Estate of Sisk v. Manzanares

262 F. Supp. 2d 1162, 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 26604, 2002 WL 32093126
CourtDistrict Court, D. Kansas
DecidedOctober 3, 2002
Docket00-4088-JPO
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 262 F. Supp. 2d 1162 (Estate of Sisk v. Manzanares) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Sisk v. Manzanares, 262 F. Supp. 2d 1162, 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 26604, 2002 WL 32093126 (D. Kan. 2002).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

O’HARA, United States Magistrate Judge.

I. Introduction.

This action arises from the suicide of Scotty Ray Sisk (“Sisk”) while incarcerated at the Shawnee County Department of *1167 Corrections (the “DOC” 2 ) in Topeka, Kansas. The plaintiffs, Sisk’s estate and survivors, allege that defendants violated Sisk’s constitutional rights by being deliberately indifferent to his medical needs. They further assert common law negligence claims.

Defendants have moved for summary judgment (doc. 115). The court has reviewed defendants’ joint motion and supporting memorandum, plaintiffs’ response (docs.122-126), and defendants’ reply (doc. 132). As explained below, defendants’ motion is granted in part and denied in part. Specifically, it is granted with respect to plaintiffs’ constitutional claims against Cole, King, Green, and the DOC, as well as plaintiffs’ negligence claims against Cole and King. However, defendants’ motion is denied with respect to plaintiffs’ constitutional claims against Manzanares, Redd, and Johnson, as well as plaintiffs’ negligence claims against Manzanares, Redd, Johnson, Green, and the DOC.

II. Facts.

The following facts are taken from the summary judgment record and are either uncontrovertéd or viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiffs’ case. Immaterial facts and facts not properly supported by the record are omitted. 3

A. Identification of Sisk as a Suicidal Inmate.

On July 2, 1999, Sisk was sentenced to one year in jail for violating a protective order and was incarcerated at the DOC. On July 6, 1999, Sisk’s mother, Sharon Sisk, called defendant Joel Manzanares, a sergeant with the DOC who was the second-shift supervisor that day. She advised Manzanares that she was concerned that Sisk would hurt himself “because he had made threats to her that he would kill *1168 himself and insinuated that he had already written a suicide note.” Manzanares assured Ms. Sisk that the DOC had a state-of-the-art facility and nothing would happen to her son. He was aware that the third shift is the most likely time for a person to attempt to commit suicide.

Manzanares directed Karen Jennings, a corrections officer with the DOC, to look for a note in Sisk’s cell. Officer Jennings found one, and Manzanares considered it to be a suicide note. Manzanares called Mary Ellen Brown, a corrections officer with the DOC, to his office and showed officer Brown the tear-stained note written by Sisk. In the note, Sisk expressed love to his parents and he had traced the outline of his hand on it. Manzanares directed officer Brown to copy the note and distribute it to the jail psychiatrist and to other supervisors and departments.

Manzanares then interviewed Sisk. At first, he found Sisk to be convincing that he would not harm himself. However, he became concerned enough to order Sisk to be moved to the medical module in order to “be on the safe side.” Once Sisk was determined to be “Signal 4” (ie., suicidal), Manzanares took a number of precautions. He placed Sisk on suicide watch, ordered Sisk to be placed on a list for medical and/or psychiatric evaluation, and ordered the corrections officers to dress Sisk in paper clothing that is specially designed to tear so that it cannot be used as an aid to commit suicide.

B. Sisk’s Move to a Hard Lockdown Cell.

In addition, Manzanares ordered the corrections officers to place Sisk in a so-called “hard lockdown” cell located in the jail’s medical module. The DOC’s written suicide prevention procedures call for suicidal inmates to be placed in “protrusion-free” rooms. There are two types of rooms in the medical module. One type is known as a “rubber room.” These rooms have walls, ceilings, and floors that have been treated with rubber coating. They do not contain any fixtures on the walls such as hooks or light switches, or any other protrusions from which an inmate could hang a blanket or a rope. The other type is called a “hard lockdown” room. It is constructed of concrete or cinder block walls with a concrete floor and a hole in the floor for inmate personal needs. The written procedures do not distinguish between rubber rooms and hard lockdown rooms.

Manzanares testified that he considers both rubber rooms and hard lockdown rooms to be protrusion-free rooms. However, other corrections officers testified that they were trained to and/or that it was the practice within the DOC to place suicidal inmates in rubber rooms and only in hard lockdown rooms if rubber rooms were unavailable. None of the rubber rooms were in use the evening of July 6, 1999. Manzanares did not attempt to determine whether a rubber room was available for Sisk.

The hard lockdown cell in which Manza-nares ordered Sisk to be placed had a metal plate attached to the wall just to the left of the door. The plate was shaped like a switch-plate cover with a slit in the center. It covered the cell’s thermostat. Manzanares did not consider this plate to be a protrusion. On the other hand, Lindsey Hayes, plaintiffs’ expert, has opined that Sisk was not placed in a “protrusion-free” cell (as required by [DOC] policy) because he was able to “utilize a metal wall plate as an anchoring device in his suicide.” 4 Dana McKnight, a corrections of- *1169 fleer with the DOC, testified in her deposition that if Sisk had been placed in a rubber room, he would not have had anything attached to the wall of his cell that he could have used as an anchoring device to commit suicide.

C. The Blanket That Sisk Was Issued.

Manzanares also ordered the corrections officers to provide Sisk with a standard-issue heavy woolen blanket and a mattress. The DOC’s written procedures call for a suicidal inmate to be given, whenever possible, a blanket. Defendant Russell Green, a captain with the DOC, testified that he knew of six suicide attempts at the DOC, and none used a blanket for hanging. However, Pat Jones, a corrections officer with the DOC, testified that the DOC stopped giving suicidal inmates blankets years ago because he thought the DOC had “a few close calls. I’m not quite sure.” Hayes has opined that “an inmate at high risk for suicide who has been issued a paper gown and placed in a stripped cell should not be issued a blanket that could be torn into strips.”

Regardless of the written policy, however, corrections officers at the DOC such as officer Brown and Bridget McCall-Norton testified that they were trained and/or that it was the practice within the DOC to give suicidal inmates a blanket only if the blanket was a suicide preventative blanket. Suicide preventative blankets were available at the DOC prior to July 6, 1999. 5 However, the DOC did not maintain a consistent supply of the suicide preventative blankets. At times, the DOC stocked paper shrouds for suicidal inmates to use.

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262 F. Supp. 2d 1162, 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 26604, 2002 WL 32093126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-sisk-v-manzanares-ksd-2002.