version of the facts, Plaintiff Konstantinou was at substantial risk of serious harm from V.B. Furthermore, Defendants Rivera and Samijlenko knew about the risk—V.B. told them himself—and took no steps to protect Plaintiff from the risk. This is sufficient to make out a deliberate indifference claim.
Defendants offer a competing version of the facts: that Defendants Rivera and Samijlenko were unaware that V.B. was about to assault Plaintiff. Plaintiff and Defendants could each succeed in convincing a jury that V.B. told—or V.B. did not tell—Rivera and Samijlenko that he was going to assault Plaintiff. Summary judgment on this issue is not appropriate.
Plaintiff also claims that Defendant Vanderpool was deliberately indifferent towards Plaintiff when Defendant Vanderpool authorized V.B. to take a shower while in open door seclusion. Plaintiff brings enough evidence to create a jury question on this issue as well.
While Defendant Vanderpool was not yet at work when Cuyahoga Hills Juvenile Correctional Facility staff moved V.B. to the Cuyahoga Unit, Vanderpool authorized V.B. to leave seclusion and move around the bed area to collect shower supplies.
For the foregoing reasons, this Court
IT IS SO ORDERED.