Poindexter v. Jeff Sandy

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. West Virginia
DecidedMarch 26, 2021
Docket3:18-cv-01511
StatusUnknown

This text of Poindexter v. Jeff Sandy (Poindexter v. Jeff Sandy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. West Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Poindexter v. Jeff Sandy, (S.D.W. Va. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF WEST VIRGINIA

HUNTINGTON DIVISION

JASON POINDEXTER,

Plaintiff,

v. CIVIL ACTION NO. 3:18-1511

WESTERN REGIONAL JAIL; JEFF SANDY, personally and in his official capacity as the Secretary of the West Virginia Department of Military Affairs and Public Safety; BETSY JIVIDEN, personally and in her official capacity as the Commissioner of the West Virginia Division of Corrections and Rehabilitation; JOSEPH WOOD, personally and in his official capacity as Superintendent of the Western Regional Jail; MAJOR ROBERT BERRY, personally and in his official capacity as a correctional officer with the West Virginia Division of Corrections and Rehabilitation; SGT. PAUL DIAMOND, personally and in his official capacity as a correctional officer with the West Virginia Division of Corrections and Rehabilitation; and CORRECTIONAL OFFICER STANLEY JARVIS, personally and in his official capacity as a correctional officer with the West Virginia Division of Correctional and Rehabilitation,

Defendants. MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER Pending before the Court is Plaintiff’s Motion to Continue (ECF No. 227), Plaintiff’s Motion for Adverse Inference Spoliation Instruction (ECF No. 217), and Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 204). The motions are now ripe for review. For the following reasons, the Court DENIES the Motion to Continue, DENIES the Motion for Adverse Inference Instruction, and GRANTS the Motion for Summary Judgment. I. BACKGROUND Factual Background Plaintiff’s claims arise from three incidents that occurred while he was an inmate at Western Regional Jail. On September 17, 2018, Plaintiff was in St. Mary’s Hospital being treated for acute epileptic seizures. While at the hospital, Plaintiff yelled at the correctional officers to bring him lunch, ripped an IV out of his arm, and caused blood to splatter. According to the St. Mary’s nurse tending to Plaintiff, his outburst appeared to be an attempt to coerce Correctional Officer Davis into an altercation. Plaintiff then left the emergency room against medical advice.

Upon return to Western Regional Jail, correctional officers led Plaintiff to the shower area, where officers typically conduct body searches of returning inmates. According to Plaintiff, Defendants Diamond and Jarvis struck him multiple times in the stomach, knee, arm, and head for “embarrass[ing] them at the hospital.” Poindexter Dep. 44:2-45:2, ECF No. 210-1. Plaintiff testified that he kept his hands behind his back, dropped to the floor, and curled up in a defensive position. He also stated that he was not searched during this time. Defendants’ incident reports indicate that they conducted a routine search in the shower area and do not indicate that they used any force. Unlike the following events, there is no video or audio recording of the shower area. The second incident occurred in the booking area near Gate 2 and was captured by video and audio recordings. See Video Recording, ECF No. 204-6. The footage begins with Plaintiff out

of frame, but officers can be heard shouting “stop spitting on me” twice. Defendant Diamond then directs Plaintiff to stop tensing his arm as they walk into the frame. Plaintiff’s left arm is only visible for a few frames of the video, but those frames show his arm stretched out behind him with the Diamond’s right hand on Plaintiff’s upper arm and the Diamond’s left hand holding Plaintiff’s wrist. Within a few seconds of the three walking into the frame, Diamond strikes Plaintiff with his knee and the two officers take Plaintiff to the ground with his arms stretched out behind his back. Once on the ground, Plaintiff yells that his shoulder is hurt as a third officer approaches from behind and places Plaintiff’s wrists in restraints. The officers then lift Plaintiff to his feet and walk him out of the frame. The third incident occurred minutes later in the medical unit hallway and was also video recorded. The recording depicts Plaintiff sitting in a chair becoming visibly agitated and yelling at an officer who is sitting at a desk just outside of the frame. Although there is no audio recording of this incident, Defendant-Officers’ incident reports consistently state that Plaintiff became angry

after the officers informed him that his phone privileges would be restricted for 72 hours due to his behavior at the hospital. Plaintiff then stands up from the chair, yells at the officers, and steps toward one of the officers approaching him. The officer gestures toward the chair, appearing to direct Plaintiff to sit down. Plaintiff does not. The officer then places his hands on Plaintiff’s upper chest and pushes Plaintiff backwards several feet so that his back is against the wall and the back of his legs are pressed up against the chair. After Plaintiff sits, the officer continues to stand next to him with his left hand holding Plaintiff’s right arm, and his right hand on Plaintiff’s left shoulder. Plaintiff continues to move his upper body forward, apparently yelling at another officer out of the frame. A few second later, Plaintiff attempts to jerk away from the officer. The officer places his left hand behind Plaintiff’s

neck, Plaintiff stands up, and then the officer uses his knee to strike him several times and takes him to the floor. Another officer walks into the frame, helps lift Plaintiff off the floor, and immediately places him back into the chair. A few minutes later, the video shows officers wheeling an emergency restraint chair into the hallway. The officers move Plaintiff toward the chair and place him in it. Once Plaintiff is sitting in the chair, three officers surround him to apply the restraints while another officer stands behind Plaintiff applying pressure underneath Plaintiff’s jaw within his hands. According to Defendants, this is a hypoglossal nerve pressure point technique. Plaintiff’s chest raises out of the chair and the officers push his chest back into the chair several times. The officer applying the pressure point releases Plaintiff after the other officers fully restrained Plaintiff (about three minutes). As the officers wheel Plaintiff out of the frame, Plaintiff is depicted jerking his body back and forth, attempting to release the restraints. According to Plaintiff, the officers then wheeled him out of the camera frame and the nurse

checked his restraints. Plaintiff also claims that, at this point, the officer applied the hypoglossal nerve pressure point technique again. During her deposition, that nurse stated that Plaintiff was agitated and screamed “kill me, kill me please. I want you to,” the entire time she was present. Dillon Dep. 15:21-16:12, ECF No. 204-6. Based on these comments, she decided to place Plaintiff on suicide watch. She stated that she did not remember Plaintiff complaining that his shoulder hurt, and if he had, she would have made a note of it in her report. In the following days, Defendants admitted Plaintiff to the hospital again for seizures and about a week later Plaintiff was transferred to the Mount Olive Correctional Complex. Following these events, officers Diamond, Jarvis, and Davis, drafted incident reports. To the extent that their reports describe the video recorded incidents above, those details are consistent

with the footage. Defendant Jarvis also completed a rule violation report charging Plaintiff with assault and battery, threats, obscene language, obstructing, compromising employees, and refusing an order. WRJ found Plaintiff guilty of obstructing, compromising employees, and refusing an order, and the officers dropped the assault and battery charge. Plaintiff claims that the officers dropped the charges after a correctional officer stated at the hearing that the allegation that Plaintiff took a “fighting stance” at the hospital was not true. 1

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Poindexter v. Jeff Sandy, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/poindexter-v-jeff-sandy-wvsd-2021.