Turner, Glenn v. Mink, Angela

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Wisconsin
DecidedMarch 13, 2023
Docket3:19-cv-01001
StatusUnknown

This text of Turner, Glenn v. Mink, Angela (Turner, Glenn v. Mink, Angela) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turner, Glenn v. Mink, Angela, (W.D. Wis. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF WISCONSIN

GLENN T. TURNER,

Plaintiff, v. OPINION and ORDER GARY BOUGHTON, LEBBEUS BROWN, MARK KARTMAN, KEVIN KALLAS, 19-cv-1001-jdp MICHAEL ROTH, STEPHEN SCHNEIDER, MATTHEW MUTIVA, and ANGELA MINK,

Defendants.1

Plaintiff Glenn T. Turner, appearing pro se, is a prisoner at Wisconsin Secure Program Facility. Turner contends that defendant prison officials failed to treat his mental health problems in various ways. He alleges that Psychological Services Unit staffing shortages caused severe delays in his treatment, that correctional officers refused to intervene when he told them that he had thoughts of self-harm, and that a psychological unit staff member failed to follow up with him for months on his reports of depression and anxiety. He brings claims under the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Wisconsin negligence law. Currently before the court are Turner’s motion to compel discovery, motions for sanctions regarding discovery issues, and motion for summary judgment. I will deny his motions to compel and for sanctions. And because I conclude that Turner fails to show that he is entitled to judgment as a matter of law, I will deny his summary judgment motion.

1 I have amended the caption to reflect the proper spelling of defendant Schneider’s name as reflected in defendants’ submissions. Defendants have also filed a motion for summary judgment that is not yet fully briefed; the court will address that motion after briefing is completed.

PRELIMINARY MATTERS Before addressing Turner’s motion for summary judgment, I begin with some

preliminary matters. A. Video footage of November 26, 2019 incident Turner has filed a motion to compel discovery, Dkt. 56, along with two motions for sanctions regarding discovery issues, Dkt. 55 and Dkt. 66. For instance, Turner seeks to compel defendants to turn over video footage from a November 26, 2019 incident in which he contends that prison staff ignored his threats of self- harm and delayed in getting him help after he overdosed on pills. Defendants responded to Turner’s request for the footage by stating that there was none available, even though

defendant Lebbeus Brown responded to an interrogatory stating that he preserved video footage of that incident. Dkt. 56-3, at 5. Turner seeks sanctions for defendants’ spoliation of the footage. Defendants have responded, stating that they were initially unable to locate footage in the electronic records archive where such footage was ordinarily stored. But litigation coordinator Ellen Ray made further efforts to locate the footage, recovered footage from the vestibule camera and officers’ body cameras, and provided it to Turner. Defendants contend that Turner’s motion to compel and for sanctions on this issue is moot. They also argue that

Turner cannot show spoliation because the vestibule video doesn’t help him: they say the video shows that Turner and defendant Stephen Schneider spoke about Turner using an electronic kiosk, not about Turner’s suicidal thoughts as he alleges. See Norman-Nunnery v. Madison Area Tech. Coll., 625 F.3d 422, 428 (7th Cir. 2010) (“The crucial element in a spoliation claim is not the fact that the [evidence was] destroyed but that they were destroyed for the purpose of hiding adverse information.”).

I do not agree with defendants that the vestibule video necessarily contradicts Turner’s allegations that he and Schneider talked about his suicidal thoughts. As Turner points out, there is no audio accompanying the vestibule video so it is impossible to tell what the parties discussed. Nonetheless, defendants have produced all the footage they have regarding this incident. In reply, Turner argues that the videos have been altered because they do not bear timestamps. That’s not entirely accurate: the vestibule video does bear a timestamp but the bodycam videos do not. Turner also argues that other evidence contradicts Schneider’s account

of events, so he should be sanctioned. The mere lack of a timestamp doesn’t show that defendants have tampered with the videos or committed any other sanctionable conduct. And inconsistencies or contradictions in the evidence are often a result of fallible human memory or other mistakes—Turner can point out discrepancies in Schneider’s account at summary judgment and trial, but they do not necessarily show that a party is intentionally lying about an issue. Turner hasn’t shown good reason to sanction defendants or any reason to compel further discovery, so I will deny his motions on this issue. But the state should be aware that whatever minimal efforts they initially undertook to

locate the footage was not enough, given their awareness that the footage could be located somewhere other than their electronic archive. In future cases, I expect state defendants to double-check other potential repositories of footage before telling a plaintiff that the footage does not exist. B. Turner’s second motion for sanctions

Turner has filed a second motion for sanctions, Dkt. 66, stating that defendants Mark Kartman and Lebbeus Brown knowingly gave false answers to interrogatories about an interview/information request form that Turner sent to Kartman in early March 2020. Both Kartman and Brown responded to his interrogatories by stating that they did not see that form. But the form itself shows that the document was received by someone at the prison, with Kartman’s name crossed out and replaced with Brown’s. Dkt. 56-7. Defendants respond by stating that Kartman’s recollection was refreshed by reviewing the form, which Turner filed as part of his motion to compel, and that Kartman amended his

interrogatory response to say that he indeed forwarded it to Brown. That’s another example of a sloppy discovery response, but also one that is not sanctionable. And the form itself does not prove that Brown saw the form, so it would be inappropriate to sanction defendants regarding Brown’s answer. I will deny Turner’s second motion for sanctions. C. Remaining requests to compel discovery Turner asks the court to compel defendant Matthew Mutiva to disclose the identity of the supervisor whom Mutiva says he notified in early March 2020 that Turner wanted to be placed in observation. Defendants responded to a later discovery request with the identity of

that supervisor: Captain Erica Collins. Turner says that this response is fabricated because Collins herself does not recall the incident. But parties sometimes disagree with each other over their recollection of facts without lying under oath. Mutiva has given his answer so there is nothing more to compel. Turner wants defendant Brown to file a new answer to an interrogatory in which Turner asked him whether defendant Schneider told him that Schneider made specific comments to Turner during the November 26, 2019 incident. Brown did not answer that question “yes” or “no,” instead recounting what Schneider told him and referring him to reports about that

incident. Turner calls Brown’s answer evasive, but an answer doesn’t have to be “yes” or “no” to respond adequately; Brown explains what Schneider told him and he referred Turner to reports recounting the events. Brown’s response was adequate so I will deny this portion of his motion to compel. Turner seeks to compel different answers to his questions asking each of the defendants whether he “got ‘interviewed’ by a . . . psychologist or psychiatrist” between July 2016 and February 2017 and whether there were any “Psychological Diagnoses evaluations” made by medical staff from July 2016 to May 2019. Dkt. 56-1, at 7, 8. Most of the defendants—who

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Turner, Glenn v. Mink, Angela, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-glenn-v-mink-angela-wiwd-2023.