Santiago v. Florida Department of Corrections

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedOctober 31, 2023
Docket3:21-cv-00886
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Santiago v. Florida Department of Corrections, (M.D. Fla. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA JACKSONVILLE DIVISION

HEATHER SANTIAGO,

Plaintiff,

vs. Case No. 3:21-cv-886-MMH-MCR

SHAWN SWAIN, et al.,

Defendants. /

O R D E R

THIS CAUSE is before the Court on Defendant Deputy Phillip Sellers’ Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 49; Sellers’s Motion), filed March 28, 2023, and Defendant Officer Shawn Swain and Officer Jim Godwin’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (Doc. 52; DOC Officers’ Motion), filed April 4, 2023. In support of his motion, Sellers, a deputy sheriff employed by the Union County Sheriff’s Office, submitted a number of exhibits. See Notice of Filing Documents in Support of Defendant Deputy Phillip Sellers’ Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 43; Sellers’s Notice), filed March 22, 2023; Notice of Filing Redacted Document in Support of Defendant Deputy Phillip Sellers’ Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 48; Redacted Notice), filed March 28, 2023. In the Officers’ Motion, Defendants Godwin and Swain, who are corrections officers with the Florida Department of Corrections (DOC), rely on the exhibits filed by Sellers as well as Santiago’s answers to Sellers’s interrogatories, which they have submitted for the Court’s consideration. See Notice of Filing Documents in

Support of Defendant Officer Shawn Swain and Officer Jim Godwin’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (Doc. 51; DOC Officers’ Notice), filed April 4, 2023. Plaintiff Heather Santiago filed responses in opposition to both motions and attached various exhibits to her responses. See Plaintiff’s Response to

Defendant, Deputy Phillip Sellers Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 54; Response to Sellers), filed April 18, 2023; Plaintiff’s Response to Defendant, Officer Shawn Swain and Officer Jim Godwin’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (Doc. 57; Response to DOC Officers), filed April 25, 2023. Defendants

then filed replies. See Defendant Deputy Sellers’ Reply to Plaintiff’s Response to Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 56; Sellers’s Reply), filed April 25, 2022; Defendant Officer Shawn Swain and Officer Jim Godwin’s Reply to Plaintiff’s Response to Defendants’ Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (Doc. 58; DOC

Officers’ Reply), filed May 9, 2023. Sellers attached one additional exhibit to his reply. See Sellers’s Reply at 8–16. Accordingly, this matter is ripe for review. I. Background Facts1 On September 3, 2017, Santiago and her eleven-year-old daughter drove

to Reception and Medical Center, a Florida state prison, to visit an inmate. See Sellers’s Notice, Ex. 4: Deposition of Heather Santiago (Doc. 43-4; Santiago Dep.) at 34–35, 38–39. Although Santiago had carpooled with others in the past, only her daughter was with her that day. See id. at 35–36, 39; DOC

Officers’ Notice, Ex. 1: Notice of Plaintiff’s Verified Answers to Defendant Phillip Sellers’ Interrogatories (Doc. 51-1; Interrogatory Answers) at 2. Santiago arrived shortly before 8 or 9 a.m. See Santiago Dep. at 38. On that day, Godwin was assigned to the Contraband Intelligence Unit

with a drug-sniffing canine. See Sellers’s Notice, Ex. 3: Department of Corrections Incident Report (Doc. 43-3; DOC Report) at 1. While performing a parking lot inspection, Godwin’s canine alerted on Santiago’s car. See id. After the canine alerted on Santiago’s car, Godwin and Swain, the prison’s duty-

warden, approached Santiago in the prison’s visitation area. See Santiago Dep. at 40; DOC Report at 1. The corrections officers told Santiago and her daughter to come with them. See Santiago Dep. at 41, 91–92 (“[D]uring visitation, they

1 For the purposes of resolving the motions, the Court views all disputed facts and reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to Santiago. The Court notes that these facts may differ from those ultimately proved at trial. See Lee v. Ferraro, 284 F.3d 1188, 1190 (11th Cir. 2002). approached me and said, ‘Ms. Santiago, we need you to come with me, you and your daughter’ . . . .”).

Godwin and Swain took Santiago and her daughter to a room that was smaller than the visitation room. See id. at 42, 92. The door was shut, but the officers never said that Santiago could not leave. See id. at 93. In all, the four individuals spent about 20 minutes in the smaller room. See id. at 92–93. The

officers told Santiago that Godwin’s canine had alerted on her car. See id. at 42. They asked for Santiago’s consent to search the car. See id. at 93. Santiago refused to give her consent. See id. at 49, 93. The officers then said that her refusal did not matter because they could get a warrant. See id. at 94. In her

deposition, Santiago testified that, even after the officers said they would get a warrant, she did not consent to the search. See id. at 46. According to Santiago, one of the officers grabbed her keys and said, “Come on. We’re going to search your car.” Id. at 47, 94–95. Santiago and her daughter followed the officers to

her car in the parking lot. See id. at 42–43, 95. While Santiago observed “[f]rom a distance,” the officers searched her car with their backs turned to her. Id. at 56, 97. In the trunk, the officers found a small change purse. See id. Inside the purse, the officers discovered feminine

hygiene products, condoms, and two cylindrical items wrapped in electrical tape. See DOC Report at 1; Redacted Notice, Ex. 1: Union County Sheriff’s Office Arrest Report (Doc. 48-1; Arrest Report) at 1. Based on his training and experience, Godwin knew that these items could be used to attempt to smuggle drugs into the prison. See Arrest Report at 1. Godwin cut into the electrical

tape to see whether the cylindrical packages contained drugs. See id. Godwin found a green leafy substance inside. See DOC Report at 1. Based on his training and experience, Godwin “knew” the substance to be synthetic marijuana. See Arrest Report at 1. In the trunk, Godwin also found several

money order receipts and notebooks with “individuals names and money amounts.” See id. Godwin and Swain then called the Union County Sheriff’s Office for assistance. See DOC Report at 1; Sellers’s Notice, Ex. 1: Union County Sheriff’s Office Call History Record (Doc. 43-1) at 1–2. In response, the

sheriff’s office dispatched Sellers to the prison. See Arrest Report at 1. Godwin and Swain never put Santiago in physical restraints or in the back of a police vehicle. See Santiago Dep. at 104–05. In her deposition, Santiago testified that, prior to the search and during the search, Godwin and

Swain never told her that she was detained or under arrest. See id. at 108. In the affidavit filed with her responses to the motions for summary judgment, Santiago avers that she asked the corrections officers for her keys to leave after being shown the synthetic marijuana. Response to Sellers, Ex. 4: Affidavit in

Opposition to Summary Judgment (Doc. 54-4; Santiago Aff.) at 1. Santiago declares that Godwin told her that she could not leave until the deputy arrived. Id. Once Sellers arrived, he spoke to the corrections officers first. See Santiago Dep. at 51. Santiago could not overhear what Godwin and Swain told

Sellers. See id. at 51, 54. According to Sellers’s report, the corrections officers told him that Godwin’s canine had alerted on the car. See Arrest Report at 1. Godwin told Sellers that Santiago had given consent for the officers to search the car and signed a consent form. See id. He also told Sellers that in searching

the car, he found synthetic marijuana, several money order receipts, and notebooks with names and money amounts. See id. Godwin showed Sellers the items he had found in the vehicle. See id. After Sellers spoke with the corrections officers, he approached Santiago

and advised her of her Miranda2 rights.

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