Donald E. Mitchell Jr v. State of Nevada Department of Corrections

CourtDistrict Court, D. Nevada
DecidedMay 7, 2020
Docket2:17-cv-00986
StatusUnknown

This text of Donald E. Mitchell Jr v. State of Nevada Department of Corrections (Donald E. Mitchell Jr v. State of Nevada Department of Corrections) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Nevada primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Donald E. Mitchell Jr v. State of Nevada Department of Corrections, (D. Nev. 2020).

Opinion

1 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 2 DISTRICT OF NEVADA 3 Donald E. Mitchell, Jr., Case No.: 2:17-cv-00986-JAD-BNW 4 Plaintiff 5 v. Order Granting Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment 6 State of Nevada ex rel Nevada Department of Corrections, et al., 7 [ECF No. 24] Defendants 8 9 In this prisoner civil-rights case, plaintiff Donald E. Mitchell sues defendants Senior 10 Correction Officer Devona Jimenez1 and Lieutenant Patrick Moreda for allegedly retaliating 11 against him for exercising his grievance rights and for filing a false notice of charges and 12 denying him due process in the disciplinary hearing that resulted in a sanction of 180 days in 13 solitary confinement.2 The defendants move for summary judgment on both claims, arguing that 14 (1)the noticeof charges served a legitimate penologicalpurpose of disciplining Mitchell for his 15 disruptive behavior and wasunrelated to his grievance rights, (2) Mitchell has not established a 16 liberty interest for his due-process claim, and (3) even if his claims had merit, they would fail 17 because the officers are entitled to qualified immunity.3 Because Mitchell hasn’t shown that 18 Jimenez had a retaliatory motive in denying him shower, phone, or law library access, his 19 retaliationclaim against Jimenez fails. His retaliation claim against Moreda also fails because 20 the notice of charges was based on his frivolous grievance activity andverbal comments that 21 22 1 Defendant Jimenez has since changed her last name to Troutman, but I continue to refer to her as Jimenez in this order. 23 2 ECF No. 3 (complaint). 3 ECF No. 24 (motion for summary judgment). 1 served only to harass, putting Mitchell’s grievance activity outside the First Amendment’s 2 protection. And becauseit is not clearly established that 180 days in solitary confinement is an 3 “atypical or significant hardship”4 on his confinement that qualifiesas a liberty interest, Mitchell 4 cannot defeat the defendants’ claim of qualified immunity. So I grant summary judgment in 5 favor of the defendants and close this case.

6 Background 7 I. Plumbing issues at High Desert State Prison caused sewage to spill into Unit 3 C/D. 8 During the week of May 11, 2016,inmates at High Desert State Prison (HDSP) damaged 9 the plumbing in units 3 C/D by flushing bedding, make-shift weapons, and trash down the 10 toilets.5 This caused sewage to spill into the unit and the cells. Because the prison was full, 11 there was nowhere to move the 168 inmates in the unit, so maintenance workers began repairing 12 the plumbing with the inmates in their cells.6 During this week, “[m]aintenance crews would 13 temporarily shut off water to the entire unit from time to time to perform repairs with little or no 14 warning to unit staff.”7

15 Jimenez took a number of steps “to address unit sanitation and inmate health” during this 16 time, including “distributing cleaning supplies to prisoners,” overseeing intermittent access to the 17 showers when the water was on, “requesting an alternative feeding schedule and feeding 18 procedures, and requesting regular reports on the progress of the repairs.”8 Staff continued to 19 20 21 4 Sandin v. Conner, 515 U.S. 472, 487 (1995). 5 ECF No. 27-1 at 27 (response to grievance). 22 6 Id. 23 7 ECF No. 25 at 10(Jimenez’s declaration). 8 Id. 1 use a written-request system to oversee the use of the two phones available amongst the 168 2 inmates.9 3 II. Mitchell files grievances to complain about the sewage debris in his cell and the unit 4 conditions. 5 On May 15, 2016, maintenance staff werefixing the plumbingissues in Mitchell’s unit 6 and shut off the water around 6:30 p.m.10 Throughout the day, Mitchell “bang[ed]on the door 7 demanding an [e]mergency [g]rievance” to complain about sewage and plumbing conditions.11 8 He banged on the cell door and window and yelled at Jimenez to “Come Here!” At one point he 9 stated, “You’re going to have to kill me,”prompting Jimenez to get Lieutenant Moreda 10 involved.12 Moreda and Jimenez approached Mitchell’s cell with a camera to record that 11 Mitchell received his meal and the grievance form.13 Mitchell yelled at Moreda about his toilet 12 and the unit conditions, and Moreda responded “stop yelling, shut up, and sit on [the]bunk to 13 receive his meal and grievance form.”14 Moreda testifiedthat the “encounter concluded without 14 incident,”15 but Mitchell maintains that Moreda pushedhis kosher meal onto the sewage-filled

15 floor and toldMitchell “to stop complaining and requesting grievances or else.”16 16 17 18 9 Id.at 10–11. 19 10 Id. at 25 (summary of disciplinary hearing). 20 11 Id.at 20(notice of charges). 21 12 Id. 13 Id. 22 14 Id.at 15(Moreda’s declaration). 23 15 Id. 16 ECF No. 3 at 10. 1 On May 16, the law library worker arrived at the unit.17 Jimenez told the law library 2 worker to return later that day because the maintenance crew was there working on the plumbing 3 issues.18 Jimenez was also shuffling the inmates to the showers because the water was on at that 4 time.19 Mitchell complained that Jimenez refused to let him shower, see the law library worker, 5 or use the phone, all in retaliation for having submitted grievances complaining of the same

6 alleged denials of the previous day.20 7 Jimenez reports that Mitchell was disruptive throughout her shift: he “continued to yell, 8 bang on his cell door, push the intercom button, and complain about the plumbing issues,” 9 despite Jimenez explaining to him “on several occasions that maintenance staff were working on 10 the issueand that [she] would notify him if anything changed.”21 “Mitchell did not cease his 11 disruptive behavior and continued to interfere with unit operations by shouting obscenities at 12 [Jimenez]and other unit staff, including multiple statements [that she] interpreted as sexually 13 harassing.”22 14 In an emergency grievance, Mitchell stated that on May 16, 2016, around 6:30 p.m.,

15 maintenance staff shut the water off in the unit.23 Mitchell complained that Jimenez had denied 16 him a shower and his ability to take his medication, in retaliation for his protected activity, with 17 the excuse that there was no water in the unit.24 Just one hour before, Mitchell had submitted 18 17 ECF No. 25 at 11. 19 18 Id. 20 19 Id. 21 20 ECF No. 27-1 at 25 (emergency grievance). 21 ECF No. 25 at 11. 22 22 Id.at 11–12. 23 23 ECF No. 27-1 at 25. 24 Id. 1 another emergency grievance requesting to be moved and claiming that he was tired of being in 2 unit 3D because unit staff were forcing inmates to eat their food in feces-and urine-filled cells 3 and that the swing-shift crew didn’t allow him to use the phonethough he submitteda “phone 4 kite” request.25 Both of these emergency grievances were deniedthe next day because “Per 5 maintenance[,] this issue was resolved 5/16/16.”26

6 III. Mitchell receives a Notice of Charges for his encounters with Officer Jimenez. 7 Mitchell continued to file informal grievances and appeal their denials in the two weeks 8 following the initial incident.27 On May 30, he received a Notice of Charges for his interactions 9 with Jimenez on May 16, which he deems evidence that Jimenez and Moreda conspired “in 10 retaliation for [F]irst Amendment activity.”28 Jimenez wrote a report about the harassment and 11 issuedtheNotice of Charges containing two charges: “Org. Work Stoppage / Demonstration” 12 and“Sexual Harassment.”29 She detailed the harassing comments and Mitchell’s disruptive 13 behavior. Mitchell received that notice on May 30, after he hadbeen moved into asolitary- 14 confinement unit for ongoing harassment against Jimenez.30

15 IV. Mitchell is sanctioned to 180 days in solitary confinement.

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Bluebook (online)
Donald E. Mitchell Jr v. State of Nevada Department of Corrections, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donald-e-mitchell-jr-v-state-of-nevada-department-of-corrections-nvd-2020.