CHAMBERS v. GLEN MILLS SCHOOLS

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 30, 2024
Docket2:24-cv-03250
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
CHAMBERS v. GLEN MILLS SCHOOLS, (E.D. Pa. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

ROY CHAMBERS JR., A CIVIL : CIVIL ACTION RIGHTS ORGANIZATION BY R.C., : GOD FACE MINISTRIES. : : v. : NO. 24-3250 : GLEN MILLS SCHOOLS, GLEN : MILLS SCHOOL STAFF OF : BUCHANAN HALL DURING THE : YEARS OF 1994 AND 1997 (1-20) AND : JOHN DOES, STATE OF : CONNECTICUT DEPARTMENT OF : CORRECTIONS, DELAWARE : COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF : CORRECTIONS/EDUCATION, STATE : OF PENNSYLVANIA DEPARTMENT : OF CORRECTIONS, PHILADELPHIA : DEPARTMENT OF : CORRECTIONS/EDUCATION. :

MEMORANDUM KEARNEY, J. August 30, 2024 An unpleaded court placed then-delinquent Roy Chambers Jr. in a youth reformatory school from 1995 to 1997. Mr. Chambers and two entities possibly affiliated with him now pro se sue the reformatory school and a variety of Pennsylvania and Connecticut state actors claiming unidentified persons working at the reformatory school physically and verbally assaulted and harassed Mr. Chambers almost thirty years ago. He alleges this conduct violated the Eighth Amendment, Americans with Disabilities Act, Rehabilitation Act, Sentencing Reform Act, and under several Pennsylvania statutes and common law tort theories. He asks for immediate mediation to award him compensation from an alleged settlement fund for former students. We granted him leave to file a complaint without paying the filing fees. Congress requires we now screen his allegations before issuing summons. We find the affiliated entities lack standing. They suffered no injury caused by the reformatory school and Mr. Chambers cannot represent them in any event. Congress does not allow him to sue under the Sentencing Reform Act. His Americans with Disabilities Act, Rehabilitation Act, and Eighth Amendment claims are time barred from the face of the allegations. We dismiss his federal claims with prejudice and decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over his state law claims as we lack an independent basis for jurisdiction.

I. Alleged pro se facts An unpleaded court affiliated with the Connecticut Department of Corrections placed Connecticut citizen Roy Chambers Jr. as a “black juvenile minor disabled offender” in The Glen Mills School in Delaware County, Pennsylvania between 1995 and 1997 as part of a juvenile placement sentence.1 Mr. Chambers suffered from unspecified disabilities while he attended the School.2 Mr. Chambers describes himself as a large sized black African American minor with disabilities before he attended the School.3 He accepted his errors and “wanted to properly rehabilitate his life to become a more productive black male in his community, in his society, for his family, and to himself.”4 Unnamed individuals at the School instructed Mr. Chambers to spit on other students as a means of discipline.5 Unnamed individuals instructed other students to spit on Mr. Chambers to

correct his behavior.6 Unnamed individuals beat Mr. Chambers or caused other students to beat Mr. Chambers if he did not spit on other students at the unnamed individuals’ direction.7 Unnamed individuals directed other students to spit on Mr. Chambers to make an example of him.8 These unnamed individuals permitted ten to fifteen different students to regularly spit on Mr. Chambers’s face and body.9 Unnamed individuals beat students who tried to avoid being spit on.10 Unnamed School staff watched as students spit on Mr. Chambers or beat him if he refused to stand still.11 Unnamed individuals also directed students ill with fevers or colds to spit on others.12 Minor infractions led to this forced spitting or beatings.13 Unnamed individuals used “educational” and “pro sports incentives” to continue spitting on and beating Mr. Chambers.14 Unnamed individuals verbally assaulted Mr. Chambers.15 Unnamed School staff members caused additional unspecified injuries to Mr. Chambers.16 For instance, the staff members repeatedly punched Mr. Chambers in the abdomen and caused him

a major injury.17 Sometimes the staff members committed abuse while intoxicated.18 Mr. Chambers never received treatment for his injuries.19 The poor treatment Mr. Chambers received at the School prevented him from achieving corrective rehabilitation.20 He still suffers from post- traumatic stress disorder and other complications.21 II. Analysis Mr. Chambers asserts federal and state claims against Glen Mills Schools, Glen Mills School Staff of Buchanan Hall during the years of 1995 and 1997 and John Does, the State of Connecticut Department of Corrections, the Delaware County Department of Corrections/Education, the State of Pennsylvania Department of Corrections, and the Philadelphia Department of Corrections/Education on behalf of himself, A Civil Rights Organization by R.C., and God Face Ministries.22 He seemingly wants us to order some form of expedited payment of

funds owed to him from a $3 Million settlement fund he avers has been set aside for persons like him injured at the Glen Mills School. Congress requires us to screen Mr. Chambers’s allegations after granting him leave to file a complaint without paying filing fees and because Mr. Chambers “seeks redress from a governmental entity.”23 We must dismiss Mr. Chambers’s Complaint before issuing summons if his claim is frivolous or malicious, he does not state a claim on which relief may be granted, or he seeks monetary relief against persons immune from such relief.24 We apply the same standard under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) to determine whether a claim should be dismissed under section 1915(e)(2)(B)(ii).25 Mr. Chambers can meet the Rule 12(b)(6) standard if he pleads a “sufficient factual matter, accepted as true, ‘to state a claim for relief [] plausible on its face.’”26 We construe Mr. Chambers’s pro se Complaint liberally and hold him to “less stringent standards than formal pleadings drafted by lawyers.”27

A. A Civil Rights Organization by R.C. and God Face Ministries lack standing.

Mr. Chambers attempts to sue on behalf of himself, A Civil Rights Organization by R.C., and God Face Ministries.28 Each of them must have “standing” to pursue their claims for a federal court to exercise jurisdiction under Article III.29 Our Founders in Article III require (1) an injury in fact, (2) fairly traceable to the School and other state actors’ challenged conduct, which is (3) likely to be redressed by a favorable judicial decision.30 Mr. Chambers and the other two entities must show a “‘concrete and particularized invasion’ of a ‘legally protected interest’” to establish injury in fact.31 Mr. Chambers alleges concrete harm to himself. But he is not the only purported plaintiff in this case. A Civil Rights Organization and God Face Ministries must also establish standing.32 They cannot. These entities did not attend the School with Mr. Chambers or sustain his alleged injuries. Mr. Chambers did not assign these claims. They cannot proceed in federal court absent allegations of a concrete invasion of their legally protected interests. Even if the entities had standing, they cannot proceed because they do not have counsel.33 Mr. Chambers cannot represent them.34 We dismiss A Civil Rights Organization by R.C. and God Face Ministries with prejudice. B. Mr. Chambers may not sue under the Sentencing Reform Act.

Mr. Chambers attempts to state a claim under the Sentencing Reform Act arising from a sentence imposed by an undisclosed court.35 This claim is not viable. “The Act aims to create a comprehensive sentencing scheme in which those who commit crimes of similar severity under similar conditions receive similar sentences.”36 The Act “made far-reaching changes in federal sentencing, one of which was to allow a convicted defendant, under certain circumstances, to appeal his sentence.”37 Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
CHAMBERS v. GLEN MILLS SCHOOLS, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chambers-v-glen-mills-schools-paed-2024.