Nathaniel Jackson v. Alton Angus

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedApril 8, 2020
Docket19-1736
StatusUnpublished

This text of Nathaniel Jackson v. Alton Angus (Nathaniel Jackson v. Alton Angus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nathaniel Jackson v. Alton Angus, (7th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

NONPRECEDENTIAL DISPOSITION To be cited only in accordance with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit Chicago, Illinois 60604

Submitted April 2, 2020 * Decided April 8, 2020

Before

DIANE P. WOOD, Chief Judge

JOEL M. FLAUM, Circuit Judge

AMY C. BARRETT, Circuit Judge

No. 19-1736

NATHANIEL JACKSON, Appeal from the United States District Plaintiff-Appellant, Court for the Central District of Illinois.

v. No. 12-cv-1084

ALTON ANGUS, et al., Michael M. Mihm, Defendants-Appellees. Judge.

ORDER

This is the second time that Nathaniel Jackson’s lawsuit—his third against staff at Pontiac and Dixon Correctional Facilities—comes to us on appeal. Jackson maintains that prison staff violated his constitutional rights when they transferred him twice to Dixon Special Treatment Center for mental-health treatment against his will. See 42 U.S.C. § 1983. In a prior decision, we vacated the entry of summary judgment on

* We have agreed to decide the case without oral argument because the briefs and record adequately present the facts and legal arguments, and oral argument would not significantly aid the court. FED. R. APP. P. 34(a)(2)(C). No. 19-1736 Page 2

claim-preclusion grounds and remanded the case for further proceedings on Jackson’s claims (1) that certain mental-health officials at Pontiac and Dixon violated his due process rights during the transfers and (2) that, during the second transfer, Pontiac’s tactical team used excessive force when extracting him from his cell. See Jackson v. Angus, 686 F. App’x 367 (7th Cir. 2017). On remand, the district court entered summary judgment for the remaining defendants. Jackson appeals, and we affirm.

During Jackson’s incarceration from 2002 to 2016, various mental health professionals diagnosed him with serious mental illnesses (including schizophrenia and psychotic disorder), and he was transferred between different prisons several times— sometimes at his request and other times involuntarily. This suit concerns his last two transfers (in March 2011 and July 2012), over his objections, from Pontiac to Dixon Special Treatment Center (STC)—a unit specializing in mental-health care. See ILL. ADMIN. CODE 415.20(k).

In late 2010, Jackson was placed in segregation at Pontiac with a psychiatric referral for paranoid behavior. Soon after, Dr. Alton Angus, a psychologist, attempted to evaluate his mental-health status and needs. But Jackson refused to discuss his mental-health history, accused Dr. Angus of harassing him, and threatened the psychologist with a lawsuit. Dr. Angus conferred with other mental-health staff about where to house Jackson after his release from segregation and determined that he needed a mental-health placement.

A few days later, Dr. José Mathews, a Pontiac staff psychiatrist, recommended Jackson’s transfer to Dixon STC. After reviewing Jackson’s medical records and interviewing him in his cell (Jackson refused to come out), Dr. Mathews diagnosed paranoid schizophrenia, paranoid personality disorder, and possible delusional disorder. Jackson was not a danger to anyone, Dr. Mathews concluded, but he would struggle to adjust to general population because of his paranoid behavior. If Jackson did not consent to the transfer, Dr. Mathews asked the Placement Review Board to consider sending him to Dixon STC against his will.

Dr. Angus then delivered a written notice of the transfer to Jackson’s cell and sought his consent. Jackson refused. Dr. Angus tried to read him the notice, which explained how he could request a hearing before the Board and present evidence to contest the transfer, but Jackson grew hostile and refused to accept a copy of the notice.

Jackson did not request a hearing and refused to participate when the Board met at the month’s end to consider the transfer. The Board gave its approval and, in a No. 19-1736 Page 3

memorandum, informed Jackson that it based its decision on Dr. Mathews’s recommendation and its own review of Jackson’s psychiatric records. Jackson was told he could request a review of the decision at any time, and he was entitled to a hearing every six months.

Jackson was transferred from Pontiac to Dixon STC in March 2011, the first of the two transfers at issue in this appeal. Dr. Jamie Lynn Chess, a staff psychiatrist who conducted an initial mental-health screening, observed that Jackson was illogical, paranoid, agitated, and guarded, and she diagnosed potential paranoid schizophrenia. Over the next six months, Jackson refused to attend his scheduled mental-health appointments or speak with mental-health staff who visited his cell. In August, he was transferred out of Dixon STC and eventually returned to Pontiac, where he demanded to be taken off the psychiatric roll call. Based on his demands, mental-health staff stopped coming to his cell.

The following July, still at Pontiac, Jackson requested a mental-health evaluation. A psychiatrist came to his cell, but Jackson refused to speak with him, and the psychiatrist—after reviewing Jackson’s records—recommended a second transfer to Dixon STC. Dr. Angus again visited Jackson in his cell to notify him of the proposed transfer, and again Jackson became hostile, refusing to sign or accept the notice. When the Board met a few days later and approved the transfer, Jackson refused to attend or participate. He received a memorandum of the decision a few days later.

The second transfer at issue occurred in late July, when several Pontiac tactical team officers came to Jackson’s cell to transfer him. After ordering him three times to come out of his cell, they warned him that they would use pepper spray if he did not comply. When he still refused, they dispensed two short bursts of pepper spray into his cell. After the fourth order, he finally left his cell, and officers led him outside, where a nurse flushed his eyes. The officers then brought him back into the prison, where they changed him into a fresh jumpsuit, before taking him to Dixon STC. He remained at Dixon STC until Dr. Chess recommended that he be transferred out of the facility in February 2013.

Jackson brought this prisoner’s rights action against employees from Dixon and Pontiac. He alleged, in relevant part, that mental-health staff violated his due-process rights during the two transfers to Dixon STC, and that members of Pontiac’s tactical team used excessive force when they extracted him from his cell during the second transfer. The district court determined that the suit was barred by two prior lawsuits that Jackson had filed in state court. On appeal, however, we vacated the judgment with No. 19-1736 Page 4

regard to certain members of the mental-health staff at both prisons as well as Pontiac’s tactical team because the suits did not cover the same claims and defendants. See Jackson, 686 F. App’x at 372.

On remand, the remaining defendants moved for summary judgment, and Jackson requested counsel. The district court briefly recruited law students to represent him, but Jackson later told the court he did not want their representation. When the court gave him the choice of proceeding with the students or representing himself, he chose self-representation. He later requested counsel again, but the court denied his request on grounds that the case’s subject matter was not complex, and there was no indication that he could not handle the case himself.

The court ultimately entered summary judgment for the defendants.

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