Jeff Carpenter v. Kathleen Kenney

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 6, 2022
Docket2020 CA 000954
StatusUnknown

This text of Jeff Carpenter v. Kathleen Kenney (Jeff Carpenter v. Kathleen Kenney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jeff Carpenter v. Kathleen Kenney, (Ky. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

RENDERED: OCTOBER 7, 2022; 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals

NO. 2020-CA-0954-MR

JEFF CARPENTER APPELLANT

APPEAL FROM FRANKLIN CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE PHILLIP J. SHEPHERD, JUDGE ACTION NO. 19-CI-01188

KATHLEEN KENNEY, ANNA VALENTINE, TYLER STROUGH, BEN MITCHELL, JAMES FORD, LOVELL LEWIS, PHILLIP CAMPBELL, AND ALAN LONG APPELLEES

OPINION AFFIRMING

** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: COMBS, MAZE, AND K. THOMPSON, JUDGES.

THOMPSON, K., JUDGE: Inmate Jeff Carpenter, pro se, appeals from the

dismissal of his complaint against Kathleen Kenney, Anna Valentine, Tyler

Strough, Ben Mitchell, James Ford, Lovell Lewis, Phillip Campbell, and Alan

Long (collectively the prison officials), based upon claims of retaliation. Carpenter argues he lost his job and was transferred out of the Kentucky State Reformatory

(KSR) and to the Kentucky State Penitentiary (KSP) because he stated he would

file a grievance.

Carpenter is serving a fifty-seven-year sentence for multiple

convictions and has a medium (level three) custody classification. Carpenter was

previously incarcerated at KSR before he was transferred to the Eastern Kentucky

Correctional Complex (EKCC) in 2007, and then transferred to KSR on August 2,

2013. He was originally transferred from EKCC to KSR for a safety reason based

on conflicts with other incarcerated persons. From 2007 to 2019, at all relevant

times Carpenter was considered to require medium custody based on having a

score of 12.

While at KSR, beginning in April 2018, Carpenter was given what he

considered to be a desirable job as an inmate observer (watcher), as the job paid

better and offered more hours than other inmate jobs.1 Pursuant to KSR’s Policies

and Procedures, KSR 13-02-08, watchers are to monitor other inmates housed in

the Corrections Psychiatric Treatment Unit (CPTU) who were at risk for self-harm.

1 According to Carpenter as stated in his complaint he “worked from 250 to 440 hours per month (8hr to 16hr days) and was paid .48 cents per hour to top out at .68 cents/hr mthly.” In comparison, he stated that in his work as a janitor at KSP he only makes “$1.40 per day five days a week.”

-2- According to Carpenter, in August 2019, there were increased

incidents of inmates in the CPTU cutting themselves, with allegations being made

by prison officials that the watchers were supplying them with razor blades, but he

denied having any involvement with any such scheme. Carpenter states he

believes that the watchers were being accused when it was in fact the staff that

were to blame for the lack of security. He explained that “inmates [housed in the

CPTU] bring in up to 20 – 30 razor blades in their mouths + the . . . wand-metal

detector will not detect them, then the inmates pass the razor blades on fish-n-lines,

in the showers during recreation and inside books.”

According to Carpenter, he overheard Lt. Strough comment that he

was going to lock up any watcher that he thought was bringing in razor blades and

Carpenter then “voiced his opinion and stated all they were trying to do was cover

up the lack of security in proper searching of the residents in CPTU[.]” Later, he

was called down by Lt. Strough and “told to keep his opinions to himself.”

Carpenter states he told Lt. Strough that “he would file a grievance + lawsuit

before being falsely accused” and Lt. Strough responded that “if I didn’t shut [up]

I’d go to the dorm.” Carpenter did not specify when these events took place.

According to Carpenter, thereafter on August 11, 2019:

Appellant was detained and escorted to the Captain’s office where Lt. Tyler Strough was waiting to confront him and immediately accused [A]ppellant of helping inmate Jaime Sargent to cut by giving him a razor blade,

-3- and said he only wanted one answer; I stated it wasn’t going down this way and I was going thru with a grievance, and contacting the Justice Cabinet + Commission. Lt. Strough ordered me locked up.

Appellant was taken to CPTU and chained to the wall in sh[a]ckles, cuffs, [and] leather belt for over 2 hours before the rest of the watchers as an example.

Carpenter also states that he was then placed in a CPTU cell with a feces-covered

mattress before being moved to administrative segregation where he was placed on

twenty-four-hour lockdown. According to Carpenter, he remained in

administrative segregation until August 19, 2019, and on August 22, 2019, he

received two disciplinary reports, one for smuggling in contraband and another for

stolen property of a Play Station 2 (a charge that had previously been investigated

and dismissed in 2014). Carpenter stated he then indicated to Sergeant Zachary

Terorde that he was being retaliated against and that Lt. Strough “only wrote me up

after I threatened to file a grievance.”

The disciplinary report form for smuggling contraband provided that

the incident as observed by Lt. Strough via camera was that Carpenter assisted in

passing off a package after Officer Lowe passed by conducting a security round,

specifically, “Inmate Carpenter can be seen putting an object onto Inmate Jamie

Sargent[’s] . . . fishing line.”

The investigating officer, Sgt. Terorde reported that Carpenter stated:

-4- I didn’t attach nothing to the fishing line, I didn’t assist [in] passing off the package. Jeffrey Beach . . . placed a paper towel on the floor with coffee in it, Jamie Sargent tried to fish it from between us, I (Carpenter) was on a 1 on 1 watch with inmate Hardy when the fishing line struck my foot, I (Carpenter) kicked the line away from me to the left.

Sgt. Terorde summarized his interviews with other inmates as follows:

Inmate Sargent stated that he was attempting to fish from his cell to another inmate[’]s cell, Carpenter had nothing to do with what I was doing.

...

Inmate Hardy stated he was half asleep and out of it due to committing self-harm a couple days in a row. Inmate Hardy stated that he did not see inmate Carpenter hold or touch anything like what the report reads.

Inmate Beach stated that inmate Carpenter had nothing to do with the fishing line or the coffee that was in the paper towel. Inmate Beach stated . . . that he takes full responsibility for the actions that took place and the coffee being received by inmate Sargent.

Inmate Glasscock stated “I . . . was there, but didn’t really observe anything. I talked to inmate Carpenter and then left.”

Sgt. Terorde’s review of the camera footage is as follows:

[A]t timestamp 17:00:06 Officer John Lowe walks past inmate Sargent[’s] cell and continued with his round. At time stamp 17:00:24 inmate Sargent shoots his fishing

-5- line from under the door towards the watchers. At time stamp 17:00:32 inmate Carpenter[’]s foot was on top of the fishing line at the time of inmate Carpenter[’]s foot movement. At time stamp 17:00:35 inmate Beach moves his foot and pulls the fishing line with his foot and began to hook the fishing line to the package on the ground. After inmate Beach begins to help inmate Sargent with the fishing line, inmate Carpenter has nothing else to do with the fishing line.

Sgt. Terorde referred the matter to the adjustment committee, explaining he

charged Carpenter with Kentucky Department of Corrections, Policies and

Procedures (CPP) 15.2(II)(B)(IV)(5) for smuggling of contraband into/out

of/within institution “due to inmate Carpenter assisting to pass contraband by ‘fish’

line.”

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Jeff Carpenter v. Kathleen Kenney, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeff-carpenter-v-kathleen-kenney-kyctapp-2022.