Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge TATEL.
A District of Columbia inmate claims that following his transfer from the District’s Lorton Correctional Facility to a Virginia prison pursuant to an interstate compact, Virginia officials used excessive force in restraining him, required him to register under his birth name rather than his religiously inspired legal name, and neglected to give him the insulin he required, resulting in his leg becoming dangerously infected. The inmate also claims that the District denied him access to the courts by failing to transport certain legal documents with him to the Virginia prison, sending them instead to his home. The inmate filed suit in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, naming as defendants the Commonwealth of Virginia, various Virginia officials, the District оf Columbia, various District officials, and the Attorney General of the United States. Affirming the district court’s dismissal of the complaint, we find that (1) all claims against Virginia, its agencies and its officers in their official capacities are either barred by sovereign immunity or mooted by the inmate’s transfer back to a District prison, (2) the dis
I.
Appellant Abdus-Shahid M.S. Ali is a District of Columbia inmate serving concurrent sentences for first-degree murder convictions in 1964 and again in 1986. Ali’s claims arise from his April 1999 transfer from the District’s Lorton Central Facility, located in Lorton, Virginia, to Virginia’s Sussex II prison in Waverly, Virginia. The transfer took place pursuant to a contract, authorized by the Interstate Corrections Compact, Va.Code Ann. § 53.1-216; D.C.Code Ann.§ 24-1001, between the District of Columbia Deрartment of Corrections and the Virginia Department of Corrections.
According to Ali, during a strip-search undertaken in preparation for his transfer, Virginia prison official D. Davis “hit [him] in the stomach,” prompting Ali to punch Davis, at which point several other officers leapt on Ali and wrestled him to the ground. Compl. ¶ ¶ 10-11. Ali claims that his “face wаs swollen up and at least four teeth were loosened of which one had to be pulled.... ” PL’s Opp’n. to Va. Defs.’ Mot. to Dismiss ¶ 30.
Ali also contends that Virginia prison officials humiliated him when, after he arrived at Sussex II, they held a stun gun to his head and forced him to register under his birth name, James C. Long, rather than his legal name, Abdus-Shahid M.S. Ali. Although originally convicted undеr his birth name, Ali changed his name in 1979 for religious reasons. According to Ali, not only did he find the registration under his birth name religiously offensive, but as a result of his incarceration under the name James Long, Sussex II officials neglected for fifteen days to give him the insulin shots required to treat his diabetes. Sussex II medical staff apparently confused another inmate’s file, labeled “James Long #268-200” and containing no diabetes diagnosis, with Ali’s file, labeled “Ali #136-476.” Comply 16. As a result of this “medical malpractice,” Ali alleges, his fingers became “numb,” Compl. ¶ ¶ 16,17, and his right leg, which became infected, “burst open” and “may (in time) ... require amputation,” Pi’s Opp’n. to Va. Defs.’ Mot. to Dismiss ¶ 11.
Finally, Ali contends that District prison officials “forced him” to send certain legal documents home rather than transporting them along with his other belongings to the Sussex II prison. Compl. ¶ 22. As a result, he experienced a “set-back” in litigation pending in the District of Columbia Superior Court. Compl. ¶ 23.
Based on these allegations, Ali filed suit in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia against three cаtegories of defendants: (1) the Commonwealth of Virginia and the Virginia Department of Corrections, as well as the Attorney General, the Governor, the Chief Warden of the Sussex II State Prison, and Corrections Officer D. Davis in their personal and official capacities; (2) the Mayor of Washington, D.C., the Warden of the Lorton Central Faсility, and the District of Columbia Department of Corrections; and (3) the Attorney General of the United States. While Ali’s handwritten complaint contains many claims, he alleges essentially four causes of action: (1) that corrections officers used excessive force in violation of his Eighth Amendment right to be free from cruel and unusual punishmеnt; (2) that the denial of insulin also violated his Eighth Amendment rights; (3) that forcing him to sign his birth name violated the First
The district court dismissed Ali’s complaint with prejudice. With respect to his claims against the Virginia defendants (except for the claim relating to the use of his birth name), the court concluded that Ali failed to exhaust his administrative remedies as required by the Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA). As to the birth name issue, the district court held that “the mere fact that correctional authorities maintain an inmate’s records in the namе he used when convicted implicates no constitutional right.” Ali v. District of Columbia, No. 99-1348, slip op. at 5 (D.D.C. July 11, 2000). Finding the claims against the District defendants and the Attorney General of the United States based on the actions of Virginia prison officials, the district court dismissed these claims as well. The district court also noted that “to the extent” Ali sought “injunctive and declarаtory relief,” such claims were “moot” in light of Ali’s “transfer[ ] back to Lorton.” Id. at 4.
Ali, supported by the amicus we appointed, now appeals the dismissal of his two Eighth Amendment claims (excessive force and denial of insulin), his First Amendment and RFRA claims (use of his birth name) and his access to court claim. Our review is de novo.
See Moore v. Valder,
II.
We begin with Ah’s claims against the Virginia defendants. According to Virginia, the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction because Ali failed to exhaust his administrative remedies as required by the PLRA.
See
42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a) (“No action shall be brought ... until such administrative remedies as are available аre exhausted.”). Virginia argues that although Ali filed a complaint pursuant to the prison’s grievance procedures, because he filed suit before those procedures were completed, he failed to exhaust his administrative remedies.
See Jackson v. District of Columbia,
We start, as we generally do, by making sure we possess subject matter jurisdiction.
See Ruhrgas AG v. Marathon Oil Co.,
Having found the PLRA’s exhaustion requirement not jurisdictional, we have no reason to consider the merits of the Virginia defendants’ exhaustion defense because Ali’s claims against them are barred on other grounds: sovereign immunity and lack of personal jurisdiction. As to the first, the Eleventh Amendment bars all suits in federal court against a state by citizens of another state.
See
U.S. Const. Amend. XI. When plaintiffs sue state officials in their official capacities for monetary damages, the suits are, in substance, suits against the state and also barred by sovereign immunity.
Edelman v. Jordan,
Applying these principles to this case, we note first that it makes no difference that Ali may be a District of Columbia resident rather than a citizen of “another state,” as the Eleventh Amendment provides.
See
13B ChaRles A. WRIght, Arthur R. Miller & Edward H. Cooper, Federal Practice and Procedure § 3618, at 568-70 (2d ed.1984) (General rule is that prisoner retains residency had at time of incarceration). In
Alden v. Maine,
the Supreme Court held that “the sovereign immunity of the States neither derives from, nor is limited by, the terms of the Eleventh Amendment. Rather, ... [it] is a fundamental aspect of the sovereignty which the States enjoyed before the ratification of the Constitution, and which they retain today ... except as altered by the plan of the Convention or certain constitutional Amendments.”
The question, then, is whether Ali has pled a cause of action arising under a federal statute that abrogates Virginia’s sovereign immunity. He has not. RFRA does not apply to the states,
City of Boerne v. Flores,
Because the district court found all claims for injunctive relief moot in light of Ali’s return to the Lorton facility and because Ali does nоt appeal this determination, the next question with respect to the Virginia defendants is whether the district court had personal jurisdiction over the individual officials in their personal capacities. Amicus argues that jurisdiction is proper under the District of Columbia long-arm statute because the defendants either “transacted]” business in the District, “contracted]” to do so, or “caus[ed] tortious injury in the District ... by an act or omission outside the District....” D.C.Code Ann. § 13-423(a)(l), -(2), -(3). We disagree. Nowhere in his complaint does Ali allege that any defendants acting in their individual capacities either transacted business in the District or contracted to do so. It is true, as amicus points out, that Virginia has contracts with the District, makes reports to the District concerning District inmates it houses, and receives money from the District. Virginia officials, however, undertake all such actions in their official capacities. In addition, because the District’s Lorton facility, the site of the alleged assault, is located in Virginia, no tortious acts took place in the District.
III.
Turning to the remaining defendants, we begin with Ali’s court access claim against the District of Columbia defendants, the only claim not based on the
Ali’s remaining clаims against District officials — his Eighth Amendment and religious freedom claims — all rest on the actions of Virginia officials. In
Monell v. New York City Dep’t of Social Servs.,
the Supreme Court, interpreting section 1983, held that while the word “person” includes a municipality, the phrase “any person who ... subjects ... any citizen” implies a strict causal relationship. Accordingly, the Court held that plaintiffs suing municiрalities under section 1983 may not rely on a respondeat superior theory; rather, they must show that municipality agents or employees acted “pursuant to official municipal policy of some nature.”
Monell,
Ali’s failure to state a section 1983 claim against the District defendants does not end our inquiry, for while Ali’s complaint states no RFRA claim against the District, amicus argues that he constructively аmended his complaint to include such a claim by citing the statute in his Opposition to the Virginia Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss. Even construing Ali’s pleadings “liberally,”
Richardson v. United States,
Finally, we rejeсt Ali’s claims against the Attorney General of the United States.
IV.
Amicus argues that if Ali can sue neither District nor Virginia officials, the District, by “transferring prisoners to other states,” can “deprive them of remedies for constitutional violations.” Amicus’s Reply at 12. Not so. Although we affirm the district court’s dismissal with prejudice of all claims against the Virginia officials in their individual capacities, we emphasize that this action merely “acts as res judicata for the jurisdictional issue.”
Posner v. Essex Ins. Co.,
The decision of the district court is affirmed.
So ordered.
