Ortiz v. Voinovich

316 F. App'x 449
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 12, 2009
Docket06-3627
StatusUnpublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 316 F. App'x 449 (Ortiz v. Voinovich) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ortiz v. Voinovich, 316 F. App'x 449 (6th Cir. 2009).

Opinions

JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge.

Michelle Ortiz, a former inmate, brought a § 1983 claim against various prison officials alleging that, while incarcerated, she was sexually assaulted by a prison guard on two successive nights and that prison officials failed to protect her from the second assault. She also claimed that prison officials retaliated against her for reporting the incident. The jury found in favor of the former inmate and against two prison officials, Paula Jordan and Rebecca Bright. The prison officials appealed. For the reasons set forth below, we conclude that both Jordan and Bright are entitled to qualified immunity.

I.

The evidence, as reflected by the jury’s verdict and, therefore, viewed on appeal in the light most favorable to Ortiz, established that at the time of the events at issue in this case, Michelle Ortiz, a former inmate at the Ohio Reformatory for Women, was serving a one-year sentence for aggravated assault in the stabbing of her husband, apparently in retaliation for multiple incidents of domestic violence to which she had been subjected over a period of several years. While incarcerated, she was sexually assaulted by a corrections officer, Douglas Schultz, on two successive nights. Ortiz testified that the first assault occurred on Friday, November 8, 1996 in her living quarters at the JG Cottage. Schultz, who reportedly had a habit of being “overly friendly” and “touching people,” walked up behind Ortiz while she was alone in the washroom and grabbed her shoulder. Ortiz said, “Oh, are you giving me a back rub?” and Schultz replied, “No, that’s not what I was reaching for” and grabbed her breast. Upset, Ortiz told him to get away from her. After a brief verbal altercation, Schultz complied, but later that night he told Ortiz, “I’ll get you tomorrow, watch.”

The next day, Saturday, November 9, 1996, Ortiz approached another corrections officer, Steve Hall, and told him that Schultz had assaulted her the night before. Hall immediately took Ortiz to see the acting case manager for the JG Cottage, Paula Jordan. Hall testified that when he dropped Ortiz off at Jordan’s office, he told Jordan what Ortiz had told him, including the name of the officer in question, but did not stay because his shift was about to end.

Despite the fact that Ortiz was crying and obviously upset, Jordan told her that it was Schultz’s last day at the JG Cottage because of a previously planned reassign-[451]*451raent to another correctional facility. Although Jordan said that “no one has the right to touch you,” she also told Ortiz to “keep in mind that the man was leaving,” that “this was his nature,” and that he “is just an old dirty man.” Jordan encouraged Ortiz to “hang out with [her] Mends” for the rest of the day so that Schultz would not have the chance to be alone with her. Ortiz explained at trial that upon learning from Jordan that it was Schultz’s last day, she decided not to file a complaint but instead just to “let it go” and get through Schultz’s last day by following Jordan’s suggestion that she use what amounted to a buddy system. Jordan also told Ortiz that “if anything happens” again, she could report it on Tuesday, when Jordan returned to work.1

The second assault occurred later on Saturday, the same day that Ortiz had spoken with Jordan. Ortiz testified that she was feeling ill, went to her room, and subsequently fell asleep. Although there were three other people in the room with Ortiz when she went to sleep, they were gone when she woke up and found Schultz standing over her, one hand fondling her breast and the other in her “crotch area” inside her underwear. When she realized what was occurring, Ortiz raised a ruckus, hitting and scratching Schultz until he left the room.

The written statement that Ortiz submitted regarding the second assault reported that Schultz “fluttered his fingers across my left breast [and] smoothed across my blanket on my crotch area.” She later testified that Schultz had succeeded in “putting his fingers inside [her],” saying that it upset her to the point that she asked Jordan whether “[she] needed to put it in” the written statement and was told to refer simply to contact with “the crotch area.”

The day after the second assault, Sunday, November 10, 1996, Ortiz told Officer Hall that Schultz had “touched [her] again,” and Hall took her to the sergeant’s office to report the incident. As a result, the matter was referred to institutional investigator Rebecca Bright, who received a call about the incident on Sunday but, because she was told that Schultz had just been transferred and was no longer assigned to the facility, did not actually begin an investigation until Monday. During the course of that investigation, Bright met with Ortiz and other relevant persons, including Officer Schultz, collected relevant documents, and scheduled a lie detector test for Ortiz, which Ortiz “passed.”

Ortiz’s claim against Jordan stemmed at least in part from Bright’s conclusion that Jordan had violated the standards of employee conduct by failing to turn in the incident report promptly. Bright testified at trial that if Jordan had reported the first incident immediately, “the proper people would have taken a role in protecting Ms. Ortiz.” As for Officer Schultz, although he initially denied any wrongdoing, he voluntarily resigned his position. Bright explained that this event effectively ended her investigation because her administrative role was limited to investigating employee misconduct.

Ortiz’s claim against Bright emanated from Bright’s recommendation early in her investigation that Ortiz be placed in “security control.” As a result, on the Tuesday [452]*452after the assault, Ortiz was transferred to the “ARN Unit,” otherwise referred to by the inmates as “the hole,” where she was put into solitary confinement. Bright later testified that she had warned Ortiz several times not to speak about the investigation with other inmates, indicating in her final warning to Ortiz that this was a “direct order.” When she received reports that Ortiz was still discussing the investigation with other inmates, Bright recommended to the warden that Ortiz be placed in “security control,” and the warden approved the action. Bright explained that this gag order was intended both to protect the integrity of the investigation and to protect Ortiz from possible altercations with other prisoners who were loyal to Schultz. But Bright also attributed her action to compliance with Ohio Administrative Code § 5120-9-11, a provision that provides for the placement of an inmate in isolation prior to a hearing for investigation if there is a threat of disruption to the institution. Ortiz was taken in handcuffs and shackled to a location that she described as lacking adequate bedding, heating, and clothing.

Ortiz alleges that Bright’s motive for placing her in “the hole” was purely punitive rather than protective, recalling that Bright told her that she was being put into the hole “because [she] had lied.” Ortiz also testified that after a day in solitary confinement, Bright called her back into her office, asked her to change her statement, and said, “[A]re you ready to tell me the story again?” When Ortiz responded she had already told her the story, Bright said, “[A]re you ready to tell me the truth?” Ortiz replied that she had already told the truth and began crying.

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Bluebook (online)
316 F. App'x 449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ortiz-v-voinovich-ca6-2009.