HARTSOCK v. IDOC

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Indiana
DecidedJanuary 23, 2024
Docket2:23-cv-00289
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
HARTSOCK v. IDOC, (S.D. Ind. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF INDIANA TERRE HAUTE DIVISION

JOSEPH HARTSOCK, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) No. 2:23-cv-00289-JMS-MKK ) IDOC, et al., ) ) Defendants. )

Order Denying Motions for Preliminary Injunction, Granting Motion Challenging Plaintiff's Entitlement to IFP Status, and Denying Motion for Counsel

Plaintiff Joseph Hartsock is an Indiana Department of Correction ("IDOC") inmate who is housed at Putnamville Correctional Facility ("Putnamville"). Mr. Hartsock is a Seventh Day Adventist who adheres to a vegan diet due to his faith. Mr. Hartsock filed this civil rights action alleging that the defendants are violating his religious beliefs and his right to an adequately nutritious diet by serving him vegan trays that are contaminated with animal products and other contaminants. He amended his complaint to add claims that some staff members were retaliating against him by engaging in behavior that made it more difficult to adhere to his vegan diet and/or litigate his claims related to his diet. See dkt. 59 (Order Screening Amended Complaint). Pending before the Court are two motions for preliminary injunction, dkts. [5] and [22], a motion challenging Mr. Hartsock's entitlement to IFP status, dkt. [57], and a motion for counsel, dkt. [66]. I. Motions for Preliminary Injunction A. Mr. Hartsock's Motions Mr. Hartsock's first motion, filed contemporaneously with his complaint on June 13, 2023, requested a temporary restraining order that would compel IDOC and Aramark (the company with whom IDOC contracts to provide inmates' food) to provide him with a nutritionally adequate vegan diet or provide him with packaged vegan meals. Dkt. 5. Because Mr. Hartsock sought relief that would exceed 14 days, the Court construed the motion as a motion for preliminary injunction and directed the defendants to respond. Dkt. 10 at 7 (citing Fed. R. Civ. P. 65(b)(2)). Mr. Hartsock

then filed a second motion for preliminary injunction on August 2, 2023. Dkt. 22. He requests the same relief in that motion. Dkt. 23 at 1. i. Allegations in the Motions Mr. Hartsock is a Seventh-day Adventists and has followed a vegan diet since he was 15 years old consistent with his religious beliefs. Dkt. 24 at 1, ¶ 5. Mr. Hartsock alleges that he is being prevented from receiving a nutritionally adequate vegan diet that comports with his sincerely held beliefs, and that he is being retaliated against for complaining about it. The IDOC has a vegan diet program available to inmates. Id. at 1, ¶ 4. IDOC Policy defines vegan food as a "prepared food item that is totally void of meat or meat by-products" and explains that a vegan diet "contains no meat, eggs, dairy, or other animal products." Id. The policy is silent

as to matters involving cross-contamination of food preparation equipment. Id. Mr. Hartsock alleges that several issues with the administration of the vegan diet have resulted in him being unable to eat the meals he is served, lest he violate the tenets of his religion or expose himself to unsafe foods that cause illness. These issues include the following, as described in Mr. Hartsock's August 1, 2023, affidavit (dkt. 24): • Inmates who work in the kitchen prepare vegan and non-vegan food, and they are allowed to use the same utensils, pots, and pans when preparing these foods, which results in the vegan food becoming contaminated with animal products. Mr. Hartsock has witnessed inmate kitchen workers handle vegan and nonvegan food without changing gloves (id. at 1−2, ¶¶ 6, 8); • Commissary items are not labeled as vegan (like kosher and halal foods are), so Mr. Hartsock cannot purchase food from commissary to supplement the diet provided through the vegan program. Further, because he is indigent, he cannot afford to purchase food from commissary to replace the diet provided by the IDOC (id. at 2−3 ¶¶ 7, 12); • Inmate workers will serve vegans non-vegan food items including cheesy potatoes, cake, milk, tuna, chicken, etc., and Mr. Hartsock has also received vegan items contaminated with mice feces or mold (id. at 2, ¶ 8); • Mr. Hartsock has filed grievances about being served contaminated or non-vegan food, and both IDOC and Aramark staff respond by telling him that he should alert a staff member at the time that his tray is contaminated so he can be provided a new one. Mr. Hartsock, however, fears doing so because he believes that inmate kitchen workers will retaliate against him since there are only a handful of vegan inmates at Putnamville, making vegan "snitches" easily identifiable (id. at 2, ¶ 9); • All vegan food is served on Styrofoam trays, which are routinely heated via warmers or are placed in close proximity to heat sources. Styrofoam is known to leach dangerous chemicals into food when heated (id. at 2−3, ¶ 10); • Mr. Hartsock stopped eating the prepared vegan trays around January 2023 because he believed they caused him to vomit or have diarrhea. His symptoms resolved when he stopped eating from the vegan trays. In order to be nourished while adhering to the diet, he would barter packaged vegan items like peanut butter packets or fruits with peels on them to avoid the cross-contamination, but he was no longer able to do so once he was placed in a restricted housing unit ("RHU") (id. at 3, ¶ 11); • Mr. Hartsock has spoken with Putnamville and Aramark staff on over 100 occasions about his concerns, but they have failed to fix the problems with the vegan diet program. In May 2023, when he was housed in a restricted housing unit ("RHU"), Mr. Hartsock informed several IDOC defendants (Officer Paxton, Sgt. Clampit, Sgt. Blackburn, and Officer Prosser) that his trays contained non-vegan food or evidence of rodent activity, but they failed to intervene or provide a replacement tray (id. at 3−4, ¶¶ 13, 19); • Mr. Hartsock has suffered from pain in his lower back near his kidneys since March 2023. At a June 2023 chronic care visit with a nurse, Mr. Hartsock informed the nurse that he believed some of his problems were attributable to his poor vegan diet, and the nurse advised him to discuss the issue with Aramark staff (id. at 5, ¶¶ 20−21); • Mr. Hartsock lost 24 pounds between May 21, 2023, when he was placed in the RHU, and June 15, 2023, when he was released from the RHU. He sought additional mental health services due to his anxiety and stress caused by the lack of adequate vegan diet, but a non-defendant mental health professional refused to change his mental health code so he could receive increased access to services. Mr. Hartsock attributes a vitamin B12 deficiency to his inadequate vegan diet. (id. at 5−7, ¶¶ 23, 39) • Mr. Hartsock alleges that some of the defendants have retaliated against him by (1) confiscating 47 inmate affidavits about nutritional/sanitation problems; (2) deleting his computer file that had legal research and exhibits about the problems; (3) temporarily changing his diet preference to a "lacto" diet; (4) ordering inmate diet workers to take his vegan card; refusing to provide vegan inmates with peanut butter packets while still providing those packets to non-vegan inmates (id. at 6, ¶¶ 26−30, 36). • Mr. Hartsock alleges that since service of his complaint, nearly 90% of his vegan diet sacks have displayed "mice activity and/or mold" but he does not elaborate about what he has actually observed (id. at 6, ¶ 28). ii. Responses Defendants IDOC, Bumgardner, Paxton, Clampit, Blackburn, Bault, Prosser, Clark, Zatecky and Humrichouser ("IDOC Defendants") and Aramark, Smith, French, and Pherson ("Aramark Defendants") responded in opposition to Mr. Hartsock's motions for preliminary injunction, arguing that he is unlikely to succeed on any of his constitutional claims because he is provided with a nutritionally adequate vegan diet. Dkts. 56, 58.

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HARTSOCK v. IDOC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartsock-v-idoc-insd-2024.