Lawrence v. Madison County

176 F. Supp. 3d 650, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 44089, 2016 WL 1306394
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Kentucky
DecidedMarch 31, 2016
DocketCivil No. 13-383-GFVT
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 176 F. Supp. 3d 650 (Lawrence v. Madison County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lawrence v. Madison County, 176 F. Supp. 3d 650, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 44089, 2016 WL 1306394 (E.D. Ky. 2016).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION & ORDER

Gregory F. Van Tatenhove, United States District Judge

Plaintiff Karen Lawrence brought this suit following the death of her son inside a jail cell in Madison County, Kentucky. Lawrence seeks summary judgment with respect to numerous federal and state law claims against Defendant Madison County and six current or former employees of the Madison County Detention Center. Defendant Christina Greene has individually filed a cross-motion for summary judgment, and the remaining Defendants also jointly seek summary judgment. For the reasons explained below, the Court will DENY the Plaintiffs Motion for Summary Judgment and GRANT IN PART the Defendants’ motions.

I

On November 10, 2012, Charles Hoffman committed suicide while in the custody of the Madison County Detention Center (“MCDC”). The story of the events leading to his death is a subject of much dispute in this case, clouded by highly charged accusations, contradictory testimony, and the natural shortcomings of human memory.1 The following account reflects the Court’s best attempt to provide a serious and accurate narrative of the events preceding Hoffman’s death.

In August 2012, Hoffman — a Michigan resident and recent parolee who wore an ankle monitor as a condition of his release — cut off his monitoring device and fled to Kentucky. [R. 156-2 at 3-4.] On October 14, 2012, the Berea police department tracked Hoffman down, arrested him, and transported him to the MCDC. At his booking, the deputies provided Hoffman with a medical questionnaire that asked, among other things, whether he had any illness, any history of mental health treatment, or any past or present suicidal thoughts. [R. 156-6 at 1.] Hoffman answered “no” to each question. [M] The deputies then placed Hoffman in a general population cell, where he remained for the next few weeks without any trouble. [R. 156-1 at 3.]

Over the course of several days in the first week of November, Hoffman could not get his girlfriend to pick up the phone. According to other inmates, he became increasingly frustrated by this lack of contact and expressed a desire to move to “the hole,” a network of isolation cells at the detention center, to avoid hearing oth[657]*657ers talk on the phone. In an undated letter sent to his girlfriend while in custody, Hoffman wrote that he “told the cops [he was] about to stab someone so they would put [him] in the hole.” [R. 156-11 at 1.] Brent Oliver, an inmate who stayed in the general population cell with Hoffman, recalls that Hoffman’s girlfriend “wouldn’t answer the phone ... and he was having problems with it,” so Hoffman asked Oliver to tell the guards “that he was going to hurt hi[m]self or hurt somebody ... so that they could get him out of the cell.” [R. 154-11 at 12.] Although Oliver thought Hoffman “was joking,” he nevertheless reports telling officer Scott Belanger2 that Hoffman “felt like hurting hi[m]self or somebody.” [Id. at 18.] According to Oliver, Belanger then “moved [Hoffman] out of his cell” and placed him in the hole. [Id. at 13.]

For his part, Belanger remembers only that Hoffman “tapped on the window” of his cell that day and told Belanger “he was feeling homicidal and he wanted to come out and sit.” [R. 154-12 at 18.] Belanger testifies that he then spoke to Defendant Cory Dunning, a police captain working at the facility, about his exchange with Hoffman. [Id.] Dunning does not remember talking to Belanger, but does recall “talking to the guys in the cell that [Hoffman] was in and asking them what was going on, and they stated that he was threatening to stab people.” [R. 154-24 at 34.] In an incident report filed thereafter, Dunning noted that Hoffman “was relocated to isolation cell 034 for administrative purposes due to him making statements to other inmates in his cell that he was going to stab them if we didn’t move him.”3 [R. 154-13 at 2.]

Former inmate Elvis Isaacs tells a different story. On the day in question, Isaacs remembers Hoffman telling inmates that he “felt like he was going to hurt himself or kill himself.”4 [R. 154-18 at 11.] Isaacs also recalls that Hoffman made a similar threat to “the guards,” after which “the guard put him in the hole and g[a]ve him ... his mat and his sheets like they didn’t take him serious[ly] or something.” [Id.] When pressed to identify the guard that heard Hoffman make these comments, Isaacs named Defendant Shawn Moody. [Id.] He further testified that he could not “remember anyone else from the jail” being present at the time Hoffman spoke to [658]*658Moody, [Id. at 14.] Moody, meanwhile, cannot recall the specifics of any conversation he may have had -with Hoffman, although he concedes that they likely spoke on a handful of occasions. [R. 154-21 at 50-52,] He does not report ever hearing Hoffman threaten to hurt or kill himself. [Id,]

Shortly after Hoffman's placement in the hole, the parties agree that officers moved inmate Christopher Foster into an isolation cell next door, where the two were able to talk through the air vents. [R. 154-17 at 23.] Foster and Hoffman bonded over stories about their romantic misfortunes, and eventually Foster asked officers to move him into Hoffman’s cell. The night before Hoffman died, Foster remembers that Defendant Tyler O’Brien, a jail deputy, escorted him and Hoffman to a phone station. After Hoffman’s girlfriend “hung up on him,” he became “badly depressed” and “angry.” [Id. at 14.] Foster suggests that Hoffman and O’B.rien then “sort of had words.” [Id.] At some point — not necessarily during the alleged argument at the phone station — Foster also recalls Hoffman telling O’Brien “that he might hurt himself [ ] and that he just, need[ed] to talk to somebody.” [Id. at 22.] He later clarified that Hoffman “did say he was going to hurt hi[m]self, but [did not use] the ‘kill’ word.” [Id, at 41.] O’Brien testifies that he has no memory of Hoffman ever telling him he was depressed of that he was going to hurt himself, and he does not believe any such conversation ever took place. [R. 154-10 at 51.] He also claims that no other inmate told him Hoffman “was going to hurt himself or was depressed.” [Id.]

O’Brien’s testimony, like Moody’s and Belanger’s, closely tracks the apparent memory of every other Defendant in this case. According to the Defendants, “during the approximately 72 hours Mr. Hoffman spent in Cell 34, more than thirteen different jail deputies observed or interacted with [him].” [R. 166-1 at 4.] Although “the deputies had a minimum of 60 separate interactions with or observations of Mr. Hoffman,” they uniformly report that he “never indicated he was depressed or suicidal.” [Id.]

Whatever outward signs of trouble he may or may not have expressed,' November 10, 2012 was the last day of Hoffman’s life. He accepted three meals from jail deputies that day, and no witnesses report any noteworthy events occurring until later that evening. At 5:11 pm, Defendant Christine Greene checked on Hoffman. [R, 1 at 6.] All parties agree that internal MCDC policy required officers to check on isolated inmates “every 20 minutes,” and to record each of those check-ins in a daily log. [R. 156-1 at 7.] That did not happen. Instead, over 3.5 hours apparently passed before Greene checked on Hoffman again. Sometime during that period, Hoffman threaded a plastic bag through a small hole in the air vent of his cell.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
176 F. Supp. 3d 650, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 44089, 2016 WL 1306394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawrence-v-madison-county-kyed-2016.