McKinley v. Atchinson

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Illinois
DecidedSeptember 30, 2019
Docket3:16-cv-00661
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
McKinley v. Atchinson, (S.D. Ill. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS

BENARD MCKINLEY,

Plaintiff,

v. Case No. 3:16-CV-661-NJR-MAB

MICHAEL ATCHISON, KIMBERLY BUTLER, RICHARD HARRINGTON, BETSY SPILLER, JOSHUA SCHOENBECK, JARED PHILLIPS, REBECCA CREASON, C. WATSON, MICHAEL HOF, WARDEN OF MENARD CORRECTIONAL CENTER, KEVIN REICHERT, FRANK LAWRENCE, ALEX JONES, BRYAN KUDER, JEANETTE COWAN, and SHELLY FRANKLIN,

Defendants.

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

ROSENSTENGEL, Chief Judge: Pending before the Court is the Report and Recommendation by Magistrate Judge Mark A. Beatty (Doc. 208), which recommends that the undersigned District Judge deny the Motion for Summary Judgment filed by all Defendants (Doc. 189). Defendants timely objected to the Report and Recommendation (Doc. 214). For the reasons set forth below, the Court adopts in part and rejects in part the Report and Recommendation and grants in part and denies in part Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment. BACKGROUND The following facts are not genuinely disputed for purposes of summary judgment: On September 11, 2013, Plaintiff Benard McKinley filed suit in this District Court against Defendants Rick Harrington, Michael Atchinson, and Aimee Lang. See McKinley

v. Harrington, 13-cv-937-MJR (“2013 McKinley”). Defendant Atchison was Warden of Menard Correctional Center from December 2011 to January 2013 (Doc. 190-1). Defendant Harrington was Warden of Menard Correctional Center from January 2013 until April 2014 (Doc. 190-2). Aimee Lang was a medical tech (2013 McKinley, Doc. 7). McKinley alleged that on October 25, 2012, he was placed in Administrative Detention (AD)1 under a new program implemented by then-Warden Atchison and

continued by present-Warden Harrington (Doc. 190-2). The detention program, while characterized as non-disciplinary, subjected McKinley to the same restrictions on the possession of property as inmates in disciplinary segregation without any hearing or measure of due process (Id.). Specifically, McKinley claimed he did not receive certain property items until a few days after he was placed in AD (2013 McKinley, Doc. 1).

Furthermore, he was forced to wait 60 days to submit a request to get his audio-visual privileges restored (Id.). The remainder of his property was not given him until January 29, 2013. (Id.). McKinley claimed this deprivation of his property without a hearing was a violation of his due process rights (Id.). McKinley further alleged a claim of deliberate indifference as to his asthma while he was in AD.

1 The Court’s threshold order in that case often referred to McKinley as having been placed in “administrative segregation” See 2013 McKinley, Doc. 7 at p. 4. Throughout the pleadings and even the Seventh Circuit’s order in 2014 McKinley, the terms “administrative detention” and “administrative segregation” are used interchangeably. The Court notes, however, that McKinley alleged he was placed on “Administrative Detention Confinement Status,” not administrative segregation. See 2013 McKinley, Doc. 1. Upon threshold review in 2013 McKinley, the Court found that the Complaint alleged two counts (2013 McKinley, Doc. 7):

Count 1: Defendants Atchison and Harrington denied McKinley procedural due process in violation of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments when they subjected to him to administrative detention and its attendant “property” restrictions without any hearing; and

Count 2: Defendants Amy Lang and Michael P. Atchison were deliberately indifferent to his serious medical needs in violation of the Eight Amendment when they took no steps to secure an inhaler refill or otherwise have McKinley’s asthma treated.

In reviewing Count 1, the 2013 McKinley Court noted that an inmate’s “mere placement or retention” in AD does not deprive him of a protected liberty or property interest. Furthermore, McKinley did not allege that his term in AD extended his sentence in any way or implicated any liberty interest such that any due process rights were triggered (Id.). Accordingly, the 2013 McKinley court dismissed Count 1 and Defendants Harrington and Atchison with prejudice (Id.). The deliberate indifference claim with regard to his asthma survived preliminary review. On May 1, 2014, McKinley moved to amend his Complaint in 2013 McKinley, and on October 6, 2014, he filed a motion for leave to supplement his Complaint. The proposed Amended Complaint (and supplement) alleged, in relevant part, that in April 2014, he was placed in Menard’s AD step-down program, but subsequently was removed and placed back on AD status. He also alleged that, during his time in AD, he was in a cell with no heat, hot water, or sanitary supplies; the window in his cell was broken; and there was dirt and rodent feces on the floor. He claimed he told Joshua Schoenbeck and Lance Phelps about the conditions but they refused to do anything. McKinley’s motions to amend and supplement the complaint were granted

(Doc. 46). The Amended Complaint added new counts against Defendants Phelps and Schoenbeck for retaliating against him by placing him in administrative segregation for refusing to answer questions and for his religious beliefs, for subjecting him to excessive force in retaliation for filing 2013 McKinley, for thwarting his plans to marry in retaliation for filing 2013 McKinley, and for subjecting him to inhumane living conditions in AD in violation of the Eighth Amendment. Although the Motion to Amend was granted, the

Court severed the claims against Defendants Phelps and Schoenbeck into a separate suit. See McKinley v. Schoenbeck, 14-cv-1137-NJR-DGW (“2014 McKinley”). McKinley filed a Second Amended Complaint in 2014 McKinley on July 6, 2015 (2014 McKinley at Doc. 43). The Second Amended Complaint added Chad Hasemeyer and Jacqueline Lashbrook as defendants in that matter, alleging these parties also

retaliated against McKinley by placing him in segregation due to his inability to assist in an internal affairs investigation and for his religious beliefs. The Court granted summary judgment to all Defendants, a decision that McKinley appealed. In its opinion, the Seventh Circuit noted that “[a]fter McKinley was released from administrative detention in November 2015, he filed this civil-rights lawsuit.”2 The opinion also references

McKinley’s “over three years” in administrative detention on four instances. Ultimately, the Seventh Circuit reversed the Court’s grant of summary judgment to Lashbrook,

2 The Court notes, but does not comment on, the discrepancy between the Seventh Circuit’s statement that McKinley filed his lawsuit in November 2015 and the fact that his Second Amended Complaint was filed in July 2015 (2014 McKinley, Doc. 43). Phelps, and Schoenbeck. 2014 McKinley is still pending. McKinley filed this action on June 17, 2016 (Doc. 1) and amended his complaint on August 16, 2016 (Doc. 19).3 In his First Amended Complaint, McKinley alleged that he

was placed in AD in 2012 in retaliation for refusing to answer questions by internal affairs officers. He further claimed he had no hearing to address his continued placement in AD until July 2014. Prison officials met ten times between October 2012 and October 2015 to review his situation, but found that his continued confinement in AD was appropriate. At four hearings between July 2014 and October 2015, members of Menard’s

Administrative Detention Review Committee (“ADRC”), affirmed these decisions. McKinley, however, described these hearings a “sham.” Finally, he claimed that the conditions of his cell were deplorable, as they were infested with mice, cockroaches, and other bugs, the window was cracked, the heat was broken, and he had no hot water for months at a time. He also was denied cleaning supplies.

After threshold review of his First Amended Complaint pursuant to 28 U.S.C.

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McKinley v. Atchinson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckinley-v-atchinson-ilsd-2019.