In re Johnny Taylor and Brandon Byrd

CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 9, 2020
Docket17-CO-174 & 18-CO-334
StatusPublished

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In re Johnny Taylor and Brandon Byrd, (D.C. 2020).

Opinion

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DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS

Nos. 17-CO-174 & 18-CO-334

IN RE JOHNNY TAYLOR and BRANDON BYRD, APPELLANTS. *

Appeals from the Superior Court of the District of Columbia (CF3-9667-16 & CF1-12762-16)

(Hon. Danya A. Dayson and Hon. Jose M. Lopez, Trial Judges)

(Argued May 24, 2018 Decided April 9, 2020)

Chantal Jean-Baptiste for appellant Johnny Taylor.

Joshua Deahl, Public Defender Service at the time of argument, with whom Samia Fam and Jaclyn Frankfurt, Public Defender Service, were on the brief, for appellant Brandon Byrd and for Public Defender Service, amicus curiae, in support of appellant Taylor.

* This court consolidated these two appeals for purposes of argument and decision. The proceedings below were in each appellant’s criminal cases, and the appeals were captioned Taylor v. United States and Byrd v. United States. The United States has not participated in these appeals, however. The actual appellee in each case is the District of Columbia Department of Behavioral Health, which intervened in the Superior Court to defend the orders challenged by appellants and continues to defend those orders in this court. We therefore have recaptioned the appeals as shown above. 2

Holly M. Johnson, Assistant Attorney General, with whom Karl A. Racine, Attorney General for the District of Columbia, Loren L. AliKhan, Solicitor General, and Stacy L. Anderson, Acting Deputy Solicitor General, were on the brief, for appellee the District of Columbia Department of Behavioral Health.

Before GLICKMAN, THOMPSON, and EASTERLY, Associate Judges.

GLICKMAN, Associate Judge: After finding appellants Taylor and Byrd

incompetent to stand trial on criminal charges, the Superior Court committed them

to Saint Elizabeths Hospital for treatment to restore them to competency. During

their commitment, their treating psychiatrists requested the Hospital’s permission to

medicate them without their consent. The purpose of the proposed psychotropic

medication was not to render appellants competent, but to curb their violent and

dangerous behavior at the Hospital by ameliorating their mental illness. The

Hospital approved each appellant’s involuntary medication in an internal

administrative hearing process. This non-judicial process incorporated the

procedures for the involuntary medication of civilly committed mental health

patients required by D.C. Code § 7-1231.08 (2012 Repl.), a provision of the Mental

Health Consumers’ Rights Protection Act of 2001. The application of those non-

judicial procedures to mentally ill and violent criminal defendants undergoing

competency restoration treatment is authorized by D.C. Code § 24-531.09 (2012

Repl.). The procedures conform to the Supreme Court’s holding in Washington v. 3

Harper 1 that the Due Process Clause does not require a court hearing before the state

may treat a mentally ill prisoner with antipsychotic drugs against the prisoner’s will

after an administrative process in which it is medically determined that the treatment

is appropriate for the purpose of controlling the prisoner’s dangerousness.

The present appeals are from the Superior Court’s denials of motions filed by

appellants to enjoin their involuntary medication. In this court, appellants challenge

their medication orders on constitutional and statutory grounds. 2 Their claims raise

purely legal questions, as to which our review is de novo. 3

Appellants’ primary contention is that the Hospital’s administrative approval

process denied them due process of law. They argue that Harper’s holding applies

only to convicted prisoners, and that under the rationale of Sell v. United States, 4 a

1 494 U.S. 210, 227-28 (1990). 2 Although appellants argued in the proceedings below that the Hospital’s administrative hearing process was deficient under Harper, they have abandoned that claim on appeal. 3 See, e.g., Aboye v. United States, 121 A.3d 1245, 1249 (D.C. 2015) (“The question being one of statutory interpretation, our review is de novo.”); Jones v. United States, 779 A.2d 277, 281 (D.C. 2001) (en banc) (explaining that, where facts are not in issue, “this court must determine the ultimate question of [constitutional] law de novo” (internal quotation marks omitted)). 4 539 U.S. 166 (2003). 4

post-Harper decision of the Supreme Court, the Due Process Clause entitles pretrial

detainees like themselves to plenary judicial hearings and special judicial findings

before they may be administered antipsychotic drugs against their will, regardless of

the purpose of the medication. In line with other courts, we conclude otherwise. In

Sell the Supreme Court held that due process requires special judicial findings when

the sole purpose of the involuntary medication is to render the defendant competent

to be tried. But the Court confirmed the relevance of Harper to pretrial criminal

defendants as well as convicted prisoners when competency restoration is not the

sole purpose of the medication. Sell implied, and we hold, that “if forced medication

is warranted for a different purpose, such as the purposes set out in Harper related

to the individual’s dangerousness, or purposes related to the individual’s own

interests where refusal to take drugs puts his health gravely at risk,”5 due process is

satisfied by administrative procedures like those the Supreme Court approved of in

Harper. Sell’s requirements when competency restoration is the sole goal of the

medication are not applicable to appellants.

Appellants’ statutory claims concern the proper interpretation of D.C. Code

§§ 24-531.09 and 7-1231.08. Mr. Taylor reads § 24-531.09 as requiring judicial

5 Id. at 182. 5

authorization of his involuntary medication for dangerousness, while Mr. Byrd

argues he was not subject to § 7-1231.08’s non-judicial process because he had not

been civilly committed to Saint Elizabeths. We reject both arguments as inconsistent

with § 24-531.09’s explicit authorization of the involuntary administration of

medication to criminal defendants undergoing competency restoration “consistent

with § 7-1231.08.” 6

I. The Constitutional and Statutory Framework

A. The Requirements of Due Process

Washington v. Harper has been called “the seminal involuntary medication

case.” 7 Mr. Harper was medicated against his will with antipsychotic drugs while

he was imprisoned in a state correctional facility for convicted felons with serious

mental disorders. 8 The facility had established an administrative hearing process for

approving such medication to treat inmates whose mental disorders rendered them

6 D.C. Code § 24-531.09(a).

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