Jones v. Linn

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Illinois
DecidedMarch 15, 2024
Docket3:19-cv-01307
StatusUnknown

This text of Jones v. Linn (Jones v. Linn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Linn, (S.D. Ill. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS BRIAN JONES #K56957, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) vs. ) Case No. 19-CV-1307-SMY ) MAC-SHANE FRANK, et al, ) ) Defendants. ) MEMORANDUM AND ORDER YANDLE, District Judge: Now pending before the Court is the Motion for Summary Judgment filed by Defendants Mac-Shane Frank, Heck, Frank Lawrence, Warden Love, C/O Rodman, Diane Skorch, Billy Stanhouse, Scott Thompson, Wangler (Doc. 168),which Plaintiff Brian Jonesopposes (Doc. 175). For the following reasons, the motion isGRANTED in part. Factual Background The following material facts are undisputed unless otherwise noted: During the relevant periods from November 2016 to September 2019,Defendants were staff members of Pinckneyville Correctional Center, and Jones was an inmate at the facility. On April 30, 2019, Pinckneyville had Jones move houses. He had been at his previous house for two years, so he had “a lot of stuff” (Doc. 169-1 at 12:22-24). Prison rules mandated that inmates could possess personal property, but it must fit into a box (Doc. 169-1 at 15:3-6). Jones testified that Defendant Wangler told him that he only had 15 minutes to fit his property into a box and threw some of the things out of the box despite them fitting (Doc. 169-1 at 13:5-22). Wangler took the “majority of everything out” and Jones had to payover $70 to send the remaining property to his home (Doc. 169-1 at 15:17-16:8). Jones’ family received the property (Doc. 169- 1 at 16:9-14). Jones testified that Wangler did this because of retaliatory intent, and that he continued to harass him by telling other officers that he was “continuously” filing grievances against him (Doc. 169-1 at 18:1-19:24). Jones objected to his treatment at Pinckneyville and requested, in writing, an investigation from “the governor, director, state representative, the head of [Internal Affairs] in Springfield” (Doc. 169-1 at 19:8-14). Jones testified that he filed grievances which drew Frank Lawrence’s attention. Pinckneyville placed Jones on investigative hold status from August 16, 2019 to August 29, 2019 (Doc. 169-4, p. 1). Jones describes this hold as “disciplinary segregation” in “the hole” with limited yard hours, no television, and “just sitting in the cage” (Doc. 169-1 at 23:21-24:4). Frank Lawrence had transferred Jones to segregation, where Lawrence told Jones that if he kept filing grievances, he would be held accountable (Doc. 169-1 at 25:17-26:20). Jones was released from segregation the next day (Doc. 169-1 at 26:19-20). In response to Jones’ grievances, IDOC sent investigator Stanhouse to investigate and speak with Jones (Doc. 169-1 at 27:5-25). Stanhouse interviewed several of the defendants and prisoners. Jones accuses Stanhouse of being biased and states his final report is inaccurate (Doc. 169-1 at 28:1-29:4). On or about September 3, 2019, Defendant Rodman from Internal Affairs wrote a disciplinary report for Jones that charged him with Security Threat Group or Unauthorized Organizational Leadership for Jones’ leadership position within a prison gang, the Black P. Stones (Doc. 169-5).!_ According to Jones, Rodman wrote this “fabricated” disciplinary report in retaliation for his grievances (Doc. 169-1 at 30:12-20).

! The report is heavily redacted (and was not filed under seal) but notes that confidential sources substantiated Jones’ association with the group (Doc. 169-5, p. 2). Page 2 of 13

Pinckneyville held a hearing on the September 3, 2019 disciplinary report that Jones attended (Doc. 169-1 at 31:11-12). Defendant Heck was the chairperson of the Adjustment Committee and Defendant Skorch was present (Doc. 169-1 at 31:13-15). Defendant Skorch did not speak but signed off on the finding of guilty (Doc. 169-1 at 35:8-16). Jones presented his defense but did not recognize all the confidential sources and did not believe that Defendant Heck

would follow upon his questions (Doc. 169-1 at 32:11-25). According to Jones, Defendants Heck, Skorch, Warden Love, and Warden Thompson all had issues with Jones’ grievances and that was the reason that he was found guilty of the charges in the disciplinary report (Doc. 169-1 at 31:23- 33:4). The Adjustment Committee’s Final Summary Report summarizes the hearing as follows: Jones pled not guilty and told the Committee that, “I’m not a leader, I’m not around these inmates and I don’t even know them. I have no idea about orders the confidential source is a liar. This is retaliation by Internal Affairs” (Doc. 169-7, p. 1). But Rodman noted that multiple Confidential Sources were “deemed reliable due to consistencies in the description of the event stated” and they

confirmed that Jones was a high-ranking leader of the organization (Doc. 169-7, p. 1). Jones was found guilty and received punishment, including 6 months of segregation and a disciplinary transfer (Doc. 169-7, p. 1). On September 25, 2019, following the guilty findings, IDOC transferred Jones to Menard Correctional Center (Doc. 169-2, p. 1). According to an affidavit submitted by Defendant Thompson,when a prisoner like Jones is found guilty of a gang affiliation, he or she is transferred to a higher security prison for security reasons (Doc. 169-9 at ¶¶ 3, 6). Transfer determinations are not made by prison personnel but by the Transfer Coordinator in Springfield (Doc. 169-9 at ¶ 7). Jones testified that once at Menard, he suffered from a “pink phase policy,” where prison staff denied him showers and hygienic items upon arrivalat the prison(Doc. 169-1 at 47:1-48:10). He further testified that this was caused by Defendant Lawrence, although he never spoke with Lawrence or saw him during this time (Doc. 169-1 at 49:6-21). Jones based his understanding that Defendant Lawrence implemented this policy on what an unnamed officer told him (Doc. 169-1

at 50:8-19). Discussion Jonesfiled the instant lawsuit pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (Doc. 1). Following the initial screening (Doc. 20), he is proceeding on the following claims relevant to the summary judgment motion: Count 2: First Amendment claim against Wangler for taking Plaintiff’s property in retaliation for Plaintiff failing to provide any gang information to Linn. Count 3: First Amendment claim against Wangler for harassing Plaintiff in retaliation for Plaintiff filing grievances and writing letters to government and IDOC officials. Count 4: First Amendment claim against Frank for placing Plaintiff in segregation under investigation in retaliation for Plaintiff filing grievances and writing letters to government and IDOC officials. Count 5: First Amendment claim against Stanhouse for failing to investigate Plaintiff’s complaints in retaliation for Plaintiff filing grievances and writing letters to government and IDOC officials. Count 6: First Amendment claim against Rodman for filing a false disciplinary charge and against Heck and Skorch for finding Plaintiff guilty of the charge in retaliation for Plaintiff filing grievances and writing letters to government and IDOC officials. Count 7: First Amendment claim against Love and Thompson for a retaliatory transfer to Menard. Count 9: Fourteenth Amendment due process claim against Rodman for a false disciplinary ticket and Heck, Skorch, Love, and Thompson related to disciplinary proceedings in which Plaintiff’s witnesses were not called, he was denied an impartial adjustment committee, his exculpatory evidence was ignored, and the evidence was not sufficient to support the guilty finding. Count 11: Eighth Amendment conditions of confinement claim against Lawrence for his pink phase policy that denied Plaintiff showers and yard time. (Doc. 20, pp.7-8).

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Bluebook (online)
Jones v. Linn, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-linn-ilsd-2024.