Mitchel Albin v. David W. Suetholz

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 19, 2022
Docket21-6044
StatusUnpublished

This text of Mitchel Albin v. David W. Suetholz (Mitchel Albin v. David W. Suetholz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mitchel Albin v. David W. Suetholz, (6th Cir. 2022).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 22a0343n.06

No. 21-6044

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FILED FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT Aug 19, 2022 DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk

MITCHEL ALBIN, ) ) Plaintiff - Appellant, ) ) v. ) DR. DAVID SUETHOLZ, et al., ) ON APPEAL FROM THE ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT Defendants, ) COURT FOR THE EASTERN ) DISTRICT OF KENTUCKY JEFFREY TILLINGHAST, FELICIANO ) VELASCO, PATRICK RYDER, CHUCK ) OPINION HOPPLE, JASON RUSSELL, and JAMES ) SMITH, in their individual capacities, ) Defendants - Appellees. ) )

Before: SILER, BUSH, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.

JOHN K. BUSH, Circuit Judge. Mitchel Albin experienced diabetic ketoacidosis while

incarcerated in Covington, Kentucky at the Kenton County Detention Center (KCDC) for a parole

violation. He sued a litany of jail employees (the KCDC defendants) and third-party medical staff,

alleging that the defendants were deliberately indifferent to his serious medical needs in violation

of his federal constitutional right to protection from cruel and unusual punishment. The district

court granted summary judgment to the KCDC defendants. We affirm.

I.

Police in Kenton County arrested Albin for a probation violation in November 2018.

A judge sentenced him to incarceration at KCDC over four consecutive weekends. Albin self- No. 21-6044, Albin v. Suetholz

surrendered for his first weekend of incarceration on November 16. Jail officers booked him in at

1842.1

Before entering the jail that night, Albin ate dinner at a local McDonald’s. As a diabetic,

he checked his blood sugar and took insulin in the jail parking lot. At that time, nothing seemed

irregular. Albin alerted jail staff to his diabetes but no other active medical issue. So he was

booked and assigned to Dorm 102 in cell block D-2.

Before we continue, a quick detour to go over staffing at the jail that weekend will benefit

the analysis later. That evening, Deputy Jeffrey Tillinghast worked in D-2 from 1500 to 2300.

Sergeant Jason Russell supervised D-2 from 1500 to 2300, and Sergeant Chuck Hopple supervised

D-2 from 2300 until 0700 the next morning. Sergeant James Smith supervised D-2 from 0300

until 1500 on November 17. And Deputy Patrick Ryder worked in D-2 from 0700 until 1057 that

morning.2

Back in D-2, Albin’s troubles began shortly after he entered the cell block. He believes

that he began feeling ill around 1900 or 1930. He laid down in his assigned sleeping area, and

around 2100 or 2200, he started vomiting. Sometime during the night, his condition worsened: he

began vomiting more often and more severely. Albin believed he was experiencing diabetic

ketoacidosis, a serious condition which had hospitalized him at least twice before.

The rest of the facts of Albin’s stay at KCDC are far from clear. By Albin’s “best estimate,”

he first reported his vomiting to a deputy on duty around 2200 or 2300, but he “can’t be for certain

on that.” He does not recall the name of any deputy he told about his vomiting. Nor is he able to

1 Here, we use military time rather than a standard twelve-hour clock to mark specific events that occurred during Albin’s stay at KCDC. Because Albin’s recollection is as incomplete and unclear as it is, military time offers the best temporal picture of when the various employees were working and when certain events happened in relation to those times. 2 Deputy Andrew Hamilton and Deputy Charles Schadler also worked in D-2 during this time, but Albin conceded to the district court that neither acted inappropriately, so they were dismissed from the case.

2 No. 21-6044, Albin v. Suetholz

provide a description of anyone he spoke to that night. He is also unsure how many times he spoke

with deputies or what they might have said. For the jail’s part, Tillinghast does not recall Albin

requesting medical assistance at any point. Nor does Russell. And the Pass Down Logs (PDLs),

which detail anything out of the ordinary that occurred during a particular shift, contain no

reference to Albin. Albin does, however, “absolutely believe” that someone contacted jail medical

staff and admits that the deputies “were probably receptive” to his needs.

Albin may have spoken with Deputy Feliciano Velasco. This is because Velasco covered

D-2 from around 0008 to 0023 on November 17 for another deputy. Velasco recalls speaking with

Albin about his medical issues and informing Hopple and the medical staff about Albin’s situation.

Velasco then returned to his usual shift outside of D-2. Hopple does not recall this conversation

but does not deny its occurrence.

Albin admits that “at some point [he] was seen” by a nurse with a cart who came around

to his cell. But he remains unsure whether he was seen “an hour into the vomiting or 12 hours into

the vomiting.” And he does not know whether he was seen before or after lights-out in the cell

block that night. An on-duty jail nurse, Michael Vandergraff, stated that he took the medical cart

to D-2 partially to assess Albin’s condition and that Albin refused such an assessment. For his

part, Albin denies refusing medical attention at any point.3

Jail medical staff take the blood-sugar readings of diabetic inmates every morning between

0300 and 0500. And inmate tracking logs show that Albin left his cell at 0448 on November 17

to have his blood sugar checked and receive insulin. As noted above, Ryder worked in D-2 from

0700 until 1057 that morning. He does not recall speaking with Albin at any point about Albin’s

3 Albin at first sued Vandergraff and the various other medical staff members named here, but he settled with them all below.

3 No. 21-6044, Albin v. Suetholz

medical needs. Nor does he recall noticing Albin vomiting in the cell block. Albin alleges that he

refused meals while at KCDC. But neither Deputy Ryder’s PDL from the shift nor the inmate

food-tracking log reflects a formal refusal.

At 1117 on November 17, officers took Albin to the jail medical unit. He does not recall

what happened in the medical unit or how long he was there. He does believe that he returned to

his cell and “vomited every 15 minutes” until 1517. Then, another jail nurse, Jessica Razor, visited

Albin’s cell in response to a report about his nausea. Razor discovered that Albin had high blood

sugar, so she consulted Dr. David Suetholz, who instructed Razor to provide Albin with insulin

for his blood sugar and Zofran to calm his vomiting.

Razor checked on Albin again at 1841. Albin advised that, while the Zofran had helped

his nausea, he was still experiencing significant pain. Consequently, at around 0000 on November

18, Dr. Suetholz requested that Albin be transported to Saint Elizabeth Hospital, where Albin

remained hospitalized until November 21.

Albin sued many staff members at KCDC and Southern Health Partners, Inc., asserting

under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments, a deliberate-indifference claim against them in

their individual capacities. KCDC defendants Tillinghast, Hamilton, Schadler, Velasco, Ryder,

Hopple, Russell, and Smith moved for summary judgment, which the district court granted. Albin

timely appealed.

II.

We review summary judgment de novo. Allen v. Highlands Hosp. Corp., 545 F.3d 387,

393 (6th Cir. 2008). Summary judgment should be granted when there is no genuine issue of

material fact, and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P.

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