LIGHTY v. PHILADELPHIA DEPT PRISON

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 16, 2022
Docket2:19-cv-01207
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
LIGHTY v. PHILADELPHIA DEPT PRISON, (E.D. Pa. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

NYFEIS LIGHTY, : Plaintiff, : : v. : CIVIL ACTION NO. 19-1207 : WILLIAMS, et al., : Defendant. :

McHUGH, J. September 16, 2022 MEMORANDUM This is an action brought by a pro se prisoner alleging two Constitutional violations: (1) conditions of confinement claim against an officer for not allowing him food and recreational time; and (2) an excessive use of force claim against two officers stemming from an incident in June 2018. Discovery is now complete, and the defendant correctional officers have moved for summary judgment. For the first claim, the conditions of confinement alleged do not rise to the level of Eighth Amendment violations. For the second claim, excessive use of force, the context is important: the incident occurred as correctional officers were attempting to secure the Plaintiff after saving him from suicide, and he admits to refusing to be handcuffed and kicking and punching the officers. Viewing the facts in the light most favorable to Plaintiff, there is no genuine dispute as to material fact such that a reasonable fact finder could find that the officers’ use of force was done maliciously and sadistically to cause harm. Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment will therefore be granted. I. Factual Background: Plaintiff Nyfeis Lighty’s Complaint arises out of events that occurred while he was incarcerated at Philadelphia Industrial Correctional Center (“PICC”). Lighty Dep. 14:6-9., Mot. Summ. J. Ex. B, ECF 24-2. Mr. Lighty alleges that Correctional Officer Rosa-Antonetty (“Officer Rosa”) denied Plaintiff exercise and extra food every time that Officer Rosa worked the 3pm-

11pm shift. Id. at 18:3-23.1 Plaintiff avers that this denial began in the middle of June 2018 and that he filed a grievance with prison officials within the same month. Id. at 18:23-19:10. The events leading to Plaintiff’s second claim occurred on June 23, 2018. Plaintiff alleges that, having been deprived of food and recreation time, he was “feeling suicidal,” and decided “to make a noose from my light fixture and hang it from the ceiling.” Lighty Dep. 23:1-10. Then, as Plaintiff had completed the noose and put it around his neck, an officer, Correctional Sergeant Bryant, looked inside his cell. Id. at 23:9-17. Seeing Plaintiff attempting to hang himself, Bryant purportedly yelled “I’ll beat your ass. He said, pop [his] cell.” Id. at 23:17-19. Bryant then “pulled a knife out of his pocket and cut the noose off [Plaintiff’s] neck.” Id. After cutting the

noose off, Bryant put the knife back in his pocket and told Mr. Lighty to “cuff up.” Id. at 24:5-7. Plaintiff refused to be handcuffed. Plaintiff testified that Sergeant Bryant then: tried to bend my arm around my back so in my mind I said, what are you doing. He said, I have to cuff you up. So, I refused to cuff up. So, at this point he bent my arm all the way back that it hurt, and so when I came around the other guard jolted me up, and from that point we started exchanging minor punches, but these guys, you know, are twice my size.

Id. at 24:11-19. Plaintiff identified the other guard as Correctional Officer Williams. Id. at 25:2.

1 At his deposition, Plaintiff was asked if Officer Rosa denied him food, and he responded yes. Lighty Dep. 18:15-18. In his grievance attached to his Complaint in this action, Plaintiff refers to a denial of “extra food.” ECF 2 at 16. Plaintiff admits that a mutual struggle ensued following his refusal to be cuffed. In the course of that fight, Plaintiff maintains that the two officers “stomped” on his head, back, and neck. Lighty Dep. 25:12-14. Plaintiff was hit “a few times.” Id. at 26:4. When asked to explain which parts of the body CO Williams hit him in, Plaintiff responded that, “It’s not that I remember. It was like this happened in the heat of the moment.” Id. at 25:19-20. Plaintiff admits that he fought

back against “both officers,” “trying to cause harm onto them to protect myself.” Id. at 25:23-24. Plaintiff hit them with his “fists, elbows,” and “kicked them a little bit because [he] was on the ground.” Id. at 26:9-10. The fight lasted for a “good minute or two.” Id. at 26:17-19. Eventually, Plaintiff surrendered, laid down, and allowed himself to be cuffed because he did not want to pick up another charge for hitting the officers. Id. at 27:1-4. As he was going down, he alleges that the officers gave him “a little punch and a little kick.” Id. at 27: 4. He also alleges that after he was cuffed, CO Williams “pushed [him] against the desk,” and was “squeezing the cuffs tight.” Id. at 28:7-12. Plaintiff then asked for medical attention because he “felt suicidal. . . had back pain. . . fists

were hurting. . . [and] head was hurting.” Lighty Dep. 30:11-13. He was taken to the PICC’s psychiatric hospital. Id. at 30:17-19. There, he was given Tylenol, but he declined psychiatric medication because he was uncomfortable taking anything he was not familiar with. Id. at 30:21- 24. Plaintiff testified that he had bruising on his chest and back and also had sustained blood in his nose.2 Id. at 31-32. His hands and wrists were swollen from the cuffs and his legs were bruised from kicking. Id. at 33:7-17.

2 In his Complaint, Plaintiff alleges that he experienced “internal bruising, restless nights of slumber, anxiety attacks, mental stress, suicidal feeling, depression, cold sweats, nosebleeds, and confusion” as a result of the physical struggle. Compl. at 5, ECF 2. At his deposition, Plaintiff clarified that he didn’t have any bruising inside his body, but rather, “just [had] bruises on my body.” Lighty Dep. 31:22-32:3. He also explained that his nose was not leaking with blood, but that “if you stick tissue in my nose there was blood in there.” Id. at 32:9-12. Plaintiff attached two grievances, each dated June 27, 2018, to his Complaint. The first grievance primarily addresses the situation with CO Rosa denying him extra food.3 ECF 2 at 15. He states that he is “sick mentally and tired physically of the way he been treating me.” Id. The second grievance primarily pertains to the officers’ use of force, complaining that they put their “hands and feet on me when they enter my cell. . . I was a[n] attempt[ed] suicide victim that got

treated wrong physically and mentally.” ECF 2 at 16. He alleges that one grievance was returned to him, see Lighty Dep. at 19:13-16 (“After I filed the grievance they gave me my copy back”), and that he never received further response, or any paperwork from the prison officials related to the grievances, see id. at 20:22-24; 39:14-19 (“I never received nothing, never got a response, nothing.”). Discovery is now complete and the Defendants Correctional Officers move for summary judgment. ECF 24. Two months have passed with no response from Plaintiff, rendering the motion ripe for review. II. Standard of Review

The motion for summary judgment is governed by the well-established standard for summary judgment set forth in Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a), as amplified by Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 322–23 (1986). Plaintiff is pro se, so is held to a less stringent standard than trained counsel. Giles v. Kearney, 571 F.3d 318, 322 (3d Cir. 2009). Although pro se pleadings and filings must be

3 The grievance states that “Rosa. . . get inmates to ‘sell there [sic] soul’ is what they call it so he won’t have to do extra work so he even give you a tray or four packs of cookies. I don’t get either one. It don’t make no since [sic] how he been treating me.” ECF 2 at 15.

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LIGHTY v. PHILADELPHIA DEPT PRISON, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lighty-v-philadelphia-dept-prison-paed-2022.