Johnson v. State of Alaska
Filing
82
ORDER OF DISMISSAL: The relief requested in the Response to Court Order at Docket 73 is DENIED. Plaintiff's motions at Dockets 77 and 78 are DENIED. All claims against all Defendants in this action, named and unnamed, are DISMISSED. Signed by Judge Sharon L. Gleason on 10/23/2024. (ANM, COURT STAFF)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF ALASKA
BRYAN WEBB JOHNSON,
Plaintiff,
v.
JOHN C. BRAINERD, et al.,
Case No. 4:21-cv-00027-SLG
Defendants.
ORDER OF DISMISSAL
Before the Court at Dockets 77 and 78, Plaintiff Bryan Johnson, a selfrepresented plaintiff, filed a Motion and an Amended Motion for Court to View
Judge Kindred’s Retirement as Sua Sponte Recusal as His Court Orders Show
Actual &/or Appearance of Bias; plus Motion to Reasses[s] his Orders for Legality
and Ethics.
Dismissed Defendants State of Alaska, Blankenship, Harbison,
Christian, MacDonald, McConahy, Peterson, Seekins, and Axelsson, responded
in opposition, treating it as a Rule 60(b) motion.1 This case was reassigned to the
undersigned judge on July 10, 2024, in light of the resignation of former Judge
Kindred.2
Also before the Court at Docket 73 is Plaintiff’s response to the Court’s order
regarding service on Defendants Brainerd and Bullis. Defendant Bullis filed a
1
Docket 80.
2
Docket 76.
limited appearance to object to Plaintiff’s response at Docket 75.
I.
BACKGROUND
On November 2, 2021, Mr. Johnson filed a Complaint alleging that the State
of Alaska violated his Fourteenth Amendment rights to due process and medical
care while he was a pretrial detainee at the Fairbanks Correctional Center
(“FCC”).3 With the Complaint, Mr. Johnson attached an order dated November 6,
2019, from the Superior Court for the State of Alaska.4 That order dismissed Mr.
Johnson’s state court criminal charges with prejudice because the speedy trial
clock expired under Alaska Criminal Rule 45 by 450 days.5
On November 4, 2021, District Judge Timothy M. Burgess recused himself
from the matter and the case was reassigned to District Judge Ralph R. Beistline.6
Shortly thereafter, the State of Alaska filed a Motion to Dismiss at Docket 4.
Finding that the Complaint was subject to screening pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §
1915A, Judge Beistline stayed the Motion to Dismiss.7 On March 4, 2022, the
Court issued a Screening Order; that order dismissed the Complaint for failure to
state a claim, granted leave to amend, and denied the Motion to Dismiss as moot.8
3
Docket 1.
4
Docket 1; Docket 1-1.
5
Docket 1-1.
6
Docket 3.
7
Docket 6.
8
Docket 10 at 12.
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The screening order instructed Mr. Johnson on how to plead claims under 42
U.S.C. § 1983, the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments, and relevant Alaska state
tort law.9 The order also noted that to successfully bring a claim under § 1983
“require[s] a viable state actor as a proper defendant,” and that judges and their
associated staff are absolutely immune from suit under 42 U.S.C. §1983.10
On April 22, 2022, Mr. Johnson filed a First Amended Complaint and, three
days later, a Notice to the Court with 60 pages of exhibits.11 Without action from
the Court, Mr. Johnson filed a Second Amended Complaint (“SAC”) with his
exhibits on May 17, 2022, which is the operative complaint at this time.12 In short
9
See Docket 10.
Docket 10 at 9–10 n.33. Indeed, it appears that a former pretrial detainee cannot maintain an
action for damages under federal law for wrongful incarceration. The sole remedy available in
federal court would appear to be a petition for a writ of habeas corpus seeking one’s release from
pretrial detention. See 28 U.S.C. § 2441; Preiser v. Rodriguez, 411 U.S. 475, 494 (1973) (“If a
state prisoner is seeking damages, he is attacking something other than the fact or length of his
confinement, and he is seeking something other than immediate or more speedy release—the
traditional purpose of habeas corpus.”); Nettles v. Grounds, 830 F.3d 922, 927 (9th Cir. 2016)
(“The Court has long held that habeas is the exclusive vehicle for claims brought by state
prisoners that fall within the core of habeas [i.e. related to the validity of any confinement or to
particulars affecting its duration], and such claims may not be brought in a § 1983 action.”); Puett
v. Ylst, 930 F.2d 29, at *1 (9th Cir. 1991) (unpublished table decision) (citations omitted) (“Any
challenge to the length or duration of confinement is redressable only in habeas corpus. A
Section 1983 action for damages by state prisoners may be maintained provided the prisoner
attacks only the conditions of his confinement and not its fact or duration.”); Lumpkin v. Bellevue
Police Dep’t, Case No. 2:23-CV-01086. Thus, even if the Court erred in its analysis of the relation
back doctrine being limited to Rule 15(c)(3) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, see Docket
66 at 7–10; Butler v. Nat’l Cmty. Renaissance of Cal., 766 F.3d 1191, 1200 (9th Cir. 2014) (“Rule
15(c)(1) incorporates the relation back rules of the law of a state when that state’s law provides
the applicable statute of limitations and is more lenient.”), Mr. Johnson’s damages claim for
wrongful pretrial detention cannot proceed in federal court. And any claims against Defendant
Axelsson for her role in the provision of medical care to Mr. Johnson arose in 2017 and were thus
time-barred long before this action was filed.
10
11
Dockets 15, 17.
12
Docket 20.
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summary, the SAC removed the State of Alaska as a Defendant and instead
names 15 Defendants, including two groups of unknown Defendants. They include
three attorneys (Brainerd, Bullis, and Hansen); seven state court judges
(Blankenship, Harbison, Christian, McConahy, MacDonald, Peterson, and
Seekins); a probation officer, Whitman; the Superintendent at Fairbanks
Correctional Center (“FCC”) in 2017, Axelsson; the unknown superintendents at
FCC at any time from July 8, 2017 through November 6, 2019; and the unknown
medical directors at FCC at any time from July 8, 2017 until November 6, 2019.13
Count I of the SAC alleges that all Defendants are liable for 719 days of Mr.
Johnson’s unnecessary incarceration in violation of Mr. Johnson’s right to due
process under the Fourteenth Amendment.14 Count II alleges that Plaintiff was
assaulted on July 8, 2017, and FCC medical personnel denied Mr. Johnson a
“med-bed” for unknown reasons, in violation of his right to medical care under the
Fourteenth Amendment.15 Lastly, Count III alleges a dereliction of duty by counsel
and judicial officers.16 In support of his claims, Mr. Johnson filed 59 pages of
exhibits, which are docket sheets, minutes, motions, and orders from state court
cases State of Alaska v. Bryan Webb Johnson, Case Nos. 4FA-14-00321CR and
13
Docket 20-2 at 3–5.
14
Docket 20-2 at 21–22.
15
Docket 20-2 at 6, 23.
16
Docket 20-2 at 24.
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4FA-17-00293CR.17
For relief, Mr. Johnson requests (1) actual damages of
$1,438,000.00; (2) punitive damages of $2,157,000.00; and (3) exemplary
damages of $2,876,000.00.18
The day after the filing of the SAC, the State of Alaska gave notice of a
substitution of counsel.19
Shortly thereafter, the Court issued a text order
acknowledging the SAC and stating that it would be screened “pursuant to 28
U.S.C. § 1915A in due course.”20 Mr. Johnson moved to strike the substitution of
counsel, because the State of Alaska was no longer a named defendant in the
SAC.21 The State of Alaska responded in opposition and with a cross-motion
asking the Court to not screen the SAC, asserting that because Mr. Johnson was
not incarcerated at the time he filed his SAC, § 1915A screening did not apply.22
On August 9, 2022, the Court issued an Order Directing Service of Summons and
Complaint, granting the Cross Motion to End Screening Review at Docket 24 and
denying as moot the Motion to Strike Substitution of Counsel for Lack of Standing
at Docket 23.23 The Court instructed Mr. Johnson to serve the summons and SAC
17
Dockets 20-3 to 20-29.
18
Docket 20-2 at 22–25.
19
Docket 21.
20
Docket 22.
21
Docket 23.
22
Docket 24.
23
Docket 25.
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on all Defendants within 90 days.24
On November 8, 2022, Mr. Johnson filed a motion requesting additional time
and assistance from the United States Marshal Service to serve all Defendants.25
No response was filed. On January 27, 2023, the Court issued a Second Order
Directing Service and Response granting Mr. Johnson’s request for service
assistance from the United States Marshal Service and providing instructions for
completing service.26
On April 27, 2023, Mr. Johnson filed: (1) an application to proceed without
prepaying fees or costs; (2) a motion requesting a volunteer attorney; and (3) a
motion for electronic service.27 Shortly thereafter, the case was reassigned to
then-Judge Kindred.28 On May 17, 2023, the Court denied Mr. Johnson’s motions,
but granted Mr. Johnson “one final opportunity to complete service within 30 days
of this order.”29 Mr. Johnson promptly filed a Motion for Clarification requesting,
among other relief, additional time for service.30 Thereafter, the United States
Marshal Service served Defendants Seekins, Harbison, Blankenship, Peterson,
24
Docket 25.
25
Docket 29.
26
Docket 30.
27
Dockets 32–34.
28
Docket 35.
29
Docket 36 at 2, 7.
30
Docket 37 at 9.
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Christian, MacDonald, McConahy, and Axelsson.31 Defendants Brainerd, Bullis,
Clarkson, Whitman, and Hansen remained unserved.32
On July 6, 2023, Defendant Axelsson and Defendants Blankenship,
Christian, Harbison, MacDonald, McConahy, Peterson, and Seekins (“Defendant
Judges”) filed Motions to Dismiss at Dockets 53 and 55. Defendant Axelsson
asserted Mr. Johnson’s claims against her in the SAC were untimely as those
claims against her did not properly relate back to the claims against the State in
the original Complaint under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 15(c)(1). 33 The
Defendant Judges echoed Defendant Axelsson’s arguments on the statute of
limitations and the relation back of claims; they also emphasized the additional
defense of judicial immunity.34
On July 18, 2023, the Court issued an Order Re Motions to Dismiss, which
(1) denied Plaintiff’s Motion for Clarification at Docket 37; (2) dismissed
Defendants Brainerd, Bullis, Whitman, Hansen, and Clarkson without prejudice for
failure to serve under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 4(m); (3) required Mr.
Johnson to identify all unnamed Defendants and file a Notice of Substitution within
90 days, after which all unidentified Defendants would be dismissed; and (4)
31
Dockets 42–45, 47–49, 51.
32
Dockets 41, 46, 50; see also Docket 56 at 4.
33
Docket 53-1 at 8–10.
34
Docket 55-1 at 13–15.
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accorded Mr. Johnson 21 days to file any opposition to the Motions to Dismiss.35
In early August 2023, Mr. Johnson filed a Notice to the Court Re: Service
Time Sensitive at Docket 58 and a Motion to Show Receipt of Certified Mail/Docs
at Docket 59.36 The notice identified eight issues: (1) the United States Marshal
Service had failed to serve the Attorney General’s Office in accordance with Rule
4(d)(8); (2) reconsideration of Mr. Johnson’s request for electronic service; (3)
reconsideration of his request for a volunteer attorney; (4) clarification on the
deadline for the completion of service; (5) notification that the service of process
receipts for Defendants Brainerd and Bullis were missing; (6) permission to serve
Defendant Brainerd electronically; (7) adjustment of Defendants’ answer due date
to 60 days rather than 21 days;37 and (8) clarification on “the number of Defendants
[the Attorney General’s Office] may represent.”38
The motion stated that the
Attorney General’s Office had served him with two notices of appearance, two
motions to dismiss, and two memoranda in support of the motions to dismiss and
it provides the tracking information.39 Subsequently, at Docket 60, Mr. Johnson
filed a Motion to Reconsider Previous Order Dismissing Brainerd as a Defendant,
35
Docket 56.
The Court notes that Docket 57 contains both the Notice and the Motion. For clarity, the Court
addresses each as their separate docket entry.
36
Mr. Johnson is mistaken that state employees are accorded 60 days to respond to a complaint
in federal court instead of 21 days. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(a)(1)(i), (a)(2), (a)(3) (60-day time
frame only applies to the United States and its agencies, officers, or employees).
37
38
Docket 58.
39
Docket 59.
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and, at Docket 61, a Motion to Define Requirements for Requesting and Assigning
Counsel.
Defendant Axelsson and the Defendant Judges filed a partial opposition to
the Docket 58 notice and the Docket 59 motion at Docket 63. As to the issues
raised in the notice, those Defendants deferred to the Court’s discretion on giving
instructions on service, appointing counsel, locating missing process receipts, and
any deadlines; but Defendants opposed Mr. Johnson being permitted to serve any
Defendant by any means other than that provided by the Local Civil Rules and
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.40 Defendants did not oppose the motion at
Docket 59,41 and did not respond to the motions at Dockets 60 and 61. In midAugust 2023, Mr. Johnson filed an opposition to the Motions to Dismiss at Dockets
53 and 55, responding that he had delayed filing suit because he believed the
State would investigate the matter42 and that judicial immunity is not absolute and
should not apply.43
The served Defendants replied jointly that neither the
untimeliness of the filing of the action nor the absoluteness of judicial immunity
could be cured; therefore, they asserted that their dismissal from the case was
appropriate.44
40
Docket 63 at 2–3.
41
Docket 63 at 3.
42
See Docket 62 at 6.
43
Docket 62 at 11.
44
Docket 64 at 2–3.
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On January 24, 2024, at Docket 66, the Court issued an Order Regarding
Pending Motions. First, and despite previously denying Mr. Johnson’s motion at
Docket 37, the Court again addressed that motion and discussed the case
screening requirement of 28 U.S.C. § 1915A;45 the difference in roles between the
State of Alaska as a defendant and the Alaska Department of Law in proving legal
representation to its employees; and the contours of sovereign immunity under the
Eleventh Amendment.46
Second, the Court evaluated Defendant Axelsson’s
Motion to Dismiss at Docket 53 and found that the SAC’s claims against Defendant
Axelsson did not relate back to the original complaint.47 Accordingly, the Court
granted the Motion to Dismiss at Docket 53 and dismissed Defendant Axelsson
from the suit. Third, the Court addressed the Defendant Judges’ Motion to Dismiss
and held “[e]ach defendant judge is immune from suit in this case.”48 Therefore,
the Court granted the Motion to Dismiss at Docket 55 and dismissed the Defendant
Judges from the action.49 Fourth, the Court granted Mr. Johnson’s Motion for
Reconsideration at Docket 60, finding that the Court had not “allow[ed] him to show
good cause for this failure to serve Mr. Brainerd before dismissing his claim as
The Court agrees with Mr. Johnson’s discussion of the District Court’s screening responsibilities
and discretionary screening options as set forth in his recent motion. See Docket 78 at 6.
45
Docket 66 at 5–7. The Court notes that due to clerical error Docket 37 remained under
advisement in the CM/ECF system, hence the duplicative rulings.
46
47
Docket 66 at 7–10.
48
Docket 66 at 10–12; but see supra n.10.
49
Docket 66 at 12.
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required.”50 The Court granted Mr. Johnson 30 days to show good cause.51 Lastly,
the Court denied Mr. Johnson’s Motion to Define the Requirements for Requesting
and Assignment of Counsel, reiterating Mr. Johnson did not meet the elements of
the test established by the Ninth Circuit.52
On March 12, 2024, at Docket 67, Mr. Johnson filed a Motion for Extension
of Time, alleging he had been injured in a car accident, and a Notice Re: Statute
of Limitations at Docket 68. The Court declined to address the notice, but granted
the Motion for Extension of Time, allowing Mr. Johnson to “make a showing of
good cause for his failure to timely service Defendants Mary Bullis and John C.
Brainerd by 4/15/2024. Further options seeking extensions to this deadline will be
disfavored.”53
On March 28, 2024, the United States Marshal Service filed service of
process receipts and returns for Defendants Bullis and Brainerd and a bill of
costs.54
Defendant Bullis’s process receipt shows that service remained
unexecuted because she no longer worked at the address provided.55 Defendant
Brainerd’s process receipt shows that the United States Marshal Service used
50
Docket 66 at 13–14.
51
Docket 66 at 14.
52
Docket 66 at 14–15.
53
Docket 69.
54
Dockets 70–72.
55
Docket 70 at 2.
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FedEx and that the address provided was to a mailbox at a UPS Store.56
On April 15, 2024, Mr. Johnson filed his statement of good cause, titled as
Response to Court Order.57 Relying on purported statements made by the United
States Marshal Service, Mr. Johnson asserted that service on Defendants Bullis
and Brainerd had been completed.58 Additionally, he requested that the Court
enter a default judgment for each of those Defendants, because they had not
responded in a timely manner.59 Counsel for Defendant Bullis entered a limited
appearance on behalf of that Defendant and asserted “Defendant Bullis has not
been served and does not waive service.”60 Neither Mr. Brainerd nor counsel for
him has appeared in this action.
On July 10, 2024, this matter was reassigned to District Judge Sharon L.
Gleason.61 On August 19, 2024, Mr. Johnson filed a Motion for Court to View
Judge Kindred’s Retirement as Sua Sponte Recusal as His Court Orders Show
Actual &/or Appearance of Bias; plus Motion to Reasses[s] his Orders for Legality
and Ethics.62 On August 20, 2024, Mr. Johnson filed an amended version of that
56
Docket 71 at 2.
Docket 73. The Court notes that because this filing is titled as a response, but includes a
request for relief, it will be treated as a motion in this order.
57
58
Docket 73 at 2.
59
Docket 73 at 2–3.
60
Docket 75 at 2.
61
Docket 76.
62
Docket 77.
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same motion.63 He requests that this Court view the resignation of former Judge
Kindred as a “sua sponte recusal . . . and reassess the orders he filed in this
case.”64 Mr. Johnson states that “[u]pon review, the Court may find evidence of
actual bias/prejudice and/or appearance of bias.”65 Mr. Johnson challenges the
orders at Dockets 36, 56, and 66.66 Out of an “abundance of caution,” previously
dismissed Defendants State of Alaska, Axelsson, and the Defendant Judges
responded construing the motion as filed under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
60(b)(6).67 Collectively, they assert that Mr. Johnson provided no legal or factual
support for his assertions; rather, he attacks “decisions unfavorable to him, but
‘judicial rulings alone almost never constitute a valid basis for a bias or partiality
motion.’”68
II.
LEGAL STANDARD
The Court treats Mr. Johnson’s recent motions as seeking to have the Court
reconsider former Judge Kindred’s orders. Pursuant to this Court's local rules, it
will ordinarily deny a motion for reconsideration absent a showing of “(A) manifest
error of the law or fact; (B) discovery of new material facts not previously available;
63
Docket 78.
64
Docket 78 at 1.
65
Docket 78 at 1 (emphasis in original).
66
Docket 78 at 1.
Docket 80 at 1–2. Because no final judgment has yet been entered, Rule 60(b) is inapplicable
at this time.
67
68
Docket 80 at 2–3 (quoting Liteky v. United States, 510 U.S. 540, 555 (1994)).
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or (C) intervening change in law.”69 Reconsideration is “an extraordinary remedy,
to be used sparingly and in the interests of finality and conservation of judicial
resources.”70
III.
DISCUSSION
A. Motions before the Court
This Court has undertaken a thorough review of this case file in an effort to
understand the history of this litigation. As a preliminary matter, the Court finds
that Mr. Johnson’s challenges to the prior orders based on the former judge’s
resignation from judicial office to be without merit.71 28 U.S.C. § 144 requires that
a party must raise the issue of bias or prejudice (1) on motion made in good faith
(2) with an affidavit of facts and reasons; (3) within 10 days of the proceeding or
longer with good cause shown.72 28 U.S.C. § 455(a) requires that a judge “shall
disqualify himself in any proceeding in which his impartiality might reasonably be
questioned.” Additionally, the statute mandates judges to disqualify themselves
where they may have personal knowledge of evidentiary facts, a conflict of interest,
or a financial interest that could be affected by the outcome.73 None of the factors
listed under either statute exist in this case; nor were they alleged in Mr. Johnson’s
69
Alaska L.Civ.R. 7.3(h)(1).
70
Carroll v. Nakatani, 342 F.3d 934, 945 (9th Cir. 2003).
71
See Dockets 77, 78.
72
28 U.S.C. § 144.
73
28 U.S.C. § 455(b).
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latest motions.74 Indeed, “judicial rulings alone almost never constitute a valid
basis for a bias or partiality motion.”75 Accordingly, the Motion and Amended
Motion for Court to View Judge Kindred’s Retirement as Sua Sponte Recusal as
His Court Orders Show Actual &/or Appearance of Bias; plus Motion to Reasses[s]
his Orders for Legality and Ethics at Dockets 77 and 78 are DENIED.
At present, two Defendants remain unserved: Bullis and Brainerd. At
Docket 70, the process receipt for Defendant Bullis demonstrates that service of
the summons and complaint remains unexecuted. At Docket 71, the process
receipt shows that the United States Marshal Service improperly executed service
on Defendant Brainerd. Rule 4(e) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure permits
service to be performed in accordance with state law. Rule 4(h) of the Alaska
Rules of Civil Procedure permits service of process by mail, using “registered or
certified mail, with return receipt.” Service of process by mail “is complete when
the return receipt is signed.”76 This necessitates that service be made via one of
these methods of the United States Postal Service, not by a private carrier, and
that a return receipt be filed with the Court. Neither of these requirements have
been met as to Defendant Brainerd. Accordingly, Defendants Bullis and Brainerd
remain unserved. Therefore, the entry of a default judgment against either of them
74
See Dockets 77, 78.
Liteky v. United States, 510 U.S. 540, 555 (1994); see also United States v. Holland, 519 F.3d
909, 913–14 (9th Cir. 2008).
75
76
Alaska R. Civ. P. 4(h).
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would be improper. The Response to Court Order at Docket 73, construed as a
motion because it requests relief from the Court, is DENIED.
B. Defendants Brainerd and Bullis are not State Actors for Purposes of
Liability under Section 1983
In the Screening Order at Docket 10, the Court reviewed Mr. Johnson’s
original Complaint at Docket 1. The Court explained the requirements for pleading
a claim and the required elements to articulate his claims as a civil rights action
under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.77 The Court gave leave for Mr. Johnson to file an
amended complaint in compliance with the fundamental elements of a § 1983 civil
rights action.
The SAC does not mention 42 U.S.C. § 1983.78 However, the Court liberally
construed the SAC as having been filed pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, as the SAC
alleges violations of federal constitutional rights and Section 1983 is the proper
vehicle to assert such rights. To state a claim for relief under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, a
plaintiff must allege plausible facts that, if proven, would establish “(1) the
defendants acting under color of state law (2) deprived the plaintiff of rights
secured by the Constitution or federal statutes.”79 To act under color of state law,
77
Docket 10 at 4–13.
78
See Docket 20.
79
Gibson v. United States, 781 F.2d 1334, 1338 (9th Cir. 1986).
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a complaint must allege that the defendant acted with state authority as a state
actor.80
An attorney appointed to represent a criminal defendant in a state court
proceeding is "as a matter of law . . . not a state actor."81 Such an attorney, whether
from the Office of Public Advocacy, Public Defender’s Agency, or by contract is
“no doubt[] paid by government funds and hired by a government agency.
Nevertheless, his function was to represent his client, not the interests of the state
or county.”82 It does not matter that a state criminal defense lawyer is paid from
public funds. “Except for the source of payment, . . . the duties and obligations are
the same whether the lawyer is privately retained, appointed, or serving in a legal
aid or defender program.”83
The only remaining defendants in this matter are two attorneys who
previously represented Mr. Johnson as court-appointed counsel.84 Defendants
Bullis and Brainerd, as a matter of law, are not state actors. The decisions of the
United States Supreme Court make clear that a court-appointed attorney cannot
West v. Atkins, 487 U.S. 42, 49 (1988) (quoting United States v. Classic, 313 U.S. 299, 326
(1941)).
80
81
See Miranda v. Clark Cnty., 319 F.3d 465, 468 (9th Cir. 2003), cert. denied, 540 U.S. 814 (2003).
Id. (citing Polk Cnty. v. Dodson, 454 U.S. 312, 325 (1981)) (recognizing that the public defender
performs “a lawyer’s traditional functions” in the lawyer’s traditional adversarial role).
82
83
Polk Cnty., 454 U.S. at 318–19 (internal quotation marks omitted).
84
Docket 20-2 at 11–13, 16.
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be sued under the federal civil rights statute, 42 U.S.C. § 1983.85 And this is the
only federal statute that could apply to Mr. Johnson’s claims against Defendants
Bullis and Brainerd in federal court. Because the claims against these Defendants
cannot proceed as a civil rights action under federal law, these Defendants must
be dismissed.
Mr. Johnson has tried, unsuccessfully, for over two years to serve these two
Defendants.
And the United States Marshal Service attempted service on
Defendant Brainerd in a manner not permitted by the applicable federal rule. But
any additional attempts at service on either of these Defendants would be futile at
this point, because Mr. Johnson’s claims against his former attorneys cannot be
pursued in a Section 1983 action in federal court.
IV.
CONCLUSION
All named Defendants have been dismissed and all unnamed defendants
have not been identified and named defendants substituted in their place, as was
ordered to occur in July 2023. Any further attempt to file an amended complaint in
this action would be futile. The judicial defendants are immune from suit; the
former attorneys are not state actors; any claims against the former superintendent
for medical care in 2017 are time-barred; and damages recovery in federal court
under Section 1983 for a state law speedy trial violation appears to be
85
See Polk Cnty., 454 U.S. at 314–19.
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unavailable.86 Thus, while this Court certainly does not endorse the conduct of
state officials with respect to the processing of Mr. Johnson’s state criminal cases,
this action must be dismissed.87
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED:
1. The relief requested in the Response to Court Order at Docket 73 is
DENIED.
2. The Motion and Amended Motion for Court to View Judge Kindred’s
Retirement as Sua Sponte Recusal as His Court Orders Show Actual
&/or Appearance of Bias; plus Motion to Reasses[s] his Orders for
Legality and Ethics at Dockets 77 and 78 are DENIED.
3. All claims against all Defendants in this action, named and unnamed, are
DISMISSED.
4. The Clerk shall enter a final judgment accordingly.
DATED this 23rd day of October 2024, at Anchorage, Alaska.
/s/ Sharon L. Gleason
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
See supra n.10. But see Docket 10 at 10 (initial Screening Order in this case discussing possible
negligence claim under state law for alleged wrongful incarceration and citing Kinegak v. State,
Department of Corrections, 129 P.3d 887, 893 (Alaska 2006)).
86
87
Allen v. City of Beverly Hills, 911 F.2d 367, 373 (9th Cir. 1990).
Case No. 4:21-cv-00027-SLG, Johnson v. Brainerd, et al.
Order of Dismissal
Page 19 of 19
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