David Hodges v. Minnesota Dept. Corrections, No. 21-3891 (8th Cir. 2023)
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Plaintiff, a Minnesota prisoner, sued several officials of the Minnesota Department of Corrections, alleging that they violated his constitutional rights by failing to protect him from an attack by a fellow inmate. The district court granted summary judgment for the officials. Defendant appealed the dismissal of his Eighth Amendment claims.
The Eighth Circuit affirmed. The court agreed with the district court that the evidence is insufficient to show that any of the defendant officials subjectively concluded that Plaintiff faced a substantial risk of serious harm and then failed to respond reasonably to it. The unrebutted evidence is that the two voting officials on the incompatibility committee considered incident reports and other relevant information but decided that the situation did not rise to the level of incompatibility—that is, they concluded that the evidence did not indicate a risk of serious bodily injury to an offender. This means that the officials did not draw the subjective inference that there existed a substantial risk of serious harm to Plaintiff. The officials predicted incorrectly, but they were not deliberately indifferent for the purposes of the Eighth Amendment.
Court Description: [Colloton, Author, with Kelly and Kobes, Circuit Judges] Prisoner case - Prisoner civil rights. In action alleging the defendants violated plaintiff's Eighth Amendment rights by failing to protect him from a fellow inmate, the district court granted defendants summary judgment on the ground plaintiff had presented insufficient evidence to show that any prison official was deliberately indifferent to a substantial risk of serious harm to plaintiff. The district court did not err in finding that the evidence was insufficient to show that any of the defendant officials on the prison's incompatibility committee subjectively concluded that plaintiff faced a substantial risk of serious harm and then failed to respond reasonably to it; given the absence of a showing that the defendant members of the prison's incompatibility committee were deliberately indifferent, plaintiff did not make a sufficient showing that either the warden or the assistant commissioner of the Department of Corrections was deliberately indifferent by deferring to the established process and policy. Judge Kelly, concurring.
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