Joshua Dean v. Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 30, 2024
Docket2024CA0563
StatusUnknown

This text of Joshua Dean v. Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections (Joshua Dean v. Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joshua Dean v. Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections, (La. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL

FIRST CIRCUIT

2024 CA 0563

JOSHUA DEAN

VERSUS

LOUISIANA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY AND CORRECTIONS DEC 3 0 2024 JUDGMENT RENDERED:

On Judicial Review from the Nineteenth Judicial District Court Parish of East Baton Rouge • State of Louisiana Docket Number 0728524 • Section 25

The Honorable Wilson E. Fields, Presiding Judge

Joshua Dean APPELLANT D. O. C. # 557040 PLAINTIFF— In Proper Person

Louisiana State Penitentiary Angola, Louisiana

Jonathan R. Vining COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE Baton Rouge, Louisiana DEFENDANT— Louisiana

Department of Public Safety and Corrections

BEFORE: MCCLENDON, WELCH, AND LANIER, JJ. WELCH, J.

Joshua Dean, an inmate in the custody of the Louisiana Department of Public

Safety and Corrections (" the Department") and confined to the Louisiana State

Penitentiary at Angola (" LSP"), appeals a judgment of the district court denying his

petition for judicial review of his lost property claim. For the reasons that follow, we

affirm.

FWXGVXFII'! 1

According to the allegations of Mr. Dean' s petition for judicial review, on

October 25, 2021, he initiated administrative remedy procedure (" ARP") claim LSP -

2021 -2718 wherein he raised claims under the Prison Rape Elimination Act

PREA"), alleging a two-year unprofessional relationship that he purportedly

engaged in with a correctional facility employee. He was subsequently placed in

administrative segregation on protective custody and moved from Camp D to the

main prison, pending the outcome of the investigation into his PREA claims. At the

time of his transfer, Mr. Dean securely locked all of his personal property in two

boxes. LSP Investigative Services interviewed Mr. Dean on October 27, 2021

regarding his ARP claim LSP -2021- 2718. That same day, he also appeared before

the LSP Disciplinary Board for Protection Court. On November 10, 2021, Mr. Dean

again appeared before LSP Investigative Services and was administered a polygraph

test. He claimed that Investigator Cassandra Temple advised him that the two boxes

containing his personal property had been removed from Camp D storage to be searched in connection with the investigation of his ARP claim LSP -2021- 2718. Mr.

Dean alleged that after his appearance before LSP Investigative Services,

Investigator Temple " retaliated against him" by confiscating two Ray tablets'

Ray tablets " offer opportunities for incarcerated individuals to connect ... and engage in I

education courses and betterment resources" including the ability to "[ p] lace phone calls and send emails with more privacy without sharing a device." See " Ray Tablets," Incarcerated Individual Services, Hay, https:// www.jpay.com/PMusic.aspx ( last accessed December 20, 2024).

2 belonging to him (JPay 5 and JPay 6) on November 10, 2021. Mr. Dean alleged that

in the course of the [ two -]year unprofessional relationship [ with the] correctional

staff [member,]" he communicated with the staff member " via telephone and [ JPay]

kiosk." He averred that the JPay tablet kiosk contained "[ e -]messages" between him

and the correctional staff member who " used an alias" to " stay in constant contact

with Mr. Dean." Mr. Dean claimed that the confiscation of the two JPay tablets

was] a means to conceal, destroy, or [ spoil] ... evidence in order to deny

administrative relief for [ the alleged] correctional staff' s unprofessional

misconduct." He also claimed he was not given proper notice of the seizure, nor the

right to be heard in opposition to the seizure. Mr. Dean was later transferred from

the main prison to an Awaiting Trial Unit (" ATU") on December 29, 2021. On

December 31, 2021, Mr. Dean signed a " Clothing and Personal Property Inventory

Form" indicating that he had received all his personal property; however, upon

closer inspection, he was " extremely stunned" to discover that his two JPay tablets

were missing from his personal property. Mr. Dean alleged that at the conclusion of

the investigation of ARP claim LSP -2021- 2718, purportedly no evidence was found

to substantiate his PREA claims, and his ARP claim LSP -2021- 2718 was allegedly

dismissed.

Thereafter, Mr. Dean sought return of the two JPay tablets confiscated during

the course of the investigation of his ARP claim LSP -2021- 2718. On January 10,

2022, he filed a lost property claim number LSP -2022- 0076, seeking return of the

JPay tablets that he alleged he personally purchased, for more than $ 800, with funds

from his inmate account. His lost property claim was initially denied by the LSP

warden on November 16, 2022, who stated: " Per Investigative Services, your tablet

was confiscated." Thereafter, the claim was denied by the Department on December

27, 2022, who cited Department Regulation # OP -C- 13 which provides, " Under no

9 circumstances will an offender be compensated for an unsubstantiated loss, or for a

loss which results from the offender' s own acts[.]" The Department further stated:

A review of institutional records revealed that your signature is affixed to the " Clothing and Personal Property Inventory Form" as receiving all of your property on 12/ 3 1/ 2021. There are no notations found on the form to indicate that any of your property was missing upon receipt. You have failed to prove that a loss actually

occurred or that staff was responsible for the alleged loss.

On February 6, 2023, Mr. Dean filed the instant proceeding seeking judicial

review of the Department' s decision regarding his lost property claim. Pertinently,

Mr. Dean sought the return of his Ray tablets or reimbursement for the full cost or

replacement value of the Ray tablets, as well as costs and indigent litigant filing and

copying fees.

On June 22, 2023, the Department filed an answer in the judicial review

proceeding, maintaining that Mr. Dean had exhausted his administrative remedies

with regard to his lost property claim and that the Department had properly rejected

the claim for the same reasons previously given by the warden on November 16,

2022, and by the Department on December 27, 2022, in their responses denying his

lost property claim. The Department also filed the administrative record along with

its answer. Included in the administrative record were emails between Department

and LSP officials that provided insight into the confiscation of Mr. Dean' s tablets.

Investigator Sarah Tanner stated that Mr. Dean' s tablets were " confiscated as part of

a non- professional relationship case[,] in which the [ correctional facility] employee

bought it for [Mr. Dean]." Department officials also attempted to determine whether

one or two tablets had been confiscated by LSP Investigative Services, as alleged by

Mr. Dean. According to LSP Lieutenant Jaci Vannoy, "[ t]he offender is only allowed

M to have one tablet in his possession at a time. So if that one was confiscated[,] there

shouldn' t have been another one."'

On August 23, 2023, following the initial screening of Mr. Dean' s petition

and the Department' s answer, the district court commissioner assigned to this case

issued an order remanding the matter to the Department. The Commissioner stated

that the Department' s answer was " inclusive" because " the Department' s

regulation( s) and/or policies of [LSP] ...

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Related

Anderson v. La. Dep't of Pub. Safety & Corr.
242 So. 3d 614 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2018)
Wallace v. La. Dep't of Pub. Safety & Corr.
260 So. 3d 588 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 2019)

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Joshua Dean v. Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joshua-dean-v-louisiana-department-of-public-safety-and-corrections-lactapp-2024.