McCray v. Gonzalez

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedSeptember 20, 2023
Docket4:20-cv-03186
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
McCray v. Gonzalez, (S.D. Tex. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT September 20, 2023 FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS Nathan Ochsner, Clerk HOUSTON DIVISION

CHARLES McCRAY, a/k/a CHARLES § LASTON, SPN # 01154346, § § Plaintiff, § § VS. § CIVIL ACTION NO. 4:20-3186 § ED GONZALEZ, et al., § § Defendants. §

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

Plaintiff Charles McCray, also known as Charles Laston, proceeds pro se and in forma pauperis in this civil rights suit. McCray alleges that the defendants denied him adequate treatment for Hepatitis C during his detention at the Harris County Jail. See Dkt. 1 (complaint); Dkt. 14 (more definite statement). Two defendants have appeared and moved for summary judgment (Dkt. 27). McCray has not responded, and the time to respond has expired. Having considered the pleadings, the motion and briefing, the applicable authorities, and all matters of record, the Court determines that summary judgment should be granted for the defendants and that McCray’s claims against the unserved defendant should be dismissed. The Court’s reasons are explained below. I. BACKGROUND

McCray, a pretrial detainee, was admitted to the Harris County Jail on December 20, 2018. He faces two criminal cases and his next court date in each case is October 4, 1 / 13 2023. See Find Someone in Jail, Harris County Sheriff’s Office, available at https://harriscountyso.org/JailInfo/FindSomeoneInJail (last visited Sept. 15, 2023); Dkt. 27-6.

McCray’s complaint names four defendants: (1) Sheriff Ed Gonzalez; (2) Dr. Laxman Sunder, Harris County Jail; (3) R. Hill, LVN, Harris County Jail; and (4) Dr. B. Howard, Harris County Jail (Dkt. 1, at 2-3). He states that he has been diagnosed with Hepatitis C and suffers from serious pain, swelling, a cough, and other symptoms. He alleges that jail personnel, including Dr. Howard, have denied his requests for anti-viral

treatment to cure Hepatitis C, telling him that Harris County does not provide the treatment and he will have to wait until he arrives at the Texas Department of Criminal Justice– Correctional Institutions Division (TDCJ) to get it. See, e.g., id. at 4-5; Dkt. 14, at 4, 8-12. He states that he was never offered, and never refused, any treatment for Hepatitis C at the jail (id. at 18). He claims that, if jail officials continue to deny the treatment, he could die

while detained (Dkt. 1, at 5; see Dkt. 14, at 3 (stating that he is 63 years old with other medical issues and claiming that, if he catches COVID-19, he “will die in this county jail”)). After screening McCray’s pleadings, the Court dismissed his claims against Dr. Sunder, Hill, and Sheriff Gonzales in his individual capacity. In the same order, the Court

construed McCray’s allegation that Harris County refuses to provide anti-viral treatment to jail inmates as a claim against Sheriff Gonzalez in his official capacity, and ordered Sheriff Gonzalez and Dr. Howard to answer the complaint (Dkt. 15). Harris County and Sheriff Gonzalez then answered (Dkt. 24; Dkt. 25) and filed a motion for summary 2 / 13 judgment (Dkt. 27; Dkt. 28). Dr. Howard has not appeared in this action, and the defendants’ motion states that she was not served with process (Dkt. 27, at 8). McCray claims that Harris County has a custom or policy of denying medication

for Hepatitis C, which prevented him from receiving medical attention (Dkt. 14, at 8-9). He alleges that Dr. Howard violated his rights because, on December 20, 2018, and for about two-and-a-half years after, she rejected his requests for anti-viral treatment and told him that he would need to “wait until [he goes] to TDCJ” (Dkt. 14, at 4, 9; see id. at 9-12).1 He further alleges that, when Dr. Howard examined him at the jail on August 27, 2020, she

stated that McCray’s liver was “acting up” but that was “nothing they could do” to treat his Hepatitis C (Dkt. 1, at 4-5). McCray claims that Dr. Howard knew of his liver problems and that, at the time she denied his request for anti-viral treatment, he had swollen legs and feet, which should have alerted her to the risk to his health (Dkt. 14, at 10). In response to the Court’s question about how Dr. Howard’s denial of treatment caused him harm,

McCray did not identify any specific harm, instead repeating that he has been told that he must wait until he gets to TDCJ to receive treatment: I have been suffering this harm since I arrived at the Harris County Jail back in 2018 . . . and I am still suffering to this day. I have been in the county jail for almost five years[.] [E]very time I go to medical I am told by all care providers that examine me that my liver is acting up but I have to go to TDCJ to receive the treatments to cure the Hepatitis C disease.

(id. at 11). The defendants present McCray’s medical records (Dkt. 28) and a declaration from

1 McCray states that Dr. Howard has now resigned from the jail (id. at 9). 3 / 13 Dr. Sunder, who reviewed McCray’s pleadings and medical records (Dkt. 27-5). Dr. Sunder states that he was acting medical director of the Harris County Jail from 2015 through 2019, and interim executive director of the jail from 2019 through March 2022.

He explains that, if an inmate arrives at the jail who has Hepatitis C but is not already receiving treatment, the medical staff monitors the inmate’s condition (id. at 1-2). If the inmate’s liver enzyme levels were “ranging from normal to slightly elevated,” then “no treatments would be administered and his enzyme levels would continue to be monitored for extreme increases, which would then indicate progression of his Hepatitis C and

possibly necessitate further tests and treatment” (id. at 2). If an inmate had sufficiently elevated liver enzyme levels, then a Hepatic ultrasound and other liver tests would be ordered and a “consultation with a gastroenterologist . . . would be requested to then determine if any treatment would be necessary” (id.). Regarding McCray, Dr. Sunder states that the medical records reflect that he has

Hepatitis C, along with diabetes and hypertension, and that he was not receiving medication for Hepatitis C when he was admitted to the jail (id.). He further states that McCray’s liver enzyme levels were “consistently monitored” during his detention and were “consistently within normal to the slightly elevated range,” indicating that “there was no acute liver failure or an acute need for Hepatitis C treatment” (id.; see id. at 3-4 (discussing in detail

16 liver enzyme tests monitoring McCray’s condition between Dec. 20, 2018, and Apr. 15, 2023)). Dr. Sunder opines that, although McCray complained during the same period of chest pain, cough, and swollen legs, these “are not typical symptoms of Hepatitis C,” but rather are attributable to his chronic conditions of diabetes and high blood pressure (id. at 4 / 13 4). He concludes, “I am of the opinion, given Mr. McCray’s lab work and enzyme levels that there was not an acute need for Hepatitis C treatment” (id. at 5). The defendants also submit McCray’s grievance records and the Harris County

Jail’s inmate handbook setting out the grievance procedure. See Dkt. 27-1 (inmate handbook); Dkt. 27-2 (McCray’s grievance history); Dkt. 27-3 (McCray’s grievance records). They present evidence that McCray filed 34 grievances between May 2019 and July 2022 but that only two pertained to his treatments for Hepatitis C. See Dkt. 27, at 10- 11; Dkt. 27-2; Dkt. 27-3. First, McCray filed a grievance in September 2019, complaining

that he had not received medication for Hepatitis C since his arrival at the jail (Dkt. 27-3, at 115 (Grievance # 29264)). On October 10, 2019, after investigation, officials determined that the grievance was unfounded because his condition was being monitored (id. at 106; see id. at 109).

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