Engleman v. Adkerson

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedMarch 1, 2024
Docket1:21-cv-01992
StatusUnknown

This text of Engleman v. Adkerson (Engleman v. Adkerson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Engleman v. Adkerson, (N.D. Ga. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF GEORGIA ATLANTA DIVISION

Lily Engleman,

Plaintiff, Case No. 1:21-cv-1992-MLB v.

Nathan Adkerson, et al.,

Defendants.

________________________________/

OPINION & ORDER All Defendants in this case move for summary judgment. (Dkts. 50, 53, 55, 57, 59, 61, 63). For the reasons explained below, the Court grants Defendant Nathan Adkerson’s motion in part but grants the other Defendants’ motions in their entirety. I. Background1 In 2019, Plaintiff worked for the Office of the Georgia Capital Defender as a mitigation specialist and licensed social worker. (Dkt. 61-1

1 Most of the responses to statements of material facts in this case violate this Court’s Standing Order. The Standing Order provides: “[A] party responding to a statement of material facts shall copy into its response ¶ 1.)2 Plaintiff was assigned to help Ricky Dubose, an inmate at Jackson Special Management Unit (a high max facility) awaiting trial for the

murder of two prison guards while escaping from another Georgia state prison. (Id. ¶ 3; Dkt. 50-13 ¶ 2.) Plaintiff regularly met with Dubose in designated meeting rooms at the prison. (Dkt. 61-1 ¶ 4.) Those rooms

were monitored by video cameras. (Id. ¶ 6; Dkt. 50-10.) On September 13, 2019, Warden Jose Morales found undated,

handwritten notes from an inmate in a trash can. (Dkt. 61-1 ¶¶ 7, 10;

document the numbered statement to which it is responding and provide its response to that statement immediately following.” (Dkt. 10 ¶ r(2).) None of the parties, except Adams, copied into their response documents the numbered statements to which it was responding. The Court admonishes the other parties for violating the Standing Order. The rule is pretty clear and should be followed. In the light of this, citations that reference only one party’s statement of material facts refer to statements the Court has confirmed are not factually (or properly) disputed. Where a statement is factually disputed or where the Court finds it necessary to establish context, the Court cites directly to evidence from the record that supports the Court’s factual recitation. If a party has objected to a fact on the grounds of relevance or materiality but has not objected to the accuracy of the fact, the Court cites directly to the party’s statement of facts if it chooses to consider the information. 2 Unless otherwise noted, all citations refer to the page numbers electronically generated by CM/ECF. Dkt. 70 ¶¶ 14, 17.) He thought Dubose had written the notes. (Dkt. 61-1 ¶ 7.) One of the notes said:

I need you to call and talk to Jessi on Whats app FrFr and explain what the reason is I can[’]t get my line and tell her I love her and miss her and tell her I had a lawyer visit 2day and Morales went in my room again 2day . . .

A second note said:

I gotta get all those drugs picked up from ‘L’ and put in balloons so she can bring either next week or the following[.] We bout 2 go up now and OMG when you get online? Sigh… We will be so str7 [sic] oh she had 4 packs I was like just give me one lol and the MF [a]in[’]t even search me its all good at least I got a pack of Newports . . .

A third note said:

[Y]ou have to take the water out your toilet and smoke in the toilet its only safe! 2morrow we blowin on the yard real free world lol did you get the cream? Love ya bra I[’]m bout to send you one I put them in my shoe so sum is broke smh[.] Hit me back[.] 7sap[.]

(Dkt. 70 ¶ 16.) The notes contained no page numbers. (See id.) Morales spoke with Adkerson (a Special Agent with the Office of Professional Standards (“OPS”) responsible for investigations inside the Department of Corrections) and expressed concern because officers had found Dubose with contraband multiple times. (Dkt. 50-13 ¶¶ 11, 12.) In the days prior to discovery of the note, Dubose had met with members of his defense team. He met with Plaintiff (the only member of his team whose name begins with the letter “L”) on September 6 and with Vyvia

Cabiness-Harris (a fact investigator) on September 12. (Dkts. 61-1 ¶ 8; Dkt. 70 ¶ 24; Dkt. 70-5 at 179.) Adkerson watched videos of both meetings. (Dkt. 70-7 at 18; Dkt. 50-13 ¶ 12.)

The video of Dubose’s September 6 meeting with Plaintiff has no audio but shows Plaintiff and Dubose talking across a table. (See

Dkt. 50-10.)3 During one portion of the one-and-a-half-hour long meeting, Plaintiff and Dubose bent over and looked under the table several times. (Id. at 1:00:08–1:00:47.) The fifth time they did so, Dubose

rolled down his right sock until it covered only the ball of his foot. (Id. at 1:01:06–1:00:13.) He put his foot on his sandal and slid the sandal and his foot forward. (Id. at 1:01:13–1:01:18.) He pulled the sandal back and

rolled his sock back up. (Id. at 1:01:18–1:01:29.) He rolled his left sock

3 At summary judgment, “in cases where video evidence is available, the Court views the facts in accordance with that video evidence, so long as ‘there are no allegations or indications that video evidence has been doctored, or that the video shows something different [from] what actually happened.’” Turner v. Phillips, 547 F. Supp. 3d 1188, 1200 (N.D. Fla. 2021) (quoting Varnadore v. Merritt, 778 F. App’x 808, 812 (11th Cir. 2019)). Neither party contests the video’s authenticity here. down, put his foot on his sandal, moved his foot toward Plaintiff on the floor, brought his foot back, and rolled his sock back up. (Id.

at 1:01:31–1:02:05.) At various times during this activity, Dubose’s body or the table obstructed the camera’s view under the table. (Id. at 1:00:08–1:02:05.) During this same time, Plaintiff had one or both of her

arms in her lap or under the table. (Id. at 1:00:06–1:01:23.) As discussed more fully below, the video never showed Plaintiff drop anything on the

floor or Dubose pick anything up. (See Dkts. 84, 88.) The video of Dubose’s meeting with Harris is not part of the record in this case. But, as explained in more detail below, other evidence

establishes that it showed Harris pass Dubose a “package” and him conceal it in his pants. (Dkt. 70-5 at 179.) As part of the investigation, Morales searched the holding cell in

which guards placed Dubose after his September 12 meeting with Harris. (Dkt. 50-13 ¶ 10; Dkt. 50-7 at 6:15–19; Dkt. 70-5 at 179–80.) He found what appeared be a Newport cigarette, a metal clip, a piece of tape, and

a piece of latex—all contraband. (Dkt. 50-13 ¶ 10; Dkt. 50-2 at 29:18–23.) It’s unclear whether this is the same holding cell in which guards placed Dubose after his September 6 meeting with Plaintiff. Adkerson and Morales say it was. (Dkt. 50-13 ¶ 10; Dkt. 61-1 ¶ 9.) But the cited portions of Morales’s testimony only establish that officers searched one

of the holding cells “adjacent to the contact visit room”—not necessarily that they searched the holding cell used for Dubose after his visit with Plaintiff. (Dkt. 50-7 at 6:1–9.) And, although Morales required guards

to search inmates before and after visits, he could not verify whether guards did that after Dubose’s September 6 meeting with Plaintiff.4

(Dkt. 61-1 ¶ 9.) Following Morales’s search of the holding cell, Adkerson e-mailed Tomekia Jordan and Mike Riley (supervisors with the OPS) about his

investigation. (Dkt. 70 ¶ 27; Dkt. 70-5 at 179–80.) He explained that Morales had found notes that “appeared to have been written by” Dubose and in which Dubose “referred to someone he called ‘L’ who brought him

tobacco and drugs in a balloon.” (Dkt. 70-5 at 179–80.) He said he had

4 Plaintiff says Dubose was strip searched after his September 6 meeting with Plaintiff.

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