Price v. Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedJanuary 3, 2023
Docket1:19-cv-00740
StatusUnknown

This text of Price v. Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections (Price v. Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Price v. Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections, (S.D. Ohio 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO WESTERN DIVISION

TERRELL PRICE,

Plaintiff, Case No. 1:19-cv-740 v. JUDGE DOUGLAS R. COLE Magistrate Judge Bowman OHIO DEPARTMENT OF REHABILITATION AND CORRECTIONS, et al.,

Defendants.

OPINION AND ORDER This cause comes before the Court on the Magistrate Judge’s December 28, 2020, Report and Recommendation (“December 28 R&R,” Doc. 28), Plaintiff Terrell Price’s Objections to the R&R (Docs. 29 & 36), and Defendants Bruce Snively, Monica Ford, Eric Dupuis, and Steve Cooper’s (collectively the “Defendants”) Response to Plaintiff’s Objections to the R&R. (Doc. 31). That R&R recommends that the Court grant Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment (“MSJ,” Doc. 17). For the reasons below, the Court OVERRULES Price’s Objections (Docs. 29 & 36) and ADOPTS the December 28 R&R (Doc. 28) in total. The Court thus GRANTS the Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 17) and DISMISSES Price’s Eighth Amendment claim, the sole remaining claim here, WITH PREJUDICE. BACKGROUND A. Factual Background As the December 28 R&R notes, the relevant facts “are largely undisputed.” (Doc. 28, #454). To start, Terrell Price is currently an inmate at the Richland

Correctional Institution.1 The events at hand, however, happened during Price’s incarceration at the Lebanon Correctional Institution. Price ended up in Lebanon on a fourteen-year sentence after a 2014 conviction for drug trafficking and related offenses. (Protective Control Packet, Doc. 17-5, #183). In June 2018, the prison reassigned him to a new cell co-occupied by Joshua Morrissette. (Compl., Doc. 3, #45). That reassignment proved to be a problem. On June 8, non-party corrections officers Bratcher and Flowers randomly searched Price and Morrissette’s cell. (Conduct

Report 1, Doc. 17-1, #130). That search revealed marijuana and suboxone strips under Price’s mattress. (Id.). Price stated that the drugs belonged to him. (Id.). Given that statement, the officers issued a Conduct Report charging Price with violating prison rules. (See id.). Price, for his part, asserts that he later informed Bratcher that Morrissette “forced” him to claim the contraband. (Doc. 3, #46). Yet Bratcher’s report does not reflect this. (See Conduct Report 1, Doc. 17-1). Nor does

Price allege that he told any of the Defendants of his explanation.

1 Previous filings (and R&Rs) in this case noted Price’s then-current incarceration at the Warren Correctional Institution. However, the Court’s review of his incarceration at the time of this Opinion’s filing suggests that Price is currently incarcerated at the Richland Correctional Institution. See Offender Search Detail – Terrell A. Price, OHIO DEPARTMENT OF REHABILITATION AND CORRECTION, https://appgateway.drc.ohio.gov/OffenderSearch/Search/ Details/A652493 (last visited November 16, 2022). On June 12, Officer Eric Dupuis met with Price and gave him the Conduct Report. (Dupuis Aff., Doc. 17-12, #315). Dupuis also informed Price of his right to make a statement about the charges. (Id.). Price pled not guilty to the allegations in

the Conduct Report, stating for the first time that he “took out for it” and that Morrissette is “affiliated,” presumably with a gang. (Id.). In other words, Price changed his tune. Now he says he only took responsibility for the drugs out of fear of Morrissette. Before Price began sharing a cell with Morrissette, the prison had approved Price’s request to transfer to a different institution to be closer to his family. (Snively Aff., Doc. 17-13, #319). But Bruce Snively, the Unit Manager then, put a hold on that

transfer pending the incident’s resolution. (Id.). Dupuis referred Price’s case to the Rules Infraction Board (“RIB”), an internal committee in charge of resolving conduct disputes and meting out punishments for violating prison policy. (Doc. 17-12, #315). The RIB considered the Conduct Report, Price’s statement, and the evidence and found Price guilty of the possession offense. (Doc. 17-1, #134–36). On the RIB’s reporting form is a box asking whether the RIB

believed the inmate’s version of the story. (Id. at #136). For unknown reasons, the RIB selected “yes.” (Id.). But it noted that it “believes the [Conduct Report] to be factual and substantiates” the charges. (Id.). The RIB removed Price to limited privilege housing until June 22. (Id.). He appealed to the Warden, who affirmed the RIB determination. (Id. at #140). While in limited privilege housing, Price says that he told Officer Steve Cooper that he did not want to continue sharing a cell with Morrissette. (Doc. 3, #46). Cooper, for his part, stated in an affidavit that “[a]t no point whatsoever did Price ever voice

to me any problems, issues, or concerns” about Morrissette. (Cooper Aff., Doc. 17-15, #327). Had Price done so, Cooper says, he would not have been returned to the cell with Morrissette. (Id.). Whether or not he made a complaint to Cooper, it is undisputed that Price returned to bunk with Morrissette on June 22. (Doc. 3, #46). He alleges that Morrissette attacked him shortly after his return, leaving him with two black eyes and lacerations all over his body. (Id. at #47). Price says that he “was left on the floor

to die” in his cell. (Id.). The Conduct Report from the incident, on the other hand, merely reflects that he reported “a fight” with Morrissette to an on-duty officer. (Conduct Report 2, Doc. 17-2, #151). After Price reported the “fight,” an officer escorted him to the medical center. (Id.). Medical staff that examined Price noted his desire for transfer to a new cell but did not note any reference to a “stabbing” or “assault.” (See generally Doc. 17-9). On

the contrary, the medical report describes Price as having abrasions and contusions. (Id. at #270). And throughout the subsequent disciplinary processes, Price referred to the confrontation as a “fight.” (See, e.g., id. at #273; see also Doc. 17-2, #151). Perhaps based on Price’s description of the events, officers charged him with fighting. (Doc. 17-2, #151). Price pled not guilty and alleged for the first time that he was “assaulted” and “stabbed” and that Morrissette was “extorting” him. (Id. at #158). Consistent with the medical staff’s findings, officers never recovered any weapon Morrissette might have used to “stab” Price. Instead, they found both inmates’ injuries “consistent with fighting marks and scratches.” (Ford Aff., Doc. 18, #354).

Officers completed a new Conduct Report, which the RIB once again adjudicated. (Doc. 17-2). Based on this Conduct Report, Price’s testimony, and the relevant medical records, the RIB found Price guilty of fighting. (Id. at #161). And this time, the RIB checked the box indicating they did not believe Price’s defense. (Id.). The Warden again denied Price’s appeal. (Id. at #168). After another stint in limited privilege housing, Price refused to return to J- Block to be with Morrissette. (Doc. 3, #48). Instead, the prison assigned Price to C-

Block. (Doc. 17-15, #327). Prison investigators denied multiple requests for protective housing, believing that Price’s complaints centered on “the hopes of reinstating his prison transfer.” (Schweitzer Aff., Doc. 17-11, #312). The committee in charge of reviewing Price’s requests also noted that “in an effort to reinstate his transfer, Price attempted to have Morrissette claim ownership of the drugs, and when Morrissette refused, a fight broke out between the inmates.” (Doc. 17-12, #317).

Eventually, Price received a transfer. But from June 28, 2018, until his transfer to Warren Correctional Institution, he filed more than forty grievances relating to these events. (See Grievance History, Doc. 17-7). B.

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