Antonio Smith v. John Kind

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 30, 2025
Docket22-2870
StatusPublished

This text of Antonio Smith v. John Kind (Antonio Smith v. John Kind) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Antonio Smith v. John Kind, (7th Cir. 2025).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ No. 22-2870 ANTONIO M. SMITH, Plaintiff-Appellant, v.

JOHN KIND, et al., Defendants-Appellees. ____________________ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin. No. 2:18-cv-01569-PP — Pamela Pepper, Chief Judge. ____________________

ARGUED DECEMBER 6, 2024 — DECIDED MAY 30, 2025 ____________________

Before HAMILTON, SCUDDER, and LEE, Circuit Judges. SCUDDER, Circuit Judge. Nearly 50 days into a hunger strike, Antonio Smith refused a correctional officer’s order to exit his cell for a daily wellness check. So for three days, offic- ers entered Smith’s cell, assisted him into a wheelchair, and transported him to the prison’s health unit—all without inci- dent. But perhaps frustrated by the noncompliance, Captain Jay Van Lanen changed course on day four by resorting to pepper spray for the extraction, knowing that Smith had a 2 No. 22-2870

medical contraindication to the spray. Smith reacted to the spray by gasping for breath for about eight minutes, only then to find himself placed naked in a cold cell for the next 23 hours. Because we conclude that a jury could find that both actions—using pepper spray and housing Smith in the frigid cell—lacked a legitimate penological purpose and thus vio- lated the Eighth Amendment, we disagree with the district court’s grant of summary judgment for the defendants on that ground. But in the end, troubled though we are by what Smith endured, the principle of qualified immunity leads us to af- firm. I A At the summary judgment stage, we view the facts in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, here Antonio Smith. See Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 255 (1986). By his telling, the situation unfolded as follows. In October 2017 Smith began a prolonged hunger strike to protest prison conditions at Green Bay Correctional Institu- tion in Wisconsin. Pursuant to prison policy, Smith had re- ported to the prison’s health unit for 45 days, each time de- clining to submit to a wellness check. On day 46, however, he declined to leave his cell, believing that prison policy allowed a nurse to come to him. A nurse did indeed go to Smith’s cell that day to document his refusal to submit to the wellness check. The following day correctional officers once again di- rected Smith to leave his cell to go to the health unit. Having received authorization to use force to gain Smith’s compli- ance, a correctional officer entered the cell with a taser drawn No. 22-2870 3

as Smith lay prone on his bed in a so-called “surrendering rit- ual”—hands behind his back, legs crossed at the ankles, and facing the wall. An extraction team followed closely behind and placed Smith in handcuffs and leg restraints before sitting him in a mobile restraint chair, essentially a wheelchair, which allowed them to transport him to the health unit. Smith continued to refuse orders to leave his cell, so the team fol- lowed this same procedure the next day. And when Smith re- fused for the fourth time, a new correctional officer, Captain Jay Van Lanen, took charge of the extraction and repeated the same process. But on November 28, 2017, when Smith refused to walk to the health unit for the fifth time, the process changed again. For reasons not clear in the record, the officers elected to vid- eotape this extraction. So although we continue to view gen- uine factual disputes in favor of Smith, we will defer to the video footage if it “firmly settles a factual issue.” Horton v. Pobjecky, 883 F.3d 941, 944 (7th Cir. 2018). Captain Van Lanen gathered a four-man extraction team outside the restrictive housing unit where Smith was housed. He stated that the extraction techniques used the previous three days were no longer suitable. Elaborating, Van Lanen said that Smith had “an extensive violent history with assign- ing hits on the streets to have people killed, assault[ing] within the prison system, and assault[ing] in general through- out his prison career.” Smith had also grown accustomed to the previous extraction method, Van Lanen observed, and the team had no way of knowing whether he had a weapon in his cell. Finally, Van Lanen explained that, because Smith was on a hunger strike, it was important to observe whether he could walk to the health unit, rather than be wheeled in a restraint 4 No. 22-2870

chair. On that basis, he believed it necessary to alter their ap- proach for this extraction, adding that, although Smith had a medical contraindication to pepper spray, Security Director John Kind had authorized its use. Donning full tactical gear, the extraction team entered the housing unit and approached Smith’s cell. Lying on his bed, Smith removed his blanket to allow the officers to see his full body and assumed the so-called surrendering ritual. For five minutes, Captain Van Lanen urged Smith to come to the cell door. Smith ignored the instruction. Van Lanen then informed Smith of his intent to use pepper spray to gain compliance and reminded him about his contra- indication to the spray. When Smith did not budge, Van Lanen deployed a burst of the spray through his cell window, immediately triggering Smith’s asthma. The video shows that, for eight minutes, Smith had difficulty breathing, seemed disoriented, and was drooling, coughing, spitting, and moaning. While Smith continued to gasp for air, Van Lanen ordered him to remove his clothes and comply with a strip search. Although he struggled to compose himself, Smith obeyed the order. After handcuffing Smith, still naked, the extraction team covered his genitals with a towel. They then helped him to his feet and walked with him down the hallway to the health unit where he refused a shower and wellness check. Instead of re- turning Smith to his cell, as done the three previous days, the officers placed him in a “control cell” used for disruptive in- mates. Van Lanen informed Smith he could request a shower and soap at any time and said he would return to discuss “clothing and stuff.” This discussion occurred around noon on November 28. No. 22-2870 5

Smith offered evidence that the control cell was very cold the night of November 28. By his account, the heating vent blew air equivalent to the outside temperature, which, during his stay in the cell, ranged from 25 to 57 degrees Fahrenheit. All the while, the control cell had no mattress or bedding, and Smith no clothes. And although Captain Van Lanen’s past practice involved placing a smock, clothing, and other permit- ted property in a security box attached to the cell regardless of whether an inmate requests such items, he did not do so for Smith. Three and a half hours after being placed in the cell, Smith requested clothing, bedding, and a mattress from Lieutenant Timothy Retzlaff. He also complained of the cold and asked to be moved to a warmer cell. Retzlaff informed Smith that he needed to check with Captain Van Lanen. Twelve hours later, another officer approached Smith and proposed an offer: if Smith submitted to future medical evaluations, he could have a smock; if not, he would remain naked and cold. Smith de- clined the offer. Smith continued waiting for Lieutenant Retzlaff to return with word from Captain Van Lanen. But word never came. So day turned to night. And night turned to day. And 23 hours after Van Lanen placed him in the control cell, there Smith remained, naked and freezing. He described his time in the cell as painful, adding that he could not sleep and spent most of the 23 hours on his feet. B In time Smith invoked 42 U.S.C. § 1983

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Antonio Smith v. John Kind, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/antonio-smith-v-john-kind-ca7-2025.