Wayne Braswell v. S.C.C.F./Riverhead County Jail; Wayne Braswell v. Suffolk County Correctional Facility/S.C.C.F., Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office, and Suffolk County’s Sheriff’s Department

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedOctober 15, 2025
Docket2:25-cv-03638
StatusUnknown

This text of Wayne Braswell v. S.C.C.F./Riverhead County Jail; Wayne Braswell v. Suffolk County Correctional Facility/S.C.C.F., Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office, and Suffolk County’s Sheriff’s Department (Wayne Braswell v. S.C.C.F./Riverhead County Jail; Wayne Braswell v. Suffolk County Correctional Facility/S.C.C.F., Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office, and Suffolk County’s Sheriff’s Department) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wayne Braswell v. S.C.C.F./Riverhead County Jail; Wayne Braswell v. Suffolk County Correctional Facility/S.C.C.F., Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office, and Suffolk County’s Sheriff’s Department, (E.D.N.Y. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK

Wayne Braswell,

Plaintiff,

2:25-cv-2668 -v- (NJC)(LGD)

S.C.C.F./Riverhead County Jail,

Defendants.

-v- 2:25-cv-3638 (NJC)(LGD) Suffolk County Correctional Facility/S.C.C.F., Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office, and Suffolk County’s Sheriff’s Department,

Defendants. MEMORANDUM AND ORDER NUSRAT J. CHOUDHURY, United States District Judge: Plaintiff Wayne Braswell (“Braswell”), acting pro se while incarcerated at the Suffolk County Correctional Facility (the “Jail”), brings two actions under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (“Section 1983”): Braswell v. Suffolk Cnty. Corr. Facility, et al., No. 2:25-cv-3638 (E.D.N.Y.) (“First Action”), and Braswell v. S.C.C.F./Riverhead Cnty. Jail, 2:25-cv-2668 (E.D.N.Y.) (“Second Action”). (First Action Compl., No. 2:25-cv-2668, ECF No. 1; Second Action Compl., No. 2:25- cv-3638, ECF No. 1.) Both actions challenge the conditions of Braswell’s confinement while detained at the Jail. (First Action Compl.; Second Action Compl.) For the reasons that follow, Braswell’s short form motions to proceed in forma pauperis (“IFP”) pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1915 are granted and Braswell’s long form IFP motion in the First Action is dismissed as moot. (First Action Short IFP Mot., No. 2:25-cv-2668, ECF No. 5; Second Action Short IFP Mot., No. 2:25-cv-3638, ECF No. 2; First Action Long IFP Mot., No.

2:25-cv-2668, ECF No. 6.) The Clerk of the Court is directed to consolidate the Second Action into the earlier-filed First Action. The First Action Complaint and the Second Action Complaint (collectively, “the Complaints”) are dismissed pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1915(e)(2)(B)(i)–(ii), 1915A(b)(1) with leave to file an amended complaint in the First Action as set forth below. PROCEDURAL HISTORY On May 12, 2025, Braswell filed the First Action Complaint using the Court’s civil rights complaint form for actions brought pursuant to Section 1983 and naming “S.C.C.F. Riverhead County Jail” as the defendant in the complaint caption. (First Action Compl. at 1.)1 Braswell did not pay the filing fee or file an IFP motion with the required Prisoner Litigation Authorization form (“PLA”) at the time he filed the First Action Complaint. Accordingly, by Notice of Deficiency dated May 13, 2025, Braswell was instructed to either pay the filing fee or to

complete and return the enclosed IFP application and PLA within fourteen days. (No. 2:25-cv- 2668, ECF No. 2.) On May 23, 2025, Braswell filed a short form IFP application, a long form IFP application and a PLA. (First Action Short IFP Mot.; No. 2:25-cv-2668, First Action Long IFP Mot., ECF No. 6; PLA, No. 2:25-cv-2668, ECF No. 7.) On June 23, 2025, Braswell filed the Second Action Complaint, again using the Court’s civil rights complaint form for actions brought pursuant to Section 1983 and this time naming

1 On the second page of the First Action Complaint, Braswell indicates that the defendant in the First Action is “S.C.C.F./Suffolk County.” (First Action Complaint at 2.) “Suffolk County Correction Facility/S.C.C.F.,” the Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office (“SCDAO”), and the Suffolk County Sheriff’s Department (“SCSD”) as defendants. (Second Action Compl. at 1.) The Court understands that the references to Defendant “S.C.C.F. Riverhead County Jail” in the First Action Complaint and “Suffolk County Correction

Facility/S.C.C.F.” in the Second Action Complaint are to the Jail. The Court refers to the Jail, SCDAO, and SCSD together as the “Defendants.” Braswell also filed a short form IFP application in the Second Action but failed to file the required PLA. (Second Action Short IFP Mot.) A Notice of Deficiency dated July 1, 2025 instructed Braswell to complete and return the enclosed PLA within fourteen days in order for his case to proceed. (No. 2:25-cv-3638, ECF No. 4.) Braswell did not file the PLA within the time allowed and, by Order dated August 7, 2025, the Court directed Braswell to file the PLA by August 21, 2025. (No. 2:25-cv-3638, ECF No. 9.) On August 18, 2025, Braswell timely filed the PLA. (25-cv-3638, ECF No. 10.) BACKGROUND2 The Complaints are brief. The First Action Complaint alleges that, on May 31, 2023,

Braswell was involved in an “altercation” with another detainee, who was confined with Braswell “in the same bullpen” at the state courthouse and whom Braswell accuses of lying during Braswell’s underlying criminal case and, as a result “had gotten me locked up.” (First Action Compl. ¶ II; Second Action Compl. ¶ II.) The First Action Complaint describes an altercation with that detainee where Braswell was left with “no choice but to defend myself which resulted in me catching a few charges as well as several bruises.” (Id.) In the space that

2 Excerpts from the Complaints have been reproduced here exactly as they appear in the original. Errors in spelling, punctuation, and grammar have not been corrected or noted. calls for a description of any injuries claimed as a result of these events in the First Action Complaint, Braswell alleges: “I have to be evaluated based on the hardship of catching a few charges. I was placed in Kirby’s Psychiatric Facility for 9 months and I’ve been incarcerated for over (2) yrs. Still pending cases.” (First Action Compl. ¶ II.A.)

The Second Action Complaint alleges the same facts as the First Action Complaint as well as the following additional facts: (1) that Braswell was arrested on February 14, 2023 “for a drug sale (which was a lie) and possession of meth)” (Second Action Compl. ¶ II); (2) that, once he returned to the Jail, an unidentified “security” person told him “that there should have been a stay away between me and the person on my criminal case” (id.); (3) that, “[d]ue to the altercation and results of that situation,” he “received a psychiatric evaluation” and that he has “PTSD” (id. ¶ II.A); and (4) that his “mental health stress has been awful.” (id.). As a result, Braswell seeks to recover unspecified “compensation for the hardship of pain & suffering as well as for the P.T.S.D. that occurred based on the life [-] threatening events.” (Id. ¶ III.) LEGAL STANDARDS I. In Forma Pauperis

Upon review of Braswell’s IFP Motions, the Court finds that Braswell is qualified by his financial status to commence this action without the prepayment of the filing fee. Therefore, the Short Form IFP Motions (First Action Short IFP Motion; Second Action Short IFP Motion) are granted. Having granted the First Action Short IFP Motion, the Court dismisses the subsequently filed Long Form IFP Motion in the Second Action (First Action Long IFP Mot., No. 2:25-cv- 2668, ECF No. 6) as moot. II. Sufficiency of the Pleadings Where an incarcerated plaintiff is proceeding IFP, 28 U.S.C. § 1915A instructs that “[t]he court shall review . . . as soon as practicable after docketing, a complaint in a civil action in which a prisoner seeks redress from a governmental entity or officer or employee of a governmental entity” and “shall identify cognizable claims or dismiss the complaint, or any

portion of the complaint, if the complaint—(1) is frivolous, malicious, or fails to state a claim upon which relief may be granted; or (2) seeks monetary relief from a defendant who is immune from such relief.” 28 U.S.C. § 1915A(a)–(b); see also 28 U.S.C.

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Wayne Braswell v. S.C.C.F./Riverhead County Jail; Wayne Braswell v. Suffolk County Correctional Facility/S.C.C.F., Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office, and Suffolk County’s Sheriff’s Department, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wayne-braswell-v-sccfriverhead-county-jail-wayne-braswell-v-suffolk-nyed-2025.