Barry v. Luzerne County

447 F. Supp. 2d 438, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 55266, 2006 WL 2322339
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 9, 2006
Docket3:04CV1330
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 447 F. Supp. 2d 438 (Barry v. Luzerne County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barry v. Luzerne County, 447 F. Supp. 2d 438, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 55266, 2006 WL 2322339 (M.D. Pa. 2006).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

MUNLEY, District Judge.

Presently before the Court for disposition is Defendants’ collective Motion for Summary Judgment on Plaintiff John Barry’s Complaint. This matter has been fully briefed and is ripe for disposition. For the following reasons, we will grant the motion in part and deny it in part.

I. Background

Defendant Luzerne County Correctional Facility hired Barry in June 1987 as a correctional officer trainee, and after completing a probationary period, he became a correctional officer. (Def. Ex. A in Supp. Summ. J. (“Def.Ex.”) Barry Dep. 7) In August 1990, he was promoted to desk *441 sergeant, and in May 1994, he was promoted to control sergeant. (Def. Ex. A, Barry Dep. 8) In 1996, he was promoted to lieutenant and assigned to the prison records department. (Def. Ex. B, Barry Investigation Hearing Tr. 60, Apr. 6, 2004) Defendants Gregory Skrepenak, Todd Vonder-heid, Robert Fumani, and Wister Yuhas are members of Defendant Luzerne County Correction Facility Board (the “Prison Board”).

On October 10, 2003, Hugo Selinski, a prisoner awaiting trial for murder, escaped from the prison. (Pl.Ex. 3 in Opp. Summ. J. (“Pl.Ex.”), Warden Gene Fischi Dep. 13) Selinski was a fugitive for approximately 72 hours before he submitted to authorities. (Pl.Ex. 3., Fischi Dep. 13) The escape became the subject of local and national media coverage.

Barry had been on duty for twenty minutes when the escape occurred. (Def. Ex. A., Barry Dep. 33; PLEx. 3, Fischi Dep. 55) After the escape, he collected incident reports from the correctional officers on duty, provided them to Warden Gene Fis-chi, and informed him that the officers lied in the reports. (Def. Ex. B., Investigation Tr. 55-57) Barry’s own written reports, however, did not include his accusation that the correctional officers lied. (Def. Ex. B., Investigation Tr. 67-70) Warden Fischi did not immediately review the reports, discuss Barry’s allegation with him, or direct another officer to investigate. (PLEx. 3, Fischi Dep. 55-57) On October 12, 2003, despite Barry’s accusation, Warden Fischi was quoted in the Scranton Wilkes-Barre Times Leader, a local newspaper, as stating that prison records reflected that the “seventh floor cells were properly checked by guards on schedule” on the night of the escape. (PLEx. 6, Times Leader Article, Oct. 13, 2005) After the escape, Barry was contacted by a reporter with the Citizens Voice, another local paper. (Def. Ex. F. Discipline/Dismissal Loudermill Hearing, N.T. 6, Oct. 24, 2003) Barry spoke with the Citizens Voice in order to explain that the correctional officers’ failures caused the escape, Warden Fischi knew of these failures yet falsely reported to the press that they had properly completed their tasks, there were numerous unreported crimes in the prison, and these issues all created public safety problems. (PLEx. 4, Barry Aff. ¶ 19) Barry also contacted a reporter with the Times Leader who interviewed him and Lieutenant Jenny Butcynski at Barry’s home. (Def. Ex. A, Barry Dep. 91, 93-94) The reporter extensively quoted Barry’s views in two articles published on October 15, 2003. (Def. Ex. G, Times Leader Article, October 15, 2003)

One article, entitled “A Prison Run Amok,” attributes numerous statements to Barry and Butcynski. (Def. Ex. G, Times Leader Article, October 15, 2003) It begins with a synopsis of four incidents where prison authorities ignored wrongdoing. (Def. Ex. G, Times Leader Article, October 15, 2003) Two were instances where inmates were found with narcotics, but either charges were not brought or the police were not notified. (Def. Ex. G, Times Leader Article, October 15, 2003) The third involved the prison authorities’ failure to investigate sexual harassment. (Def. Ex. G, Times Leader Article, October 15, 2003) In the fourth incident, the prison authorities failed to reprimand an employee caught with a former inmate and two shotguns in his car. (Def. Ex. G, Times Leader Article, October 15, 2003) “The incidents are among the many that Lts. John Barry and Jenny Butcynski say have occurred in the past two years under the unwatchful eye of Warden Gene Fischi and his two deputy wardens, Rowland Roberts and Ben Grevera.” (Def. Ex. G, Times Leader Article, October 15, 2003) Barry and ButzynskL reported they were “dis *442 gusted by the lack of oversight of the correctional officers, which they believe led to the escapes and multiple other problems within the facility.” (Def. Ex. G, Times Leader Article, October 15, 2003) Barry called for Fischi, Roberts, and Grevera to resign. (Def. Ex. G, Times Leader Article, October 15, 2003) The article proceeded to list numerous other incidents gleaned from written misconduct reports, including various instances where narcotics were discovered and no charges were instituted. (Def. Ex. G, Times Leader Article, October 15, 2003) It also provided Fischi’s and the deputies’ explanations for the incidents and discipline. (Def. Ex. G, Times Leader Article, October 15, 2003) Fischi explained that his office has no power to institute criminal charges against prisoners and referred many cases to the district attorney. (Def. Ex. G, Times Leader Article, October 15, 2003) Roberts explained that he may have ignored possession of small amounts of marijuana, such as the residue left on the end of a cigarette butt. (Def. Ex. G, Times Leader Article, October 15, 2003) Fischi addressed the incident where an officer was found with a former inmate, and explained that although socializing with inmates is not tolerated, that incident involved a former inmate and the socializing was not excessive and was merely a car ride. (Def. Ex. G, Times Leader Article, October 15, 2003) Fischi also explained that as lieutenants, it was Barry’s and Butzynski’s duty to reprimand guards who failed to do their jobs. (Def. Ex. G, Times Leader Article, October 15, 2003) “They are my first line of supervision.... What do you think their job is?” (Def. Ex. G, Times Leader Article, October 15, 2003) Barry retorted that the administration ignored his concerns and was not aggressive with the guards. (Def. Ex. G, Times Leader Article, October 15, 2003) He stated, “There is a breakdown of communication in that prison.... The guards are not doing their jobs.” (Def. Ex. G, Times Leader Article, October 15, 2003)

The second article provides an analysis of Selinski’s escape, gleaned from official statements and prison reports “provided by the lieutenants.” (Def. Ex. G, Times Leader Article, October 15, 2003) Selinski entered the cell of another inmate, Scott Bolton, and together they removed a window and used bed sheets tied together to flee the seventh floor of the prison. (Def. Ex. G, Times Leader Article, October 15, 2003) The reports indicated that guards were in the cell blocks at the time of the escape, but Barry stated “[njobody was on the block.” (Def. Ex. G, Times Leader Article, October 15, 2003) He explained that one report, which indicated that a guard was on the block, could not have been true because the guard “would have at least noticed that Selenski and Bolton were in another inmate’s cell, which is not allowed.” (Def. Ex. G, Times Leader Article, October 15, 2003) Barry repeated his allegation that guards rarely walk the blocks and the administration has been lax in enforcing the rules. (Def. Ex. G, Times Leader Article, October 15, 2003) The article concluded with Fischi’s warning that “any individual who reveals information is ‘strictly out of bounds.’ ” (Def. Ex.

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447 F. Supp. 2d 438, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 55266, 2006 WL 2322339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barry-v-luzerne-county-pamd-2006.