Snider v. Pennsylvania DOC

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 13, 2020
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. 2020).

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, et al. :

JOEL SNIDER : CIVIL ACTION v. NO. 18-801 OFFICER MCKEEHAN, et al.

MEMORANDUM KEARNEY, J. January 13, 2020 Joel Snider is serving a thirty to sixty-year sentence in state prison after his August 2014 plea of guilty but mentally ill to a July 2010 third degree murder and burglary in this District. As our Court of Appeals recently instructed in Geness v. Cox, mentally ill persons may proceed on Americans with Disabilities Act claim against the state.! But we first need to know if the prisoner is suffering a disabling level of mental illness. Our review is hampered when the prisoner proceeds pro se and does not provide grounds to qualify for a guardian ad litem other than his unsupported claims contradicted by his conduct and earlier judicial findings. He seems to agree he is not constitutionally entitled to counsel in his civil cases. He instead argues the judicial system and prisons must provide him accommodations as a self-described mentally ill prisoner so he can better access the civil courts. Mr. Snider is now entering his seventh year of pro se litigation challenging accommodations provided to him in state and federal courts, conditions of his custody, and arguing

state actors retaliate against him for his grievances. He is also pursuing Post-Conviction Relief Act claims in state court challenging his 2014 guilty plea. He apparently has not exhausted state court remedies, nor has he sought habeas relief seeking to vacate his guilty plea. He instead filed at least four actions in this District and two in Western District of Pennsylvania with largely the same arguments although focused on different prisons. We now have four federal trial judges reviewing the same or very similar prison treatment issues as well as state court judges reviewing his guilty plea. We sua sponte raised the issue of consolidating these two cases before us but the state actor defendants argued the federal cases are not related given different correctional facilities and defendants. Mr. Snider has yet to get near a trial date; he has not proceeded beyond the pleadings before us. Our review is more complicated by Mr. Snider pro se appealing interlocutory Orders continuing to divest trial courts of jurisdiction: e.g., he now has five matters in our Court of Appeals, including an appeal of our Order denying him a volunteer guardian ad litem and our Order denying him permission to appeal this same interlocutory order. We cannot determine whether Mr. Snider has valid federal claims in many instances because we cannot get to the merits of his pleadings. We are not presently aware of an attorney willing to represent Mr. Snider. Even if we did know of an attorney, we are not certain Mr. Snider will listen to an attorney as he claims attorneys representing him erred in both his criminal case warranting post-conviction relief and in the 2013 case in this District where volunteer counsel settled a claim for him but he now wants to vacate the settlement claiming his volunteer counsel did not consult with him. In his latest series of filings, Mr. Snider pro se asks all the four federal judges with the six cases to consolidate earlier filed cases in this District into later filed cases in the Western District of Pennsylvania. We cannot and will not do so today as to the cases before us as there is no

articulated basis to transfer venue today and, even if we did transfer, the transferee district would need to consolidate. But we must now stay the resolution of nine pending motions to dismiss in Mr. Snider’s 2015 case at No. 15-951 pecore us because he appealed an interlocutory decision in No. 15-951 after we told him twice he could not do so. These appeals could be considered frivolous which would not stay our ongoing progress for all the reasons in our detailed findings in support of our September 30, 2019 Order denying a guardian ad litem. But his arguments have marginal validity and the issues affect all aspects of his case at No. 15-951 as he claims he is incompetent to proceed without a guardian ad litem and appointment of counsel in this civil action and presumably others. This same argument arguably applies to No. 18-801 also before us with two pending and briefed motions to dismiss. In accompanying Orders, we deny Mr. Snider’s motions for consolidation but unfortunately must stay the progress of No. 15-951 and No. 18-801 and direct all parties to file no further briefing in either of these two cases until jurisdiction is vested back in our Court. Absent further grounds, we will not transfer venue of No. 15-951 as the claims arise in this District. We may transfer venue of No. 18-801 as it arises from conduct in the Western District of Pennsylvania but not until after our Court of Appeals resolves the present appeal of our September 30, 2019 Order in No. 15-951 denying a guardian ad litem. We deny relief in the third case at No. 18-1789 as there is no matter before us after we dismissed the case and Mr. Snider appealed our dismissal. I. Background Police arrested Joel Snider in July 2010 for murder and other charges arising from the shooting death of Sudharman Joseph Fenton in Union County, Pennsylvania? After an October 12, 2010 preliminary hearing, a magisterial district judge found sufficient evidence to detain Mr.

Snider for trial. Mr. Snider alleges he spent time as a pre-trial detainee at the Union County prison, the Snyder County prison, the Clinton County Correctional Facility, the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections, and Torrance State Hospital from September 2010 to August 2014. On August 8, 2014, Mr. Snider entered a negotiated plea of guilty but mentally ill to one count of third-degree murder and one count of burglary.? The state court sentenced Mr. Snider to the agreed-upon aggregate sentence of thirty to sixty years’ incarceration.’ He is now incarcerated in the Western District of Pennsylvania. A. Mr. Snider’s alleged disabilities. Mr. Snider alleges he is disabled under the Rehabilitation Act (RA), 29 U.S.C. § 794, and Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), 42 U.S.C. §§ 12131, 12181, because of mental illness and a hearing impairment.> Mr. Snider alleges diagnoses of attention deficit disorder, schizophrenia paranoid type or schizoaffective disorder bi-polar type, bi-polar I disorder with psychotic features, and post-traumatic stress disorder.® He alleges his mental illness substantially limits his brain function and adversely affects “nearly every aspect of his daily life, including his ability to care for himself and other major life activities such as sleeping, learning, reading, concentrating, socializing and communicating.”” Mr. Snider alleges the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections “regards” Mr. Snider as having “personality disorders” including anti-social personality disorder, borderline personality disorder, and narcissistic personality disorder.’ Mr. Snider alleges his lack of capacity prevents him from “meaningful court access.” He claims a statutory right to counsel to allow him access to the civil courts. B. Mr. Snider’s 2013 case before Judge Brann at No. 13-1226 appears to be on appeal. Before pleading guilty but mentally ill to third degree murder in August 2014, Mr. Snider filed Snider v. Motter, No. 13-1226 pending before Judge Brann. In his Second Amended

Complaint, Mr. Snider alleged Warden Jaqueline Motter, Clinton County Correctional Facility, correctional officers, and nurses violated Mr.

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Snider v. Pennsylvania DOC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snider-v-pennsylvania-doc-pamd-2020.