Singleton v. Laurel Harry

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 10, 2023
Docket1:13-cv-02711-DFB
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Singleton v. Laurel Harry, (M.D. Pa. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

TYRONE SINGLETON, : Civil No. 1:13-CV-2711 : Plaintiff, : : v. : (Magistrate Judge Carlson) : LAUREL HARRY, et al., : : Defendants. :

MEMORANDUM OPINION

I. Introduction This case, which was assigned to us in 2021 has a protracted procedural history. Indeed, this lawsuit has been pending before various judges in this court and in the court of appeals for nearly a decade. Given the extended duration of this case, it may seem unusual that the issue of the defendants’ personal involvement has become the subject of a summary judgment motion in 2022, some nine years after this lawsuit was first filed. Nonetheless, we are now presented with this threshold question through a motion for summary judgment filed by the remaining defendants. By way of background this is a prisoner civil rights case filed by the plaintiff, Tyrone Singleton, a former pretrial detainee who was temporarily detained at the State Correctional Institution at Camp Hill in the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections (“DOC”). Singleton filed this suit in 2013, alleging that he was confined in administrative segregation for over one year without explanation and without a hearing in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.

(Doc. 1). Pending before the court is the remaining defendants’ third motion for summary judgment. (Doc. 119). The remaining defendants—Laurel Harry, the

Superintendent of SCI Camp Hill, and Lisa Peters, a retired supervisor with the Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole—assert that Singleton’s claim against them fail because neither defendant was personally involved in the alleged constitutional violation. For the following reasons, we will grant summary judgment

in favor of Defendant Peters, as we find that the plaintiff has not established that she was personally involved in the alleged denial of his due process rights. However, with respect to Defendant Harry, we find that summary judgment would be

inappropriate given the factual disputes that remain with respect to Singleton’s confinement in administrative custody and Defendant Harry’s Knowledge, acquiescence and involvement in this confinement. Accordingly, for the reasons that follow, the defendants’ motion will be granted in part and denied in part. II. Statement of Facts and of the Case1 In this case, we certainly do not write upon a blank slate. Tyrone Singleton

filed the instant suit against the defendants in November of 2013, alleging a violation of his right to procedural due process when he was confined in administrative custody for roughly 14 months without a hearing. In December of 2012, Singleton

reported to Pennsylvania parole authorities after he tested positive for THC and had picked up charges for DUI, which were violations of his parole in New York. He was taken into DOC custody in January of 2013 and placed in administrative custody. For their part, the defendants assert that inmates who are in DOC custody

and detained temporarily are routinely placed in administrative custody for the safety of the institution, given that DOC staff do not have as much information about the temporary detainee as they would a permanent inmate. These inmates are put into a

Control Group, which has less privileges than general population inmates but somewhat more privileges than inmates in disciplinary custody. Singleton immediately began writing to staff and inquiring about his placement in administrative segregation. Thus, in February of 2013, Singleton wrote

an Inmate Request to Staff Member to Laurel Harry, the Superintendent of SCI Camp Hill, in which he informed her of his circumstances as a temporary detainee

1 The factual background of this Memorandum Opinion is taken from the parties’ submissions to the extent those submissions are supported by the record. (Docs. 119- 122, 125-129). and requested information about the detainer that he was being held on. (Doc. 122- 12, at 2). Singleton also filed an Official Inmate Grievance requesting information

regarding his confinement, to which he received a response indicating that he was being held at SCI Camp Hill as a parole violator from New York and because he had pending charges in Pennsylvania. (Doc. 122-13, at 4). He was informed that unless

he made bail on his Pennsylvania charges or authorities from New York took custody of him, he would remain in DOC custody. (Id.) The official who answered Singleton’s grievance, who is not a named defendant, further responded that she did not have any information on his current housing assignment. (Id.) Singleton

appealed the denial of his grievance, and Defendant Harry upheld the response as the Facility Manager, stating that “while it may not be to [his] liking,” Singleton was “in an appropriate housing unit.” (Id., at 8).

A month later, on March 21, 2013, Singleton wrote an Inmate Request to Staff Member to Mr. Whalen, his unit manager and a defendant who has been dismissed from this case. (Id., at 12). Singleton requested a copy of the New York detainer that he was being held on, and Whalen informed him that there were no detainers that

had been lodged against him. (Id.) The following day, Singleton wrote another request to a Ms. Leonard asking why he was still being held, as there were no detainers lodged against him and he had made bail on his Pennsylvania charges.2 (Id., at 11). Ms. Leonard responded that he was being held on his out-of-state parole

violation charges. (Id.) Thus, it appears that there was either a miscommunication or a material misunderstanding of Singleton’s status as a DOC detainee, as Singleton was told by

one DOC official that there was no detainer lodged against him by New York and was told by another that he was being held as an out-of-state detainee. Notwithstanding this confusion, Singleton was told by Harry that “while it may not be to [his] liking, [he was] in an appropriate housing unit.” (Doc. 122-13, at 8).

However, and significantly, it is unclear whether, other than the response to his grievances informing Singleton that he was being held for his parole violation and pending Pennsylvania charges, Singleton was informed as to why he was placed

specifically in administrative custody, and further, whether he was given an opportunity to challenge the determination.3 Ultimately, after 402 days, Singleton was transferred from SCI Camp Hill and DOC custody to New York on February 14, 2014. He was released on parole in New York on March 14, 2014.

2 Although Singleton’s bail was initially set at $25,000.00, it was later reduced to nominal bail of $1.00. (See Doc. 66, ¶ 42). 3 Indeed, as Magistrate Judge Schwab previously noted, “contrary to the defendants’ assertion, the grievance process did not provide Singleton an explanation for why he was being held in the SMU.” (Doc. 70, at 40). As we have noted, we do not write on a blank slate in the instant case. Rather, the defendants filed a motion to dismiss Singleton’s initial complaint, which was

granted without prejudice to Singleton filing an amended complaint. (Docs. 17, 18). Singleton, at that time proceeding pro se, subsequently filed an amended complaint, which is now the operative pleading. (Doc. 19). The defendants then moved to

dismiss the amended complaint, and the motion was granted as to the Eighth Amendment claim lodged in the amended complaint but denied as to the due process claim regarding Singleton’s placement in administrative segregation. (Doc. 32). Following the denial of the motion to dismiss, the defendants then filed a

motion for summary judgment. (Doc. 33). That motion was granted, and Singleton appealed to the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit.

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