Brian Jones v. Theodore Anderson
Citation116 F.4th 669
Date Filed2024-08-29
Docket21-2929
JudgeSykes
Cited28 times
StatusPublished
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
In the
United States Court of Appeals
for the Seventh Circuit
____________________
No. 21-2929
BRIAN J. JONES,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
THEODORE ANDERSON, et al.,
Defendants-Appellees.
____________________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of Wisconsin.
No. 19-CV-1774 â Lynn Adelman, Judge.
____________________
ARGUED SEPTEMBER 8, 2023 â DECIDED AUGUST 29, 2024
____________________
Before SYKES, Chief Judge, and ROVNER and KIRSCH, Circuit
Judges.
SYKES, Chief Judge. Brian Jones, a Wisconsin prisoner, sued
several correctional officers for damages under 42 U.S.C. §
1983, accusing them of violating his Eighth Amendment right
against cruel and unusual punishment. Jonesâs claims stem
from a disturbance he created in the prison dayroom when he
cursed at correctional officers and refused to return to his as-
signed cell. In response the officers placed him in a restraint
2 No. 21-2929
chair and transported him to a restrictive-housing cell. Before
placing Jones in restricted housing, the officers strip-searched
him as required by prison policy. Jones alleges that the offic-
ers used excessive force, conducted an unlawful strip search,
and confined him in a dirty cell. The district court entered
summary judgment for the officers on all claims.
Jones represented himself throughout the litigation below.
With the assistance of volunteer counsel on appeal, he con-
tends that the magistrate judge who handled the early stages
of the case should have granted his request for the assistance
of pro bono counsel under 28 U.S.C. § 1915(e)(1). This argu-
ment is meritless. The magistrate judge applied the correct le-
gal standard and reasonably concluded that Jones was
competent to litigate this straightforward case on his own.
Moreover, no lawyer could have helped Jones prevail on his
claims because most of the events in question were captured
on video and the recording conclusively shows that Jones has
no case. We affirm the judgment.
I. Background
Jones is confined at the Columbia Correctional Institution,
a maximum-security prison in Portage, Wisconsin. On the
morning of May 20, 2019, he caused a disturbance in the
prison dayroom. The incident began when he refused to re-
turn to his cell in the general population when instructed to
do so by correctional officers. He complained that he would
not go to any cell unit with stairs, telling the officers that he
had a âlow bunk low tier restriction.â Lieutenant Theodore
Anderson was summoned to the dayroom to address the
problem. He told Jones that the officers were aware of his low-
bunk status but explained that all cell units have stairs. Jones
responded, âWell I ainât going to that cell. I donât know what
No. 21-2929 3
is so hard for you to understand, but you will have to carry
me wherever we go.â
The parties disagree slightly over the verbal exchange that
took place next. The officers reported that Jones began to yell
and swear at them, calling them âfucking idiots.â Jones denies
that he used profanity but admits that he âverbally expressed
his frustration with staffâ and refused to return to his cell. Re-
gardless, because Jones continued to resist direct orders to re-
turn to his assigned cell, Lieutenant Anderson decided to
transport him to the restrictive-housing unit using a restraint
chair, which looks like a wheelchair with straps. Sergeant Na-
than Fosshage was present during the encounter with Jones;
Officer Jamie Dutton and Sergeant Kyle Ferstl also responded
to assist.
At Lieutenant Andersonâs direction, Sergeant Ferstl hand-
cuffed Jones with his arms behind his back. Jones claims that
he âfelt and heard his bones cracking and snapping in his
shoulderâ when Sergeant Ferstl handcuffed him. Lieutenant
Anderson directed Officer Dutton to put leg restraints on
Jones. At this point, Lieutenant Anderson turned on his body
camera to record the encounter.
Our account continues with a description of what appears
on the video recording. When Lieutenant Anderson initially
activated his body camera, Jones appears to be comfortable
and relaxed, but he quickly became argumentative and hos-
tile. He swore and yelled at the officers when Sergeants Ferstl
and Fosshage eased him into the restraint chair. He also com-
plained about pain in his wrists from the cuffs. Sergeants
Ferstl and Fosshage fastened the safety belt across Jones and
secured him in the chair.
4 No. 21-2929
Once Jones was secured, the officers wheeled him to the
restrictive-housing unit in the prison. Lieutenant Anderson
radioed the control room to inform them of the escort. Along
the way another officer arrived with a camera to record the
transport. Lieutenant Anderson activated that camera too and
gave it to Officer Dutton to record the rest of the encounter.
Officers Joshua Bender and Eric Fox responded to provide
further assistance.
When the group arrived at the restrictive-housing unit, the
officers prepared Jones for a strip searchâa security precau-
tion mandated by prison policy before inmates can be placed
in restrictive-housing cells. The officers removed Jonesâs knee
brace and walked him to the corner of the room where Ser-
geant Ferstl conducted the strip search. Officer Dutton, a fe-
male officer, was still present and operating the camera that
Lieutenant Anderson had given her. She recorded the strip
search from a distance, with several male officers standing be-
tween her and Jones, partially obstructing her view.
Sergeant Ferstl completed the strip search efficiently and
without incident. When it was finished, the officers covered
Jones with a towel around his waist and again secured him in
the restraint chair. He continued to complain about his wrists,
so the officers took him to the nurse for an examination. Jones
complained extensively to the nurse about his general ail-
ments, but the only pain he mentioned from the officersâ ac-
tions that day was pain from handcuffs cutting into his wrists.
The nurse examined Jonesâs wrists and did not see any blood
or other injury, so she cleared him for placement in a cell. The
officers then placed Jones in a restrictive-housing cell and
gave him a smock to wear. Once inside, he stood near the door
and complained some more about his wrists. His wrists are
No. 21-2929 5
visible in the recording; there is no sign of any injury. The
video recording ends there.
Prior to placing Jones in the restrictive-housing cell,
Officer Fox inspected the cell and found it clean. Jones claims
that it was dirty. He says there were âdust bunniesâ on the
floor and a layer of film on the sink and toilet; he also claims
that the mattress and pillow were stained. He adds that he
could not access hygienic or toiletry items, though he admits
that he received toiletry products and new clothing after âap-
proximately 28 hours.â Last, Jones says that he had to crawl
on the cell floor because his knee brace was not returned to
him during his confinement in restrictive housing. After two
days he was returned to a cell in general population.
Jones sued the officers involved in these events seeking
damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. He alleged that they violated
his Eighth Amendment right against cruel and unusual pun-
ishment by (1) using excessive force against him; (2) conduct-
ing an unlawful strip search; and (3) confining him in a dirty
cell. Jones proceeded pro se, but about six months into the lit-
igation he asked the court to appoint pro bono counsel, assert-
ing that he could not âfind or understand the statutes and
lawsâ and that the prison law library was inaccessible because
of COVID-19 restrictions. He also told the court that other in-
mates had been assisting him with his filings. In support of
the motion, Jones attached letters that he had written to law-
yers seeking representation.
The magistrate judge assigned to handle case-manage-
ment issues denied Jonesâs motion for pro bono counsel with-
out prejudice, leaving the door open for a renewed motion
later in the litigation. Jones did not renew the motion. The of-
ficers eventually moved for summary judgment on all claims.
6 No. 21-2929
The district judge granted the motion, and Jones appealed.
We sua sponte recruited pro bono counsel for him on appeal.1
II. Discussion
With the assistance of volunteer counsel on appeal, Jones
challenges the magistrate judgeâs decision denying his motion
for pro bono counsel and the district judgeâs order granting
the officersâ motion for summary judgment. Both decisions
were sound.
A. Request for Counsel
Under 28 U.S.C. § 1915(e)(1), a federal court âmay request an attorney to represent any person unable to afford counsel.â The statute is âentirely permissive.â Pruitt v. Mote,503 F.3d 647, 654
(7th Cir. 2007) (en banc). Civil litigants have no con- stitutional or statutory right to court-appointed counsel, and § 1915(e)(1) âdoes not authorize the federal courts to make co- ercive appointments of counsel.â Id. at 653 (quoting Mallard v. U.S. Dist. Court for S. Dist. of Iowa,490 U.S. 296, 310
(1989)). Rather, the statute âcodifies the courtâs discretionary author- ity to recruit a lawyer to represent an indigent civil litigant pro bono publico.âId.
âAlmost everyone would benefit from having a lawyer, but there are too many indigent litigants and too few lawyers willing and able to volunteer for these cases.â Olson v. Morgan,750 F.3d 708, 711
(7th Cir. 2014). âDistrict courts are thus placed in the unenviable position of identifying, among a sea 1 Natalie D. Dygert and Kate Oh of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP ac- cepted the appointment. They have ably discharged their duties. We thank them for their service to their client and the court. No. 21-2929 7 of people lacking counsel, those who need counsel the most.âId.
Accordingly, we have recently explained that âthe deci-
sion whether to recruit a lawyer for a particular plaintiff is
made against the twofold backdrop of a high volume of indi-
gent, pro se litigants (particularly incarcerated individuals)
and a small pool, by comparison, of attorneys willing and able
to take those cases on pro bono.â Watts v. Kidman, 42 F.4th 755, 763 (7th Cir. 2022). Based on these and other practical consid- erations, we have held that district judges should engage in a two-step inquiry when faced with a request for pro bono counsel under § 1915(e)(1), asking first â(1) has the indigent plaintiff made a reasonable attempt to obtain counsel or been effectively precluded from doing so; and if so, (2) given the difficulty of the case, does the plaintiff appear competent to litigate it himself?â Pruitt,503 F.3d at 654
.
The first step needs no elaboration. Step two âcan be com-
plexâ and involves a pragmatic judgment about the difficulty
of the case and the plaintiffâs ability to present it to the court
on his own. Watts, 42 F.4th at 760. âThe inquiries are neces-
sarily intertwined; the difficulty of the case is considered
against the plaintiffâs litigation capabilities, and those capabil-
ities are examined in light of the challenges specific to the case
at hand.â Pruitt, 503 F.3d at 655. A judge will normally con- sider âthe plaintiffâs literacy, communication skills, educa- tional level, and litigation experienceâ along with any evidence in the record âbearing on the plaintiffâs intellectual capacity and psychological history.âId.
But these are merely factors that are ordinarily relevant. No one factor is âneces- sary or conclusive.âId.
at 655 n.9. Indeed, â[t]here are no fixed requirements for determining a plaintiffâs competence to 8 No. 21-2929 litigate his own case.âId. at 655
. Ultimately, the âinquiry into the plaintiffâs capacity to handle his own case is a practical one, made in light of whatever relevant evidence is available on the question.âId.
Finally, âthe decision whether to recruit pro bono counsel
is left to the district courtâs discretion.â Id. at 654. Our job is to ensure that this discretion is exercised in accordance with ap- propriate legal principles. The âquestion on appellate review is not whether we would have recruited a volunteer lawyer in the circumstances, but whether the district court applied the correct legal standard and reached a reasonable decision based on facts supported by the record.âId. at 658
. And even
if we find an abuse of discretion, we will not reverse the dis-
trict courtâs denial of a § 1915(e)(1) motion absent a showing
of prejudiceâin other words, reversal is warranted only âif
there is a reasonable likelihood that the presence of counsel
would have made a difference in the outcome of the litiga-
tion.â Id. at 659 (emphasis in original).
Everyone agrees that Jones made a reasonable effort to ob-
tain counsel, so our focus is on the second part of the Pruitt
formula. At step two the magistrate judge applied Pruittâs
overlapping inquiry into the difficulty of Jonesâs case and his
ability to litigate it himself. She noted first that Jonesâs Eighth
Amendment claims are ânot very complexâ and concerned
only matters of which he had personal knowledge. She also
determined that Jones could capably handle his case on his
own because his filings demonstrated that he is âarticulate
and can effectively advocate for himself.â And she expressed
a willingness to give him extra time to complete litigation
tasks if needed.
No. 21-2929 9
That ruling was well within the bounds of the judgeâs
broad discretion; she keyed her analysis to the correct legal
standard and reached an eminently reasonable decision based
on the information Jones had provided. Resisting this conclu-
sion, Jones contends in general terms that the judge did not
adequately address the difficulties he might encounter with
discovery and legal research. These challenges are common to
all pro se litigants; the magistrate judge reasonably concluded
that the case was simple enough for Jones to present the gist
of his claims to the court on his own. Jones also argues that he
needed the assistance of a lawyer because COVID-19 re-
strictions hindered his access to the library. This concern too
was not unique to Jones; all incarcerated pro se litigants had
to deal with COVID-19 restrictions during the pandemic.
Given the straightforward nature of Jonesâs claims, the mag-
istrate judge reasonably concluded that whatever difficulties
he encountered dealing with library closures could be ad-
dressed by extensions of time and other court interventions.
Jonesâs narrower arguments fare no better. He maintains
that the magistrate judge disregarded or failed to consider the
complexities that might arise in the more advanced stages in
the litigation. But the judge denied the motion for counsel
without prejudice and extended the deadlines for discovery
and dispositive motions. Jones could have renewed his re-
quest for counsel later in the litigation but did not do so.
Jones also asserts that he needed a lawyer to help with his
claim about his cell conditions because he had to prove that
the officers acted with deliberate indifference to a health risk
from his unclean cell. This argument is misplaced in the con-
text of this case. Itâs true that some prisoner cases alleging that
officials were deliberately indifferent to health and safety
10 No. 21-2929
risks âcan be complex and difficult for a prisoner to litigate
pro se.â McCaa v. Hamilton, 959 F.3d 842, 846 (7th Cir. 2020).
But there are no categorical rules in this area; every request
for pro bono counsel requires a practical and particularized
assessment that considers the complexity of the claims, the
pro se litigantâs capacity to litigate them himself, and the lim-
ited resources in the legal community to take on and under-
write pro bono litigation. Many claims involving allegations
of deliberate indifference are straightforward and not beyond
the capacity of a pro se litigant. The cell-conditions cause of
action in this case is just such a claim.
In sum, the magistrate judge correctly applied the law and
reached a reasonable decision to deny Jonesâs request for re-
cruited pro bono counsel. We note as well that even if we were
inclined to find that the judge abused her discretion (she did
not), reversal would not be justified because no attorney
could have changed the outcome here. As we explain next,
the video recording conclusively refutes Jonesâs claims about
excessive force and an unlawful strip search, and his cell-con-
ditions claim is likewise meritless.
B. Eighth Amendment Claims
We review the district judgeâs summary-judgment order
de novo, viewing the record in the light most favorable to
Jones and drawing all reasonable inferences in his favor. Bur-
ton v. Downey, 805 F.3d 776, 783(7th Cir. 2015). But where the events in question were preserved in a video recording, we view the facts âin the light depicted by the videotape,â pro- vided that â[t]here are no allegations or indications that th[e] videotape was doctored or altered in any way, nor any con- tention that what it depicts differs from what actually hap- pened.â Scott v. Harris,550 U.S. 372, 378, 381
(2007).
No. 21-2929 11
1. Excessive Force
The Eighth Amendmentâs protection against cruel and un-
usual punishment prohibits the âunnecessary and wanton in-
fliction of painâ on prisoners. Hudson v. McMillian, 503 U.S. 1,
5(1992) (internal quotation marks omitted). In this contextâ an excessive-force claim arising out of restraints applied in a prison settingâthe central question is âwhether force was ap- plied in a good faith effort to maintain or restore discipline or maliciously and sadistically for the very purpose of causing harm.â Whitley v. Albers,475 U.S. 312
, 320â21 (1986) (internal quotation marks omitted). Relevant factors in the analysis in- clude âthe need for the application of the force, the amount of force applied, the threat an officer reasonably perceived, the effort made to temper the severity of the force used, and the extent of the injury that force caused to an inmate.â Fillmore v. Page,358 F.3d 496, 504
(7th Cir. 2004). Importantly, de minimis uses of force do not implicate the Eighth Amendment. Hud- son, 503 U.S. at 9â10 (âThe Eighth Amendmentâs prohibition of âcruel and unusualâ punishments necessarily excludes from constitutional recognition de minimis uses of physical force, provided that the use of force is not of a sort ârepugnant to the conscience of mankind.ââ (quoting Whitley,475 U.S. at 327
)).
The video recording irrefutably establishes that the offic-
ers used only de minimis force and they used it reasonably, not
maliciously. Jones alleges that Sergeant Ferstl used excessive
force when he handcuffed him before placing him in the re-
straint chair; he contends that we must send this issue to a
jury because the handcuffing occurred just before the video
recording began. But the video did not need to âcapture every
second of every aspect of the transferâ to establish that no rea-
sonable juror could credit Jonesâs account. Fillmore, 358 F.3d
12No. 21-2929 at 504. The video does not suggest that Jones was experienc- ing the level of pain that one would expect if Sergeant Ferstl had used excessive force when handcuffing him, as Jones claims.Id.
The recording begins immediately after he was
placed in handcuffs. Jones claims that the bones in his shoul-
der âcracked and snappedâ during the handcuffing. But the
video shows him sitting comfortably in no apparent pain im-
mediately after he was handcuffed. And when the nurse ex-
amined Jones roughly 20 minutes later, he did not complain
about an injury to his shoulder, focusing instead on his com-
plaints about wrist pain.
Jones also claims that the officers used excessive force
when they placed him in the restraint chair, applied the leg
restraints, removed him from the restraint chair, and held him
during the strip search. The video captures all these events
(although the strip-search portion is partially obscured by the
officers who positioned themselves between Jones and Officer
Dutton). The video shows that the officers used only minimal
force (if any at all) to secure him in the restraint chair and con-
duct the strip search. Some application of physical contact
was necessary because Jones repeatedly refused to return to
his cell and even demanded that the officers carry him. De-
spite his resistance, the video shows that the officers were able
to maneuver him into the restraint chair, secure him there,
and complete the strip search with only minor physical con-
tact against his wishes. There was no violent force, only a min-
imal degree of unwanted physical contactânot enough to
characterize as anything more than de minimus force for
Eighth Amendment purposes. And the nurse examined Jones
immediately after the strip search; she cleared him for place-
ment in a cell after finding no injury.
No. 21-2929 13
No juror viewing this evidence could reasonably conclude
that the officers wantonly and sadistically inflicted pain on
Jones. See Whitley, 475 U.S. at 322.
2. Strip Search
Strip-searching a prisoner violates the Eighth Amendment
only if it is âmaliciously motivated, unrelated to institutional
security, and hence totally without penological justification.â
Whitman v. Nesic, 368 F.3d 931, 934(7th Cir. 2004) (internal quotation marks omitted). To overcome summary judgment, Jones had to produce evidence showing that the officers con- ducted the search in a harassing manner intended to âhumil- iate and inflict psychological pain.âId.
Here again the video evidence conclusively establishes
that the strip search was neither malicious nor performed in a
harassing manner. Prison policy requires officers to perform
a strip search before placing an inmate in the restrictive-hous-
ing unit. That is unquestionably a legitimate penological jus-
tification; it promotes the safety and security of inmates and
prison staff alike. The video recording shows that the officers
performed the search in a respectful, professional, and meas-
ured manner.
Jones argues that the presence of Officer Dutton, a female
correctional officer, was gratuitous and humiliating. Partici-
pation in a strip search by an officer of the opposite sex may
raise Eighth Amendment concerns if the officer is not per-
forming a legitimate penological function but instead is an
âinvited spectator[]â whose presence is intended to cause em-
barrassment. Calhoun v. DeTella, 319 F.3d 936, 940 (7th Cir.
2003). Thatâs not what happened here.
14 No. 21-2929
Officer Dutton was one of the first officers to respond
when Jones caused the disruption in the dayroom. Then, at
Lieutenant Andersonâs direction, she recorded Jonesâs trans-
fer from the dayroom to the restrictive-housing unit. She did
not participate in the strip search, but instead recorded it from
a distance and her view was limited by several male officers
who stood between her and Jones during the search. She was,
in short, performing a legitimate penological function in a rea-
sonable way; she was not present to embarrass or humiliate
Jones.
3. Cell Conditions
To prevail on an Eighth Amendment claim concerning the
conditions of his confinement, a prisoner has the burden to
prove that the conditions were objectively so severe that he
was deprived of âthe minimal civilized measure of lifeâs ne-
cessitiesâ and that prison officials acted with âdeliberate in-
differenceâ with respect to the conditions. Farmer v. Brennan,
511 U.S. 825, 834(1994) (internal quotation marks omitted). To prove the objective component of the claim, a prisoner must show that âthe conditions were sufficiently serious as an ob- jective matterâ and created âan excessive riskâ to his health and safety. Thomas v. Blackard,2 F.4th 716
, 719 (7th Cir. 2021) (internal quotation marks omitted). To prove the subjective component, he must show that the prison officials he has sued had actual knowledge that he faced âa substantial risk of se- rious harm and disregard[ed] that risk by failing to take rea- sonable measures to abate it.â Farmer,511 U.S. at 847
.
Jonesâs allegations fall short of a cognizable constitutional
claim. To start, recall that he was confined in the restrictive-
housing unit for just two days. He says that his cell had âdust
bunniesâ on the floor, a layer of âfilmâ on the toilet seat and
No. 21-2929 15
sink, and a stained mattress. Thereâs a factual dispute about
this claim, but even if we accept Jonesâs allegations as true, the
degree of uncleanliness he describes does not amount to a
deprivation of the minimal civilized measure of lifeâs necessi-
ties as an objective matterâespecially not for the short dura-
tion of two days. Jones also claims that he was deprived of
hygienic products for the first 28 hours of his two-day con-
finement in restrictive housing. A short-term deprivation of
hygienic products, even one that causes considerable discom-
fort or unpleasantness, does not raise a constitutional concern.
See Lunsford v. Bennett, 17 F.3d 1574, 1580 (7th Cir. 1994) (stat-
ing that the deprivation of toilet paper and other hygienic
supplies for âapproximately a twenty-four periodâ is merely
a âtemporary discomfortâ that âhardly violates common no-
tions of decencyâ). And even if we assume for the sake of ar-
gument that the conditions Jones describes were objectively
severe, thereâs no evidence that any of the officers were aware
of them and deliberately disregarded an excessive risk of
harm to Jones.
Jonesâs final allegation about his confinement in restrictive
housing requires a bit more attention. Jones alleges that he
had to crawl on the floor for two days because he did not have
his knee brace. Assuming without deciding that his two-day
lack of access to his supportive orthopedic equipment satis-
fies the objective-severity requirement, there is no evidence
that the officers were aware that his knee brace was not re-
turned to him during the entirety of his confinement in re-
strictive housing. He has neither alleged nor provided
evidence that they knew he did not have access to his brace
during this time, much less that they were aware that the dep-
rivation created a risk of excessive harm to him.
16 No. 21-2929
Jones argues that the officers should have known that he
was deprived of his knee brace for his entire time in restrictive
housing because they removed the brace before the strip
search. This argument sounds in negligence, not deliberate in-
difference. It implies that they had a duty to ensure that the
knee brace was returned to him at some point after he was
secured in his restrictive-housing cell. But âit is not enough to
show that a state actor should have known of the danger his
actions created. Rather, a plaintiff must demonstrate that the
defendant had actual knowledge of impending harm which
he consciously refused to prevent.â Tesch v. Cty. of Green Lake,
157 F.3d 465, 476 (7th Cir. 1998) (internal quotation marks
omitted).
AFFIRMED