Harris v. Thigpen

727 F. Supp. 1564, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 182, 1990 WL 1095
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Alabama
DecidedJanuary 8, 1990
DocketCiv. A. 87V-1109-N
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 727 F. Supp. 1564 (Harris v. Thigpen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. Thigpen, 727 F. Supp. 1564, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 182, 1990 WL 1095 (M.D. Ala. 1990).

Opinion

OPINION

VARNER, District Judge.

This cause is now before the Court for final determination after trial and filing of post-trial briefs and amendments to said briefs by all parties.

This case involves the constitutionality of CODE OF ALABAMA [1975], § 22-11A-17, which requires testing of inmates for AIDS upon admission and within 30 days of release, construction of § 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, 29 U.S.C. § 794, as well as the constitutional rights of inmates (both sick and well) as to the propriety of testing and segregating those testing positive. A class of inmates has been certified pro and con.

On page 2 of the Complaint filed herein June 24, 1988, Plaintiffs claim allegedly unconstitutional practices by the authorities at the Alabama Department of Corrections [DOC]:

(1) By requiring all prisoners to submit involuntarily to blood tests against their will shortly after incarceration in, and shortly before release from, a State penal institution.

(2) By failing to advise prisoners as to the inconclusive and sometimes misleading significance of the results.

(3) By failing to provide essential emotional support and mental health counseling to those prisoners who test positive.

(4) By compelling prisoners who test positive to live with all other prisoners who have tested positive in segregated units that are “like leper colonies”.

(5) By the mere fact of their segregation, publicly branding such segregated prisoners as carriers of a dread, socially unacceptable and fatal disease independent of security from each other.

(6) By causing those prisoners to lose the opportunity to participate in vocational and educational programs, to earn good time credits and to participate in work release and similar programs and, therefore, limiting their opportunities for early release and for parole.

(7)By providing them with grossly deficient medical, mental health and dental care.

Plaintiffs contend that the above practices deny Plaintiffs rights guaranteed by the First, Fourth, Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution and by § 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. Jurisdiction is claimed pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1331 and the Rehabilitation Act.

It is alleged that Plaintiffs are all administratively segregated AIDS carriers. Men are kept in Dormitory 7 at the Limestone Facility except that those with security classifications of close, maximum or protective are kept in cells at Limestone and women are kept in a block at the Tutwiler Unit for women. With few exceptions, they are segregated from other prisoners, allowed to use libraries and recreation yards and facilities sparingly and denied the opportunity to do substantial work, in and out of the institutions, so as to prepare for and earn various types of conditional release.

Defendants are (1) Morris Thigpen, Commissioner of the DOC, who is responsible for the control of the DOC, including the enforcement of rules concerning testing and segregation of inmates; (2) Jean Hare, who is Warden of the Julia Tutwiler Prison for Women, charged with administering the HIV segregation unit at Tutwiler; (3) J.D. White, who is Warden of the Limestone Correctional Facility, charged with administration of the HIV segregation unit at Limestone; (4) Lynn Harrelson, Warden of the Kilby Prison, charged with implementing the HIV antibody testing program at Kilby; (5) Correctional Health Care, Inc., an entity under contract with the DOC to provide medical care services to Alabama State prisoners; and (5) Dr. George Sutton, Medical Director for Correctional Health Care, Inc. There is no serious question that all of these Defendants are acting under color of law. A class of inmates supporting Defendants’ present policies *1567 has been certified as Intervening Defendants in this case.

It appears to this Court, in regard to the class action status of this ease, that the lawsuit as it stands challenges the mandatory testing of all present or future Alabama State prisoners for HIV antibodies and the forced segregation and other practices associated with treatment and/or care for those found to have HIV antibodies or active AIDS virus. The presence in one’s blood of the antibodies is an indication that the subject has contracted or is irrevocably contracting the fatal AIDS.

AIDS now appears not to be an air-borne disease. It is thought to be transmitted only by contact of open wounds or body cavities with blood, semen or vaginal secretions — usually in sexual relations, by infusion or innoculation of blood in transfusions or intravenous needle-sharing activities or prenatally. Yet, many experts agree that, in a small percentage of known cases, there is no explanation of how the disease was transmitted. A primary reason for the mysteries surrounding the disease is the fact that no germs or indicia of the presence of the disease in a subject have been found and no tests are available to diagnose the disease. Blood tests do show identifiable antibodies (HIV antibodies) which show that a subject has contacted the disease and that the subject’s system is seeking (or has sought) to reject the disease. Seropositives, persons whose blood contains those antibodies, may be otherwise healthy, but they are, for life, carriers of the AIDS disease and their maximum life expectancies are estimated by various experts to be as much as between two and eight years. One expert testified that AIDS is now curable, but all agreed that no one has ever been cured. AIDS, itself, does not cause death; it so weakens the immune system that an opportunistic disease (many of which do no harm to an AIDS-free person) is deadly. Seropositives carry the antibodies and can communicate the disease but display no outward symptoms, that is, they have had none of the opportunistic diseases, the presence of which are outwardly symptomatic of the AIDS disease. Drugs, such as AZT, have been helpful in combating and preventing some of the opportunistic diseases. The future of the seropositive is currently dim, but somewhat more hopeful.

In Paragraph 25, the Complaint suggests that the several tests for HIV antibodies which are indicative of AIDS are not always accurate. The experts agree that the ELISA test may produce a small number of false positives. In event of a positive ELISA, a second ELISA test is given by the DOC, and in the event of a second positive, a Western Blot test will be given. The Western Blot test sometimes indicates false negatives and, therefore, is not completely dependable. A combination of the tests may be inaccurate negatively because of the long (as much as one year) incubation period of the virus after exposure and before evidence of the virus is ascertainable, but is, apparently, infallible if the antibodies (HIV) have begun to form. AIDS is a diagnosis of a complex disease that causes a disfunction of the body’s immune system against disease.

As might be expected, the basic claims of the Plaintiffs are strongly appealing to humanitarian nature as are the claims of people suffering similar problems in the free world. No one can be without sympathy for those who have or are reasonably suspected of having an incurable and fatal disease.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
727 F. Supp. 1564, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 182, 1990 WL 1095, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-thigpen-almd-1990.