Current v. Dept. of Rehab. & Corr.

2018 Ohio 1500
CourtOhio Court of Claims
DecidedMarch 20, 2018
Docket2016-00488JD
StatusPublished

This text of 2018 Ohio 1500 (Current v. Dept. of Rehab. & Corr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Current v. Dept. of Rehab. & Corr., 2018 Ohio 1500 (Ohio Super. Ct. 2018).

Opinion

[Cite as Current v. Dept. of Rehab. & Corr., 2018-Ohio-1500.]

TERRY CURRENT Case No. 2016-00488JD

Plaintiff Magistrate Robert Van Schoyck

v. DECISION OF THE MAGISTRATE

OHIO DEPARTMENT OF REHABILITATION AND CORRECTION

Defendant

{¶1} Plaintiff brings this action claiming that when he was incarcerated in defendant’s custody and control at London Correctional Institution (LCI), another inmate attacked and injured him on March 25, 2011, due to the negligence of defendant. The issues of liability and damages were bifurcated and the case proceeded to trial on the issue of liability. {¶2} At trial, plaintiff testified that in 2006 he and his nephew Tommy Scott were incarcerated in the same housing unit at LCI. According to plaintiff, another inmate in the housing unit, Joseph Rosebrook, was in prison for attempting to have Scott’s father killed, and he had a list of other people whom he wanted to have killed and he spoke of hiring a hitman. Plaintiff stated that one name on Rosebrook’s list was a man named Dan Ott. Plaintiff testified that he and Rosebrook were among a group of inmates watching a television news show one day when a story aired about the homicide of a man in Geauga County named Dan Ott. According to plaintiff, this was not the man on Rosebrook’s list, and Rosebrook exclaimed that “they killed the wrong S.O.B.” {¶3} Plaintiff related that when this happened, he had been sharing information with Detective Keith Levan of the Logan County Sheriff’s Office about a separate murder investigation. Plaintiff stated that he subsequently began sharing information about Rosebrook and Ott with both Levan and Detective Juanita Vetter of the Geauga County Sheriff’s Office. Plaintiff stated that the LCI Investigator at the time, Marty Case No. 2016-00488JD -2- DECISION

Dillard, and the then-Assistant Investigator, Matthew Crisler, helped arrange interviews and communications with Vetter, and he remembered Dillard sitting in on one or more interviews. Plaintiff testified that he was told, apparently by Dillard, that if he was ever concerned for his safety he could notify the captain’s office or any staff member and ask to be put in protective control. {¶4} Plaintiff stated that defendant released him from LCI in 2007 after he served out his sentence. Plaintiff related that he was on post-release control afterward and stayed in touch with Levan. According to plaintiff, stories about Rosebrook and the killing of Ott later appeared in the news media and named him as an informant. About six months after his name appeared in the news, plaintiff stated, he was arrested on new criminal charges for which he was eventually sentenced to a four-year prison term. {¶5} Plaintiff testified that on January 22, 2010, he started serving his sentence at defendant’s Correctional Reception Center (CRC). Plaintiff recounted explaining to an employee there, Classification Specialist Amy Robie, that he would feel unsafe at LCI due to his history both with Rosebrook and with another man he served time with there named Carl Simons. A memo prepared by Robie documented that plaintiff told her he needed to be separated from Simons, whom plaintiff stated that he had testified against in Champaign County, and Robie noted that Simons was in the custody of Champaign County at that time. (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 2.) {¶6} Nine days after plaintiff’s arrival at CRC defendant placed him at LCI, he testified. According to plaintiff, at LCI he was assigned to the same housing unit as an inmate named Chad South who had been at LCI during part of plaintiff’s prior prison term. Plaintiff stated that he suspected, and later learned from South himself, that South was the hitman responsible for Ott’s death. Plaintiff stated that after South confided in him, he shared the information with Crisler. Plaintiff testified that Crisler asked if he felt that South posed a danger to him and that he said no, but that he told Crisler he was worried about Rosebrook arranging an attack upon him. It was plaintiff’s Case No. 2016-00488JD -3- DECISION

testimony that he felt Rosebrook had the ability to arrange from another institution to have an attack carried out on him “through the prison grapevine.” Plaintiff related that at no time during his second term at LCI were either Rosebrook or Simons there. Nevertheless, plaintiff stated, as soon as he arrived inmates called him a snitch. Plaintiff also stated that when a telephone rang one day, a lieutenant joked that plaintiff should answer because the call was probably for him. Plaintiff stated that within ten days of his arrival LCI, an inmate named J. Farr attacked him, and he felt that this was due to his being an informant. {¶7} Plaintiff recounted that he was later transported to the Champaign County jail where he remained for a month or more so he could testify in Simons’ criminal case. Vetter came to see him at the jail to talk about South and the Ott homicide, plaintiff stated. From plaintiff’s testimony, they apparently agreed that upon his return to LCI he would not seek to transfer out of there until South’s sentence expired. {¶8} Plaintiff stated that less than two weeks after he returned from the jail to LCI, an inmate named Weber attacked him on February 12, 2011. According to plaintiff, he felt that this was due to his reputation as an informant. Plaintiff admitted, however, that when he appeared before the Rules Infraction Board (RIB) on a charge of fighting Weber, he pleaded guilty and his recorded testimony made no reference to that theory nor gave any indication that he felt he was in danger leading up to that altercation or in the future. (Defendant’s Exhibit B.) Plaintiff insisted that he told the RIB about Rosebrook and Simons and expressed concern for his safety, but that these statements must have been ignored, and he also suggested that his written testimony had been tampered with. {¶9} Plaintiff testified that a Separation Order was issued to keep him and Weber apart (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 6), that the RIB ordered him to serve 15 days in the segregation unit for fighting Weber, and that while he was there he wrote a kite to Crisler. Crisler then met with him, plaintiff stated, and told him that he would be safe in segregation and Case No. 2016-00488JD -4- DECISION

that if he ever felt unsafe he was to tell any staff member that he needed to see Crisler. Plaintiff admitted that when the 15 days were up, he could have refused to leave segregation if he feared for his safety, but that he instead reentered the general population. Plaintiff explained that he did not want to stay in segregation because he would not have access to the commissary or enjoy other privileges, he felt safer in the general population, and segregation is an undesirable place where inmates are sent to be punished. Plaintiff stated that he later telephoned Vetter and told her there was no more information for him to provide, and that at some point afterward Crisler met him again and asked if he felt threatened. Plaintiff stated that Crisler told him he could contact any staff member if he did feel threatened, and that Crisler would have him transferred out of LCI. {¶10} Later on, plaintiff stated, he observed a document posted on a bulletin board in the LCI law library, being a narrative report from the City of Urbana Police Division regarding information plaintiff shared with that agency about purported criminal activity involving Simons. (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 5.) Plaintiff explained that he seized the document and did some investigating which led him to believe that Simons, despite being at another prison, was responsible for the posting of the document and meant for some harm to be done to plaintiff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2018 Ohio 1500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/current-v-dept-of-rehab-corr-ohioctcl-2018.