OPINION
These Civil Rights proceedings were filed by plaintiffs pursuant to 42 U.S.C. A. § 1983, alleging that defendants’ conduct toward plaintiffs constituted a deprivation of Constitutional rights. Because the matters complained of arose from the same incident, the Court consolidated both actions, and the parties have been afforded a full and complete trial.
Essentially, plaintiffs seek to recover damages for cruel and inhuman punishment to which they allegedly were sub
Shortly after Warden Robinson arrived, plaintiffs and another of the five inmates began striking the Warden and attempted to throw him over the railing to the ground below, a distance of 15 to 20 feet. The assistance of other officers was required to quell what by this time had turned into an affray and near riot. The Warden directed that the alarm bell be rung to summon help from the Sheriff’s Office in view of the substantial emergency which existed.
When the Sheriff’s deputies arrived, the inmates and several guards were still fighting; defendant Lieutenant Jennings was down on the ground and was being beaten by one inmate, and it appeared that the inmates were in control of the situation. It is well to note that both plaintiffs here were subsequently convicted of assault by a prisoner and prison riot, as a result of their participation in the incident about which they now complain. All five inmates, including plaintiffs, were eventually subdued, placed in a van, and returned on the date of the incident to the State Correctional Institution at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Under the circumstances, the Court is satisfied that excessive force was not employed by defendants and that there was no violation of any of plaintiffs’ Constitutional rights. Very simply stated, the force used was reasonably required to secure and maintain safety in the institution and to prevent any further outbreak of violence. As stated in Holt v. Hutto, 363 F.Supp. 194 (E.D. Ark.1973),
“. . . [A]t times force has to be used by prison personnel on recalcitrant inmates, and (that) an inmate who has been the subject of force is not likely to concede that its use was necessary or that the amount used was reasonable. The Court also recognizes that an employee charged with improper use of force is not to be judged by hindsight but in the light of facts and circumstances as they reasonably appeared to him to exist at the time.”
In view of the foregoing, it is the considered judgment of the Court that defendants have in no way violated plaintiffs’ Constitutional rights.
Findings of fact and conclusions of law have not been separately stated but are included in the body of the foregoing opinion as specifically authorized by Rule 52(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.