Briggs v. Massachusetts Department of Correction

CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedJanuary 17, 2024
Docket1:15-cv-40162
StatusUnknown

This text of Briggs v. Massachusetts Department of Correction (Briggs v. Massachusetts Department of Correction) 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
Briggs v. Massachusetts Department of Correction, (D. Mass. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS CIVIL ACTION NO. 15-cv-40162-RGS

LEONARD BRIGGS, GEORGE SKINDER, LOUIS MARKHAM, FRANCIS McGOWAN, ERIC ROLDAN, ROLANDO S. JIMENEZ, and JENNIFER WARD, on behalf of themselves and others similarly situated,

v.

MASSACHUSETTS DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTION, et al.

________________________________________ FINDINGS OF FACT, RULINGS OF LAW, AND ORDER AFTER A BENCH TRIAL

January 17, 2024

STEARNS, D.J. On August 20, 2021, U.S. District Judge George O’Toole certified the plaintiff class in this case as “[a]ll individuals who are currently in Massachusetts Department of Correction (DOC) custody or in the future are placed in DOC custody, and who are currently or in the future become deaf or hard-of-hearing.”1 Dkt # 257 at 2-3. In April of 2023, the court randomly

1 This case was originally assigned to Judge O’Toole when filed in November of 2015. Judge O’Toole certified the plaintiff class on August 20, 2021. assigned the case to this session of the court after Judge O’Toole recused himself from any further involvement. At counsels’ request, and with the

assistance of Department of Correction personnel, on July 25, 2023, the court visited residential units at Massachusetts Correctional Institution (MCI)-Norfolk where most of the remaining class members are housed. These included the Critical Care Unit; Unit 4-2 (the court viewed plaintiff

Rolando Jimenez’s personal cell); Unit 8-2; Unit 3-3 (where plaintiff Harmon Sparks resides); and Unit 2-3 (the court viewed plaintiff Westley Cain’s cell). In each unit, the court inspected the prison’s current bed books,

illuminated exits, and smoke alarms; and noted the inmate hard-of-hearing indicators (ear posters on cell doors and/or red dots on bed book inserts).2 A six-day bench trial was convened on August 7, 2023. The claims tried before the court involved the DOC’s emergency notification system, and

whether the emergency procedures comport with the requirements of the Eighth or Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution or the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). Eight class members testified at the trial with the assistance of lipreading, Spanish and sign language

interpreters, and personal hearing devices. The class witnesses included

2 The court also viewed a video recording provided by the parties of Unit D1 at MCI-Shirley. Rolando Jimenez, Louis Markham, George Skinder, Francis McGowan, Westley Cain, Carl Drew, Daniel McNair, and Harmon Sparks. See Dkt. ##

336-339. These class members are identified by DOC as deaf or hard-of- hearing. Plaintiffs also presented the deposition testimony of Karen DiNardo, a former DOC ADA compliance officer and the testimony of a designee of the Massachusetts Commission for the Deaf and Hard of

Hearing, Sharon MacLean. Finally, plaintiffs called three expert witnesses – Dr. Judy Anne Shepard-Kegl, Richard Lorenzo Ray, and as rebuttal witness, Gina Hilberry.

DOC called as witnesses its employees Abbe Nelligan (DOC’s Assistant Deputy Commissioner of Reentry), Jeffrey Quick (DOC’s Director of Resource Management), and Nolan Griffiths (DOC’s Fire Safety Administrator). DOC also presented an expert witness, Dr. Eileen Baker.

On October 18, 2023, after reviewing the trial transcripts and the parties’ proposed findings of fact and rulings of law, the court heard the parties’ closing arguments. The court will now enter its final rulings. FACTUAL FINDINGS

The Parties (1) The remaining named plaintiffs3 – Rolando Jimenez, Louis Markham, George Skinder, and Francis McGowan – represent

approximately 600 hard-of-hearing or deaf inmates residing in various Massachusetts state correctional facilities. DOC’s Proposed Findings of Facts and Rulings of Law (PF&R), Dkt # 355 ¶ 1. (2) Rolando Jimenez (64 years old) testified that he has 80-85%

hearing loss in both ears and requires bilateral hearing aids to hear speech and environmental sounds. Day 1 Tr. 75:24-76:3, 76:25-77:17. Jimenez is unable to see well without glasses. Id. at 76:15-24. As Spanish is his first

language, lipreading an English speaker is a challenge for him. Id. at 74:17- 18. He can only hear the smoke detector when wearing his hearing aids. Id. at 83:19-24; 84:9-14; DOC’s PF&R ¶ 3. Jimenez has been in DOC custody since February 9, 1982, and a resident of MCI-Norfolk since approximately

April of 2015. Joint Stipulation of Facts (Stip.) Dkt #320-1 ¶1, ¶2. (3) Louis Markham (70 years old) testified that he was born profoundly deaf in both ears but is fluent in American Sign Language (ASL), which is his best means of communication. Day 3 Tr. 26:4-5; 45:2-25, 46:14-47:16.

Markham’s speech is unintelligible, and his lipreading and ability to read or

3 Leonard Briggs, Eric Roldan, and Jennifer Ward are former named plaintiffs who are no longer in DOC custody. write English is poor. Id. at 47:2-10, 14-23. Markham is unable to hear speech no matter the amplification but wears hearing aids to sense

vibrations. Id. at 44:14-22, 45:25. Markham has been in DOC custody since February 16, 1979, housed at the Massachusetts Treatment Center (MTC), MCI-Norfolk, and currently at NCCI-Gardner in Unit T-1, Cell 104B. Dkt #320-1 at ¶¶ 4-6.

(4) George Skinder was diagnosed with severe to profound hearing loss at age 3 and communicates with Pidgin Signed English, a form of sign language. DAY 3 Tr. 87:7-13, 90:10-23. He wears bilateral hearing aids to

enhance his ability to hear environmental sounds and understand his surroundings. Id. at 88:1-3. Skinder has been housed at MCI-Norfolk, MCI- Cedar Junction, NCCI-Gardner, and MCI-Shirley. He has been incarcerated at the MTC three times: from August 9 to September 5, 2013, April 2 to

November 29, 2018, and November 29, 2021 to the present. (5) Francis McGowan was born profoundly deaf in both ears. Id. at 9:19-24. His preferred language is ASL. Id. at 10:24-25. He wears bilateral hearing aids to hear environmental noises but cannot hear speech. Id. at

10:1-2; Day 1 Tr. 36:6-8. McGowan suffers with Parkinson’s Disease and arthritis and is mobile using a wheelchair. Day 3 Tr. 6:24-7:1. He has been incarcerated in MCI-Norfolk’s Assisted Daily Living (ADL) or Clinical Stabilization Unit (CSU) unit since 2017. See Stip. ¶ 10; Day 3 Tr. 6:3-5, 8:7- 10.

(6) Class members Westley Cain, Carl Drew, Daniel McNair, and Harmon Sparks also testified regarding their hearing loss and its effect on their ability to converse or be aware of announcements or sounds within their assigned DOC facilities. Cain, a 74-year-old prisoner housed at MCI-

Norfolk, testified that he has hearing loss in his right ear, difficulties processing conversation, and that DOC has not tested him for hearing aids. DAY 2 Tr. 31-33:16. Drew, a 68-year-old prisoner housed at MCI-Shirley,

testified that he has hearing loss in both ears and wears hearing aids. DAY 2 Tr. 4:25-19:6. Drew has been incarcerated at MCI-Shirley since April 8, 2004. Stip. ¶ 20. McNair, a 69-year-old prisoner currently housed at MCI- Norfolk, testified that he has worn hearing aids in both ears since 2016. DAY

4 Tr. 3:22-4:25. Sparks, a 70-year-old prisoner housed at MCI-Norfolk, testified that he was diagnosed with hearing loss while serving in the military as a launch crewman in a rocket artillery unit. He also has tinnitus.4 DOC has provided Sparks with a “pocket talker”5 which he uses only when

4 “Tinnitus – a noise in the ears, such as ringing, buzzing, roaring or clicking.” Dorlands Medical Dictionary (28th ed.) at 1714.

5 A pocket talker is a personal amplification device attached to a headset to help improve communications in difficult listening environments.

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