Simpkins v. Boyd County Fiscal Court

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Kentucky
DecidedOctober 11, 2022
Docket0:19-cv-00098
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Simpkins v. Boyd County Fiscal Court, (E.D. Ky. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF KENTUCKY NORTHERN DIVISION (at Ashland)

GARY SIMPKINS, ) ) Plaintiff, ) Civil Action No. 0: 19-098-DCR ) V. ) ) BOYD COUNTY FISCAL COURT, et al., ) MEMORANDUM OPINION ) AND ORDER Defendants. )

*** *** *** *** Plaintiff Gary Simpkins filed this civil rights action alleging that, during his brief stay at the Boyd County Jail, staff battered him and held him for several hours in a restraint chair with a tight strap around his neck. The Court granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment, concluding that Simpkins had not provided sufficient evidence indicating that a government action was the moving force behind his alleged injuries. The United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit reversed that determination, finding that the Court failed to properly consider a Department of Justice Report that supported Simpkins’ claims. The Court will deny the defendants’ motion for summary judgment in light of the Sixth Circuit’s conclusions. I. Background The relevant facts as alleged by the plaintiff are as follows: A police officer stopped Simpkins for speeding in Ashland, Kentucky on September 13, 2018. Simpkins advised the officer that he was speeding because he was having chest pain and was on his way to a hospital. But while running his license, the officer discovered that Simpkins had an outstanding warrant for terroristic threatening in another county. The officer placed Simpkins under arrest but took him to a local hospital for evaluation. Following a series of tests, a physician determined that Simpkins had no acute issues and discharged him. The officer then transported Simpkins to

the Boyd County Detention Center (“BCDC” or “jail”), arriving at approximately 4:00 a.m. on September 13. Simpkins recalled that “a little short fat guy with a black head” booked him into the jail. [Record No. 15, p. 25] He stated during his deposition that he “told them all about [his] medical issues” during booking. Simpkins completed a “Standard Medical Questions” form in which he indicated that he: (i) had cancer; (ii) was taking prescription medicines that may need continuation while he was in jail; and (iii) had previously sustained a closed head injury

that resulted in a permanent disability. [Record No. 18-4, p. 4] Simpkins also reported during his deposition that he suffered from Crohn’s disease, hepatitis, kidney stones, acid reflux, and scar tissue on his brain. [Record No. 15, p. 20] He completed a “Mental Health Questions” form during intake in which Simpkins indicated that he had a serious mental health condition that may need attention while he was in jail, that he had previously attempted suicide, and that he was currently thinking about suicide. [Record No. 18-4, p. 6]

Simpkins was placed in a cell with two other inmates following the booking process. [Record No. 15, p. 26] Eventually, the two other inmates were moved and Simpkins was alone in the cell for a period of time. There was a call button in the room, but Simpkins thought it did not work. However, he pressed it twice because he needed his medicine. The second time, Deputy James Layne told Simpkins to sit down and shut up. Simpkins began beating on the door because he was desperate for his medicine. Layne advised Simpkins that he was being moved to “D-block.”1 Id. at 32. There were five other inmates in the D-block cell and they told Simpkins that there was not enough room for him there. One of the other inmates told a deputy that Simpkins had threatened suicide

(which he denies). At that point, that guy that had a cap on, kind of short red hair … he walked me down beside of a room that had a guard sitting in on a computer and then he put these leather gloves on and he grabbed me by the head and slammed it up against the wall like that and said, “Hold your head right there.” And then he just started beating me (sound effects)—like that and I started crying. I said, “Why did you do me that way? You’re hitting me right where I’m hurt at.”2

Id. at 33.

Thereafter, Layne escorted Simpkins to a bathroom to change into a paper smock. Simpkins concedes that, at some point, he advised Layne that he needed his medicine before he “start[ed] thinking about suicide.” Id. at 34. Layne then placed Simpkins in a new cell described as “high watch,” where the plaintiff was alone for approximately thirty minutes. Id. at 35-36. Simpkins asserts that he was growing dizzy and continued to ask for his medicine. But an employee (Osborne) advised Simpkins that a nurse stated that he could not have his medicine because it was “out of date.” Id. at 36. Layne came “running through” and told Simpkins to sit down on his mat. Id. at 37. After Simpkins sat down, Layne “just [ran] up and grabbed [him] by the arm, twisted it like that, and kicked [him] in the side” and said, “get up.” According to Simpkins,

1 Layne’s incident report states that Simpkins was moved to D Block at approximately 1:00 p.m. on September 13 “for disrespect”. [Record No. 18-4]. Simpkins testified that he did not know what time he was moved. [Record No. 15, p. 28]

2 Layne’s incident report identifies the individual who walked Simpkins from D-Block to booking as “Deputy Payne,” but Simpkins did not know the person’s name. [Layne then] throwed [him] in that chair and he strapped it tight as he could get it. He jerked it like that. Pulled it back and went (sound effects) on the Velcro and done my arms the same way and he said—put this cap on me that looked like a bowl that was turned upside down. And he pushed me in that cell, and slammed it down backwards. He said, “now, bitch, there’s your medicine,” and then slammed the door (sound effect).

Simpkins contends that “they strapped [him] right across the neck like that as tight as they could get it” and he “laid there all night choking.” Id. at 21, 29. Deputy Kouns said, “Scream, bitch,” before Simpkins passed out. Simpkins’ uncle came to bond him out of jail around 11:00 p.m. that night (September 13). Simpkins recalled still being strapped into the chair when “a little short chubby guy” woke him up to tell him that someone was there to pick him up. He told Simpkins, “I’m so thankful somebody come and got you because Layne had intention of killing you today.” Simpkins had a “big welt” across his neck when the strap was removed and his ribs were “killing [him].” After being released, Simpkins retrieved his car from impound and went home to rest before seeking medical attention. Simpkins filed this action in the Boyd Circuit Court alleging claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the following defendants: the Boyd County Fiscal Court; Boyd County employees Jimmy Joe Burchett and Unknown Defendants (individually and in their official capacities); and Boyd County employees Carl Tolliver, John Greer, Thomas Jackson, Stephen Towler, and Bill Hensley (in their official capacities). Burchett was Jailer at the time of the events alleged and Hensley was Jailer at the time the Complaint was filed. Tolliver, Greer, and Jackson were Boyd Fiscal Court Commissioners at the time of the events alleged and Towler was Boyd County Judge Executive.3 Simpkins alleges violations of his Eighth, Tenth, and Fourteenth Amendment rights

based on the excessive force to which he contends he was subjected at BCDC. Simpkins also alleges that the County and its supervisory officials failed to properly train and/or supervise staff at BCDC. He claims that the treatment to which he was subjected “was not unusual, but part of a continuing policy, pattern, custom, and/or practice of the Defendants of willfully and deliberately physically and mentally abusing the inmates.” The defendants timely removed the matter to this Court and, at the conclusion of discovery, moved for summary judgment.

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Simpkins v. Boyd County Fiscal Court, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simpkins-v-boyd-county-fiscal-court-kyed-2022.