Camps v. City of Warner Robins

822 F. Supp. 724, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7079, 1993 WL 183839
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Georgia
DecidedMay 19, 1993
DocketCiv. A. 92-103-2-MAC (WDO)
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 822 F. Supp. 724 (Camps v. City of Warner Robins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Camps v. City of Warner Robins, 822 F. Supp. 724, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7079, 1993 WL 183839 (M.D. Ga. 1993).

Opinion

ORDER

OWENS, Chief Judge.

Before the court is a motion for summary judgment filed by defendant City of Warner Robins and defendants Johnson and Sadlow of the Warner Robins Police Department (“City defendants”) and a motion .for summary judgment filed by defendants Ezell, Meadows, Serda, and Taitón of the Houston County Sheriffs Department (“County defendants”). After careful consideration of the arguments of counsel, the relevant case law, and the record as a whole, the court issues the following order.

FACTS

On Sunday, November 26, 1989, Dale Camps (“decedent”) was arrested at 3:20 a.m. by Officer Thomas Lee Herren of the Warner Robins Police Department (“WRPD”) for theft of gasoline from a convenience store/ gas station. When the decedent was arrested, Herren smelled alcohol on his person.

The decedent was taken to the WRPD to be processed. The WRPD is not a full-time jail, but rather a holding facility used to detain people until they can be processed and released on bond or transferred to a jail. Because the decedent had been arrested on the state charge of theft, it was the practice and policy of the City of Warner Robins- to transfer him to the Houston County Jail, a full-time prison facility.

After the decedent was taken to the WRPD, he was very unruly and refused to cooperate with booking procedures, and Herren placed him into a holding cell with some difficulty. Herren then called for backup to help him in» transporting the decedent to another facility.

A few minutes later, Officer Michael Earl arrived, and he' and Herren went to the decedent’s cell. They discovered the decedent standing on a metal bunk with a portion of a red shoelace tied around his neck. The other portion of the shoelace was hanging from a metal grate in the ceiling of the cell. Earl took the decedent down, and aside from some redness on his neck, there were no signs of injury to the decedent.

Earl then attempted to talk to the decedent in an effort to get him to cooperate. However, the decedent stated that he still refused to be processed, and he resisted being handcuffed. He-also told the officers to “Shoot me, beat me up, I’m not going, do what you got to do.”

The officers led the decedent back to the booking area, where the decedent began hitting his head against the wall and suffered a slight cut on his forehead. He was so unruly that the officers were still unable to get him to comply with booking procedures. Lieutenant Charles Sadlow, who was the supervisor on duty at the WRPD, determined that the decedent did not need medical attention and advised the officers to transport the decedent to the Houston County Jail to be processed and held on his state theft charge.

The decedent was transported to the Houston County Sheriffs Department at 5:36 a.m. Deputy Lisa Ezell was the only officer on duty at the Houston County Jail at this time. Herren advised Ezell that the decedent had been unruly and refused to be processed at the WRPD.

It is undisputed that Herren also gave Ezell some information about the decedent’s suicidal behavior at WRPD and that Ezell did not seek any further details from Herren about this behavior. However, there is a dispute as to the amount of information provided by Herren concerning the decedent’s suicidal behavior. The City defendants contend that Herren told Ezell that the decedent had actually attempted suicide at WRPD. In contrast, the County defendants contend that Herren merely told Ezell that the decedent had been “acting suicidal.”

*728 Thus, for purposes of the City defendants’ motion, the court will assume that Herren only stated to Ezell that the decedent had been “acting suicidal” at the WRPD. Then, for purposes of the County defendants’ motion, the court will assume that Ezell was aware of the decedent’s previous suicide attempt.

After Herren left at 5:39 a.m., Ezell completed a booking report on the decedent and got him changed into prison garb. She also interviewed the decedent and filled out a mandatory receiving/screening form on him, the purpose of which was to determine whether the decedent needed to be medically evaluated or treated for a mental disturbance. She also placed the decedent with the general population of the jail in a cell containing three other inmates. According to Ezell, all of these activities were accomplished in three minutes. 1

During her screening of the decedent, Ezell found him to be calm and cooperative, and he did not appear to be a suicide risk. However, based upon what Herren had told her, she classified the decedent as suicidal and placed him under a “close watch.” Under Houston County policy, a close watch consists of checking on a prisoner on an unsystematic basis, no less frequently than every fifteen minutes.

Ezell’s shift ended at 6:00 a.m., and she informed her replacements, Deputies Jessie Meadows and Michael Sipps, that the decedent had been “acting suicidal” at the WRPD and should be put on a close watch. Neither officer sought any further information about the decedent’s behavior.

Most of the facts surrounding the decedent’s stay in the Houston County Jail for the next thirty-one hours are in dispute. According to Meadows and Sipps, they made frequent checks on the decedent at irregular intervals throughout the day. However, two of the decedent’s cellmates contend that these checks were never made, and for purposes of defendants’ motion, the court must adopt this version of the facts.

In addition, the decedent’s mother, Ruth Camps, claims that she spoke to Meadows on the telephone three times on November 26, 1989. During their first conversation, she told Meadows that the decedent was suicidal and had attempted suicide in a jail on a previous occasion. She made the other two calls to Meadows after receiving distraught calls from the decedent.

During these calls, she expressed great conqern over her son’s mental state and even asked if she could send a pastor, doctor, or mental health worker to the jail to talk to him. Meadows stated that he could not allow anyone to see the decedent because visitation was not permitted on Sundays without approval from a superior officer. Meadows denies that these conversations took place.

The decedent’s cellmates also informed Meadows and Sipps that the decedent was making suicidal threats. At 1:30 p.m., Meadows took the decedent out of his cell and talked to him for a few minutes. According to his cellmates, the decedent continued to 'threaten suicide throughout the day.

Deputy Ezell arrived for her shift at 6:00 p.m. According to the decedent’s cellmates, Ezell checked on their cell only once during the night. She was relieved at 6:00 a.m. on Monday, November 27, 1989, by Meadows and Corporal Debra Serda (now Hinson).

That morning, one of the decedent’s cellmates told Serda that he had seen the decedent tie a sheet into knots and affix it to the overhead light. Corporal Serda did nothing in response to this information.

Moreover, the decedent’s father, Felix Camps, came to the jail at 10:45 a.m. to see his son, but Meadows refused to permit the visitation. Mr. Camps also asked Meadows to give the decedent a package of cigarettes and to let him know that his father had come

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
822 F. Supp. 724, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7079, 1993 WL 183839, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/camps-v-city-of-warner-robins-gamd-1993.