Kareem Davenport v. Anthony Wills, Rob Jeffreys, Menard Corr. CTR., Ill. Dept. of Corr., Lacy Mezo, Devin W. Eggers, Troy L. Slinkard, S. Gee, Brandon K. Garcia, Welge, Korondo

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Illinois
DecidedNovember 14, 2025
Docket3:25-cv-00176
StatusUnknown

This text of Kareem Davenport v. Anthony Wills, Rob Jeffreys, Menard Corr. CTR., Ill. Dept. of Corr., Lacy Mezo, Devin W. Eggers, Troy L. Slinkard, S. Gee, Brandon K. Garcia, Welge, Korondo (Kareem Davenport v. Anthony Wills, Rob Jeffreys, Menard Corr. CTR., Ill. Dept. of Corr., Lacy Mezo, Devin W. Eggers, Troy L. Slinkard, S. Gee, Brandon K. Garcia, Welge, Korondo) 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
Kareem Davenport v. Anthony Wills, Rob Jeffreys, Menard Corr. CTR., Ill. Dept. of Corr., Lacy Mezo, Devin W. Eggers, Troy L. Slinkard, S. Gee, Brandon K. Garcia, Welge, Korondo, (S.D. Ill. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS

KAREEM DAVENPORT, ) M49922, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) vs. ) ) ANTHONY WILLS, ) ROB JEFFREYS, ) MENARD CORR. CTR., ) ILL. DEPT. OF CORR., ) Case No. 25-cv-176-MAB LACY MEZO, ) DEVIN W. EGGERS, ) TROY L. SLINKARD, ) S. GEE, ) BRANDON K. GARCIA, ) WELGE, ) KORONDO, ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

BEATTY, Magistrate Judge:

Plaintiff Kareem Davenport, an inmate of the Illinois Department of Corrections (IDOC) currently detained at Menard Correctional Center, brings this civil rights action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for alleged deprivations of his constitutional rights. Specifically, Plaintiff challenges issues surrounding his ongoing requests for placement in protective custody. The Complaint (Doc. 1) was dismissed for violating Rule 8 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, and for containing misjoined claims. Plaintiff’s Amended Complaint (Doc. 15) is now before the Court for preliminary review pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1915A.1 Under Section 1915A, the Court is required to screen prisoner complaints to filter out non-meritorious claims. See 28 U.S.C. § 1915A(a)-(b). Any portion

of a complaint that is legally frivolous, malicious, fails to state a claim upon which relief may be granted, or asks for money damages from a defendant who by law is immune from such relief must be dismissed. 28 U.S.C. § 1915A(b). At this juncture, the factual allegations of the pro se complaint are to be liberally construed. Rodriguez v. Plymouth Ambulance Serv., 577 F.3d 816, 821 (7th Cir. 2009). THE AMENDED COMPLAINT

Plaintiff’s original pleading concerned discrete interactions with 30 individual defendants over the course of two years. (Doc. 1). The Court reviewed the pleading and found that it did not contain a short plain statement of the facts, and it likely contained claims that were misjoined because they concerned many different factual scenarios and did not share common defendants or causes of action. The amended pleading still

concerns events that span nearly two years, but it has been reduced from 30 defendants to 11, and Plaintiff has tried to narrow his focus to incidents that impacted his placement in protective custody. Plaintiff argues that by making these modifications, he is now focused on First and Eighth Amendment violations that all pertain to the same “transaction.” (Doc. 15 at 23).

1 The Court has jurisdiction to screen the Complaint in light of Plaintiff’s consent to the full jurisdiction of a Magistrate Judge, and the limited consent by the Illinois Department of Corrections to the exercise of Magistrate Judge jurisdiction as set forth in the Memorandum of Understanding between this Court and the Illinois Department of Corrections. Plaintiff first alleges that on April 21, 2022, he attempted to speak to Defendant Mezo about his desire for protective custody while he was being moved from the

Medium Security Unit (MSU) to the East cell house. (Doc. 15 at 14). Mezo informed Plaintiff that he would need to raise the issue with the sergeant at the cellhouse, but Plaintiff continued to try to press the conversation. Plaintiff alleges that during this encounter he was walking slowly due to preexisting injuries, which he voiced to Mezo, but despite his contentions, Mezo became frustrated with his pace and ultimately issued him a disciplinary ticket for slowing the line movement. Plaintiff further alleges that the

disciplinary proceedings that followed were not adequate because the committee inaccurately reported that he admitted guilt and they did not review video footage. (Doc. 15 at 14). Additionally, he faults Defendants Wills and Jeffreys for their role in the grievance appeal of the discipline. He ultimately received 7 days of segregation and a 1- month grade-reduction.

Plaintiff complains that Mezo violated his First and Eighth Amendment rights in this interaction because the disciplinary ticket was retaliatory, and the conditions in segregation were atypical and significant. He alleges that Mezo deliberately subjected him to cruel and unusual punishment. He claims he was not given any bedding, soap, or clothes beyond the jumpsuit on his back, for the entire 7 days. (Doc. 15 at 15).

Second, Plaintiff alleges that on September 1, 2022, he was denied protective custody and had a 24 hour wait until he could reapply. He explains that the first attempt to place him with a cellmate failed, which then led to staff promising him a single cell. Despite the promise, he alleges that Defendants Eggers and Slinkard were surprised to find someone in the cell that should have been a single-cell, and they gave Plaintiff no alternative options. (Doc. 15 at 15-16). Slinkard and Eggers allegedly got frustrated with

Plaintiff, which Plaintiff attributes in part to a prior encounter with Slinkard in July of 2022 about the same topic (protective custody). Eggers promised a crisis team, but when Plaintiff was escorted downstairs Defendant Gee refused assistance and simply walked him to segregation. (Doc. 15 at 16-17). Plaintiff again alleges the associated disciplinary hearing was mishandled, but he admits that the offense was ultimately reduced, and the segregation term was stricken. (Doc. 15 at 17).

He alleges that in association with this instance, Defendants Slinkard, Eggers and Gee violated his First and Eighth Amendment rights by retaliating when he requested protective custody, or a crisis team, and by relegating him to poor conditions in segregation. (Doc. 15 at 17-18). In Claim 3, Plaintiff complains that for five days in November of 2022, and for

about two weeks in December of 2022, he was housed in protective custody intake. (Doc. 15 at 18). On these occasions, he was housed in the receiving and classification building, a building that he alleges has no electricity, no cable, and no wifi. He also complains that he could not shop commissary or attend video visits. Plaintiff claims that these conditions violated the Eighth Amendment because those awaiting protective custody

(or in protective custody) are supposed to receive the same standard of living as general population inmates. (Doc. 15 at 18-19). He faults Defendants Wills, Menard, IDOC, and Jeffreys for choosing to place protective custody intake inmates in these conditions. In Claims 4 and 5, Plaintiff alleges that on November 15, 2023, he asked for a crisis team and to be placed in protective custody. (Doc. 15 at 19-20). Defendant Slinkard was

assigned to walk him to the protective custody intake area, and on the walk Slinkard gave Plaintiff grief about making yet another request for protective custody. (Id.). Plaintiff alleges that ultimately Slinkard retaliated against him in some fashion during this encounter by issuing him a disciplinary ticket and placing him in segregation. (Doc. 15 at 20). He alleges that his water and toilet were not operational for the first 24 hours, and he was forced to go weeks without any way to clean his cell. He alleges the conditions

were atypical. After Slinkard left Plaintiff at restrictive housing, Plaintiff alleges he experienced a mental health crisis.

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Kareem Davenport v. Anthony Wills, Rob Jeffreys, Menard Corr. CTR., Ill. Dept. of Corr., Lacy Mezo, Devin W. Eggers, Troy L. Slinkard, S. Gee, Brandon K. Garcia, Welge, Korondo, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kareem-davenport-v-anthony-wills-rob-jeffreys-menard-corr-ctr-ill-ilsd-2025.