Smith v. Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedSeptember 29, 2022
Docket3:21-cv-01421
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Smith v. Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction, (N.D. Ohio 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO WESTERN DIVISION

Theodore W. Smith, III, CASE NO. 3:21-CV-1421

Plaintiff, Judge James G. Carr v.

Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections, et al. ORDER Defendants. This is a pro se prisoner civil rights case arising under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Plaintiff, Theodore Smith, asserts constitutional claims against defendants Warden May, Deputy Warden Walters, Institutional Inspector Jenkins, Corrections Officer (C.O.) Peppers, C.O. Cutlip, Lieutenant (Lt.) Rockenbough, Lt. Weirich, Medical Supervisor Segur, Lt. Ford, Sergeant Klavenger, C.O. Logon, C.O. Hilton, Licensed Practical Nurse (L.P.N.) A. Showman, L.P.N. C. Klocineld, and the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections (ODRC) Chief Inspector Mohr. Plaintiff asserts that Defendants collectively embarked on a “campaign of retaliation” in violation of his First Amendment rights after learning of his success in an unrelated arbitration proceeding. Further, Plaintiff contends he was subject to excessive force by various Defendants in violation of the Eighth Amendment. Finally, Plaintiff claims that he was denied due process of law under the Fourteenth Amendment because he was: 1) denied attendance at various Rule Infractions Board (R.I.B) hearings, 2) informed that he was required to use a new grievance process, and 3) did not have his emergency grievance letters addressed. Defendants deny violating any of Plaintiff’s constitutional rights. Pending before me are Plaintiff’s Supplemented (i.e., Amended) Complaint (Doc. 16), Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss (Doc. 14), Plaintiff’s Motion in Opposition (Doc. 15), and Defendants’ Reply (Doc. 22). For the reasons below, I dismiss Plaintiff’s Supplemented Complaint and grant Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss.

Background Plaintiff Theodore Smith, III. (“Plaintiff”), is an inmate at the Toledo Correctional Institution (“ToCI”). On March 12, 2020, Plaintiff’s arbitration teleconference on an unrelated matter took place next to Defendant Klavenger’s office. (Doc 1, PgID 34; Doc. 13, PgID 211; Doc. 14, PgID 229). Upon completion of the hearing, Plaintiff asserts he “realized, by the look on Sgt. Klavenger’s face, that [Klavenger] had overheard most if not all of the arbitration process.” Id. Additionally, Plaintiff claims that the look on Defendant Klavenger’s face warned him that “the issue was not concluded.” Id. Plaintiff contends that his favorable arbitration result prompted Defendants to engage in a series of retaliatory acts between March 16, 2020, and February 16, 2021.

On March 16, 2020, Plaintiff alleges that “his fears were realized” when another inmate, Jones, initiated a physical altercation with him over stolen property. Id. (Doc. 13, PgID 211-212; Doc. 14, PgID 230). Plaintiff states that Defendant Peppers falsified the documentation from this altercation to omit facts favorable to Plaintiff. Id. Plaintiff also states that he was not admitted to the R.I.B hearing to tell his account of how the events occurred. Id. Further, Plaintiff accounts that he was told that inmates were no longer permitted to use the three-step paper inmate grievance forms and instead, had to use a nine-step electronic form. (Doc. 13, PgID 212; Doc. 14, PgID 230). Plaintiff objected to this and requested a memorandum justifying the new procedure. In October 2020, Plaintiff asserts that inmate White was also prompted to physically harm Plaintiff as part of the alleged retaliatory scheme. Plaintiff believes inmate White was involved in the conspiracy because he overheard Defendant Cutlip ask inmate White, “what are you going to do for me?” (Doc. 13, PgID 213). On October 9, 2020, Plaintiff contends that inmate

White approached him and punched him in the face. (Doc. 13, PgID 213-214; Doc. 14, PgID 230). Plaintiff states that he received infractions afterwards, but inmate White did not. Id. Plaintiff however, admitted to punching inmate White and did not deny that he was guilty of a Rules Infraction himself. (Doc. 13, PgID 214; Doc. 14, PgID 230). Plaintiff also asserts that sometime in October 2020, someone stole various Commissary items from his cell. This happened, he claims, because Defendant Cutlip intentionally left his cell open. Id. Plaintiff alleges that he could not submit any grievances regarding this incident because Defendants May, Walters, and Jenkins did not provide him with a copy of the ODRC Chief Inspector’s memorandum explaining the new grievance process. Id. Plaintiff asserts that he was unable to use the electronic system because he had difficulty typing. Moreover, Plaintiff argues

that Defendants Rockenbough and Weirich again denied him access to the related R.I.B. hearings. (Doc. 13, PgID 214). Next, Plaintiff claims Defendant Segur deprived him of warm food and vitamins in violation of the Eighth Amendment, because Plaintiff had a heightened sensitivity to COVID-19. (Doc. 13, PgID 216-217; Doc. 14, PgID 230). Plaintiff states that his poor diet caused him to become weak and lightheaded. Id. Accordingly, Plaintiff submitted a kite form to Defendant Segur but was never seen or treated. Id. However, Defendants state that Plaintiff does not provide the kite forms or state factual assertions capable of connecting these concerns to a deprivation of his Eighth Amendment rights. (Doc. 14, PgID 230). Plaintiff then recounts two incidents where Defendants used excessive force. Upon his

release from confinement for fighting over stolen property, Plaintiff approached Defendant Klavenger to ask for help with retrieving his property. (Doc. 13, PgID 219). Plaintiff states that Defendant Klavenger looked “anxious for his arrival” and that when Plaintiff asked again about his missing property, Defendant Klavenger became “unhinged.” Id. Plaintiff states that Defendant Klavenger handcuffed him, “savagely” grabbed his bicep, and marched Plaintiff to another location while shouting that Plaintiff was a “check-in.” Plaintiff asserts that Defendant Klavenger’s actions were meant to “cause Mr. Smith to react violently, thus, justifying any subsequent use of force.” Id. Additionally, while being marched by Defendant Klavenger into the “strip cage”, Plaintiff alleges that Defendant Hilton attempted to trip him while other officers were “yelling threats and calling Mr. Smith names.” Id.

Plaintiff states that once the cell doors were closed, Defendant Logon sprayed pepper spray in his face. (Id.; Doc. 14, PgID 230). In contrast, Defendants assert the pepper spray was used in response to Plaintiff kicking officer Logon and after Plaintiff was preparing to spit on an officer. (Doc 14, PgID 230). Plaintiff denies doing both. (Doc. 13, PgID 221). Plaintiff again alleges that the involved officers falsified their reports and violated his Eighth Amendment Constitutional Rights. Defendants assert that there are no facts to support Plaintiff’s claims for excessive force. Id. Finally, Plaintiff alleges that Defendant Showman, the nurse who saw him after his pepper spray incident, falsified her medical report by failing to get closer than ten feet in order to examine or treat his injuries. (Doc. 13, PgID 222). Plaintiff again contents that this violated his Eighth Amendment Constitutional Rights. Id. Later that day, Plaintiff asserts that Defendant Klocineld filed a medical examination report regarding the same incident. (Doc. 13. PgID 222-223). She admitted that Plaintiff was

sprayed with pepper spray but reported no injuries. Id. She further wrote that he refused to have vital signs taken. Id. Plaintiff argues that this report was falsified. Defendants assert that Plaintiff provides no legal basis for his argument, nor the medical report in support of his statements. (Doc. 14, PgID 231).

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