YOUNG v. MONMOUTH COUNTY

CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 31, 2025
Docket3:24-cv-04975
StatusUnknown

This text of YOUNG v. MONMOUTH COUNTY (YOUNG v. MONMOUTH COUNTY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
YOUNG v. MONMOUTH COUNTY, (D.N.J. 2025).

Opinion

NOT FOR PUBLICATION

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF NEW JERSEY

KIMBERLY YOUNG, et al., laintiff: i . Plaunnitts, Civil Action No. 24-4975 (MAS) (TJB) ‘ OPINION MONMOUTH COUNTY, et al., Defendants.

SHIPP, District Judge This matter comes before the Court on the Monmouth County Defendants’! Motion to dismiss (ECF No. 7) Plaintiffs’? complaint (ECF No. 1) in this prisoner civil rights matter. Plaintiffs filed a response to Defendants’ Motion (ECF No. 16), to which Defendants replied (ECF No. 19). For the following reasons, the County Defendants’ motion shall be granted in part and denied in part. I. BACKGROUND This matter arises out of the overdose death of Egner while housed in the Monmouth County Correctional Institution (“MCCT”) in April 2022, (ECF No. | at 6.) In February 2020, Egner was sentenced to six years incarceration for the distribution of controlled dangerous

' These Defendants include Monmouth County, the Monmouth County Sheriff's Office, the Monmouth County Board of County Commissioners, Sheriff Shaun Golden, Undersheriff Theoadore Freeman, Warden Victor Ianello, and the John Doe Correction Officer Defendants. ? Plaintiffs in this matter are Kimberly Young, as administratrix of the Estate of David Egner (“Egner’), and as guardian of their minor child, A.E., and A.E. individually.

substances, but was eventually deferred into an intensive supervision program. (/d. at 10.) Following several instances of violating that program through drug use, Egner was taken back into custody and placed into the MCCI in April 2022. Ud.) On April 17, 2022, Egner sought out and obtained drugs, specifically “fentanyl-laced heroin” from a fellow inmate, Alvino Hinton (“Hinton”). Ud.) At 9:05 a.m. that morning, Egner was found unresponsive in his cell. It is not entirely clear what occurred in the immediate aftermath of this discovery, but Plaintiffs allege that jail medical staff, employed by Defendant CFG, were alerted to the situation but did not appropriately respond either because they did not use Narcan upon Egner or did not use sufficient doses of Narcan to revive Egner. (Ud. at 10-11.) Plaintiffs do not detail what steps were taken during those early moments or the timeline for CFG’s response, but do allege that Egner was transferred to CentraState Medical Center in Freehold, where he died three days later, on April 20, 2022. (Ud. at 11.) Egner’s death was determined to be the result of “mixed drug toxicity” arising out of ingesting fentanyl, acetylmorphine, and other opioids. Cd.) A search of Hinton later produced “36 wax folds of heroin” which had been concealed in Hinton’s underwear. (/d. at 10.) Hinton later admitted to smuggling the drugs into the jail himself. (Ud. at 15.) Hinton was thereafter charged with, and convicted of, causing Egner’s death. (/d.) The remainder of Plaintiffs’ complaint attempts to lay the blame for Egner’s overdose on various supervisory Defendants and the entity responsible for overseeing the jail and its medical staff. Specifically, Plaintiffs allege that Defendants were, or should have been, aware that drug abuse was widespread at MCCI, and that “CDS was widely available to the MCCI inmate population” but provide very few specific factual allegations to support these conclusions. (/d. at 12.) In support of these contentions, Plaintiffs allege that Sheriff Golden of Monmouth County was quoted in a 2018 Asbury Park Press article as stating that “76 percent of inmates in county jails face addiction” and that the same article expressed the opinion that addiction problems were

particularly high in those charged with drug offenses. (/d.) Plaintiffs also point to a January 2024 article in the New Jersey Monitor in which they allege that Undersheriff Freeman wrote about an “entrenched drug trade” in the jail which resulted in overdoses and lawsuits. (/d.) In their reply, Defendants provided the Court with copies of the two articles upon which Plaintiffs relied. The 2018 Asbury Park Press article was not specifically concerned with the drug trade in jail, but rather with a voluntary addiction recovery program put into place in the jail, which Sheriff Golden praised as a means to help inmates with addiction issues. (See ECF No. 19-] at 2.) It was the article’s author, however, and not Golden, who stated that “76 percent of inmates in county jails face addiction,” and nothing in the article indicates that Golden in any way endorsed or agreed with this statistic, nor was the statistic specifically aimed at MCC] itself. (/d.) The 2024 New Jersey Monitor article is largely a summary of another federal lawsuit regarding the overdose death of a female inmate, Jennifer Ross, in MCCI in September 2022. (id. at 7.) Other than summarizing the allegations of that lawsuit, which Plaintiffs also recapitulate in their complaint, the article briefly notes that Undersheriff Freeman authored an article in 2017 regarding drug trade in the jail, and notes that since 2017, several jail officers who attempted to smuggle drugs into the jail in potato chip bags were arrested and prosecuted. (/d. at 9.) Defendants also provided a copy of Freeman’s 2017 article, which was referenced by the Monitor and indirectly by Plaintiffs through the Monitor article, which does not concern itself with a rampant drug trade, but instead merely details new X-ray screening devices at the jail aimed at increasing the discovery rate of contraband of all types entering the jail in inmates’ body cavities. (Ud. at 13-14.) The only actual incidents of drug abuse mentioned in either article occurred in either 2013, nearly a decade before Egner’s incident, or 2022, in the case of Ross’s death which took place several months after Egner’s passing.

Aside from these articles and the allegations made in the Ross lawsuit, in describing MCCI as a haven of drug smuggling and abuse, Plaintiffs rely upon the arrest and prosecution of corrections officer Bryant Mack (“Mack”), Mack was indicted on drug distribution charges in March 2022 arising out of alleged drug smuggling in which he engaged with another staff member in 2020 and 2021. (/d. at 14.) Mack, however, had been smuggling suboxone, marijuana, and “K2,” not heroin or fentanyl. (Ud. at 15.) Plaintiffs do not allege that Mack was involved in any way with Egner or Hinton. While Plaintiffs plead that the supervisory Defendants failed to adopt sufficient policies to address the drug issues—such as increased cell checks, searches, better detection equipment, the greater use of drug dogs, and the like—Plaintiffs plead facts indicating that the jail did, in fact, have policies aimed at dealing with the issue of drug dependency by inmates. Specifically, Plaintiffs acknowledge in pleading claims against the John Doe Officers that the jail had standard procedures requiring the frequent and repeated monitoring of inmates with known drug histories, frequent cell checks, restrictions on free movement for those admitted with addiction issues, policies requiring staff to be prepared to summon medical aid as needed as soon as an overdose was discovered, rules requiring the reporting of drug abuse and overdoses, and various rules and equipment aimed at detecting and eliminating contraband, including drugs, from the facility. (Id. at 29-30.) Plaintiffs also allege, at least indirectly, that the jail did have policies in place for the discovery, firing, and prosecution of staff members, including Mack, who were found to be smuggling and otherwise facilitating drug use in the jail. (/d. at 14-15.) Il. LEGAL STANDARD In deciding a motion to dismiss pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure

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YOUNG v. MONMOUTH COUNTY, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-monmouth-county-njd-2025.