Snider v. Pennsylvania DOC

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 30, 2019
Docket4:15-cv-00951
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Snider v. Pennsylvania DOC, (M.D. Pa. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA JOEL SNIDER : CIVIL ACTION v. NO. 15-951 PENNSYLVANIA DEPT. OF CORRECTIONS, e¢ al. : MEMORANDUM KEARNEY, J. September 30, 2019 While serving a thirty to sixty-year sentence in state prison after pleading guilty to a murder occurring over nine years ago, Joel Snider has taken offense to the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections transferring him to a new facility. When he did not get immediate relief, he filed three complaints with hundreds of allegations against dozens of Pennsylvania officials and now this District Court essentially claiming their decisions violate his rights as a person wrestling with attention deficit disorder, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder, and a hearing impairment. He invokes our jurisdiction under the Americans with Disabilities Act, Rehabilitation Act, and the civil rights law. He wrongly believes he enjoys a constitutional right to a lawyer in these cases and courts should move quickly to resolve his claims. After review of several of his repetitive and often bizarre pro se filings, we sua sponte ordered Mr. Snider and Defendants to address whether we should hold a hearing on appointment of a guardian ad litem, appoint a guardian with power to retain counsel, and consolidate his cases challenging access to a lawyer and the courts as a prisoner filing cases. He appealed staying our progress. After studying medical records, Mr. Snider’s admission of competency, and following our Court of Appeals’ mandate divesting its jurisdiction from his appeal, we today find no basis to appoint a guardian ad litem or consolidate Mr. Snider’s claims against different parties relating to different time periods.

1, Facts As he admitted, Joel Snider murdered Jonathan Fenton on July 4, 2010.' Between July 7, 2010 and August 8, 2014, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania held Mr. Snider in a facility as a pre-trial detainee.2 On August 8, 2014, Union County Court of Common Pleas President Judge Michael T. Hudock sentenced Joel Snider to thirty to sixty years in state prison for third degree murder.*? He remains in state custody today. It appears he initially took offense to his conditions of confinement and a possible transfer among Pennsylvania’s correctional institutions. Mr. Snider, blessed with a 132 IQ, filed this case in 2015 challenging the conduct of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and a variety of its agents regarding his ability to access courts as a self-described disabled person suffering from mental illnesses including attention deficit disorder, a form of schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, post- traumatic stress disorder, and a hearing impairment. He sues to redress grievances with his confinement including a transfer to a facility in 2013. He claims multiple state actors violated the Americans with Disabilities Act and his rights under the First and Fourteenth Amendments. He failed to timely amend but judges allowed him leave to file a second amended complaint which is presently subject to a motion to dismiss from Union County and Warden Shaffer.* He then pro se sued officials with the Department of Corrections in No. 18-801 challenging their treatment of him since 2017. He also sued judicial officers in this District in No. 18-1789 requiring our Court of Appeals to assign this case to our docket After reviewing dozens of his filings where he repeatedly seeks relief for being denied access to the courts as a person with an alleged mental illness, we sua sponte ordered the parties show cause why we should not hold an evidentiary hearing and review medical records relating to Mr. Snider’s mental condition.» We simultaneously denied Mr. Snider’s request for

appointment of counsel in a civil proceeding but, concerned he may need a guardian ad litem, we stayed an analysis of Union County’s and Warden Shaffer’s pending motion to dismiss his second amended complaint.® Mr. Snider sought an extension and then appealed our interlocutory order.’ Our Court of Appeals recently dismissed the appeal for lack of jurisdiction, returning the case to

We now return to the issue of whether we should appoint a guardian ad litem to represent Mr. Snider’s interests. If so, the guardian may seek to retain counsel. We begin by reviewing Mr. Snider’s history, particular in filings before us. Mr. Snider’s ability to proceed. Mr. Snider, admittedly blessed with a 132 IQ, argues he “has a long and documented history of treatment for mental illness.”? After listing his mental illnesses, Mr. Snider cites a Missouri court’s adjudication of his disability—for Social Security Disability Income purposes— and his Guilty But Mentally Ill plea in his underlying Pennsylvania murder case as adjudications sufficient to render him incapacitated.'° Mr. Snider repeatedly cites and describes the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, the local rules of the United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania, the Americans with Disabilities Act, the Rehabilitation Act, the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act, and case law interpreting these statutes. He vigorously engages in the litigation process and is acutely aware of filing deadlines, the importance of an accurate docket, and procedures he must follow. In his three pending civil actions, Mr. Snider demonstrates an ability to receive and evaluate information effectively. The docket in this case alone reflects over 290 entries: Mr. Snider filed, to date, eighty motions,!! twenty-seven briefs,'? eight objections to Magistrate Judge Schwab’s Reports and Recommendations and Judge Brann’s orders,'? and several amended

complaints.'* Mr. Snider’s motion practices includes a motion for leave to proceed in forma pauperis, multiple motions to appoint counsel, a motion for class certification, motions for temporary restraining orders, motions for preliminary injunctions, discovery motions, a motion for recusal, motions for extensions of time, motions for sanctions, and motions for status updates. And Mr. Snider appealed to our Court of Appeals. Snider’s complaint. Mr. Snider’s initial twenty-page complaint included seven attachments: “(1) Class Action Complaint; (2) Exhibit 1; (3) Motion for Class Certification; (4) Brief in Support of Class Certification; (5) Motion for Appointment of Counsel; (6) In Forma Pauperis Application and Authorization; (7) Summons.”!> Mr. Snider plead jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 and 1342(a)(3).'© He sought declaratory relief under 28 U.S.C. §§ 2201 and 2202, and claimed 28 U.S.C. §§ 2283 and 2284, as well as injunctive relief under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 65.'’ He plead our venue “under 28 USC section 1391 (b)(2) . . . it is where the majority of the events giving rise to this claim occurred; the place of business of the Governor, Attorney General, and [Pennsylvania Department of Corrections] are located there, as well as most of the defendants.”!® Mr. Snider explained he exhausted administrative remedies and documented each step he took in the administrative remedy process.'? Mr.

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Snider v. Pennsylvania DOC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snider-v-pennsylvania-doc-pamd-2019.