Nate A. Lindell v. Larry Fuchs, et al.

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Wisconsin
DecidedDecember 23, 2025
Docket3:23-cv-00805
StatusUnknown

This text of Nate A. Lindell v. Larry Fuchs, et al. (Nate A. Lindell v. Larry Fuchs, et al.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nate A. Lindell v. Larry Fuchs, et al., (W.D. Wis. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF WISCONSIN

NATE A. LINDELL,

Plaintiff, OPINION and ORDER v.

23-cv-805-amb LARRY FUCHS, et al.,

Defendants.

Plaintiff Nate A. Lindell, a state prisoner representing himself, alleges that a correctional officer at Columbia Correctional Institution, Ashley Suprise, sexually assaulted him and issued a false conduct report against him to discredit any complaint. He further alleges that the remaining defendants, also Columbia Correctional staff, knew Suprise posed a risk of harm to inmates yet turned a blind eye to her alleged conduct in this case and approved the conduct report. Plaintiff is proceeding on Eighth Amendment claims against Suprise for the alleged assault, and against the remaining defendants for failing to prevent further emotional or psychological harm to plaintiff. Dkt. 9 at 8–9, 17. Defendants have filed a motion for summary judgment on all of plaintiff’s claims on the merits or, alternatively, under the doctrine of qualified immunity for all defendants except Suprise. Dkt. 25. Plaintiff has renewed his motion to compel defendants to provide supplemental responses to certain discovery requests. Dkt. 60. For the following reasons, defendants’ motion is GRANTED as to all of plaintiff’s claims except for his Eighth Amendment claim against Suprise, which will proceed to trial.1 Plaintiff’s motion to compel is DENIED, but the parties are ORDERED to meet and confer by the deadline indicated below on any remaining discovery issues related to plaintiff’s claim against Suprise.

JURISDICTION

This case was originally assigned to a district court judge, who screened plaintiff’s complaint. Dkt. 9. The parties have since consented to jurisdiction by a United States Magistrate Judge. Dkt. 20. The court has original jurisdiction over plaintiff’s claims because they arise under the Constitution of the United States. 28 U.S.C. § 1331.

FINDINGS OF FACT2 A. The parties Plaintiff, a state prisoner, was incarcerated at Columbia Correctional Institution at all times relevant to this lawsuit.

The defendants all worked at that institution: defendant Larry Fuchs as Warden, defendants Ryan Blount and Gwen Schultz as security directors, defendants Kevin Pitzen and

1 Plaintiff seeks leave to file a sur-reply in opposition to defendants’ motion for summary judgment contesting defendants’ arguments regarding plaintiff’s claim against Suprise. Dkt. 62. The motion is GRANTED and the court has considered plaintiff’s arguments, although they did not affect the court’s reasoning, conclusions, or the ultimate result. Plaintiff’s sur-reply raises points about Suprise that were already in the record and already considered by the court, so defendants are not prejudiced by the court accepting it. 2 I find the following facts are material and undisputed, unless otherwise noted, based on the parties’ briefing, their proposed factual findings, responses, replies, and objections, and considering the evidence of record in the light most favorable to plaintiff as the non-moving party. Miller v. Gonzalez, 761 F.3d 822, 827 (7th Cir. 2014). Jason Chatman as captains, defendant Kyle Zenk as an inmate complaint examiner, and defendants Ashley Suprise and Bryan Gerry as correctional staff. B. The alleged sexual assault At approximately 6:30 p.m. on November 10, 2020, plaintiff was moved to Housing

Unit 2 following a Covid-19 quarantine. Suprise was working on the unit as a floor officer and a nondefendant officer was working in the dayroom control “bubble,” an enclosed room where staff can observe the housing unit’s hallways and dayroom. Suprise allowed plaintiff to clean his new cell due to Covid-19 concerns before moving several large bins of his property one by one from the nearby dayroom and down a hallway into the cell. The process took about an hour. Plaintiff alleges that while he was moving into his new cell, Suprise called him into the unit’s meeting room, slid her hands down his pants, touched his genitals, and then bent over

and pressed herself against his genitals. Plaintiff alleges he warned Suprise that she was violating the Prison Rape Elimination Act (PREA), and Suprise threatened that plaintiff had better not complain. So, plaintiff went back to moving and unpacking his property in the hope that “the matter would blow over.” Dkt. 1-1, ¶ 32. But, as discussed in greater detail below, Suprise later issued a conduct report against plaintiff for alleged disrespect, disruptive conduct, loitering, and disobeying orders. C. Video of plaintiff’s move-in process Plaintiff’s move-in process was captured across two different videos—one of the

dayroom and one of the hallway. Neither video recorded audio. The dayroom video begins with plaintiff setting two large bins on a dayroom table and approaching the control bubble where he appears to speak to the officer inside as well as Suprise, who is standing nearby. Dkt. 29-4, 00:21–1:22. Plaintiff then retrieves a broom and dustpan, pauses again at the control bubble, and proceeds down the hallway, followed about a minute later by Suprise carrying what appear to be cleaning supplies. Id. at 1:37–3:41. The hallway video shows plaintiff proceeding into his new cell with the broom and moving a chair out into the hallway,

where Suprise places cleaning supplies about a minute later. Dkt. 49, 00:22–1:45. Suprise hands plaintiff several items and then leaves the hallway while plaintiff sweeps and cleans his cell. Id., 1:44–3:21. Over the next few minutes, the hallway and dayroom videos show plaintiff moving his property into his cell bin by bin, at times with Suprise nearby. At that point, Suprise follows plaintiff down the hallway as he is carrying a bin and waits outside his cell for him to emerge carrying a mattress pad that he takes back through the dayroom with Suprise following. Id., 8:24–9:04. Plaintiff and Suprise cross the dayroom and go through a door in the bottom

lefthand corner of the frame where they remain out of frame for approximately 12 seconds before plaintiff reappears without the mattress followed by Suprise. Dkt. 29-4, 11:05–11:49. Plaintiff resumes moving his property as Suprise walks away in the opposite direction. About half an hour later, Suprise walks to plaintiff’s new cell, stacks his bins that are in the hallway, and leans up against the wall outside his cell on one arm. Dkt. 49, 41:37–41:48. Plaintiff is in his cell, off camera. Suprise stands there for around a minute and appears to be speaking with plaintiff before she takes a bin from him and stacks it on top of the others. Id., 41:48–42:45. She remains standing by the stack of bins in the hallway outside plaintiff’s cell

for two minutes before taking another bin from plaintiff that she stacks with the others and pushing the stack down the hallway and out of frame. Id., 42:45–44:43. Suprise returns about 10 minutes later to retrieve a spray bottle left in the hallway and the chair from outside plaintiff’s cell and then leaves the hallway. Id., 55:38–56:32. D. Plaintiff’s conversation with defendant Jason Chatman Later that same evening, defendant Jason Chatman went to plaintiff’s cell to ask

whether he was still feeling “a little heated” after an alleged altercation between plaintiff and Suprise during plaintiff’s move. Dkt. 48, 0:09–0:14. The conversation was captured on Chatman’s body worn camera. Chatman informed plaintiff that he was being moved to temporary lockup, a restrictive housing status, due to his alleged disruptive conduct “in his cell” and “with the boxes” while relocating to Housing Unit 2. Id., 0:36–0:55.

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