George v. Beaver County

32 F.4th 1246
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedMay 3, 2022
Docket21-4006
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 32 F.4th 1246 (George v. Beaver County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
George v. Beaver County, 32 F.4th 1246 (10th Cir. 2022).

Opinion

Appellate Case: 21-4006 Document: 010110678979 Date Filed: 05/03/2022 Page: 1 FILED United States Court of Appeals PUBLISH Tenth Circuit

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS May 3, 2022

Christopher M. Wolpert FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT Clerk of Court _________________________________

KATHY M. GEORGE, on behalf of the Estate of Troy Bradshaw,

Plaintiff - Appellant,

v. No. 21-4006

BEAVER COUNTY, by and through the Beaver County Board of Commissioners; CAMERON M. NOEL; RANDALL ROSE; DOES 1-10, inclusive,

Defendants - Appellees. _________________________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Utah (D.C. No. 2:16-CV-01076-TS) _________________________________

Eric Boyd Vogeler, Vogeler, PLLC, Salt Lake City, Utah, for Plaintiff-Appellant.

Andrew R. Hopkins, Mylar Law, P.C. (Frank D. Mylar with him on the brief), Salt Lake City, Utah, for Defendants-Appellees. _________________________________

Before HOLMES, McHUGH, and CARSON, Circuit Judges. _________________________________

CARSON, Circuit Judge. _________________________________

Order requires respecting policy. And volatile prison environments demand

consistent training on institutional policies. But failing to follow prison policy is not Appellate Case: 21-4006 Document: 010110678979 Date Filed: 05/03/2022 Page: 2

a constitutional violation in and of itself. Successful 42 U.S.C. § 1983 municipal-

and supervisory-liability claims involve a constitutional violation or pattern of

constitutional violations. Violating policy alone supports neither.

We treat jail-suicide claims, like Plaintiff’s, as failures to provide medical

care. Such claims require proof that a prison official acted with deliberate

indifference to the detainee’s serious medical needs, violating the Eighth, or

Fourteenth, Amendment. Although Plaintiff proved that certain officers failed to

follow Beaver County’s suicide-prevention policy, the district court granted summary

judgment (1) to the County because Plaintiff failed to show it employed an

unconstitutional policy and (2) to Sheriff Noel and Corporal Rose because the law

entitles them to qualified immunity. We exercise jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291

and affirm.

I.

Beaver County Correctional Facility’s (“BCCF”) suicide-prevention policy

requires officers to screen all prisoners for suicide risk. When screening suggests

such a risk, officers must keep that prisoner in an observation cell in the booking

area, check on him every fifteen minutes, and remove all property or implements that

could be used for suicide. BCCF’s practice was to give inmates on suicide watch

only a suicide smock to wear and only a suicide-proof blanket for bedding. Once an

officer places a prisoner on suicide watch, only a medical or mental-health provider

may remove him. BCCF Officers may view BCCF’s policy handbook, containing the

suicide-prevention policy, on every computer in the facility. And officers must also

2 Appellate Case: 21-4006 Document: 010110678979 Date Filed: 05/03/2022 Page: 3

complete a twelve-week training program at the Utah Peace Officer Standards and

Training (“POST”) Academy followed by forty hours of annual training, which

includes a four-hour suicide prevention training. All deputies involved in this lawsuit

are POST-certified officers in good standing. And before the events that occurred in

this case, no inmate had ever committed suicide at the BCCF.

On June 13, Beaver County officers responded to reports of a truck running

into parked cars. The decedent, Troy Bradshaw, drove the truck. When officers

encountered him at the scene, he smelled of alcohol, spoke incoherently, and could

barely stand and walk. The officers arrested Bradshaw for driving under the

influence and placed him in Deputy Nathan Bastian’s vehicle. Once in the patrol

vehicle, Bradshaw complained of pain, so Deputy Bastian transported him to Beaver

Valley Hospital. At the hospital, Bradshaw complained that his handcuffs hurt his

left hand. When Deputy Bastian and Sergeant Laura Davis checked the cuffs, they

discovered he was missing a finger from a previous injury. To avoid that injury from

causing him discomfort, they instead uncuffed his wrists and cuffed his arms to the

hospital bed. At the hospital, Bradshaw twice asked Sergeant Davis to kill him. The

hospital cleared Bradshaw, and Deputy Bastian transported him to the BCCF.

At the BCCF, Deputy Cody Allen had Bradshaw take a breath test. Deputy

Allen then completed the Initial Arrestee Assessment (IAA), which reflects that

Bradshaw previously considered suicide; was not thinking about it currently; had a

brother who committed or attempted suicide; and was intoxicated. Bradshaw stated

that he would kill himself if placed in a cell.

3 Appellate Case: 21-4006 Document: 010110678979 Date Filed: 05/03/2022 Page: 4

After the IAA, the officers placed Bradshaw on suicide watch. Three

corrections officers and Deputy Allen walked Bradshaw to a holding cell in the

booking area. Deputy Allen told Bradshaw that he would be in cell two—a “dry” cell

without a toilet. Bradshaw moved away from Deputy Allen and said he would not go

into the cell. Deputy Bastian grabbed Bradshaw’s arm, and Bradshaw resisted. The

officers then forced Bradshaw down to the ground, where Sergeant Davis secured his

legs. Sergeant Davis ordered Bradshaw to stop resisting. He complied, and the

officers rolled him on his side and placed him in cell two. Bradshaw beat on the cell

door for two to three hours. Officers did not place him in a safety smock or create a

suicide watch log, in violation of BCCF’s suicide-prevention policy, but Corporal

Sarah Kinross monitored Bradshaw by sitting in the booking area all night. Corporal

Kinross’s June 14, 2014 shift-change report reflected that Bradshaw was suicidal and

in cell two. Corporal Kinross stated that, as a matter of practice, she would have

orally passed this information on to Corporal Randall (“Randie”) Rose, the oncoming

corporal, but could not recall if that happened.1

By June 14, 2014, Bradshaw was no longer acting violently, and Officer

Shawn Higgins transferred Bradshaw from cell two to cell three. While cell three is

in the booking area, it has a toilet, sink, and bed. Some officers were unaware that

Bradshaw was on suicide watch. Corporal Rose was on duty when Bradshaw moved

1 Defendant Rose testified that BCCF officers conveyed shift-change information to the oncoming shift orally, via handwritten notes in the control room, or by written reports. At least with oral shift-change reports, in 2014, BCCF had no specific written policy for how that should be done. 4 Appellate Case: 21-4006 Document: 010110678979 Date Filed: 05/03/2022 Page: 5

to cell three. While in cell three, Bradshaw received bedding, but the record does not

reveal who gave it to him. Some officers may have thought that moving Bradshaw to

cell three meant he was no longer on suicide watch because cell two ordinarily

housed suicidal inmates (and without bedding), though BCCF sometimes kept

suicidal inmates in cells one and three.

That same day, officers completed a second assessment of Bradshaw as part of

the booking process.

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