Le Bourgeois v. Wolf

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Wisconsin
DecidedMarch 10, 2020
Docket2:17-cv-01375
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Le Bourgeois v. Wolf, (E.D. Wis. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF WISCONSIN

DJUAN DONTIZE LE BOURGEOIS, Plaintiff,

v. Case No. 17-C-1375

NATHAN WOLF, et al., Defendants. ______________________________________________________________________ DECISION AND ORDER Plaintiff Djuan Dontize LeBourgeois is a Wisconsin state prisoner who is representing himself. He alleges claims against three correctional officers based on their searching his cell, finding what they believed to be contraband, and charging him with disciplinary rules violations. They also ordered destruction of the contraband. One item of contraband was the plaintiff’s religious text. The plaintiff brings claims for retaliation against him for exercising his First Amendment rights, violation of procedural due process, and violation of his right to freely exercise his religion. Before me now is the defendants’ motion for summary judgment. I. BACKGROUND At the time of the events giving rise to this suit, the plaintiff was an inmate at Waupun Correctional Institution. Currently, he is confined at Kettle Moraine Correctional Institution. On June 5, 2015, defendants Timothy Price and Nathan Wolf conducted a search of the plaintiff’s cell, which he shared with another inmate. The defendants found the following items: • three boxes of cubed sugar; • one snack bag containing bread dough which was inside a bag with the plaintiff’s name on it; • thirteen magazines with another inmate’s cell number on them; • two books that did not bear the plaintiff’s name and cell number; • six oranges and three apples; • a foot bath; • a damaged fan; • two full sized trash bags; and • a bag of blue yarn. The plaintiff’s possession of some of these items suggested that he intended to make “hooch,” which is bootleg alcohol made by fermenting fruit and sugar using the yeast in bread dough. The plaintiff’s possession of these items also violated prison rules. The plaintiff could not possess the sugar without a canteen receipt, which he did not have. A prisoner is not permitted to keep bread dough in his cell. The plaintiff’s possession of the magazines was not allowed because they belonged to a different inmate. Although inmates may keep some fruit in their cells, nine pieces of fruit exceeds the limit. The foot bath was not allowed because the plaintiff needed authorization from the health- services unit to possess it, which he did not have. The damaged fan was not allowed because prison rules deem any damaged property contraband. Full-sized trash bags are also contraband. The yarn was deemed contraband because inmates may possess hobby supplies only if they post a “hobby slip” on their cell wall, which the plaintiff failed to do. As for the books, they were deemed contraband because, under prison rules, an inmate must write his name and inmate number on any book in his possession. See

2 West Decl. ¶ 51; Ex. 1002 at 9 (ECF No. 51-2 at p. 14 of 53). The defendants explain that the purpose of this rule is to discourage inmates from stealing books belonging to other inmates or strong-arming them into surrendering their books. The defendants state that if they find an inmate with a book bearing someone else’s name or no name

at all, they will assume that the inmate acquired the book in an impermissible, possibly dangerous, manner. See Defs.’ Prop. Findings of Fact (“PFOF”) ¶ 14. After Wolf and Price finished their search and confiscated the plaintiff’s property, they interviewed him and his cellmate. According to the plaintiff, Wolf and Price wanted him to either admit to making hooch or identify the other inmates that may have been involved in the hooch-making operation. See Le Bourgeois Dep. at 18–20, ECF No. 43. Based on what they found in the plaintiff’s cell, Wolf and Price had enough evidence to charge him with misconduct. However, according to the plaintiff, they told him that if he confessed to making hooch and identified the other inmates involved, they would let him go scot-free. Id. at 18–20. The plaintiff refused to confess or implicate other inmates.

During the interview, the plaintiff told Wolf and Price that one of the books they had confiscated—the Egyptian Book of the Dead—was his religious text. (The plaintiff is a

1 In her declaration, Kelli Willard West, the DOC’s Religious Practices Coordinator, states that the DOC policy covering possession of personal property as of June 2015 includes the following provision: “Inmates shall write their full name and DOC number on the inside cover of all allowable publications they are issued.” West Decl. ¶5. West’s declaration refers to a version of the policy that became effective on March 12, 2014, but that version is not in the record. The version that is in the record became effective on August 31, 2010, and it does not contain the provision at issue. See ECF No. 51-3. The current version of the policy, which I located on the DOC’s website, contains the provision at issue. For now, I will assume that the March 2014 version also contained the provision. But I will direct defendants’ counsel to file the version of the policy referred to in West’s declaration. 3 follower of Kemetism, a revival of Ancient Egyptian religion.) He said that even though his name was not written on the book, he could produce a receipt for it and a DOC form allowing him to possess it. The plaintiff asked to have his personal property returned to him, but Wolf and Price said no and concluded the interview.

The next day, the plaintiff spoke to the third defendant, Lieutenant Andrew Larson. He told Larson about his property and asked if he knew what was going on. The plaintiff was primarily concerned about getting his religious text and hobby supplies back. According to the plaintiff, Larson told him that he would talk to Price. Later, the plaintiff saw Larson and asked him if he had spoken to Price. Larson told the plaintiff that he should tell Price what he wanted to know and that if he did not, Larson would “hear the ticket” and find the plaintiff guilty. Le Bourgeois Dep. at 21–22. When the plaintiff asked, “What about my book?” Laron told him, “If I find you guilty everything is getting destroyed.” Id. at 22. That evening, Price returned to the plaintiff’s cell and asked him if he had

anything he wanted to tell him. When the plaintiff said no, Price left. A short time later, a different officer (not a defendant) came to the plaintiff’s cell to inform him that he was receiving a conduct report and to take his statement. The plaintiff dictated a statement to this officer. The conduct report was written by Wolf. It charged the plaintiff with four “minor” offenses: disobeying orders, damage or alteration of property, unauthorized transfer of property, and possession of contraband. See Exhibit 1001, ECF No. 51-1. Under DOC rules, when an inmate is charged with a minor offense and the inmate contests the charges, the conduct report proceeds as a “contested minor” under Wisconsin 4 Administrative Code § DOC 303.77 (2015).2 Under that rule, an inmate does not receive a formal hearing. Instead, prison staff informs the inmate of the nature of the alleged infraction and offers the inmate an opportunity to provide a statement. The conduct report and the inmate’s statement are forwarded to a supervisor for review. The

supervisor renders a decision based solely on the conduct report and the statement. If the supervisor finds the inmate guilty, he can impose any of the “minor penalties” listed in Code § DOC 303.70, which include loss of recreation time and loss of other privileges. In the present case, the plaintiff gave the following statement regarding the conduct report: As for the hobby material, I have a hobby card, it was on my shelf. I have no tape to put it on the wall. I have a receipt for my religious text. It was in the book, when the officers searched. I am not supposed to under my religion desecrate sacred text with markings.

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Le Bourgeois v. Wolf, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/le-bourgeois-v-wolf-wied-2020.