Cohen v. Coahoma County, Miss.

805 F. Supp. 398, 1992 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20670, 1992 WL 322053
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Mississippi
DecidedSeptember 28, 1992
DocketDC 91-198-B-O
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 805 F. Supp. 398 (Cohen v. Coahoma County, Miss.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cohen v. Coahoma County, Miss., 805 F. Supp. 398, 1992 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20670, 1992 WL 322053 (N.D. Miss. 1992).

Opinion

ORDER

BIGGERS, District Judge.

Upon consideration of plaintiff’s Motion for Temporary Restraining Order and Motion for Preliminary Injunction, and the file and records in this action, the court finds that the Report and Recommendations of the United States Magistrate Judge dated August 31, 1992 was on that date duly served by regular mail upon counsel of record for plaintiff Michael Cohen and for defendants; that more than ten days have elapsed since service of said Report and Recommendations; and that no objection thereto has been filed or served by any party. The court is of the opinion that the magistrate judge’s Report and Recommendations should be approved and adopted as the opinion of the court. It is, therefore

ORDERED:

1. That the Report and Recommendations of the United States Magistrate Judge dated August 31, 1992 be, and it is hereby, approved and adopted as the opinion of the court.

2. That plaintiff’s Motion for Temporary Restraining Order be, and it is hereby, denied as moot.

*400 3. That plaintiffs Motion for Preliminary Injunction, be, and it is hereby, sustained, and that defendants Coahoma County, Mississippi and Andrew S. Thompson, Jr., Sheriff of Coahoma County, their subordinates and those acting in concert with them be, and they are hereby, enjoined, pending entry of final judgment in this action, from inflicting physical pain upon prisoners in the custody of the sheriff for the purpose of coercing information from such prisoners.

4. That plaintiff be, and is hereby, relieved of any duty to post security in connection with the preliminary injunction herein granted.

5. That defendants Coahoma County, Mississippi, and Andrew S. Thompson, Jr., Sheriff of Coahoma County, pay to plaintiff an interim award of his attorney fees and expenses reasonably incurred in obtaining preliminary injunctive relief. The issue of the amount of such attorney fees and expenses is hereby referred to United States Magistrate Judge J. David Orlansky for determination. Within 11 days of this date plaintiff shall serve an itemized affidavit of his said attorney fees and expenses, reasonably incurred by him in obtaining such relief. Defendants may serve any desired responses or counter affidavit within 11 days of the date of service of plaintiffs affidavit. The magistrate judge will thereafter enter an order fixing the amount of the expenses to be paid.

REPORT AND RECOMMENDATIONS

ORLANSKY, United States Magistrate Judge.

By order dated January 10, 1992 in the above entitled action, plaintiff’s Motion for Temporary Restraining Order and Motion for Preliminary Injunction were referred to the magistrate judge for further consideration and issuance of a report and recommendations. Pursuant to the order of reference, 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1)(B) and Local Rule M-4.1(b)(2), the magistrate judge has conducted an evidentiary hearing on plaintiffs said motions at which plaintiff and defendants appeared both in person and by counsel. Following the hearing the parties submitted additional memoranda of authorities.

Upon consideration of the evidence adduced at the hearing, the motion papers, and the arguments of counsel, it is recommended that the court adopt the following as the findings of fact and conclusions of law required by Rule 52, Federal Rules of Civil Procedure; that plaintiffs Motion for Temporary Restraining Order be denied as moot; and that plaintiffs Motion for Preliminary Injunction be sustained.

I. FACTS.

The material facts are not in substantial dispute. Plaintiff Michael Cohen is an inmate of the Coahoma County Jail at Clarks-dale, and, as such, is in the custody of defendant Andrew S. Thompson, Jr., the duly elected Sheriff of Coahoma County. Plaintiff Cohen was also an inmate of the Coahoma County Jail on January 24, 1991. However, he has not been continuously confined in the jail since that date. The record in this action does not make precisely clear when or why plaintiff Cohen left the jail after January 24,1991, nor when or why his present period of incarceration there began. While the missing information might be of some historical interest for background purposes, it is not essential to resolution of any issue now before the court.

On January 24, 1991 two inmates of the Coahoma County Jail, Alonzo Wilson and Eddie Wilkins, attempted to escape while leaving church services which were conducted in the conference room on the first floor. They attempted to make their escape by breaking through glass doors at the front of the jail, but were seized by officers while the attempt was in progress. Wilson and Wilkins were shackled hand and foot and were then taken into the conference room where church services had been held. They were at that time fully controlled by the officers, and there were no further escape attempts. All of the other inmates were locked in their cells or secured behind locked doors.

*401 When the escape attempt occurred, Sheriff Thompson was not at the jail, but was at the courthouse approximately one block away. When he learned of the escape attempt he immediately went to the jail and found Wilson and Wilkins secured in the conference room. There was at that time no disturbance, and all of the inmates were under control. An investigation of the escape attempt was promptly begun, and it was learned that plans for the escape had involved at least one other inmate and that the escape plan called for the glass front doors of the jail to be broken with a metal bar which the conspiring inmates had secreted somewhere in the jail. However, the bar was not used by Wilson and Wilkins in their abortive attempt.

Sheriff Thompson questioned Wilson and Wilkins in the conference room in an effort to obtain information which might lead officers to weapons and implements, including the metal bar, which had been secreted for use in the planned escape attempt. That interrogation was not productive. Accordingly, Sheriff Thompson obtained a length of coaxial cable approximately three to three and one-half feet long. A length of such cable was received in evidence at the hearing as Exhibit P-3, and is identical in appearance to the cable ordinarily used by cable television systems to transmit their signals. According to Sheriff Thompson he used this length of cable in an attempt to “coerce” Wilson and Wilkins into revealing where the metal bar was secreted and was thereby able to extract from them the information that it was upstairs in the jail. According to Thompson, in the process of “coercing” them he struck Wilson and Wilkins on the buttocks with the cable “a couple of times each.”

Unable to learn more from Wilson and Wilkins, Sheriff Thompson had them taken to their third floor cell and there proceeded to interrogate the five occupants of the cell, including Wilson and Wilkins, concerning the location of the metal bar, which by that time Thompson believed to be a brace discovered to be missing from a serving table. Thompson asked the occupants of the cell to surrender the metal bar or brace, but they did not respond.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
805 F. Supp. 398, 1992 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 20670, 1992 WL 322053, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cohen-v-coahoma-county-miss-msnd-1992.