Prisoner claims officer kneed him in the face, bloodied eye
Consider the allegation by Neki Gibbs.
Gibbs claims correctional officer Ryan Maddox pepper-sprayed the left side of his face using “excessive amounts” of the chemical that causes acute eye pain, temporary blindness, shortness of breath, gagging and other symptoms.
After a “brief tussle,’’ Gibbs claims he laid on the floor and Maddox held him down with his knee, hit him in the head and kneed him in the face, causing a bloody gash to his left eyebrow.
Maddox then had Gibbs transferred to the larger James T. Vaughn Correctional Center for men near Smyrna, where he was put into the Security Housing Unit, known behind bars as “the hole.’’
Gibbs says that despite his “obvious eye injury,’’ he didn’t receive an adequate medical exam or treatment and Maddox told him, “You think we’re going to give you any kind of help after what you did?”
His request for stitches was denied and now he has a large permanent scar over his left eyelid, the lawsuit claims.
Gibbs alleges he previously filed grievances against Maddox that were ignored, and instead was told he was “imagining” the mistreatment.
Burke also said “there is no excuse for failure to review” video footage when it’s available, and that ACLU attorneys would seek to have them produced during the litigation.
“We don’t have any pattern of investigations,’’ she said. “We don’t have any evidence that there’s been fact-finding on the part of the Department of Correction. We’ll get into discovery and we’ll be able to see all the files and see all the videotapes.”
She acknowledged the case won’t be resolved anytime soon. “It won’t be quick,’’ she said. “This is major complex federal litigation. So it doesn’t move rapidly.”