US appeals court says man can sue Pennsylvania over 26 years of solitary
confinement
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[September 25, 2024]
By MARYCLAIRE DALE
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — A man who spent 26 years in solitary confinement
despite a history of mental illness can sue Pennsylvania prison
officials for alleged cruel and unusual punishment, a U.S. appeals court
said in reviving the man’s lawsuit.
Roy Lee Williams spent nearly all of his time alone from 1993 until
2019, when a legal settlement led the state to end the practice of
routinely housing death-row inmates in solitary confinement.
Williams had been sentenced to death for killing a construction worker
in Philadelphia in 1988. An Associated Press story on the 1992 trial
reported that Williams, who is Black, had said he wanted to kill a white
person because a white person had put him in jail in a robbery case.
He was sentenced to death row at 26. His mental health problems date
back to at least age 14, when he was involuntarily committed to a
psychiatric facility amid suicidal ideation, according to his lawsuit.
Prison officials knew of his history of severe mental health and
cognition problems at least by 1996, Senior U.S. Circuit Judge Theodore
McKee wrote in the 2-1 ruling issued Friday, which reversed a lower
court ruling.
While state officials argued that the Department of Corrections was not
on notice before 2019 that its solitary confinement practices were
unconstitutional, McKee found they were. He cited a 25-page letter
outlining needed reforms the agency received in 2014 from the U.S.
Department of Justice.
“The 2014 DOJ report concisely packaged much of the relevant and binding
law and delivered it to the defendant’s doorstep,” said McKee, who sits
in the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court in Philadelphia.
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The ruling comes as at least a dozen states have banned or restricted
solitary confinement and lawsuits in both Pennsylvania and around the
country target the practice as well, especially for people with mental
illness. Critics say a person’s mental health can deteriorate quickly in
isolation, leading in some cases to self-harm.
Williams, who filed his initial lawsuit without the help of a lawyer,
described a six-month disciplinary period he once spent without even a
radio as being “isolated on top of being isolated,” according to the
ruling.
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In this Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2016, photo, U.S. Appeals Judge Theodore
A. McKee speaks during an interview with The Associated Press in
Philadelphia. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File)
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The 3rd Circuit also revived Williams’ claim that prison officials
ignored his right to services under the Americans with Disability
Act.
“The evidence here is uncontradicted,” McKee wrote. “By neither
removing Williams from solitary confinement for 26 years, nor making
modifications to his conditions of confinement, the DOC failed to
act."
Williams remains in custody, and under a death sentence, in a state
prison near Philadelphia. He is represented by the Pennsylvania
Institutional Law Project, which has filed a number of similar suits
alleging undue harm from years of isolation. Some lawsuits seek
policy changes, while Williams is seeking money damages since he is
no longer in solitary confinement.
“His is the first to go up on appeal. So I think this opinion
definitely will help all those other men whose cases are currently
pending in trial courts right now,” said Matthew Feldman, a
supervising attorney with the group.
The state Attorney General’s office, which argued the case, declined
comment Tuesday while it reviewed the opinion. Its client, the
Department of Corrections, did not immediately return email messages
seeking comment.
According to Feldman, about 5% of the state's prison population is
in solitary confinement. He said that about half of that group —
compared to one-third of the overall prison population — have a
history of mental illness.
People living in solitary confinement typically only get about an
hour a day outside of their small cell, and are often restrained
when they leave it. Advocates say it's difficult to sleep because
the environment is often loud and brightly lit, even at night.
“I personally find it inspiring that, despite all that these men
have been through, they had the courage to sue their jailers,”
Feldman said of Williams and others who drafted the initial suits on
their own. "They had the ingenuity to file these cases and craft
compelling legal arguments. And I guess they had faith that they
could vindicate their rights in court.”
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