Hill v. PA Dept. of Corrections

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 29, 2025
Docket3:24-cv-01393
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Hill v. PA Dept. of Corrections, (M.D. Pa. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA FAQUAN HILL,

Plaintiff CIVIL ACTION NO. 3:24-CV-01393

v. (MEHALCHICK, J.)

LAUREL HARRY, et al.,

Defendants.

MEMORANDUM Plaintiff Faquan Hill, proceeding pro se and in forma pauperis, has filed an amended complaint alleging a campaign of abuse and harassment by various employees of the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections (“DOC”). (Doc. 12). Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1915A, the Court will permit Hill to proceed on certain claims against nine of the 27 named defendants but dismiss all other claims. The Court will deny Hill’s motion for appointment of counsel (Doc. 14) without prejudice. I. BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY The Court granted Hill leave to file this amended complaint because his original complaint (Doc. 1) did not state a plausible claim for relief. (Doc. 9). The amended complaint is prolix, but the Court summarizes Hill’s allegations to the extent relevant to his claims, mindful of the requirement that pro se pleadings be “liberally construed.” See Estelle v. Gamble, 429 U.S. 97, 106 (1976). Hill alleges that he is a “D-roster” inmate1 who has been housed in solitary confinement in the “DTU”2 at various DOC institutions. Between May 2022 and January 2023, Hill was generally incarcerated at SCI-Rockview (“Rockview”), but repeatedly transferred to SCI-Phoenix (“Phoenix”) for court hearings. On August 29, while Hill was on suicide watch at Phoenix, he asked Unit Manager Fanrak for permission to make “an

emergency call to the DOC abuse hotline.” A phone was brought to Hill’s cell, and Hill made “several calls” to the abuse hotline to “report various abuse issues that happened to him” at Rockview. Hill also reported that he had told Fanrak, Deputy Sipple, and CCPM Muick about the abuse and that they had “neglected to help [Hill] avoid going back to SCI-Rockview to avoid further abuse.” During these calls, Lieutenants Baity and Mertin were standing near Hill’s cell “eavesdropping.” After the calls, Baity allegedly told Hill that he “heard everything and was going to tell [Fanrak, Sipple, and Muick] that [Hill] was ‘SNITCHING’ on them and make them send [Hill] back to SCI-Rockview immediately so [Hill] could continue to be abused.” Mertin allegedly “co-signed” Baity’s statement. Baity and Mertin allegedly “taunted

and teased” Hill through the intercom in his cell by calling him a “snitch” and a “bitch” for phoning the abuse hotline, and said that they “would make sure [Hill] would be immediately transferred back to SCI-Rockview in a body bag within 24 hours.”

1 “The D Stability Code . . . applies to inmates who have the most significant mental health needs and entitles them to the greatest amount of mental health resources available.” Dooley v. Wetzel, 957 F.3d 366, 370 (3d Cir. 2020) (citing Pa. DOC Reg. § 13.8.1(1)). 2 The DTU, or Diversionary Treatment Unit, is a form of high security housing for inmates with mental health needs. See Brown v. Baronner, No. 3:19-CV-0374, 2022 WL 905538, at *4 (M.D. Pa. Mar. 28, 2022). Later that day, Baity allegedly told another officer (“John Doe”) “to give [Hill] a razor so he could kill himself.” Officer Doe, who is not named as a defendant in this case, allegedly gave Hill a razor even though Hill was on suicide watch. When he returned to his cell, Hill “started to cut himself with the razor and then swallowed it as an attempt to commit suicide.” He began spitting up blood, and several inmates in nearby cells yelled for emergency help.

Baity and Mertin allegedly “began taunting [Hill] and telling him to die slow.” “Almost two hours” after the calls for help, Baity, Mertin and several unnamed officers “cell extracted” Hill and escorted him to a psychiatric observation cell (“POC”). The balance of Hill’s complaint to this Court is dedicated to legal paperwork that Hill lost during the extraction, his unsuccessful attempts to retrieve it, and an alleged campaign of harassment by various DOC employees in retaliation for his complaints about the lost paperwork and other prison conditions. Hill alleges that his property was not retrieved from his cell after the extraction, despite a DOC policy which allegedly requires that “an inmate[’]s property is supposed to be immediately brought to the area where [the] inmate is housed.”

On August 30, C.O.s Greaves, Shoanberger, Lentz, and a lieutenant (“Jane Doe”) told Hill that he was being transferred back to Rockview. Hill inquired about his legal property, but these officers “said that it was never brought to the POC storage area as it should [have] been,” and that it “might” still be left in his old cell because Mertin and Baity were “angry” about Hill’s phone calls and the fact that they had to extract him from the cell. An “intake sergeant,” also referred to as “John Doe,”3 said that he had packed Hill’s property “on a bus that left earlier that morning to SCI-Benner and would make its way to SCI-Rockview.” Hill protested

3 The complaint asserts claims against “SCI Phoenix Property Sgt. John Doe.” The Court infers that this is not the same “John Doe” allegedly involved in Hill’s suicide attempt. that the property should have been transferred in the same vehicle as Hill. Shoanberger “said that would have been true if [Hill] did not upset” Mertin and Baity, which Doe allegedly confirmed. During the journey back to Rockview, Hill continued to protest to Lentz and Shoanberger about the mishandling of his property. Lentz “told [Hill] that if he would stop complaining and let the situation go that they would stop at ‘Royal Farms’ and get him some

chicken.” The officers ultimately did stop at Royal Farms and “tr[ied] to bribe [Hill] with food to keep his mouth shut.” Upon arrival at Rockview, an intake sergeant asked where Hill’s property was, to which Shoanberger replied: “[Hill] pissed the wrong people off.” When he was returned to the Rockview DTU, Hill raised the issue with Unit Manager Knapp. Knapp allegedly responded that he “had heard that [Hill] had made many complaints about him to the abuse hotline and the PREA investigator,” “that he would make [Hill’s] life a living hell,” and that “if he gets his hands on any of [Hill’s] property he would throw it in the garbage.” Hill filed a grievance about his lost property and raised the issue at weekly “PRC”

meetings, which were arranged by staff to discuss his DTU status. At one such meeting, Deputy Rowe, CCPM Miller, Major Halderman, PSS Hull, and Knapp were in attendance. In addition to the lost property, Hill complained that he had received “no basic issue of property of hygiene products, bed sheets, and clean clothes.” Knapp allegedly admitted that “he refused to give [Hill] any property.” All five defendants at this meeting allegedly agreed that Hill “should not be given any basic issue property or clean clothes for at least another week because [Hill] deserved to suffer for crying to PREA about his DTU staff.” Hill also complained to Facility Manager Salamon, who allegedly remarked that Hill “could kiss his legal property goodbye and that he would never get it back.” Salamon allegedly explained that Hill’s complaints had upset “a lot of SCI Rockview staff,” including herself, and that she would direct the grievance coordinators, Nikki Paul and K. Brubaker, to “find a reason” to dismiss any grievance Hill filed because they were “a tight knit family.” Brubaker ultimately denied Hill’s grievances for “made[-]up and[/]or confusing reasons that did not coincide with DOC policy and that [Hill] was not responsible for.” Hill appealed, but these

appeals were denied on similar grounds. Hill filed additional grievances, which were denied by SCI-Phoenix grievance coordinator “K.

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Hill v. PA Dept. of Corrections, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-pa-dept-of-corrections-pamd-2025.