King v. Heselbach

CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedMarch 24, 2023
Docket1:22-cv-00197
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
King v. Heselbach, (D. Md. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MARYLAND

| DAVID KING, . Plaintiff, . ve . □ RYAN HESELBACH, Civil Action No. TDC-22-0197 DAVID ELLIFRITZ and _ JAMIE FARRIS, Defendants □□

MEMORANDUM OPINION Plaintiff David King, a state inmate at the North Branch Correctional Institution (“NBCT”’) in Cumberland, Maryland, has brought this civil rights action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against Sgt. Ryan Heselbach, Sgt. David Ellifritz, and Hearing Office Jamie Farris arising out of a November: 2019 incident when Heselbach and Ellifritz found a weapon in his cell at NBCI and Farris imposed the sanction of disciplinary segregation against him after a hearing. Defendants have filed a Motion to Dismiss or, in the Alternative, Motion for Summary Judgment. Also pending is King’s Motion for Admission or in the Alternative for Summary Judgment, which the Court construes as a Cross Motion for Summary Judgment. Both Motions are fully briefed. King has also filed a “Motion to Stay Plaintiff(s) Request for Video Cameras Recording” in which he | | requests that the disciplinary proceeding be reopened. ECF No. 24. Having reviewed the pleadings and the submitted materials, the Court finds no hearing necessary. See D. Md. Local R. 105.6. For the reasons set forth below, Defendants’ Motion will be GRANTED, and King’s Motions will be DENIED. .

BACKGROUND LL The Cell Search : :

On November 28, 2019, while King was an inmate at NBCI, his cellmate went to the shower while King was standing inside the cell, at the cell door, observing the hallway. The cellmate then refused to return to the cell and was moved into segregation. Heselbach and Ellifritz, who were correctional officers at NBCI, went to King’s cell to collect the cellmate’s property. When the officers arrived, they noticed a bag just outside of the cell door. When Ellifritz picked up the bag, he saw that it contained a broken fan motor. He placed the bag back in front of the cell door, just out of King’s sight. When the officers asked King to whom the bag belonged, he responded that he did not know and stated that it was not there when the doors opened for showers. King. was directed to identify and place his cellmate’s property onto a property cart. After King finished loading the cart, Heselbach asked King, and King confirmed, that all of the cellmate’s property was in the cart. The cart was then removed from the cell.

Because of the bag found outside the cell door that likely contained contraband, Heselbach and Ellifritz then decided to search the cell. King was removed from the cell and handcuffed while

. Heselbach and Ellifritz conducted the search. During the search, Heselbach found a round metal shaft, sharpened to a point, in a shoe under the bottom bunk, that appeared to be made from metal similar to the material of the fan motor. According to King, the weapon was actually found in the bag outside of the cell, and the officers falsely reported the weapon was found inside the cell during the search. Il. The Disciplinary Proceeding Neither King nor his cellmate admitted to possession of either the weapon or the bag, and each was issued a Notice of Inmate Rule Violation (“Notice”). On November 28, 2019, King was

served with a Notice charging him with violating Rule 105, which prohibits the possession, use, or manufacture of a weapon. The Notice informed King that he would have a disciplinary hearing, and it provided him with the opportunity to list a représentative to participate in the hearing, witnesses he wanted to have called at the hearing, and evidence that he wanted to present at the hearing. King did not request a representative or witnesses, but he requested that the surveillance

video from the time of the incident, as well as the bag found outside his cell, be made available for use as evidence at the hearing. . On December 12, 2019, King’s disciplinary hearing was held before Hearing Officer Farris. Neither Heselbach nor Ellifritz participated in the disciplinary hearing, and neither was responsible for producing the evidence at the hearing. Farris noted that King had not requested a representative or witnesses, but that the requested surveillance video was available and would be considered. Heselbach’s report on the incident was read into the record. In response, King asserted that the bag, which according to the report was originally outside the cell, was brought into the cell by one of the officers. King also maintained that he never went outside of the cell, and that he . never bent over and put anything outside of the cell, and that the requested surveillance video would establish those facts. Farris confirmed that he had reviewed the surveillance video but concluded that the footage was not clear enough to see what the officers picked up in front of his - cell or to determine if anyone placed anything in front of the cell. The prison’s representative noted that King was charged with a weapon found inside of the cell, under the bunk and inside a shoe, not outside of the cell. At the conclusion of the heating, Farris found King guilty of the rule violation based on the following analysis: I find the report to be credible and reliable. The defendant stated that because the cameras could not show inside of the cell he could not give a defense against the

weapons being found in there. The defendant stated that it was found outside of the cell and that the officer picked it up from outside the cell. The officer reported that it was found inside the cell hidden in a shoe under the bunk. I find that the defendant had access to the weapon. Upon further review of the defendant’s rule violation history, the defendant has had several guilty findings for weapon rule violation[s]. As where the defendant’s cell buddy had none whatsoever. With that being said I find it more likely th[a]n not that the weapon found was in fact the defendant’s weapons. Therefore I find the defendant Guilty of [R]ule 105... Hrg. Record at 4, Defs.’ Mot. Ex. 1 at 14, ECF No. 13-2. In reaching this conclusion, Farris considered a photograph of the weapon and shoe in which it was found and the surveillance video of the tier activity at the time of the cell search, including from when correctional staff took the property cart to King’s cell to the time that King was escorted from the cell. He also reviewed the disciplinary histories of King and his cellmate. According to Farris, there was no reason to examine the bag King requested as evidence because King was charged only with the weapon found inside the cell and was not charged with anything related to the bag or its contents. As | punishment, King received 120 days of disciplinary segregation. No good conduct credits were | revoked. . ot □□ Meanwhile, King’s cellmate was charged with the same offense and also a charge for violating Rule 316 by disobeying an order to return to his cell. The cellrhate later pleaded guilty □□□ to the Rule 316 charge, but the Rule 105 charge was dismissed in light of the guilty finding entered against.King. |

On December 13, 2019, King filed an appeal of Farris’s decision on the grounds that the decision was “substandard” in part because the “Hearing Officer make claims that video footage wasn’t clear enough to see what the Correctional Officer picked up” or to see “anyone placing anything out front the cell.” Appeal at 1, Defs.’ Mot. Ex. 1 at 23, ECF No. 13-2. Farris’s decision

was affirmed by the Warden of NBC] and the Inmate Grievance Office. On December 19, 2019, filed an Administrative Remedy Procedure complaint (“ARP”) in which he objected to the .

conduct of the disciplinary hearing and the ruling on similar grounds, including complaining about _Farris’s assertion that the video footage was not clear enough.

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King v. Heselbach, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-v-heselbach-mdd-2023.