William Shayne Thorpe v. Tim Weaver, et al.

CourtDistrict Court, C.D. Illinois
DecidedNovember 7, 2025
Docket4:25-cv-04186
StatusUnknown

This text of William Shayne Thorpe v. Tim Weaver, et al. (William Shayne Thorpe v. Tim Weaver, et al.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, C.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
William Shayne Thorpe v. Tim Weaver, et al., (C.D. Ill. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT CENTRAL DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS ROCK ISLAND DIVISION

WILLIAM SHAYNE THORPE, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) 4:25-cv-04186-SEM-DJQ ) TIM WEAVER, et al., ) ) Defendants. )

ORDER Plaintiff, proceeding pro se under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, presently in post-conviction custody at the McDonough County Jail, pursues claims for alleged violations of his constitutional rights at the Jail. The case is before the Court for a merit review of Plaintiff’s complaint. The Court must review Plaintiff’s complaint to determine if it is sufficient to proceed. 28 U.S.C. § 1915A. A claim is legally insufficient if it “(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.” Id. The Court accepts the factual allegations as true, liberally construing them in the plaintiff’s favor. Turley v. Rednour, 729 F.3d 645, 649 (7th Cir. 2013). But conclusory statements and labels are insufficient—the facts alleged must “state a claim for relief that is plausible on its face.” Alexander v. United States, 721 F.3d 418, 422

(7th Cir. 2013) (citation omitted). A. Facts Plaintiff names as Defendants correctional employee Tim

Weaver, Sergeant Terry Foulk, Jail Administrator Caitlin Willey, Chief Deputy Sheriff Adam Cremer, Sheriff Nicholas Petitgout, State’s Attorney Susan Maxwell, Judge Nigel Graham, and Judge

Heidi A. Benson. Plaintiff was housed in the McDonough County Jail on July 8, 2025, on a domestic battery charge. The victim of the battery had

sought a civil order of protection against Plaintiff in McDonough County Case No. 2025OP63. The Court takes judicial notice of specifics related to that case drawn from online McDonough County

Circuit Court records. The OP matter was set for a further hearing on the petition for order of protection on July 8, 2025, at 2:00 p.m., before Judge Cavanaugh (not a Defendant here). Plaintiff notified jail staff well in advance, both verbally and via

inmate request, that he wanted to attend the July 8 hearing. Defendant Weaver took Plaintiff to the legal room to await the video hearing. He was in the legal room for about twenty minutes after the hearing was scheduled to occur. Plaintiff asked passing officers

if he could be moved to Holding 1 because there was little ventilation, airflow, and bathroom in the legal room. At first, he was ignored. About fifteen minutes later he asked Weaver again and

Weaver said that Holding 1 was in use, so he would take Plaintiff back to Cell Block W3 and come get Plaintiff again when the judge appeared on the screen for the hearing. Plaintiff confirmed that

Weaver would come get Plaintiff for the hearing. An hour later, Plaintiff saw Sergeant Foulk on rounds and asked him why no one got him for the hearing. Foulk said, “You

weren’t down there, dude.” Plaintiff explained that Weaver said he could come get Plaintiff. Foulk said, “He shouldn’t have told you that, I’ll look into it.” Plaintiff told Foulk that he needed to refute the

allegations against him and that he could prove the allegations were false, all to assist in his defense of the criminal charges against him. Foulk told Plaintiff that the victim did not appear for the hearing anyway, so the civil order of protection case had been

dismissed. The Court records confirm the dismissal. Plaintiff asked his attorney, girlfriend, and mother to check the court records to see what had happened. Plaintiff wrote a grievance

related to the incident. The next day he requested legal library. Usually, detainees are locked in a room with their legal books to study. But on this day, Sergeant Foulk came into the legal room,

sat down, and asked Plaintiff why he had filed a grievance against Weaver. Plaintiff said that he was trying to prove his innocence at the civil order of protection hearing. Foulk again noted that the

order of protection case had been dismissed. Plaintiff asserted that it was his right to attend the hearing to defend himself. Foulk said, “I heard you did not want to go to the hearing.” Plaintiff got agitated

and said that was a lie, that Plaintiff had no respect for Foulk, that Foulk had no intestinal fortitude, and that right is right and wrong is wrong. Foulk said that he would handle it if it was wrong.

Plaintiff said he intended to go to trial in the criminal case and wanted to prove the victim was a liar. Foulk said that “they can’t use it because it was thrown out” and he would appreciate it if Plaintiff “took the grievance off.” Plaintiff speculates that Foulk

could have been implying that “conditions could be worse” or maybe that Foulk heard the officer saying that Plaintiff said that he did not want to go to the hearing. The Court notes again that Plaintiff repeatedly asked to be removed from the video hearing room, and it

was upon his request that he was removed from the video hearing room. Plaintiff alleges that he took Foulk’s statements “as a threat” and signed a form to retract his grievance against Weaver.

Plaintiff proceeded to jury trial in the criminal case on August 28 – 29, 2025. He was found guilty of two counts of aggravated domestic battery by strangulation and one count of domestic

battery causing bodily harm with a prior domestic battery conviction. Prosecutors used the victim’s sworn order of protection statement against Plaintiff at trial. The victim testified that she had

lied, but the jury found Plaintiff guilty based on the order of protection statement and “her ER visit.” Plaintiff alleges no other evidence was introduced.

Based on the public record of the criminal case, 2025CF115, the evidence at trial included: 1) the victim’s statements for the purpose of medical diagnosis or treatment, 2) Plaintiff’s past criminal conviction, 3) sworn video testimony by a physician, Dr.

Joseph Calvo, who also was recognized and testified as an expert witness in emergency medicine, 4) a photograph of the victim’s neck, 5) four video exhibits drawn from Sergeant Cremer’s body camera, 6) a certified copy of an order of protection, likely the

emergency order of protection, issued in 25OP63, admitted without objection, 7) the victim’s sworn statement from 25OP63, admitted without objection, 8) the sworn testimony of Sergeant Cremer, 9)

the sworn testimony of Nurse William Anderson, 10) sworn testimony from Detective Nick Severs, and 11) a video from Sever’s body camera. The trial record also shows the defense rested without

presenting any evidence. Plaintiff believes that if he had attended the civil order of protection hearing, he would have been allowed to present proof,

and at that time he would have provided his account of events, and the victim’s claims would have been refuted. Plaintiff alleges the criminal trial judge did not allow Plaintiff

(who was represented by an attorney) to bring this and other issues up at a preliminary hearing on July 14. Plaintiff asks to have his “case thrown out due to them using statements from a hearing I requested to be at … but wasn’t due to

staff error ….” Plaintiff also asks for money damages for violation of his due process rights as well as mental anguish and money Plaintiff’s family apparently incurred, and perhaps is incurring, during his detention and potential imprisonment.

B. Analysis 1. Judicial Immunity Plaintiff sues Judge Nigel Graham and Judge Heidi Benson

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