Andrew Vicks v. Correctional Officer FNU Knight

380 F. App'x 847
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedMay 26, 2010
Docket09-15012
StatusUnpublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 380 F. App'x 847 (Andrew Vicks v. Correctional Officer FNU Knight) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrew Vicks v. Correctional Officer FNU Knight, 380 F. App'x 847 (11th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Andrew Vicks, a Florida state prisoner proceeding pro se, appeals from the district court’s order granting summary judgment in favor of correctional officers Richard Knight and Robert Andrews in Vicks’s civil action, which he brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for an alleged violation of his Eighth Amendment rights. On appeal, Vicks argues that the district court erred in granting summary judgment for several reasons. He asserts that Knight and Andrews failed to comply with his discovery requests, thus depriving him of the opportunity to support his claims with evidence. In addition, Vicks asserts that the Florida Department of Corrections (“FDC”) re *848 fused to provide him with a videotape documenting Knight’s alleged attack against him. Moreover, Vicks contends that he demonstrated a prima facie claim that Knight and Andrews violated his Eighth Amendment rights, and that they failed to conclusively demonstrate that such a violation did not occur. Vicks asserts that, if he were permitted to litigate his claims at trial, he could present evidence in the form of witness testimony and medical documents that would demonstrate that Knight unnecessarily beat him, while Andrews knowingly refused to intervene.

For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.

I.

Vicks filed a complaint under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, naming the following defendants: (1) Knight, a correctional officer employed by the FDC, in his individual capacity; and (2) Andrews, a correctional officer employed by the FDC, in his individual capacity. In his complaint, Vicks claimed that Knight and Andrews violated his constitutional right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment, as guaranteed by the Eighth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

In support of these claims, Vicks alleged that, on August 2, 2007, he was placed under full restraints so that he could be escorted to and from an event in the prison library. After the event in the library ended, Knight and Andrews escorted Vicks back to his prison cell at approximately 9:15 p.m. After Vicks entered his cell, Knight removed Vicks’s leg restraints, and Vicks waited for Knight to remove his waist and wrist restraints. Instead of removing these additional restraints, however, Knight “rushed” Vicks, “knocking him flat on his back,” and began punching him in the ribs, kidneys, and back. Andrews positioned himself in the doorway of Vicks’s cell so that other inmates would not be able to view the beating. Although Andrews observed the beating, and was aware that Knight’s actions subjected Vicks to a substantial risk of serious harm, he did not attempt to intervene. According to Vicks, numerous inmates in cell wings C and D yelled for Knight to stop beating Vicks. After the beating, Knight and Andrews left Vicks’s cell, leaving him in the waist and wrist restraints. As a result of Knight’s blows, Vicks was in “intense pain,” felt as if he were about to pass out, and was “gasping for air.” Around midnight, Vicks informed another FDC employee of what had occurred, and he was escorted to the prison’s medical wing. According to Vicks, as a result of the attack, he sustained injuries in the form of a swollen and bruised torso, and bruised ribs. Based on these facts, Vicks claimed that Knight had violated his rights by using excessive and unnecessary force, and that Andrews had violated his rights by demonstrating deliberate indifference to a serious risk of harm.

Knight and Andrews filed a motion for summary judgment, stating that neither of them could specifically recall escorting Vicks to his cell on August 2, 2007. They asserted, however, that the exhibits that they had attached to their motion demonstrated that no beating had occurred. Because Knight did not beat Vicks, they argued, Andrews could not be held liable for failing to intervene in this alleged beating.

Knight’s and Andrews’s exhibits showed that Vicks was under “close management” status at the prison at the time that the alleged beating occurred. A document entitled “Close Management Daily Record of Segregation” reflected that, at 9:40 p.m. on August 2, 2007, Vicks refused to relinquish his restraints. He ultimately relinquished the restraints at 1:20 a.m. on August 3. In an incident report dated August 3, 2007, Lieutenant J. Lindsey reported that, at *849 1:20 a.m., he approached Vicks’s cell in order to remove Vicks’s restraints, which Vicks previously had refused to relinquish to other correctional officers. According to Lindsey, Vicks stated that he was still wearing restraints because correctional officers had “jumped” him and beat him. Vicks was taken to the medical clinic, where a registered nurse, Marcia Mayer, examined him, but did not note any injuries.

In a FDC emergency room record, Mayer reported that she examined Vicks at 1:47 a.m. on August 3, 2007. According to Mayer, Vicks had reported that a FDC officer had hit him, and that he was suffering from pain that he placed at a level of 4 1/2 on a scale ranging from 0 to 10. Mayer noted that Vicks had zero bruises, contusions, bleeding, or lacerations, that he had a normal gait, and that he experienced no difficulty in moving his extremities. She certified that she had not been able to identify any injury. Another FDC emergency room record reflected that “T. Parrish,” a senior licensed practical nurse (“SLPN”), examined Vicks at 2:00 p.m. on August 3. In this report, Parrish noted that Vicks had zero injuries, and no redness, swelling, or bruising. He certified that he had not been able to identify an injury, and that he did not administer treatment. Vicks’s additional medical records did not reflect that he had been diagnosed with any injury related to a beating in the months after August 3, 2007.

Knight and Andrews also included their affidavits in their exhibits, in which they admitted that they had escorted Vicks to his cell on August 2, but denied’that any attack had occurred. Specifically, Knight stated that he knew that Vicks’s allegations of an attack were untrue because he did not use any force against Vicks, and was required to document any force that he used against a prisoner in a “Use of Force Report.” Knight stated that he had never failed to complete such a report after it was necessary for him to use force against an inmate. Knight further explained that, at times, inmates would refuse to relinquish their restraints. When this happened, correctional officers would leave the inmate in his restraints until he voluntarily relinquished them.

Michael Tomlinson, Chief of Security for Florida State Prison, executed an affidavit in which he averred that inmates would occasionally refuse to relinquish their restraints. Tomlinson stated that correctional officers would handle the situation by leaving the inmate in his restraints, and periodically checking to see if he would like to relinquish them. Mayer executed an affidavit, in which she stated that she examined Vicks at 1:47 a.m. on August 3, and could identify “no injury whatsoever on his body.” Thomas Parrish, a SLPN employed by Florida State Prison, executed an affidavit in which he stated that he examined Vicks at 2:00 p.m. on August 3. Parrish averred that his examination of Vicks did not reveal an injury.

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