Mixon v. Pohlmann

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedJuly 21, 2022
Docket2:20-cv-01216
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Mixon v. Pohlmann, (E.D. La. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA

KAREN ROBERTS MIXON, ET AL. * CIVIL ACTION NO. 20-1216 * VERSUS * SECTION: “E”(1) * JAMES POHLMAN, ET AL. * JUDGE SUSIE MORGAN * * MAGISTRATE JUDGE * JANIS VAN MEERVELD *********************************** * ORDER AND REASONS Before the Court is Plaintiffs’ Motion in Limine for an Adverse Evidentiary Presumption Due to Defendants’ Spoliation of the Evidence and for Sanctions. (Rec. Doc. 87). For the following reasons, plaintiffs’ Motion is DENIED. Background This is a §1983 lawsuit arising out of the death of Edward Mixon while incarcerated at the St. Bernard Parish Prison. Mixon was arrested and taken into custody on October 24, 2019. At the time, he suffered from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, atrial fibrillation, high blood pressure, and cardiological problems for which he was receiving treatment and taking prescribed medication. He was also addicted to opioids. Plaintiffs allege that Mixon notified prison staff of these medical concerns during his initial screening but the prison did not administer his prescriptions or render appropriate medical care. Plaintiffs allege that Mixon’s condition deteriorated rapidly. He died in his jail cell on October 28, 2019. An investigation was conducted by Detective Jessie Gernados of the Detective Bureau, the detective agency within the St. Bernard Parish Sheriff’s Office. She requested a copy of the video surveillance of Mixon’s cell from midnight on October 28, 2019, through the time shortly following his death. (Rec. Doc. 93-8). Deputy Warden Justin Meyers, who is in control of the surveillance video, explained in his deposition that the surveillance video recording on the system writes over itself 20-30 days after being recorded. (Rec. Doc. 93-9, at 1). When surveillance video is requested, he enters the requested start and stop time and downloads the entire video during that period. Id. In this instance, he made a single copy of the video for October 28, 2019, for Gernados.

Id. Gernados confirmed in her deposition testimony that she requested the entire period from midnight through shortly after Mixon’s death and did not request only portions of that time. (Rec. Doc. 87-6, at 9). Meyers testified that every time he downloads a video he tells the person requesting it that if there is anything missing they should let him know because he is on a time limit due to the video being overwritten. (Rec. Doc. 93-11). Gernados admitted in her deposition that video from the entire time of Mixon’s incarceration was available to her during her investigation—which she completed on or about November 21, 2019. Id. at 5. She testified that additional video beyond what she requested was not necessary for her investigation. Id. On November 22, 2019—29 days after Mixon’s arrest and 25 days after his arrest—the Sheriff’s Office received a letter from Mixon’s family’s counsel advising them of his

representation and asking that “all documents regarding [Mixon’s] arrest together with any and all video and/or audio recordings regarding his arrest, incarceration and medical treatment administered” be retained. The letter was forward to the Sheriff’s Office’s attorney on November 25, 2019. Mixon’s surviving wife and sole daughter filed this lawsuit on April 17, 2020, seeking damages under 42 U.S.C. §1983 for violation of Mixon’s Fourteenth Amendment and Eighth Amendment right to be free from deliberate indifference to his serious medical needs while incarcerated. Trial is set to begin on August 1, 2022. There have been issues with production of the video surveillance from the start. After several promises that defendants would produce the video went unfulfilled, plaintiffs filed a motion to compel. The court ordered production of the video in November 2021. The first copy of the video was corrupted. The next copy produced on a USB drive contained the video from October 28,

2019, however, certain sections of time were missing. Plaintiffs have identified the following missing segments: • Between 00:04:14 and 00:24:59 • Between 00:25:47 and 03:53:49 • Between 04:00:25 and 04:09:561 After determining that the video they received contained missing sections, the plaintiffs filed a motion to compel production of the entire video. The court ordered that the parties meet and confer and submit a status report stating whether they had resolved the dispute. In their status report, defendants asserted that they had produced the entirety of the video that had been referred

to in the Incident Report pertaining to Mixon’s death. (Rec. Doc. 63, at 4). They asserted that Gernados had requested portions of the video she deemed relevant and that same video had been entered into evidence at the Sheriff’s Office and a copy of that same video had been provided to the plaintiffs. Id. They asserted they had provided all videos in their possession, noting that surveillance video is maintained for a limited period before it is recorded over. Id. They asserted that by the time they received plaintiffs’ request that video be preserved in November 2019, all video (other than the copy put into evidence by Gernados) was no longer available. Id. On November 22, 2021, the court denied the motion to compel as moot and without prejudice to any right plaintiffs might have to seek sanctions with regard to the loss of allegedly

1 Plaintiffs identified these segments in briefing the present motion. They did not identify any additional segments when questioned at oral argument. relevant evidence. The parties continued to prepare for trial—including conducting discovery into the circumstances surrounding the gaps in the video footage—and on May 24, 2022, plaintiffs filed the present motion for sanctions. Oral argument was held on July 6, 2022, the submission date selected by the plaintiffs.

Of note, while the summary of the surveillance video in Gernados’ report does not reference the gaps in footage identified by the plaintiffs, it does reference the following missing footage: • Between 09:28:50 and 09:29:05 • Between 09:34:50 and 09:34:56 • Between 09:36:00 and 09:37:00 • Between 09:41:40 and 09:41:47 • Between 09:41:55 and 09:42:00

(Rec. Doc. 93-12, at 5-6). Gernados also included a note that the video outages referenced in her report were caused by an accident with injury that occurred around 0930. Id. at 6. She explained in her deposition that a car accident had knocked over a transmission line at that time. (Rec. Doc. 93-14, at 1-2). Although Gernados testified in her deposition that she had requested the video without gaps and that when she viewed it, it contained no gaps, defendants’ counsel asked her to review the video since she had last viewed in 2019. (Rec. Doc. 87-6, 15-16; Rec. Doc. 93-16; Rec. Doc. 93-17). Following the deposition, she executed an affidavit in which she states that she viewed the video again on April 27, 2022, and discovered that she had been mistaken in testifying at her deposition that the video was continuous and did not contain any gaps. (Rec. Doc. 93-21, at 2) She stated that she made no alterations or deletions of any type to the jail video that was provided

to her by Meyers and placed into evidence. Id. In their motion, plaintiffs ask this court to enter an order instructing the jury of a mandatory inference that the missing video evidence would have been favorable to plaintiffs in meeting their burden of deliberate indifference and unfavorable to defendants in defending that they acted without deliberate indifference. They argue that sanctions for spoliation are warranted here. First,

they argue that defendants had a duty to preserve the entire surveillance video from the date of Mixon’s incarceration through his death at the time the video was destroyed.

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