Rombach v. Culpepper

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedAugust 3, 2020
Docket2:16-cv-00556
StatusUnknown

This text of Rombach v. Culpepper (Rombach v. Culpepper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rombach v. Culpepper, (E.D. La. 2020).

Opinion

EASTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA

THE ESTATE OF GREGORY CIVIL ACTION ROMBACH AND DONNA MAHL ROMBACH, on behalf of minor child, NO. 16-556 D.A.R. SECTION M (3) VERSUS

JOE CULPEPPER, et al.

ORDER & REASONS

Before the Court is a motion for summary judgment filed by defendants the City of Bogalusa (“Bogalusa”), and Joe Culpepper (Bogalusa Chief of Police), Scott Adams (Warden, Bogalusa City Jail), Wendy O’Quin Perette (Mayor of Bogalusa), Otis Taylor (Bogalusa employee), Louis Clark (Bogalusa employee), Lesley Knight (Bogalusa employee), Lisa Erwin (Bogalusa employee), Leonard Powell (Bogalusa employee), and Lashonda Payton (Bogalusa employee), in their official and individual capacities (collectively, “Defendants”).1 Plaintiffs the Estate of Gregory Rombach and Donna Mahl Rombach, on behalf of the minor child, D.A.R. (collectively, “Plaintiffs”), respond in opposition,2 and Defendants reply in further support of their motion.3 Having considered the parties’ memoranda, the record, and the applicable law, the Court issues this Order & Reasons granting the motion for summary judgment. I. BACKGROUND This case arises out of Gregory Rombach’s death while in custody at the Bogalusa City Jail on July 9, 2015. The pertinent facts were recited by the Court in a previous Order &

1 R. Doc. 94. 2 R. Doc. 95. 3 R. Doc. 98. … At 1:52 a.m. on Monday, July 6, 2015, Mr. Rombach was arrested for shoplifting from a Walmart. During booking, the police learned that there was a warrant for Mr. Rombach’s arrest for failure to appear. Mr. Rombach was subsequently arrested per the warrant. At 2:55 a.m. on July 6, 2015, Mr. Rombach filled out a medical form, indicating that he had no medical conditions other than an allergy to penicillin. In the afternoon of July 6, 2015, Mr. Rombach was sentenced for failure to appear to fifteen days in custody or a $250.00 fine. Mr. Rombach’s arraignment for the shoplifting arrest was set for one week later, on July 13, 2015. Mr. Rombach was then returned to the custody of the Bogalusa City Jail.

Mr. Rombach made three telephone calls from jail before he passed away. He first called his mother in the early hours of July 6, 2015, to tell her that he had been arrested and to ask that she bail him out of jail. He called his parents again, likely on July 7, 2015, when he spoke with his father. When asked how he was doing, Mr. Rombach responded, “Not so good, Dad.” Mr. Rombach also called his brother, but the record does not indicate when that call took place.

At some point after booking, Mr. Rombach told jail personnel that he was withdrawing from heroin. Scott Adams, the warden of the jail, states in his affidavit that a nearby hospital told him that “there is no real treatment of withdrawal symptoms and it is sufficient for the jail to observe the inmate in withdrawal and provide plenty of hydration, aspirin, and malox-type products to assist the inmate with the symptoms experienced in going through withdrawal.” According to Warden Adams, “Rombach requested and was given a small dose of castor oil for relief of constipation.” There is no other evidence in the record of whether and how Mr. Rombach was treated for his withdrawal symptoms.

Warden Adams’ employees had similar understandings of what jail policy required them do when an inmate was suffering from withdrawal symptoms. Louis Clark, a jail employee, testified in his deposition that inmates experiencing withdrawal symptoms are given “Imodium for diarrhea[,]” “ibuprofen for pain, [and] muscle spasm, and Emetrol [for] ... nausea.” Lisa Erwin, another jail employee, echoed Clark’s testimony in her own deposition when she testified that “[t]he only thing [the jail] give[s] [inmates] now is Emetrol, Imodium, and ibuprofen.” Erwin went on to explain that she didn’t have “any protocols” for inmates going through withdrawal, but agreed with Warden Adams that the nearby hospital had recommended treatment with over-the-counter medications. Erwin did not know if the hospital had told the jail how to know when an inmate’s withdrawal symptoms are severe enough to warrant professional medical attention.

At some point after informing jail personnel that he was in withdrawal,

4 This matter was originally assigned to a different section of this Court and was realloted to this section upon the confirmation of the undersigned. R. Doc. 71. move was “because [Mr. Rombach] was being disruptive” and so jail personnel wanted to “observe [Mr. Rombach] better.” Jail personnel state that when questioned about his symptoms while in the private padded cell, Mr. Rombach “said he was fine and requested to go back to his cell[;]” a request that was accommodated. Christopher Flot, an inmate who was in the jail at the same time as Mr. Rombach, states that Mr. Rombach “was placed in a private cell after he repeatedly called for medical attention.” Mr. Flot states that Mr. Rombach was moved to the private cell on Mr. Rombach’s second day of incarceration, which was likely July 7, 2015.

Mr. Flot’s declaration provides other details about Mr. Rombach’s time in jail. According to Mr. Flot, Mr. Rombach was assigned to the cell next to his, where the inmates were confined from 10:00 p.m. to 5:00 a.m. every day. Both Mr. Flot and Mr. Rombach had access to the same day room when not confined to their cells. Mr. Flot states that Mr. Rombach ate “very little food, which he vomited up.” Mr. Flot heard Mr. Rombach “ask to be taken to a hospital for medical attention.” According to Mr. Flot, a prison employee who heard Mr. Rombach’s request said that Mr. Rombach could not go to the hospital. Mr. Flot also states in his declaration that he “personally told Mr. Otis, Mr. Lewis, [and] Ms. Knight that [Mr. Rombach] did not feel well, was not eating and was vomiting, and [that Mr. Rombach] needed a doctor.” Mr. Flot also declares that the jail employees “did not make regular inspections of the cells when [the inmates] were on lockdown at night.”

Another inmate was also aware that Mr. Rombach was not feeling well. Chadwick Hart, who either shared a cell with Mr. Rombach or Mr. Flot the night that Mr. Rombach passed away, told Detective David Miller that Mr. Rombach was throwing up at 11:00 p.m. on July 8, 2015, and that Mr. Rombach continued to throw up throughout the night. These statements are consistent with the prison report of Mr. Rombach’s death. When Detective Miller arrived at Mr. Rombach’s cell on July 9, 2015 to investigate Mr. Rombach’s death earlier that day, he saw vomit in the toilet in the cell. An autopsy was subsequently conducted; the cause of death was a “perforated duodenal ulcer with peritonitis.” The autopsy also revealed that Mr. Rombach had amphetamine, methamphetamine, and opiates in his system when he died.

In January 2016, Plaintiffs filed the instant lawsuit. There are two distinct sets of defendants. All defendants have been sued in their individual and official capacities. One set is a group of John and Jane Does, who are described as employees of “the Bogalusa Police Department and/or of the City of Bogalusa and its jail.” The Amended Complaint alleges that these unnamed defendants are liable to Plaintiffs under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for violating the [Fourth] and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution by denying Mr. Rombach necessary medical care, which resulted in his death. The Amended Complaint also alleges that these unnamed defendants are liable to Plaintiffs under Louisiana Civil Code Articles 2315, 2315.1, and 2316 for causing Mr. Rombach’s death. The other set of Defendants is a group of three named individuals: Joe Culpepper, the Chief of Police in Bogalusa; Scott Adams, the Warden of the Bogalusa City Jail; and Wendy O’Quin Perrette, the Mayor of the Bogalusa.

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Rombach v. Culpepper, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rombach-v-culpepper-laed-2020.