Pickett v. Lindsay

56 F. App'x 718
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 31, 2002
DocketNo. 01-3755
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 56 F. App'x 718 (Pickett v. Lindsay) 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
Pickett v. Lindsay, 56 F. App'x 718 (7th Cir. 2002).

Opinion

ORDER

Ozzie Pickett, an Illinois prisoner, brought suit against several prison guards under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The jury found in favor of defendants. Pickett now argues that he is entitled to a new trial because: the verdict was against the manifest weight of the evidence; defense counsel’s improper closing argument was “clearly injurious” to Pickett’s case; and the district court committed prejudicial error by excluding from evidence a disciplinary summary favorable to Pickett. We affirm.

I.

The Illinois Department of Corrections presently incarcerates Ozzie Pickett at the “supermax” maximum security prison in Tamms, Illinois. Pickett brought an action against various correction officers under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. Pickett’s suit arose from events that allegedly occurred in 1997 and 1998 while he was an inmate at the Stateville Correctional Center in Joliet, Illinois. Pickett alleged that defendants, who were guards at Stateville, violated his Eighth Amendment and due process rights by: (1) confining him in conditions that violate the Eighth Amendment; (2) using excessive force against him on four separate occasions; and (3) making false statements against him that led to inappropriate disciplinary action, including his transfer to Tamms.

As to the charge of conditions in violation of the Eighth Amendment, the jury heard Pickett’s testimony to the effect that, from April 5 to April 10,1997, guards kept him in a cell that had a broken window and was thus “very cold” and contained snow. He also testified that he had no bedding and that complaints to defendant Lindsay went unheeded, although another officer gave him a “plastic bag and tape” to place over the window. Because of these conditions, Pickett testified, he felt ill and caught a cold. On cross-examination, however, Pickett testified that he could not recall stating that he had caught a cold in an April 20th letter that he had written to a prison doctor.

An Officer Duvall testified, on the other hand, that she had inspected Pickett’s cell and that her log reflected that the window was fixed when Pickett was assigned to the cell. In a similar vein, a Cpt. Manning testified that the window to the cell was not broken and that he had not seen snow in the cell. The jury also viewed weather reports for the Joliet area indicating that outside temperatures during Pickett’s six days in the cell ranged from a high of 68 degrees Fahrenheit to a low in the 20’s.

Regarding the claims of excessive force, the jury heard evidence concerning four alleged incidents. The first alleged incident happened in June 1997 and concerned guards’ alleged slamming of Pickett’s hands in the chuckhole of his cell (“the chuckhole incident”). Pickett testified that, after defendant Lindsay had deliberately passed his cell without serving him lunch, Pickett hollered and placed his hands through the chuckhole. According to Pickett, guards then proceeded to slam repeatedly the chuckhole door on his hands. The jury also heard Lindsay’s tes[720]*720timony to the effect, however, that Pickett had thrown a tray at him, that Lindsay therefore tried to shut Pickett’s chuckhole, and that Pickett sustained minor injuries while resisting guards’ efforts to close the chuckhole. Cpt. Manning’s testimony corroborated Lindsay’s account by stating that he saw food on Lindsay, and Pickett himself testified that he continued to keep his hands in the chuckhole as guards tried to close it. The inmate injury report that Pickett adduced stated that, after the chuckhole incident, Pickett received iodine, ice packs, and Tylenol for his injuries.

The second alleged incident of excessive force occurred in July 1997, when three guards allegedly used excessive force by beating Pickett while he was handcuffed in a holding cell (“the holding cell incident”). Pickett testified that the three guards beat and insulted him because he had earlier yelled about not receiving needed medical attention. The defendants presented testimony to the effect that Pickett had lunged at Lindsay as guards were removing Pickett from the holding cell and that guards then used necessary force to restrain Pickett. The inxpate injury report that Pickett put forth showed that Pickett suffered a “minor laceration” to his left ear, a broken nose, redness in the “back medial area,” a mild contusion to the shoulder, and a he-matoma to the lip.

The third alleged incident of excessive force occurred in October 1997, when Pickett was in the shower (“the shower incident”). Pickett testified that defendant Hall placed him in a shower cell and removed one of his handcuffs, whereupon Pickett, before he would allow Hall to remove the other handcuff, demanded to see a lieutenant about Hall’s refusal to provide Pickett with a razor. According to Pickett’s testimony, Hall then left, returned “a couple of seconds later,” and slammed Pickett to the floor, where two other officers began punching him. Officer Hall testified, however, that he was escorting Pickett from the shower when he slipped off one of his handcuffs and attempted to punch Hall, at which point the guards used necessary force to restrain Pickett. According to Pickett’s testimony, a prison medic told him shortly after the altercation that there was “nothing wrong with” him, and that he “would be all right.”

The fourth and final alleged incident of excessive force happened in April 1998, when guards confined Pickett to a strip cell (“the strip cell incident”). Pickett testified that guards punched him and confined him to a strip cell for defying orders not to kick his cell door, which he denied having done. Defendants presented testimony to the effect that Pickett had defied orders to stop kicking his cell door, and that they were obliged to use the requisite force to restrain him upon taking him to a strip cell. Pickett received no medical attention following this alleged incident, and there is no documentary evidence that he was injured because of this incident.

The final basis of Pickett’s suit is that defendants Lindsay and Hall allegedly lied about him attacking them in the preceding incidents, resulting in wrongful disciplinary action being taken against him in the form of a transfer to Tamms.

In January 2001, a jury returned a verdict in favor of all eight defendants on all counts. On September 27, 2001, the district court denied Pickett’s Rule 59 motion for post-trial relief, holding that Pickett was not entitled to a new trial because: the verdict was not against the manifest weight of the evidence; defense counsel’s improper closing argument was not “clearly injurious” to Pickett’s case; and the district court did not commit prejudicial error by excluding from evidence part of exhibit 36, which was a disciplinary summary regarding the shower incident. [721]*721Pickett appeals, raising the three issues delineated below.

II.

We turn first to Pickett’s argument that the district court erred in denying his motion for a new trial based on insufficiency of the defense’s evidence. Pickett bears a heavy burden in attempting to establish that the district court should have granted a new trial: he must show the verdict was against the manifest weight of the evidence. Cygnar v. City of Chicago, 865 F.2d 827, 835 (7th Cir.1989).

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