Frankie Walker, Sr. v. James Clayton

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 26, 2018
Docket16-2898
StatusUnpublished

This text of Frankie Walker, Sr. v. James Clayton (Frankie Walker, Sr. v. James Clayton) 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
Frankie Walker, Sr. v. James Clayton, (7th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

NONPRECEDENTIAL DISPOSITION To be cited only in accordance with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit Chicago, Illinois 60604

Submitted March 23, 2018 * Decided March 26, 2018

Before

KENNETH F. RIPPLE, Circuit Judge

ILANA DIAMOND ROVNER, Circuit Judge

AMY C. BARRETT, Circuit Judge

No. 16-2898

FRANKIE N. WALKER, SR., Appeal from the United States District Plaintiff-Appellant, Court for the Central District of Illinois.

v. No. 13-CV-3358

JAMES C. CLAYTON, et al., Colin S. Bruce, Defendants-Appellees. Judge.

ORDER

Frankie Walker is a civil detainee at Rushville Treatment and Detention Facility. Rushville officials restricted his access to the general population for nine days while the police investigated whether he had tampered with a witness. In this civil-rights suit Walker asserts that, in restricting him, Rushville retaliated against him for his past litigation and denied him liberty without due process. He also contends that two staff

* We have agreed to decide this case without oral argument because the briefs and record adequately present the facts and legal arguments, and oral argument would not significantly aid the court. FED. R. APP. P. 34(a)(2)(C). No. 16-2898 Page 2

members later ordered a search of his room in retaliation for litigation. The district court entered summary judgment in favor of the defendants, and we affirm. Rushville’s belief that Walker had tampered with a witness was sincere and justified the brief assignment to restricted status to facilitate an investigation; the assignment was not punitive, so it did not deny Walker liberty; and no evidence supports the assertion that the search of Walker’s room was retaliatory. Walker also challenges some procedural rulings, but those arguments are baseless.

This case begins with a document that Walker wrote for Troy Curtner, a fellow resident. Curtner had been attacked by a Rushville detainee and was scheduled to testify against that detainee in a criminal prosecution. While helping Curtner prepare a related civil suit against Rushville, Walker also drafted a document that Curtner signed stating that he would no longer testify or otherwise participate in prosecuting his attacker. The document was intercepted in October 2011 by Chris Clayton, a Rushville investigator, who suspected that Curtner did not compose it himself.

Clayton reports that he interviewed Curtner who told him the following: Walker wrote the document; Walker “advised” Curtner “that it was in his best interest not to testify against the other resident”; and Walker, along with several other residents, “advised” Curtner to sign the document. Based on this interview Clayton believed that Walker and the other residents had tampered with Curtner. He called the Illinois State Police to investigate possible witness tampering. Curtner later told the district court that Walker did not intimidate or tamper with him, but he did not dispute Clayton’s description of the interview.

During the police investigation, Rushville briefly placed Walker and the other residents in a unit with restricted access to the general population. The transfer facilitated the investigation into the residents’ possible misconduct by isolating them until the police interviewed them. See ILL. ADMIN. CODE tit. 59 § 299.650(a)(3). A committee of Rushville administrators met to discuss the assignment. Walker did not attend their meeting, and to protect the integrity of the investigation the committee did not tell him why he was placed in restrictive status. Walker remained there until the police investigation ended nine days later. During those nine days, a police investigator read the document and interviewed Curtner. He determined that Curtner had not been tampered with and, after consulting the State’s Attorney, told Clayton that the police would not pursue charges against Walker. The next day, Rushville told Walker about the investigation, that it was over, and that he was released from restricted status. Suspecting that no investigation had ever occurred, Walker asked the police (using No. 16-2898 Page 3

Illinois’s Freedom of Information Act) for documents about the “criminal investigation of Frankie N. Walker.” No “Walker” documents turned up; the investigation’s documents were filed under “Curtner,” and they were eventually produced.

The next relevant event occurred two years later. Walker was in his unit’s common area in August 2013 preparing this suit against Clayton for placing him on restrictive status. Clayton, Ryan Kerr (a security aide), and two other aides arrived to search a neighboring room. Clayton saw Walker’s civil complaint, glanced inside Walker’s room, and briefly blocked Walker’s entry to it, prompting Walker to believe that Clayton was harassing him. When the search of the neighboring room ended, Clayton, Kerr, and the aides left. Two other aides arrived ten minutes later and searched Walker’s room. As the search began, Kerr returned. Walker asked the reason for the search, and Kerr said that it was random, which Walker replied he doubted.

Walker has sued under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, claiming that Clayton and other staff unlawfully placed him on restricted status and that Clayton and Kerr unlawfully ordered the search of his room. They did so, he contends, to retaliate against him for assisting with and filing lawsuits, in violation of the First Amendment and due process. Walker also added a civil-conspiracy claim and a supplemental state-law claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress. The district court eventually entered summary judgment in favor of all defendants, reasoning that they had behaved lawfully.

We begin with Walker’s principal claim: that Clayton and Rushville officials put him on restricted status in retaliation for his First Amendment activity of litigating. To survive summary judgment, Walker must produce sufficient evidence to persuade a rational factfinder that the defendants’ explanation for his changed status—the witness- tampering investigation—is pretextual and that the true reason was retaliatory. See Massey v. Johnson, 457 F.3d 711, 717 (7th Cir. 2006). The undisputed evidence is that, based on Clayton’s interview, the defendants genuinely believed that Walker had tampered with Curtner and that they needed to isolate him briefly to facilitate a police investigation of the matter. A sincere belief in a legitimate reason for adverse action (in this case, restricted status to facilitate the investigation) defeats a claim of retaliation. See Burks v. Wisc. Dep’t of Transp., 464 F.3d 744, 754 (7th Cir. 2006); Jordan v. Summers, 205 F.3d 337, 343 (7th Cir. 2000).

Walker replies with two arguments that are unpersuasive. First he contends that, because the police investigator later determined that Clayton’s belief about tampering was unfounded, the belief was not genuine. But an unfounded belief is not the same as No. 16-2898 Page 4

an insincere one. See Jordan, 205 F.3d at 344 (“Pretext is a lie, not merely a mistake.”); see also Massey, 457 F.3d at 719 (plaintiff’s after-the-fact explanation did not undermine sincerity of defendant’s previous belief). Walker is left with only speculation that Clayton did not believe that Walker had tampered with Curtner.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Bell v. Wolfish
441 U.S. 520 (Supreme Court, 1979)
Sow v. Fortville Police Department
636 F.3d 293 (Seventh Circuit, 2011)
Kim Patterson v. Avery Dennison Corporation
281 F.3d 676 (Seventh Circuit, 2002)
Springer v. Durflinger
518 F.3d 479 (Seventh Circuit, 2008)
Eugene Devbrow v. Steven Gallegos
735 F.3d 584 (Seventh Circuit, 2013)
Massey, Michael v. Johnson, Mable
457 F.3d 711 (Seventh Circuit, 2006)
William Hurt v. Matthew Wise
880 F.3d 831 (Seventh Circuit, 2018)
Cooney v. Casady
735 F.3d 514 (Seventh Circuit, 2013)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Frankie Walker, Sr. v. James Clayton, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frankie-walker-sr-v-james-clayton-ca7-2018.