Navejar v. Iyiola, No. 12-1182 (7th Cir. 2013)
Annotate this CaseWhile proceeding to the Stateville prison cafeteria, Navejar spoke to other inmates in their cells. Officer Iyiola ordered him to get out of the line because prison rules forbid inmates from stopping to speak to other inmates. Navejar disobeyed, became belligerent, and punched Iyiola. Other guards wrestled Navejar to the ground where he was handcuffed. Navejar claims that guards kicked him in the forehead, stomped his head against the ground, pepper-sprayed him, dragged him along the floor, and left him alone for a half-hour, while he screamed in pain, before he was allowed to wash off the pepper spray. The next morning a guard brought Navejar to Stateville’s health care unit, where nurses examined him. Before a doctor could provide attention, a guard escorted Navejar out, explaining that he was being transferred to Pontiac. At Pontiac, Navejar was examined by a physician, who concluded that he had suffered only bruises and scratches. In Navejar’s suit under 42 U.S.C. 1983, the district court denied motions to recruit counsel and entered summary judgment for the guards on Eighth Amendment claims. The Seventh Circuit reversed, finding that the court applied the wrong legal standard to Navejar’s motion and that lack of counsel prejudiced him.
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