SUSAN PARADISE BAXTER, Magistrate Judge.
On September 3, 2013, Plaintiff Jeffrey Marten, an inmate incarcerated at the State Correctional Institution at Forest in Marienville, Pennsylvania ("SCI-Forest"), filed this pro se civil rights action pursuant 42 U.S.C. §1983 against Defendants Daniel Burns, Superintendent at SCI-Forest ("Burns"); E.W. Tice, Deputy Superintendent for Facilities Management at SCI-Forest ("Tice"); and A.W. Repko, Major of the Guard at SCI-Forest ("Repko").
Plaintiff claims that Defendants were deliberately indifferent to his health and safety in violation of his rights under the eighth amendment to the United States Constitution. In particular, Plaintiff alleges that, on May 15, 2013, he was physically assaulted and stabbed by an unidentified inmate during recreation period on the D-block concrete yard at SCI-Forest. (ECF No. 1, Complaint, at ¶¶ 2-3). Plaintiff alleges that the assualt was undetected by prison guards and surveillance cameras because it occurred in one of several "architectural blind spots" that are present in SCI-Forest's four concrete yards. (
Defendants filed an answer to Plaintiff's complaint [ECF No. 15], and the parties have completed discovery. On July 25, 2014, Defendants filed a motion for summary judgment [ECF the evidence of record. Plaintiff has since filed a brief in opposition to Defendant's motion [ECF
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(c)(2) provides that summary judgment shall be granted if the "pleadings, the discovery and disclosure materials on file, and any affidavits show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Rule 56(e)(2) further provides that when a motion for summary judgment is made and supported, "an opposing party may not rely merely on allegations or denials in its own pleading; rather, its response must — by affidavits or as otherwise provided in this rule — set out specific facts showing a genuine issue for trial. If the opposing party does not so respond, summary judgment should, if appropriate, be entered against that party."
A district court may grant summary judgment for the defendant when the plaintiff has failed to present any genuine issues of material fact. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). The moving party has the initial burden of proving to the district court the absence of evidence supporting the non-moving party's claims.
The burden then shifts to the non-movant to come forward with specific facts showing a genuine issue for trial. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(e);
When considering a motion for summary judgment, the court is not permitted to weigh the evidence or to make credibility determinations, but is limited to deciding whether there are any disputed issues and, if there are, whether they are both genuine and material.
A material fact is a fact whose resolution will affect the outcome of the case under applicable law.
Pro se pleadings, "however inartfully pleaded," must be held to "less stringent standards than formal pleadings drafted by lawyers"
The Eighth Amendment's prohibition against the infliction of cruel and unusual punishment has been interpreted to impose upon prison officials a duty to take reasonable measures "`to protect prisoners from violence at the hands of other prisoners.'"
"Thus, in order to survive defendant's summary judgment motion, a plaintiff is obligated to produce sufficient evidence to support the inference that defendants `knowingly and unreasonably disregarded an objectively intolerable risk of harm.'"
In determining whether a defendant was deliberately indifferent, the court must "focus [on] what a defendant's mental attitude actually was (or is), rather than what it should have been (or should be)."
Here, Defendants assert that "Plaintiff can never show that the Defendants were deliberately indifferent to his safety," because there was constant video surveillance in the yard; the blind spots obstructed from the view of the cameras were "tiny;" the concrete yards were under constant visual observation by staff; and the small number of reported assaults in the concrete yards during the years 2012 and 2013 prove the absence of a longstanding, pervasive, well-documented history of assaults to which Defendants were deliberately indifferent. (ECF No. 28, Defendants' Brief, at pp. 5-7).
In support of these assertions, Defendants have submitted the Declaration of Paul Ennis, Major of Unit Management at SCI-Forest, who declares that (1) the RHU concrete yards are constantly monitored by hub surveillance cameras, which cover all areas of each yard, with the exception of "very thin strips," approximately 1-1½ feet out from the left and right walls of each yard; (2) the concrete yards are under visual surveillance by the hub officer, who has a 360 degree view of the yards; "Rover" officers, who continually walk outside the fence of the four concrete yards; and housing unit staff and officers, who enter and move through the concrete yards on an unscheduled, random basis; and (3) the number of assaults in either the concrete or main yards are few in comparison to those that occur inside the facility. [ECF No. 30-1 at pp. 2-4].
In addition, Defendants have submitted, inter alia, Defendants' response to Plaintiff's fourth request for production of documents, which indicates that no extraordinary occurrence reports for inmate on inmate assaults from May 15, 2012 through May 15, 2013, were generated for the D-Unit concrete yard, where Plaintiff's incident occurred [ECF No. 30-1 at p. 45]; and SCI-Forest guilty misconduct assault and fight reports for 2012 and 2013, which indicate that, out of the 228 inmate-on-inmate fights of which SCI-Forest inmates were found guilty in those two years combined, only 34 occurred in the yards [ECF No. 30-1 at pp. 107-108].
In response, Plaintiff has submitted, inter alia: (1) the declaration of Chad Schultz, an inmate at SCI-Forest, who declares that he measured the blind spots, using the heel-to-toe method, and determined that the blind spot areas in the concrete yards, range from one to twelve feet along each wall as one moves away from the hub's center [ECF No. 31-1]; (2) Plaintiff's declaration declaring that he attended the concrete yards on a daily basis from the early part of 2010 to May 15, 2013, and rarely observed the "Rover" officer continuously walking outside of the fence of the concrete yards during recreation [ECF No. 31-3]; (3) Defendants' responses to Plaintiff's third request for admissions, in which Defendants admit that neither SCI-Forest staff nor SCI-Forest security surveillance cameras observed Plaintiff's alleged assault in the D-Unit concrete yard on May 15, 2013 [ECF No. 31-4]; (4) a copy of an Inmate's Request to Staff Member that he sent to Defendant Burns on October 9, 2012, in which he advised the superintendent of the presence of the "architectural blind spots" in the concrete yards. This request was then copied by Defendant Burns to Defendants Repko and Tice [ECF No. 31-7]; and (5) the declaration of Idris Enlow, an SCI-Forest inmate who declares that, during the years 2012 and 2013, he personally witnessed at least six incidents of inmate-on-inmate assaults that went undetected by staff because they occurred in the "blind spot" areas [ECF No. 31-8].
The evidence submitted by Plaintiff thus indicates, at the very least, that Defendants knew of the existence of "architectural blind spots" in the RHU concrete yards, and establishes that assaults occurred in these blind spots that were not detected by surveillance cameras or staff. Although Defendants understandably emphasize that the incidence of reported attacks in the concrete yards pales in comparison to the number of attacks that occur within the facility, such statistics are by no means conclusive because they track only those assaults that are either observed or reported. Moreover, there is enough evidence of record to raise a genuine issue of fact as to whether the risk of undetected assaults due to the blind spots in the concrete yards was so obvious that Defendants should have taken more affirmative action to obviate the risk, regardless of statistical evidence to the contrary. For this reason, Defendants' summary judgment motion will be denied.
An appropriate Order follows.
AND NOW, this
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that Defendants' motion for summary judgment [ECF No. 27] is DENIED.