Jonathan DiFraia v. Kevin Ransom

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMarch 31, 2026
Docket24-2673
StatusPublished

This text of Jonathan DiFraia v. Kevin Ransom (Jonathan DiFraia v. Kevin Ransom) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jonathan DiFraia v. Kevin Ransom, (3d Cir. 2026).

Opinion

U.S. COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT No. 24-2673

JONATHAN DIFRAIA, Appellant

v.

KEVIN RANSOM, SUPERINTENDENT; JASEN BOHINSKI, DEPUTY SUPERINTENDENT FOR CENTRALIZED SERVICES; DR. TIMOTHY KROSS; WAYNE INNISS, CORRECTIONS CLASSIFICATION PROGRAM MANAGER; RAWLINGS, DRUG AND ALCOHOL TREATMENT SPECIALIST, et al. ______________________________

On Appeal from the U.S. District Court, M.D. Pa. Judge Jennifer P. Wilson, No. 1:23-cv-01187

Before: BIBAS, PORTER, and BOVE, Circuit Judges Argued Jan. 27, 2026; Filed Mar. 31, 2026 _____________________________

OPINION OF THE COURT BIBAS, Circuit Judge. Cruel and unusual punishment, like intentional discrimination, requires not only a wrongful act but also a blameworthy mind. So prisoners may not use either the Eighth Amendment or the Americans with Disabilities Act to challenge prison officials’ good-faith judgments about medical treatment. Yet that is just what prisoner Jonathan DiFraia tries to do. As a drug addict, he got medication as part of his prison’s drug-treatment program. But after officials accused him of diverting his medication to other prisoners, they kicked him out of the program. Nothing in the record suggests that they meant to (or were even reckless about) exposing DiFraia to more harm, or that they disciplined him because of his drug addiction. So the District Court properly dismissed both federal claims. In dismissing DiFraia’s state-law negligence claim, though, it relied on circuit precedent that has since been abro- gated. We will thus AFFIRM the dismissal of DiFraia’s two fed- eral claims, VACATE the dismissal of the negligence claim, and REMAND.

I. SUSPECTED OF DIVERTING MEDICATION, DIFRAIA IS PHASED OUT OF DRUG TREATMENT DiFraia is a Pennsylvania state prisoner. As an opioid addict, he was approved for medication to help control his drug crav- ings. Medications like methadone and buprenorphine allay an addict’s cravings without creating a high, reducing the risk of relapse. DiFraia was prescribed and got Suboxone, a brand of buprenorphine. The prison made Suboxone available as part of a Medication Assisted Treatment program, which offered pris- oners “long-term care strategies of medication management and continued monitoring” to help control their addictions. Pa. Dep’t of Corr., Medication Assisted Treatment (MAT) [https://perma.cc/Y9FF-NZ2J] (last accessed Mar. 3, 2026); see also App. 4 n.2. These medications are themselves opioids, so prisons with treatment programs typically do not let prisoners consume them alone. Rather, prisons administer them in medication

2 lines or the like. One day, while in the medication line, DiFraia was strip-searched and found to have contraband: an e-cigarette with a cap on it. Guards accused him of using the cap to divert (smuggle) the medication to other prisoners and wrote him up for contraband, though DiFraia denied the charge. A week later, DiFraia was once again in the medication line. That time, after consuming his dose of Suboxone, he was again written up for having contraband and diverting his medication. He denied the allegation once more. Three days later, he met with Dr. Timothy Kross. Dr. Kross told him that he was being “removed from” the program for diversion. App. 31. Rather than force DiFraia to go off Suboxone cold turkey— which would have triggered withdrawal—Dr. Kross gradually tapered DiFraia’s doses over the next week. Even so, DiFraia soon suffered withdrawal symptoms, causing him to “pick[ ] [at his] arms,” leaving scars. Id. at 32. His mental health also suffered. He wrote to the superintendent and other prison offi- cials asking to be put back on Suboxone, but they refused. DiFraia was told that he “did not have to actually be caught diverting to be considered a diverter,” limiting his access to Suboxone. Id. at 31. In response, DiFraia sued Dr. Kross, the superintendent, and various other prison officials. His pro se complaint alleges violations of the Eighth Amendment, the Americans with Dis- abilities Act, and the “Tort Acts.” App. 32. We review de novo, construing his pro se complaint liberally. Haines v. Kerner, 404 U.S. 519, 520–21 (1972) (per curiam); Vorchheimer v. Phila. Owners Ass’n, 903 F.3d 100, 105 (3d Cir. 2018).

3 II. DIFRAIA FAILS TO STATE AN EIGHTH AMENDMENT CLAIM

DiFraia charges the doctor and prison officials with violat- ing the Eighth Amendment by being “deliberat[ely] indif- feren[t] to [his] medical needs.” App. 32. Read liberally, his pro se complaint seeks relief under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Yet it fails to state a claim. A. Historically, the Eighth Amendment banned intentional sentences, not prison conditions The Eighth Amendment bars “cruel and unusual punish- ments.” At the Founding, “the word ‘punishment’ referred to the penalty imposed for the commission of a crime.” Helling v. McKinney, 509 U.S. 25, 38 (1993) (Thomas, J., dissenting) (citing five dictionaries from the Founding era through the early nineteenth century). The term “cruel” meant “horrid modes” of abuse, such as “the rack or the stake.” Baze v. Rees, 553 U.S. 35, 98 (Thomas, J., concurring in the judgment) (quoting James A. Bayard, A Brief Exposition of the Constitu- tion of the United States 154 (2d ed. 1840)). And the amend- ment used “unusual” in the sense of “contrary to [long] usage” or without “precedent.” Harmelin v. Michigan, 501 U.S. 957, 974 (1991) (opinion of Scalia, J.); see also John F. Stinneford, The Original Meaning of “Unusual”: The Eighth Amendment as a Bar to Cruel Innovation, 102 Nw. U. L. Rev. 1739, 1767, 1810–15 (2008). So the Eighth Amendment was about choices at sentencing. It cabined the power of judges and juries to intentionally inflict horribly painful sentences that were outside “the bounds of [the] common-law tradition.” Id. (both sources); see also

4 Louisiana ex rel. Francis v. Resweber, 329 U.S. 459, 463 (1947) (Reed, J., plurality opinion). Examples included “[b]reaking on the wheel, flaying alive, rending asunder with horses, … maiming, mutilating and scourging to death.” Ben- jamin L. Oliver, The Rights of an American Citizen 186 (1832). And the amendment prevented decisionmakers from sub- stituting cruelty when ordinary punishments were unavaila- ble. For instance, shortly before the English Bill of Rights, the King’s Bench sentenced perjurer and Protestant cleric Titus Oates to be defrocked, pilloried, whipped, and imprisoned for life because it could not sentence him to death. See Harmelin, 501 U.S. at 969–73 (opinion of Scalia, J.). In response to those sorts of grotesque excesses, Parliament (and later, the Framers of the Constitution) checked judges’ and juries’ retributive impulses. Helling, 509 U.S. at 38, 40 (Thomas, J., dissenting). But the Eighth Amendment did not “encompass a prisoner’s injuries that b[ore] no relation to his sentence,” such as those from “prison deprivations.” Id. It was addressed to judges and juries, not jailers. And it sought to curb intentional cruelty, not neglected prisons. B. The Eighth Amendment’s history still shapes its modern limits Half a century ago, the Supreme Court expanded the Eighth Amendment beyond its original bailiwick. In Estelle v. Gam- ble, the Court reasoned that a prison’s failure to give prisoners needed medical treatment could lead to “physical torture or a lingering death,” akin to the barbaric, outdated punishments targeted by the Eighth Amendment.

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Related

Louisiana Ex Rel. Francis v. Resweber
329 U.S. 459 (Supreme Court, 1947)
Haines v. Kerner
404 U.S. 519 (Supreme Court, 1972)
Estelle v. Gamble
429 U.S. 97 (Supreme Court, 1976)
Rhodes v. Chapman
452 U.S. 337 (Supreme Court, 1981)
Harmelin v. Michigan
501 U.S. 957 (Supreme Court, 1991)
Helling v. McKinney
509 U.S. 25 (Supreme Court, 1993)
Hope v. Pelzer
536 U.S. 730 (Supreme Court, 2002)
Baze v. Rees
553 U.S. 35 (Supreme Court, 2008)
Ashcroft v. Iqbal
556 U.S. 662 (Supreme Court, 2009)
Roe v. Elyea
631 F.3d 843 (Seventh Circuit, 2011)
Nanette Archer v. Ben Dutcher
733 F.2d 14 (Second Circuit, 1984)
Liggon-Redding v. Estate of Robert Sugarman
659 F.3d 258 (Third Circuit, 2011)
Richard Foelker v. Outagamie County
394 F.3d 510 (Seventh Circuit, 2005)
Farmer v. Brennan
511 U.S. 825 (Supreme Court, 1994)
CG v. Pennsylvania Department of Education
734 F.3d 229 (Third Circuit, 2013)
John Colwell v. Robert Bannister
763 F.3d 1060 (Ninth Circuit, 2014)
Rouse v. Plantier
182 F.3d 192 (Third Circuit, 1999)
Antonio Pearson v. Prison Health Service
850 F.3d 526 (Third Circuit, 2017)

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