Sneed v. Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Louisiana
DecidedSeptember 14, 2023
Docket3:22-cv-00207
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Sneed v. Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections, (M.D. La. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

MIDDLE DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA

BOBBY RAY SNEED CIVIL ACTION VERSUS NO. 22-207-JWD-RLB LOUISIANA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY AND CORRECTIONS, ET AL.

RULING AND ORDER

I. INTRODUCTION This matter comes before the Court on the Motion to Dismiss Pursuant to Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 12(b) (Doc. 77) filed by Defendants Jeff Landry, in his individual and official capacity as Attorney General of the State of Louisiana, and Christopher N. Walters and Grant L. Willis, in their individual and official capacities as Assistant Attorneys General of the State of Louisiana (collectively, “AG Defendants”). Plaintiff Bobby Ray Sneed (“Plaintiff” or “Mr. Sneed”) opposes the motion. (Doc. 79.) No reply was filed. Oral argument is not necessary. The Court has carefully considered the law, the facts in the record (including those alleged in the First Amended Complaint (“FAC”) (Doc. 74)), and the arguments and submissions of the parties and is prepared to rule. As the parties acknowledge, this Court is extremely familiar with the relevant factual and procedural background of Mr. Sneed’s ordeal, much of which was recounted in the Court’s prior ruling in Sneed v. Abbott, No. 21-279, 2021 WL 3057429, at *1–9 (M.D. La. July 20, 2021) (deGravelles, J.). The full extent of those facts need not be recounted here. In short, Mr. Sneed brought claims against the Louisiana Committee on Parole (“Committee”) and its members1 alleging that they initially granted Mr. Sneed parole, but they then conspired to deny him his freedom under extraordinarily suspicious and controversial circumstances. See id; see also FAC, Doc. 74. Mr. Sneed asserted the following specific claims in that case: (1) due process violations; (2) retaliation in violation of the First Amendment, and (3)

vindictiveness. Sneed v. Abbot, 2021 WL 3057429, at *7–9. As this Court previously stated:

if true, the allegations of the FAC are extremely troubling. The FAC portrays Defendants as petty tyrants who are accountable to no one and who exercise their power without regard to the wellbeing of those within their jurisdiction. If true, Defendants’ flagrant disregard of procedural norms in the two hearings at issue is, at best, irregular, and, at worst, reprehensible.

Id. at *1. Nevertheless, this Court was powerless to grant Mr. Sneed any relief. As the Court stated in its Ruling and Order on those defendants’ motion to dismiss: But, however terrible the Court finds Defendants’ alleged conduct to be, it is bound to apply controlling precedent. That authority— Heck v. Humphrey, 512 U.S. 477 (1994) and its progeny—provides that, when a plaintiff makes an attack on the propriety of a single defective parole hearing (or, in this case, two hearings) and seeks an earlier release from custody, then such claims cannot be asserted until state habeas corpus remedies are exhausted.

Having carefully considered the matter, the Court finds that Plaintiff’s claims are barred by Heck. While the Heck line has an exception for attacks on general parole procedures, the allegations of the FAC do not fall into this category. Consequently, Defendant’s motion will be granted.

1 The Committee members included Executive Director Francis M. Abbot and members Tony Marabella, Sheryl Ranatza, Jim Wise, Pearl Wise, and Alvin Rouche, Jr. Sneed, 2021 WL 3057429, at *1. In the instant suit, Abbott, Ranatza, Marabella, and Wise were named defendants. Id. at *1. Leave to amend was granted, id. at *19–20, but Mr. Sneed declined to do so, presumably recognizing the correctness of the Court’s ruling. Judgment was entered on August 4, 2021, dismissing Plaintiff’s claims without prejudice. Sneed v. Abbott, No. 21-279 (M.D. La. Aug. 4, 2021), Doc. 24. Now, Mr. Sneed returns bringing new claims against these and others defendants, including

the AG Defendants, Governor John Bel Edwards, and persons associated with the Department of Public Safety and Corrections (“DPSC”).2 (FAC ¶¶ 118–32, Doc. 74.) Mr. Sneed seeks relief under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, the Racketeering Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1961 et seq. (“RICO”), and Louisiana state law for the wrongs allegedly perpetrated against him. (FAC ¶¶ 133–199, Doc. 74.) Following several amendments, motions to dismiss were filed—the instant one by the AG Defendants, (Doc. 77), and one by all other defendants, (Doc. 76). The latter was granted as unopposed, (Doc. 80), so the AG Defendants are, presently, the only remaining Defendants. Attorney General Landry had virtually no involvement in Mr. Sneed’s case; the federal

claims against him are easily dismissed for lack of personal participation. The case against Mr. Walters and Mr. Willis is a closer call. They are the Assistant Attorney Generals who represented the Committee in the clashes between the Committee and Sneed in state court. (FAC,¶¶ 128–29, Doc. 74.) They also represented the Committee in Sneed v. Abbott. According to the FAC, they purportedly made false statements to the state trial court and then, when the trial court granted Mr. Sneed’s immediate release, they delayed while appealing the trial court’s order. (Id. ¶¶ 11, 99–100.) They ultimately proved successful, as the Louisiana Supreme Court reversed the lower courts and found that Mr. Sneed was not entitled to immediate release

2 The DPSC defendants include Secretary James M. LeBlanc; Warden Timothy Hooper; and Jonathan R. Vining, DPSC’s General Counsel. (FAC ¶ 118–121, Doc. 74.) but rather a revocation hearing before the Board. See Sneed v. Hooper, 2021-01863 (La. 12/15/21), 328 So. 3d 1165, 1166 (per curiam). The key question before the Court is whether Walters and Willis are entitled to absolute or qualified immunity for their conduct. Indeed, that is the only issue which Mr. Sneed even remotely addressed in his opposition.

In answering this question, the Court is again left in the same position it was in Sneed v. Abbot. That is, however much this Court may deplore the alleged conduct of Walters and Willis— conduct which purportedly included violations of their professional duty of candor and contempt of court, as outlined in the FAC, and behavior which this Court found to be, at best, questionable during the case of Sneed v. Abbot—the Court is again bound by controlling precedent. Applying that precedent, the Court finds that the AG Defendants are entitled to qualified immunity. Mr. Sneed had the burden of pointing to controlling authority establishing that these defendants had “fair warning” that their conduct was unlawful in the unique circumstances of this case—where they delayed release (even intentionally) to appeal a district court order requiring the

immediate release of a parolee while they pursued an appeal, when they ultimately prevailed in reversing the trial court order, and when Plaintiff makes no showing that this state supreme court ruling is invalid or otherwise unlawful. Plaintiff has failed to meet that burden. That is to say, the Court cannot say that every state attorney in Walters’s and Willis’s shoes would know, beyond debate, that their conduct violated clearly established law. As a result, the § 1983 claims against them will be dismissed. Given the serious nature of this case, the Court will grant leave to amend, though the Court advises Plaintiff to be judicious and only submit a new complaint if there are good faith grounds for the claims.

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Sneed v. Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sneed-v-louisiana-department-of-public-safety-and-corrections-lamd-2023.