OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff Ronald Lipton brought this action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against defendants the County of Orange (the “County”), a municipal corporation, and H. Frank Bigger, Thomas Madden and Antoinette Catletti as administratrix of the Estate of Theodore Catletti (collectively the “individual defendants”) in their *438 individual and official capacities. 1 (Complt.1ffl 8-9.) At all times relevant to the events on which this action is based, the individual defendants occupied the following positions with the County: (1) Bigger was the County’s elected Sheriff; (2) Theodore Catletti was the County’s corrections administrator, holding the rank of Colonel within the Sheriffs department; and (3) Madden was the assistant corrections administrator, holding the rank of Major within the Sheriffs department. (Id. ¶¶ 3, 5-6.) Plaintiff seeks compensatory damages from the County and compensatory and punitive damages from the individual defendants, claiming that defendants’ actions with respect to his pretrial detention and release therefrom constituted a violation of his free speech, due process and equal protection rights secured by the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. 2 (Id. ¶¶ 7, 29.) Specifically, plaintiff contends that defendants retaliated against him for his public criticism of police misconduct by causing or acquiescing in maltreatment by Sheriffs deputies who: (1) kept him in an unheated holding cell while he was wearing only thin jail-issue clothing; (2) deprived him of food and drink except for one sandwich and water given to him on the night he entered defendants’ custody; (3) arbitrarily and capriciously changed his inmate classification and transferred him to the correctional facility on Riker’s Island in New York City (“Riker’s”), where Sheriffs deputies falsely informed the staff that he was a pedophile; (4) physically abused him while they transported him back to the jail from Riker’s; (5) subjected him to an unjustified strip search prior to his release pursuant to an unconstitutional policy of strip searching all pretrial detainees; and (6) released him into cold weather with no jacket or money and refused him access to shelter or a telephone to call for help. (Id. ¶¶ 13,14,17, 20-24.)
Defendants now move for summary judgment pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 56 dismissing plaintiffs Complaint in its entirety, arguing that: (1) the claimed misconduct was de minimis and thus not of a level necessary to support constitutional claims; (2) with respect to the County and the individual defendants in their official capacities, plaintiff has failed to prove that the alleged deprivations were pursuant to a County custom or policy; (3) plaintiffs claims fail to state an equal protection violation; and (4) the individual defendants were not personally involved in the alleged deprivations, and in any event would be entitled to qualified immunity for their actions. (Def. County Mem. Supp. Summ. J. at 12-21, 23-33, 37-38; Defs. Catletti & Madden Mem. Supp. Summ. J. at 6-13; Def. Bigger Mem. Supp. Summ. J. at 4-17.) The County also argues that plaintiffs damages should be limited to nominal or punitive damages because he has failed to make the showing of physical injury *439 required by the Prison Litigation Reform Act (the “PLRA”), 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(e). (Def. County Mem. Supp. Summ. J. at 34-36.)
For the reasons set forth herein, we grant defendants’ motion for summary judgment dismissing all claims contained in the Complaint, except for the retaliatory transfer claim. We deny the County’s motion for summary judgment on the retaliatory transfer claim. We dismiss as redundant the retaliatory transfer claim against the individual defendants in their official capacities. We grant the motions for summary judgment of individual defendants Bigger and Madden dismissing the retaliatory transfer claim against them in their personal capacities. We deny the motion of defendant Catletti dismissing the retaliatory transfer claim against him in his personal capacity. Finally, we conclude that plaintiff may recover compensatory, nominal and/or punitive damages on the retaliatory transfer claim from defendant Catletti, and nominal and compensatory damages from the County.
BACKGROUND
The record and the parties’ submissions reveal the following facts. 3 Plaintiff is a 57 year-old resident of Newburgh, New York, a city that is located within the County. (Def. County Mem. Supp. Summ. J. at 2.) Plaintiff is currently employed as a part-time college boxing instructor, 4 but worked for various law enforcement agen *440 cies in New York and New Jersey as a police officer and prosecutor’s investigator from 1968 until 1987. (Id.; Lipton 7/23/03 Dep. at 35-51, 73.) Plaintiff has long been publicly critical, in the media and the courts, of the actions of numerous law enforcement agencies in the County and surrounding areas. (Compita 10.)
One such example of plaintiffs public criticism of local law enforcement was his lawsuit against the Walden Police Department (“Walden”), a village police department located in the County that had employed him for six months in 1986-1987. (Lipton 7/23/03 Dep. at 63-64.) Plaintiff, a Jewish man, left Walden because he discovered that another officer had drawn swastikas on plaintiffs ticket book and because he did not want to continue covering for the sheriff while the sheriff was having extramarital relations. (Id. at 64, 66-67.) Plaintiff stated that the Walden administration retaliated against him for his failure to assist in the sheriffs infidelities by not giving him work, and by not providing him with assistance in the field when he called for it. (Id. at 67-68.) In 1996, plaintiff brought a federal lawsuit against the village of Walden and its police department alleging police misconduct, harassment and anti-Semitism, which suit was resolved by a confidential settlement. (Id. at 97-98.) Plaintiff has brought numerous other actions against local entities that include pending suits against the Woodstock Police Department, another former employer, for false arrest and malicious prosecution, and the owner of the City of Newburgh’s website for publication of allegedly defamatory statements. (Id. at 97, 99-100,130.)
In August 1996, plaintiff complained about the hiring practices of the Village of Montgomery Police Department to a reporter who incorporated the complaints in an article published in the Middletown Times-Herald. (Compita 10.) The article discussed members of that police department who had also worked for the County Sheriffs department, and criticized a Montgomery practice that allegedly required its police officers to work for a private security company owned by Jack Byrnes, a Montgomery officer and Major in the County Sheriffs department. (Id.; see also Lipton 7/23/03 Dep. at 137-39.) Plaintiff learned of this requirement during a meeting with Byrnes prior to applying for a Montgomery police position, and testified at his deposition that he had informed Byrnes of his objection to that requirement as illegal. (Id. at 140.)
Thereafter, in November 1996, Larry Catletti, who is the son of defendant Cat-letti, a deputy in the County Sheriffs department and a part-time police officer for the Village of Montgomery, stopped plaintiff for speeding on Route 17-K in the Town of Montgomery. (Complt. ¶ 11; Lipton 7/23/03 Dep. at 143-46.) This traffic stop occurred shortly before plaintiff was to testify in his federal lawsuit against the Village of Walden. (Lipton 7/23/03 Dep. at 147-48.) Plaintiff testified that he asked Larry Catletti why he had been stopped, and Catletti answered that it was “for testifying against my friends, asshole.” (Id; see also Lipton 7/25/03 Dep. at 11.) When plaintiff realized who Larry Catletti was, he said “[yjour father works for a jail,” to which Catletti replied that plaintiff “better never wind up there.” (Lipton 7/23/03 Dep. at 148.) Larry Cat-letti then issued plaintiff a speeding ticket, and left the speed box blank. (Id.) The Montgomery Village Court subsequently dismissed the speeding ticket. (Id. at 150.)
Shortly thereafter, plaintiff both sent a letter to and called defendant Bigger expressing his concerns about the ticket and what Larry Catletti had said to him about *441 what would happen if plaintiff came to the County jail. 5 (Id. at 161.) Bigger stated that he would talk to Larry Catletti, and mentioned that defendant Ted Catletti was the jail administrator and was in the room with him. (Id. at 162.) Plaintiff also met alone with Bigger in person, and again expressed his concerns. (Id. at 163.) Bigger promised plaintiff that he would check into the allegations. (Id. at 164.) In a subsequent follow-up conversation, Bigger told plaintiff that he thought the ticket was unwarranted, but that there was nothing he could do about it. 6 (Id.) Plaintiff followed up again by sending Bigger a written letter in March 1997 reminding him of Catletti’s threats; that letter was also sent to the New York State and New York City Departments of Corrections. (Id. at 165-66.) Plaintiff received no further response to that letter. (Id. at 166.)
Thereafter, on February 14, 1999, plaintiff and his son were arrested in Ulster County on a subsequently dismissed charge of criminal weapons possession 7 in the third degree in violation of N.Y. PENAL LAW § 265.02. 8 (Matera Aff. ¶ 1.) Pending bail, plaintiff was detained in the Ulster County jail until Ulster County officials transferred him to the custody of defendant County in the evening of February 17, 1999 on new charges of aggravated sexual abuse in the third degree in violation of N.Y. PENAL LAW § 130.66. (Complt. ¶ 13; Lipton 7/23/03 Dep. at 169-70, 173; Def. County Rule 56.1 Stmt., Ex. M.) Upon their arrival at the County jail, following the initial intake processing, plaintiff and his son were placed in a cold, unheated holding cell for approximately one hour although they were wearing only *442 thin jail-issue garments. (Lipton 7/25/03 Dep. at 54-55, 61.) Plaintiff complained to nearby deputies about the cold, and of numbness in his chest and requested a blanket and medical attention, but was given neither. (Id. at 59, 61-62.) After approximately one hour, Joseph Ryan, a Captain in the Sheriffs department and shift commander for the evening, moved plaintiff and his son to a heated cell and provided them each with a sandwich and drinks. 9 (Id. at 73-74; see also Ryan Dep. at 12.) Plaintiff then thanked Ryan for “treating us as human beings.” (Lipton 7/25/OS Dep. at 75.)
The following morning, February 18, 1999, two officers approached the cell occupied by plaintiff and his son. (Id. at 82.) The officers, one of whom is named Kos-mogiannis, informed them that plaintiffs son would be placed into the general inmate population, 10 and that plaintiff was “ ‘going somewhere else and that’s the present from the colonel, from Colonel Catletti.’ ” (Id. at 83; see also Def. County Mem. Supp. Summ. J. 18.) They told plaintiff that he was being moved “as a present from the colonel for giving his son a hard time.” (Lipton 7/25/03 Dep. at 85.) The officers also stated that the “major and the colonel wanted [plaintiff] transferred somewhere else.” (Id. at 86.) Plaintiff immediately asked to speak to Bigger, but the officers informed him that Bigger did not want to see him. 11 (Id. at 86-87.) Shortly thereafter, an unidentified officer came to the cell and told plaintiff that he was being transferred to Riker’s as “ ‘a present from the colonel’ ” and because “the major and the colonel” want him sent there. 12 (Id. at 91-92.) The officer also told plaintiff that his classification had been changed and that “this jail can no longer house someone like you.” (Id. at 92.) Later that morning, two Sheriffs deputies, Curtis and Price, transported plaintiff to Riker’s. (Id. at 94; see also Lipton 8/5/03 Dep. at 43-44.) Plaintiff had no complaints about the car trip to Riker’s. (Lipton 7/25/03 Dep. at 99-100.) It is undisputed that the transfer was made at Catletti’s direction and approved by the State of New York. 13 (Def. County Rule 56.1 Stmt. ¶¶ 4-5, 8.)
*443 Upon their arrival at Riker’s, the County deputies transferred plaintiff to the custody of Riker’s corrections officers. (Lipton 7/25/03 Dep. at 101.) Plaintiff noticed that the paperwork given to the Riker’s officer contained a statement to the effect of “claims to have been a police officer, this is untrue, do not believe him.” (Id.) We note that the transfer form submitted to the Court as part of the record states that plaintiff “claims to be retired police officer — information is unfounded.” (Def. County Rule 56.1 Stmt., Ex. K.) Plaintiff also claims that he overheard the County officers tell the Riker’s officers that he was a pedophile. 14 (Lipton 7/25/03 Dep. at 102.)
Plaintiff also testified that the Riker’s officers asked the County officers when plaintiffs next court date was, and the County officers replied that there was no court date and plaintiff was to remain at Riker’s indefinitely, despite the fact that the County officers had with them a form stating that plaintiff was scheduled for an appearance in the Newburgh Town Court on February 22. (Id.) Plaintiff then asked the Riker’s officers to call the Newburgh court, and explained that the County officers were lying when they statéd that he was not a former police officer, and was a pedophile. (Id.) After a brief discussion between the Riker’s officers, they called the court and learned of plaintiffs scheduled court date. (Id. at 103.) At this point, the County officers ran out of the building, despite the Riker’s staffs request for them to stay, and the Riker’s officers stated that ‘“there is something very wrong here.’ ” (Id. at 103,106.)
. Plaintiff remained at Riker’s until two County officers, Tim Mahoney and John Byman, picked him up on the evening of February 19, 1999. (Complt. ¶ 19; Lipton 8/5/03 Dep. at 5-6.) Plaintiff claims that prior to the car trip, Mahoney asked him, “ ‘Mo you’re the Walden cop,’ ” to which plaintiff replied in the affirmative. (Lipton 8/5/03 Dep. at 6-7.) Plaintiff testified that Mahoney and Byman physically abused him during the car ride from Riker’s to the County jail as Mahoney, the driver, slammed on the brakes hard, repeatedly and without cause, resulting in plaintiffs head and shoulders being slammed into the partition that separated the front and rear seats of the police car, causing him pain. 15 (Id. at 11, 13, 16.) Plaintiff testified that Mahoney “slammed on the brakes without any vehicle or traffic necessity about four times” early in the trip. (Id. at 14, 18.) Plaintiff was in handcuffs and ankle restraints during the trip and was not wearing a seat belt. 16 (Id. at 14-15.)
*444 Upon his return to the County Jail, plaintiff learned that bail had been posted for him with the Newburgh Town Court by friends and relatives (Lipton 7/25/03 Dep. at 136, 144, 147) and that he was to be released. (Lipton 8/5/03 Dep. at 21.) Plaintiff then requested the return of his possessions that had been taken from him during the initial jail intake process; he then discovered that some were missing. (Id.) A young Sheriffs deputy then asked plaintiff to step into a corridor area, where he told plaintiff to take off all of his clothes for a strip search. 17 (Id. at 21-22.) When plaintiff asked why he was béing strip searched, given that he just was in the custody of two deputies who had searched him before putting him the car, the officer stated: “ T hear you tape record cops. You give cops a hard time.’ ” (Id. at 22.) When plaintiff asked for a superior officer, the officer told plaintiff: “ ‘Take off your clothes or you’re never going to get out of the jail.’ ” (Id.) Plaintiff removed his clothes and bent over at the officer’s request, but continued to complain, to which the officer responded: “ ‘That’s the way it is at OC Jail. You don’t like it, don’t come here.’” (Id. at 23-26.) Plaintiff then dressed in pants, a shirt, shoes and socks — his heavy jacket that he had worn at the time of his arrest had not been returned to him by the jail staff. (Id. at 27-28.)
Plaintiff then began to exit the jail. (Id. at 29.) While on his way out, he asked a Sheriffs employee to permit him to make a phone call to his son to get a ride home; that request was denied. (Id.) Plaintiff then told the employee that he felt weak and sick, it was freezing outside and that he did not have a coat, and that he lacked change or a calling card; he asked the employee to either call plaintiffs son or allow him to wait inside. 18 (Id.) The employee responded by telling plaintiff to: “Get the fuck outside” and also denied plaintiffs request to see a supervisor. (Id. at 29-30.) Plaintiff testified that it was below 30 degrees that February night. (Id. at 30.) He attempted unsuccessfully to use the pay phone outside of the jail to call for a ride, and then tried to walk to the nearby Goshen Diner before he became dizzy and his knees gave out after approximately fifteen steps. (Id. at 31-32.) He went back to the phone and made another unsuccessful attempt to call his family. (Id. at 31.) Plaintiff then banged on the jail door, but personnel would not let him back in. (Id.) Plaintiff then blacked out, and he woke up to his son standing over him; his son subsequently removed him from the jail premises and took him home. (Id.) Thereafter, plaintiff commenced this action on February 1, 2002. (Co'mplt.)
DISCUSSION
I. Standard of Review
Under Fed. R. Civ. P. 56, summary judgment may be granted where there are no genuine issues of material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
See
Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). The
*445
burden rests on the movant to demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of material fact.
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
II. Whether Plaintiff’s Substantive Claims State Cognizable Constitutional Violations
With respect to the substance of plaintiffs claims, defendants, noting the traditional latitude that the courts accord to corrections officials in the administration of their facilities, 19 argue that any injury arising from plaintiffs cell temperature and food deprivation claims is de minimis and cannot form the basis of a constitutional violation. (Def. County Mem. Supp. Summ. J. at 12-16, 23-24.) Defendants also argue that the decision to transfer plaintiff to Riker’s was supported by legitimate penological reasons and that there is no admissible evidence that it was an improper punitive or retaliatory transfer. (Id. at 16-22.) Finally, defendants also contend that they had no duty to plaintiff upon his release that would form the basis for a constitutional violation. (Id. at 24-26.) Plaintiff argues in response, albeit in a somewhat skeletal manner, that actions by prison officials taken in retaliation for the exercise of First Amendment rights are actionable, even if they are supported by otherwise legitimate reasons. (PI. Mem. Opp. Summ. J. at 2-3.) We address these arguments in turn.
A. Plaintiff’s Cell Temperature, Food Deprivation, Strip Search and Post-Discharge Claims
In their Memorandum, defendants argue extensively that plaintiffs allegations in his Complaint arising from the cold cell temperature, the alleged food deprivation and his release in weakened condition into cold weather fail to state cognizable constitutional violations. (Def. County. Mem. Supp. Summ. J. at 12-16, 23-26.) Defendants argue similarly with respect to plaintiffs equal protection claim set forth in the ad damnum clause of the Complaint. (Id. at 37-38.) Defendants also argue that there is no evidence of custom or policy supporting plaintiffs claims with respect to the strip search. (Id. at 30-31.) Plaintiff does not address these arguments in his Memorandum, instead choosing to confine the rather sparse legal analysis therein to the alleged retaliatory transfer to *446 Riker’s. (PL Mem. Opp. Summ. J. at 1-3.) Defendants argue in their Reply Memorandum that plaintiff, under this Court’s decision in Jessamy, has abandoned any claim that these allegations amounted to actionable constitutional violations. (Def. County Reply Mem. Supp. Summ. J. at 1-2.)
This Court may, and generally will, deem a claim abandoned when a plaintiff fails to respond to a defendant’s arguments that the claim should be dismissed.
See, e.g., Jessamy,
We do conclude that plaintiff has abandoned any independent constitutional claims arising from the cold cell temperature, the alleged food deprivation, his alleged release in weakened condition into cold weather and the Equal Protection Clause. Nevertheless, the Complaint and plaintiffs Memorandum make clear that the gravamen of his claims is defendants’ alleged retaliation for the exercise of his First Amendment rights. (Complt. ¶¶ 27, 29; PI. Mem. Opp. Summ. J. at 2-3.) Moreover, plaintiffs briefing omission does not erase these factual events from the record—it means only that they cannot serve by themselves as independent factual predicates for constitutional claims. Accordingly, so long as plaintiffs allegations with respect to those events are supported by admissible evidence, they remain relevant proof of animus under the appropriate analytical step in the context of plaintiffs claims of retaliation for the exercise of First Amendment rights.
We treat plaintiffs claims with respect to the alleged pre-release strip search separately because, viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiff, those allegations present an appalling abuse of the power afforded to corrections officers that is too serious an affront to a decent society to dismiss solely on the basis of a briefing failure, without a review of th'eir merit.
See Bell,
B. Plaintiff’s Retaliatory Transfer Claims
Defendants next argue that plaintiffs classification change and retaliatory transfer claims should be dismissed because: (1) there is no admissible evidence of an improper motive for the transfer; (2) a legitimate penological reason existed for the transfer; and (3) he had no state law-created liberty interest in avoiding the transfer. (Def. County Mem. Supp. Summ. J. at 16-22; Def. Bigger Mem. Supp. Summ. J. at 9-14; Defs. Catletti & Madden Mem. Supp. Summ. J. at 10-12.) We address each contention in turn.
The Second Circuit has held that the transfer of an inmate, including a pretrial detainee, “ ‘to less amenable and more restrictive quarters for nonpunitive reasons’ is not a right protected by the due process clause itself.”
Covino v. Vt. Dep’t of Corr.,
We must approach plaintiffs retaliation claims “ “with skepticism and particular care,’ because ‘virtually any adverse action taken against a prisoner by a prison official — even those otherwise not rising to the level of a constitutional riolation — can be characterized as a constitutionally proscribed retaliatory act.’ ”
Davis v. Goord,
To establish a prima facie case of First Amendment retaliation, a plaintiff must establish “(1) that the speech or conduct at issue was protected, (2) that the defendant took adverse action against the plaintiff, and (3) that there was a causal connection between the protected speech and the adverse action.” ... Conclusory allegations or denials are ordiparily not sufficient to defeat a motion for. summary judgment when the moving party has set out a documentary case.... Regardless of the presence of retaliatory motive, however, a defendant may be entitled to summary judgment if he can show dual motivation, i.e., that even without the improper motivation the alleged retaliatory action would have occurred.... Plaintiff has the initial burden of showing that an improper motive played a substantial part in defendant’s action. The burden then shifts to defendant to show it would have taken exactly the same action absent the improper motive.
Scott v. Coughlin,
1. Whether There is Admissible Evidence of an Improper Motive
Defendants first argue that there is no admissible evidence of an improper motive for the transfer, thus dictating that summary judgment be entered in their favor.
23
Specifically, they contend that the statements of Officer Kosmogiannis and the unidentified corrections officers about Cat-letti’s intentions are inadmissible hearsay not within the purview of Fed. R. Evid. 801(d)(2)(D), which provides that “[a] statement is not hearsay if ... offered against a party and is ... a statement by
*449
the party’s agent or servant concerning a matter within the scope of the agency or employment, made during the existence of the relationship.” (Def. County Mem. Supp. Summ. J. at 17-19.) Relying primarily on
Evans v. Port Auth. of N.Y.,
Under Rule 801(d)(2)(D), a “sufficient foundation to support the introduction of vicarious admissions ... requires only that a party establish (1) the existence of the agency relationship, (2) that the statement was made during the course of the relationship, and (3) that it relates to a matter within the scope of the agency.”
Pappas v. Middle Earth Condo. Ass’n,
Defendants rely on
Evans
for the proposition that “[statements of low-level employees who were not part of the decision-making process are not admissible as vicarious admissions” under Rule 801(d)(2)(D). (Def. County Mem. Supp. Summ. J. at 18-19.) Defendants read
Evans
too broadly in its applicability to this case. In
Evans,
an employment discrimination case alleging racial discrimination and retaliation under Title VII and 42 U.S.C. § 1981, the plaintiff proffered as evidence in opposition to a summary judgment motion his own affidavit, with this statement: “ ‘Rodrigo Ortiz [a co-worker] told me that Ernesto Butcher [the manager] told him that I never would be promoted in the Tunnels, Bridges & Terminals Department so long as he had any control over TB
&
T because I had complained about racial discrimination and inculpated him as part of my complaint.’ ”
Mindful of the discretionary nature of evidentiary rulings,
24
we find
Evans
distinguishable and defendants’ reliance on it
*450
overbroad.
Evans
is distinguishable because unlike the co-worker in that case, the declarant Kosmogiannis and the other corrections officers here had a “significant role in the ... decision. at issue” because they clearly were acting within the scope of their employment at the County jail in executing the order of Catletti to transfer plaintiff to Riker’s. Thus, although they may not have made the transfer decision, their participation was instrumental in its execution and their statements are admissible against the County under Rule 801(d)(2)(D).
See Sadrud-Din v. City of Chicago,
2. Whether Defendants Would Have Transferred Plaintiff to Riker’s Irrespective of Any Retaliatory Motive
Defendants next argue that even in the presence of admissible evidence of retaliatory motive, plaintiffs claim fails because there were proper reasons for the decision to transfer plaintiff. (Def. County Mem. Supp. Summ. J. at 19-20; Def. Bigger Mem. Supp. Summ. J. at 11-14.) Once plaintiff has introduced admissible evidence of a retaliatory motive, “[t]he burden then shifts to defendant to show it would have taken exactly the same action absent the improper motive.”
Coughlin,
.Defendants have proffered evidence tending to establish a non-retaliatory purpose for plaintiffs transfer to Riker’s. At his deposition, Madden testified that he understood from post-transfer discussions with Catletti that Catletti petitioned the State for permission to transfer plaintiff to Riker’s because of the potential for liability and conflicts occasioned by plaintiffs presence in the jail, given his history with *451 County law enforcement officers. (Madden Dep. at 16-17, 27, 31-34, 65-66.) Madden understood that Catletti wanted to eliminate any direct control that he had over plaintiffs environment in order to shield the County from any potential liability. (Id. at 16.) Madden also testified that transferring inmates to Riker’s did not cost the County any money, while it would have had to pay board expenses to transfer plaintiff to a closer facility such as Putnam County. (Id. at 34.) He testified that numerous individuals were transferred to Riker’s since 1992, but he was not sure if any were active or retired police officers like plaintiff. (Id. at 29-30.) See also supra note 13.
Based on this evidence, defendants argue that plaintiff was transferred to Riker’s for the legitimate penological reason of avoiding litigation stemming from an already conflict-ridden situation, and doing so in a cost-effective manner. (Def. County Mem. Supp. Summ. J. at 20; Defs. Catletti & Madden Mem. Supp. Summ. J. at 5.)
See In re Soliman,
We conclude that there is a genuine issue of material fact precluding a grant of summary judgment to defendants on the retaliation claim. Although defendants may have advanced a legitimate pe-nological reason for plaintiffs transfer, we cannot say
as a matter of law
that defendants would have transferred plaintiff to Riker’s absent a retaliatory motive. In this case, the very conduct offered to justify the transfer was the same constitutionally protected conduct that would have created the motive for the alleged retaliation. In other words, there was no basis for transferring plaintiff to Riker’s which was independent of his protected conduct. To deny plaintiff a trial on what plainly is a jury question of pretext involving credibility would ensnare him in a Kafkaesque trap of circular reasoning.
See Graham,
III. Whether the Complaint Should be Dismissed Against the County and the Official Capacity Defendants Because Plaintiff Has Failed to Show a Custom or Policy of Retaliation or That Defendant Catletti is a Policymaker
Defendants next contend that the retaliation claim should be dismissed against the County and the individual defendants in their official capacities because plaintiff did not prove that there exists a municipal custom or policy of retaliation. (Def. County Mem. Supp. Summ. J. at 31.) Defendants also contend that plaintiff has not proven that defendant Catletti, the official who made the transfer decision, is a final policymaker whose decisions would give rise to municipal liability.
(Id.
at 32-33.) We deny defendants’ motion for summary judgment dismissing plaintiffs claims against the County. We do, however, dismiss as redundant the claims against the individual defendants in their official capacities.
See, e.g., Baines v. Masiello,
Section 1983 applies to municipalities and other local government units.
Monell v. Dep’t of Soc. Servs.,
A. Whether the County Has a Custom or Policy of Retaliation
Defendants first contend that plaintiff has not alleged or proven that the County has a custom or policy of retaliatory transfers. (Def. County Mem. Supp. Summ. J. at 27, 31.) Indeed, the only evidence in the record of any such custom or policy are conclusory statements to that effect in plaintiffs affidavit, which aver: (1) “[t]he Orange County Jail has a custom or policy in effect wherein police officers who speak out against other police officers are harassed and physically abused”; (2) “[t]his policy or custom includes harassment and abuse of police officers incarcerated there who criticize the Sheriff of the County of Orange and the jail administrators”; and (3) “[a]t a minimum, the Orange County Jail has a policy in effect wherein I would be personally physically abused as a result *453 of my exercise of my First Amendment right to free speech.” (Lipton Aff. ¶¶ 2-4.) Plaintiff supports these conclusory allegations of custom or policy only by citing examples of his own mistreatment by various jail personnel. (Id. ¶¶ 5-8.)
It is well settled that the “policy or custom used to anchor liability need not be contained in an explicitly adopted rule or regulation,” and that “[cjonstitutional deprivations actionable under § 1983 may be ‘visited pursuant to governmental “custom” even though such custom has not received formal approval through the body’s official decisionmaking channels.’”
Sorlucco v. New York City Police Dep’t,
We conclude that plaintiff has not proven the existence of a municipal custom or policy of retaliatory transfer. “Conclusory allegations of a municipality’s pattern or policy of unconstitutional behavior are insufficient to establish a
Monell
claim, absent evidence to support such an allegation.”
McAllister v. New York City Police Dep’t,
B. Whether Defendant Catletti Was a Final Policymaker Under § 1983
Defendants next contend that Catletti, the jail administrator who made the decision to transfer plaintiff to Riker’s, was not a final policymaker whose actions are considered a policy or custom leading to municipal liability under § 1983. (Def. County Mem. Supp. Summ. J. at 31-33.) They argue that as a matter of state law, the final policy maker at the jail was not Cat-letti, but rather Bigger, who was not involved in the transfer decision.
(Id.
at 32.) Plaintiff, relying on statements of fact in the Second Circuit’s recent opinion in
Catletti ex rel. Estate of Catletti v. Rampe,
*454 The record reveals the following additional undisputed facts relevant to this inquiry. At all relevant times, Catletti held the rank of Colonel and was jail administrator for the County. (Madden Dep. at 9.) Madden held the rank of Major and served as assistant jail administrator to Catletti, who was his immediate superior. (Id. at 17, 53.) Catletti in turn reported, to Bigger, who was elected Sheriff of the County in 1995. (Bigger Dep. at 5.) Cat-letti was the official who made the decision to transfer plaintiff to Riker’s. (Madden Dep. at 16.) Bigger did not learn about this decision until Catletti told him about it one week after it happened. 25 (Bigger Dep. at 17-18.) Catletti did not tell Bigger why he transferred plaintiff to Riker’s, and he was not required by County policy or procedure to do so. (Id. at 22-28.) Bigger testified that Catletti would have been responsible for responding to complaints made by plaintiff to the state department of corrections. (Id. at 25.)
“Actions by an individual with final decision-making authority in a municipality constitute official policy for purposes of a § 1983 claim.”
Anthony,
Defendants rely primarily on the Second Circuit’s decision in
Jeffes
for the proposition that the sheriff is
the
final policymaker at a New York county’s jail. (D'ef. County Mem. Supp. Summ. J. at 32-33.) In
Jeffes,
a § 1983 case wherein the plaintiff corrections officers alleged that the defendant sheriff retaliated against them for reporting wrongdoing at the jail to the public and federal investigators, the sheriff argued that he was not the final policymaker because the civil service commission retained jurisdiction over personnel and employment matters.
The bulk of plaintiffs’ claims center on harassment, intimidation, threats, and endangerment of their fives. The County has pointed us to no provision of State or local law that requires a sheriff to answer to any other entity in the management of his jail staff with respect to the existence or enforcement of a code of silence. We conclude that Sheriff Barnes was, as a'matter of law, the County’s final policymaking official with ■ respect to the conduct of his staff members toward fellow officers who exercise their First Amendment rights to speak publicly or to inform government investigators of their co-workers’ wrongdoing.
Id.
at 61. Defendants appear to' argue that under that
Jeffes,
Bigger, the elected Sheriff, is the only possible final policymaker for § 1983 purposes. We do not share their broad reading of that case.
Jeffes
only stated that the sheriff was the final policy maker in the circumstances of that case; nowhere in that decision does the Second Circuit say that there can be only one such actor in all other circumstances.
26
Indeed, defendants’ reading is inconsistent with the Second Circuit’s decision in
Rookard,
which states that the relevant inquiry is whether Catletti’s decision is “at the time [it was] made, for
practical or legal reasons ...
the municipality’s final decision” on the.transfer.
Accordingly, we conclude that we lack sufficient information at this time to make the legal determination that Catletti was not the final policymaker on the trans
*456
fer issue.
27
The record indicates that Cat-letti made the transfer decision alone, and that Bigger did not know about it until over a week later and when he did learn about it, he did not ask and was not told the reason for the transfer; apparently, Catletti was not required by either policy or practice to tell him. Moreover, neither plaintiff nor defendants have provided us with copies of local law or jail rules and procedures delineating the limits of Catlet-ti’s authority in the jail. On this motion for summary judgment, defendants have therefore not carried their burden of demonstrating as a matter of law that plaintiff cannot prove that Catletti’s decision is “at the time [it was] made, for practical or legal reasons ... • the municipality’s final decision” on the transfer.
28
Rookard,
IV. Limitation of Damages Under the Prison Litigation Reform Act
Defendants next contend that because plaintiff has introduced no evidence of physical injury, any damages recovery on his retaliatory transfer claim is limited to nominal and punitive damages by the PLRA, 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(e), and shall not include any compensatory damages. (Def. County Mem. Supp. Summ. J. at 34-36.) Defendants also argue that as a matter of law, plaintiff cannot recover punitive damages from the County. (Id. at 36.) In response, plaintiff does not claim physical injury in his Affidavit or Memorandum, but rather argues that the physical injury requirement of the PLRA no longer applies to him because he was not incarcerated at the time that he brought this action. (PI. Mem. Opp. Summ. J. at 2-3.)
Section 1997e(e) of the PLRA provides that “[n]o Federal civil action may be brought by a prisoner confined in a jail, prison, or other correctional facility, for mental or emotional injury suffered while in custody without a prior showing of physical injury.” Congress enacted the PLRA in 1996 “to curb the filing of frivolous lawsuits by prisoners.”
Cox v. Malone,
The PLRA does, however, not license corrections officials to engage in malicious and sadistic conduct against prisoners in retaliation for their exercise of well established constitutional rights. It is not an abrogation of § 1983 that eliminates completely the possibility of compensation for those individuals deprived of their constitutional rights by the outrageous conduct of government officials merely because those officials work at correctional facilities. Put differently, plaintiffs claims in the this case present allegations of serious constitutional violations that plainly are not the petty complaints at which the PLRA is aimed.
30
Thus, there is an exception to the aforementioned PLRA preclusion of compensatory damages in the absence of physical injury that is applicable to cases wherein the constitutional right that is allegedly violated arises under the First Amendment. Although § 1997e(e) applies to plaintiffs First Amendment retaliation claim, a First Amendment deprivation presents a cognizable injury standing alone and the PLRA “does not bar a separate award of damages to compensate the plaintiff for the First Amendment violation in and of itself.”
Ford v. McGinnis,
Plaintiff has stated a cognizable claim that his First Amendment rights were violated when defendants allegedly transferred him to Riker’s in retaliation for his lawsuits and media activities.
See supra
Part II.B. Accordingly, we conclude that plaintiffs recovery on his claim of transfer in retaliation for the exercise of his First Amendment rights may include compensatory, nominal and/or punitive damages from defendant Catletti, and compensatory and nominal damages from the County, from whom punitive damages may not be collected as a matter of law.
See, e.g., DiSorbo v. Hoy,
V. Whether Defendants Bigger and Madden Were Sufficiently Involved in the Decision to Transfer Plaintiff to be Held Personally Liable Under § 1983
Individual defendants Bigger and Madden next argue that we should grant summary judgment dismissing plaintiffs claim against them because they were not sufficiently personally involved in the decision to transfer plaintiff to Riker’s to incur liability under § 1983. (Defs. Catletti & Madden Mem. Supp. Summ. J. at 6-8; Def. Bigger Mem. Supp. Summ. J. at 4-8.)
It is well settled that to hold a defendant liable under § 1983 “for the deprivation of a protected liberty or property
*459
interest without due process, a plaintiff must also show that the defendants were personally involved in the unconstitutional conduct. There is no
respondeat superior
liability in § 1983 cases.”
Green v. Bauvi,
“in one or more of the following ways: (1) actual direct participation in the constitutional violation, (2) failure to remedy a wrong after being informed through a report or appeal, (3) creation of a policy or custom that sanctioned conduct amounting to a constitutional violation, or allowing such a policy or custom to continue, (4) grossly negligent supervision of subordinates who committed a violation, or (5) failure to act on information indicating that unconstitutional acts were occurring.”
Richardson,
We conclude that Madden lacked the requisite personal involvement to be held liable for the alleged retaliatory transfer of plaintiff to Riker’s. As the previously discussed undisputed facts reveal, Madden did not participate in the action, which was ordered in any event by Catletti, who was his supervisor. Madden also testified at his deposition that he did not learn of the transfer until after it had happened. Finally, there is no evidence of a policy or custom that would give rise to supervisory liability for Madden. See also supra Part III.A.
As to Bigger, we conclude that although he was Catletti’s supervisor and occupied the top position on the jail’s chain of command, he too lacked the requisite personal involvement in the transfer. The undisputed evidence shows that he did not learn of the transfer until the week after it was made, and did not inquire about the reason why it was made. As stated previously, there is no evidence of a policy or custom of retaliation. There was no opportunity for him to remedy the situation because he did not learn of it until after plaintiff had been released. Finally, plaintiff has not introduced any evidence of or made any arguments relating to gross negligence by Bigger in his supervision of Catletti. Accordingly, we grant summary judgment dismissing plaintiffs claims against Bigger and Madden in their personal capacities.
VI. Whether Catletti Would Be Entitled to Qualified Immunity for His Actions
Defendants next argue that Catletti would have been entitled to qualified im
*460
munity for his actions with respect to the transfer of the plaintiff, even assuming that a constitutional violation occurred. (Defs. Catletti & Madden Mem. Supp. Summ. J. at 9-13.) “The qualified immunity doctrine shields ‘government officials performing discretionary functions ... from liability for civil damages insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.’ ”
X-Men Sec., Inc. v. Pataki,
With respect to the substance of the qualified immunity doctrine:
[A] government official sued in his individual capacity ... is entitled to qualified immunity in any of three circumstances: (1) if the conduct attributed to him is not prohibited by federal law, ...; (2) where that conduct is so prohibited, if the plaintiffs right not to be subjected to such conduct by the defendant was not clearly established at the time of the conduct, ...; or (3) if the defendant’s action was “objective[ly] legally] reasonable[ ] ... in light of the legal rules that were clearly established at the time it was taken.”
X-Men Sec.,
We already have concluded that there is a genuine issue of material fact as to whether Catletti’s decision to transfer plaintiff was retaliation for plaintiffs exercise of his First Amendment rights and thus prohibited by federal law. See supra Part II.B. We also conclude that the second element cannot be satisfied because the right to exercise First Amendment freedom of speech without retaliation from corrections officials is clearly established under the ample and decades-old precedent reviewed herein. See id.
We further conclude that a genuine issue of material fact precluding summary judgment exists as to whether Cat-letti’s action was “objectively reasonable.” In the Second Circuit, “[w]here specific intent of a defendant is an element of plaintiffs claim under clearly established law, and plaintiff has adduced sufficient evidence of that intent to defeat summary judgment, summary judgment on qualified immunity grounds is inappropriate.”
Mandell v. County of Suffolk,
CONCLUSION
For all of the foregoing reasons, defendants’ motion for summary judgment is granted in part and denied in part. We grant defendants’ motion for summary judgment dismissing all claims contained in the Complaint, except for that of retaliatory transfer. We deny the County’s motion for summary judgment on the retaliatory transfer claim. We dismiss as redundant the retaliatory transfer claim against the individual defendants in their official capacities. We grant the motions of individual defendants Bigger and Madden dismissing the retaliatory transfer claim against them in their personal capacities. We deny the motion of defendant Catletti dismissing the retaliatory transfer claim against him in his personal capacity. Finally, we conclude that plaintiff may recover compensatory, nominal and/or punitive damages on the retaliatory transfer claim from defendant Catletti, and nominal and compensatory damages from the County.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. We have jurisdiction, over this matter pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 and 1343. Unless otherwise stated, all references to "Catletti” herein are to Theodore Catletti.
. Plaintiff also alleged that defendants' actions constituted cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the Eighth Amendment. (Complt.lffl 7, 29.) It is, however, well settled that with respect to pretrial detainees, "the environmental conditions of their confinement are properly reviewed under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, rather than the Cruel and Unusual Punishment Clause of the Eighth.”
Benjamin v. Fraser,
. We have gleaned the facts contained herein from the assertions contained in defendants’ Local Rule 56.1 Statements and Memoranda, the citations to admissible evidence contained therein, and an independent review of the pleadings and record. We note with disapproval that plaintiff did not file with his response the required counter-statement admitting or denying these facts, a critical omission that is further compounded by plaintiff's failure to support the largely conclusory factual assertions in his Memorandum’s statement of facts with citations to the record. This deficiency in the Memorandum is significant because to "to avoid penalizing parties harshly as a result of technical errors by their attorneys,” we will look to that statement of facts as a stopgap alternative to a Local Rule 56.1 Statement. Jessamy v. City of New Rochelle, 292 F.Supp.2d 498, 504 (S.D.N.Y.2003) (Conner, J.). As a result, we accept as uncontested those facts averred by defendants that are supported by admissible evidence in the record. Id. at 504-05. We have, however, reviewed the non-conclusory factual assertions contained in the affidavits of plaintiff and Peter Matera, an Ulster County assistant district attorney, that are annexed to plaintiff’s Memorandum of Law. We did, however, supplement the facts provided by defendants with additional details gleaned from our review of the source materials cited.
Moreover, we note that plaintiff's Memorandum opposing the motion for summary judgment is virtually devoid of legal argumentation, which is defined "as advancing] one's contentions by connecting law to facts.”
Sioson v. Knights of Columbus,
. Plaintiff has had a career in boxing that included stints as a sparring partner for prominent boxers including Muhammed Ali and Hurricane Carter, as well as work as a professional boxing referee licensed in various states at several levels of the sport. (Lipton 7/23/03 Dep. at 51-55, 85, 88; Lipton 7/25/03 Dep. at 140.)
. Bigger’s account of this conversation is not inconsistent with plaintiff's testimony. Bigger recalls the conversation, and states that he had advised plaintiff to take the issue up with the proper authorities, namely the police department that Larry Catletti was working for at the time that he issued the ticket. (Bigger Dep. at 15-17.)
This was not the first time that Bigger and plaintiff had met. Plaintiff approached Bigger in 1996 or 1997 and asked him to support his son Brett Lipton's application for the police academy, a request that Bigger accommodated by speaking to defendant Catletti, the official then responsible for such applications. (Id. at 6-7, 11-12.) Subsequently, plaintiff and Bigger met in passing at a restaurant in Newburgh where plaintiff was supposed to meet the boxer Joe Frazier. (Id. at 7-8.) Indeed, plaintiff introduced Frazier to Bigger later that evening. (Id. at 8.)
. Plaintiff appears to treat the traffic stop by Larry Catletti as a background incident relevant to the dispute between the parties and not as an independent basis for relief. Indeed, as the County correctly points out, any such claims arising out of the November 1996 traffic stop are time-barred under § 1983 because the Complaint was dated February 1, 2002, and plaintiff knew or had reason to know of any potential traffic stop-related civil rights claims when it occurred. (Def. County-Mem. Supp. Summ. J. at 11-12.)
See, e.g., Scott
v.
Gardner,
. Plaintiff testified that these weapons charges were filed shortly after he brought to the Saugerties police tape recordings of threatening anti-Semitic phone calls made to him by his then-girlfriend’s brothers, one of whom he alleges is an active Ku Klux Klan member in addition to his work as a local corrections and part-time police officer. (Lipton 7/23/03 Dep. at 123-24, 167.)
. The preliminary hearing was cancelled and plaintiff was released on February 17, 1999 after a police officer informed the assistant district attorney assigned to prosecute the case that he had made an outcome-determinative error in measuring the barrel of the shotgun at issue. (Matera Aff. ¶ 2.) Thereafter, on May 26, 1999, the Woodstock Town Court dismissed the charges on the prosecutor's application. (Id. ¶ 3.)
. As the County points out, plaintiff had been offered food on other occasions while in County custody, but refused to eat that food. (Def. County Rule 56.1 Stmt. ¶ 3.) At his deposition, plaintiff testified that he and his son were afraid to eat that food because of Catletti's presence at the jail. (Lipton 7/25/03 Dep. at 77-78.)
. Plaintiff objected at the time to the movement of his son into the general inmate population because plaintiff's son is a police academy graduate who would likely be endangered by that move. (Lipton 7/25/03 Dep. at 82-83.) Plaintiff testified that his son was harassed, but unharmed after he was moved into the general inmate population. (Id. at 88.)
. At his deposition, Bigger denied any involvement in Catletti's decision to transfer plaintiff to Riker’s, and testified that he learned about that decision in a conversation with Catletti the week after it was made. (Bigger Dep. at 17-19.) Bigger did not inquire about the reason for the decision, and did not find it unusual. (Id. at 18, 22.)
. Ryan testified at his deposition that Catletti called him at home on the morning that plaintiff was transferred to Riker's and expressed anger over any special treatment with respect to food that had been accorded plaintiff the previous evening. (Ryan Dep. at 17-18.) Ryan also testified that Catletti told him about the speeding ticket incident, and expressed his dislike for plaintiff. (Id. at 19.)
. We note that Madden testified at his deposition that Catletti, as jail administrator, moved plaintiff from the County jail to Riker’s because of his involvement in law enforcement-related controversies, several of which involved jail employees, and a desire to "move him for our protection in the liability matter so that we would have no direct control over his environment.” (Madden Dep. at 16, 27.) Madden testified that he was not *443 personally involved in the decision to move plaintiff, which was the province of Catletti as jail administrator and subject to state approval, and only became aware of the decision after plaintiff already had been moved. (Id. at 17-18, 31-35, 43.) Madden testified that the practice of interfacility transfers is not uncommon in the corrections field, and is often done when the staff of a particular jail has a conflict of interest with a particular prisoner. (Id. at 27.) He also stated that individuals have been moved from the County to Riker’s on numerous occasions. (Id. at 29-30.) Madden testified that Riker's did not cost the County money, while other facilities such as Putnam County charged boarding expenses for other counties' inmates. (Id. at 34.) Ryan's testimony about such arrangements was similar, and he specifically referred to an agreement between Riker’s and the County for the mutual exchange of high risk inmates. (Ryan Dep. at 32-34.)
. There is, however, no written notation to this effect on the transfer form.
. This practice is known colloquially in law enforcement circles as "waffling,” because of the "waffle” imprint that the metal screen partitions of older police cars leave on the prisoner’s face. (Ryan Dep. at 22-23.)
. Plaintiff testified that he received medical attention after the incident from a health center physician for red marks and a headache. *444 (Lipton 8/5/03 Dep. at 35-36.) The physician also treated him at the same time for general illness and weakness following his release from the County Jail. (Id. at 35.)
. Plaintiff testified that the officer refused to identify himself and that he could not read the officer's name tag because he lacked his glasses. (Lipton 8/5/03 Dep.' at 23-24.) Plaintiff described the officer as white, "tall and slim and young” with short hair and facial acne. (Id. at 24.)
. Defendants dispute this portion of plaintiff’s deposition testimony and contend that plaintiff did not give the jail staff notice of his weakened condition at the time of his release. (Def. County Rule 56.1 Stmt. ¶ 11.)
. It is well settled that such deference applies in the administration of facilities that hold pretrial detainees, as well as those wherein convicted prisoners are confined.
See, e.g., Bell,
.
See also Merritt v. Hawk,
. Indeed, defendants have introduced evidence to the contrary. Madden testified that at his deposition that although there is a conceivable reason to search a prisoner returning to the Jail from Riker’s because of the possibility of bringing in contraband from that facility, there is no procedure in place wherein an inmate is strip searched prior to release on bail, and that he would find that practice ‘unusual.” (Madden Dep. at 78-79.)
. The officer who performed the search is not a named defendant herein, and the three-year statute of limitations applicable to § 1983 claims and the operation of Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(c) renders futile an amendment to the Complaint at this point naming him because his omission was not by mistake, but because of lack of identifying information.
See, e.g., Barrow v. Wethersfield Police Dep’t,
. It is well settled that this Court need consider only admissible evidence in deciding a motion for summary judgment.
See, e.g., King v. Town of Wallkill,
.
See, e.g., United States v. Jackson,
. Madden testified that he learned of Catlet-ti's decision within a few days after the transfer occurred. (Madden Dep. at 33-34.) See also supra note 13.
. Accordingly, the discussion relied on by defendants in
Sheriffs Silver Star Ass’n v. County of Oswego,
. We note that plaintiff's reliance on the statement of facts in
Catletti
describing Catlet-ti’s policymaking responsibilities is inappropriate. (PI. Mem. Opp. Summ. J. at 2.)
See Catletti,
. Plaintiff, however, retains the burden of proving this as a matter of law at trial before the case is submitted to the jury.
See, e.g., Jeffes,
. Plaintiff's reliance on
Greig v. Goord,
. The PLRA was enacted in response to "lawsuits seeking damages for 'insufficient storage locker space, a defective haircut by a prison barber, the failure of prison officials to invite a prisoner to a pizza party for a departing prison employee, and yes, being served chunky peanut butter instead of the creamy variety.’ ”
Shaheed-Muhammad v. Dipaolo,
. In their Reply Memorandum, defendants rely heavily on Judge Scheindlin’s decision in
Cox
in support of their position that the lack of physical injury precludes plaintiff from recovering compensatory damages under the PLRA. (Def. County Reply Mem. Supp. Summ. J. at 6-8.) We conclude, however, that
Cox
and the Second Circuit’s decision in
Thompson
are distinguishable from the present case because they were, respectively, excessive force and medical treatment cases that lacked First Amendment implications. Indeed, Judge Scheindlin, the author of
Cox,
also authored
Ford,
and held therein that First Amendment violations remain separately compensable, even under the PLRA.
. Defendant Catletti’s reliance on the proposition that there is no state right or law precluding the interfacility transfer of prison inmates is misplaced and unavailing. (Defs. Catletti & Madden Mem. Supp. Summ. J. at 12.) Indeed, there may be any number of legitimate penological reasons justifying the transfer of an inmate to a different facility. The reliance on this proposition, however, misstates and evades the central issue of this case, namely whether the transfer of plaintiff to Riker’s was made in retaliation for plaintiffs exercise of his First Amendment rights.
