Darrel Leon Rayford v. Centurion of Florida LLC, et al.

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Florida
DecidedMarch 9, 2026
Docket3:25-cv-00627
StatusUnknown

This text of Darrel Leon Rayford v. Centurion of Florida LLC, et al. (Darrel Leon Rayford v. Centurion of Florida LLC, et al.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Darrel Leon Rayford v. Centurion of Florida LLC, et al., (N.D. Fla. 2026).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA PENSACOLA DIVISION

DARREL LEON RAYFORD,

Plaintiff,

v. Case No. 3:25cv627-LC-HTC

CENTURION OF FLORIDA LLC, et al.,

Defendants. _________________________________/ REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION Plaintiff Darrel Leon Rayford, a prisoner proceeding pro se and in forma pauperis, alleges Defendant Centurion of Florida LLC (“Centurion”) violated the Eighth Amendment by displaying deliberate indifference to a right knee injury he suffered while incarcerated. Doc. 15. Centurion has filed a motion to dismiss (Doc. 29) and Rayford responded in opposition (Doc. 45). After reviewing the parties’ submissions and the relevant law, the undersigned concludes the motion should be GRANTED because: (1) Rayford failed to exhaust his administrative remedies regarding his claim against Centurion; and (2) his factual allegations do not support a deliberate indifference claim against Centurion. I. Background Rayford sues Centurion, a contractor that provides medical care to inmates in the Florida Department of Corrections (“FDOC”), and three of its employees, Dr. E. Hernandez-Perez, Nurse Kelley Coone, and Nurse Melanie Carter. The second amended complaint (Doc. 15) sets forth the following factual allegations, which are

accepted as true for purposes of this Report and Recommendation. In May 2023, Rayford injured his right knee while playing basketball at Okaloosa Correctional Institution (“Okaloosa CI”). He heard “a pop sound” in the

knee, felt “excruciating pain,” and was unable to stand with all his weight on the knee. Security staff immediately escorted Rayford to the medical department for an examination. Nurse Coone asked Rayford to try to walk; Coone observed Rayford’s knee

was “extremely swollen” and, based on his behavior and facial expression, saw that he was in “a tremendous amount of pain.” Coone ordered x-rays, which were taken the same day as the injury. Coone told Rayford she could find nothing abnormal on

the x-rays and an MRI would need to be conducted. About a month after the injury, Coone and Dr. Hernandez-Perez provided Rayford with crutches. In August 2023, Rayford was transferred to the Reception and Medical Center (“RMC”), where medical staff informed him that Coone had scheduled him to

receive “progressive rehabilitative and physical exercise therapy.” Over a span of three months, Rayford was forced, under threat of disciplinary action, to complete twelve sessions of “rigorous and painful multi-training exercises.” He could not

properly complete the exercises due to pain and because “the tendons which connect his quadriceps muscle to his kneecap was clearly disconnected.” Rayford maintains the physical therapy sessions increased his pain and “only made his injury worse.”

In December 2023, Rayford was transferred back to Okaloosa CI in more pain than when he suffered the knee injury in May 2023; the chronic pain interfered with his sleep. In March 2024, Nurse Coone prescribed him 500 mg naproxen pills “for

the first time for his chronic knee pain” but he “was told to take only half to save them money.” At various sick call visits, Rayford complained to Coone that the naproxen did nothing to dull his chronic knee pain. Coone refused to prescribe another, stronger pain medicine “that would work despite having access to stronger

medicine.” In April 2024, Coone and Dr. Hernandez-Perez provided Rayford a “non-hinged type knee brace.” Sometime after December 2023, Dr. Hernandez-Perez conducted an

independent examination of Rayford’s knee and reviewed the x-rays that Coone had ordered in May 2023. Hernandez-Perez explained to Rayford that the lateral collateral ligament (“LCL”) in his right knee “was completely torn.” Rayford showed Hernandez-Perez his right knee; he pointed to the top of his kneecap and

pressed his finger down, “evidencing no connective tissue present.” Rayford then showed Hernandez-Perez his left knee for comparison, “where the other was obviously connected.” Hernandez-Perez nodded his head in agreement and explained that an LCL tear is a common injury among athletes that causes pain and other symptoms.

Rayford asked whether minor LCL tears “usually heal after 3-12 weeks … with general management and treatment involving the use of ice packs, crutches, and … a hinged knee brace.” Hernandez-Perez said “yes.”

Rayford looked at both his legs side by side and told Hernandez-Perez the quad muscle in his right leg had “shrunk a lot.” Hernandez-Perez nodded in agreement and explained that it appeared “major surgery … probably would be required to fix it and for [Rayford] to gain full use of his leg,” but “he couldn’t say

for sure without the results of an MRI or ultrasound scan to determine the full extent of the injury.” Rayford immediately requested that those diagnostic tests be performed and

that he be prescribed a stronger pain medication to address the constant aching and numbness in his leg. Rayford also indicated that when he walked, he felt like his leg had “no balance, like it’s going to collapse on the injured side.” Hernandez-Perez refused to prescribe different medication or order an MRI, saying “it’s not in the best

interests of company costs for stronger pain medicines or an MRI scan.” On October 4, 2024, Hernandez-Perez told Rayford he was going to prescribe a different treatment—therapeutic soles for his shoes and four 10-mg steroid pills a

day to help with his knee pain and minimize the swelling. Rayford asked about surgery but Hernandez-Perez said “We gonna do one step at a time.” When Rayford asked about an MRI, Hernandez-Perez replied, “they not gonna pay the money for

an MRI.” Rayford told Hernandez-Perez that Coone said she “put him in for an MRI scan.” Hernandez-Perez said, “you’re like the 20th person she told that she was gonna do something for and was lying.” Rayford asserts the steroid pills did

“nothing to dull [his] knee pain or help his knee heal itself properly.” Between March 2024 and September 2024, Rayford filed multiple grievances complaining about the adequacy of his treatment and requesting diagnostic imaging, surgery, and to see a specialist. Some of these grievances were reviewed and

responded to by Dr. Hernandez-Perez and Nurse Carter. The responses denied Rayford’s grievances and informed him that medical personnel were responsible for determining his treatment regimen.

In February 2025, Rayford was transferred back to the RMC for an MRI “due to multiple sick calls without relief from pain and reduced function of knee.” The MRI was taken in March 2025, and Dr. Owens diagnosed Rayford as having a problem with his meniscus and ordered surgery. The surgery on Rayford’s knee was

performed on July 11, 2025. Based on the foregoing, Rayford alleges the Defendants violated the Eighth Amendment by exhibiting deliberate indifference to his right knee injury. As relief,

he seeks compensatory and punitive damages, as well as injunctive relief. II. Failure to Exhaust Centurion argues Rayford’s claim against it should be dismissed because he

failed to exhaust his administrative remedies before filing this action. After reviewing the parties’ arguments and Rayford’s grievances, the undersigned concludes Rayford did not exhaust his deliberate indifference claim against

Centurion because he never filed a grievance asserting his inadequate treatment was due to a custom or policy. A. Legal Standard The Prison Litigation Reform Act (“PLRA”) provides that “[n]o action shall

be brought with respect to prison conditions under section 1983 of this title, or any other Federal law, by a prisoner confined in any jail, prison, or other correctional facility until such administrative remedies as are available are exhausted.” 42 U.S.C.

§ 1997e(a).

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