Aaron Davis v. Jeffrey Nines, Assistant Commissioner, West Region, Keith Arnold, Warden, Bethany Cornachia, Assistant Warden, Richard Roderick, Case Management Supervisor, Michelle Gardner, Americans with Disabilities Act Coordinator, Aetna: Ne.emerse LES UTILIZATION MANAGEMENT MEDICAL DIRECTOR, YESCARE, UTILIZATION MANAGEMENT MEDICAL DIRECTOR, CENTURION, Kristine M. Swick, Assistant Director of Nursing, Asresahegn Getachew, M.D., and Michael S. Love, Charge Nurse

CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedMarch 19, 2026
Docket1:24-cv-02488
StatusUnknown

This text of Aaron Davis v. Jeffrey Nines, Assistant Commissioner, West Region, Keith Arnold, Warden, Bethany Cornachia, Assistant Warden, Richard Roderick, Case Management Supervisor, Michelle Gardner, Americans with Disabilities Act Coordinator, Aetna: Ne.emerse LES UTILIZATION MANAGEMENT MEDICAL DIRECTOR, YESCARE, UTILIZATION MANAGEMENT MEDICAL DIRECTOR, CENTURION, Kristine M. Swick, Assistant Director of Nursing, Asresahegn Getachew, M.D., and Michael S. Love, Charge Nurse (Aaron Davis v. Jeffrey Nines, Assistant Commissioner, West Region, Keith Arnold, Warden, Bethany Cornachia, Assistant Warden, Richard Roderick, Case Management Supervisor, Michelle Gardner, Americans with Disabilities Act Coordinator, Aetna: Ne.emerse LES UTILIZATION MANAGEMENT MEDICAL DIRECTOR, YESCARE, UTILIZATION MANAGEMENT MEDICAL DIRECTOR, CENTURION, Kristine M. Swick, Assistant Director of Nursing, Asresahegn Getachew, M.D., and Michael S. Love, Charge Nurse) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aaron Davis v. Jeffrey Nines, Assistant Commissioner, West Region, Keith Arnold, Warden, Bethany Cornachia, Assistant Warden, Richard Roderick, Case Management Supervisor, Michelle Gardner, Americans with Disabilities Act Coordinator, Aetna: Ne.emerse LES UTILIZATION MANAGEMENT MEDICAL DIRECTOR, YESCARE, UTILIZATION MANAGEMENT MEDICAL DIRECTOR, CENTURION, Kristine M. Swick, Assistant Director of Nursing, Asresahegn Getachew, M.D., and Michael S. Love, Charge Nurse, (D. Md. 2026).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MARYLAND

AARON DAVIS, Plaintiff, Vv. JEFFREY NINES, Assistant Commissioner, West Region, KEITH ARNOLD, Warden, BETHANY CORNACHIA, Assistant Warden, RICHARD RODERICK, Case Management Supervisor, MICHELLE GARDNER, . Americans with Disabilities Act Coordinator, Aetna: Ne.emerse LES UTILIZATION MANAGEMENT MEDICAL DIRECTOR, YESCARE, UTILIZATION MANAGEMENT MEDICAL DIRECTOR, CENTURION, KRISTINE M. SWICK, Assistant Director of Nursing, ASRESAHEGN GETACHEW, M.D., and MICHAEL S. LOVE, Charge Nurse, Defendants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION Self-represented Plaintiff Aaron Davis, a hearing-impaired inmate who is currently incarcerated at the North Branch Correctional Institution (“NBCI”) in Cumberland, Maryland, has filed this civil rights action in which he asserts federal statutory claims and federal and state constitutional claims against correctional personnel and employees of the current and former contracted medical providers for Maryland state prisons, Centurion Health (“Centurion”) and YesCare Corporation (“YesCare”), arising from Defendants’ alleged failure to address and accommodate Davis’s hearing impairment. In his verified Amended Complaint, Davis names 10

defendants in their individual and official capacities: former NBCI Warden and current Assistant Commissioner of Correction Jeffrey Nines, NBCI Warden Keith Arnold, NBCI Assistant Warden Bethany Cornachia, NBCI Case Management Supervisor Richard Roderick, Maryland Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services (“DPSCS”) Americans with Disabilities Act Coordinator Michelle Gardner, the Utilization Management Medical Directors (“UMMDs”) for YesCare and Centurion (“YesCare UMMD” and “Centurion UMMD”), YesCare Assistant Director of Nursing Kristine M. Swick, YesCare and Centurion Dr. Asresahegn Getachew, and Centurion Nurse Michael S. Love. Defendants YesCare UMMD, Dr. Getachew, and Swick (“the YesCare Defendants”) have filed an Amended Motion to Dismiss or, Alternatively, for Summary Judgment (“the YesCare Motion”); Defendants Centurion UMMD, Dr. Getachew, and Love (“the Centurion Defendants”) have filed a Motion to Dismiss or, in the Alternative, Motion for Summary Judgment (“the Centurion Motion”); and Defendants Nines, Arnold, Cornachia, Roderick, and Gardner (“the State Defendants”) have filed a Motion to Dismiss or, in the Alternative, Motion for Summary Judgment (“the State Defendants’ Motion”). In responding to Defendants’ Motions, Davis has filed a Motion to Clarify and Investigate, a Motion for Leave of Court to File an Appendix, and a Motion for Additional Time to Conduct Discovery. Having reviewed the submitted materials, the Court finds that no hearing is necessary. See D. Md. Local R. 105.6. For the reasons set forth below, the YesCare Motion will be GRANTED, the Centurion Motion will be GRANTED, the State Defendants’ Motion will be GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART, and Davis’s Motions will be GRANTED.

BACKGROUND I. Davis’s Allegations In the presently operative Amended Complaint, Davis alleges the following relevant facts, which the Court accepts as true for purposes of the Motions. Davis was diagnosed at birth with hearing loss which will become progressively worse over time and has relied on hearing aids throughout his life. This disability affected his comprehension and motor skills as a child and has contributed to his various mental health conditions. Davis asserts that deaf or hearing-impaired inmates need CapTel phones for communication with family and video rely phones with closed captions for use during visitation; mobile pagers or beepers to notify inmates of scheduled activities such as recreation, programs, meals, and medical passes; mounted alert beacons to notify inmates of shift changes and other announcements; and staff trained on the requirements and implementation of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (“ADA”). Davis contends that NBCI has failed to provide these accommodations or other effective ways for hearing-impaired inmates to utilize the prison’s facilities. Beginning on October 31, 2017, Davis was incarcerated at Maryland Correctional Institution—Jessup (“MCI-J”), a facility that “caters to deaf and hearing impaired inmates.” Am. Compl. at 23, ECF No. 32. On or about September 15, 2021, Davis was “arbitrarily” transferred to NBCI, a maximum security prison. /d. at 24. Davis alleges that Warden Arnold, who was then the NBCI Assistant Warden with responsibility for ADA compliance, and NBCI Case Management Supervisor Roderick both knew or should have known that NBCI could not meet the needs of hearing-impaired inmates such as Davis. He also alleges that Gardner, as the DPSCS ADA Coordinator, could have “facilitated a swap” of prisoners so that he could return to MCI-J,

and that the YesCare Defendants “may have been contacted” to advocate for such a transfer, but they did not do so. /d. at 24-25. According to Davis, since he has been held at NBCI, he has been deprived of equipment needed by hearing-impaired inmates for “daily aspects of prison life.” Id. at 25. On April 10, 2022, Davis filed an administrative remedy procedure grievance (“ARP”), No. NBCI-0634-22, in which he raised concerns about the accommodation of his hearing impairment. Although this ARP was dismissed, on appeal, the Commissioner of Correction found Davis’s claim meritorious on August 4, 2022 and directed then- Warden Nines to adhere to ADA requirements. On August 19, 2022, Davis sent a sick call request seeking a new hearing aid and other auxiliary equipment and requesting to see an audiologist. On August 20, 2022, Davis submitted a formal request for reasonable accommodations of his hearing impairment in which he sought, among other accommodations, the CapTel phone or video relay phone, a beacon or pager to alert him to events and emergencies, and a hearing-impaired sign to alert correctional officers that he cannot hear them. On October 26, 2022, Davis met with Roderick to discuss his need for auxiliary aids. According to Davis, Roderick became “‘enflamed” and noted that Davis already had a hearing aid and a tablet for use in communications. /d. at 26. When Davis asked to be transferred back to MCI-J, Roderick told him that because he had a “poor adjustment history,” he needed to reduce his security level and thus would need to “stay out of trouble for a year” in order to be considered. Id.; Information Report Form at 1, Am. Compl. Ex. 4, ECF No. 32-4. Later, in January 2023, a case manager told Davis that he would need to be infraction-free for three years to be considered for a decrease in security classification.

Meanwhile, on December 21, 2022, Davis was placed in administrative segregation through “no fault of his own.” Am. Compl. at 26. Davis complained to an NBCI case manager about the hardships he faced while in segregation, but Roderick, who became Assistant Warden and the ADA Coordinator for NBCI in February 2023, responded that Davis had received a hearing aid and would have to make do with it because he would not be leaving NBCI. On February 15, 2023, Davis submitted an additional complaint requesting accommodations for his hearing impairment while in administrative segregation, such as the use of communication cards to inform him of his times for showers or recreation, because he could not hear announcements. That same day, Davis was returned to general population. On March 19, 2023, after Davis tossed a bottle containing a cleaner to another inmate, Officers Kitzmiller, Kiefer, and Wagner strip-searched him, searched his cell, “vandalized” his property, and took away his hearing aid and hearing-impaired sign. /d. at27. Davis was prevented from speaking to a supervisor about the incident and was told not to file a grievance.

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Aaron Davis v. Jeffrey Nines, Assistant Commissioner, West Region, Keith Arnold, Warden, Bethany Cornachia, Assistant Warden, Richard Roderick, Case Management Supervisor, Michelle Gardner, Americans with Disabilities Act Coordinator, Aetna: Ne.emerse LES UTILIZATION MANAGEMENT MEDICAL DIRECTOR, YESCARE, UTILIZATION MANAGEMENT MEDICAL DIRECTOR, CENTURION, Kristine M. Swick, Assistant Director of Nursing, Asresahegn Getachew, M.D., and Michael S. Love, Charge Nurse, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aaron-davis-v-jeffrey-nines-assistant-commissioner-west-region-keith-mdd-2026.