JerMichael Pearson v. Warden Cedric Taylor

665 F. App'x 858
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 20, 2016
Docket14-15459
StatusUnpublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 665 F. App'x 858 (JerMichael Pearson v. Warden Cedric Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
JerMichael Pearson v. Warden Cedric Taylor, 665 F. App'x 858 (11th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Jermichael Pearson, a Georgia state prisoner proceeding pro se, filed a civil-rights complaint under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging claims under the Eighth Amendment against several employees of the Georgia state prison system. He alleged that CERT Team Officer Robert Weston used excessive force by maliciously pepper spraying him and that the other defendants, Deputy Warden Ted Philbin, Deputy Warden Calvin Orr, and Warden Cedric Taylor, were deliberately indifferent to his medical needs after the use of excessive force. The district court granted summary judgment to Weston on the excessive-force claim and dismissed the deliberate-indifference claims for failure to exhaust administrative remedies.

On appeal, Pearson argues that the district court erroneously granted summary judgment to Weston because material facts are in dispute. Furthermore, he contends that the Georgia Department of Corrections’s (“GDOC”) use-of-force policy is unconstitutional, and he asks for leave to amend his complaint to add GDOC policymakers Brian Owens and “Mr. Tillman” as defendants. Finally, he asserts, the district court improperly resolved factual disputes in deciding whether he had exhausted his administrative remedies, erred in concluding that the administrative remedies were “available,” and abused its discretion by not allowing him to amend his complaint to show exhaustion.

After a careful review of the record and consideration of the parties’ briefs, we conclude that the district court improperly granted summary judgment to Weston, and we vacate and remand for further proceedings on Pearson’s excessive-force claim. We affirm the district court in all .other respects.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

We first present the facts relevant to Pearson’s excessive-force claim against Weston. For clarity, and because Weston *860 disputes whether Pearson’s version of events must be credited at summary judgment, we set forth the parties’ distinct versions of the relevant events, as well as a summary of other record evidence, including a video recording.

A. Pearson’s Version of Events

On January 15, 2013, an inmate escaped his cell at Valdosta State Prison and stabbed another inmate repeatedly with a metal shank. The attacker then threw the shank into Pearson’s cell and threatened him not to tell anyone.

When prison officers responded to the attack, Pearson discreetly obtained Officer Weston’s attention. Weston came over and saw the shank on the floor of Pearson’s cell. Weston told Pearson to hand over the shank, but Pearson refused, stating that he did not want to risk disease because the shank was covered in blood. Pearson offered to be handcuffed so that Weston could retrieve the shank. Apparently ignoring Pearson’s offer, Weston again ordered Pearson to hand him the shank and threatened to use pepper spray if he did not. Pearson asked why Weston would pepper spray him if he was not a threat to security, other inmates, or himself.

At that point, Weston, wielding a “riot-size” canister of pepper spray, deployed pepper spray at Pearson and into his cell for one to two minutes. Because Pearson was wearing only underwear at the time, the spray hit all parts of his body, including, most notably, his eyes. The spray caused Pearson to vomit blood and mucus and to faint for around five minutes. He awoke to Weston and another officer yelling at him to stand up and come to the cell door to be handcuffed. Pearson responded that he could not breathe or stand up. Weston deployed a second burst of pepper spray, this time for ten to fifteen seconds. Pearson was near the back of the cell for the second burst, so it did not directly hit him, but he pled for time to compose himself and for Weston not to use pepper spray again. During this time, Weston and the other officer shouted abusively and harshly ordered him to come to the door to “cuff up.” Pearson eventually did so.

Weston and other officers escorted Pearson from his cell to a shower cell, where he waited for around twenty minutes for the nurse to arrive. While waiting in the shower, Pearson vomited blood and mucus. When the nurse arrived, she conducted what Pearson claims was an improper evaluation and then told him that he would recover in twenty-four hours when the pepper spray wore off. Pearson was not allowed to shower either before or after the nurse’s evaluation.

When the nurse left, Weston escorted Pearson back to his cell. Along the way, Weston “spitt[ed] obscenities” at Pearson and stomped on his bare feet. When they reached Pearson’s cell, the chemical agents from the pepper spray still lingered in the air. Pearson’s cell door had remained closed while he was in the shower cell, and ventilation in the cells was otherwise poor. Pearson asked for but was refused cleaning supplies to decontaminate his cell.

Pearson claimed that the exposure to pepper spray damaged his eyes. He asserted that he has suffered from temporary blindness, blurry vision, and other vision complications since the incident.

B. Weston’s Version of Events

Weston provided the same basic outline of events, but he contradicted Pearson on several key facts. According to Weston, when he responded to the stabbing incident, he saw Pearson standing in his cell holding a bloody shank. Weston ordered Pearson four separate times to either hand over the shank or come to the cell door to *861 be handcuffed. Pearson refused and instead tried to flush the shank down the toilet.

Deciding he needed to recover the shank as quickly as possible for safety and security reasons, Weston deployed a three-second burst of pepper spray into Pearson’s cell and then shut the tray slap to let the spray take effect. Weston did not observe Pearson coughing, vomiting, or fainting. After the single use of pepper spray— the only time pepper spray was used— another officer began recording the incident with a video camera. Pearson eventually came to the door to be handcuffed after a different officer threatened to use pepper spray again. Pearson was taken to a shower cell to be seen by a nurse, and he was permitted to shower after the nurse saw him.

C. Other Relevant Evidence

The nurse who examined Pearson executed an affidavit in which she stated that she completed a “use of force” assessment when she examined Pearson on January 15, 2013. The nurse stated that she did not observe any objective medical symptoms or injuries that would indicate that an excessive amount of pepper spray had been used. The nurse did not see any vomit, blood, or mucus on the floor of the shower. Pearson was not allowed to shower before the examination, the nurse said, but he showered afterward. The nurse, referencing medical records attached to the affidavit, stated that Pearson had complained of vision problems multiple times before January 15,2013.

The record also includes a DVD with a video recording, lasting just over eight minutes, taken by one of the officers. The video begins after any use of pepper spray and ends with Pearson in the shower waiting for the nurse.

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Bluebook (online)
665 F. App'x 858, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jermichael-pearson-v-warden-cedric-taylor-ca11-2016.