Williams, Travis v. Syed, Salam

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Wisconsin
DecidedFebruary 25, 2022
Docket3:16-cv-00474
StatusUnknown

This text of Williams, Travis v. Syed, Salam (Williams, Travis v. Syed, Salam) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams, Travis v. Syed, Salam, (W.D. Wis. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF WISCONSIN

TRAVIS D. WILLIAMS,

Plaintiff, OPINION AND ORDER v. 16-cv-474-wmc DR. SALAM SYED, et al.,

Defendants.

In this case, the court granted pro se plaintiff Travis D. Williams leave to proceed on First, Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment claims, as well as state law claims, against 27 officials working at the Wisconsin Department of Corrections’ Columbia Correctional Institution (“Columbia”). In particular, plaintiff challenges: the decision not to place him in a unit specified for inmates with mental health conditions, which he claims was racially motivated; decisions denying him access to a wheelchair or medical shoes necessary to address his painful hip, foot and ankle conditions; the treatment of a nose sore; the alleged refusal to prevent him from falling, then failure to treat him after he fell; the failure to address urine leaking into his cell; and the allegedly retaliatory refusal to provide him appropriate medical or mental health care. Before the court now are the parties’ pending cross motions for summary judgment (dkt. ##92, 113), as well as Williams’ related motion seeking judgment in his favor and trial related motions (dkt. ##155, 169, 170, 179). After declining to strike his untimely September 11, 2019, filings, the court gave defendants the opportunity to reply to plaintiff’s late-filed, summary judgment opposition materials. (Dkt. #184.) Subsequently, plaintiff also moved to alter or amend the court’s June 21, 2021, opinion and order granting defendants’ motion for sanctions. (Dkt. #185.) In the end, this case is about plaintiff’s seeking his own, preferred method of

treatment for a variety of claimed medical needs, rather than the defendants’ recommended treatment. Regardless, since there is no evidence of defendants acting with deliberate indifference to plaintiff’s medical needs, or retaliation for his seeking alternative treatment, they are entitled to summary judgment on the merits of Williams’ § 1983 claims. Thus, the court will award defendants summary judgment, relinquish jurisdiction over his

supplemental state law claims, direct the entry of judgment in defendants’ favor, and close this case.

BACKGROUND1 Williams was incarcerated at Columbia between May 5, 2015, and April 21, 2017, during which he suffered from several physical ailments, including degenerative joint

disease, heel spurs in both feet, fibrosis in his left arm, a hiatal hernia and sleep apnea.2

1 Unless otherwise noted, the facts set forth in this opinion are material and undisputed. The court has drawn all facts from the parties’ proposed findings of fact and supporting evidence, as well as defendants’ response to plaintiff’s proposed findings of fact. Much of the evidence on which plaintiff purports to rely in support of his proposed findings of fact is difficult to follow, principally because he does not attest to material events based on his own recollection, but instead cites to documentary evidence using inconsistent citations and designations. Nonetheless, since most of plaintiff’s so-called “evidence” appears to be contained in the attachments to Williams’ declaration (dkt. ##96-1, 96-2, 96-3), the court has done its level-best to review those documents and adopted plaintiff’s proposed findings of fact insofar as the evidence supports the stated factual findings. 2 Plaintiff’s Amended Complaint also includes several proposed findings of fact related to his physical ailments while incarcerated at the Racine County Jail in 2013. (See PPFOF (dkt. #94) ¶¶ 17-20.) He further includes several proposed findings of fact related to treatment received from a physician when he was at Dodge, Dr. Hoftiezer. (Id. ¶¶ 22-24.) However, these events are not Williams further claims that his left arm was “deformed” after tearing his bicep muscle in half, which required surgery. (Williams Exs. 2, 16 (dkt. #96-3, at 6, 21).) Williams attests that he first started using a cane in 2014, and then in 2015, began using a walker. In April

of 2015, while Williams was still incarcerated at Dodge Correctional Institution (“Dodge”), he participated in physical therapy, which included pain interventions like electrical stimulation, hot and cold packs, ultrasounds, and therapeutic exercises using a Thera band. At that time, Williams attests that he was able to walk the farthest he had been able to walk in three years, with the help of a walker.3

As for Williams’ mental health, he underwent a psychiatric evaluation on April 20, 2015, by a psychiatrist at Dodge, Dr. Drinka. Drinka diagnosed multiple substance abuse disorders, as well as a need to “rule out” schizoaffective disorder and malingering psychosis. (Adams Decl., Ex. 1018 (dkt. #122-1) 161-63.) At that time, Drinka prescribed Williams trazadone 100 mg for 6 months, and ziprasidone 20 mg for 1 week, followed by 40 mg for 6 months.4

About two weeks later, on May 5, 2015, Williams was transferred to Columbia. During his intake screening at that facility, the Health Services Unit (“HSU”) noted that Williams had the following medical restrictions: use of a walker, use of a wheelchair for

material to plaintiff’s claims related to events that took place at Columbia starting in 2015, and the court includes those facts here only as necessary to provide context.

3 At Dodge, Williams also claims a Dr. Karen Miller wrote a medical note stating that he would need a “highly skilled PT” to return him to a functional level, but the document he cites in support of that proposed fact (Ex. 1018 (dkt. #122-1) at 134) includes no such note. 4 Trazadone is a prescription medication typically used for sleep; and ziprasidone is an antipsychotic medication typically used to treat schizophrenia or bipolar disorder. distances only, a knee sleeve, arch supports, a blue Thera band, knee high TEDS, and heel cushions. While staff at Dodge had ordered arch supports, heel cushions and a knee sleeve for Williams, those items had not yet arrived at the time Williams was transferred.5 During

the intake screening, HSU also noted that Williams had been prescribed ziprasidone and trazadone by psychiatry, as well as acetaminophen for right knee pain, fiber tabs, and a neti pot for a nose sore. On March 16, 2015, a physician from Dodge had further ordered Williams one tube of bacitracin ointment, with no refills, to treat Williams’ nose sore. Essentially from that point until his 2017 transfer out of Columbia, Williams claims that

his mental and physical health needs were mismanaged and ignored, prompting him to file this lawsuit on July 1, 2016. After requiring amendments to his complaint, the court essentially allowed Williams to proceed with claims against the following, 27 current and former Columbia employees: Correctional Officers Douglas Bittelman, Cory Knapp, Joel Roeker and Nathan Roberts; Columbia’s warden’s Secretary Amber Anderson; Dr. Salam Syed, a physician; Medical

Assistant Rachel Pafford; Dr. Philip Hoechst, a physical therapist; Registered Nurses Denise Valerius, Kathleen Whalen, Kerry Newbury, Kristine DeYoung, Jessie Beaver, Melissa Thorne, Neaver Walters and Trisha Anderson; Heath Services Managers (“HSM”) Meredith Bird (formerly Meredith Mashak) and Candace Warner; Unit Supervisor Sara Fry; Dr. Daniel Norge, a psychological associate in the Psychological Services Unit (“PSU”); Drs. Maria Gambaro, Julia Persike, Kelsey Stange, Woods, Maureen White and

5 The evidence of record does not indicate precisely when Williams received these items. Raymond Wood, psychologists; and Dr. Robert Vickrey, a psychiatrist. In particular, the court allowed Williams leave to pursue Eighth Amendment claims for deliberate indifference and state law negligence claims against: defendants Bittelman and Warner,

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