Alvarado v. Madison County Detention Center

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Mississippi
DecidedSeptember 30, 2022
Docket3:20-cv-00152
StatusUnknown

This text of Alvarado v. Madison County Detention Center (Alvarado v. Madison County Detention Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alvarado v. Madison County Detention Center, (S.D. Miss. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF MISSISSIPPI NORTHERN DIVISION

LAWRENCE ALEXANDER ALVARADO PLAINTIFF

V. CIVIL ACTION NO. 3:20-cv-152-FKB

MAJOR HUSTED, et al. DEFENDANTS

ORDER

This case is before the Court on the Motion for Summary Judgment [69] filed by Defendants Major Jeffrey Husted, Captain Brian Watson, and SRT Detention Officers Lieutenant Ike Williams, Master Sergeant Shakeena White, Sergeant Shaqueria Branch, Deputy Cedric Shavers, Deputy William Irwin, Deputy Hunter Moore, Deputy Michael Spann, Deputy Gabrelle Gore, and Deputy Tavarius Sharp.1 Plaintiff Lawrence Alvarado filed a response [74] in opposition, and Defendants filed a rebuttal [76]. Having considered the matter, the Court finds that the motion [69] should be granted in part and denied in part. I. Factual Background At the time of the incidents giving rise to this action, Plaintiff Lawrence Alvarado was a convicted and sentenced inmate in the custody of the federal Bureau of Prisons, but was being held in the Madison County Detention Center (“MCDC”) for proceedings before this Court in another matter. Plaintiff is proceeding pro se and in forma pauperis, subject to the Prison Litigation Reform Act (“PLRA”). He claims his Eighth Amendment rights against cruel and unusual punishment were violated, as well as his Fourteenth Amendment due process rights. He has brought this suit pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983.

1 Deputy Shavers is referenced in the Complaint [1] as “Chavis”; Deputy Irwin is referenced as “Ewin”; and in Plaintiff’s earlier Inmate Request Forms, Deputy Gore is referenced as “Gordon.” See, for example, [1] at 1 and 5, [25] at 1, and [69-3] at 101 and 106. Plaintiff’s account begins on or about September 25, 2019. Plaintiff alleges that he had a verbal altercation with Deputy Gore, and minutes later, Deputies Shavers,2 Moore, Spann, and Irwin entered his unit. [1] at 4-5; [25] at 2; [38] at 7-8. Spann, Shavers, and Irwin allegedly threatened to physically harm him. [1] at 5; [25] at 2. Plaintiff then used a kiosk to enter a

complaint against “Gore (F.N.U.) [S]hav[er]s, and several other members of the SRT team”; about an hour later, he was moved to administrative confinement in the B Unit for allegedly threatening officers. [1] at 5; see also [25] at 2-3; [38] at 9-10. Plaintiff claims that the next day (on or about September 26), Gore tried to give him a poisoned food tray. Specifically, he claims that on that day, Gore participated in handing out food trays, and based on Plaintiff’s alleged observations of Gore, he believed that Gore was trying to give a particular tray to him. [1] at 5-6; [25] at 3; [38] at 10-14. Plaintiff states that after getting the tray, he saw “green pellets” in his food. Id. His attempt to speak with a shift lieutenant was denied, and a few hours later, he was moved from administrative segregation to disciplinary segregation in D Unit. [1] at 6; [25] at 3; [38] at 12-13. Afterwards, Plaintiff submitted a

grievance against Gore alleging food poisoning. [25] at 3-4; see also [38] at 14. A hearing was held by Sergeant Branch and Officer Christina Kelly (MCDC Administrative Remedy Coordinator), and Plaintiff was given sixty days segregation with credit for time served from September 25, 2019. [1] at 6; [25] at 4. Plaintiff appealed the decision via the administrative

2 Defendant Shavers is listed in Plaintiff’s Complaint but not in the omnibus testimony. Compare [1] at 5 to [38] at 8-9. Despite this discrepancy, the Court construes Plaintiff’s suit to include Shavers in this portion of his allegations. See Eason v. Holt, 73 F.3d 600, 602 (5th Cir. 1996) (“[A]mplifying the allegations in the prisoner's complaint, the Spears testimony likewise becomes a part of the total filing by the pro se applicant.”) (footnotes omitted). Pursuant to Eason, in instances where Plaintiff has attempted to name groups of defendants, the Court has noted the discrepancy and treated Plaintiff’s sworn testimony at the omnibus hearing as an amplification of claims made in his Complaint [1]. As a result, a defendant’s acts described in the Complaint and/or in other sworn testimony, such as the omnibus hearing transcript [38] or Plaintiff’s affidavit [25], have been considered by the Court. remedy program and contends that Kelly never responded and Warden Watson’s response was that MCDC was “only a holding facility for the U.S. Marshals.” [1] at 6. Plaintiff also alleges that on November 12, 2019, Major Husted and Deputy Sharp attempted to bargain with him to refrain from his civil complaint against Gore and other deputies

who had allegedly threatened his safety; Plaintiff declined. [1] at 6-7; [25] at 5; [38] at 14-15. Plaintiff believes that this conversation provides evidence of a violation of his constitutional rights, as it shows Husted’s and Sharp’s awareness of “the situation between Deputy Gore” and himself as well as his safety concerns involving other officers. [38] at 14-15. Plaintiff alleges Husted and Branch informed him that he would be released from segregation on November 26 (approximately sixty days after September 25). Id. at 15-16; [25] at 5. On November 27, after Plaintiff had been allowed out of his cell for his allotted one hour, Plaintiff asked to speak with an officer regarding why he had not yet been released from segregation. [1] at 7; [25] at 5-6; [38] at 15-17. Awaiting an answer to his question, Plaintiff did not follow Master Sergeant White’s intercom orders to go back into his cell. [1] at 7; [38] at 15-

17; Pl.’s Resp. [74] at 3. According to Plaintiff, a few minutes later Defendants Irwin, Spann, Shavers, Moore, Sharp, White, Branch, and Williams came into D Unit. [1] at 7; [25] at 6; [38] at 16-17.3 Plaintiff claims that from that point, Irwin shot him with a pepperball gun, and he was kicked and punched by Spann, Shavers, Sharp, and Moore, after he was handcuffed—all while allegedly trying to follow orders. [1] at 7-9]; [25] at 6; [38] at 17-18. Video footage shows, however, that Plaintiff

3 At the omnibus hearing, Plaintiff testified that Moore, Irwin, Spann, Shavers, Williams, White, Sharp, “and several more officers” came into the area. [38] at 17:9-15. Video footage shows a total of eight officers during this time. Ex. “C” to [69] at 9:21:53 to 9:22:24. The Court notes that Sergeant Branch is specifically named in this group in the Complaint, but not in omnibus hearing testimony, and Master Sergeant White is specifically named in the omnibus testimony, but not in the section of the Complaint detailing the group of officers physically involved in the November 27 use of force. Compare [1] at 7 to [38] at 17:9-15. All eight officers are named in Plaintiff’s Affidavit. [25] at 6. was first kicked and stomped and then handcuffed. Compare [38] at 17-18 to Ex. “C” to [69] at 0:01:57 – 0:02:17.4 Plaintiff testified that after he was handcuffed, Spann, Shavers, Moore, and Sharp rammed his head into doors, walls, and poles on the walk from D Unit to the main building. [1] at 7-8; [25] at 6-7; [38] at 18-20. For most of this walk, view of the plaintiff is obstructed on the video. See Ex. “D” to [69].5 Plaintiff alleges that under the breezeway leading from D Unit

to the main building, Defendants Spann and Shavers rammed his head into a pole but “missed” “another pole” which resulted in their falling into the grass beside the breezeway, where he was punched and kicked by Spann, Moore, Irwin, Sharp, and Shavers while still handcuffed. [1] at 7- 8; [25] at 6-7; [38] at 19-20; [74] at 3.6 After arriving in the main building, officers placed Plaintiff in a room in medical. Plaintiff

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Alvarado v. Madison County Detention Center, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alvarado-v-madison-county-detention-center-mssd-2022.