Chichakli v. Grondolsky et al
Filing
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Judge George A. OToole, Jr: ORDER entered. MEMORANDUM AND ORDER: All claims against respondents Thomas R. Kane, C. Hunton, and P. Surowaniec are DISMISSED. This action may proceed with the Warden Grondolsky as the sole respondent. SERVICE ORDER: The Clerk of this Court shall serve a copy of the petition. The respondent shall file an answer or other responsive pleading within 21 days after the service of the petition.(PSSA, 1)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
RICHARD AMMAR CHICHAKLI,
Petitioner
v.
CIVIL ACTION
NO. 16-12258-GAO
WARDEN J. GRONDOLSKY,
Respondent.
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
December 12, 2016
O=TOOLE, D.J.
I.
Introduction
On November 16, 2016, petitioner Richard Chichakli, a prisoner incarcerated at FMC
Devens in Ayer, Massachusetts, filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C.
' 2241 with an incorporated memorandum in support. The petition names as respondents:
(1) Warden J. Grondolsky; (2) Thomas R. Kane, the Acting Director of the Federal Bureau of
Prisons (BOP); (3) C. Hunton, FMC Devens Unit Manager; and (4) P. Surowaniec, FMC Devens
Case Manager. The petition seeks various relief, including (1) an Order directing the removal
of the “Management Variable” (MV) in his record for allegedly being a flight risk; (2) an Order
directing expungement of unsupported entries in his records, including his Security
Classification; (3) an Order restoring 27 days of good time credit that he alleges was taken by the
BOP improperly as a disciplinary sanction; (4) an Order for expungement of the incident report
forming the basis of his loss of good time credit, and for reversal of the disciplinary sanction;
(5) an Order for correction of the records to reflect his release date to its original setting of May
13, 2017; and (6) an Order to process his referral packet submitted to the Residential Reentry
Management Office for his re-designation to a camp or low-security facility near his home and
family in the Dallas-Fort Worth area of Texas, in accordance with BOP=s policy to house
prisoners within 500 miles from home.
In brief, Chichakli contends that the BOP has manipulated his designations in order to
place him at a higher-security facility by increasing his MV based on his being a flight risk.
Pet. (Docket No. 1 at & 9).
Absent this variable, which remains in effect until January 17,
2017, Chichakli claims he would be designated mandatorily from low-security placement to a
camp placement.
Further, he contends that he has been incarcerated in “Administrative
Facilities” that are not low-security. Id.
He claims that the reason for the MV against him was
in retaliation for reporting a bribery/extortion scheme while he was incarcerated in FDC-Miami
in 2015.
He alleges that he was asked, by an inmate acting as a middleman, to pay money in
exchange for a 12-month halfway house and home confinement package deal, but he refused the
proposal and reported this scheme to BOP staff.
Id. at & 11. Additionally, he claims the BOP
has placed him in harsh conditions of confinement for the same political reasons for which he
was convicted. Id. at 4.
He contends that he is not mentally ill and should not be incarcerated
at FMC Devens, an administrative medical facility used to treat sex offenders and others with
mental health issues.
Further, he alleges that his designation to FMC Devens was made in order
to punish him by separating him from his family and the designation is inconsistent with his
records.
Chichakli alleges that the named respondents are in collusion with each other and with
BOP staff in Miami to conceal the bribery and extortion scheme that he reported while in
custody in Miami in 2015.
He claims the respondents deliberately stalled the BOP’s
administrative remedy procedure and failed to respond to his requests for an administrative
remedy with respect to an alleged incident report against him by a BOP staff member based on a
fabricated incident on September 14, 2015.
He further claims that the BOP staff at FMC
Devens has “brushed-off” the refusal to respond to his appeal regarding a false incident report,
on the grounds that “it is Miami[’s] problem.”
Id. at 5.
Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. ' 555 et seq.
He contends this violated the
He points to various records that he
claims were falsified or back-dated.
Chichakli alleges that Surowaniec deliberately and maliciously gave him bad assessment
reports (regarding programming and living skills), falsified documents (including residency
records), misled him and gave him false instructions in order to delay his halfway house/home
confinement referral packet for five months, preventing him from receiving fair consideration for
halfway house and/or home confinement.
Chichakli contends that Hunton failed to address the unusual behavior of Surowaniec and
has relied on his personal opinions rather than a document-supported approach to issues relating
to security classification, halfway house release, and the flight risk MV.
He alleges that the unit
team (both Surowaniec and Hunton) caused a variety of delays, initially blaming the delay on
Warden Grondolsky; however, when this was brought to the Warden’s attention by Chichakli’s
complaint, the unit team was ordered to consider the referral package, ultimately submitted on
July 12, 2016.
He claims the unit team refused to recommend halfway house placement as
required by 18 U.S.C. ' 3624(c) and did not consider the five factors mandated to be considered
under the statute. Instead, they recommended four or five months of home confinement.
Chichakli seeks expedited relief insofar as there is less than six months remaining until his
release and he is eligible for halfway house release in December, 2016. He did not, however, pay
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the $5.00 filing fee for habeas petitions nor did he seek a waiver thereof. In light of this, on
November 17, 2016, this Court issued a Procedural Order (Docket No. 4) directing Chichakli to
pay the filing fee or file a Motion for Leave to Proceed in forma pauperis along with his prison
account statement, by December 9, 2016. On November 18, 2016, Chichakli paid the $5.00 filing
fee.
II.
Discussion
A.
Warden Grondolsky is the Only Proper Respondent
Chichakli has not made any distinct allegations against respondent BOP Acting Director
Kane and there is no basis to include him as a respondent in this habeas action.
Accordingly, he
shall be terminated as a respondent in this action and all claims against him are DISMISSED.
Next, Chichakli has made numerous allegations of wrongdoing by respondents Hunton
and Surowaniec with respect to matters affecting his release from incarceration. These
allegations of civil rights violations, however, are not raised properly in a habeas petition. 1
There is no basis to include these respondents in this habeas action.
The habeas relief Chichakli
seeks may be obtained, if he is entitled to it, from an Order directed to Warden Grondolsky, who
1
To the extent Chichakli seeks to assert separate claims against these respondents, he must do so,
if at all, by means of a non-habeas civil action by filing a Complaint in accordance with Rules 8
and 10 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Along with the Complaint, he must pay the
$350.00 filing fee and the $50.00 administrative fee, or seek a waiver thereof by filing a Motion
for Leave to Proceed in forma pauperis along with his certified prison account statement for the
six-month period preceding the filing of the Complaint. Unlike habeas actions, prisoners filing
a non-habeas civil action are not eligible to receive a complete waiver of the filing fee; rather,
prisoners must pay monies toward the filing fee in installments pursuant to the formula set forth
in 28 U.S.C. ' 1915(b) until the entire fee is paid.
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is the only proper respondent here. 2
Accordingly, Hunton and Surowaniec shall be terminated
as respondents in this action and all claims against them are DISMISSED.
This action may
proceed with the Warden Grondolsky as the sole respondent.
B.
Order for Service of the Habeas Petition
In light of the above, this Court will direct the clerk to serve the petition on Warden
Grondolsky, and will direct him to file a response within twenty-one (21) days from the date of
this Memorandum and Order.
III.
Conclusion and Order
Based on the above, it is hereby Ordered that:
1.
All claims against respondents Thomas R. Kane, C. Hunton, and P. Surowaniec are
DISMISSED. The clerk shall terminate these respondents as parties to this action and
shall correct the docket accordingly;
2.
The Clerk of this Court shall serve a copy of the petition upon (i) FMC Devens Warden
Jeff Grondolsky; and (ii) the United States Attorney for the District of Massachusetts;
and
3.
The respondent shall file an answer or other responsive pleading within 21 days after the
service of the petition. The answer or other responsive pleading must also include a
2
It is well-settled that a prisoner contesting the legality of his detention normally must name his
immediate custodian, “the individual having day to day control over the facility in which he is
being detained” as the respondent to the petition. See Rumsfeld v. Padilla, 542 U.S. 426, 434
(2004); Vasquez v. Reno, 233 F.3d 688, 694 (1st Cir. 2000) (a petitioner=s legal custodian is the
individual having day-to-day control over the facility in which petitioner is being detained), cert.
denied, sub nom. Vasquez v. Ashcroft, 122 S. Ct. 43 (2001). The reason that the proper
respondent is deemed to be the individual with the day to day control over a petitioner is because
“[t]he writ of habeas corpus does not act upon the prisoner who seeks relief, but upon the person
who holds him in what is alleged to be unlawful custody.” Braden v. 30th Judicial Circuit
Court of Kentucky, 410 U.S. 484, 494-95 (1973); see 28 U.S.C. ' 2243 (directing that “[t]he writ
or order to show cause shall be directed to the person having custody of the person detained.”@).
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statement notifying this Court of the existence of any victim or victims as defined by 18
U.S.C. ' 3771.
SO ORDERED.
/s/ George A. O’Toole, Jr.
GEORGE A. O=TOOLE, JR.
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
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