WILSON-WALKER v. GAMBONE

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 17, 2025
Docket2:24-cv-04828
StatusUnknown

This text of WILSON-WALKER v. GAMBONE (WILSON-WALKER v. GAMBONE) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
WILSON-WALKER v. GAMBONE, (E.D. Pa. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

ZUNIR WILSON-WALKER : CIVIL ACTION : v. : NO. 24-4828 : C/O GAMBONE, MAJOR MOYER, : LT. STABILE, LAW LIBRARY : SUPERVISOR KEELEY DIANGELO, : CAPTAIN SMITH

MEMORANDUM KEARNEY, J. January 17, 2025 The incarcerated Zuhir Wilson-Walker alleges a correctional officer violated his civil rights during his July 9, 2024 intake at the Montgomery County Correctional Facility. We dismissed his pro se complaint approximately three months ago upon screening with leave to amend. He amended and repeated many of his same allegations but added privacy, conspiracy, and retaliation theories. We again screen consistent with Congress’s mandate after granting him leave to proceed without paying filing fees. Mr. Wilson-Walker again does not state a claim on his repeated theories. He also does not plead facts allowing us to plausibly infer a privacy, conspiracy, or retaliation claim. We grant him one last chance to timely plead his claims hopefully informed by this Memorandum before we dismiss with prejudice. I. Alleged pro se facts The Commonwealth detained Mr. Wilson-Walker at the Montgomery County Correctional Facility beginning July 9, 2024.1 Corrections Officer Gambone’s July 9, 2024 strip search. Corrections Officer Gambone aggressively patted down Mr. Wilson-Walker during the July 9, 2024 intake at the Facility, touched Mr. Wilson-Walker in “personal spots,” directed Mr. Wilson- Walker to strip in the presence of another inmate in a small changing room, and directed Mr. Wilson-Walker to lift his genitals, jump up and down with his back to Corrections Officer Gambone, and “squat and cough.”2 Corrections Officer Gambone then “lick[ed] his lips and smiled at” Mr. Wilson-Walker when Mr. Wilson-Walker questioned the purpose of the intake search, a search Corrections Officer Gambone took “for his own pleasure.”3

Corrections Officer Gambone directed Mr. Wilson-Walker to sign papers without giving Mr. Wilson-Walker a chance to read them or explain the papers.4 Corrections Officer Gambone then escorted Mr. Wilson-Walker and another incarcerated person to a body scanner to scan for contraband.5 Mr. Wilson-Walker asked Corrections Officer Gambone why he “violated” Mr. Wilson-Walker during the strip search and made him feel uncomfortable, only to take Mr. Wilson-Walker for a body scan.6 Corrections Officer Gambone ignored Mr. Wilson-Walker’s questions.7 Captain Smith’s responses to Mr. Wilson-Walker’s concerns. Mr. Wilson-Walker asked non-party Facility Social Worker Carey for a grievance form to report the July 9, 2024 incident.8 Social Worker Carey did not give Mr. Wilson-Walker a grievance

form, so Mr. Wilson-Walker hand wrote a grievance on July 26, 2024 and gave it to an unnamed security staff supervisor.9 Captain Smith called Mr. Wilson-Walker to his office between midnight and 2:00 AM on July 27, 2024 to explain the basis of the grievance before Corrections Officer Gambone and a John Doe Corrections Officer.10 Captain Smith looked “uninterested” in Mr. Wilson-Walker’s grievance and “barely wrote down anything.”11 Corrections Officer Gambone looked at Mr. Wilson-Walker “dead in [his] eye with a[n] evil look,” intimidating Mr. Wilson-Walker.12 Mr. Wilson-Walker reported to Captain Smith sexual harassment by Corrections Officer Gambone.13 Captain Smith ignored Mr. Wilson-Walker’s grievance and allowed Corrections Officer Gambone to continue to work on Mr. Wilson-Walker’s housing unit instead of “preventing these things … not to happen again.”14 The Facility’s “mental health” put Mr. Wilson-Walker on medication to treat his trauma, post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, anxiety, and nightmares caused by the intake search

conducted by Corrections Officer Gambone.15 The Facility’s security supervisors did not update Mr. Wilson-Walker on his grievance or how “the incident” would be handled going forward to prevent Corrections Officer Gambone from harming Mr. Wilson-Walker in retaliation for reporting the July 9, 2024 incident.16 There is no allegation Corrections Officer Gambone took action to harm Mr. Wilson-Walker. Law Librarian DiAngelo copying and review of Mr. Wilson-Walker’s complaint. Mr. Wilson-Walker went to the Facility’s law library on August 28, 2024 to prepare his civil rights complaint against the Facility based on the July 9, 2024 intake search and the failure of unnamed security supervisors to protect Mr. Wilson-Walker from Corrections Officer Gambone or other unnamed officers.17 Mr. Wilson-Walker asked Law Librarian DiAngelo to make copies of

his complaint.18 Law Librarian DiAngelo read Mr. Wilson-Walker’s complaint while making copies without his permission and secretly made a copy for herself.19 Law Librarian DiAngelo then left the library and gave a copy of the civil rights complaint to Major Moyer.20 Major Moyer and Lt. Stabile verbal threats and housing in “max custody.” Major Moyer then ordered Mr. Wilson-Walker to Major Moyer’s office.21 Lt. Stabile, present in Major Moyer’s office, looked at Mr. Wilson-Walker with an intimidating and “evil glare.”22 Major Moyer yelled and cursed at Mr. Wilson-Walker and denied an officer harmed Mr. Wilson-Walker.23 Major Moyer threatened Mr. Wilson-Walker with placement in “max confinement to rot” with “murders, rapists, and serial killers” and to prevent Mr. Wilson-Walker from having access to the law library if Mr. Wilson-Walker “did not state [he] fe[lt] safe on camera.”24 Mr. Wilson-Walker refused to “lie on camera” and felt threatened by Major Moyer.25 Lt. Stabile then threatened Mr. Wilson-Walker with physical harm.26 The Facility currently houses Mr. Wilson-Walker in its “max custody” unit with no access

to the law library or the courts.27 Mr. Wilson-Walker reported the incident with Major Moyer and Lt. Stabile to non-party Assistant Warden Burger the next day, but the Assistant Warden ignored Mr. Wilson-Walker’s complaint.28 II. Analysis Mr. Wilson-Walker claims Corrections Officer Gambone, Major Moyer, Lieutenant Stabile, Law Librarian Keeley DiAngelo, and Captain Smith each violated his Fourth, Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendment rights from the date of his July 9, 2024 intake through August 29, 2024.29 As explained in our October 7, 2024 memorandum screening Mr. Wilson-Walker’s original Complaint, Congress requires us to again screen the allegations of the amended Complaint after granting Mr. Wilson-Walker leave to proceed without paying the filing fees.30 Congress in section

1915(e)(2)(B) requires we dismiss his claim if the action “is frivolous or malicious; fails to state a claim on which relief may be granted; or seeks monetary relief against a defendant who is immune from such relief.”31 When considering whether to dismiss a complaint for failure to state a claim under section 1915(e)(2)(B), we apply the same standard provided in Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6).32 Mr. Wilson-Walker must plead enough facts to state a claim for relief plausible on its face under Rule 12(b)(6).33 A claim is facially plausible “when the plaintiff pleads factual content that allows the court to draw the reasonable inference that the defendant is liable for the misconduct alleged.”34 While “[t]he plausibility standard is not akin to a ‘probability requirement,’ it does require the pleading show ‘more than a sheer possibility … a defendant has acted unlawfully.’”35 “A pleading that merely ‘tenders naked assertion[s] devoid of further factual enhancement’ is insufficient.”36 We are “mindful of our obligation to liberally construe a pro se litigant’s pleadings … particularly where the pro se litigant is imprisoned.”37 We are to “remain flexible” and “apply the relevant legal principle even when the complaint has failed to name it.”38

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WILSON-WALKER v. GAMBONE, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-walker-v-gambone-paed-2025.