Edward Graziano v. Pennsylvania Department of Corrections, Lt. Deal, Lt. Haggerty, Dereck F. Oberlander, Lt. Dickey, C/O Dale Barger, C/O Justin Holland, C/O Gary Hiler, C/O Jeremy Shelley, C/O Joe Sibble, C/O Nathan Perkins

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 31, 2026
Docket1:22-cv-00163
StatusUnknown

This text of Edward Graziano v. Pennsylvania Department of Corrections, Lt. Deal, Lt. Haggerty, Dereck F. Oberlander, Lt. Dickey, C/O Dale Barger, C/O Justin Holland, C/O Gary Hiler, C/O Jeremy Shelley, C/O Joe Sibble, C/O Nathan Perkins (Edward Graziano v. Pennsylvania Department of Corrections, Lt. Deal, Lt. Haggerty, Dereck F. Oberlander, Lt. Dickey, C/O Dale Barger, C/O Justin Holland, C/O Gary Hiler, C/O Jeremy Shelley, C/O Joe Sibble, C/O Nathan Perkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edward Graziano v. Pennsylvania Department of Corrections, Lt. Deal, Lt. Haggerty, Dereck F. Oberlander, Lt. Dickey, C/O Dale Barger, C/O Justin Holland, C/O Gary Hiler, C/O Jeremy Shelley, C/O Joe Sibble, C/O Nathan Perkins, (W.D. Pa. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA ERIE EDWARD GRAZIANO, ) ) Plaintiff ) 1:22-CV-00163-RAL ) vs. ) RICHARD A. LANZILLO ) Chief United States Magistrate Judge PENNSYLVANIA DEPARTMENT OF ) CORRECTIONS, LT. DEAL, LT. y MEMORANDUM OPINION ON HAGGERTY, DERECK F. ) DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR OBERLANDER, LT. DICKEY, C/O ) SUMMARY JUDGMENT DALE BARGER, C/O JUSTIN ) HOLLAND, C/O GARY HILER, C/O JEREMY SHELLEY, C/O JOE ) RE: ECF NO. 203 SIBBLE, C/O NATHAN PERKINS, Defendants )

Plaintiff Edward Graziano (“Graziano”) commenced this pro se action against thirty-six defendants. The Pennsylvania Department of Corrections (“DOC”) and ten employees of the DOC at its State Correctional Institution in Forest County (“SCI- Forest”) remain as Defendants following the Court’s disposition of prior motions to dismiss.1 Nine remaining Defendants are corrections officers of varying rank: Lt. Deal, Lt. Dickey, Lt. Haggerty, CO Dale Barger, CO Gary Hiler, CO Justin Holland, CO Nathan Perkins, Jeremy Shelly, and CO Joe Sibble. The other individual Defendant is Derek Oberlander, the former Deputy Superintendent of Central

1 The parties have consented to the jurisdiction of a United States Magistrate Judge as authorized by 28 U.S.C. § 686. The Court previously dismissed the claims against Defendants Bogardus, Brian Byers, Richard Camacho, Criley, Michelle Crowther, Lisa Fiscus, Angel F. Gressel, Ian Gusstafson, Erin Miller, Gregory Miller, Ross Miller, Minich, Earnest Mongelluzzo, Morgan, Yvette Perrin, Lisa Reeher, Bruce Simons, Kimberly Smith, Witness of DC-141, Part D2, Susan R. Adams, Theresa Biel, Centurion, Kevin Cowan, Wellpath, LLC., and Andrew Leslie. See ECF Nos. 106, 276.

Services at SCI-Forest. Following the Court’s orders on prior motions to dismiss (see ECF Nos. 106, 276), the following claims remain: (1) Count V: an American Disabilities Act (“ADA”) claim against the DOC; (2) Count VI: an Eighth Amendment excessive force claim against Defendants Haggerty, Deal, Hiler, Barger, Shelley, Sibble, Perkins, and Holland (collectively “Corrections Officer Defendants”), and a related supervisory liability claim against Defendants Oberlander and Dickey; (3) Count VIII: a state law assault and battery claim against the Corrections Officer Defendants; and (A) Counts XIII and XIV: First Amendment claims against Oberlander. Discovery has concluded and the Defendants have moved for summary judgment. For the reasons discussed herein, the Defendants’ motion will be denied as to Graziano’s ADA claim and granted as to all other claims. I. Material Facts? A. ADA Claim At all times relevant to this action, Graziano was an inmate at SCI-Forest.? Graziano has been diagnosed with antisocial personality disorder, anxiety, and depression and has been prescribed psychiatric medications for his mental health conditions and related sleep difficulties. See ECF No. 205, § 5; ECF No. 276 § 5; ECF No. 281 7 6. Graziano received his psychiatric medications during “medline” or “med pass.” The Defendants assert that this occurred at approximately 3:30 p.m. to 4:30

material facts are taken from the parties’ concise statements of material facts (ECF Nos. 205, 279), as well as the appendixes and exhibits submitted by the Defendants and Graziano (ECF Nos. 206, 210, 277, 281). Disputed facts are noted. 3 Graziano remains in the custody of the DOC but is currently housed at SCIJ-Benner Township.

p.m. while Graziano states that medline was conducted between 4:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. ECF No. 281 { 6. On June 30, 2019, Graziano completed an “Inmate Disability Accommodation Request Form” in which he complained that cell lighting, the cell intercom, and early medline distribution disrupted his sleep, resulting in his inability to participate in certain prison programs and services. As accommodations, Graziano requested that cell security lights be turned off immediately after count, cell intercoms be used only for individualized notifications and medical emergencies, general announcements be made only over the unit loudspeaker, and evening medline be moved to a later time. Graziano alternatively requested that he be housed in SCI- Forest’s Special Needs Unit which would enable him to receive his medications later in the evening or that he be transferred to another State Correctional Institution. Id. q 8. Kim Smith, SCI-Forest’s Corrections Health Care Administrator, reviewed Graziano’s request for accommodations and his medical records. She concluded that insomnia was not Graziano’s diagnosed disability, but a symptom.’ She also found that a medical or psychiatric transfer to another State Correctional Institution was not warranted because Graziano was receiving appropriate services through psychology and psychiatry.5 Graziano asserts that he was not given his psychiatric

4 Prison officials offered to move Graziano’s prescription of Cymbalta to the morning to help with his complaints of insomnia, but Graziano refused. ECF No. 206-2, p. 1 5 Graziano’s alternative request to be placed in the SNU was rejected because he did not meet the criteria for SNU placement. See ECF No. 206-2, p.69. Prison officials rejected this placement based on their assessment that it would “not only further engrain inmate’s feeling of entitlement but also create a security risk for an inmate with a known track record of escape attempts.” Id., p. 80. They also assessed that the “inmate is attempting secondary gain of SNU placement for female staff

medications at bedtime as prescribed and was subject to disciplinary action for behavior deriving from his mental health disability. ECF No. 277-5, pp. 18-19. After Superintendent Oberlander reviewed CHCA Smith’s memorandum regarding Graziano’s accommodation requests, Graziano’s Inmate Disability Accommodation Request Form and Smith’s recommendation were forwarded to the Central Office Inmate Disability Accommodation Committee (““COIDAC’) for a final decision. COIDAC determined that Graziano was being reasonably accommodated because he was prescribed medication to treat his mental health diagnoses and therefore denied his request for further accommodations. Graziano disputes COIDAC’s finding. He asserts that requiring him to take his “psychiatric medications so early rendered the medication ineffective at helping me manage my anxiety and depressive disorders and regulate [his] sleep...which substantially impaired my brain and physical functioning which deprived me of the benefits of and from participating in, the services, programs and activities that SCl-Forest provided to qualified individuals like myself ...”. ECF No. 281, { 20. B. The April 18, 2019 Use of Force Incident On April 17, 2019, Graziano was placed in Psychiatric Observation Cell (“POC”) 3D-1004 after expressing suicidal ideation. On April 18, 2019, medical staff

contact...he has a history of exposing himself and for sexual harassment towards female staff members.” Jd. p. 92. 6 On November 26, 2019, Graziano filed Grievance Number 836921 complaining of the conditions of his confinement and reasserting that his sleep was being disrupted by the lights on his housing unit, the use of the intercom system by corrections staff, and the timing of medline. While this grievance did not specifically challenge the denial of Graziano’s request for accommodations, it referenced Grievance Number 838427, which did.

cleared Graziano to be moved from the POC back to a cell in the Restricted Housing Unit (““RHU”).7 Graziano refused to comply with the transfer order. Defendant Lieutenant Haggerty was called to Graziano’s POC cell to attempt to gain his compliance, and when this was unsuccessful, a seven-man compliance team was assembled to remove Graziano from the POC and transfer him to a cell in the RHU.

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Edward Graziano v. Pennsylvania Department of Corrections, Lt. Deal, Lt. Haggerty, Dereck F. Oberlander, Lt. Dickey, C/O Dale Barger, C/O Justin Holland, C/O Gary Hiler, C/O Jeremy Shelley, C/O Joe Sibble, C/O Nathan Perkins, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edward-graziano-v-pennsylvania-department-of-corrections-lt-deal-lt-pawd-2026.