Anders v. Russell

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Virginia
DecidedMarch 10, 2022
Docket7:21-cv-00030
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Anders v. Russell, (W.D. Va. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA ROANOKE DIVISION

TONY ANDERS, ) ) Plaintiff, ) Case No. 7:21CV00030 ) v. ) OPINION AND ORDER ) SUPERINTENDANT BOBBY ) JUDGE JAMES P. JONES RUSSELL, ET AL., ) ) Defendants. )

Tony Anders, Pro Se Plaintiff; Christopher S. Dadak, GUYNN, WADDELL, CARROLL & LOCKABY, P.C., Roanoke, Virginia, for Defendants Bobby Russell, Scott Booher, Christopher Hayes, Chad Keller, and William Maddy; Angela Boice Axselle, WIMBISH GENTILE MCCRAY & ROEBER PLLC, Richmond, Virginia, for Defendants Wellpath, LLC and David MacDonald, DO.

The plaintiff, Tony Anders, a Virginia inmate proceeding pro se, filed a Complaint under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that at the Western Virginia Regional Jail (“WVRJ”), the defendants responded inappropriately to protect him from, and treat him for, the COVID-19 virus.1 After review of the record, I conclude that the defendants’ Motions to Dismiss must be granted.

1 Anders names the following WVRJ officials or contractors as defendants: Superintendent Bobby Russell, Major Hayes, Captain Keller, Captain Booher, and Officer Maddy (“the nonmedical defendants”); and Wellpath, LLC (“Wellpath”) and Dr. MacDonald, Medical Director (“the medical defendants”). Wellpath is a healthcare services company that provides medical and mental health care to those in custody in jails and prisons. I. BACKGROUND. After Anders received a Virginia prison sentence in March of 2019, he was

confined for some time at WVRJ.2 He alleges that in late September or early October 2020, WVRJ administrators allegedly decided to “rent bed space to a number of COVID-19 Positive inmates from the Franklin County Jail.” Compl. 3, ECF No. 1.

When the Franklin County inmates arrived, other WVRJ inmates allegedly had to triple bunk or sleep on the floor. Id. at 7. Anders also complains that WVRJ administrators did not keep the Franklin County inmates housed together. He submits a Franklin County inmate’s affidavit

stating even after that inmate told officials he was feeling sick and believed his negative test results were wrong, officials still placed him in the WVRJ general population until he later tested positive for COVID-19.

According to Anders, within a week, inmates and staff at the jail were getting sick. Staff set up quarantine units for COVID-19-positive inmates, but Anders alleges that inmates were “still moved and shuffled in and out of different units, mixing positive and negative testing inmates together.” Id. at 4. Anders asserts that

2 In addition to the Complaint, Anders filed a motion seeking interlocutory and declaratory relief. I denied the motion as moot because Anders had been transferred to a different jail facility. Thereafter, Anders filed a memorandum and affidavits from other WVRJ inmates, purportedly offering additional facts in support of that motion. Although Anders did not move to add this material to his Complaint, I will consider it in addressing the pending motions. -2- in many unspecified instances, officials allowed positive and negative inmates to share tablets, telephones, library books, and newspapers that were not cleaned

between uses. He also asserts that cells were not cleaned between inmate occupants during this period. Anders allegedly complained to Superintendent Russell and Major Hayes in

early November 2020, asserting that these practices put WVRJ inmates’ lives at risk. When he received no immediate response, Anders complained to Captain Keller that he did not feel safe because a lot of people at WVRJ were getting sick. He asked to be transferred. Keller told him to “stop complaining” because he would “eventually”

be sent to prison. Id. at 3. On November 11, 2020, defendant Maddy allegedly left open a secure sliding door between E-1 and E-4 units, allowing inmates from those units to congregate,

shake hands, and hug each other. Later that night, Anders asked Maddy to let him see the nurse, but the officer told him “to sign up for sick call.” Id. at 4. On November 12, 2020, all inmates in E-4 unit were tested for COVID-19, including Anders. More than half of the inmates tested positive for COVID-19.

Anders tested negative. The next day, defendants Keller and Booker and other officers, all wearing personal protective equipment, began moving all E-4 inmates who had tested negative into a different housing unit. Anders told Keller that he was

-3- not feeling well. Keller allegedly said that because of Anders’s negative test result, he would move into E-2 unit with others who had tested negative.

After that move, Anders allegedly became so sick that he was “nearly bed- ridden, coughing, vomiting, and suffering breathing difficulties.” Id. at 5. He asserts that Wellpath and Dr. MacDonald had “adopted a practice of treating all COVID-19

medical request[s] as routine,” rarely responding to written requests about COVID- 19 and requiring inmates “to wait until the nurse[s] made their regular sick call rounds.” Id. at 6. Anders alleges that after he had complained for days of feeling sick, medical staff examined him, but provided only Tylenol to treat his COVID-19-

like symptoms. On November 20, 2020, staff provided Anders with another COVID-19 test that showed a positive result. At that point, officers moved Anders back to E-4 unit

with other inmates who had tested positive. Anders claims, however, that Wellpath and its unspecified employees “falsified some test results and or did not conduct all the test[s] they said they performed on inmates.” Id. Liberally construed, the Complaint asserts the following claims: (1) the

nonmedical defendants were deliberately indifferent to serious risks to health and safety, in violation of Anders’s constitutional rights, when they (a) allowed COVID- 19-positive inmates from another jail to be confined at WVRJ for financial gain; (b)

allowed inmates with COVID-19 to mingle with other inmates; (c) failed to provide -4- proper masks or cleaning supplies to inmates; and (d) delayed or denied Anders’s written grievances about COVID-19; and (2) the medical defendants violated

Anders’s rights when they allegedly (a) “falsified COVID-19 test results and or documents relating to the test results of inmates” and treated medical requests related to COVID-19 as “routine”; (b) denied prompt and appropriate treatment for

Anders’s complaints about COVID-19-like symptoms; and (c) delayed or denied his written grievances about COVID-19. Id. at 8, 9. As relief, Anders seeks declaratory and monetary relief.3 The nonmedical defendants and the medical defendants, by counsel, have

filed separate motions to dismiss. The medical defendants also attach an affidavit and medical records to their motion. Anders has responded to both motions, making them ripe for decision.

3 Anders also sought injunctive relief ordering that he be transferred away from WVRJ. On February 11, 2021, only a month after Anders filed his § 1983 action, he notified the court that he had been transferred to a state prison facility. Because he is no longer housed under the conditions of which he complains in this action, his demands for injunctive relief are moot. Rendelman v. Rouse, 569 F.3d 182, 186 (4th Cir. 2009) (“[A]s a general rule, a prisoner’s transfer or release from a particular prison moots his claims for injunctive and declaratory relief with respect to his incarceration there.”). -5- II. DISCUSSION. A. Standards of Review.

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Anders v. Russell, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anders-v-russell-vawd-2022.