Garmon v. IDOC

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Illinois
DecidedAugust 27, 2025
Docket3:21-cv-00027
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Garmon v. IDOC, (S.D. Ill. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS

JESSE C. GARMON, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) vs. ) Case No. 3:21-CV-27-MAB ) DONALD DUNN, DAVID STOCK, ) JEFFREY DENNISON, JULIE TANNER, ) DEBORAH ZELASKO, ) DEBBIE MAGNUS, DAN LYNN, ) SUSAN WALKER, KENDRA SEIP, ) HARRY ALLARD, ) STEPHANIE WAGGONER, and ) VERA ROLLINS, ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

BEATTY, Magistrate Judge: Plaintiff Jesse Garmon filed this lawsuit in January 2021 pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 seeking compensatory damages for his allegedly unlawful incarceration in the Illinois Department of Corrections after the Prisoner Review Board revoked his supervised release. This matter is currently before the Court on the motion for summary judgment filed by all Defendants (Doc. 146). Having reviewed the parties’ briefs, the previous Orders of the Court, and the relevant case law, the undersigned finds the threshold issue of whether Plaintiff’s claims must be dismissed because they are barred by Heck v. Humphrey should be decided first, before addressing Defendants’ motion for summary judgment on the merits of Plaintiff’s claims. BACKGROUND1 In October 2012, Plaintiff was sentenced in Fulton County, Illinois to six years imprisonment for aggravated domestic battery, to be followed by a four-year term of

Mandatory Supervised Release (“MSR”) (Doc. 146-1). Then on August 18, 2015, the Fulton County court reduced Plaintiff’s sentence to three years and six months, with four years MSR (Doc. 41, p. 19).2 The IDOC recalculated Plaintiff’s sentence and changed his out date to June 26, 2015 (Doc. 41, p. 20), which had already passed, meaning Plaintiff was eligible for immediate release. Plaintiff was scheduled for immediate release on

August 21, 2015 (Id.), and was in fact released from Big Muddy River Correctional Center that day (Doc. 146-2, para. 10). Plaintiff claims that the excess time he served left him with a “floating sentence credit” of two months and nine days that could be credited against any future sentence imposed for violating the supervised released On October 8, 2015—less than two months after being released from prison—

Plaintiff was arrested, in Sangamon County, Illinois for domestic battery (Doc. 41, p. 22). The following day, the IDOC issued a Parole Violation Report and a warrant for Plaintiff’s arrest (Id.; Doc. 146-2, p. 2).3 After pleading guilty to a charge of disorderly conduct in Sangamon County (see Doc. 41, pp. 43–44), Plaintiff was handed over to IDOC custody

1 The facts stated in this section are taken from the admissible evidence submitted by Defendants at summary judgment, as well as the sworn allegations contained in Plaintiff’s second amended complaint and the documents attached thereto.

2 Neither party provided any information as to why Plaintiff’s sentence was reduced.

3 While there is a distinction between the terms “parole” and “mandatory supervised release,” see People v. Lee, 979 N.E.2d 992, 1000-01 (Ill. App. Ct. 4th Dist. 2012), those terms are used synonymously and interchangeably throughout the record in this case to describe Plaintiff’s status. on December 4, 2015, to await an appearance in front of the Prisoner Review Board (“PRB”) on the supervised release violation (Doc. 146-2, para. 11).

It is undisputed that on March 2, 2016, the PRB found Plaintiff had violated his supervised release as of October 8, 2015, by committing a criminal offense in Sangamon County (Doc. 41, p. 9 (Second Am. Comp.); Doc. 146, p. 3 (Defs.’ MSJ); Doc. 146-2, p. 6 (PRB Order)). Plaintiff claims that he met with Donald Dunn, a member of the PRB, on March 2, 2016, and that Mr. Dunn decided Plaintiff should be reinstated to supervised release with some minimal modifications to the conditions (Doc. 41, 9–10). Plaintiff claims

that he even signed papers agreeing to the new conditions (Id.). However, it is undisputed that the Order issued by the PRB revoked Plaintiff’s supervised release and required him to serve the remainder of his four-year MSR term in prison (Doc. 41, p. 9 (Second Am. Comp.); Doc. 146, p. 3 (Defs.’ MSJ); Doc. 146-2, p. 6 (PRB Order)). In the days that followed his meeting with the PRB, Plaintiff began corresponding

with various counselors at Centralia, about Dunn’s reinstatement order; those communications suggested that Plaintiff would be released to a halfway house (Doc. 41, pp. 10, 14; see also id at p. 24). Plaintiff was also told that his discharge date, meaning “the day that [the IDOC] will have to let you go whether you have a place or not,” was September 19, 2016 (Doc. 41, p. 25). On March 8, 2016, he received a message that his

discharge date had changed and was actually September 14, 2017 (Doc. 41, pp. 10, 28; see also id. at pp. 27). He was soon informed that his release date was recalculated yet again to January 22, 2019, because he had been ordered to serve 85% of his sentence. (Doc. 41, pp. 10, 29–31; see also Doc. 146-2, p. 2). He continued to ask Centralia officials why he was still incarcerated and had not been released as ordered, as well as why his discharge date kept changing (Doc. 41, pp. 10, 23, 33). At some point, he also started asking why he was

not receiving credit for the two months and nine days of excess time that he had served on his original sentence, but his requests were repeatedly denied (Doc. 41, pp. 7, 11, 12; see also id. at pp. 32, 60–68). Plaintiff was transferred to Shawnee Correctional Center sometime in late May or early June 2016 (see Doc. 41, pp. 67–72). He claims that he immediately began contacting staff at Shawnee asking for his sentence to be properly calculated to reflect the two

months and nine days of credit that he thought he was entitled to, but again his requests were refused (Doc. 41, pp. 12–13, 14; see also id. at pp. 34–37, 70–72). Plaintiff was discharged on January 22, 2019, (Doc. 146-2, p. 3), which he claims was over two months after the date that he should have been released. In this lawsuit, Plaintiff alleges that Defendants, all of whom were officials at

Centralia or Shawnee, had no authority to keep him in prison after his PRB hearing because Donald Dunn ordered that his supervised release be reinstated (Doc. 41, p. 15). Plaintiff further alleges that Defendants miscalculated his revocation sentence by refusing to give him credit for excess time he served on his original sentence (Doc. 41, p. 15). Plaintiff was permitted to proceed on claims that Defendants’ refusal to release

Plaintiff from custody following the PRB hearing and/or miscalculating his revocation sentence violated his federal and state due process rights and his Eighth Amendment rights to be free from cruel and unusual punishment (Docs. 23, 62). He is seeking monetary damages for his “unlawful incarceration” (Doc. 41, p. 16). After all the Defendants appeared and filed their answers, this action was reassigned to the undersigned in March 2023 upon the full consent of all parties (Doc.

128). Defendants filed their motion for summary judgment on the merits of Plaintiff’s claims on July 29, 2024, arguing that they are entitled to judgment as a matter of law because there is no evidence that the Prisoner Review Board ever ordered Plaintiff to be released from prison and reinstated on supervised release, like he contends, and because his revocation sentence was properly calculated (Doc. 146, pp. 4–6). Plaintiff filed a response in opposition on September 12, 2024, primarily arguing that he should have

received credit on his revocation sentence for the excess time he spent in custody on his original sentence from June 26, 2015, to August 21, 2015 (Doc. 152). Defendants did not file a reply brief.

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