Goldsboro v. Doe

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedAugust 5, 2025
Docket6:25-cv-00825
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Goldsboro v. Doe, (M.D. Fla. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA ORLANDO DIVISION

HARRY LEE GOLDSBORO, II,

Plaintiff,

v. Case No: 6:25-cv-825-JSS-RMN

WARDEN JOHN DOE, SHERIFF WAYNE IVEY, MAJOR TORQUADO, MAJOR WILSON, and MAJOR SAMUEL,

Defendants. /

ORDER Plaintiff, a prisoner proceeding pro se, sues five officers in their individual and official capacities under 42 U.S.C. § 1983: Brevard County Sheriff Wayne Ivey and four Brevard County Jail officers described as Warden John Doe and Majors Torquado, Wilson, and Samuel. (Dkt. 1 at 2–4; Dkt. 1-1 at 1–2.) The court screens Plaintiff’s complaint under 28 U.S.C. § 1915A. Although some of the claims in the complaint are sufficiently pleaded, Plaintiff must file an amended complaint if he wishes to proceed as to other claims in the complaint that are not sufficiently pleaded. BACKGROUND Plaintiff claims that in October 2022, he was transferred from the Florida Department of Corrections to the Brevard County Jail for a pending case. (Dkt. 1-1 at 2.) According to Plaintiff, the Brevard County Jail has a total “ban on books and paper,” so he “was prohibited from transporting any of his legal mail despite having four post[-]conviction motions pending” that were “due to be ruled on in May 2023.” (Id.) Allegedly, between May 12 and 24, 2023, Plaintiff “received legal mail notifications” through the jail’s electronic tablet system “indicating that legal mail had

been received.” (Id.) Plaintiff reports that the legal mail was then sent to the mail processing center for Smart Communications, where the mail was scanned to create an electronic copy, and the originals were destroyed. (Id.) According to Plaintiff, this practice caused a six-day delay before he could access the legal mail on a tablet, and

the mail was related to cases where he had only thirty days to file an appeal. (Id.) Plaintiff was also allegedly “prohibited by the [p]roperty office from accessing his legal mail in his property because it was not legal mail related to” his pending Brevard County case. (Id.) Plaintiff states that the jail provides only fourteen tablets for forty-eight inmates

and since December 2024, his “dorm had only six tablets for [forty-eight] inmates. (Id.) Purportedly, “requests for more tablets ha[ve] been ignored.” (Id.) Plaintiff further states that the “tablets are only available for about [ten] hours per day and can[] and have been confiscated.” (Id.) He claims that officers have confiscated tablets indiscriminately and for the actions of only one person. (See id. at 2, 4–5, 9.) For

example, Plaintiff asserts that on various dates in 2024 and 2025, “the officer in charge . . . confiscated all of the tablets due to the actions of one inmate who hid a tablet in his cell.” (Id. at 4.) Plaintiff complains that these confiscations “delayed . . . [his] ability to access his legal mail to write his motions in his appeal.” (Id.) He alleges that confiscations have caused him to lose research time and access to legal mail available only on the tablet and have thus “prevented [him] from timely completing motions, conducting research, and submitting motions to the law library to request copies before mailing [the motions] to the courts.” (Id. at 5.)

Plaintiff alleges that in addition to being the only way to access legal mail, the tablets furnish the only access to the law library, and even that access is limited. (Id. at 2, 5.) According to Plaintiff, the law library does not offer access to local rules, newly passed laws, or recent Supreme Court rulings and does not provide examples of forms, motions, civil rights complaints, or habeas petitions. (Id. at 2.) Further,

Plaintiff claims, although the “jail has two [part-time] officers assigned to the law library,” they are not “trained in the law” and “can offer no legal assistance.” (Id.) Plaintiff also asserts that the books available on the tablets consist of only approximately 150 to 180 classic novels and he has no access to new or recent books.

(Id. at 5.) Purportedly, he has no access to other forms of entertainment such as movies, either, and the unnamed warden “has commented that the tablets will never have movies as long as he[ i]s in charge.” (Id. at 7 (emphasis omitted).) Given the book and paper ban, the limited law library access, and Plaintiff’s inability to access his legal paperwork for his previous convictions stored in his

property, Plaintiff allegedly “had to file three of his post[-]conviction motions without the record and without any legal assistance from persons trained in the law, and all three motions were denied.” (Id. at 2.) Plaintiff reports that he has “made mistakes in filing his post[-]conviction motions” in a timely fashion and failed to “follow certain appellate procedures, such as appealing to the proper court, . . . submitting motions for rehearing, [and] citing proper caselaw to support his claims.” (Id. at 3.) Plaintiff states that he has made additional procedural and formatting errors in civil rights cases about the conditions of his confinement and in other cases. (Id. at 4–5.) According to

Plaintiff, although he was permitted to amend some motions, others were dismissed. (Id. at 3–5.) In addition, Plaintiff claims, the delays caused by the ban caused him to “los[e] as many as [six to fifteen] working days on orders that had [thirty-]day deadlines,” and some orders imposed deadlines that expired before he

received the orders. (Id. at 3.) Allegedly, on various dates in 2024 and 2025, Plaintiff also needed the law library to print copies of certain legal mail “so that he could include [it] as evidence” on appeal and in section 1983 complaints. (Id. at 6.) Plaintiff states: “[D]ue to an issue with Smart Communications, the law library personnel cannot access any legal mail that was sent to [him] since [November 1, 2024];

consequently, [he] has [seventy-five] legal mail documents that he cannot access.” (Id.) According to Plaintiff, “this issue . . . has not been resolved” even though he submitted two grievances and the law library “contacted Smart Communications multiple times.” (Id.) Plaintiff alleges that Defendants “refuse to spend allocated funds” from an

inmate welfare account supported by jail commissary sales “to improve the law library and provide legal materials and supplies to indigent inmates.” (Id. at 8.) Plaintiff claims that the jail provides only four sheets of lined paper, two envelopes, and one pen each month to indigent inmates and he needed more than those supplies to prosecute his legal actions. (Id.) He states that as of January 2024, the account contained more than $1 million. (Id.) While some funds were used to build a half- court basketball court, to provide chess boards in dorms, and to pay for additional security for a jail-wide tournament, Plaintiff alleges that these expenditures “cost

nowhere near [$1 million], and the jail suddenly had money to replace the cell doors.” (Id.) Allegedly, when Plaintiff filed a records request to ascertain how the funds are being spent, the records custodian told him that responding to his request would cost over $1,000, leading Plaintiff to believe that the funds are being misappropriated. (Id.)

Overall, Plaintiff asserts that the total book and paper ban implemented and enforced by Defendants is an arbitrary infringement on his rights with no valid penological objective. (See id. passim.) Plaintiff claims that “th[e] ban has not stopped drugs or contraband from entering the jail.” (Id. at 3.) Moreover, Plaintiff identifies alternatives to the ban, such as “permit[ting] inmates to purchase up to three books per

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Bluebook (online)
Goldsboro v. Doe, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goldsboro-v-doe-flmd-2025.