CARROLL v. ANDERS

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 25, 2020
Docket5:19-cv-02060
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
CARROLL v. ANDERS, (E.D. Pa. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

ARTIS C. CARROLL, JR. : CIVIL ACTION : v. : NO. 19-2060 : PETER ANDERS :

MEMORANDUM

KEARNEY, J. March 25, 2020

In early 2015, African American Artis C. Carroll, Jr. disputed grading at Millersville University of Pennsylvania. The University also found he harassed persons resulting in disciplinary sanction. His repeated conduct eventually resulted in trespass charges, a guilty verdict for defiant trespass, and a prison term. When preparing to leave prison in 2017, Mr. Carroll wrote to his lawyer requesting assistance with returning to school which the lawyer, the university, and the university’s police chief viewed as threatening bodily harm to many persons. We do not opine as to whether they were justified in this view. But the police chief delivered and read a warning letter to Mr. Carroll upon his prison release precluding him for contacting university personnel or appearing on the university campus until July 2019 but allowing him to discuss the no-trespass with university officials. Rather than discuss with the university, Mr. Carroll sued the police chief among others. After we dismissed several of his claims, we allowed discovery into Mr. Carroll’s remaining due process and race discrimination claims. Mr. Carroll failed to appear for deposition or in court; he failed to answer motions. After careful review of the police chief’s unopposed motion for summary judgment with supporting evidence, we enter summary judgment for the police chief. Mr. Carroll fails to adduce evidence of being a student entitled to certain levels of due process and even if a student, fails to show a lack of due process. There is no basis for race discrimination. We enter judgment dismissing Mr. Carroll’s claims. I. Statement of undisputed facts Artis C. Carroll is an African American man. He enrolled in Millersville University of Pennsylvania beginning in 2011. By 2014, he enrolled in the University’s clinical program for respiratory therapy. He struggled with his grades by the Spring Semester 2015.1

Mr. Carroll’s Spring 2015 problems with the University. On February 26, 2015, the University sanctioned Mr. Carroll, Jr. with counseling and two months probation after finding him responsible for violating the University’s Student Code of Conduct, including alleged “disorderly, harassing, and inappropriate” conduct on February 14, 2015.2 On March 25, 2015, Mr. Carroll visited the University Registrar’s office demanding a form to change a grade with which he disagreed.3 Registrar Alison Hutchinson told Mr. Carroll she lacked permission to provide paperwork because Mr. Carroll sued the University. She asked Mr. Carroll several times to leave.4 Mr. Carroll refused to leave and raised his voice at Ms. Hutchinson.5 University Police Officers Flood and Yanak then received a call “of a student

giving staff a hard time, and refusing to leave, the registers [sic] office,” and reported to the scene.6 The Officers informed Mr. Carroll he must leave and contact Tom Richardson, University Assistant Vice President of Student Affairs, before returning to the Registrar’s office.7 The Officers cited Mr. Carroll for simple trespass8 and advised he would be arrested for trespassing if he returned to the Registrar’s office without Assistant Vice President Richardson’s approval.9 The next day, Lori Austin, the University Director of Judicial Affairs, wrote Mr. Carroll informing of alleged Student Code of Conduct violations from the day before.10 Director Austin’s letter informed Mr. Carroll of an Administrative Hearing scheduled for April 3, 2015 where Mr. Carroll could explain his conduct.11 On March 26, 2015, Mr. Carroll met with Director Austin in her office.12 Director Austin attempted to help Mr. Carroll by calling the Registrar’s office on Mr. Carroll’s behalf to discuss his issues with obtaining a grade change form.13 Nobody from the Registrar’s office could help at the moment, so Director Austin told Mr. Carroll to return to her office the next day.14 Director Austin told Mr. Carroll several times to not visit the Registrar’s office and

warned Mr. Carroll he “would be arrested if [he] went up there.”15 Mr. Carroll left after agreeing to return to Director Austin the next day.16 Minutes later, Officer Flood called Director Austin stating he arrested and cited Mr. Carroll for Criminal Trespass as he exited Lyle Hall and the Registrar’s office.17 On March 27, 2015, Assistant Vice President Richardson wrote Mr. Carroll regarding his actions on March 25, 2015 and March 26, 2015.18 Assistant Vice President Richardson told Mr. Carroll because of “the serious nature your behavior in these incidents, you have been placed on interim suspension from the University. You are banned from this campus until you have received permission otherwise.”19 Director Austin also wrote Mr. Carroll on March 27, 2015

informing of alleged University Student Code of Conduct violations for visiting the Registrar’s office without permission on March 26, 2015 and scheduling an Administrative Hearing for April 3, 2015.20 Despite his interim suspension and numerous warnings to not violate the no trespass order, Mr. Carroll attended class on University campus on March 31, 2015.21 Director Austin, Assistant Director of Judicial Affairs Ron Wiafe and University Police asked Mr. Carroll to leave campus, but he refused.22 Police arrested Mr. Carroll for Defiant/Criminal Trespass and detained him from March 31, 2015 until April 8, 2015.23 Director Austin wrote Mr. Carroll two letters on April 9, 2015.24 The first letter informed Mr. Carroll of an Administrative Hearing scheduled for April 15, 2015 for his Student Code of Conduct violations on March 31, 2015.25 The second letter informed Mr. Carroll Director Austin rescheduled the April 3, 2015 Administrative Hearing for April 15, 2015 and all of his pending cases would be heard during the April 15, 2015 Administrative Hearing.26 These letters also informed Mr. Carroll the University would assess monetary sanctions if he failed to attend the hearing.27

Mr. Carroll did not attend the April 15, 2015 Administrative Hearing.28 At the hearing, Director Austin “reviewed the evidence without the benefit of Mr. Carroll’s testimony, [and] found [Mr. Carroll] violated the Student Code of Conduct related to the charges” for all of his recent cases combined.29 Director Austin placed five sanctions on Mr. Carroll: (1) suspension from the University effective April 17, 2015 through December 31, 2015 meaning Mr. Carroll would not able to re- enroll in classes until the Spring 2016 semester, (2) required mental health assessment and evaluation, (3) $100 fine for failing to appear at the April 15, 2015 Administrative Hearing, (4) deferred expulsion resulting in immediate imposition should Mr. Carroll engage in any new

misconduct, and (5) restrictions from the entire University campus beginning March 27, 2015 until informed otherwise.30 In an April 17, 2015 letter, Director Austin informed Mr. Carroll of these sanctions and his right to appeal within five business days.31 Mr. Carroll received an electronic copy of the April 17, 2015 letter the same day, beginning the five business-day appeal period.32 Fourteen days later, Mr. Carroll appealed to Director Austin, Assistant Director Wiafe and Assistant Vice President Richardson.33 Judicial Affairs Handbook sets due process for an appeal.

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CARROLL v. ANDERS, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carroll-v-anders-paed-2020.