Burgess v. Snider

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedMay 23, 2025
Docket2:22-cv-00228
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Burgess v. Snider, (M.D. Fla. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA FORT MYERS DIVISION

JOHNNY BURGESS,

Plaintiff,

v. Case No. 2:22-cv-228-JLB-NPM

DEREK SNIDER, et al.,

Defendants. / ORDER At all times relevant to the allegations in this civil rights case, Plaintiff Johnny Burgess (“Plaintiff”) was a prisoner of the Florida Department of Corrections. This action stems from an alleged use of excessive force against Plaintiff while he was held at Charlotte Correctional Institution. (Doc. 1.) The Court now considers an amended motion for summary judgment filed by Defendants Snider, Ramsey, Nesbitt, Hirschy, and Crawford. (Doc. 106.)1 Plaintiff filed a response and amended response to the motion. (Doc. 99, Doc. 107.) After carefully considering the pleadings and the record in this case, the Court finds that Defendants Snider, Ramsey, Hirschy, Crawford, Nesbitt, and Basilio are entitled to judgment as a matter of law.

1 Defendant Kaiser has not been served with process. On April 21, 2023, the Court cautioned Plaintiff that he must provide Defendant Kaiser’s address to the Clerk by May 21, 2023 or this defendant would be dismissed from this action under Rule 4(m) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. (Doc. 55.) Plaintiff did not provide an address for Defendant Kaiser. Therefore, Defendant Kaiser is dismissed from this action under Rule 4(m). I. Background and Procedural History Plaintiff initiated this action on April 11, 2022 by filing a pro se 42 U.S.C. § 1983 civil rights complaint against seven officers at the Charlotte Correctional

Institution. (Doc. 1 at 2–5.) He generally alleged Eighth Amendment claims of excessive force and failure to intervene based on an August 26, 2021 incident in which the defendants used chemical agents (pepper spray) against him. (Id. at 6– 7.) The defendants filed a motion to dismiss the complaint, arguing that Plaintiff had not exhausted his claims or stated a claim for relief. (Doc. 44.) The defendants also asserted entitlement to qualified immunity. (Id.) In the order addressing the defendants’ motion to dismiss, the Court summarized Plaintiff’s

relevant factual allegations as follows: On August 26, 2021, Plaintiff heard (through his cell window) Defendants Crawford, Ramsey, Hirschy, Basilio, and “several other unknown staff” threaten him with chemical spray, deprivation of food, placement on strip status, disposal of personal property, and beatings, in retaliation for Plaintiff having filed an earlier civil rights case. Later the same day, Defendant Hirschy came to Plaintiff’s cell with a handheld camcorder. Plaintiff alleges, without explanation, that Defendants Snider and Ramsey sent Defendant Hirschy to spray him with chemical agents for no reason. Plaintiff asserts that no “Crisis Intervention Technique” was used to avoid the use of chemical agents. Defendant Hirschy ordered Defendant Nesbitt to spray chemical agents on Plaintiff even though Plaintiff “was humbly being compliant and not in violation of any rule whatsoever to provoke the use of force.” Handcuffs were placed on Plaintiff during the incident, and because they were too tight, his hands swelled, and he has suffered nerve damage. (Doc. 59 at 3 (internal citations to the record omitted).) After liberally construing Plaintiff’s pro se complaint as alleging six separate claims—three claims for excessive force relating to the use of pepper spray and application of handcuffs, one claim for failure-to-protect, one claim of mail

tampering, and one claim for making threats (Doc. 59 at 9–10)—the Court granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss in part. The Court determined that Plaintiff had not exhausted his failure-to-protect, mail tampering, or verbal threat claims against any defendant and granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss as to those claims. (Id.) However, the Court found that Plaintiff’s Eighth Amendment excessive force claims were exhausted and sufficiently pleaded. The Court explained:

Plaintiff generally avers that he was sprayed with chemical agents by Defendants Hirschy and Nesbitt for no justifiable reason and that someone applied hand restraints too tightly on April 26, 2021—again, for no justifiable reason. He also argues that Defendants Snider and Ramsey expressly ordered the unjustified use of force. [FN] These allegations are sufficient to survive a motion to dismiss under the Whitley standards. The need for force and whether the force used was reasonable in light of the threat posed by Plaintiff are fact-intensive considerations that should be raised in a motion for summary judgment or at trial. Likewise, as to the defendants’ argument that they are entitled to qualified immunity, “the law was clearly established that correctional officers could not use force maliciously or sadistically for the very purpose of causing harm,” Skrtich v. Thornton, 280 F.3d 1295, 1305 (11th Cir. 2002), which is precisely what is alleged here. And while factual development of this claim may establish that the defendants are entitled to qualified immunity, the facts as alleged by Plaintiff do not establish that entitlement at this early stage of litigation. [FN] The defendants argue that Plaintiff’s excessive force claims against Defendants Snider and Ramsey are impermissibly based on a theory of respondeat superior. However, Plaintiff alleges that Defendants Snider and Ramsey ordered the unwarranted application of chemical agents. Therefore, he has alleged their direct involvement with the force, and the Court will not address the defendants’ argument otherwise. See, e.g., Thomas v. Bryant, 614 F.3d 1288, 1317 n. 29 (11th Cir. 2010) (recognizing that the “the FSP Warden's direct authorization of all uses of force and the routine application of the DOC's non-spontaneous use-of-force policy without regard to an inmate's mental health status satisfy § 1983's causation requirement”). (Id. at 19–20 (citations to the record omitted).) Specifically, the following claims survived the defendants’ motion to dismiss: Count I – Excessive Force (Defendants Snider and Ramsey). Eighth Amendment excessive force claim for ordering the unnecessary use of pepper spray against Plaintiff. Count II – Excessive Force (Defendants Nesbitt, Hirschy, and Crawford).2 Eighth Amendment excessive force claim for unnecessarily using pepper spray against Plaintiff. Count III – Excessive Force (Defendants unknown). Eighth Amendment excessive force claim for using overly-tight hand restraints on Plaintiff after the application of pepper spray. (Id. at 9, 19–20.) After conducting discovery, the defendants filed a motion for summary judgment. (Doc. 89.) To support their motion, they offer sworn use-of-force incident reports from Defendants Nesbitt, Basilio, Crawford, and Kaiser as well as from non-defendant Officer Thayer (Doc. 90-1; Doc. 90-2), the Reports of Force Used from the Florida Department of Corrections (Doc. 90-3; Doc. 90-4); Plaintiff’s Emergency Room Record (Doc. 90-4 at 5–6), the Florida Administrative Code provisions for use of force (Doc. 90-5), and three video clips of the incident. (Doc.

2 Plaintiff was inconsistent as to whether the camera operator was Nesbitt or Crawford. However, the defendants’ undisputed evidence clarifies that Defendant Crawford was the camera operator and Defendant Nesbitt applied the pepper spray. (Doc. 90-1 at 1, 5.) 104 (Exhibits F, G, and H).) Thereafter, the defendants filed an identical motion for summary judgment that included pinpoint citations to the video clips. (Doc. 106.)

Plaintiff responded to the defendants’ motion for summary judgment. (Doc. 99; Doc.

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Burgess v. Snider, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burgess-v-snider-flmd-2025.