Alexander v. Mici

CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedMay 4, 2022
Docket1:20-cv-10020
StatusUnknown

This text of Alexander v. Mici (Alexander v. Mici) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexander v. Mici, (D. Mass. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS ___________________________________ ) CHRISTINE MARA ALEXANDER, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) Civil Action v. ) No. 20-10020-PBS ) MASSACHUSETTS DEPARTMENT OF ) CORRECTION, CAROL MICI, in her ) official capacity, NELSON ALVES ) in his official capacity, and ) WELLPATH, LLC, ) ) Defendants. ) ___________________________________)

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER May 4, 2022 Saris, D.J. INTRODUCTION In her initial pro se complaint, Christine Mara Alexander, who suffers from claustrophobia and gender dysphoria, challenged the denial of an orchiectomy and her limited access to female clothing and makeup products. After the Court appointed counsel, defendants agreed to the orchiectomy. In her Amended Complaint, she alleges that the denial of gender-affirming items, as well as defendants’ failure to transport her alone in a large van to her medical appointments, are a violation of her rights under the Eighth Amendment, Fourteenth Amendment, and Americans with Disabilities Act. She seeks an injunction and declaratory relief but not compensatory damages.

The defendants are the Massachusetts Department of Correction (“DOC”); Carol Mici, the Commissioner of the Massachusetts DOC; Nelson Alves, the Superintendent of MCI- Norfolk (collectively, “DOC Defendants”); and Wellpath, LLC (“Wellpath”). Alves and Mici are being sued in their official capacities. Wellpath employs the medical providers for DOC inmates and is responsible for Alexander’s treatment for gender dysphoria. The defendants have moved to dismiss all claims.

After hearing, the Court ALLOWS IN PART the defendants’ motion as to the Eighth Amendment claim, ALLOWS the motion as to the Fourteenth Amendment Due Process claim, and DENIES the defendants’ motion as to the Equal Protection and Americans with Disabilities Act claims. BACKGROUND I. The Plaintiff Plaintiff Christine Mara Alexander is serving a life

sentence at Massachusetts Correctional Institution at Norfolk (“MCI-Norfolk”). Alexander has male genitalia but lives as a woman. An evaluating psychologist and physician concluded that she “appears to fit the diagnosis” of gender dysphoria (“GD”). Dkt. 47 ¶ 14. Alexander has sought medical treatment and counseling for gender dysphoria since 1985. The defendants have known of Alexander’s condition since at least 2003, when she was evaluated by a psychologist and physician at the request of DOC. Given her diagnosis, the doctors recommended she receive the clinical treatment outlined by the WPATH Standards of Care. The Massachusetts DOC has explicitly incorporated the WPATH

Standards of Care in its official policy on the Identification, Treatment, and Correctional Management of Inmates Diagnosed with Gender Dysphoria, 103 DOC 652. Regulation 103 DOC 652 establishes a DOC Gender Dysphoria Treatment Committee (“GD Committee”); the GD Committee consists of contractual medical providers and is responsible for reviewing treatment for all inmates diagnosed with gender dysphoria. II. Previous Lawsuits, Grievances, and Appeals

Ms. Alexander has been seeking treatment and accommodation for her gender dysphoria for years. In 2009, Alexander filed a lawsuit against the DOC and its medical staff for failure to allow hormone therapy, laser hair removal, and finasteride (hair loss medication). In 2012, the Court entered an order documenting the DOC’s agreement to provide laser hair removal and finasteride.

Alexander has continued to struggle with gender dysphoria, and she has complained that her current treatment plan is insufficient in sixty-two documented medical treatment notes from mental health visits since 2012. She has expressed suicidal thoughts. In the wake of her 2009 lawsuit, Alexander was placed on Mental Health Watch where she met with a medical professional and revealed that she had attempted suicide twice.

Alexander has filed grievances and appeals of denials relating to her requests for an orchiectomy and gender-affirming items. She provides examples of her denials, such as “Thank you for resubmitting your appeal. It is appreciated. Upon the review of the GD Committee, this procedure was not clinically indicated. You are encouraged to continue communication with your therapist when you are seen.” Dkt. 47 ¶ 70. Alexander calls these responses “empty statements” “devoid of any rationale.” Dkt. 47 ¶ 71.

III. Orchiectomy Around June 2021, Alexander received verbal notice that the GD Committee had approved her request for an orchiectomy.1 Because Alexander also suffers from claustrophobia, she requested transportation in a large van by herself to medical appointments. She was scheduled for a surgical consult on July 19, 2021, but when Alexander was brought out for her transport,

1 An orchiectomy is a surgical procedure in which an individual’s testicles are removed. she learned that she would be riding with other inmates in a smaller van. Alexander had a claustrophobic attack when she attempted to get in and was not able to attend her appointment.

Alexander’s doctor submitted a note on July 28, 2021, reflecting that he intended to place a medical restriction that Alexander should be transported in a van and he informed Alexander that he would put another order in for a ride-alone restriction. Another appointment was scheduled for August 12, 2021, to meet with a urologist. When it was time for her August appointment, DOC planned to transport her with other prisoners. Alexander was told the van was one of the newer ones, which she understood to be smaller than the larger, older van she had requested. Alexander refused to attend the appointment.

IV. Gender-Affirming Items In addition to her requests for an orchiectomy, Alexander has repeatedly requested permission to buy, at her own expense, gender-affirming items like a nude bra, high cut women’s underwear, Levi’s jeans, “Kiss Press Nails” in dark purple and a red or dark red, mascara, and Wet & Wild “Light berry beige/frost” lipstick. She also requests an eyebrow pencil, a light to medium foundation, “Oil of Olay” cream, eye shadow in

“pale purple” or “lilac,” and women’s size 11/11.5 sneakers. Alexander has been allowed “[a]t times” to order outside items, like women’s cut jeans, through online stores or catalogues. Dkt. 47 ¶ 55. She has also “[a]t times” been allowed access to items available to women at the all-women’s prison, MCI- Framingham. Dkt. 47 ¶ 56. Alexander alleges that the policy around commissary items is an “ever-changing system of inconsistently applied rules” and “definitions of contraband,”

and access to outside items and canteen items from MCI- Framingham “has varied” based on “arbitrary and capricious circumstances, including who holds the position of prison treasurer at the time.” Dkt. 47 ¶¶ 55-56, 60. Alexander was evaluated by an expert doctor in her prior case who recommended that the DOC “allow dress, undergarment, etc. that [would] allow Ms. Alexander to represent herself in a way that is consistent with her self-identified gender . . . .”

Dkt. 47 ¶ 50. STANDARD OF REVIEW To survive a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, “a complaint must contain sufficient factual matter . . . to ‘state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.’” Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662, 678 (2009) (quoting Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 570 (2007)). Two basic

principles guide the Court’s analysis. “First, the tenet that a court must accept as true all of the allegations contained in a complaint is inapplicable to legal conclusions.” Iqbal, 556 U.S. at 678. “Second, only a complaint that states a plausible claim for relief survives a motion to dismiss.” Id. at 679.

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Alexander v. Mici, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-v-mici-mad-2022.