Personal Restraint Petition Of Robert R. Williams

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 1, 2020
Docket54629-9
StatusUnpublished

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Bluebook
Personal Restraint Petition Of Robert R. Williams, (Wash. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

December 1, 2020 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II In the Matter of the Personal Restraint of No. 54629-9-II

ROBERT RUFUS WILLIAMS,

Petitioner. PUBLISHED OPINION

GLASGOW, J.—Robert Rufus Williams seeks relief from restraint imposed following his

convictions for burglary, robbery, and attempted murder. In his personal restraint petition (PRP),

Williams alleges that due to the spread of COVID-19 in prisons, including his prison in particular,

and his age, race, and disability, the conditions of his confinement have become a cruel punishment

in violation of article I, section 14 of the Washington Constitution and the Eighth Amendment to

the United States Constitution. Williams asks to be released and argues a sentence of home

confinement with his sister is the only effective remedy.

Although we hold that the Washington Constitution is more protective than the federal

constitution in these circumstances, we conclude that Williams’s incarceration does not violate the

Washington Constitution considering (1) Washington’s consistency with other states in its

approach to releasing inmates during the COVID-19 pandemic; (2) an evaluation of Williams’s

risk in light of the Department of Corrections’ continuously evolving multifaceted response to

COVID-19; and (3) the penological purposes of ongoing confinement in Williams’s case, which

include ensuring community safety. Moreover, we follow recent Washington Supreme Court and

Division One cases concluding that the Department has not been deliberately indifferent to the risk No. 54629-9-II

of COVID-19 and, therefore, Williams’s ongoing incarceration is not cruel and unusual under the

Eighth Amendment.

We deny Williams’s PRP and deny his motion for release. We also deny his alternative

request for a reference hearing.

FACTS

I. WILLIAMS’S MEDICAL CONDITIONS AND CONVICTIONS

Williams is a 78-year-old, Black man who has been diagnosed with diabetes and

hypertension. Since suffering a stroke in 2010, the right side of Williams’s body has been largely

immobilized. Williams now uses a wheelchair and receives assistance with activities of daily

living.

In 2007, Williams “brutally assaulted” his ex-girlfriend, and she suffered “severe, life-

threatening injuries.” State v. Williams, noted at 160 Wn. App. 1036, 2011 WL 1004554, at *1-2.

A jury convicted Williams of first degree burglary, first degree robbery, and attempted second

degree murder. The jury returned special verdicts finding that Williams was armed with a deadly

weapon for each offense. He was sentenced to approximately 270 months of confinement, and he

entered prison in 2009 at the age of 67. His earned release date is in 2028. We affirmed his

convictions on appeal. Id. at *5.1

1 Williams also argued that the trial court had improperly entered an order stating that his lesser included first degree assault conviction was still valid in the event his attempted murder conviction was overturned on appeal. Williams, 2011 WL 1004554, at *5. We agreed with Williams that such an order violated double jeopardy and remanded for the trial court to address the error and vacate the assault conviction. Id.

2 No. 54629-9-II

This PRP was filed in the Supreme Court, along with a motion for release pending final

determination and accelerated review pursuant to RAP 16.15(b) and 17.4(b). The PRP was

promptly transferred to this court. We granted the motion for accelerated review.

II. WILLIAMS’S CONDITIONS OF CONFINEMENT AT COYOTE RIDGE AND HIS COVID-19 DIAGNOSIS

When Williams filed his PRP, he was incarcerated at Coyote Ridge Corrections Center. At

that time, three staff members at Coyote Ridge had tested positive for COVID-19, but no one from

the incarcerated population had yet tested positive. Although Williams’s legal team had been

advocating for his return to the Sage Unit, a unit for “elderly and/or infirm residents,” Williams

was living in the general population in a roughly 200 square foot cell with three other men.

Department of Corrections’ Resp. (Resp.), Ex. 3 ¶ 6 (Decl. of Dr. Frank Longano).2 This was a

dry cell without plumbing, so there was not an easily accessible sink for handwashing or a toilet.

Williams was also regularly exposed to over 70 men in the cafeteria during meals. Williams

repeatedly asked for a face mask in early April 2020, but face masks were not provided until April

17, 2020. As of May 12, 2020, Williams’s face mask had never been washed, and he had not been

provided any soap free of charge.

On April 14, 2020, Williams asked the Department for an “[e]xtraordinary [m]edical

[p]lacement” of home confinement with his sister in another state. Pet’r’s Reply to Resp. to PRP

(Reply), Ex. 1, Attach. D ¶¶ 4, 8 (Decl. of Dayton L. Campbell-Harris). The secretary of the

2 Williams was previously housed in the Sage Unit, but he returned to the general population in June 2019. Williams did not know why he was returned to the general population. Dr. Frank Longano, Deputy Chief Medical Officer for the Department, noted that Williams requested to return to the Sage Unit prior to his COVID-19 diagnosis and stated, “Mr. Williams’ records indicate a history of being non-compliant and refusing to take his medications, though recent compliance appeared to be good.” Resp., Ex. 3 ¶ 6 (Decl. of Longano).

3 No. 54629-9-II

Department may authorize an extraordinary medical placement outside of a Washington prison

under RCW 9.94A.728(1)(c)(i)(A)-(C) when three conditions are met: (1) the person “has a

medical condition that is serious and is expected to require costly care or treatment,” (2) the person

“poses a low risk to the community because he or she is currently physically incapacitated due to

age or the medical condition or is expected to be so at the time of release,” and (3) “granting the

extraordinary medical placement will result in a cost savings to the state.” For purposes of this

statute, the term “incapacitated” is defined as “having a medical condition that renders the offender

permanently unable or unlikely to engage in activities of daily living without assistance, to perform

gainful employment, and participate in criminal behavior.” Reply, Ex. 1, Attach. D, Attach. 2 (May

7, 2020 letter from Department’s Health Services Division to Williams).

Williams was informed on May 7, 2020 that his request for extraordinary medical

placement was denied because, although he met the medical criteria, he did not satisfy the

“community safety criteria.” Id. There was “no avenue for appeal illustrated on the . . . denial

letter,” and Williams does not attempt to appeal or seek review of the denial in this proceeding.

Reply, Ex. 1, Attach. D ¶ 17 (Decl. of Campbell-Harris). Rather, he asks this court for the same

remedy—release to home confinement with his sister—through the avenue of a PRP.

On May 14, 2020, Coyote Ridge reported its first confirmed case of COVID-19 in the

inmate population. The Department transferred the infected inmate and others who were

symptomatic to Airway Heights Corrections Center. Williams believes these symptomatic

individuals were transferred from the unit where he was living at the time.

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