Smith v. North Carolina Department of Adult Corrections

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 25, 2023
Docket1:23-cv-00218
StatusUnknown

This text of Smith v. North Carolina Department of Adult Corrections (Smith v. North Carolina Department of Adult Corrections) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. North Carolina Department of Adult Corrections, (W.D.N.C. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF NORTH CAROLINA ASHEVILLE DIVISION 1:23-cv-00218-GCM

S. SHANE SMITH, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) vs. ) ORDER ) NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT ) OF ADULT CORRECTIONS, et al. ) ) Defendants. ) __________________________________________)

THIS MATTER is before the Court on initial review of Plaintiff’s Amended Complaint [Doc. 15]. See 28 U.S.C. §§ 1915(e) and 1915A. Plaintiff is proceeding in forma pauperis. [Docs. 2, 8]. I. BACKGROUND Pro se Plaintiff S. Shane Smith (“Plaintiff”) is a prisoner of the State of North Carolina currently housed at Foothills Correctional Institution (“Foothills”) in Morganton, North Carolina. He filed this action in the Eastern District of North Carolina on November 16, 2022, against Defendants North Carolina Department of Adult Corrections (NCDAC); Todd Ishee, the NCDAC Secretary; John/Jane Doe, the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) Coordinator; and Teresa Jardon, the Foothills Warden, claiming that Defendants violated his rights under the Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”), 42 U.S.C. § 12101, et seq., and the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (“Rehab Act”). [Doc. 1]. On January 27, 2023, District Judge Terrence W. Boyle ordered that this action be transferred to this Court because this action “relates to the alleged failure to accommodate [Plaintiff’s] disability at Foothills,” which is in the Western District.1 [Doc. 9]. On initial review of Plaintiff’s Complaint, this Court found that Plaintiff failed to state a claim for relief and allowed Plaintiff 30 days to amend his Complaint. [Doc. 14]. Plaintiff timely filed an Amended Complaint [Doc. 15], which is now before the Court on initial review. In his Amended Complaint, Plaintiff names the following Defendants: (1) the NCDAC; (2) Todd

Ishee, “Commissioner of Prisons;” (3) Teresa Jardon, Foothills Warden; (4) John Coleman, Director of N.C. Correctional Enterprise (NCCE)2; (5) Sophia Feaster, Division ADA Coordinator; (6) Monica Teague, Region ADA Coordinator; and (7) Deorain Carson, Facility ADA Coordinator. [Id. at 1, 3-6]. Plaintiff purports to sue all Defendants in their individual and official capacities. [See id. at 4-6]. Plaintiff alleges as follows. Plaintiff was born without fingers and toes and has “extremely sensitive skin.” [Id. at 8]. He has no grip with his right hand and limited grip with his left hand. [Id.]. On his left hand, Plaintiff has what some might mistakenly assume is a thumb, but rather is “the root from which a thumb would extend.” [Id.]. Without toes, his

“balance is cumbersome.” [Id.]. Plaintiff is very limited in how he performs manual tasks and even the slightest alteration in their performance causes him “excruciating physical pain and great discomfort.” [Id.]. The appendage “that is often misidentified as a thumb is [Plaintiff’s] primary tool” for feeding, dressing, and caring for himself, “all only if appropriately accommodated.” [Id. at 8-9].

1 For reasons unknown to the Court, this matter was not opened as a new case in this District until August 16, 2023. [See Doc. 12].

2 Plaintiff alleges that, as Director of the NCCE, Defendant Coleman “is responsible for the administration, operation, and supervision of all NCCE industry plants, staff and facilities; and the promulgation and enforcement of laws, rules, regulations, policies, and practices relevant to them.” [Doc. 15 at 4-5]. Once in NCDAC custody, in or around 1993, prison officials provided Plaintiff numerous disability accommodations and allowed Plaintiff to receive numerous items from family members that were necessary for Plaintiff to perform simple daily tasks. [Id. at 6, 11]. After nearly 15 years of incarceration, Plaintiff was transferred to a facility where officials “arbitrarily took it upon [themselves] to rescind all of [his] previously approved disability accommodations.”

[Id.]. In 2007, Plaintiff filed a civil action under the ADA and Rehab Act in the Eastern District of North Carolina, S. Shane Smith v. Theodis Beck, et al., No. 5:07-CT-3034-FL. [Id. at 11-12]. Ultimately, that action ended in a settlement agreement between the Plaintiff and the NCDAC whereby the NCDAC agreed, among other things, to provide Plaintiff with “appropriate clothing and assistive devices” for his disabilities and the opportunity to buy other identified items at his own expense. [See Doc. 15-2 at 114-22]. In reaching this agreement, it was determined that the NCCE could not provide the items that Plaintiff needed and that they would need to be purchased from outside vendors, such as Walmart. The items included bed linens, boxer shorts, shirt jackets, t-shirts, pants with sufficient pockets, a belt, bath towels and face cloths, crew

socks, a digital pocket radio, radio headphones, a nylon zippered notebook, an analog watch, and rubber-gripped pens. [Doc. 15 at 13-17]. The clothing and linen items were to be made of 100% cotton and washed only in special detergent. [Doc. 15-2 at 115-16]. In September 2015, Plaintiff filed a federal civil rights action in the Middle District of North Carolina, S. Shane Smith v. Frank L. Perry, et al., 1:16-CV-396-TDS-LPA, which concluded in 2021 with a settlement agreement. [Id. at 17]. After filing that action, prison officials “all but stopped providing clothing which met [Plaintiff’s] specific disability accommodation needs and completely stopped permitting [him] to purchase at [his] expense the non-clothing and linen items [he] used as accommodation assistive devices.” [Id.; see id. at 18- 24]. The NCCE “has continually demonstrated it is unable or unwilling to create or provide the clothing and linen items [Plaintiff] needed to appropriately accommodate [his] disability.” [Id. at 24]. “The change of [Plaintiff’s] clothing which accommodated [his] disability served absolutely no penological purpose other than to harass, belittle, intimidate, and retaliate against [Plaintiff] for the expression of [his] grievances and for [his] previous civil rights litigation.” [Id. at 24-25].

After discussing his disability needs with his housing unit’s supervisory staff, supervisory staff informed Plaintiff that Defendant Jardon had rejected his request for accommodation. [Id. at 25]. On June 30, 2022, after discussing his disability needs with the Foothills medical department and obtaining a referral, Plaintiff was assessed by an occupational therapist. [Id.]. It was determined that “the requested and previously provided items were the most appropriate accommodation for [Plaintiff’s] unique disability.” [Id.]. Shortly after his appointment with the occupational therapist, prison officials told Plaintiff that they were not going to implement the occupational therapist’s recommendations. [Id.]. Thereafter, Plaintiff submitted an official NCDAC Offender Reasonable Request for Accommodation (“ADA Request”), “pleading prison

officials to provide the various items which accommodated [Plaintiff’s] disability.” [Id.]. Defendants Teague, Feaster, and Carson denied Plaintiff’s numerous ADA Requests. [Id.]. Plaintiff has written Defendant Ishee “numerous times requesting disability accommodation,” but Plaintiff has never met Defendant Ishee and Defendant Ishee “has never responded or communicated with [Plaintiff]” regarding Plaintiff’s disability accommodation needs. [Id.]. Plaintiff has never met Defendant Coleman and Defendant Coleman has never communicated with Plaintiff regarding Plaintiff’s disability assistance needs. [Id. at 26].

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Bluebook (online)
Smith v. North Carolina Department of Adult Corrections, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-north-carolina-department-of-adult-corrections-ncwd-2023.