Copeland v. Northwestern Memorial Hospital

964 F. Supp. 1225, 38 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 222, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7534, 1997 WL 291374
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedMay 30, 1997
Docket96 C 1270
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 964 F. Supp. 1225 (Copeland v. Northwestern Memorial Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Copeland v. Northwestern Memorial Hospital, 964 F. Supp. 1225, 38 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 222, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7534, 1997 WL 291374 (N.D. Ill. 1997).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

ALESIA, District Judge.

Before the court are numerous motions by the parties in this ease. Defendants Northwestern Memorial Hospital, the City of Chicago, Abel Pena, and Lee Harbaugh have brought motions to dismiss plaintiff Clyde Copeland’s complaint. Plaintiff Clyde Copeland has brought motions related to various discovery requests, for production of transcripts, for issuance of a subpoena, to substitute parties of interest, and for summary judgment. For the reasons that follow, the court grants defendants’ motions to dismiss, and strikes some and denies some of Copeland’s motions as set forth below.

I. BACKGROUND 1

Early in the morning on March 3, 1994, plaintiff Clyde Copeland suffered a stressful encounter that resulted in a panic attack, so he took his prescribed anxiety medication, Xanax. Copeland then blacked out. The next thing Copeland remembered occurred-seven or eight hours later and miles away; he was running north on LaSalle Street in downtown Chicago.

At the moment Copeland’s cognizance returned, he was having memories of robbing or attempting to rob the Harris Bank at the Board of Trade in downtown Chicago on four occasions in 1981, 1982, and 1983. Copeland’s mood was vacillating between disorientation and hopelessness, agitation and fear, anxiousness and melancholy. For relief, Copeland went on a cocaine binge that lasted until the next day.

When Copeland’s binge was over, his distraught mood returned. So, in the late afternoon on March 4, 1994, Copeland presented himself at the emergency room at Northwestern Memorial Hospital (“Northwestern” or “the hospital”), seeking psychiatric intervention and treatment and admission to the hospital. A nurse interviewed Copeland pri- or to his admission. He told her that he was frightened after coming down from his cocaine binge and wanted to speak with a psychiatrist. He also told her that he recently had been released from the psychiatric unit at Illinois Masonic Hospital in Chicago, and gave her the names of his doctor there and the medications he was taking.

When the nurse asked Copeland how much cocaine he had consumed, Copeland told her *1230 about $1,400 worth. The nurse asked where Copeland got the money to buy the cocaine, and he replied, “I don’t know. Yesterday I had a blackout after taking my Xanax and when I came to I had the money. That’s why I’m so scared — I don’t know what happened yesterday.”

The nurse then referred Copeland to an admissions clerk to complete the necessary paperwork for hospital admission. After Copeland was finished, the nurse again asked him how he got the money for the cocaine. He said that he did not remember. The nurse asked Copeland if he ever had committed any crimes, and Copeland responded that he was a convicted felon. The nurse asked Copeland about the last crime he had committed; he told her it was a bank robbery at the Board of Trade building at LaSalle and Jackson in Chicago. The nurse told Copeland that that was all she needed and that a doctor should be available soon.

After a long wait, Copeland began to feel extremely anxious and asked the nurse if she had a cigarette. She did not but told a security guard to find Copeland a cigarette. When Copeland walked outside the emergency room to smoke, the nurse had the security guard accompany him. A little while later, the nurse told Copeland that the doctor was available and that the security guard would escort Copeland to the doctor.

The security guard took Copeland to his office, where he told Copeland that Copeland had to submit to a strip search. Copeland protested, stating that it seemed like he was being arrested. The guard explained that because Copeland was going to be admitted to a psychiatric ward, he had to submit to the search for everyone’s safety, including Ms own, and that the search was hospital policy. Copeland then consented to the search.

The guard then escorted Copeland to a locked observation room, which could be opened only from the outside. At one point while Copeland was in the observation room, a doctor entered with six to eight students, and asked Copeland if he would answer some questions. Copeland agreed.. Copeland recounted his recent status as a psyeMatric patient at Illinois Masóme, Ms blackout the day before, Ms cocaine binge, and the ex-

treme emotions that precipitated Copeland’s presentment to Northwestern.

The doctor stated that the nurse told him that Copeland had robbed the bank at the Board of Trade, wMch Copeland acknowledged. The doctor then asked Copeland if that was how he got Ms money to buy cocaine. Copeland replied that he did not know; that he could not remember what he did for several hours the previous day; and that he already had the money when Ms memory returned. The doctor reframed and asked again the questions about Copeland’s criminal past, but Copeland answered as before. The doctor and students then left the observation room, the doctor telling Copeland on his way out that Copeland would be put in the psyeMatric umt soon, and that when he got there, he and the doctor would talk about his medication.

Some time later, the nurse entered the observation room with two Chicago police officers. The officers handcuffed Copeland without speaking to him. One of the officers asked the nurse if Copeland was on any medication or had any medical or psyeMatric conditions that would require special handling. She replied, “We haven’t done anytMng with him but hold him for you.”

The officers took Copeland from the hospital and brought him to the police station. During the ride, one officer said that they had a long rnght ahead of them, interrogating Copeland and typing up the reports of the investigation. The other officer replied that this was the easiest duty they could have received, because that mght they were just “errand boys for the Feebees,” meaning the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”). The first officer asked for the arrest warrant from the “feds” to go along with Ms report. The second officer replied that they did not need a warrant, since tMs was not their “collar,” and that all they had to do was hold Copeland overnight.

At the police station, Copeland was photographed and fingerprinted and placed in a cell. The next morning, March 5, 1994, the CMcago police transferred custody of Copeland to Lee Harbaugh, special agent for the FBI. Harbaugh handcuffed Copeland’s hands *1231 in front of him and placed Copeland in the front seat of Harbaugh’s ear. Harbaugh removed his jacket and got in the car. His weapon was holstered on his right side and was accessible to Copeland, making Copeland fear that Harbaugh was tempting Copeland to make an escape attempt. As Harbaugh began driving, Copeland began fidgeting in his seat. Harbaugh said he wished that Copeland would try it. Harbaugh then said, “If you don’t cooperate with me I might just kill you. You see we can do anything we want with you. You’re nothing. A nigger and a nut. Who’ll care if we lose you? Nobody. I’ll be a hero. Go ahead, try it.” Copeland did not respond for fear of provoking Harbaugh to kill him.

At FBI headquarters, Harbaugh took Copeland to a large room with rows of desks and handcuffed him to a desk chair.

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964 F. Supp. 1225, 38 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 222, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7534, 1997 WL 291374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/copeland-v-northwestern-memorial-hospital-ilnd-1997.