Johnson v. Alameda County Sheriff Department - Santa Rita Jail

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedNovember 29, 2021
Docket4:20-cv-08283
StatusUnknown

This text of Johnson v. Alameda County Sheriff Department - Santa Rita Jail (Johnson v. Alameda County Sheriff Department - Santa Rita Jail) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Alameda County Sheriff Department - Santa Rita Jail, (N.D. Cal. 2021).

Opinion

1 2 3 4 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 5 NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 6 7 ETTA JOHNSON, Case No. 20-cv-08283-DMR

8 Plaintiff, ORDER ON DEFENDANTS’ MOTION 9 v. TO DISMISS AND MOTION FOR MORE DEFINITE STATEMENT 10 ALAMEDA COUNTY SHERIFF'S DEPARTMENT, et al., Re: Dkt. No. 15 11 Defendants. 12 13 Defendants Alameda County Sheriff’s Department, Santa Rita Jail, and Alameda County 14 Sheriffs Does 1-20 (collectively, “Defendants”) move to dismiss Plaintiff Etta Johnson’s first 15 amended complaint (“FAC”) for civil rights violations under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 16 12(b)(1) and (b)(6), or for a more definite statement under Rule 12(e). (“Mot.”) [Docket No. 15.] 17 Johnson is self-represented. The court held a hearing on November 17, 2021 by Zoom at which 18 counsel for Defendants appeared. Johnson did not appear but likely as a result of connection 19 problems. For the following reasons, Defendants’ motion is denied in part and granted in part. 20 Johnson is granted to leave to file a Second Amended Complaint (“SAC”) within 30 days—i.e., by 21 December 29, 2021—in accordance with the court’s instructions at the end of this order. 22 I. BACKGROUND 23 Johnson makes the following allegations in the FAC and the accompanying attachments, 24 all of which are taken as true for the purposes of the motion.1 The court recounts all of her 25

26 1 When reviewing a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, the court must “accept as true all of the factual allegations contained in the complaint.” Erickson v. Pardus, 551 U.S. 89, 94 27 (2007) (per curiam) (citation omitted). 1 allegations, even though a number of them are not related to the four legal claims that she asserts. 2 On the night of February 13, 2019, Johnson was riding an AC Transit bus toward her home in 3 West Oakland. FAC at 16. She placed her purse on the seat behind the bus driver while she paid 4 her fare. Id. As she was paying, she saw a man reach into the side of her purse and grab her 5 phone. Id. As he pulled her phone out of her purse, she hit his hand and told him to let go of her 6 phone and “stay out of [her] purse.” Id. The bus driver asked the man if Johnson hit him, and he 7 said that she did. Id. Then, the bus driver called the Alameda County sheriff. Id. 8 An unidentified law enforcement officer—whom Johnson describes as “the sheriff”— 9 boarded the bus and asked the man if Johnson hit him. He told the officer yes. Id. The officer 10 asked the man if he wanted to press charges, and the man said no. Id. Thereafter, the officer 11 ordered Johnson to get up and disembark. Id. Johnson had two bags and her purse with her. The 12 officer took one of Johnson’s bags from her, and she carried the other bag and her purse off the 13 bus. Id. Once she reached the sidewalk, the officer seized her right arm and twisted it very hard, 14 and she heard a “pop” in her elbow and shoulder. Id. She fell to the ground in pain. Id. The 15 officer grabbed her off the ground by her clothes and threw her into the back of his car. Id. at 16- 16 17. The officer then shoved an object into her mouth and told her to “blow on this.” Id. at 17. 17 Johnson did not know the object was a breathalyzer. Id. The officer told her she was not 18 “blowing correctly” into the breathalyzer, and he told her to blow into it again. Id. Johnson 19 passed out, possibly due to her arm pain. Id. She says that when she came to, she was at Santa 20 Rita jail. Id. Her arrest paperwork stated that she was arrested for public drunkenness, but she 21 claims she had not consumed any alcohol that night. Id. 22 According to a grievance Johnson filed on May 8, 2019 which is attached to the FAC, 23 24 expands upon the statement of facts in her handwritten FAC. See FAC at 3-4, 12, 16-17 (as the 25 FAC does not contain page numbers, citations in this order refer to the pagination on the ECF docket filing). The most complete version appears to be the typed statement of facts at pages 16 26 and 17. Johnson also attaches statements from two separate grievances filed with the Alameda County Sheriff’s Office. The court liberally construes all of these materials as part of her 27 complaint and considers them to establish Johnson’s factual allegations. Johnson is directed to provide a single, complete version of her statement of facts when she files her SAC if she should 1 Johnson experienced other incidents while she was imprisoned at Santa Rita. See FAC at 18.2 2 First, Johnson claims that a correctional officer smashed her fingers in her cell door. Id. at 21. On 3 February 24, 2019 during her afternoon “pod time,” Johnson re-entered her cell for a minute. Id. 4 As she was exiting her cell again for the remainder of her pod time, an unidentified female 5 corrections officer smashed Johnson’s fingers in her cell door, causing her fingers to become stuck 6 in the door, which resulted in “pain and injury.” Id. at 21-22. The officer laughed at her and told 7 her that her pod time was up. Id. at 22. After Johnson replied that she still had remaining pod 8 time, the officer “went and checked and then came back and told [her that she] could go back on 9 the pod.” Id. Johnson asked to see the nurse or go to the hospital because of her finger injury, but 10 no one came to help her prepare the form to go to the doctor until the next day. Id. A doctor 11 ultimately did not see her before she was released. Id. 12 Next, Johnson claims that Defendant Santa Rita Jail denied access to her blood pressure 13 medications during her incarceration. FAC at 24. She has prescriptions for Metoprolol, 14 Simvastin, and 80 milligrams of aspirin to treat her medical conditions including high blood 15 pressure and congestive heart failure. Id. Because she did not have her medications, she suffered 16 from high blood pressure and headaches while incarcerated. Id. at 24-25. The jail gave her an 17 alternate medication that did not control her blood pressure and headaches. Id. at 25. Johnson’s 18 request for a medical evaluation was denied, and she was told she would have to pay to see a 19 doctor. Id. She did not see a doctor before she was released. Id.3 20 Johnson was released from Santa Rita on February 27, 2019. FAC at 22. On April 10, 21 2019, the criminal charge against her was dismissed. Id. at 17. 22 Johnson alleges that she has suffered ongoing pain and nerve damage after the officer 23 twisted her arm, requiring her to seek medical treatment, physical therapy, and a referral to an 24

25 2 Johnson says that the officers refused to accept these grievances while she was in jail and that she had to file them after she was released. FAC at 21. 26 3 Johnson also describes a delay in receiving her commissary food order, the correctional officer 27 and another inmate serving her a cooked rat, and the jail’s refusal to provide her with a phone card and specific candy bars she asked for. See FAC at 27-28. She does not assert any legal claims 1 orthopedist. Id. She also alleges that after she was released from jail, the two bags she was 2 carrying with her on the night she was arrested were not returned to her, nor were three items that 3 were in her purse—Gucci Red perfume, Yves St. Lauren perfume, and a stick of lipstick. Id. 4 The FAC states the following claims for relief: (1) excessive force related to the incident 5 with the arresting officer on February 13, 2019; (2) deliberate indifference to medical needs of a 6 pre-trial detainee related to incidents at Santa Rita; (3) a claim related to the deprivation of her 7 property, styled as a second excessive force claim; and (4) false arrest related to her arrest.4 FAC 8 at 5-9.

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Johnson v. Alameda County Sheriff Department - Santa Rita Jail, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-alameda-county-sheriff-department-santa-rita-jail-cand-2021.