Underwood v. Barrett
Opinion
When plaintiff refused to exit a prison recreation cage to be brought to a new cell, prison officials used oleoresin capsicum ("pepper spray"), physical force, and handcuffs to secure his compliance with the officials' orders. Plaintiff subsequently brought this lawsuit under
The prison officials eventually moved for summary judgment, contending that, at the very least, they were entitled to qualified immunity.
See
Gray
v.
Cummings
,
The record contains two versions of the relevant interaction between plaintiff and prison officials as they attempted to move him from the recreation cage. One version is the plaintiff's description of what happened. The other version is a videotape of the interaction taken by prison officials. No one disputes the authenticity of the video evidence. Nor is there any claim that it was doctored in any way. The two versions conflict in several apparently crucial respects. Under plainly controlling law, the district court's job was to decide whether the video evidence "blatantly contradicted" the plaintiff's version of events, in which case the court's next job was to determine if, viewing the facts in the light depicted by the video evidence, the prison official violated plaintiff's constitutional rights.
See
Scott
v.
Harris
,
The district court conceded that the video evidence was "compelling," but opted to reject the teaching of
Scott
, explaining that it preferred the contrary view expressed in both Justice Stevens's
Scott
dissent,
see
*21
In so proceeding, the district court failed to fulfill its obligation to follow the law as set forth in controlling precedent.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Valentine UNDERWOOD, Plaintiff, Appellee, v. Patrick BARRETT; Anthony Catalano; Jeffrey Clement; Brian Devlin ; Michael McDonald; Anthony Falciano; Leo Marchand ; Stuart McCulloch; William Shugrue, Defendants, Appellants, Douglas Bower ; Correctional Officer Sweets, F/K/A John Doe (Sweets); Donald Denomme; Jeffrey Fisher; Michael Grant; Jack Haughey; Jason Lanpher; Abby Nelligan; James Nelson; Dinarte Rego; James J. Saba; Sean Smith; Luis S. Spencer, Defendants.
- Cited By
- 12 cases
- Status
- Published