Lewis v. Adelowo

CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedSeptember 13, 2024
Docket1:22-cv-03074
StatusUnknown

This text of Lewis v. Adelowo (Lewis v. Adelowo) 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
Lewis v. Adelowo, (D. Md. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MARYLAND

TREMAYNE LEWIS, Plaintiff, V. Civil Action No. TDC-22-3074 SGT. ADELOWO, GILBERT EKANE, MARTINS IRIA, ROBERT DEAN, Warden, and SGT. OLUWADAMILOLA OLANITYAN, Defendants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION Self-represented Plaintiff Tremayne Lewis, who is currently incarcerated at the North Branch Correctional Institution (“NBCI’) in Cumberland, Maryland, has filed this civil rights action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging constitutional violations arising from the alleged use of excessive force against him when he was confined at Jessup Correctional Institution (“JCI”) in Jessup, Maryland. The operative pleadings are the Complaint, ECF No. 1, and the Amended Complaint, ECF No. 14, which serves only to identify by name the John Doe Defendants referenced in the original Complaint. Defendants have filed a Motion to Dismiss or, in the Alternative, for Summary Judgment. Having reviewed the briefs and submitted materials, the Court finds that no hearing is necessary. See D. Md. Local R. 105.6. For the reasons set forth below, Defendants’ Motion will be GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART.

BACKGROUND L Use of Force In the Complaint, Lewis, who was assigned to protective custody at JCI, alleges that on February 9, 2022 at approximately 5:05 p.m., Defendant Sgt. Michael Adelowo, a JCI correctional officer, was collecting trash from each cell. A second correctional officer placed Lewis’s dinner in the food slot in Lewis’s cell door. When Lewis told the second officer to wait while he washed his hands, Sgt. Adelowo stopped collecting trash, grabbed Lewis’s food, and slammed his food onto trays for other inmates. Lewis then told Sgt. Adelowo that if he was not going to feed Lewis, a lieutenant should be called. According to Lewis, Sgt. Adelowo then grabbed the food slot door and repeatedly slammed it on Lewis’s left wrist, which was in the food slot. Lewis alleges that four other correctional officers, consisting of Defendants Warden Robert Dean, Sgt. Oluwadamilola Olaniyan, Correctional Officer II (“CO II”) Gilbert Ekane, and CO II Martins Iria, were with Sgt. Adelowo at the time, but they did nothing to stop Sgt. Adelowo from slamming Lewis’s wrist and hand in the food slot. In his declaration, Lewis has clarified that the officers conducting the food distribution with Sgt. Adelowo were CO II Ekane, CO II Iria, and CO II Olayele Akinroyeje. At some point, as other officers grabbed Sgt. Adelowo, he put his hand on his mace dispenser, which caused Lewis to back away from his door. Lewis then saw abrasions, blood, and redness on his hand and wrist and immediately felt pain. Lewis alleges that he was not taken to the medical unit for more than two hours after the incident. In contrast, Defendants have submitted declarations from certain JCI correctional officers that generally state that they did not observe the food slot door slammed on Lewis’s wrist and did not observe that he had any injuries. Specifically, CO Il Akinroyeje states that on February 9, 2022, he was the correctional officer who handed out food trays on Lewis’s housing tier. He

asserts that when he placed a tray in Lewis’s food slot, Lewis said that he “did not want his food.” Akinroyeje Decl. § 2, Mot. Ex. 1, ECF No. 22-3. After CO II Akinroyeje reported to Sgt. Adelowo that Lewis refused his food, he observed Sgt. Adelowo remove Lewis’s tray without closing the food slot door on Lewis’s hand or arm. In his declaration, Sgt. Adelowo asserts that after learning that Lewis refused his food tray, he removed Lewis’s tray and, as he was about to close the food slot door, Lewis put his hand through it. According to Sgt. Adelowo, he then placed his hand on the “OC” spray on his waist, after which Lewis moved away from the food slot. The slot was then clear so that Sgt. Adelowo could close and secure it. At that point, Lewis yelled at him and accused him of injuring his hand. Sgt. Adelowo denies slamming Lewis’s arm or hand in the food slot. Nevertheless, Sgt. Adelowo reported Lewis’s accusation to Lt. Hans Njumbe, who arrived at Lewis’s cell approximately three minutes later. Lewis was then removed from his cell, but Sgt. Adelowo observed no cuts, swelling, or bruising on his arms and hands. When Lewis was later removed from his cell to be taken to the medical unit, Sgt. Adelowo saw scratches on Lewis’s arm which appeared to him to be self- inflicted. Sgt. Adelowo asserts that he directed Sgt. Sanusi to take photographs of Lewis’s arms and hands. According to CO Il Ekane, he was on the housing tier during the distribution of dinner trays and was responsible for opening the padlocks on the cell doors so that other correctional officers could place food trays in the food slots. After dinner was over, Lewis told CO II Ekane that he injured his hand during the distribution of trays and asked to speak to the officer-in-charge and to be taken to the medical unit. CO II Ekane did not see the food slot door close on Lewis, see Lewis in distress, or notice that Lewis had an injury to his hands or arms. CO II Ekane reported Lewis’s request to Sgt. Olaniyan. According to Sgt. Olaniyan, he received this report at 5:45 p.m.

and then immediately arranged for an escort officer to take Lewis to the medical unit, went to the housing tier, and observed the officer take Lewis out of the housing unit to go to the medical unit. Sgt. Olaniyan further states that the edges of food slots are not sharp enough to cut a person’s hands or arms. In his declaration, CO II Iria states that he was making rounds with Lt. Njumbe in Lewis’s housing unit when Lewis told them that a correctional officer had closed the food slot door on his hand. According to Iria, he and Lt. Njumbe removed Lewis from his cell and noted that he was not in physical distress and that his arms, wrists, and hands had no swelling, bruising, or cuts. Lt. Njumbe instructed CO II Iria that Lewis should be escorted to the medical unit when an escort officer became available. Before Lewis was taken to the medical unit, CO II Iria observed that Lewis had shallow abrasions on his arms which appeared to be “self-inflicted.” Iria Decl. § 5, Mot. Ex. 4, ECF No. 22-6. In a declaration, Lewis disputes these accounts and states that surveillance video footage for February 9, 2022 from 5:00 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. “will back and support all [his] claims.” Lewis Decl. §] 7, Opp’n Ex. 1, ECF No. 29-1. He disputes Lt. Njumbe’s assertion that he conducted a security round check and provides the housing unit logbook which lacks any entry signed by Lt. Njumbe. Lewis also disputes the claim that Lt. Njumbe and Sgt. Adelowo removed him from his cell to check on whether he had injuries. Lt. Njumbe has filed a supplemental declaration in which he maintains that he was present on Lewis’s tier on February 9, 2022 and notes that “[n]ot all appearances on the tier by correctional officers are logged into the tier logbook.” Njumbe Suppl. Decl. 2, 4, Reply Ex. 1, ECF No. 32-2.

Il. Medical Treatment and Condition According to logs for Lewis’s housing unit for February 9, 2022, Lewis was not escorted to the medical unit at 7:20 p.m. According to medical records, Lewis had a left arm abrasion with no bleeding and told the nurse that a correctional officer had slammed his hand in the food slot. He completed an “inmate statement paper” provided by Lt. William Bunn to report on the use of force. Lewis Decl. 4 10. Sgt. Sanusi took four photographs showing a series of scratches on Lewis’s arm. The nurse cleaned Lewis’s arm with normal saline, applied bacitracin ointment, and covered the abrasion with gauze. Lewis was given a pass for wound treatment and was told to return to medical if the situation worsened. According to Lewis, over the following eight months, Lewis was prescribed more than three different pain medications.

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Lewis v. Adelowo, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-adelowo-mdd-2024.