Tiffany Wingo v. Major Branson Harris

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 1, 2025
Docket24-10933
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Tiffany Wingo v. Major Branson Harris, (11th Cir. 2025).

Opinion

USCA11 Case: 24-10933 Document: 54-1 Date Filed: 12/01/2025 Page: 1 of 15

FOR PUBLICATION

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Eleventh Circuit ____________________ No. 24-10933 ____________________

TIFFANY WINGO, as Administrator of the Estate of Kevil Wingo, Sr., KIEARA WINGO, as surviving child of Kevil Wingo, Sr., ERIKA WINGO, as Surviving Child of Kevin Wingo, Sr., ESQ. TERI FIELDS, Conservator of Kevil Wingo, Jr., Surviving Minor Child of Kevil Wingo, Sr., Plaintiffs-Appellants, ANGEL CALLOWAY, as mother and next friend of Erika Wingo, surviving minor child of Kevil Wingo, Sr., et al., Plaintiffs, versus

WELLSTAR HEALTH SYSTEM, INC., et al., Defendants, USCA11 Case: 24-10933 Document: 54-1 Date Filed: 12/01/2025 Page: 2 of 15

2 Opinion of the Court 24-10933

MAJOR BRANSON HARRIS, individually, LIEUTENANT CHARLES GORDON, individually, DEPUTY PAUL WILKERSON, individually, DEPUTY LYNDA MARSHALL, individually, JOHN DOES 1 - 10, individually and in their capacity as employees of Cobb County Sheriff's Office, et al., Defendants-Appellees. ____________________ Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia D.C. Docket No. 1:20-cv-03662-VMC ____________________

Before ROSENBAUM, GRANT, and BRASHER, Circuit Judges. BRASHER, Circuit Judge: The main question in this appeal is whether nonmedical jail officers were deliberately indifferent to a detainee’s serious medical condition when they followed the advice of the jail’s medical staff. Kevil Wingo was a pretrial detainee in the Cobb County Adult De- tention Center when he died from a perforated ulcer. He was un- der the care of nurses at the center when he died, and those nurses had misdiagnosed him as suffering from drug withdrawal or “de- tox.” His estate sued the Center’s sheriff’s deputies for deliberate indifference. We hold that a nonmedical jail officer cannot be USCA11 Case: 24-10933 Document: 54-1 Date Filed: 12/01/2025 Page: 3 of 15

24-10933 Opinion of the Court 3

found liable for deliberate indifference when he or she reasonably relies on the advice or opinion of a medical professional. Because the sheriff’s deputies reasonably relied on the nurses’ diagnosis, we conclude that they were not deliberately indifferent. The district court also correctly granted summary judgment to Deputy Wilker- son because the plaintiff’s medical expert could not say with any degree of medical certainty that he caused Wingo’s death. As a re- sult, we affirm. I.

In September 2019, Kevil Wingo was arrested in Cobb County for possessing 0.2 grams of cocaine. After his arrest, he was booked as a pretrial detainee at the Cobb County Adult Detention Center. A few days after entering detention, Wingo began to com- plain of abdominal pain and sweating. In response to these com- plaints, Deputy Quinton Appleby took Wingo to the detention cen- ter’s infirmary. En route to the infirmary, Wingo told Deputy Ap- pleby that he had an ulcer, which Appleby relayed to the nursing staff. Nurse Yvette Burton admitted Wingo to the infirmary at 12:35 a.m. that night. In the infirmary, medical staff hired through WellStar Health Systems, Inc., including Nurse Burton, were re- sponsible for overseeing operations. Sheriff’s deputies, however, were responsible for security. Those deputies were trained not to make medical decisions but instead to defer to the medical staff. USCA11 Case: 24-10933 Document: 54-1 Date Filed: 12/01/2025 Page: 4 of 15

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When Wingo was admitted, he was complaining of nausea, vomiting, and abdominal discomfort. He was also heard pleading with God, saying that he would never touch drugs again should he survive. Based on these signs and symptoms, Nurse Burton believed Wingo to be detoxing or suffering from withdrawals. Indeed, at the time, Wingo was in the middle of a mandatory 5-day period of re- ceiving “withdrawal checks” for opiates, which further confirmed her suspicion that his symptoms were a result of detoxing. Her ex- perience as a nurse only strengthened this belief. After all, detoxing afflicts as many as 40 percent of the inmates in the infirmary. Ac- cording to Nurse Shanna Griffith, another nurse on the night shift, the medical staff took Wingo’s vitals and then admitted him “so he could stay overnight . . . [and] see the doctor in the morning.” Doc. 200-6 at 28. Over the course of that night, Deputy Britton McPhee, a Sheriff’s Deputy serving in the infirmary, watched Wingo. Deputy McPhee observed Wingo being “very loud” from the time he en- tered the infirmary. This disruption continued throughout the night, causing his cell mates to protest that they could not sleep. Continuing to complain of his symptoms, Wingo repeatedly asked Deputy McPhee to send him to the hospital. In accordance with his training, Deputy McPhee replied that this decision would be up to the medical staff. Displeased with this response, Wingo replied: “just shut . . . up and do what I’m telling you to do.” Doc 191-3 at 174. USCA11 Case: 24-10933 Document: 54-1 Date Filed: 12/01/2025 Page: 5 of 15

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At 6:00 a.m., Deputy Lynda Marshall relieved Deputy McPhee. Deputy McPhee informed Deputy Marshall that Wingo had been generally disruptive, “hollering,” and demanding to go to the hospital. He also told her that, according to the nurses, Wingo was detoxing. Deputy Marshall, who had served in the Sheriff’s Of- fice for over 27 years, had frequently seen individuals detoxing dur- ing pretrial detention. Based on this experience, and judging from Wingo’s symptoms, Deputy Marshall agreed with the nurses’ as- sessment. Nurse Annaleen Visser, who took over from Nurse Burton during the day shift, also believed that Wingo was detoxing. Wingo’s frequent demands to go to the hospital did nothing to change her mind. In her experience, detoxing inmates always wish to go to the hospital in hopes of a better bed, better meals, more privacy, and opiates. In Nurse Visser’s mind, inmates will “do any- thing to go to the ER.” Doc. 200-5 at 88. Because she was so sure that Wingo was detoxing, she declined to do a physical assessment of him, preferring to wait—in accordance with detoxing proto- cols—for him to be “calm.” Throughout the early morning, Deputy Marshall observed Wingo continuing to yell that he needed to go to the hospital. Wingo also told Deputy Marshall that he could not breathe. In re- sponse, she told him that “if you are talking to me, you are breath- ing,” but she also asked him for more details. Doc. 191-4 at 138. He reiterated that he could not breathe and that he needed to go to the hospital. Deputy Marshall relayed these complaints to the nurses, USCA11 Case: 24-10933 Document: 54-1 Date Filed: 12/01/2025 Page: 6 of 15

6 Opinion of the Court 24-10933

who told her that Wingo was “just trying to go to the hospital, he was detoxing, drug seeking, [and] that he was okay.” Id. By this time, Wingo’s repeated yelling and disruption had become a source of frustration to Wingo’s fellow inmates. The frustration eventually reached a breaking point, and Deputy Mar- shall heard that Wingo’s inmates were planning to fight him in his cell. She went to retrieve him. But when she opened the door, Wingo fell to the floor and again asked to go to the hospital. She informed the nurses, who did nothing in response. Then, fearing that Wingo would suffer physical harm if she put him back in his cell, she called her supervisor, Lieutenant Charles Gordon, for ad- vice. When Lieutenant Gordon arrived at the infirmary at 7:30 a.m., he observed Wingo on the ground. Deputy Marshall in- formed him that Wingo had been “causing some type [of] issue with other inmates in the cell.” Doc. 191-6 at 80. Lieutenant Gor- don then asked Nurse Visser whether Wingo was “okay,” to which she replied that he was “medically fine.” Id. at 65, 87-90, 96.

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