SUE E. MYERSCOUGH, District Judge.
Plaintiff, proceeding pro se, brought the present lawsuit pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging an Eighth Amendment claim for failure-to-protect for events that allegedly occurred during her incarceration at Dwight Correctional Center. The matter comes before this Court for ruling on the Defendants' Motions for Summary Judgment. (Docs. 62, 64). The motions are granted.
Summary judgment should be granted "if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." FED. R. CIV. P. 56(a). All facts must be construed in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, and all reasonable inferences must be drawn in his favor.
At all times relevant, Plaintiff was incarcerated at Dwight Correctional Center ("Dwight"). The Defendants were employed at Dwight in the following capacities: Defendant Thompson was the Warden; Defendant Davidson was an Internal Affairs officer; Defendant Brennisen was a correctional lieutenant; and, Defendants Cerda, Wilson, and Kretchmer were correctional officers.
Plaintiff was involved in physical altercations with two different inmates on consecutive days. The two altercations are related as it pertains to the motivations for fighting and the alleged overarching supervisory roles of Defendant Thompson and Defendant Davidson, but otherwise involve different sets of prison officials. The altercations occurred on August 29, 2012, and August 30, 2012.
At some point prior to the altercations, Plaintiff shared a cell with Inmate Toni Hale in the protective custody unit at Graham. Disciplinary reasons prompted Hale's removal and, in the process, Hale's television was apparently broken. Hale blamed Plaintiff.
Hale began threatening Plaintiff with physical harm by telling other inmates to deliver verbal messages to Plaintiff. Plaintiff testified that the specific threat was that Hale was going to "whoop [Plaintiff's] ass." Pl.'s Dep. 19:22-24. At first, Plaintiff did not lend much credence to these threats. Pl.'s Dep. 15:22-24 ("First I blew her off . . . thinking she [was] playing because she was just our roommate. We didn't have no problem."). Hale then began yelling verbal threats through a gate that separated the protective custody and general population units where Plaintiff and Hale were housed, respectively. Plaintiff also heard a rumor that Hale had compensated another inmate (Weslena Poole) to inflict physical harm upon Plaintiff.
Plaintiff requested a "Keep Separate From" ("KSF") order against Hale from her correctional counselor on August 20, 2012.
In addition to the KSF, Plaintiff testified that she had completed Protective Custody Unit ("PCU") contracts against several other inmates. A PCU contract is different from a KSF: a PCU contact informs prison officials that an inmate feels threatened by other inmates, while a KSF requests that prison officials isolate the requesting inmate from the other inmate. Pl.'s Dep. 40:12-41:11. The contents of a grievance Plaintiff filed suggest that prison officials at Dwight will only separate inmates when a KSF is in effect, even while the inmates are housed in the PCU. (Doc. 67-1 at 12-13). Plaintiff filed a PCU contract against Toni Hale and another inmate on August 16, 2012. (Doc. 67-1 at 14).
On August 29, 2012, Plaintiff was placed in a cell with three (3) other inmates. Among those inmates was Weslena Poole. Plaintiff notified Defendant Wilson that she (Plaintiff) had written PCU contracts against Poole so they should not have been in the same cell. Plaintiff, however, testified that she did not have a KSF against Poole. Pl.'s Dep. 41:14-18. Defendant Wilson notified her supervisor (Defendant Brennisen).
According to Plaintiff, Defendant Wilson relayed a message from Defendant Brennisen that Plaintiff had two options if she did not want to be in the cell: go to segregation or go to the Mental Health Unit.
Plaintiff testified that immediately prior to the fight Hale had stated her intentions to harm Plaintiff. Pl.'s Dep. 48:13-14 (Hale stated, ". . . I'm about to whoop your ass for breaking my tv."). Plaintiff stated she responded by standing against a wall and braiding her hair.
Aside from the brief conversation with Defendant Cerda, where the Court will accept Plaintiff's allegations as true that she (Plaintiff) informed Cerda of the potential fight, Plaintiff never personally notified any of the Defendants of the threats from Hale. Pl.'s Dep. 65:6-19 (Plaintiff told correctional officers Strowmatt, Howser, Buffert, White, Frigidson, and Shaw); 81:16-18 (Kretchmer did not know about Plaintiff's KSF request).
To succeed on a failure to protect claim, a plaintiff must show (1) "that he is incarcerated under conditions posing a substantial risk of serious harm," and, (2) prison officials acted with "deliberate indifference" to that risk.
Plaintiff told Defendant Wilson that there was an issue between her and inmate Poole, and a reasonable inference exists that Defendant Brennisen was also aware of a potential issue through Defendant Wilson.
Plaintiff has not shown that a substantial threat of harm existed on August 29, 2012 with regard to Poole. Plaintiff admitted in her deposition that she had not requested a KSF against Poole and that Poole "had come out of a blind spot" because they had been roommates before without any problems. Pl.'s Dep. 22:3-6; 24:2-10. Plaintiff also admitted that she did not ask for a KSF against Poole and another inmate because they were not threatening her, Plaintiff just wanted to avoid the nonsense. Pl.'s Dep. 41:19-24 ("Now, if they was [sic] doing the same thing Hale was doing, threatening me and all that, then I would have asked for a keep separate . . . I really was trying to avoid BS. . . ."). While Defendant Wilson and Defendant Brennisen may have been aware of Plaintiff's asserted issues, the record discloses that they could not have been aware of a specific threat of harm because, according to Plaintiff, none existed.
Moreover, Defendant Wilson did not ignore Plaintiff's concerns. Defendant Wilson notified her lieutenant, Defendant Brennisen, and relayed Plaintiff's options to be removed from the cell. In fact, Plaintiff had called a "crisis" earlier that day and went to the Mental Health Unit because another inmate whom she allegedly feared had been placed in her cell. Pl.'s Dep. 25:7-12. Defendant Brennisen offered Plaintiff the same option, and Plaintiff refused. In light of this evidence, the Court cannot find that these Defendants acted unreasonably under the circumstances. Therefore, the Court finds that no reasonable juror could conclude that a substantial threat of harm existed with respect to inmate Poole, or that Defendant Wilson and Defendant Brennisen were deliberately indifferent.
Plaintiff complained to prison officials regarding the threats from Hale through PCU contracts and requests for KSF orders. Viewed in the light most favorable to Plaintiff, the Court can impute knowledge of Hale's threats to Defendant Thompson and Defendant Davidson, as they both signed off on the denial of the KSF. Based on this, the Court finds that a reasonable juror could conclude that these defendants, as well as Defendant Cerda, had knowledge of Plaintiff's assertions that Hale had made threats.
Even so, Plaintiff cannot show that these defendants were deliberately indifferent. On August 16, 2012, Plaintiff submitted a PCU contract against Hale and another inmate. On August 20, 2012, Plaintiff requested a KSF. Prison officials did not ignore Plaintiff's requests: Internal Affairs interviewed Plaintiff regarding the alleged threats and found them to be unsubstantiated. In addition, Plaintiff and Hale had been roommates previously in the PCU without incident.
Despite Plaintiff's protests, Defendant Cerda could not have been aware of any KSF in effect because there was not one. Assuming Defendant Cerda did not believe Plaintiff's statements prior to placing her in the cell, this alone does not impose liability.
Finally, Plaintiff admitted that Defendant Kretchmer did not have knowledge of any KSF requests or otherwise on August 30, 2012. Pl.'s Dep. 81:16-18. Defendant Kretchmer's role on that date was limited to observing the fight between Plaintiff and Hale and calling for assistance from other officers.
Therefore, the Court finds that no reasonable juror could conclude that Defendants Thompson, Davidson, Cerda or Kretchmer were deliberately indifferent.