LEONARD G. YOUNG, JR., Aрpellant v. JEFFREY MARTIN, DEPUTY SUPERINTENDENT GREENE SCI, in his official and individual capacity; LOUIS S. FOLINO, SUPERINTENDENT GREENE SCI, in his official and individual capacity; MAJOR LORINDA WINFIELD; CAPTAIN ANTHONY GUMBAREVIC, in his official and individual capacity; CO #1 MOODY, in his official and individual capacity
No. 13-4057
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
September 8, 2015
PRECEDENTIAL. Argued: October 29, 2014. On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania (District Court No. 2-10-cv-00284). Magistrate Judge: Honorable Cynthia R. Eddy. Before: MCKEE, Chief Judge, GREENAWAY, JR., and KRAUSE, Circuit Judges.
Robert J. Ridge (Argued)
Clark Hill
301 Grant Street
One Oxford Centre, 14th Floor
Pittsburgh, PA 15219
Counsel for Appellant
Sandra A. Kozlowski
Kemal A. Mericli (Argued)
Office of Attorney General of Pennsylvania
564 Forbes Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA 15219
Counsel for Appellees
OPINION OF THE COURT
KRAUSE, Circuit Judge.
Leonard G. Young, Jr., a Pennsylvania prisoner with a long history of mental illness, filed suit alleging that Appellees-Defendants1 violated his Eighth Amendment rights
I. Factual Background
For over six years, Young has been held in solitary confinement, housеd in either the Restrictive Housing Unit (“RHU“) or the mental health unit of different Pennsylvania prisons because of his extensive disciplinary history and history of mental illness. Since childhood, Young has been diagnosed with various forms of mental illness, including bipolar disorder and schizoaffective disorder. However, since his detention over these past several years in solitary confinement, consisting of isolation for 23 hours per day and one hour of recreation time in a solitary pen on weekdays, Young‘s symptoms of mental illness have intensified, including visual and auditory hallucinations, paranoid thoughts, throwing and smearing his own feces, episodes of self-harm, and suicidal impulses. Indeed, since living in these conditions of prolonged isolation, his numerous suicide attempts have included efforts to hang himself and to breаk his own neck by banging his head against the wall.
When other inmates saw Young on the roof they began calling to him from their cells. In the meantime, Lieutenant Kirby and a group of COs gathered on the floor below Young. From his perch, Young shouted that he was protesting for prisoners’ rights and for the return of some of his proрerty. Two COs watching Young from the balcony chatted with each other and laughed as he talked. Young remained crouched on the roof voicing his complaints for approximately seven minutes before following the COs’ orders to step back onto the second tier and to close himself inside the shower. Once there, he again complied with orders, placed his hands behind his back, and pushed his forearms through the shower tray slot so the COs could handcuff and then remove him, secured, from the shower. As the COs escorted him to the stairs, Young passively refused to walk by laying down on the ground. His ankles then were
After the COs carried Young to a nearby corridor and placed him face down on the ground with his hands and ankles cuffed, four COs stood over him and further restrained his limbs. Young remained motionless on the ground and did not struggle during this process. However, rather than asking Young to submit to a routine strip search and although he had not spit on anyone, the COs placed a spit mask on him and cut off Young‘s clothes to perform a prone strip search.3 Young complained but did not physically resist the search; no contraband was found.
After the search was complete, Young, naked, cuffed, and compliant, was hoisted to his knees and photographed for several minutes to record any injuries he may have sustained during the incident. While the pictures were taken, Lieutenant Kirby left the scene to obtain the requisite authorization for placing Young in a four-point restraint chair. Young repeatedly asked why he was going to be placed in a restraint chair, but received no answer.4 When the restraint
At approximately 8:46 p.m., Young was wheeled into the air-conditionеd cell and left naked, except for the smock on his lap. Upon his arrival, a nurse determined that his straps were too tight and loosened them accordingly. As reflected in the reports generated over the time he spent in the psychiatric observation cell, medical personnel continued to
Later in the morning, Young was still naked in the chair and became agitated because of his continued restraint. Upset, he told the COs that he would “act out” when released. J.A. 604. Because he was “loud” and “making demands,” prison officials declined to remove him from the restraint chair. J.A. 196. He was finally released a couple hours later once officials were satisfied that he had calmed down.
All told, Young was confined in the restraint chair from approximately 8:46 p.m. to approximately 10:30 a.m. the next morning—a nearly fourteen-hour period that significantly exceeded the two-hour maximum recommended by the chair‘s manufacturer and the eight-hour maximum, absent special authorization, permitted by the prison‘s regulations. See J.A. 180. Upon release, Young was shaking uncontrollably and repeatedly complained that he was “cоld down to his bones” because of the air conditioning blowing on his naked body for fourteen hours. J.A. 287. His legs were so numb that he could not walk, and he had to be wheeled back to the RHU in the chair.5 As Defendants’
II. Procedural Background
Young initiated suit in March 2010 and, in August 2010, filed an amended complaint, claiming, among other things, that his placement in the restraint chair was purely punitive and constituted excessive force in violation of the Eighth Amendment. The Defendants moved for summary judgment, arguing that their actions were justified by Young‘s extensive disciplinary history. In addition, Young filed a motion to stay the proceedings pending the outcome of an investigative report by the Department of Justice (“DOJ“) regarding the treatment of mentally ill prisoners in the Pennsylvania prison system and also requested that the District Court provide him with funding for a mental health expert.
III. Jurisdiction and Standard of Review
The District Court had jurisdiction pursuant to
IV. Analysis
The main issue presented on appeal is whether the District Court erred by granting summary judgment in favor of the Defendants by concluding that they did not violate Young‘s Eighth Amendment rights when they strapped him in a restraint chair, naked, for fourteen hours, in the absence of any imminent threat of bodily harm to himself or others. Young argues that his placement in the restraint chair constituted use of “excessive force,” relying on thе Supreme
A. The Applicable Eighth Amendment Framework
The Eighth Amendment prohibits the infliction of “cruel and unusual punishments.”
The parties dispute whether Young‘s claims regarding the use of the four-point restraint chair, i.e., a mechanical restraint, fall into the category of excessive force or conditions of confinement, and, as one district court has observed, our “[c]ase law does not provide a clear answer for which anаlysis applies.” Zimmerman v. Schaeffer, 654 F. Supp. 2d 226, 248 (M.D. Pa. 2009). We last addressed the issue of whether the use of a restraint chair constituted an Eighth Amendment violation in Fuentes. However, that case, decided before Hope, is distinguishable on its facts and left open the issue of whether the use of mechanical restraints should be analyzed under the Supreme Court‘s excessive force or conditions of confinement jurisprudence.
In Fuentes, the inmate began kicking his cell door and yelling for a CO, while complaining that another inmate urinated in his cell. 206 F.3d at 339. The COs cuffed Fuentes through his food slot and entered his cell to conduct a search. Id. A struggle ensued, and the COs eventually wrestled Fuentes to the floor. Id. Fuentes continued to yell while one CO held him on the ground as another cuffed his legs. Id. At the same time, the Assistant Warden authorized use of the restraint chair for eight hours, in accord with the prison‘s regulations. Id. at 339, 340. Fuentes argued that use of the restraint chair was purely punitive and violated his Eighth Amendment rights because he was no longer a threat
Despite some facial similarities to Young‘s case, the facts of Fuentes are sufficiently different that its holding is of limited applicability here for three reasons. First, Fuentes’ placement in the restraint chair occurred contemporaneously with the physical altercation with the COs. That is, the chair was an instrument used by prison officials to subdue an actively combative prisoner. In contrast, Young never engaged in a physical altercation and was placed in the restraint chair while entirely docile.
Second, Fuentes’ placement in the restraint chair was in accord with prison regulations, as he posed an immediate threat to the COs, and he was released after eight hours. Young, on the other hand, was not an immediate threat to himself or others, as he was shackled and face down on the ground, and there is no evidence that any prison official authorized Young‘s confinement in the restraint chair in excess of the eight-hour maximum otherwise permitted under the prison regulations. See Oral Argument at 44:01-49:49, available at http://www2.ca3.usсourts.gov/oralargument/audio/13-4057Youngv.Martin,%20et.al.mp3.
Finally, Fuentes does not answer the question of what legal framework applies in the face of a claim that the use of
In Hope, the Supreme Court specifically addressed the issue of whether the use of mechanical restraints constituted cruel and unusual punishment. Larry Hope, an Alabama prisoner, fell asleep during a “morning bus ride to [his] chain gang‘s worksite.” Hope, 536 U.S. at 734. He “was less than prompt in responding to an order to get off the bus” and eventually got into a “wrestling match with a guard.” Id. Hope was handcuffеd, placed in leg irons, and transported back to the prison where he was cuffed on a “hitching post.” Id. “The guards made him take off his shirt, and he remained shirtless all day while the sun burned his skin.” Id. at 734-35. He was chained to the post for seven hours and was given water only once, denied bathroom breaks, and taunted by the guards. Id. at 735.
After noting that “unnecessary and wanton inflictions of pain are those that are totally without penological justification,” the Supreme Court concluded that, on the facts alleged by Hope, “the Eighth Amendment violation is obvious.” Id. at 737-38 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). The Court explained:
Any safety concerns had long since abated by the time petitioner was handcuffed to the hitching post because Hope had already been subdued, handcuffed, placed in leg irons,
and transported back to the prison. He was separated from his work squad and not given the opportunity to return to work. Despite the clear lack of an emergency situation, the respondents knowingly subjected him to a substantial risk of physical harm, to unnecessary pain caused by the handcuffs and the restricted position of confinement for a 7-hour period, to unnecessary exposure to the heat of the sun, to prolonged thirst and taunting, and to a deprivation of bathroom breaks that created a risk of particular discomfort and humiliation. The use of the hitching post under these circumstances violated the “basic concept underlying the Eighth Amendment[, which] is nothing less than the dignity of man.” Trop v. Dulles, 356 U.S. 86, 100 (1958). This punitive treatment amounts to gratuitous infliction of “wanton and unnecessary” pаin that our precedent clearly prohibits.
Id. at 738 (footnote omitted).
The Defendants do not dispute that Hope controls as to which Eighth Amendment test applies to analyze the use of mechanical restraints. See Zimmerman, 654 F. Supp. 2d at 249 (Hope is the controlling case on the “constitutionality of mechanical restraints“). They contend, however, that the Supreme Court in Hope “applied the conditions of confinement/deliberate indifference test of Farmer v. Brennan.” Appellees’ Br. 34-35. We disagree because the language and reasoning of the opinion reflect that the Court, in fact, was applying the excessive force test.
We conclude, under Hope, that Young‘s claims should be analyzed under the excessive force test and that such analysis demonstrates that the District Court‘s grant of summary judgment was in error. We now turn to the task of applying this test to the record before us.8
B. Application of the Excessive Force Test In Light Of Hope
The District Court concluded that there was no Eighth Amendment violation because Young was “known-to-be-violent,” was exposеd to “minimal force,” promised to “act out if released,” and was not punched, kicked or “otherwise manhandl[ed]” by the COs. Young, 2013 WL 5230796, at *13. We conclude from our independent review of the videotape and record evidence that the District Court failed to draw all reasonable inferences in Young‘s favor and that, when those inferences are properly drawn, there are genuine disputes of material fact as to whether the Defendants’ use of the restraint chair in this case violated the Eighth Amendment.
Force that is used “maliciously and sadistically for the very purpose of causing harm” violates the Eighth
As applied to mechanical restraints, the Supreme Court in Hope identified particular criteria relevant to the use of excessive force test, holding that (1) where the inmate had “already been subdued, handcuffed, [and] placed in leg irons,” and (2) there was a “clear lack of an emergency situation” such that “[a]ny safety concerns had long since abated,” then (3) subjecting the inmate to “substantial risk of physical harm” and “unnecessary pain” serves no penological justification. Hope, 536 U.S. at 738; see also Rhodes, 452 U.S. at 346 (“Among ‘unnecessary and wanton’ inflictions of pain are those that are ‘totally without penological justification.‘“) (quoting Gregg v. Georgia, 428 U.S. 153, 183 (1976)). Measured by this yardstick, Young has raised genuine disputes of material fact for a jury to ascertain whether he suffered an Eighth Amendment violation.
First, like the inmate in Hope, it appears that Young was already subdued when subjected to mechanical restraint. He was not violent, combative, or self-destructive at any point during the incident leading up to his prolonged confinement in the restraint chair. On the contrary, he was safely secured and shackled after voluntarily complying with the COs’ instructions to step into the shower. And immediately prior to being placed in the restraint chair, he was naked and subdued,
While the District Court found that Young‘s threats of future harm were sufficient to justify his extended placement in the restraint chair, the record, when drawing all inferences in Young‘s favor, supports a contrary interpretation. Video recording reflects that after being strapped in the chair for nearly eight hours, Young did comment that he would likely be placed back in the restraint chair because “that‘s just how it is,” J.A. 196, and that, following the stress of nearly fourteen hours of confinement, he was agitated and told two COs he would “act out” when released, J.A. 604. When considered on the whole, however, any number of reasonable inferences could be drawn in Young‘s favor from these statements, not the least of which being (1) that the Defendants had consistently used the chair to punish Young, and (2) that Young was upset and angry about an unjustified, punitive confinement.
Second, there is ample evidence that the events of September 20th did not rise to the level of an “emergency situation,” Hope, 536 U.S. at 738, despite the District Court‘s characterization of “a highly energized situation,” Young, 2013 WL 5230796, at *5 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). Young only left his cell because a CO inadvertently opened his cell door—far from a prison break; the incident lasted a mere seven minutes, during which two
Finally, there is a dispute of fact as to whether, despite the lack of an emergency situation and the evidence that Young was already subdued, the prison officials exposed Young to a “substantial risk of physical harm” and “unnecessary pain” by placing him in the restraint chair. See id. The prison‘s own regulations authorize use of the restraint chair only for “protection of self or others,” J.A. 626, to “prevent an inmate from injuring [himself] or other persons,” J.A. 629, and to “safely restrain a combative or self-destructive person,” id. Yet the COs and prison officials not only placed Young in the restraint chair but did so for nearly fourteen hours, far exceeding the eight-hour maximum permitted without speciаl authorization. See Hope, 536 U.S. at 738.
At the outset, Young‘s restraints were so tight that he cried out in pain, and during the extended period he remained in the restraint chair, Young was naked, with his genitals partially exposed and an air conditioner blowing cold air on him. When he was finally released from this extreme confinement, Young was shaking uncontrollably and complained that he was “cold down to his bones.” J.A. 287. His legs, numb from the restricted position his body was forced to endure over fourteen hours, could no longer hold his weight and he had to be wheeled back to the RHU. On this
In sum, applying the use of excessive force test, analyzing the record under the criteria identified in Hope, and drawing all inferences in favor of Young as the nonmoving party, we cannot say that “there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
C. The Issue of Qualified Immunity
The Defendants also ask us—in a single sentence—to affirm on the ground of qualified immunity. The District Court did not reach the issue and the availability of the defense was not briefed on appeal. In Hope, the Supreme Court held that the officers were not entitled to qualified immunity because their actions violated “clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.” 536 U.S. at 739 (quoting Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 800, 818 (1982)) (quotation marks omitted). We will leave this issue for the District Court to address in the first instance on remand, considering (1) whether “the stаte of the law” in 2009, including Hope, gave the Defendants “fair warning that their alleged treatment of [Young] was unconstitutional,” 536 U.S. at 741, and (2) whether Young‘s confinement in the restraint chair violated prison regulations of which the Defendants were aware, see, e.g., id. at 743-44 (prison officials’ violation of Department of Corrections’ regulations for restraining inmates at a hitching
D. Young‘s Remaining Arguments
Young also argues that the District Court abused its discretion by refusing to stay the summary judgment proceedings pending the issuance of the DOJ‘s final investigative report and erred in refusing to allocаte funds for him to retain a mental health expert. We review for abuse of discretion the District Court‘s denial of Young‘s motion to stay and its refusal to allocate funds for an expert. See Bechtel Corp. v. Local 215, Laborers’ Int‘l Union of N. Am., 544 F.2d 1207, 1215 (3d Cir. 1976) (a district court may stay proceedings “[i]n the exercise of its sound discretion“); see also
The District Court did not abuse its discretion when it denied Young‘s motion to stay the proceedings.9 At that
Notes
(1) the interest of the plaintiffs in proceeding expeditiously with this litigation or any particular aspect of it, and the potential prejudice to plaintiffs of a delay; (2) the burden which any particular aspect of the proceedings may impose on defendants; (3) the convenience of the court in the mаnagement of its cases, and the efficient use of judicial resources; (4) the interests of persons not parties to the civil litigation; and (5) the interest of the public in the pending civil and criminal litigation.
While these factors provide a useful analytical framework when deciding whether to stay a civil case pending the outcome of criminal proceedings, Young does not cite, and we have not found, any authority applying them in the context of a motion for stay pending an agency‘s investigative report. See, e.g., id. at 55 (denying stay because there was “no basis in law for the notion that defendants in a criminal prosecution, antitrust or otherwise, have a due process right to stay proceedings in related civil actions lest they be forced to defend themselves on two legal frоnts simultaneously“). Indeed, all of the authority cited by Young is in the context of parallel criminal proceedings. See, e.g., SEC v. Dresser Indus., Inc., 628 F.2d 1368, 1376 (D.C. Cir. 1980); Walsh Secs., Inc. v. Cristo Prop. Mgmt., Ltd., 7 F. Supp. 2d 523, 527, 529 (D.N.J. 1998). Given the very different issues and interests implicated by such parallel proceedings, we decline to import that framework here.
admission, was “his Eighth Amendment, excessive force challenge to [his] fourteen hour restraint in a restrictive movement chair” at SCI-Greene. J.A. 829 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). The District Court properly concluded that the DOJ‘s preliminary investigative report regarding SCI-Cresson was “irrelevant and immaterial to that sole claim” and that Young effectively requested an “indefinite” stay because there was no indication when the DOJ‘s final report would be issued. Id. at 829, 839. While this appeal was pending, however, the DOJ issued its final investigative report, detаiling the “dehumanizing and cruel” conditions that attend the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections’ (“DOC“) use of solitary confinement at six prison facilities, including SCI-Greene, where prisoners are reportedly confined to a cell, less than 100 square feet, for twenty-three hours a day, exposed to unsanitary and inhospitable conditions, and subjected to the excessive use of restraints. Investigation of the Pa. Dep‘t of Corr. Use of Solitary Confinement on Prisoners with Serious Mental Illness and/or Intellectual Disabilities, Appellant‘s Br., Ex. C, at 4, 9-11.10 The report observes that solitary confinement commonly includes the “[u]nnecessary and excessive use of
Young argues on appeal that the final DOJ report is both relevant and admissible. The report reflects, among other things, that rather than providing mental health treatment, “staff members routinely respond to [a] prisoner exhibiting symptoms of . . . mental illness by making his living conditions even more inhospitable,” including 24/7 confinement; denying the prisoner bedding material, clothing, and running water; restricting prisoners to even smaller cells; and subjecting them to the “excessive use of restraints.” Id. at 10-11. It also describes that during their solitary confinement, the prisoners’ senses are assaulted with foul smells from the “inadequate sanitation and ventilation“—including the stench of human excrement that mentally ill prisoners smear on the wall and which might rеmain for days—and loud noises from the “yelling and banging of neighboring prisoners.” Id. at 9-10. According to the report, most cells have no windows, depriving prisoners of any natural light, though they never enjoy a respite, even at night, from the relentless overhead lighting within their cells. Id. at 9. Five days a week, those who are willing to submit to a strip search are “led by tether,” “arms and legs shackled,” to “an empty and caged outdoor pen” for a single hour. Id. at 9-10. Solitary confinement includes a total restriction on contact visitations, id. at 10, which means that the only human touch these inmates experience is from the COs shackling them, and a restriction to a single monthly non-contact visitation, id., which means that, but for an hour a
According to the report, the use of solitary confinement on mentally ill prisoners “exacerbates their mental illness and leads to serious psychological and physiological harms,” “including psychosis, trauma, severe depression, serious self-injury, and suicide,” id. at 3, 7, and as a result of their prolonged isolation, the prisoners express an inability “to conform their conduct to the prison‘s rules in a way that would allow them out of their isolation cell” and “accumulate[] years of disciplinary time . . . fear[ing] they [will] never be returned to general population,” id. at 8. Having been denied mental health services, and with their mental illness exacerbated by prolonged solitary confinement, the prisoners are reportedly subjected to excessive restraints as a form of punishment, with “more than 260 full-body restraint incidents” over eighteen months, of which “almost 75% lasted longer than 7 hours, and 15% lasted longer than 12 hours.” Id. at 11.
Young notes the many parallels between the findings in the final report and his own experience, pointing out that not only was he subjected to excessive restraint, lasting almost fourteen hours, but also that he suffers from many forms of serious mental illness,11 that his mental illness has
The Defendants do not dispute that the report is a public document nor do they challenge its trustworthiness, but they argue that it makes “general” and “inadmissible” legal conclusions. Appellees’ Br. 29. The Defendants also argue that admission of the DOJ‘s “opinion” that “restraint chair confinement ‘often’ is punitive for severely mentally ill RHU inmates held elsewhere” would be “unduly prejudicial in the most fundamental sense.” Id. at 29-30.
Because the District Court did not address any evidentiary issues pertaining to the final report in deciding Young‘s motion to stay, it should do so on remand, сonsidering whether the report here, to the extent it contains relevant findings and conclusions, constitutes a trustworthy
Finally, we agree with the Defendants that the District Court did not abuse its discretion in denying Young‘s request to appoint a mental health expert pursuant to
V. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the District Court improvidently granted summary judgment in favor of the Defendants by failing to apply the Supreme Court‘s
