Nigel Livingston v. United States of America; Miguel Mateo; Jane Doe

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 20, 2026
Docket1:24-cv-04489
StatusUnknown

This text of Nigel Livingston v. United States of America; Miguel Mateo; Jane Doe (Nigel Livingston v. United States of America; Miguel Mateo; Jane Doe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nigel Livingston v. United States of America; Miguel Mateo; Jane Doe, (E.D.N.Y. 2026).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK ---------------------------------------------------------- X NIGEL LIVINGSTON, : : Plaintiff, : MEMORANDUM DECISION AND : ORDER - against - : : 24-cv-4489 (BMC) UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, : : Defendant. : ---------------------------------------------------------- X

COGAN, District Judge.

Plaintiff Nigel Livingston brought the instant case against the United States and Officers Miguel Mateo and Jane Doe of the Federal Bureau of Prisons (“BOP”) for injuries he sustained while he was a pretrial detainee at the Brooklyn Metropolitan Detention Center (the “MDC”). The Court previously dismissed plaintiff’s Bivens claims against the officers; all that remains is plaintiff’s FTCA claim against the United States. After an unsuccessful motion to dismiss the FTCA claim, the Government now moves for summary judgment on it. The Government’s motion is granted, and this case is dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. BACKGROUND Plaintiff was a detainee at the MDC from September 2021 through the end of 2023. At the time of the June 26, 2022 attack, plaintiff was housed in a “general population” housing unit, Unit 51, and was not confined in “continuous locked down status.” Plaintiff testified that officers were supposed to do rounds “every half an hour, an hour” to make sure the inmates were okay, but instead did rounds “when they fe[lt] like it.” According to plaintiff, when officers weren’t doing rounds, they were talking with each other “next door” and in other housing units. Plaintiff knows this because he could see the officers through the windows on their office doors. Plaintiff estimates that “[f]or the 12-hour shift, [officers were] probably walking three hours out of the 12.” There is no BOP policy that dictates the number and frequency of rounds that

correctional officers must conduct of the general population housing units. Instead, BOP Program Statement (“PS”) 5521.06, titled “Search of Housing Units, Inmates, and Inmate Work Areas,” directs each institution to “establish procedures to ensure all housing units and work areas are searched routinely, but irregularly.” (Emphasis in original). Another BOP policy, PS 5500.14, requires each institution to conduct at least “five official inmate counts during every 24-hour period,” but it does not say when these counts must occur. 1 In addition, “counts” appear to be different from “rounds”: the BOP policies explain that rounds/inspections are primarily designed to detect contraband, prevent escapes, maintain sanitary standards, and eliminate fire and safety hazards, and that counts are used to maintain continuous inmate accountability.

Plaintiff now argues that correctional officers are required to conduct rounds every 45 minutes. He does not point to a formal BOP policy for this proposition (there apparently isn’t one), but rather to the testimony of Officer Mateo. This is what Officer Mateo testified: So we’re supposed to do rounds every hour, every 45 minutes. But there are times where you can’t do a round every hour. You have the time they come out. Then you have time to feed. Then you have -- what do you call it? Sometimes you're doing paperwork. People come to you and they ask you questions. Sometimes they have legal. So you have to start calling, looking for inmates that have legal visits or they have to go to court. Sometimes they have visits. And you’re running around looking for inmates because they don’t respond to the microphone. So there are times where you can go around and not do a round on -- on that moment. But you go around doing rounds. You know, as you are looking

1 PS 5500.14 also requires that correctional officers “observe all inmates confined in continuous locked down status, such as administrative detention or disciplinary segregation, ... at least twice per hour.” It is uncontested that this policy does not apply to plaintiff, who was not in continuous locked down status during the attack. 2 for people you’re pretty much doing a round. So it – it’s not – it’s not a black and white. It’s not like nothing is written in stone at that job. I mean, it is written in stone, but the job itself varies. Because if you are -- if you can’t do a -- if you can’t do a round every 45 minutes and you do it every hour because of whatever situation is going on. A body alarm in another unit you have to respond to. And those things happen. So nothing is textbook in the -- in the -- the Bureau of Prisons. Nothing. Everything is -- is done when it’s supposed to be done, but sometimes the timing might be a little off. Officer Mateo added that a round could take 20 or 30 minutes when inmates are locked in, and even an hour when the inmates are not locked in. Plaintiff’s counsel did not ask Officer Mateo whether there was an official BOP policy requiring that officers conduct rounds every 45 minutes or every hour, and Officer Mateo did not say that there was one. On the evening of June 26, 2022, plaintiff was attacked by two inmates, one of whom has been identified as Jamarr Simmons. Plaintiff was leaving his cell to watch the BET Awards on TV when he noticed the two of them waiting outside. He then felt something on the back of his neck and, upon placing his hand there, realized that he was bleeding. The assailants then pushed plaintiff back into his cell and tried to cut him more. Plaintiff estimates that he was inside the cell with the assailants for five to eight minutes “trying to fight them off from cutting [him] more.” The attack ended with plaintiff “trying to push them back out of the cell” and the assailants running off. Plaintiff had no history of altercations with either of his assailants and, in fact, did not know them at the time. The BOP’s investigative report of the incident notes that plaintiff “smoke[d] K-2 and had owned [sic] money to several Blood gang members” and that Simmons was a Blood. Plaintiff denies consuming or possessing illicit substances while at the MDC and thus denies owing a drug debt to his assailants. The investigative report sets forth a timeline of entries to and exits from plaintiff’s cell based on CCTV footage. At approximately 8:17 PM, Simmons and Derrick Casado, another 3 inmate, entered plaintiff’s cell. At 8:18 PM, Casado left plaintiff’s cell. At 8:19 PM, Simmons left plaintiff’s cell and returned at 8:22 PM for just 30 seconds. At 8:33 PM, another inmate, Jordan Velez, left plaintiff’s cell and re-entered at 8:35 PM with food. At 8:41 PM, Simmons opened the cell door (presumably from the outside) while talking to plaintiff, then closed the

door and walked away. Plaintiff does not appear to contest the accuracy of the timeline (albeit it’s unclear whether he’s reviewed the CCTV footage himself); in fact, he relies on the timeline to argue that the “assault took place over 24 minutes.” However, if the timeline is accurate, then Simmons was in plaintiff’s cell for just 2 minutes and 30 seconds. No correctional officer observed the attack as it happened, nor does there appear to be CCTV footage of the attack itself (as opposed to the goings-on outside of plaintiff’s cell that are documented in the investigative report). Plaintiff maintains that the entire attack was captured on CCTV and that an employee was watching the incident as it unfolded, but there’s no evidence of that. Officer Mateo testified that he did not have access to the CCTV during his shifts, and that he “wouldn’t know” whether a specific officer or some other employee watches the CCTV

during shifts. After the attack, plaintiff attempted to clean his wounds with a towel in his cell. He approached a female officer for assistance, who instructed him to return to his cell. Plaintiff remained in his cell overnight and did not receive medical attention until the following afternoon when an officer noticed his injuries while escorting him for a legal visit.

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Bluebook (online)
Nigel Livingston v. United States of America; Miguel Mateo; Jane Doe, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nigel-livingston-v-united-states-of-america-miguel-mateo-jane-doe-nyed-2026.