Boclair v. Lashbrook

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Illinois
DecidedMarch 28, 2024
Docket3:18-cv-01188
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Boclair v. Lashbrook, (S.D. Ill. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS

STANLEY BOCLAIR, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) Case No. 18-cv-1188-RJD ) JACQUELINE LASHBROOK, et al., ) ) Defendants. )

ORDER DALY, Magistrate Judge: Plaintiff Stanley Boclair, an inmate in the custody of the Illinois Department of Corrections (“IDOC”), filed this lawsuit pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging his constitutional rights were violated while he was incarcerated at Menard Correctional Center (“Menard”). In his complaint, Plaintiff alleges he was subjected to cruel and unusual punishment when members of the Orange Crush tactical unit handcuffed him in a stress position on August 4, 2017, causing severe pain and injuring his left shoulder. In his Amended Complaint, Plaintiff proceeds on ten counts alleging deliberate indifference under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments against Defendants John Baldwin, Jacqueline Lashbrook, Barry Myers, Michael Laminack, Philip Royster, Joshua Cornstubble, John Koch, Justin Engelage, Carson Winters, and Ezra Hunter (see Doc. 63). Each count is against one individual defendant. This matter is now before the Court on Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 242), to which Plaintiff responded (Doc. 250), and Defendants filed a Reply (Doc. 258). Plaintiff filed a Motion to Strike Defendants’ Reply. Doc. 259. He references a procedure for filing replies that was ordered by Judge Yandle, who was previously assigned to this case. Doc. 131. Page 1 of 9 The undersigned does not require the same procedure, and therefore Plaintiff’s Motion to Strike is DENIED. As explained further, Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment is GRANTED. MATERIAL FACTS At his deposition, Plaintiff testified that he suffered a left shoulder injury from a fall that occurred at a prison in either late 2014 or early 2015. Doc. 266-1, p. 4. Id. When he arrived at

Menard in 2016, he had no pain or complications from his left shoulder. Id., p. 8. He did not have a special cuffing permit when he arrived at Menard, nor did he obtain one at Menard at any time before the incident at issue. Id., p. 5. According to an IDOC Operations Order, the IDOC Southern Region Tactical/Tactical Response Team planned to search for weapons, weapon material, security threat group literature, and drugs at Menard Correctional Center at some point between August 1, 2017 and August 5, 2017. Doc. 250, p. 28. The memo states that “the Offenders will be strip searched and restrained. They will then be escorted to the General Division Chapel and monitored by tactical staff with medical staff present for any health issues.” Id.

On August 4, 2017, Defendant John Baldwin was the Acting Director of the IDOC. Id., p. 41. Defendant Lashbrook was the warden at Menard. Id., p. 54. Defendant Engelage was a member of the tactical unit team on August 4, 2017. Id., p. 67. Defendants Royster, Myers, Winters, Cornstubble, Hunter, Koch, and Laminack were correctional officers in various capacities who were present at Menard on August 4, 2017 and participated in some capacity in the search. Id., pp. 27, 78, 86, 97, 105, 114, 124, 126, Defendants Hunter and Engelage stated in their sworn answers to Interrogatories that “protocol requires individuals in custody to be restrained behind their back unless they produce a medical permit requiring a different method of restraint[].” Id., pp. 62, 86. Defendant Engelage Page 2 of 9 further stated that “the main objective in securing large groups of individuals in custody during prison shakedowns is to keep the area safe and secure by making sure nothing gets out of hand, too loud, or too rowdy.” Id., p. 68. On the morning of August 4, 2017, Plaintiff and other inmates learned “that the prison was on lockdown and a shakedown was imminent.” Doc. 266-1, p. 3. After “some hours went by”,

officers arrived at Plaintiff’s gallery and started “preparing” him for the shakedown.” Id., p. 4. The officers told him to turn with his back towards them, and they performed a strip search. Id., p. 6. An unknown corrections officer handcuffed Plaintiff behind his back. Id., p. 7. Plaintiff was led out of his cell to the chapel, which he described as follows: I was told to back out of the cell, head down, facing the ground. And once I backed out of the cell, I was turned a certain way and proceeded down the gallery with my head down, behind another officer. Between each officer and an inmate, there was an officer. There was hundreds of officers escorting the whole gallery at one time. Each inmate on either side of me, we had an officer between us. An officer would be behind me; an officer would be in front of me. We proceeded out the door of the cell house, and we proceeded to the chapel, and in that same order. We were assigned a row of seats to sit in.

Id., p. 7.

In his sworn answers to Interrogatories, Defendant Royster stated that “generally, individuals’ head and eyes are down while being transported so they do not trip and fall.” Doc. 250, p. 38. Defendant Winters stated in his sworn answers to Interrogatories that inmates “are moved with their head and eyes down” so “they cannot see other inmates in order to start a fight or target an officer.” Id, p. 128. As Plaintiff walked out of his cell, he saw Defendant Lashbrook. Doc. 266-1, p. 7. He recognized her because he had previously seen her walking around Menard. Id. Regarding the Page 3 of 9 other defendants, “I didn’t know any of them by face. If I saw their face, I couldn’t put a name to it; and if I heard their name, I couldn’t put a face to it. I had no familiarity with the officers or with the staff on August 4, 2017.” Id. Plaintiff sat in his assigned seat. He explained that he was in a “stress position” because he had “to have [his] extremities and [his] limbs held in a certain fashion for a certain length of

time until it starts to put stress on [his] extremities…[and] body.” Id, p. 9. Plaintiff was in the chapel for approximately 90 minutes. He stayed seated and handcuffed behind his back the entire time. Id. He saw Defendants Royster and Engelage, and he heard the names “Ezra..Carson..Laminack…Cornstubble.” Id., p. 10. He never heard nor saw Koch or Myers. Id. Plaintiff spoke to Defendants Winters, Royster, and Hunter. Id., p. 11. When asked what he told them, Plaintiff testified to the following: I had an injury to my shoulder, that it was being torn, that I felt it being torn. The word I used was “rip.” I said, my shoulder is being ripped apart. I’ve been here for more than an hour now or a little into the hour. I’ve been there more than 30 minutes now. I’m starting to feel the pain, I’m starting to feel the stress. It’s pulling my shoulders. I’m grimacing. I had a face full of tears. I’m trying to get them to do something.

It wasn’t-it wasn’t a long thing. These were just things that happened over a matter of second verses, two or three times. They knew I was in pain. They came and talked-they addressed me. I didn’t know who they were, but they addressed me in a two or three second verse, when I said-you know, when they said—it was all they said—it won’t be that long, it won’t be that long, it won’t be much longer.

Id., p. 11. Some of the inmates who had braids in their hair were uncuffed and lined up against a wall so that they could undo their braids. Id., pp. 10, 11. Plaintiff overheard “someone say that Defendant Lashbrook was in the chapel” while he was crying, grimacing, and asking for medical Page 4 of 9 attention. Id., pp. 12, 13. Plaintiff did not talk to Defendants Baldwin or Lashbrook. Id., p. 13. He never saw Defendant Baldwin, but believes Defendant Baldwin was present at Menard on August 4, 2017. Id. Plaintiff produced an affidavit from another inmate, Roberto Ramirez, that states as follows:

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Boclair v. Lashbrook, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boclair-v-lashbrook-ilsd-2024.