TINSLEY v. MAIN

CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedOctober 31, 2019
Docket2:15-cv-07319
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
TINSLEY v. MAIN, (D.N.J. 2019).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF NEW JERSEY RUSSELL TINSLEY, Civil Action No. 15-7319(MCA) Plaintiff, v. : OPINION MERRILL MAIN, PH.D., STU CLINICAL 3 DIRECTOR, et al., Defendants. :

I. INTRODUCTION This matter having been opened to the Court by Defendants Merrill Main, Ph.D., R. Van Pelt, and Christopher Beaumont, Ph.D. ! (“the DHS Defendants”) (ECF No. 195) on a motion for summary judgment as to Plaintiff Russell Tinsley’s (“Plaintiff”) First Amendment retaliation claims against Defendants Main and Beaumont in connection with Plaintiffs submission of grievances, complaints, and/or lawsuits. For the reasons explained in this Opinion, the Court will grant the motion for summary judgment as to Defendant Beaumont and will deny the motion for summary judgment as to Defendant Main. The Court will also deny Plaintiff’s motion for reconsideration of the Court’s prior decision granting summary judgment to Defendants Van Pelt and Sherry Yates, and deny without prejudice Plaintiff's motion to remove his counsel.

' Defendant Christopher Beaumont, Ph.D. appears to be improperly pleaded as Christopher Beaumount, Ph.D.

Il. FACTUAL BACKGROUND In May 2010, Plaintiff was civilly committed to the Special Treatment Unit (“STU”) as a sexually violent predator (“SVP”) under New Jersey’s Sexually Violent Predator Act (“SVPA”).? Merrill Main, Ph.D., is a licensed clinical psychologist and the Clinical Director at the STU and supervised the treatment of Plaintiff during the relevant time period. (ECF No, 195-2, Defendants’ Statement of Material Facts “DSMF” at J 1.) Christopher Beaumont, Ph.D., is a clinical psychologist in the STU and treated Plaintiff during the relevant time period. (DSMF at 9-10.) It appears undisputed that Plaintiff has submitted numerous grievances, complaints, and lawsuits related to his confinement in the STU. The grievances, complaints, and lawsuits challenge Plaintiffs civil commitment, the inadequacy of his sex offender treatment, the failure to promote him to the next stage of treatment, and the restrictive nature of his confinement on the South Unit of the STU. In his grievances, complaints, and lawsuits, Plaintiff also alleges misconduct by STU staff, including alleged retaliatory conduct by Defendants Main and Beaumont.’ Defendant Beaumont has worked directly with Plaintiff as a front-line therapist. (DSMF at 9-10.) Specifically, Defendant Beaumont has facilitated two process groups (that is, Treatment Orientation ##2 and 18) and one psycho-educational module (that is, Relapse

? Plaintiff appealed his commitment to the Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division, which affirmed his commitment in an unpublished decision. Jn re Civil Commitment of R.T., No. A-2521-13T2, 2016 WL 674215, at *1 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. Feb. 19, 2016) . 3 Plaintiff has attached exhibits to his opposition brief showing that he continues to file complaints about DHS employees to various state, federal, and private agencies. For instance, on April 18, 2018 he wrote to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services seeking an investigation of the STU and Defendant Main. (See ECF No. 199-2, Plaintiff's Cert. at Exhibit H.) He has also written to The Department of Justice, Citizens Commission on Human Rights International, and The American Psychological Ethics Office. (/@. at Exhibits H-K.)

Prevention 1A.B) with Plaintiff. Defendant Beaumont asserts that while he was working with Plaintiff as one of his front-line therapists, he encouraged Plaintiff to process salient therapeutic issues during the group process while also focusing on sex-offender-specific dynamics. (DSMF at 7 10-11.) It is undisputed that Plaintiff submitted several Remedy Forms expressing dissatisfaction with Defendant Beaumont during the relevant time period. (ECF No. 199-2, Plaintiff’s Cert., Exhibit L at 129-135.) On September 9, 2014, Plaintiff also submitted a “Complaint” contending that on September 8, 2014, Defendants Beaumont “brushed off evidence of [Plaintiff's] successful completion” of certain treatment modules and recommended that Plaintiff repeat the modules despite his high scores.* Plaintiff further asserted that other residents were moved off the South Unit and/or advanced to the next module, and he believed that his failure to advance was the result of complaints Plaintiff has brought against Defendant Beaumont and his other therapists, resulting in an investigation by the DHS and the Newark Board of Psychologists. (/d. at 135.) There is no record evidence of a complaint to the Newark Board of Psychologists. Plaintiff did, however, submit a Complaint to the New Jersey State Board of Psychological Examiners in 2014, asking them to investigate Defendant Beaumont and Dr. Burley’s decision not to advance him in treatment.® (Plaintiff's Cert., Exhibit M at 139-140.) Plaintiff has not provided the date he first submitted his Complaint about Defendant Beaumont to the New Jersey State Board of Psychological Examiners, but it appears that the Complaint

4 It is not clear if this Complaint is an internal grievance or was sent to an outside agency. > Plaintiff submitted a similar “Complaint” dated September 30, 2014, in which he contends that Defendant Beaumont is retaliating against him due to complaints he filed against them. (See id. at 136.) 6 Plaintiff appears to concede that the New Jersey State Board of Psychological Examiners found no basis to pursue any disciplinary action against Defendant Beaumont and recommended that he pursue other legal avenues. (See Plaintiff’s Cert., Ex. M at 141-143.)

against Defendant Beaumont was filed prior to September 9, 2014. (See ECF No. 195-4, Beaumont Cert. at | 7, Exhibits A-B.) Defendant Beaumont asserts that his role as Plaintiffs therapist did not require him to respond to resident grievances because they are administrative in nature; consequently, Defendant Beaumont asserts that he neither received grievances submitted by Plaintiff nor was ever made aware of one submitted by him regarding any treatment as one of his front-line therapists. (DSMF at {J 12-13.) Because he neither received nor was made aware of any grievances from Plaintiff, Defendant Beaumont asserts that his treatment decisions did not have anything to do with Plaintiff's grievances and that his treatment decisions were based on his professional evaluation and judgment of Plaintiff's psychological needs.? (DSMF at 4 14.) Defendant Beaumont appears to concede that he was aware of Plaintiff's Complaint filed with the New Jersey State Board of Psychological Examiners and has attached to his certification his letter responses to the September 9, 2014 and October 7, 2014 letters from the State Board of Psychological Examiners. (Beaumont Certification at J 7, Exhibits A-B.) It also appears undisputed that Defendant Main was aware of Plaintiff's frequent filing of grievance, complaints, and lawsuits. (See ECF No. 195-3, Main Certification at 4 5, Ex. A and B; Plaintiffs Cert., Ex. A at 7-14.) Plaintiff asserts that on or about October 11, 2014, Defendant Main told Plaintiff he would never advance in treatment if he continued to file grievances and lawsuits. To support his allegation, Plaintiff has submitted a Remedy Form dated

7 Plaintiff appears to concede that Defendant Beaumont has no role in reviewing internal grievances, and has not provided any evidence to the contrary. (See 199-2, Plaintiffs Cert. at Jf 25-32.) In 2014, Plaintiff also filed a Complaint to the New Jersey State Board of Psychological Examiners against Defendant Main. (See DSMF at 9] 7-8; ECF No. 199-2, Plaintiff's Cert., Exhibit A at 14.)

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TINSLEY v. MAIN, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tinsley-v-main-njd-2019.