Derek Thomas v. Jacqueline Carmichael

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 23, 2026
Docket23-2552
StatusPublished
AuthorRippledissents

This text of Derek Thomas v. Jacqueline Carmichael (Derek Thomas v. Jacqueline Carmichael) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Derek Thomas v. Jacqueline Carmichael, (7th Cir. 2026).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ No. 23-2552 DEREK THOMAS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v.

JACQUELINE CARMICHAEL, et al., Defendants-Appellees. ____________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana, Terre Haute Division. No. 2:21-cv-00160 — James R. Sweeney II, Chief Judge. ____________________

ARGUED MAY 28, 2025 — DECIDED JANUARY 23, 2026 ____________________

Before RIPPLE, ST. EVE, and KOLAR, Circuit Judges. KOLAR, Circuit Judge. Derek Thomas served part of his criminal sentence at the Federal Correctional Complex (FCC) in Terre Haute, Indiana. He alleges that, while housed there, he was attacked by his cellmate repeatedly and suffered seri- ous injuries. He now brings claims against several prison of- ficials from FCC Terre Haute under Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics, 403 U.S. 388 (1971). He says two of these officials violated the Eighth 2 No. 23-2552

Amendment by failing to protect him from his cellmate. And he says all defendants violated the Eighth Amendment by act- ing with deliberate indifference to his serious medical needs. The district court granted defendants summary judgment, and Thomas now appeals. The facts of this case are disturbing. We take Thomas at his word—and the evidence certainly seems to suggest—that he was brutally attacked. And perhaps corrections officials could have done more to protect Thomas. But we are not asked to decide whether an attack occurred or whether cor- rections officials could have done more to prevent an attack. With a few nuances more fully discussed below, we are pri- marily confronted with two questions: (1) does Thomas pre- sent a claim previously recognized under Bivens or the very few cases to expand Bivens; and (2) can Thomas defeat the de- fendants’ qualified-immunity defense even though he did not point to any clearly established law in the district court? Prec- edent precludes us from answering these questions in Thomas’s favor. Thus, we affirm the district court’s judgment. I. Background We present the facts and draw all reasonable inferences in Thomas’s favor, as he is the non-movant. Taylor v. Schwarzhu- ber, 132 F.4th 480, 486 (7th Cir. 2025). A. Underlying Facts In 2014, Thomas was sentenced to fifteen years in prison after pleading guilty to production of child pornography. Af- ter he was sentenced, he moved among various prisons until, three years into his sentence, he was transferred to FCC Terre Haute. This prison has two facilities. One is the Federal No. 23-2552 3

Correctional Institute (FCI) Terre Haute; the other is the United States Penitentiary (USP) Terre Haute. Officials originally placed Thomas in the general popula- tion of the FCI. The day he was placed in general population, inmates there asked about his conviction. When Thomas con- fessed he was a sex offender, the inmates told him to check into protective custody immediately or be killed. Thomas did so and was sent to the Special Housing Unit (SHU) within the FCI. Even while in the SHU, though, inmates sought to harm Thomas by tainting his food with pebbles, staples, chicken bones, and shards of glass. Thomas told Dr. Jacqueline Car- michael, a psychologist at FCC Terre Haute (and a defendant here), that he could not eat his food because it was consist- ently tainted. A day after he said this, staff transferred Thomas to another SHU, this one within the USP. About two weeks after he was transferred, Thomas was placed in a cell with a man whose initials are G.L. Things be- came violent once G.L. learned that Thomas was a sex of- fender. Within thirty minutes of their meeting, G.L. beat Thomas unconscious and threatened to kill him if he reported the beating. Thomas tried to covertly tell staff about this beat- ing by slipping a note under his cell door as G.L. slept. The note went unanswered, though Dr. Erin Conner, a psycholo- gist in the SHU at the USP (and a defendant here), later told Thomas she saw the note. A week after this first beating, Thomas told his correc- tional counselor, Tracy Joslyn (also a defendant here), about the attack. She reportedly replied: “you don’t get to pick who you cell with. You’re going back[.]” In the following days, 4 No. 23-2552

G.L. beat Thomas multiple times and knocked out two of his teeth. Around two weeks after Thomas told Counselor Joslyn about G.L.’s violence, Thomas and G.L. were transferred to- gether to the SHU in the FCI. They remained cellmates. A few days after this transfer, G.L. choked Thomas unconscious. Thomas then wrote to Dr. Carmichael directly—again slip- ping a note under his cell door while G.L. slept—that G.L. was beating him. Dr. Carmichael later admitted receiving this let- ter. During Dr. Carmichael’s rounds the following week, Thomas covertly showed her his bruises. He mouthed “help me” and, pointing to G.L., said “beating me[.]” In response, Dr. Carmichael held up a clipboard that read “do you need [Special Investigative Services] to pull you out?” to which Thomas said “yes[.]” But Thomas was not removed from his cell and alleges that, later that day, G.L. beat him, choked him unconscious, and then raped him. In a later interview with officials, Thomas described waking up on his bunk—after G.L. choked him—with his pants down, ointment on his anus, and pain in his rectum. From this, Thomas said, he “deduce[d] that [he] had been raped.” During Dr. Carmichael’s rounds the next week, Thomas told her G.L. had raped him. Dr. Carmichael told Thomas she understood and that she was forwarding his earlier note to her boss. Later that day, Thomas was removed from his cell and placed in a new cell. The day after he was removed from his cell, Thomas posted a request for medical attention on his cell door using a standard form. In it he said he had “injuries and blood in [his] stools.” That same day he also wrote to Dr. Carmichael asking to speak with her because he was not sleeping and was “still No. 23-2552 5

in shock.” Two days after sending her this note, he sent her another. The next week, Thomas told Counselor Joslyn he had been raped and asked for medical and psychological treatment. He also asked for a grievance form to complain that he had not yet been seen by any medical staff. A week after this conver- sation, Counselor Joslyn gave him a grievance form. After receiving a report that Thomas was suicidal, Dr. Car- michael met with Thomas and conducted a suicide risk as- sessment. Thomas testified he told Dr. Carmichael about the rape, but her report does not reflect this information. Her re- port states Thomas denied suicidality, and that she concluded Thomas was a “low” acute suicide risk. The same month Dr. Carmichael assessed Thomas, Thomas filed a grievance about the rape, which prompted Dr. Conner and Special Investigative Services Lieutenant Jamie Baker (a defendant in this case) to interview him. The same day he was interviewed, Thomas saw Nurse Matthew Worthington (another defendant), who explained that he could not collect any evidence of the rape given how much time had passed. Though Thomas showed Nurse Worthing- ton his broken teeth and bruises, Thomas claims Nurse Worthington did not physically examine him. After Thomas disclosed the rape in a letter to outside enti- ties, he underwent another evaluation by Nurse Corey Pointer (another defendant) as part of the protocol mandated by the Prison Rape Elimination Act. Thomas testified that Nurse Pointer’s evaluation was “humiliating,” because he was ordered to disrobe in front of correctional officers who then laughed at him. Thomas also said that he asked Nurse 6 No. 23-2552

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Derek Thomas v. Jacqueline Carmichael, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/derek-thomas-v-jacqueline-carmichael-ca7-2026.