Kim Strickland v. John Jabe

638 F. App'x 179
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedAugust 19, 2015
Docket14-6229
StatusUnpublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 638 F. App'x 179 (Kim Strickland v. John Jabe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kim Strickland v. John Jabe, 638 F. App'x 179 (4th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

Affirmed in part; reversed and • remanded in part by unpublished PER CURIAM opinion.

Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.

PER CURIAM:

This lawsuit arises from the murder of an inmate, Aaron Cooper, by another in *181 mate, Robert Gleason, at a maximum security prison in Virginia. Kim Strickland, the personal representative and administrator of Cooper’s estate, brought suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that a sergeant (Tracy Baird) and three corrections officers (Heather Halsey, Brian Meade, and Robert Mullins) violated the Eighth Amendment by being deliberately indifferent to Cooper’s safety. In support, Strickland asserts that the defendants took no measures to prevent Cooper’s murder, despite knowing that Gleason had killed another inmate and that he threatened to kill again. She also asserts that the defendants actively facilitated Cooper’s murder by, among other things, agreeing not to search Gleason for the murder weapon in exchange for Gleason providing them certain favors.

On appeal, we must decide whether the district court correctly held that qualified immunity protects the defendants from Strickland’s § 1983 claim. For the reasons set forth below, we agree that Baird and Halsey are entitled to qualified immunity. On the other hand, disputed issues of material fact exist as to Meade’s and Mullin’s involvement in the murder. Accordingly, we affirm as to Baird and Halsey, and reverse and remand as to Meade and Mullins.

I.

Robert C. Gleason Jr. first entered prison in 2007 after receiving a life sentence for murder. 1 While serving his sentence at Wallens Ridge State Prison, Gleason strangled his cellmate, Harvey Watson Jr., to death. During a court appearance for Watson’s murder, Gleason declared that he would kill again if he were not executed. According to a Red Onion sergeant present in the courtroom at the time, Gleason said, “it might be one of these guys next time” and pointed to several prison officers present in the courtroom. J.A. 66-67. Despite this outburst, Gleason was not sentenced to death. Instead, he was transferred to Red Onion State Prison (Red Onion), a Security Level S facility housing Virginia’s most violent and dangerous inmates.

After arriving at Red Onion, Gleason set about making good on this threat to kill again. As his target, he settled on Aaron Cooper, a 26-year-old inmate serving a sentence of approximately 34 years for a series of robberies and carjackings. 2 Gleason testified that he befriended Cooper in order to gain his trust. Gleason then convinced Cooper to go along with a plan in which Cooper would fake being strangled by Gleason in order to bring suit against the prison. Gleason testified that he told Cooper, “I want you to take a deep breath so you can pass out so if they do a polygraph test on you if they ask you did you actually pass out from Mr. Gleason choking, pulling on the rope.” J.A. 97. But, according to Gleason, “I made that up. That was never going to happen. That was never going to happen. I was going to kill him.” J.A. 88. Gleason wanted to make the Department of Corrections look *182 stupid because “they kept on saying this is Red Onion, this ain’t going to happen up here.” J.A. 102. With the help of other prisoners, Gleason obtained his weapon, a long rope “braided so that way it wouldn’t break” while in the showers. J.A. 89.

After obtaining the rope, Gleason still needed to find a way to get close enough to Cooper to use it, no easy feat in Red Onion, where the prisoners are separated in individual metal cages even during outdoor recreation time. Gleason took advantage of a widespread system of favor-trading between guards and inmates in order to get close to Cooper. Gleason says that he made arrangements with Halsey, Meade and Mullins to effectuate his plan. According to Gleason, prisoners would often arrange to stay inside their cells during recreation time in exchange for other favors from guards. Guards participated in this exchange because they were saved the work of bringing the prisoner onto the recreation yard. To execute his plan to kill Cooper, Gleason says that he arranged with Halsey and Meade to assign prisoners to the metal cages in the recreation yard so that Cooper’s and Gleason’s cages would be adjacent. J.A. 91 (“Well, I told [Meade] I’d stay in plus other things, and I don’t want to get into that.”). According to both Meade and Mullins, inmates usually chose their own cages. J.A. 230-31 (“They usually just choose their own cage.... We’d just take them to whichever case they went to.”); J.A. 245 (“They chose. When they come out, they went to the rec, the cage that they just walked out and went to the cage that they wanted to go into.”). Halsey and Meade deny an agreement with Gleason regarding the placement of inmates on that day.

After securing a place next to Cooper in the recreation yard, Gleason still had to get the rope into the cage. Again, Gleason testified that he had help in doing so. Before inmates are brought onto the recreation yard, they are strip-searched by the officers. On the day of the killing, Meade and Mullins searched Gleason (Halsey was elsewhere at the time). Although Gleason had the rope in his shirt during the search, Meade and Mullins did not find it. J.A. 93. Gleason claims that Meade and Mullins purposefully performed an insufficient search because of an agreement to provide them with favors. Gleason also testified that his plan to kill Cooper was common knowledge among the inmates. J.A. 94 (the inmates “all knew what was going on.”); see also J.A. 97 (“All of [the inmates] except for Sparrow”). He also says that the prison officials “all knew what was going on. And plus Martin [Rodgers] gave them all a heads-up.” 3 J.A. 94. Meade and Mullins in turn deny any agreement with Gleason or that they performed an improper search.

Gleason also testified that Halsey deliberately looked the other way during the killing itself. According to Gleason, Halsey was in the control tower overlooking the yard in the moments before he strangled Cooper. Gleason also testified that Halsey saw him place the rope around Cooper’s neck. J.A. 118. Then, according to Gleason, “She looked down, that’s when they all looked up, were inside talking and *183 what not, and I pulled the rope up and that’s when she shut window and never seen her again.” J.A. 118. Halsey, however, denies this account, and instead says she was in another part of the prison during the killing. 4 According to Travis McCoy, the Warden of Red Onion at the time, “staffing policy did not require security staff be present on the recreation yard during offender recreation.” J.A. 76.

' Video evidence shows that Gleason strangled Cooper, walked away, and then strangled him again. When Halsey went to the yard to bring the inmates back to their cells, she found Cooper’s body and radioed Baird, a sergeant at the prison, for assistance.. Although medical assistance was administered, it was too late: Cooper died at the scene. 5

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
638 F. App'x 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kim-strickland-v-john-jabe-ca4-2015.