Alvin John Langsford, III v. Morehouse Parish Jail, et al.

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedDecember 1, 2025
Docket3:25-cv-01105
StatusUnknown

This text of Alvin John Langsford, III v. Morehouse Parish Jail, et al. (Alvin John Langsford, III v. Morehouse Parish Jail, et al.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alvin John Langsford, III v. Morehouse Parish Jail, et al., (W.D. La. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

WESTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA

MONROE DIVISION

ALVIN JOHN LANGSFORD, III CIVIL ACTION NO. 25-1105

SECTION P VS. JUDGE JERRY EDWARDS, JR.

MOREHOUSE PARISH JAIL, ET AL. MAG. JUDGE KAYLA D. MCCLUSKY

REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION

Plaintiff Alvin John Langsford, III, a prisoner at St. Tammany Parish Jail proceeding pro se and in forma pauperis, filed this proceeding on approximately August 1, 2025, under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. He names the following Defendants: Morehouse Parish Jail (“MPJ”), Sheriff Mike Tubbs, Warden Trevor Wilhite, and Lieutenant Don Taylor.1 For reasons that follow, the Court should retain Plaintiff’s claims of excessive force against Lieutenant Taylor, claim that Warden Wilhite failed to protect him from Taylor shooting him with a mace rifle, claims that Taylor and Wilhite failed to provide decontamination measures and wound care after Taylor shot Plaintiff with mace, and claim that Taylor failed to provide wound care after Plaintiff returned from the hospital. The Court should, as detailed below, dismiss Plaintiff’s remaining claims, including his requests to fire, demote, and criminally charge defendants.

1 This matter has been referred to the undersigned for review, report, and recommendation under 28 U.S.C. § 636, and the standing orders of the Court. Background

Plaintiff claims that the morning of April 2, 2025, at MPJ, Lieutenant Don Taylor choked him until he could not breathe, bruising his neck and throat and causing resultant swelling. [doc. #s 1, p. 5; 7, p. 9]. Plaintiff struggled against Taylor’s grip because he feared for his life. Id. He claims that Taylor then attempted to break his leg, bending it “against the natural angle.” Id. Plaintiff “then stopped all resisting,” and Taylor and three others dragged him to “Max-1 cell.”2 Id. Plaintiff claims that Taylor allowed a nurse3 to bend his fingers back and punch him with closed fists on his hands and arms while Taylor choked him. [doc. # 7, p. 6]. The nurse allegedly shouted, “Put some pain on him[.]” Id. Plaintiff alleges that ten minutes later, Warden Wilhite entered the cell, ordered “the other two inmates who occupied the cell” to leave, and ordered Plaintiff to take off all his clothing. [doc. # 1, pp. 5-6]. Warden Wilhite exited the cell, stating, “Make sure you tell them this!” Id. Plaintiff claims that while he was completely naked, facing a wall, “in full compliance,” and posing no threat, Lieutenant Taylor then shot him four times with a “mace-ball rifle.” [doc. #s 1, p. 6; 7, p. 7]. He suffered four separate open wounds. [doc. # 7, p. 5]. He now “has permanent physical damage to his back and buttocks.” Id. at 8.

Plaintiff claims that Warden Wilhite allowed Taylor to shoot him with the mace ball rifle. [doc. # 7, p. 7].

2 Plaintiff also refers to Max-1 as max confinement and maximum custody.

3 Plaintiff does not name the nurse as a defendant. Plaintiff claims that Lieutenant Taylor and Warden Wilhite left him in the cell for twelve hours “with open wounds, without clothing, covered in mace . . . .” [doc. # 7, pp. 5, 7]. He states that Wilhite knew that Taylor deployed the mace. Id. at 7. Mace also covered the cell and remained in the air inside the cell. Id. at 5. He was not offered a shower or a clean cell. Id.

When Plaintiff asked guards for a shower and clothes, they “replied, ‘Lt. Taylor said leave you be.’” Id. He states that Taylor and Wilhite knowingly allowed him “to be denied treatment of any kind and ignored all requests for assistance . . . .” Id. at 13. Before he was later transferred to a hospital around twelve hours after Taylor’s alleged uses of excessive force, Plaintiff suffered difficulty breathing, lost consciousness, had muscle spasms, was in extreme pain, and his skin, throat, and lungs were burning. Id. at 13. He struggled to swallow because his throat was swollen. Id. Plaintiff informed a night shift officer of his injuries; he also filed an emergency “sick call.” [doc. # 5, p. 6]. Approximately one hour later at around 10:30 p.m. on April 2, 2025, an officer escorted Plaintiff to a hospital, where he received x-rays, evaluation, treatment, a

diagnosis, and pain medication. [doc. #s 5, p. 7; 7, pp. 10, 13]. Plaintiff claims that MPJ and Lieutenant Taylor failed to maintain medical staff on site during the night shift. [doc. # 7, pp. 2, 6]. Plaintiff was not allowed to shower for thirty hours after experiencing the mace. [doc. # 7, p. 5]. He finally received a shower on April 4, 2025. Id. at 11. Plaintiff claims that when he returned to MPJ from the hospital, MPJ assigned him to a Max-1 cell. [doc. #s 1, p. 7; 7, p. 2]. Faulting Lieutenant Taylor, Plaintiff alleges, “Over the course of a day or so,” his cell, which was designed for only two people, had five inmates in it. [doc. #s 1, p. 7; 7, p. 5]. He was “also placed in another two-man cell with 11 other inmates.” [doc. # 7, p. 5]. Plaintiff claims that when he was moved to Max-1, Lieutenant Taylor allowed his property to be stolen. [doc. # 7, p. 5].

Plaintiff claims that Lieutenant Taylor knew he required additional wound care after his trip to the hospital, but Taylor disregarded his requests for medical treatment. [doc. # 7, p. 14]. For eight days after his trip to the hospital on April 2, 2025, he did not receive any additional wound care, despite a physician at the hospital telling Plaintiff’s accompanying officer that Plaintiff required assistance cleaning and treating his wounds. Id. Plaintiff claims that for fifteen days in Max-1, he was not allowed to brush his teeth, make a telephone call, or receive a complaint form. [doc. # 1, p. 7]. Plaintiff claims that Lieutenant Taylor and Warden Wilhite kept him in “max confinement” for fifteen days without issuing him a write up, offering him a hearing before a disciplinary board, or issuing a formal sentence. [doc. #s 1, pp. 8-9; 7, pp. 5, 8].

Faulting MPJ, Plaintiff claims that in Max-1, he was not allowed to speak to his attorney. [doc. #s 1, p. 8; 7, p. 1]. He also claims that MPJ would not allow him to have his bible in maximum custody. [doc. #s 1, p. 9; 7, p. 2]. He claims that Lieutenant Taylor took his mattress “from 6:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Monday through Friday during [his] entire period of housing in Max-1 without cause.” [doc. # 7, p. 5]. Plaintiff states that when he returned to MPJ from St. Bernard Parish Jail on an unknown date, he informed Lieutenant Taylor that he did not feel safe at MPJ, but Taylor refused to place him in protective custody and stated, “We don’t have protective custody, nobody knows you [are] here, you’ll be alright.” [doc. # 7, p. 3]. Plaintiff alleges that while he was in Dormitory 3, another inmate, Mannie Mimms, threatened to sexually assault him or rape him if Plaintiff did not give him money. [doc. # 7, p. 4]. Plaintiff wrote letters to Lieutenant Taylor and Warden Wilhite expressing his “need to be moved to a different location,” adding that he was not safe. Id. at 4, 8. He alleges that Taylor

and Wilhite did not respond. Id. Later, Plaintiff informed Taylor that he needed assistance and that Mannie Mimms was extorting him and threatening to assault and rape him. Id. Plaintiff alleges that when he was showering later, Mimms entered and tried to grab Plaintiff’s penis, buttocks, and other exposed areas while “appearing to masturbate.” Id. Mimms stated that if Plaintiff did not give him what he wanted, he would take it. Id. Plaintiff refused the advances, and Mimms “left the shower area.” Id. When Plaintiff reported Mimms’ actions to Taylor, Taylor moved Plaintiff to Dormitory 2. Id.

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