Harris v. Miller

818 F.3d 49, 2016 WL 963904, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 4701
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMarch 15, 2016
DocketDocket No. 14-2957
StatusPublished
Cited by305 cases

This text of 818 F.3d 49 (Harris v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. Miller, 818 F.3d 49, 2016 WL 963904, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 4701 (2d Cir. 2016).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Plaintiff-Appellant Audra Lynn Harris is a former inmate of Bedford Hills Correctional Facility. She testified at her deposition that, while incarcerated at Bed-ford Hills, a male officer and three female officers entered her room to take down cotton that she had removed from her mattress and pasted to her room’s windows. The male officer then demanded to know if Harris had any more cotton. According to Harris’s testimony, which was not disputed under oath, after she said no, the three female officers grabbed her, threw her to the ground, lifted her smock, and forcibly opened her legs to allow the male officer to visually inspect her genitalia for any additional cotton.

Harris later brought a claim against the officers, Defendants-Appellees • Michael Miller, Ella Anderson, Valerie Bryant, and Robin Trotter (collectively, the “Appel-lees”), for violations of her constitutional rights based on this search. After the Appellees moved for summary judgment, the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (McMahon, /.) determined that there was no genuine dispute of material fact and that the Ap-pellees were entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Because we respectfully conclude that the district court’s analysis of this claim rested on an incomplete assessment of the law, particularly the Fourth Amendment’s protection of an inmate’s right to bodily privacy, and because we conclude that there are genuine disputes of material fact, we VACATE so much of the district court’s order as dismissed the claim concerning the search for cotton, and we REMAND for further proceedings.

I. BACKGROUND

The following facts are either uncontro-verted or construed in the light most favorable' to Harris, the nonmovant. Harris was incarcerated at Bedford' Hills Correctional Facility in Bedford Hills, New York, from September 30, 2008, to February 14, 2012, for burglary and criminal contempt. Dr. Catherine McDermott-Coffin, the Forensic Unit Chief of the New York State Central New York Psychiatric Center’s Satellite Unit at Bedford Hills, explained that Harris received a Level 1 designation for “Treatment Needs/Service Level” at the time of her admission. J.A. 1108-09. A Level 1 “designation is the highest level designation and is assigned to individuals displaying symptoms of major/serious mental illness, with active symptoms requiring care and treatment and/or patients who require frequent support and interventions by the mental health staff.” Id.

During her incarceration, at Bedford Hills, Harris filed at least 30 grievances against prison staff, at least 11 of them prior to the events at issue in this appeal. Harris alleges that “throughout [her] incarceration, [her] Civil Rights were violated by Bedford Hills Correction’s Officers and Security staff due to their pattern of ongoing abuse of authority, fabricated Misbehavior Reports, malicious and calculated cell searches, harassment, retaliation, deliberate indifference, intentional misconduct, as well as verbal and physical abuse and beatings.” J.A. 1191. She further [55]*55alleges that she “was constantly harassed and retaliated against by officers because [she] wrote grievances when they violated [her] rights and the rules.” J.A. 1192.

' Following a series of incidents that áre outside the scope of this appeal, officers transferred Harris to a one-on-one observation room to monitor her more closely. In the observation room, officers directed Harris to change into a smock. Harris, who had been in an observation room before, acknowledged that changing into a smock was standard procedure. At her deposition, Harris explained that she attempted to put the smock on over her clothing while getting undressed, but the officers told her she could not undress in that manner. She stated that the officers proceeded to knock her down and pull off her clothing, injuring her in the process, before throwing the smock at her. (It is unclear from the record which officers were involved in this incident.) Harris contends that she then requested medical assistance from nearby nurses, but 'the officers who had changed her clothing refused to allow the nurses to tend to her.

At that point,, Harris attempted to use her mattress to block the observation room’s windows. She explained at her deposition: “I put up my mattress again so I couldn’t be seen, because I felt humiliated. I felt like I had been raped, and nobody would help me.” J.A. 1072. Harris then.ripped open her mattress, which may have been torn already, and started using water to put the mattress’s cotton stuffing on the windows so that she “couldn’t be seen.” J.A. 1072.

What occurred after Harris began pasting the cotton to the windows is the focus of this appeal. At her deposition, Harris testified that a male officer, Miller, and three female officers — later identified as Anderson, Bryant, and Trotter — entered her room and started taking down the cotton while Harris stood in the shower. At her deposition, Harris recounted the events that followed:

And • [Miller], said you have any more cotton? And I said no. He told me to lift up my smock. And I said, I don’t have anything. I said, you can’t do that. You are a man. And then he nodded to the three officers, and they snatched me . on the ground, threw, me on the ground, and they started — like I tried to keep my legs closed, and they pulled my legs apart, lift up my smock. And they opened my legs and he at my legs— between my legs. And then they threw my legs down, and' then I started screaming. I started screaming. I realized I had a cut.

J.A. 1072. Shortly after this incident, Miller, with the assistance of others, caused Harris to be injected with antipsychotic medication.

Several weeks later, Harris filed a grievance complaining about;the April 8, 2010 search. The description she provided in that grievance is consistent with her initial complaint. filed in the district court on September 7, 2011, her amended complaint filed on November 29, 2011, her deposition testimony on November. 26, 2012, and, finally, her declaration in opposition to defendants’ motion for summary judgment filed on November 22, 2013.

Harris’s description is also the only evidence in the record detailing the April 8, 2010 search: The Appellees did not offer any evidence contradicting Harris’s description of the incident, such. as . an affidavit from Miller stating that the search never happened or explaining that it did not happen as Harris describes. Instead, the Appellees’ only denial that the search occurred was in their briefs filed in the district court. Moreover, the evidence that the Appellees submitted to the district court relating to the incident corroborates [56]*56much of Harris’s description, although it is silent on the officers’ conduct. For example, the Appellees submitted an"-Inmate Misbehavior Report dated April 8, 2010, which states that, on April 8, 2010,

while conducting an 1 on 1 watch with inmate Harris ..,, after discovering she was moving her mattress to the shower, [Anderson] gave her several direct orders-to move it. Inmate Harris proceeded to rip a hole in the mattress & place it’s contents on the floor and'the glass (she used water as a paste) blocking [Anderson’s] view.

J.A. 1131. They also submitted the following entry from Harris’s medical-file, 'also dated April 8, 2010:

Inmate has been on Infírmáry for several days, but today, became combative & irrational, prompting a phone call to OMH — Inmate’s therapist, Spatárella, attended pt.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
818 F.3d 49, 2016 WL 963904, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 4701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-miller-ca2-2016.