Redmond v. Crowther
Opinion
TYMKOVICH, Chief Judge *933 This appeal arises from prison officials' attempt to gain control over an agitated prisoner who refused to obey their orders, locked himself in the prison's outdoor recreation yard, and threatened prison officials. To subdue the prisoner, prison officials decided to drop CS gas, a commonly used tear gas, into the recreation yard.
The plan went awry. The recreation yard contained a prison ventilation system intake vent, which draws air in from the recreation yard and circulates it inside the prison. So when prison officials deployed the gas, the intake vent drew the gas in and filtered it into the prison. Numerous prisoners in their cells were exposed to the gas, which caused a burning sensation in their eyes, ears, and noses, and made it difficult for them to breathe. Prison officials evacuated the prisoners housed in two sections of the prison after they secured the prisoner in the recreation yard. The officials did not, however, evacuate the prisoners in two other sections.
On behalf of a class of about one-hundred prisoners, Timothy Redmond sued three of the prison officials for constitutional violations under
The district court granted the defendants' summary judgment motion. Exercising jurisdiction under
I. Background
Redmond and the entire plaintiff class 1 were incarcerated in the Olympus Wing of the Utah State Prison, an inpatient treatment facility that houses prisoners with physical and mental health conditions. It has five divided sections. Section D includes a recreation yard which is enclosed by four walls and open to the sky. On one of those walls is an intake vent to Olympus's HVAC unit. The vent takes in air from the recreation yard and circulates it into the cells in sections A, B, C, and D.
James Hill is a prisoner housed in Section D. On August 3, 2011, Hill violated prison rules. When an officer tried to discipline him, Hill walked away. The officer ordered Hill to return to his cell, but Hill refused. In response, prison officials ordered all prisoners to return to their cells and locked the doors.
*934 But Hill did not return to his cell. He instead walked into Section D's recreation yard and closed the door behind him, which caused it to lock. Hill then took off his glasses and began sharpening them on the wall. He declared he would "stick or cut the first pig that came out there," paced aggressively, swung his arms in the air, swore, and spit at prison officials. App. at 283.
In response, Robert Powell, the lead officer on duty that day, called the special operations unit, which Jason Nicholes led. Nicholes and his team planned how to extract Hill. Nicholes considered various options such as using a shield wall, shooting Hill with a rubber bullet, or deploying pepper spray. In the end, however, Nicholes concluded that these paths presented additional risks to staff, so he decided to deploy CS gas.
But before doing so, Nicholes examined the recreation yard and looked for risks-he did not notice any, nor did he notice the HVAC vents. With his team in place, Nicholes instructed Hill to submit to a strip search and be handcuffed. He warned Hill that if he did not comply, force would be used. Hill nevertheless flipped off Nicholes and said "F*** you, fascist." App. at 288.
Nicholes then ordered his team to deploy the CS gas. The plan went smoothly except for a significant problem-the HVAC unit. Because the recreation yard contained the HVAC unit's intake vent, the vent drew the gas in and pumped it inside the prison. The gas went into the cells in sections A, B, C, and D. It also went into administrative areas. The gas caused a burning sensation in prisoners' eyes, ears, and noses, and made it difficult for them to breathe.
It took about thirty minutes for Powell and other prison officials to evacuate the prisoners in Sections B and C. During the evacuation, Powell went into the recreation yard and confirmed that medical staff were offering assistance to prisoners. Yet when the evacuated prisoners were lined up in the recreation yard, Powell told them:
if any of you sissies absolutely need medical treatment, that's fine, but if any of you are just going over there to whine and cry, something to that extent, or say, oh, my eyes hurt or something like that, I'm going to put you on lockdown or see about having you removed from this facility. I'm not going to have you wasting time with those complaints. If you're about to die, that's one thing.
App. at 1284. Two prisoners claim they would have sought medical treatment had Powell not made this statement.
Next, Powell entered sections A and D. 2 Powell thought the gas had dissipated in these sections and that the prisoners no longer complained about the gas. He thus decided to not evacuate Sections A and D at all. To air these sections out, Powell instead opened the ports of the cells' doors and placed an industrial fan in the doorway. Medical staff also walked around Sections A and D to ask if prisoners needed medical care.
II. Analysis
Redmond contends that Powell and Nicholes violated the Eighth Amendment by exposing the prisoners to CS gas and then failing to respond adequately to their resulting medical needs. He also claims Powell, Nicholes, and Crowther violated the Utah Constitution's unnecessary-rigor clause by exposing the prisoners to CS gas.
*935 We first discuss our standard of review before turning to Redmond's claims under the Eighth Amendment and the Utah Constitution.
A. Standard of Review
Ordinarily, we grant summary judgment only if no genuine issue as to any material fact exists and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). But our "review of summary judgment orders in the qualified immunity context differs from that applicable to review of other summary judgment decisions."
Koch v. City of Del City
,
In determining whether the plaintiff meets this burden, we "ordinarily accept the plaintiff's version of the facts-that is, the 'facts alleged.' "
A.M. v. Holmes
,
To qualify as clearly established, a constitutional right must be "sufficiently clear that every reasonable official would have understood that what he is doing violates that right."
Mullenix v. Luna
, --- U.S. ----, ----,
And it is a "longstanding principle that clearly established law should not be defined at a high level of generality."
White v. Pauly
, --- U.S. ----, ----,
B. Eighth Amendment Claims
Redmond claims Powell and Nicholes violated the Eighth Amendment by (1) exposing plaintiffs to CS gas; (2) discouraging plaintiffs from seeking medical attention and not permitting them all to leave their cells or to shower; (3) verbally abusing and intimidating plaintiffs; and (4) failing to train prison staff regarding the use of CS gas.
We examine each claim in turn, and find none persuasive.
*936 1. Exposure to Gas
Redmond contends Powell and Nicholes violated the Eighth Amendment by exposing prisoners to CS gas. To begin with, the parties dispute whether we should analyze this claim under the conditions-of-confinement framework or the excessive-force framework. Redmond argues that when "assessing the claims of innocent bystanders who are not the intended target of force and whose exposure to force does not further the purpose of maintaining and restoring discipline," the conditions-of-confinement framework applies. Aplt. Br. at 40. We disagree.
The Supreme Court made clear in
Whitley v. Albers
that when prison officials employ force "to resolve a disturbance ... that indisputably poses significant risks to the safety of inmates and prison staff," we must analyze that use of force under the excessive-force rubric.
Nicholes and Powell are entitled to qualified immunity on the claim they used excessive force by exposing the prisoners to gas. Redmond fails to meet his burden of showing a constitutional violation occurred. And even assuming the officials did, in fact, violate the Eighth Amendment, Redmond fails to show this right was clearly established.
a. Constitutional Violation
"[A]n excessive force claim involves two prongs: (1) an objective prong that asks if the alleged wrongdoing was objectively harmful enough to establish a constitutional violation, and (2) a subjective prong under which the plaintiff must show that the officials acted with a sufficiently culpable state of mind."
Giron v. Corr. Corp. of America
,
*937
Whitley
,
Redmond fails to meet his burden of proving Nicholes and Powell acted with the subjective intent required to use excessive force. The record reveals the defendants inadvertently-not intentionally or maliciously-exposed the prisoners to CS gas. And accidently deploying force is antithetical to deploying that force maliciously or sadistically.
Compare
DeSpain
,
Redmond argues that whether the "exposure was truly inadvertent" is a jury question, so we must accept Redmond's alleged version of the facts-Nicholes and Powell intended to gas
all
the prisoners, not just Hill. Aplt. Br. at 47. But because we are beyond the pleading stage, we will only accept Redmond's version of the facts if a reasonable juror could believe it.
See
Holmes
,
But after reviewing the record, we conclude that no reasonable juror could believe the officers intended to expose any prisoner besides Hill to gas. Indeed, Nicholes testified that he did not notice the HVAC unit before deploying the gas. And after deploying the gas, Powell exclaimed the "one thing we didn't plan on is where is the intake air for this HVAC system." App. at 133. The gas getting drawn into the intake vent, moreover, caused significant trouble for the officials. The gas went into administrative areas-thus exposing those prison officials to gas-and required a large-scale evacuation of the prison. Given all this, Nicholes's and Powell's generalized knowledge about the HVAC system and CS gas's intended uses and effects are insufficient to create a jury question about their intent.
Redmond also argues that because the officers used excessive force against Hill by subduing him with CS gas, the officers also employed excessive force against all the prisoners exposed to the gas. But even assuming an excessive-force claim is transferable in this way, Redmond fails to show the officers maliciously and sadistically deployed force against Hill.
To determine whether prison officials applied force maliciously and sadistically or, rather, in good faith, we consider (1) the need for the force, and (2) whether the officers used a disproportionate amount of force.
See
Whitley
,
First, the prison officials needed to use force. Hill had, after all, locked himself inside the recreation yard and refused to
*938
comply with prison officials' orders.
4
Redmond makes much of the fact that Hill had allegedly thrown his sharpened glasses over the wall, leaving him unarmed. And he argues our summary-judgment standard of review requires us to assume the officers knew Hill was unarmed. Even assuming they knew Hill had no weapon before deploying the gas-which they deny-it matters not. Armed or not, prisoners "cannot be permitted to decide which orders they will obey, and when they will obey them."
Soto v. Dickey
,
Second, Redmond argues the officers used a disproportionate amount of force. Specifically, he claims the force employed must be disproportionate because it "was so great that over one hundred innocent Prisoners' cells were doused in CS gas." Aplt. Br. at 35. To be sure, it would be disproportionate to intentionally expose over one-hundred prisoners to gas just to secure one prisoner. In such a case, the ends would not justify the means. But that intention, of course, is not present in this case. Rather, the record demonstrates the officials inadvertently exposed the other prisoners to gas. So the question, then, is whether it was disproportionate to use CS gas to secure Hill, when the officers did not realize other prisoners would be incidentally exposed to the gas as well.
Against the backdrop of the deference we afford prison officials in these situations, we cannot conclude it was disproportionate to use CS gas. Indeed, when prison officials must act to "preserve internal order and discipline," we afford them "wide-ranging deference."
See
Whitley
,
b. Clearly Established
Even if we assume a constitutional violation occurred, moreover, the officers would still be entitled to qualified immunity because no case clearly establishes this right. To prove "the contours of an excessive-force claim ... were well established," Redmond cites
Whitley
for the general proposition that " 'conduct that does not purport to be punishment at all' violates the Eighth Amendment if it involves the 'unnecessary and wanton infliction of pain.' " Aplt. Br. at 48 (quoting
Whitley
,
And although
Whitley
repeats the Eighth Amendment's general framework, the Supreme Court recently reminded us that it is a "longstanding principle that clearly established law should not be defined at a high level of generality."
White
,
Indeed,
White
is instructive. In that case, the Supreme Court reversed our circuit's conclusion that a right was clearly established.
White
,
Nor do the most factually similar cases from our circuit clearly establish that inadvertent exposure to gas violates the Eighth Amendment. To the contrary, in
Gargan
, a non-precedential unpublished decision, we held spraying an unarmed prisoner secured in his segregation cell with pepper spray did not violate the Eighth Amendment.
In sum, Nicholes and Powell are entitled to qualified immunity on the claim they violated the Eighth Amendment by exposing the prisoners to CS gas. Redmond cannot establish that the officers violated the Eighth Amendment and, even assuming they did, the right would not be clearly established.
2. Deliberate Indifference to Serious Medical Needs
Redmond next contends Powell acted with deliberate indifference to prisoners' serious medical needs in violation of the Eighth Amendment.
"[D]eliberate indifference to serious medical needs of prisoners" violates the Eighth Amendment.
Estelle v. Gamble
,
The subjective component requires showing the prison official "knew [the inmate] faced a substantial risk of harm and disregarded that risk by failing
*940
to take reasonable measures to abate it."
Martinez v. Beggs
,
Redmond claims Powell acted with deliberate indifference to the prisoners' serious medical needs in two ways: (1) by not allowing the prisoners to leave their cells to get fresh air or to shower, and (2) by discouraging them from seeking medical attention. Even assuming these allegations are true, qualified immunity shields Powell from liability.
a. Access to Fresh Air and Showers
On the fresh-air claim, Redmond fails to show a constitutional violation occurred. Redmond makes two separate arguments as to the prisoners in Sections B and C and those in Sections A and D.
First, since Powell did not evacuate the prisoners in Sections B and C until Hill was secured, Redmond argues Powell acted with deliberate indifference to the prisoners' serious medical needs by failing to promptly evacuate them from their cells. But Redmond offers no evidence that satisfies the subjective prong of a medical neglect claim. Nor does the record support a finding that any prisoner was substantially harmed by the officer's conduct. In fact, the record demonstrates that rather than disregard the risks prisoners in Sections B and C faced by remaining in their cells after the gas was released, Powell did his best to swiftly evacuate them. Just minutes after the gas was released, Powell ordered the opening of doors to air the facility out. And once the special operations team secured Hill-about ten minutes after the gas was deployed-Powell ordered Sections B and C evacuated.
Redmond makes much of this ten-minute delay. In his view, the fact that Powell did not immediately order the facility evacuated demonstrates he acted with deliberate indifference. We disagree. Given the circumstances, we find it wholly unsurprising that Powell did not immediately order a full evacuation. After all, not only did the HVAC unit drawing in gas surprise Powell, but he also had a more pressing problem to deal with-securing Hill. Once Hill was secured, Powell ordered the evacuation. Thus, Powell's delay in ordering the evacuation does not suggest he acted with deliberate indifference.
Second, Redmond argues that Powell acted with deliberate indifference to the medical needs of the prisoners in Sections A and D because he did not evacuate them at all. Instead, to flush the gas out of their cells, he opened the cells' ports and placed an industrial fan by the door. Even assuming this violates the Eighth Amendment, Redmond cites nothing that clearly establishes this right. Nor would it be obvious to every reasonable prison official that to decontaminate prisoners exposed to gas, the Eighth Amendment requires removing the prisoners from their cells, rather than opening their cells' ports and placing a fan by the door.
See
Mullenix
,
On the shower claim, even assuming that failing to allow all prisoners to shower violates the Eighth Amendment, Redmond cites no case clearly establishing this right.
b. Discouraging Prisoners from Seeking Medical Treatment
Redmond forfeited his argument that Powell violated the Eighth Amendment by discouraging prisoners from seeking medical assistance because
*941
he inadequately briefed it.
6
Arguments are forfeited when they rest on bare assertions and cursory arguments made in the opening brief.
See, e.g.
,
Leathers v. Leathers
,
Even if Redmond had not forfeited this claim, qualified immunity would shield Powell from liability because Redmond proffers no evidence that satisfies the objective component of a medical neglect claim. Redmond claims prisoners did not seek medical attention because Powell discouraged them from doing so. Assuming this is true, to satisfy the objective component of a medical neglect claim Redmond must show that this denial of medial care caused a sufficiently serious injury. He has not done so.
To be sure, the prisoners were injured by being exposed to CS gas. But that injury is the subject of the excessive-force claim we have already addressed. Redmond never alleges what injury could be caused by not seeing medical staff after being exposed to gas. In fact, Redmond's brief repeatedly notes that the decontamination process for gas exposure involves showering and exposure to fresh air, thus suggesting medical professionals could not have even alleviated the prisoners' symptoms through some sort of professional medical care. And we are aware of no prisoner who, in fact, asked for medical care and had it denied.
In sum, Redmond forfeited his claim that Powell acted with deliberate indifference to the prisoners' serious medical needs in violation of the Eighth Amendment. And had Redmond not forfeited this claim, Powell would nonetheless be entitled to qualified immunity.
3. Other Eighth Amendment Claims
Redmond makes two additional Eighth Amendment claims we can easily dismiss.
7
First, he argues Nicholes and Powell created an unconstitutional condition of confinement by insulting and intimidating the prisoners. But the objective component of a conditions-of-confinement claim requires Redmond to allege a condition that is either "sufficiently serious so as to deprive inmates of the minimal civilized measure of life's necessities" or "constitute[s] a substantial risk of serious harm."
Shannon v. Graves
,
*942
Second, Redmond argues Nicholes and Powell created an unconstitutional condition of confinement by failing to adequately train prison staff on the use of CS gas. But even assuming this violates the Eighth Amendment, Redmond fails to cite anything that clearly established this right. Indeed, his brief cites only the general conditions-of-confinement standard laid out in
Farmer v. Brennan
,
C. Utah Constitution Claims
Lastly, Redmond claims Powell, Nicholes, and Crowther violated the Utah Constitution's unnecessary-rigor clause by exposing the prisoners to CS gas. The clause, a variation on excessive-force principles, states that "[p]ersons arrested or imprisoned shall not be treated with unnecessary rigor." Utah Const. art. I, § 9.
To recover under the clause, Redmond must establish, among other things, that the prisoners suffered a flagrant violation of their constitutional rights.
See
Jensen ex rel. Jensen v. Cunningham
,
Redmond also sues Crowther in his official capacity and asks that we enjoin Crowther and direct him to adopt and comply with written policies regarding the deployment of gas. But Redmond lacks standing to sue for injunctive relief. "Plaintiffs have the burden to demonstrate standing for each form of relief sought."
Lippoldt v. Cole
,
Redmond argues he has standing to sue for injunctive relief because the defendants are "disregarding an objectively intolerable risk of harm" that a similar situation with CS gas may occur. Aplt. Br. at 55. Yet he offers just speculation that a similar incident will occur. True, Redmond claims the prison has failed to "adopt[ ] a formal policy regarding the steps that should be undertaken to protect innocent prisoners from secondary exposure."
Id.
But Nicholes has implemented a new procedure on his team to "take into account the HVA[C] system." App. 865. Given this, Redmond's argument that a similar incident will occur is "contingent upon speculation or conjecture" and thus "beyond the bounds of a federal court's jurisdiction."
Lippoldt
,
In sum, Redmond's claim for monetary damages and injunctive relief under the Utah Constitution fails.
III. Conclusion
The district court properly granted summary judgment. Redmond forfeited his *943 claim based on Powell discouraging prisoners from seeking medical attention, and Powell and Nicholes are entitled to qualified immunity on all of Redmond's other Eighth Amendment claims. Redmond cannot sue for damages under the Utah Constitution because he failed to show Powell and Nicholes flagrantly violated the Utah Constitution. And Redmond lacks standing to sue for injunctive relief under the Utah Constitution.
We accordingly AFFIRM.
For ease of reading, we use "Redmond" as short-hand for the entire plaintiff class.
The prisoners housed in Sections A and D cannot mingle with other prisoners. They consequently could not be evacuated alongside the prisoners in Sections B and C.
Even if Redmond were correct that the conditions-of-confinement framework governed, the officials would still be entitled to qualified immunity. Conditions-of-confinement claims have two prongs: (1) an objective prong, under which the alleged injury must be sufficiently serious, and (2) a subjective prong, under which the prison official who imposed the condition must have done so with deliberate indifference.
See, e.g.
,
Farmer v. Brennan
,
Redmond cannot show the officers acted with the subjective intent required for a conditions-of-confinement claim. At most, the record reveals negligent conduct. And deliberate indifference "describes a state of mind more blameworthy than negligence."
Redmond claims Hill did not "refuse[ ] to comply with commands" because "it was unclear what Hill was being commanded to do." Aplt. Br. at 34. We disagree. Indeed, Hill reacted to the commands by giving Nicholes the finger and saying "F*** you, fascist." App. at 288. We think this reaction is as clear an indication as any that Hill had no plans to comply with the orders.
Redmond claims from "the very beginning Nicholes had decided and received permission to use CS gas." Aplt. Br. at 8. True, before considering other ways to secure Hill, Nicholes told his supervisor he would "probably be using CS gas." App. 857. But the fact that Nicholes thought he would ultimately decide to deploy gas does not undercut or somehow invalidate his subsequent consideration of different options.
In his opening brief, Redmond has only one conclusory sentence on this claim. Aplt. Br. at 44. He also summarily states that Powell "discouraged Prisoners from seeking [medical attention]" and there was "no legitimate penological purpose to ... actively discourage or disallow proper ... medical attention."
Redmond also argues Powell created an unconstitutional condition of confinement by failing to "establish prompt, verbal contact with inmates" after the gassing to "alleviate their panic and anxiety." Aplt. Br. at 44. We can easily dismiss this argument, however, as Redmond cites no case to show this violates any constitutional right, much less a clearly established one.
To recover monetary damages under the Utah Constitution, Redmond would also need to show that existing remedies do not redress his injuries and equitable relief would be inadequate.
See
Cunningham
,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Timothy REDMOND; Nick Watson; George Monfort; Daniel Lassche; Kraig Canfield, and All Others Similarly Situated, Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. Scott CROWTHER, as Successor to Alfred Bigelow in His Official Capacity; Robert Powell, in His Individual Capacity; And Jason Nicholes, in His Individual Capacity, Defendants-Appellees.
- Cited By
- 159 cases
- Status
- Published