Phoenix v. Lafourche Parish Government

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedJune 17, 2020
Docket2:19-cv-13004
StatusUnknown

This text of Phoenix v. Lafourche Parish Government (Phoenix v. Lafourche Parish Government) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phoenix v. Lafourche Parish Government, (E.D. La. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

EASTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA

DEANNA PHOENIX, on behalf of CIVIL ACTION her minor daughter, S.W.

v. NO. 19-13004

LAFOURCHE PARISH GOVERNMENT, ET AL. SECTION "F"

ORDER AND REASONS

Before the Court is a motion to dismiss by CorrectHealth Lafource, LLC, David Jennings, Kendra Patrick, Patricia Guidry, Katasha Morris, Aysa Every, Shanta Sherman, Sara Armond, and Chelsea Nolan. For the reasons that follow, the motion is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part. Background This civil rights lawsuit arises from a mentally ill pretrial detainee’s suicide by hanging in his jail cell days after being removed from suicide watch. Sometime between 12:37 a.m. and 4:30 a.m. on October 7, 2018, 36-year-old Samuel June Williams hanged himself in a jail cell in the E Block at the Lafourche Parish Detention Center. Nineteen days after he told a correctional officer he was suicidal and five days after being removed from suicide watch. This civil rights litigation on behalf of his minor daughter followed. The Court takes as true the allegations in the complaint. Samuel Williams suffered from schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. Arrested on unspecified charges, on September 15, 2018,

Williams was transported to the Lafourche Parish Detention Center, which is operated and administered by Lafourche Parish Sheriff’s Office. Sheriff Craig Webre is a policymaker for the LPSO and detention center; he was responsible for staffing the detention center and contracting with medical providers. Major Jeremy Graniere and Captain Cortell Davis were Corrections Directors of the LPSO; both were policymakers responsible for training and supervising staff that supervised the detainees in LPSO custody. The LPSO contracted with CorrectHealth Lafourche LLC (CHL) to provide and manage medical and mental health services for detainees in LPSO custody at LPDC; CHL provided staff, training, and policies for all medical and mental health personnel it employed at LPDC,

including David Jennings (a social worker), Kendra Patrick (a nurse practitioner), and a number of licensed practical nurses, Patricia Guidry, Katasha Morris, Aysa Every, Shanta Sherman, Sarah Armond, and Chelsea Nolan. Detainees are screened on arrival at LPDC. In the intake screening form for Williams, CHL nurse Aysa Every indicated that Williams denied thoughts of self-harm, denied mental health history, and denied a history of suicide attempts or ideation. From a holding cell, Williams was placed in F Block; the next day he was transferred to G Block. That same day, Williams informed a correctional officer that he was suicidal.1 By 8:05 a.m. on September 18, 2018, Williams was placed on suicide watch and

watched by CHL licensed practical nurses Patricia Guidry or Shanta Sherman. Williams remained on suicide watch from September 18 until 12:14 p.m. on October 2, 2018. During the two-week suicide watch period, the Custom Flow Chart kept by the CHL medical providers indicates that the following individuals monitored Williams: David Jennings (social worker); Kendra Patrick (nurse practitioner); and Patricia Guidry, Aysa Every, Shanta Sherman, Sarah Armond, Chelsea Nolan, and Katasha Morris (licensed practical nurses). Seven days after being placed on suicide watch, Williams was interviewed about his suicidal ideations; he informed either Armond or Jennings that he felt depressed and suicidal, that he

had mental health history of bipolar and schizophrenia diagnoses, and that he had been prescribed medications to treat his mental illnesses. The mental health note (taken by either Armond or Jennings) on September 25, 2018 recommends “continue on suicide watch, verify meds, psych appointment upon verification.” That same day, Williams signed a release authorizing JeffCare (of

1 A Chart Note by Shanta Sherman at 6:27 a.m. on September 18, 2018 states, “Nurse on duty advised by Lt. Jones inmate told security personnel that he wanted to kill himself inmate placed on suicide watch per protocol.” Jefferson Parish Human Services Authority) to release his mental health records to LPDC; Williams had been treated at JeffCare since September 2017. Williams’s JeffCare records were either received that same day, or CHL failed to obtain them.2 The JeffCare records

essentially confirmed with more specificity what Williams reported to CHL. The records indicate that Williams had been diagnosed with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder and that his treatment regimen in January 2018 at JeffCare included three medications: a mood stabilizer, to be taken twice daily; a schizoaffective/ schizophrenia medication to be taken once each month; and an anti- depressive to be taken once daily. CHL did not provide Williams with these or any medications. Nor did CHL schedule an appointment for a psychiatrist or psychologist to examine Williams. Two days later on September 27, 2018, in the Subjective Interview Form in CHL’s record, Patrick noted that Williams was on

suicide watch (but erroneously noted the suicide watch time period spanned three, rather than nine, days), that Williams had reported that he was diagnosed with bipolar disorder and schizophrenia a few months ago, that Williams “states he is not taking medication,” and that he reports depression and suicidal thoughts. Patrick

2 It is alleged, the medical records were received by CHL and saved by Nolan It is alternatively alleged that CHL failed to obtain the records. also noted “keep on suicide watch obtain records from Jeff Carrol rtc 1 week.” Five days later on October 2, 2018, Williams was examined by

Jennings, CHL social worker, who noted in the Subjective Interview Form that Williams

said he is feeling ‘good.’ He denied [suicidal ideation]. He denied past attempts at suicide. [Williams] said he was getting Invega shot from JeffCare...up till a couple months ago.... He verbalized having support from family and hope for his future. He was definitive in his denial of [suicidal ideation] or wanting to hurt himself.

Jennings discontinued Williams’s suicide watch: in a mental health note and provider order that same day, Jennings stated “Discontinue suicide watch, house per security, verify meds, psych appointment, f/u in one week by social worker.” In accordance with Jennings’s order, Williams was removed from suicide watch on October 2 and placed on D Block. After a problem with another inmate a few days later, Williams was moved to E Block. The same day he was moved to E Block, the Exam Forms portion of the CHL record reflects that Nolan noted: “Appointment with Appt: MenHlth SickCall-Prov for 10-09-2018: f/u social worker in one week Appointment with Appt: Mental Health Provider (NP_PA) for 10-11-18: VERIFY MEDS. PSYCH APPOINTMENT UPON VERIFICATION.” Whether Nolan examined or spoke to Williams, or ascertained whether he was experiencing suicidal ideation, is not reflected in the note. “Although Williams advised all the CorrectHealth Lafourche defendant employees that he had been receiving medications for his schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, and the JPSHA records verified

as much,” it is alleged, Williams “was never prescribed any medications by [CHL] or examined by a psychiatrist.” Nineteen days after threatening suicide -- unmedicated and before being examined or treated by a psychiatrist or physician - - on October 7, 2018, Williams hanged himself in his cell. He was last seen alive at 12:36 a.m.; his body was found at 4:30 a.m. His medical “treatment” at the jail consisted of being placed on suicide watch for 14 days, one visit with a nurse practitioner, and one or two visits with a social worker. On October 7, 2019, Deanna Phoenix, on behalf of Phoenix’s (and Williams’s) minor daughter, S.W., sued Lafourche Parish Government, Sheriff Craig Webre (in his individual and official

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Phoenix v. Lafourche Parish Government, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phoenix-v-lafourche-parish-government-laed-2020.