Harris, Larry v. Karna, Petar

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Wisconsin
DecidedNovember 17, 2022
Docket3:21-cv-00133
StatusUnknown

This text of Harris, Larry v. Karna, Petar (Harris, Larry v. Karna, Petar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris, Larry v. Karna, Petar, (W.D. Wis. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF WISCONSIN

LARRY D. HARRIS, JR.,

Plaintiff, v. OPINION and ORDER

PETAR KARNA, BRADLEY R. JAHNKE, 21-cv-133-jdp and DANE KIRK,

Defendants.1

Plaintiff Larry D. Harris, Jr., appearing pro se, is a prisoner at Waupun Correctional Institution. Harris alleges that when he was incarcerated at Columbia Correctional Institution, correctional officers injured him by placing him in tight handcuffs and refusing to loosen them. Harris brings claims under the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Defendants have filed a motion for summary judgment, Dkt. 31, which I will deny because there are genuine disputes of material fact concerning the events at issue and Harris’s injuries. The case will proceed to trial. UNDISPUTED FACTS The following facts are undisputed unless otherwise noted. Plaintiff Larry D. Harris, Jr. was incarcerated at Columbia Correctional Institution (CCI). Defendants worked at CCI: Petar Karna was a lieutenant and Bradley Jahnke and Dane Kirk were correctional officers. Harris brings claims about defendants’ refusal to loosen his

1 I have amended the caption to reflect the spellings of defendants’ names as provided in their submissions. overly tight handcuffs at the end of a series of events occurring after Harris assaulted a correctional officer. The events leading up to the handcuffing at issue bear some relevance to Harris’s claims, so I begin with the assault. A. Background

At about 8:15 a.m. on February 18, 2016, Harris attacked a correctional officer who he was conversing with. The assault lasted about 40 seconds; Harris struck the officer with a closed fist about a dozen times, put his arms around the officer’s neck, knocked him to the floor, and kicked him. Harris walked away from the officer. Security staff entered the unit to restrain Harris. Defendants state that Harris resisted staff and kicked at them. Harris states that he did not resist the officers. Video footage of the assault and aftermath does not show whether Harris resisted: Harris’s body is largely blocked from the view of one of the cameras by the large

number of officers who responded to the scene, and the officers’ restraint of Harris was outside the view of the other camera. See Dkt. 34-3 and 34-4 (placeholder entries for video footage from two cameras). Defendant Karna twice fired a taser to Harris’s right shoulder and left thigh. Another officer fired a second taser to Harris’s thigh, but Karna stopped the taser cycle short because officers were able to handcuff Harris by that point. Defendants say that it was necessary to tase Harris to gain his compliance; Harris says that he was already compliant. Karna called for a “restraint chair,” which prison policy allows for transport of “highly

assaultive or out-of-control inmates.” Dkt. 34-1, at 6. A restraint chair is built with a groove to provide space for an inmate’s hands handcuffed behind his back. Once Harris had been secured into the restraint chair, security staff escorted Harris to be strip searched, secured in a bed restraint, and placed in a control cell. As he was escorted to the observation shower, Harris stated that he was asthmatic and could not breathe, and he asked for his inhaler. Karna told him that medical staff had been

alerted and his inhaler would be retrieved as soon as possible. Staff arrived with Harris at the observation shower to conduct a strip search, helped Harris to his feet, and escorted him toward the shower. Defendants say that Harris lunged toward the shower so they “stabilized” him against the door; Harris said that he did not lunge or resist the officers at any point. The strip search did not reveal any contraband. Non-defendant Nurse Beverly Veyna examined Harris and noted that he was not wheezing and that his lungs were clear. She noted a cut to his lip that did not need stitches. Officers put Harris back in the restraint chair and transported him back to the unit.

At the unit, Karna and other staff lifted Harris out of the restraint chair and placed him in a five-point bed restraint. Harris repeatedly stated that the restraints on his ankles were “way too tight” and he complained of his left hand being weak or numb. Dkt. 33, ¶ 25. Video of this part of the events shows that Karna loosened Harris’s left ankle restraint, stating “that’s a little too tight.” Dkt. 34-5 (placeholder entry for the video recording), at 00:10. Harris says that Karna loosened the restraint only after Veyna told him to, but that is not reflected in the video, so I will accept defendants’ proposed finding on this issue. Nurse Veyna examined Harris further, cleaning his lip and giving him two puffs of his

asthma inhaler. She and another nurse checked his restraints, concluding that they were not too tight even though Harris continued to say that they were. B. Handcuffing central to Harris’s claims Harris’s Eighth Amendment claims are about the following events. It is unclear exactly how long Harris was in the restraint bed before the handcuffing that is the subject of Harris’s Eighth Amendment claims. Defendants state that about two

hours after the assault, defendant officers Jahnke and Kirk unrestrained Harris and took him out of the bed. Harris says that they took him out of the bed about an hour after the assault. It is undisputed that Jahnke and Kirk placed Harris in handcuffs and leg restraints, sat him in a restraint chair, and escorted him to a room in the segregation unit to be interviewed by two detectives from the Columbia County Sherriff’s Department. Defendant Karna supervised the officers’ placement of restraints. After Jahnke applied the handcuffs Harris immediately complained to Jahnke about the tightness of the cuffs. Harris told Jahnke that he felt pain in his wrist and it felt like the

handcuffs were so tight that they were breaking his wrists and cutting off blood circulation. Harris asked Jahnke if he could loosen the handcuffs but Jahnke ignored him. Harris then asked Karna if the handcuffs could be loosened but Karna ignored him. On the way to the interview room, Harris continued to complain to defendants Jahnke and Kirk about the tightness of the handcuffs and he asked them to loosen the right handcuff because it felt like it was breaking his wrist, but they ignored him. Harris told them that he would refuse to cooperate with the interview unless they loosened the handcuff, but they ignored him.

The interview with the detectives lasted less than two minutes. Harris refused to tell the detectives his name or share his version of events. While he was being taken to another cell, Harris told Jahnke and Kirk that the handcuff on Harris’s right wrist was so tight that his hand felt numb. According to Harris, Jahnke told him “that [Harris] would have to deal with it because he was being transported to [Waupun Correctional Institution].” Dkt. 43, ¶ 48. Jahnke and Kirk then secured Harris in a room facing a wall to await transport. Harris says that he was left in the room for two hours; defendants say that it was about an hour.

When non-defendant officers arrived to transport Harris, they uncuffed him and Harris noticed “painful sores” on his right wrist and “long welts” on his left wrist from the handcuffs. Id., ¶¶ 58, 59. The next day Harris saw a nurse and stated he had pain and numbness in his wrists. The nurse gave him ibuprofen for his pain. Staff reported that he had only light marks on his wrist that were “barely able to [be] visualize[d].” Dkt. 35-1, at 3. Harris continued to have pain, muscle cramps, numbness, and stiffness in his right hand and wrist. In March 2016, about three weeks after the assault, a nurse examined Harris and noted no swelling or deformity in his right wrist and a range of motion within normal limits. A

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