ROMAN v. LITTLE

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 30, 2020
Docket2:19-cv-05204
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
ROMAN v. LITTLE, (E.D. Pa. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

ALEXSANDRO ROMAN : CIVIL ACTION : v. : NO. 19-5204 : DR. LITTLE, et al. :

MEMORANDUM

KEARNEY, J. April 30, 2020

A Hispanic man entering state prison with disclosed ongoing medical issues shortly after hospital care pro se sues the prison medical professionals for a thirteen-day delay in treating him upon admission to the prison and two prison correctional officers for skipping over him in line at the sick call delaying his treatment for an additional three days. He pleads telling the medical professionals of his ongoing pain including providing current hospital records upon entering the prison. He did not describe his medical condition to the prison officers, but he assumed they knew of his pain by the way he walked. He seeks damages against the medical professionals and prison officers for violating his Eighth Amendment right to be free from deliberate indifference to his medical needs while incarcerated and his Fourteenth Amendment right to equal protection of the law as a Hispanic man. He also sues the medical professionals for negligence under Pennsylvania law but has yet to obtain a certificate of merit required to proceed. After parsing through his pro se amended Complaint, we deny the medical professionals’ motion to dismiss the deliberate indifference and negligence claims. We dismiss the equal protection claims and the deliberate indifference claim against the prison officers. Given the effect of present COVID- 19 restrictions on meaningfully moving forward on a pro se prisoner’s civil rights claim, we again refer this case to our volunteer civil rights panel and briefly defer further scheduling, allowing the prisoner to possibly amend to plead more specific facts if he can do so in good faith. I. Pro se alleged facts From August 1, 2018 through September 2018, prison medical professionals Dr. Little and Physician Assistant Nicholson owed a duty to render medical treatment to Alexsandro Roman then incarcerated at SCI-Chester.1 Earlier on August 1, 2018, before entering SCI- Chester,2 Mr. Roman received treatment for his medical conditions at Hahnemann Hospital and

Temple University Medical Hospital, which included prescribed pain medications, magnetic resonance imaging and examinations.3 He suffered excruciating back pain from a dislocated disc, a vertebrae infection and arthritis.4 Mr. Roman’s medical records described his hospital treatment and included orders from hospital doctors for the prison doctors to follow.5 Upon admission to SCI-Chester, Mr. Roman told Dr. Little, Physician Assistant Nicholson and prison medical intake staff about the nature and extent of his injuries and medical needs.6 Mr. Roman also gave his medical records to Dr. Little and Physician Assistant Nicholson. They reviewed the records.7 Dr. Little and Physician Assistant Nicholson could not “properly and appropriately treat [Mr. Roman’s] medical conditions” because they failed to have Mr. Roman sign a medical records release authorization.8

On August 1, 2018 and the several days following, Mr. Roman personally requested Dr. Little and Physician Assistant Nicholson provide “medications for pain, a cane to walk with, bottom bunk status, and no stairs status.”9 But despite these repeated requests and their awareness of Mr. Roman’s injuries and painful suffering,10 Dr. Little and Physician Assistant Nicholson refused or neglected to refill Mr. Roman’s medications or provide medical assistance.11 Denial of sick-call services and medication. While incarcerated, Lieutenant White and Officer Dixon held Mr. Roman under their custody, control, and supervision.12 To obtain medical treatment, Mr. Roman scheduled a sick- call appointment and on September 10, 2018, he appeared for sick-call services at the prison

medical department where Officer Dixon worked the front desk and Lieutenant White assisted him.13 Officer Dixon maintained a list of inmates with scheduled sick-call appointments and would call inmates from the list for treatment.14 After “waiting for a long time,” Mr. Roman approached Officer Dixon’s desk and looked at the list where he discovered his name written at the top and several scratched out inmate names below his.15 Officer Dixon skipped Mr. Roman, instead calling inmates placed below him on the list first.16 Mr. Roman continued to wait as Officer Dixon called other inmates.17 Despite Mr. Roman’s need for medical care, apparent “because he could hardly walk,”18 “Officer Dixon told [Mr. Roman]… no more sick-call services would be available for the day.”19 In response, Mr. Roman explained to Officer Dixon and Lieutenant White the nature of his injuries, the severity of his pain, and his need for medication and treatment.20 But Officer Dixon and

Lieutenant White still refused treatment and sent Mr. Roman back to his housing unit.21 To remove him from the medical department, Officer Dixon tried to write a misconduct report on Mr. Roman.22 As a result of denied treatment, Mr. Roman continued to suffer “extreme and severe physical pain”23 and “agony for many days.”24 Mr. Roman later complained of his medical issues to Deputy Superintendent Walls.25 Deputy Walls “was able to get [Mr. Roman into] the medical department on September 13, 2018” and prison physicians re-ordered his medications the same day.26 After these medications expired, Dr. Little and Physician Assistant Nicholson refused to re-order the medication and Mr. Roman continued to suffer extreme pain.27 Mr. Roman filed grievances and grievance appeals to complain of Dr. Little and Physician Assistant Nicholson’s refusal to re-order his medication.28 Race discrimination. Mr. Roman is of Puerto Rican descent and struggles with the English language.29 Dr.

Little, Physician Assistant Nicholson, Officer Dixon and Lieutenant White treated Mr. Roman “unfairly and in a discriminatory manner in obtaining medical care and his medications based upon [Mr. Roman’s] inability to speak English and being of Puerto Rican descent.”30 Mr. Roman personally observed non-Puerto Rican, English-speaking inmates “treated appropriately at sick call.”31 Despite Mr. Roman’s observations, Officer Dixon “completely denied [Mr. Roman] medical care at sick call due to a bias, prejudice, or retaliation.”32 II. Analysis Mr. Roman pro se33 sues Dr. Little and Physician Assistant Nicholson, claiming they violated his Eighth Amendment right to be free from deliberate indifference, Fourteenth Amendment right to Equal Protection, and professional negligence.34 Mr. Roman alleges Dr.

Little and Physician Assistant Nicholson disregarded his medical needs and refused to provide treatment for unconstitutional reasons. He alleges Dr. Little and Physician Assistant Nicholson treated him “unfairly and in a discriminatory manner in obtaining medical care and his medications based upon [Mr. Roman’s] inability to speak English and being of Puerto Rican descent.”35 Mr. Roman claims to have personally observed non-Puerto Rican, English-speaking inmates “treated appropriately at sick call.”36 Mr. Roman also sues Officer Dixon and Lieutenant White alleging they knew and deliberately failed to assist in obtaining treatment for Mr. Roman’s medical needs when he visited the sick call on September 10, 2018.37 Mr. Roman alleges Officer Dixon and Lieutenant White acted similarly to Dr. Little and Physician Assistant Nicholson by depriving him of medical treatment because of his ethnicity and limited English proficiency.38 Dr. Little and Physician Assistant Nicholson move to dismiss Mr. Roman’s amended complaint for failure to state a claim.39 Officer Dixon and Lieutenant White separately move to dismiss Mr. Roman’s amended complaint for failure to state a claim.40 Mr. Roman did not

respond. A. Mr. Roman pleads deliberate indifference against Dr.

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ROMAN v. LITTLE, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roman-v-little-paed-2020.