In Re: Terry Taylor

417 F.3d 649, 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 15579, 2005 WL 1791220
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 29, 2005
Docket05-2357
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 417 F.3d 649 (In Re: Terry Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re: Terry Taylor, 417 F.3d 649, 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 15579, 2005 WL 1791220 (7th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

KANNE, Circuit Judge.

Terry Taylor seeks Judge Philip G. Re-inhard’s disqualification from presiding over a criminal case pending against Taylor because Judge Reinhard has twice been a defendant in civil cases filed by Taylor. Prior to trial, Judge Reinhard denied Taylor’s motion for disqualification under 28 U.S.C. § 455(a). We agree with Judge Reinhard that he was not required to disqualify himself from presiding over Taylor’s case, and accordingly deny Taylor’s petition for writ of mandamus. Because we have not previously addressed a situation where a litigant sought disqualification under 28 U.S.C. § 455(a) based on his prior suit against the judge, we provide the following explanation for our denial.

BACKGROUND

Taylor’s federal litigation began when he filed four suits on the same day, April 4, 1996, in the Northern District of Illinois, Western Division. The first suit was against D.E.A. agent James Flint. Taylor alleged that Flint came to Taylor’s room at the hotel where Taylor was living, asked for a cigarette, and then hit Taylor over the head with a bottle. In a separate suit, Taylor alleged that neighbors whom he believed were undercover police officers beat him up and told him that they would hurt his family if he pressed charges against James Flint. Taylor also separately sued the mayor of Rockford, the city of Rockford, and Jaime Bielfeldt, a woman Taylor had married two years earlier. Taylor alleged that Bielfeldt married him at the mayor’s request in order to investigate Taylor. Judge Reinhard denied Taylor’s request to proceed in forma pauperis in each of these cases and dismissed each one without prejudice. Taylor lastly sued Ralph Hudson, alleging that Hudson was a D.E.A. agent who had tried to get Taylor to sell drugs for the mayor of Rockford. Hudson was actually not a D.E.A. agent, but rather a defendant in a pending criminal case. Taylor included other individual defendants in this suit but failed to allege that they were involved in any wrongdo *651 ing. Judge Reinhard dismissed the case as frivolous.

On May 14, 1996, after Judge Reinhard dismissed Taylor’s first four cases, Taylor filed three new cases. He sued Ogle County Jail and three jail employees, claiming that jail staff were punishing him for his litigation against the City of Rockford. He alleged that the employees were deliberately indifferent to his medical needs, but attached medical forms showing that he had in fact been properly treated for his ailments. Taylor also filed a new suit against Mayor Box and the City of Rockford, this time adding State’s Attorney Paul Logli as a defendant. Taylor reiterated his claims from his prior litigation that D.E.A. agent Flint assaulted him, that Ralph Hudson attempted to have him sell drugs for the mayor, that police officers beat him to keep him from filing suit against Flint, and that his former wife married him in order to investigate him. Taylor went on to allege that State’s Attorney Logli and the mayor conspired to cover up the wrongdoing he had suffered. The district court dismissed the complaints in each of these cases for failure to state a claim.

In a third action filed that day, Taylor sued two of the same defendants — Paul Logli and the City of Rockford' — -and added Gloria Lind, Winnebago County Clerk, and a state judge, Judge Penniman, as defendants. Taylor claimed that Lind and Judge Penniman participated in the marriage scam created by Paul Logli. Judge Reinhard dismissed the case as frivolous and malicious under 28 U.S.C. § 1915A. He also held that Taylor had used up his allotted three strikes under 28 U.S.C. § 1915(g) and would be subject to future filing restrictions.

Two weeks after filing the above cases, Taylor filed suit against State’s Attorney Logli and ten other individual defendants, including employees of Rockford Police Department, additional state’s attorneys, and the Fire and Police Commissioner. He alleged that before he had been incarcerated he had been shot at by one of the police officer defendants. Judge Reinhard ordered Taylor to show cause why his case should not be dismissed under 28 U.S.C. § 1915(g). On the same day Taylor filed his eleven-defendant case, he separately sued seventeen individuals — again including Logli — and this time named as defendants a number of public defenders, more state’s attorneys, two state judges, and a court reporter. This suit complained of the state’s inadequate 1986 prosecution of police officer Mike Hill, who Taylor says shot him. Judge Reinhard issued a show-cause order under 28 U.S.C. § 1915(g) . in this case as well. Instead of responding to either show-cause order, Taylor filed notices of appeal.

Taylor returned to federal court in October 1996 to file suit against the same defendants listed in his seventeen-defendant case, in addition to two new defendants. Taylor alleged that a state judge, Judge Nielson, had sentenced Mike Hill to 30 years’ imprisonment, but that the listed defendants (including Judge Nielson) all conspired to keep Hill from serving his sentence. Upon filing, Taylor moved for the case to be heard by Magistrate Judge Mahoney because, Taylor claimed, Judge Reinhard is friends with Judge Nielson and Paul Logli. Taylor argued that Judge Reinhard’s friendships are evidenced by his adverse rulings against Taylor. Taylor later moved to add a number of defendants, including an eye care center that he alleged had put contact lenses on his eyes to keep him from being able to see that Mike Hill was still employed by the Rockford Police Department. Taylor filed a subsequent motion for Judge Reinhard to recuse himself because, Taylor explained, *652 he planned to file a separate suit against Judge Reinhard. Judge Reinhard denied the recusal motions and dismissed the case as frivolous under 28 U.S.C. § 1915A.

Taylor filed his next federal suit, case no. 97 C 50233, in June 1997. Taylor submitted a single-spaced list of defendants that fills a page and includes state judges, state’s attorneys, psychiatrists, police officers, jail officials, clerks of state and federal courts, medical facilities, and Judge Reinhard. The complaint claims that Judge Reinhard “has used his power as a judge to try and cover up five attemt [sic] murder’s [sic] on my life.” The evidence of this cover-up, Taylor contended, was Reinhard’s dismissal of Taylor’s cases. Taylor goes on to allege that Judge Rein-hard conspired with the Clerk of the Seventh Circuit and the pro se clerk to have a prior appeal dismissed under Rule 42(b). Taylor requested damages for mental anguish and the reinstatement of his prior cases as relief. In an attachment to his complaint, Taylor explains that Judge Re-inhard has previously ruled against him because the state court judges are “friends in the robe.” On July 9, 1997, Judge Reinhard dismissed the appeal under 28 U.S.C.

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Bluebook (online)
417 F.3d 649, 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 15579, 2005 WL 1791220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-terry-taylor-ca7-2005.