Nate Lindell v. Peter Moreno, Jennifer Fandel, Michael Glass, Nathan Kennedy, and Anthony Churchill

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Wisconsin
DecidedMarch 13, 2026
Docket3:23-cv-00811
StatusUnknown

This text of Nate Lindell v. Peter Moreno, Jennifer Fandel, Michael Glass, Nathan Kennedy, and Anthony Churchill (Nate Lindell v. Peter Moreno, Jennifer Fandel, Michael Glass, Nathan Kennedy, and Anthony Churchill) 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 Lindell v. Peter Moreno, Jennifer Fandel, Michael Glass, Nathan Kennedy, and Anthony Churchill, (W.D. Wis. 2026).

Opinion

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

NATE LINDELL,

Plaintiff, v. OPINION and ORDER

PETER MORENO, JENNIFER FANDEL, 23-cv-811-jdp MICHAEL GLASS, NATHAN KENNEDY, and ANTHONY CHURCHILL,

Defendants.

Plaintiff Nate Lindell, a state of Wisconsin prisoner proceeding without counsel, was removed from educational programming and barred from being in the same building as a teacher soon after Lindell and another inmate had a verbal altercation in class. Lindell brings First Amendment claims against Department of Corrections and University of Wisconsin employees whom he alleges retaliated against him for complaining about being harassed by the other inmate. Both the corrections defendants and the UW defendants move for summary judgment. Dkt. 43 and Dkt. 51. For the reasons stated below, I will grant those motions and dismiss the case. I will also address a series of other motions. PRELIMINARY MATTERS After summary judgment briefing was completed, Lindell moved to submit additional evidence concerning defendant Nathan Kennedy’s termination by the DOC for misconduct and to submit a sur-reply addressing what he believes were arguments raised for the first time in the UW defendants’ reply brief. Dkt. 130 and Dkt. 131. I will grant those motions and I will consider Lindell’s new filings. But they ultimately do not affect the outcome here. Kennedy’s termination was for misconduct unrelated to the events of this case. Also, I do not agree with Lindell that the UW defendants raised new issues in their reply brief, and in any event his sur-reply arguments do not change my analysis below. Lindell moves to sanction defendants for what he believes is perjury in their declarations

and other misconduct. Because he seeks entry of judgment in his favor as a sanction, I will address this motion before addressing defendants’ motion for summary judgment. Lindell argues that in their declarations defendants discuss alleged misconduct on his part, but that the misconduct could not have happened because they did not file conduct or incident reports about it as is required under DOC rules. He disagrees with defendants’ account of events and their stated rationales for the actions they took. He also contends that counsel for both sets of defendants conducted litigation in bad faith by submitting defendants’ declarations with the above alleged defects, and he accuses counsel for the corrections

defendants of concealing evidence concerning defendant Kennedy’s termination of DOC employment for misconduct (evidence that Lindell submits in sur-reply). I will deny Lindell’s motion for sanctions. What he describes is not sanctionable misconduct but rather his disagreement about the underlying events of the case, a run-of-the- mill occurrence in litigation. People’s memories of events can change over time, and a lack of corroborating evidence might harm a witness’s credibility, but those aren’t reasons for sanctions. Nothing in his submissions suggests that defendants or their counsel have acted in bad faith. I need not address in detail Lindell’s allegations that counsel for the corrections

defendants concealed records regarding Kennedy’s termination because (1) Lindell was able to submit those materials in sur-reply; and (2) those materials are ultimately immaterial to my analysis of his claims at the summary judgment stage. UNDISPUTED FACTS The following facts are undisputed unless otherwise noted. Nate Lindell was an inmate at Columbia Correctional Institution (CCI) at the times

relevant to this case. The corrections defendants all worked at CCI: Nathan Kennedy was the education director, Anthony Churchill was a teacher, and Michael Glass was a restrictive housing unit manager and he later became CCI’s deputy warden. This case involves a prison educational program called Odyssey Beyond Bars (OBB), a community project through UW–Madison intended to give people the opportunity to try college. Defendant Peter Moreno and Jennifer Fandel were employed by UW–Madison; Moreno was the academic program director for OBB, and Fandel was teaching faculty. Fandel came to CCI once a week to teach English 100. Lindell was enrolled in that class

in spring 2022, as was another inmate named Eric Gallup. Lindell states that Gallup repeatedly harassed him during this class, often calling Lindell a communist. In mid-March 2022, Lindell sent Fandel an electronic message over OBB’s software application stating in part that he didn’t like condescending jokes made by another student (I take him to mean Gallup) and asking Fandel to tell the class to “refrain from making disrespectful, condescending, or inconsiderate remarks.” Dkt. 46-1, at 12. Fandel replied, stating that she would watch for those remarks and that she might say something to the class about it. Lindell states that Fandel did not say anything to the class about it. In May 2022, Lindell included in his end-of-the-course self-reflection paper statements

that he was frustrated by inmates wasting long stretches of class with irrelevant monologues and that he had to warn Gallup about intentionally mispronouncing his name in class. Fandel taught a non-credit poetry class in the summer, which Lindell did not take. Lindell says that he made Fandel aware that he didn’t want to take that class because Gallup would be in it. Fandel offered to all students who completed English 100 the opportunity to participate in an “editorial group” in summer 2022; the participants would edit student-inmate work for

an internal prison publication and discuss their work. Gallup was in the group. Lindell joined the group midsummer and stayed on for the fall semester. Lindell states that he complained several times to Fendel in person about Gallup’s behavior. Fandel denies that Lindell complained to her. On November 14, 2022, there was an incident involving Lindell and Gallup. Gallup loudly spoke about an issue irrelevant to the class “about how stupid a professor was who believed that only White people could be racist.” Dkt. 99, ¶ 64. Lindell asked if there was going to be a discussion about editorial-group business, and Gallup replied, “No.” Id. Lindell said

that Gallup’s remarks could be offensive to another of the inmates present, who was black. Fandel added that what Gallup was saying sounded racist. Gallup told Lindell, “If you don’t like what I’m saying, turn your chair around.” Id. The parties dispute whether defendant Churchill was in the classroom for this incident: Lindell says he was, Fandel says that Churchill was just outside the classroom and that she looked at him when the conversation got heated to get him to join them. At the end of class, Gallup approached Lindell for a hug. Fandel says that Lindell accepted the hug. Lindell says that Gallup forced the hug on him. The next day, Lindell sent Fandel an electronic message stating that Gallup’s history of

misbehavior and harassment of Lindell was causing a hostile environment, that he didn’t want Gallup’s hug, and that “[i]f there are any more gratuitous, hostile, degrading remarks made by [Gallup] about any group (e.g. lesbians, Blacks, Muslims, etc.), please let Mr. Moreno know that I will be pursuing legal action.” Dkt. 46-1, at 6. Fandel corresponded with others, including Moreno, Kennedy, and Churchill, about how to respond to this message and the threat of being sued. Moreno suggested that they’d

likely have to dissolve the editorial group if the inmates couldn’t get along. Fandel wrote back to Lindell, thanking him for bringing the matter to her attention and letting her know that he had not been satisfied by how he and Gallup had seemed to resolve the dispute. She added that she understood his complaint and that she shared the concern with Moreno. About a week after the incident, Fandel was in one of the prison’s dayrooms.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

United States v. Rod Blagojevich
612 F.3d 558 (Seventh Circuit, 2010)
John C. Babcock v. R.L. White and G. McDaniel
102 F.3d 267 (Seventh Circuit, 1996)
Bridges v. Gilbert
557 F.3d 541 (Seventh Circuit, 2009)
Heffernan v. City of Paterson
578 U.S. 266 (Supreme Court, 2016)
Robert Holleman v. Dushan Zatecky
951 F.3d 873 (Seventh Circuit, 2020)
Jennifer Beardsall v. CVS Pharmacy, Incorporated
953 F.3d 969 (Seventh Circuit, 2020)
Zachary Pulera v. Victoria Sarzant
966 F.3d 540 (Seventh Circuit, 2020)
Elijah Manuel v. Nick Nalley
966 F.3d 678 (Seventh Circuit, 2020)
Herzog v. Graphic Packaging International, Inc.
742 F.3d 802 (Seventh Circuit, 2014)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Nate Lindell v. Peter Moreno, Jennifer Fandel, Michael Glass, Nathan Kennedy, and Anthony Churchill, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nate-lindell-v-peter-moreno-jennifer-fandel-michael-glass-nathan-wiwd-2026.