Kevin Anderson v. Washington State Department of Corrections

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 26, 2016
Docket33191-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of Kevin Anderson v. Washington State Department of Corrections (Kevin Anderson v. Washington State Department of Corrections) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kevin Anderson v. Washington State Department of Corrections, (Wash. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

FILED April 26, 2016 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division Ill

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

KEVIN ANDERSON, ) No. 33191-1-111 ) Appellant, ) ) v. ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, ) ) Respondent. )

LAWRENCE-BERREY, A.CJ. -Inmate Kevin Anderson brought suit against the

Department of Corrections (DOC) seeking penalties and attorney fees under the Public

Records Act (PRA), chapter 42.56 RCW. Mr. Anderson alleged the DOC wrongfully

withheld certain documents when he viewed his inmate central file. The trial court

granted the DOC's motion for summary judgment and dismissed Mr. Anderson's claims.

On appeal, Mr. Anderson asserts various arguments that the trial court erred. We

disagree and affirm the trial court. No. 33191-1-III Anderson v. Dep 't of Corr.

FACTS

Mr. Anderson was housed at the Airway Heights Corrections Center (AHCC) from

February 2011 until he was transferred to the Coyote Ridge Corrections Center (CRCC)

in February 2013. While at AHCC, Mr. Anderson reviewed documents contained in his

inmate central file on February 9, 2012, May 31, 2012, and August 14, 2012.

The DOC creates a central file for every inmate who enters its custody. The ·

central file follows the inmate to the current DOC facility where the inmate is housed.

According to the DOC, an inmate's central file is not static-documents may be added to

or removed from a central file during the course of the incarceration based on DOC

records management guidelines.

DOC Policy 280. 510 governs the public disclosure of records to inmates. In

relevant part, DOC Policy 280.510 provides:

A. All public records requests, other than requests by incarcerated offenders for inspection of their central file or health record, must be submitted in writing to the Department of Corrections Public Records Office [by regular mail or e-mail] ....

B. . .. An offender may request to inspect his/her central file by completing and submitting DOC 05-066 Request for Disclosure of Records to the facility/local Records Unit. C. Requests from an incarcerated offender to examine or obtain a copy of information in his/her health record will be handled per DOC 640.020 Offender Health Records Management.

2 No. 33191-1-III Anderson v. Dep 't of Corr.

Clerk's Papers (CP) at 67.

Inmates often send a "kite" ( an internal prison correspondence) to the records unit

of their DOC facility to view their central files. The DOC then assigns each central file

review request a distinct tracking number and requires the inmate to submit an official

records request form. If an inmate requests to review his central file multiple times, the

DOC treats each request as a separate public disclosure request in its system. If the DOC

withholds or redacts documents contained in an inmate's central file, at the time of the

inmate's central file review, the DOC provides the inmate with an exemption log that

explains the basis for its decision to withhold or redact. An inmate may appeal the

DOC's exemption claim internally within the DOC. Consistent with DOC Policy

280.510, if an inmate requests a document outside his or her central file or medical file,

the DOC requires the inmate to submit a public records request to the DOC public records

office in Olympia.

On January 4, 2012, Mr. Anderson submitted a kite to the AHCC records unit

requesting to review his central file. The DOC assigned the request the tracking number

12-007. Mr. Anderson reviewed his central file on February 9, 2012. Concurrent with

his central file review, the DOC notified Mr. Anderson, in an exemption log, of its

statutory basis for withholding two documents-his Federal Bureau of Investigations

3 No. 3 3 191-1-III Anderson v. Dep 't of Corr.

(FBI) rap sheet and his Washington State Patrol (WSP) rap sheet. A few weeks later, Mr.

Anderson notified the DOC that he believed his central file was missing documents. The

DOC responded that his central file review, along with the exemption log, contained or

identified all the documents AHCC received from the Washington Corrections Center

(WCC) upon his arrival.

In March 2012, Mr. Anderson filed an appeal with the DOC public disclosure

appeals office in Olympia. The grounds of Mr. Anderson's DOC appeal included the

withholding of his rap sheets, and an assertion of documents missing from his central file.

On March 30, 2012, the DOC public disclosure appeals office notified Mr. Anderson that

"[t]he decision to withhold both Rap Sheets was appropriate when it was made," although

that policy had since changed and he could submit a new central file review request. CP

at 296.

Sometime in April 2012, the DOC learned that a portion of Mr. Anderson's central

file from his previous incarceration had not been forwarded to AHCC. On May 15, 2012,

the DOC public disclosure appeals office notified Mr. Anderson that some of the records

that should have been in his central file were still in WCC during his February 9, 2012

central file review, and therefore "[f]acility records staff will prepare the first volume of

your central file for inspection and schedule your review." CP at 205.

4 No. 33191-1-111 Anderson v. Dep 't of Corr.

On May 22, 2012, the AHCC records unit informed Mr. Anderson that it had

received the missing volume of his central file and was assigning his review of the

documents a new tracking number, 12-107. Mr. Anderson protested the new tracking

number as he considered the missing volume of his central file part of his January request.

On May 31, 2012, Mr. Anderson reviewed the missing volume of his central file and was

provided another exemption log. Because Mr. Anderson only reviewed documents sent

from WCC, he did not review his rap sheets, nor did the DOC attempt to claim an

exemption for his rap sheets.

On July 24, 2012, Mr. Anderson submitted another kite to the AHCC records unit

to review his central file. The DOC assigned the request the tracking number, 12-173.

Prior to Mr. Anderson's upcoming central file review, the DOC reviewed his central file

and merged the missing volume that had previously been at WCC. During this time, the

DOC claims it realized that Mr. Anderson's central file contained documents that should

have been in Mr. Anderson's medical file. Consequently, the DOC removed seven

records from Mr. Anderson's central file and sent them to his medical file on August 8,

2012.

Mr. Anderson reviewed his central file on August 14, 2012. During the central file

review, Mr. Anderson was given an exemption log (dated August 8, 2012), which listed

5 No. 33191-1-III Anderson v. Dep 't of Corr.

seven medical records as being withheld in their entirety. The medical records included a

special sex offender sentencing alternative (SSOSA) assessment and chemical

dependency documents. 1 On the exemption log, the withheld medical records had a

double asterisk next to them, and the bottom of the log stated:

**ABOVE ORIGINAL DOCUMENTS REMOVED FROM CENTRAL FILE AND SENT TO MEDICAL ON 8/8/2012. IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO REVIEW ANY OF THESE PARTICULAR DOCUMENTS, PLEASE SEND AN INMATE KITE TO MEDICAL.

CP at 151. The exemption log also stated that the "MEDICAL/MENTAL

HEAL TH/CHEMICAL DEPENDENCY" exemption applied to the medical records

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