William Evans v. Harry Vinson

427 F. App'x 437
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 29, 2011
Docket09-6283
StatusUnpublished
Cited by130 cases

This text of 427 F. App'x 437 (William Evans v. Harry Vinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
William Evans v. Harry Vinson, 427 F. App'x 437 (6th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

COLE, Circuit Judge.

Only two days after assisting another prisoner in filing a grievance, Plaintiff-Appellant William Evans was placed in administrative segregation for nine days due to a false-positive drug test. Evans then filed this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 suit against seven prison officials — DefendantsAppellees Harry Christopher Vinson, Nancy Doom, Glenn Haeberlin, Byron Jasis, Joe Keene, Rick Pershing, and Junior Ross — alleging violations of Evans’s First, Fourth, Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendment rights. The district court granted Defendants’ motion for summary judgment; Evans appeals. For the following reasons, we AFFIRM in part, REVERSE in part, and REMAND for further proceedings.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Factual Background

The original seven plaintiffs in this case, Alando Sublett, James DeBow, William Evans, Daniel Lindsey, Donnie Ashby, Aaron Burnett, and James Dunn, were all incarcerated at the Kentucky State Penitentiary (“KSP”) in May 2005. Evans is the only plaintiff remaining in the suit. The relevant facts, taken in the light most favorable to Evans, are as follows:

On May 17, 2005, Sublett was given a “stick test” — a urine test used in the field to screen for illegal drug use — by Defendant Vinson, a correctional officer at KSP, and another officer. Vinson, displeased with the results, allegedly destroyed Sublett’s first sample and ordered another with a different witness. Sublett was then sent to his cell without an opportunity to witness the sealing of the sample or its chain of custody, which is inconsistent with the process usually followed for administering drug tests at KSP. Half an hour later, Sublett was placed in administrative segregation in “3 Cellhouse” as a result of the stick test, which Defendants claimed was positive. Defendants sent an additional sample to Aegis Sciences Corporation (“Aegis”) for confirmation.

On May 18, 2005, DeBow, an inmate grievance aide, received a message about the incident and approached Evans, an inmate legal aide, about assisting Sublett in getting released. Evans sent a memo *440 randum to Defendants Pershing, Jasis, and Haeberlin requesting Sublett’s release on due process grounds.

On May 19, 2005, Defendants received the lab report from Aegis showing that Sublett had tested negative for drug use, and Sublett was released from segregation. That same day, Vinson administered stick tests to DeBow and Evans, and Defendant Keene, the deputy warden for security at KSP, served as a witness. Following the tests, DeBow and Evans were ordered to return to their cells. Approximately forty-five minutes later, they were placed in the “ ‘Super Max’ Administrative Segregation Unit (7 Cellhouse)” based on allegedly positive stick tests. The May 19, 2005 detention order stated that Evans was “being placed in 7 Cellhouse Admin. Seg. for investigation into Illegal Drug Activity within the institution. This action was taken for the Safety of Staff and inmates, and the safe and secure operation of this institution.” (Detention Order, Dist. Ct. Docket No. 71 Ex. 2.) While in 7 Cellhouse, Evans was subjected to a nude strip search, haircut, and shave, and restricted from his job as a legal aide and all of the privileges he enjoyed in the general population and honor housing unit.

Five days later, on May 24, 2005, Defendant Haeberlin, the warden at KSP, advised Evans by letter that the stick tests were under review. On May 26, 2005, the May 19 samples were sent to Aegis for further review, with “Reasonable Cause” listed as the reason for testing. The next day, the lab reports from Aegis were reviewed, and they were negative for drugs. That same day, after nine days of segregation in 7 Cellhouse, Evans and DeBow were released.

Defendants contend that Evans and DeBow were tested pursuant to KSP’s random testing policy. A May 4, 2005 memorandum from Defendant Captain Junior Ross, the drug screen coordinator at KSP, provides the following:

Attached is the random list of Drug Screen Inmates for May, 2005. Please assign trained staff to conduct these tests. We are required to test 10% of the population. This list contains 126 names to allow for transfers and releases and still meet the required 84 tests. You need to have the drug-screens completed no later than the 20th[] of the month. Please forward all Employer copies of the urine samples paperwork to Administrative Supervisor!.] The inmate donor gets the green copy, the front blue copy goes with the specimen, and all other copies come to me.... Note: Starting last month 50% of all drug screens are done by using the (AEGIS) Specimen collection kit and completed by the Lab, the other 50% will be done by using (Redwood Bioteck) test device.

(Memorandum, Dist. Ct. Docket No. 56 Ex. 7.) The “random list,” which was generated by a computer in Frankfort, Kentucky and not by anyone at the facility, included Evans and DeBow, but not Sublett.

Evans was tested again on July 4, 2005, fourteen days after filing a grievance. He was also on the random list that month. The lab results from the July test were negative for drugs, but this time the reason listed for testing was “Random.” Evans was also tested, with negative results, on September 25, 2005 and March 9, 2008. The lab results from the September test did not include a reason for testing, and those from the March test stated “Random.”

B. Procedural History

Evans and six other pro se prisoners filed suit in the United States District Court for the Western District of Ken *441 tucky under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging violations of their state and federal rights. All plaintiffs but Evans have since been dismissed from the action. After the district court’s initial review under the Prison Reform Litigation Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1915A, Evans was allowed to proceed on the following claims:

[His] Fourteenth Amendment due process claim arising out of the positive stick test resulting in his placement in segregation against Defendant KSP Captain Junior Ross in his individual and official capacity;
[His] Eighth Amendment claim pertaining to his placement in segregation against Defendant KSP Corrections Officers Harry Christopher Vinson and Joe Keene in their individual capacities and against Defendants KSP Procedures Officer Byron Jasis, KSP Deputy Warden of Programs Nancy Doom, KSP Deputy Warden for Security Rick Pershing, and KSP Warden Glenn Haeberlin in their individual and official capacities;
[His] Eighth and Fourth Amendment claims regarding the reasonableness of the urine tests/selection process against Defendants Vinson and Keene in their individual capacities and against Defendants Pershing, Jasis, and Haeberlin in their individual and official capacities; and

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427 F. App'x 437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-evans-v-harry-vinson-ca6-2011.