ANTHONY SWAIN, ALEN BLANCO, BAYARDO CRUZ, RONNIEL FLORES, WINFRED HILL, et al., Plaintiffs - Appellees, versus DANIEL JUNIOR, MIAMI-DADE COUNTY, FLORIDA, Defendants - Appellants.
No. 20-11622
United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
June 15, 2020
[PUBLISH] D.C. Docket No. 1:20-cv-21457-KMW
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida
Before MARTIN and NEWSOM, Circuit Judges, and WATKINS,* District Judge.
It would be a colossal understatement to say that the COVID-19 pandemic has had far-reaching effects. It has changed everything from the way that friends and families interact to the way that businesses and schools operate to the way that courts hear and decide cases. The virus, though, poses particularly acute challenges for the administration of the country‘s jails and prisons. Because incarcerated inmates are necessarily confined in close quarters, a contagious virus represents a grave health risk to them—and graver still to those who have underlying conditions that render them medically vulnerable. And for their part, prison officials are faced with the unenviable (and often thankless) task of maintaining institutional order and security while simultaneously taking proper care of the individuals in their custody.
Our plaintiffs here—a group of medically vulnerable inmates—challenged the conditions of their confinement at Miami‘s Metro West Detention Center. In particular, they assert that Miami-Dade County and Daniel Junior, the Director of the Miami-Dade Corrections and Rehabilitations Department, have inadequately responded to the COVID-19 outbreak and thereby violated their constitutional rights. Holding that the plaintiffs were likely to succeed on the merits of their claim and would suffer irreparable injury in the absence of immediate relief, the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida enjoined the county and Junior to take a number of precautionary measures to halt the virus’ spread and ordered them to file regular reports regarding the virus’ status.
A motions panel of this Court stayed the injunction pending resolution of the defendants’ appeal. After considering the merits, and with the benefit of outstanding written briefs and oral arguments, we now conclude that the district court erred in issuing the injunction.1 Accordingly, we vacate the injunction and remand the case to the district court.
I
A
This litigation began on April 5, 2020, when plaintiffs Anthony Swain, Alen Blanco, Bayardo Cruz, Ronniel Flores, Winfred Hill, Deondre Willis, and Peter Bernal—medically vulnerable pretrial detainees at Metro West Detention Center in Miami, Florida—filed a class-action complaint against Miami-Dade County and Daniel Junior in his official capacity as Director of the Miami-Dade Corrections and Rehabilitation Center.2 They sought to represent
On April 7, the district court entered a 14-day TRO, based largely on the CDC‘s guidance for correctional facilities. See Ctrs. for Disease Control & Prevention, Interim Guidance on Management of Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) in Correctional and Detention Facilities (March 23, 2020), https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/downloads/guidance-correctional-detention.pdf [hereinafter CDC Guidance]. The guidance provided suggestions regarding cleaning, hygiene, and disease-prevention practices, and also recommended that detention facilities “[i]mplement social distancing strategies to increase the physical space between incarcerated/detained persons (ideally 6 feet between all individuals, regardless of the presence of symptoms).” Id. at 9–11 (emphasis omitted). Among other precautions, the district court‘s TRO required the defendants to provide for six-foot spacing between inmates “[t]o the maximum extent possible” and to ensure that each inmate received soap and cleaning supplies. The TRO further ordered the defendants to file a notice describing the measures that Metro West had employed and identifying medically vulnerable individuals.
The defendants’ notice of compliance, filed two days later, advised the district court that they had, among other things:
- provided inmates access to cleaning supplies;
- provided personal hygiene supplies, including liquid soap and paper towels;
- acquired “industrial grade fogging type sanitization equipment to sanitize housing units when inmates are in recreation (three times per week)“;
- issued masks to all inmates and employees;
- cancelled inmate visitation;
- implemented mandatory wellness screenings for all staff;
- formalized a “new intake quarantine protocol“;
- made efforts “to successfully decrease overall inmate population and allow for increased social distancing“;
- increased awareness about social distancing and instructed staff “to continually walk throughout [Metro
West] to enforce social distancing by officers and inmates“; - modified the “sick call process” in order “to allow for an expedited review” of inmates with COVID-19 symptoms;
- posted notices “in English, Creole and Spanish that encourage social distancing and proper hygiene” and provided other information about the virus; and
- instituted a “COVID-19 Incident Command Center and a Response Line” for tracking the virus’ impact on inmates and staff.
The defendants’ notice indicated that they had taken many of these measures even before the plaintiffs had filed suit.
On April 14, the district court extended the TRO and commissioned two independent experts to inspect Metro West, evaluate the defendants’ compliance with the TRO, and submit a report with their findings. The experts’ report—which was filed seven days later—explained that Metro West‘s administrators and employees were “doing their best balancing social distancing and regulation applicable to the facility” and that they “should be commended for their commitment to protect the staff and the inmates.” Expert Report at 2. In particular, the report observed that Metro West was conducting staff screenings, that the facility appeared clean, that cleaning supplies were available, that inmates and staff had masks, and that inmates were “staggered and appropriately distanced when going to medical.” Id. at 2–3. The report also stated, however, that while “[t]he bunks are staggered with head to foot configuration,” there wasn‘t six feet between them, that inmates congregated around tables and televisions, that “[t]he areas with the telephones do not allow for social distancing,” and that most of the units “were too overcrowded to allow for adequate social distancing.” Id. at 2. The report recommended testing, increased screening of inmates, and “an urgent decrease in the population density” because “the high census of Metro West . . . in addition to the dormitory style housing units, makes it impossible to follow CDC guidance for social distancing measures.” Id. at 3.
B
In the run-up to the preliminary-injunction hearing, both parties submitted additional evidence. For their part, the defendants notified the court that they had purchased and installed ionizers to purify the air and body-heat cameras to measure inmates’ temperatures, and had begun testing even asymptomatic inmates. The defendants also explained that through their collaboration with state criminal-justice officials, nearly 900 inmates had been released—reducing Metro West‘s population to less than 70% of its capacity—and that they would continue working to reduce the inmate population. The defendants further stated that “[v]irtually all of the measures taken after [the lawsuit was filed] would have been taken, regardless of the allegations made in th[e] case” and that “[t]he only aspect of the TRO that had not been in place prior to its entry was the Court-ordered use of paper towels and liquid soap“—which, the defendants had earlier clarified, had been supplied to all housing units by the time they filed their notice of compliance on April 9. The defendants also represented that they would continue to take necessary precautions “even in the absence of a court order.”
The plaintiffs’ additional inmate declarations acknowledged some improvements in Metro West‘s conditions—for instance, they noted that jail staff had put tape on the floor in certain areas to encourage social distancing, made intercom announcements
On April 29, after holding a two-day hearing, the district court issued a preliminary injunction on the plaintiffs’ § 1983 claim. (The court separately denied the plaintiffs relief on their § 2241 petition, and thus refused to order the release of any inmates. That decision isn‘t before us.) The court noted that “[i]t is clear that there remain several factual disputes regarding the extent to which Defendants’ stated policies to protect inmates and staff from COVID-19 are being implemented and enforced.” Dist. Ct. Order at 33–34. But it emphasized that it was “unrebutted” that “the rate of inmate infections has increased dramatically” and that undisputed “medical evidence and testimony from numerous doctors” showed “that other measures—absent social distancing—are not alone sufficient to stop the spread of the virus.” Id. at 34. “Thus,” the court held, “even if [it] were to credit all of Defendants’ evidence at this stage and discount the factual disputes about the implementation of Defendants’ policies and procedures, Plaintiffs have nonetheless made a clear showing as to each of the four factors required for injunctive relief on their Eighth Amendment claim.” Id. at 35. The court reasoned that “[b]ecause [the plaintiffs] have demonstrated that the lack of social distancing—which has not been and cannot be achieved absent an additional reduction in Metro West‘s population or some other measure to achieve meaningful social distancing—and the issues attendant to effectively implementing CDC standards present an immediate, ongoing risk of harm to Plaintiffs, they have met their burden.” Id.
When considering the plaintiffs’ likelihood of success on their constitutional claim, in particular, the district court said much the same thing. Specifically, it held that “even considering the measures Defendants have adopted—and setting aside the numerous factual disputes as to the consistency and efficacy of those measures—the record nonetheless can be seen to demonstrate deliberate indifference to a serious risk of harm to Plaintiffs.” Id. at 37. First, the court stated that the “Defendants’ contention that the actions they have taken to date are sufficient is belied by the exponential rate of infection since this case commenced“—emphasizing that whereas no inmates had tested positive at the time the complaint was filed, 163 inmates had tested positive within the ensuing three weeks. Id. Second, the court explained that “the evidence adduced in
The district court held that the remaining preliminary-injunction factors favored relief, as well. It concluded—albeit in a single sentence—that the plaintiffs would suffer irreparable injury absent immediate relief because of the danger posed by the virus’ spread. Id. at 41. The balance of the harms also weighed in the plaintiffs’ favor, the court reasoned, because the defendants hadn‘t shown that the administrative burden of the injunction overcame the threat posed by the virus: Because the defendants “repeatedly stated they were poised to take the measures in the TRO before its entry and have now implemented those measures and more,” the court explained that the injunction would result in “no appreciable impact on them.” Id. at 43. Finally, the court held that injunctive relief would advance the public interest by reducing the possibility of community spread. Id.
The district court‘s injunction required the defendants to take numerous actions—many of which the court had already ordered in the TRO—including that the defendants, “[t]o the maximum extent possible considering [Metro West‘s] current population level, provide and enforce adequate spacing of six feet or more between people incarcerated at Metro West so that social distancing can be accomplished.” Id. at 49–50. It also directed the defendants, among other things, to communicate with inmates about COVID-19 and to ensure that all inmates have access to testing, protective masks, cleaning and hygiene supplies, and adequate medical care. Id. at 49–51. The injunction imposed reporting requirements, as well, ordering the defendants to:
- file a notice with the court every three days detailing the number of staff and inmates quarantined or infected, and “continue to provide this information to their state criminal justice partners“;
- file a weekly report with the current population of Metro West; and
- submit a proposal within seven days describing the steps that the defendants “will undertake to ensure additional social distancing safeguards in terms of housing inmates and inmate activity (medical visits, telephones, etc.).”
Id. at 51–52.
The defendants immediately appealed the preliminary injunction and requested a stay, which we granted in a published order. Swain v. Junior, 958 F.3d 1081, 1092 (11th Cir. 2020). This is our review on the merits.
II
“A preliminary injunction is an extraordinary remedy never awarded as of right.” Winter v. Nat. Res. Def. Council, Inc., 555 U.S. 7, 24 (2008). In order to obtain one, a party must establish four separate requirements—namely, that “(1) it has a substantial likelihood of success on the merits; (2) irreparable injury will be suffered unless the injunction issues; (3) the threatened injury to the movant outweighs whatever damage the proposed injunction may cause the opposing party; and (4) if issued,
A
The plaintiffs contend that the defendants have been “deliberately indifferent” to the serious risk that COVID-19 poses to them, in violation of the
To establish a deliberate-indifference claim, a plaintiff must make both an objective and a subjective showing. Farmer v. Brennan, 511 U.S. 825, 834 (1994). Under the objective component, the plaintiff must demonstrate “a substantial risk of serious harm.” Id. Here, the defendants seem to agree—wisely, we think—that the risk of COVID-19 satisfies this requirement. Under the subjective component, the plaintiff must prove “the defendants’ deliberate indifference” to that risk of harm by making three sub-showings: “(1) subjective knowledge of a risk of serious harm; (2) disregard of that risk; (3) by conduct that is more than mere negligence.” Lane, 835 F.3d at 1308 (quotation omitted).4 Helpfully, the defendants seem not to
dispute that they had “subjective knowledge” of the risk that the virus poses. The inquiry here thus hinges on whether the defendants “disregard[ed]” the risk “by conduct that is more than mere negligence,” id. (quotation omitted)—or more simply stated, whether they “recklessly disregard[ed] that risk,” Farmer, 511 U.S. at 836.
As applied in the prison context, the deliberate-indifference standard sets an appropriately high bar. A plaintiff must prove that the defendant acted with “a sufficiently culpable state of mind.” Id. at 834 (quotation omitted). Ordinary malpractice or simple negligence won‘t do; instead, the plaintiff must show “subjective recklessness as used in the
The district court here held that the plaintiffs were likely to succeed on the merits of their
1
a
Any fair reading of the district court‘s order demonstrates that it relied overwhelmingly—if not exclusively—on two considerations in concluding that the defendants acted with the required deliberate indifference: (1) the fact that COVID-19 was continuing to spread at Metro West and (2) the impossibility of achieving adequate social distancing.
The order‘s plain language tells the story. As an initial matter, when assessing whether the plaintiffs had met the four requirements to obtain injunctive relief, the district court acknowledged “that there remain several factual disputes regarding the extent to which Defendants’ stated policies . . . are being implemented and enforced,” but it insisted that two things were undeniable: (1) that “the rate of inmate infections [at Metro West] ha[d] increased dramatically” and (2) that “other measures—absent distancing—are not alone sufficient to stop the spread of the virus.” Dist. Ct. Order at 33–34. The court then held: “Thus, even if the Court were to credit all of Defendants’ evidence at this stage and discount the factual disputes about the implementation of Defendants’ policies and procedures, Plaintiffs have nonetheless made a clear showing as to each of the four factors required for injunctive relief on their Eighth Amendment claim.” Id. at 35 (emphasis added).
The district court made the basis of its decision even clearer when analyzing deliberate indifference specifically. There, the court again bracketed any factual disputes and yet still concluded the defendants had acted with deliberate indifference, holding that “even considering the measures Defendants have adopted—and setting aside the numerous factual disputes as to the consistency and efficacy of those measures—the record nonetheless can be seen to demonstrate deliberate indifference to a serious risk of harm to Plaintiffs.” Id. at 37. For support, the district court said two things in particular. First, it concluded that the “Defendants’ contention that the
Accordingly, even while the district court seemed to assume a state of affairs in which the defendants had taken numerous measures to combat the virus, it held that the defendants were nonetheless deliberately indifferent based on two considerations: (1) the increase in the rate of infections at Metro West and (2) the lack—and seeming impossibility—of meaningful social distancing at the facility. In so concluding, the district court erred. Neither the resultant harm of increasing infections nor the impossibility of achieving six-foot social distancing in a jail environment establishes that the defendants acted with “subjective recklessness as used in the criminal law.” Farmer, 511 U.S. at 839–40 (quotation omitted).
First, and most obviously, the district court erred in relying on the increased rate of infection. On this point, the Supreme Court‘s decision in Farmer couldn‘t be any clearer: “[P]rison officials who actually knew of a substantial risk to inmate health or safety may be found free from liability if they responded reasonably to the risk, even if the harm ultimately was not averted.” Id. at 844 (emphasis added). A resulting harm thus cannot alone establish a culpable state of mind. Cf. Wilson v. Seiter, 501 U.S. 294, 303 (1991) (stating that “the ‘wantonness’ of conduct” doesn‘t “depend[] upon its effect upon the prisoner“); Wilson v. Williams, No. 20-3447, 2020 WL 3056217, at *10 (6th Cir. June 9, 2020) (rejecting the contention that “the [Bureau of Prisons] was deliberately indifferent to petitioners’ health and safety because [its] actions have been ineffective at preventing the spread of COVID-19“).
Second, and separately, the district court erred in concluding that the defendants’ inability to ensure adequate social distancing constituted deliberate indifference. The court stated no less than eight times in its order that adequate social distancing was “not possible” or “impossible.” See, e.g., Dist. Ct. Order at 7, 11, 12, 13, 16, 38. (The plaintiffs acknowledge the same at least six times in their brief. See, e.g., Br. of Appellees at 4, 8, 12, 15, 19, 54.) The court-commissioned expert report likewise observed that Metro West‘s population made it “impossible to follow CDC guidance for social distancing measures.” Expert Report at 3. And indeed, the district court noted that the inmates’ own declarations supported the conclusion that social distancing “is impossible to achieve given the current population at Metro West.” Dist. Ct. Order at 12. Failing to do the “impossible” doesn‘t evince indifference, let alone deliberate indifference.
b
So much for what the district court said. Now for what it didn‘t say. As already explained, the fundamental question in any deliberate-indifference case is whether the defendants exhibited “a sufficiently culpable state of mind.” Farmer, 511 U.S. at 834 (quotation omitted). In evaluating that question, we must focus not on isolated failures—or impossibilities, as the case may be—but
It bears repeating that deliberate indifference is not a constitutionalized version of common-law negligence. To the contrary, we (echoing the Supreme Court) have been at pains to emphasize that “the deliberate indifference standard . . . is far more onerous than normal tort-based standards of conduct sounding in negligence,” Goodman v. Kimbrough, 718 F.3d 1325, 1332 (11th Cir. 2013)
2013), and is in fact akin to “subjective recklessness as used in the criminal law,” Farmer, 511 U.S. at 839-40; see also id. at 835 (“[D]eliberate indifference describes a state of mind more blameworthy than negligence.“). Were we to accept the district court‘s determination that resulting harm, the failure to take impossible measures, or even the combination of both suffices to show a criminally (and thus constitutionally) reckless mental state, “the deliberate indifference standard would be silently metamorphosed into a font of tort law—a brand of negligence redux—which the Supreme Court has made abundantly clear it is not.” Goodman, 718 F.3d at 1334.
It is undisputed, as the district court said, that the defendants didn‘t succeed in preventing the virus’ spread. It is also undisputed that they didn‘t do the “impossible” by ensuring six-foot social distancing. But what did the defendants do? And can we say that their response was reckless? First, with respect to social distancing in particular, as the court-commissioned expert report summarized, the defendants “d[id] their best.” Expert Report at 2. In particular, the report observed that the defendants put “tape on the floor to encourage social distancing in lines,” that “bunks are staggered with head to foot configuration” in order to maximize the distance between faces during sleep, and that “[p]atients are staggered and appropriately distanced when going to medical.”
Moreover, the defendants have represented that they took numerous other measures—besides social distancing—to mitigate the spread of the virus. The district court summarized a few of them:
- “requiring staff and inmates to wear face masks at all times (other than when sleeping)“;
- “conducting screening for all staff entering the facility“;
- “conducting daily temperature screenings for all inmates“;
- “suspending all outside visitation“; and
- “providing disinfecting and hygiene supplies to all inmates.”
Dist. Ct. Order at 20. And as already explained, before the preliminary injunction was entered, the defendants notified the district court that they had purchased and installed ionizers to clean the facility‘s air and body-heat cameras to measure inmates’ temperatures, and had even begun testing asymptomatic detainees for the virus as resources became more widely available. Remember, the district court made no findings that these measures hadn‘t been implemented. Quite the opposite, in fact: The court assumed, for the sake of its deliberate-indifference analysis, at least, that the defendants had implemented these measures, but nonetheless concluded, as a matter of law, that they must have been inadequate because (1) the rate of infections rose and (2) social distancing—which it took to be the most critical measure—wasn‘t possible.5
Whatever deliberate indifference is, the defendants’ conduct here doesn‘t show it. The district court erred in holding that the defendants acted with a deliberately indifferent mental state, equivalent to “subjective recklessness as used in the criminal law.” Farmer, 511 U.S. at 839-40. We simply cannot conclude that, when faced with a perfect storm of a contagious virus and the space constraints inherent in a correctional facility, the defendants here acted unreasonably by “doing their best.” Because the defendants “act[ed] reasonably,” they “cannot be found liable” under the
* * *
We pause briefly to address two arguments that the plaintiffs have raised on appeal. They contend that whatever the district court‘s order said, its deliberate-indifference conclusion was actually premised on (1) the defendants’ failure to implement what the plaintiffs call “feasible” social-distancing measures and (2) Junior‘s continued enforcement of pretrial-detention orders despite the fact that Metro West‘s current population precludes adequate distancing. For reasons already explained, we don‘t think the district court‘s
First, “feasible” distancing. The plaintiffs assert that the district court determined that the defendants—despite knowing that social distancing is critically important—were deliberately indifferent because they “neither adopted nor implemented feasible social-distancing measures.” Br. of Appellees at 27 (emphasis added). But the portion of the district court‘s analysis that the plaintiffs cite doesn‘t say that at all; indeed, although the plaintiffs refer to “feasible” social distancing some 14 times in their brief, see, e.g., id. at 3, 4, 10, 16, 19, 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 41, 54, the district court didn‘t mention “feasible” social distancing even once.
At most, it seems to us, the district court‘s order can be read to hold that social distancing was “not uniformly enforced” in certain instances, “such as when inmates line up to receive food and eat together in their unit; when inmates line up for headcount; when inmates line up outside the clinic to receive medication; and when inmates participate in mandatory outdoor recreation once a week.” Dist. Ct. Order at 38. But again, assuming the same state of affairs that the district court did—one in which we “discount the factual disputes about the implementation of Defendants’ policies and procedures“—the allegedly nonuniform enforcement of social distancing cannot alone constitute deliberate indifference. The district court never found that the defendants knew of any potential lapses in enforcement and deliberately ignored them.6 As we have explained, while the expert report noted
some distancing violations, it also observed that social-distancing measures had been implemented and that Metro West‘s staff members were “doing their best.”
Second, ongoing confinement. The plaintiffs assert that “[t]he district court separately found that plaintiffs will likely establish that Junior has exhibited deliberate indifference by enforcing plaintiffs’ ongoing confinement when the jail‘s population precludes adequate distancing.” Br. of Appellees at 34. But again, that‘s just not what the district court‘s order says. To the contrary, in fact, the district court recognized state criminal-justice officials’ role—separate from Junior‘s—in determining which inmates would be released; in its injunction order, the court ordered the defendants to provide “their state criminal justice partners” with updated information about the virus, presumably so that the defendants, in coordination with state-level actors, could reduce Metro West‘s population. Dist. Ct. Order at 51–52.
Even if the plaintiffs’ posited determination existed, we would reject their reliance on it. Assuming for present purposes (only) that “failing to take an action one knows to be necessary to prevent serious harm—even if outside one‘s legal authority—can establish the requisite intent for deliberate indifference,” Br. of Appellees at 35, that intent hasn‘t been shown here.7
2
Shifting gears, the defendants separately contend that the district court erred in its likelihood-of-success-on-the-merits analysis because it failed to consider “two threshold issues“: (1) the heightened standard for municipal liability under Monell v. Department of Social Services, 436 U.S. 658 (1978), and (2) PLRA exhaustion. We agree.
Regarding municipal liability, the district court reasoned that “[a]t the preliminary injunction stage . . . Plaintiffs are not required to ‘prove a custom’ or ‘identify a final policymaker,‘” Dist. Ct. Order at 32, as would normally be required under Monell, see id. at 690–91. That is incorrect. The Supreme Court has recently reiterated that “[i]t is well established that in a § 1983 case a city or other local governmental entity cannot be subject to liability at all unless the harm was caused in the implementation of ‘official municipal policy.‘” Lozman v. City of Riviera Beach, 138 S. Ct. 1945, 1951 (2018) (emphasis added) (quoting Monell, 436 U.S. at 691). Municipal liability is thus plainly part of the likelihood-of-success-on-the-merits inquiry at the preliminary-injunction stage, and the district court erred in sidestepping the issue. See Church v. City of Huntsville, 30 F.3d 1332, 1347 (11th Cir. 1994) (holding that “the plaintiffs have failed to establish the existence of a municipal policy or a pervasive practice that could serve as a predicate to municipal liability under section 1983” and
The district court also erred in refusing to consider the defendants’ arguments with respect to PLRA exhaustion.9 “There is no question that exhaustion is mandatory under the PLRA and that unexhausted claims cannot be brought in court.” Jones v. Bock, 549 U.S. 199, 211 (2007) (emphasis added); see also Chandler v. Crosby, 379 F.3d 1278, 1286 (11th Cir. 2004) (“A district court must dismiss the suit when it finds that the plaintiff-inmate has not exhausted his administrative remedies.“). Accordingly, the plaintiffs could show a substantial likelihood of success on the merits only if the defendants were unlikely to demonstrate a lack of PLRA exhaustion. See Gonzales v. O Centro Espirita Beneficente Uniao do Vegetal, 546 U.S. 418, 429 (2006) (explaining that “the burdens at the preliminary injunction stage track the burdens at trial“).
B
While the failure to show likelihood of success on the merits alone warrants reversal, we briefly address the district court‘s analysis of the remaining preliminary-injunction factors—irreparable harm, the balancing of the harms, and the public interest. Jones v. Governor of Fla., 950 F.3d at 806.
First, the district court erred in holding, without any meaningful analysis, that the plaintiffs would suffer irreparable injury absent an injunction on the ground that “COVID-19 will continue to spread throughout Metro West and infect additional inmates and staff.” Dist. Ct. Order at 41. We agree with the defendants that the inquiry isn‘t whether the plaintiffs have shown that the virus poses a danger to the inmates in the abstract—it undoubtedly does—but rather whether they have shown that they will suffer irreparable injury “unless the injunction issues.” Jones v. Governor of Fla., 950 F.3d at 806.
Although the district court acknowledged that our precedent calls the irreparable-injury element “the sine qua non of injunctive relief,” it devoted only a single conclusory sentence to addressing that requirement—and it gave no consideration to whether the plaintiffs were likely to suffer irreparable injury absent an injunction. Dist. Ct. Order at 41. To be sure, the court asserted that without injunctive relief, the virus would continue to spread. But given the way it decided the case, the court couldn‘t properly determine whether the plaintiffs would be injured absent injunctive relief because it declined to make factual findings about the extent and efficacy of the measures that the defendants were already taking. “As we have emphasized on many occasions, the asserted irreparable injury must be neither remote nor speculative, but actual and imminent.” Siegel v. LePore, 234 F.3d 1163, 1176 (11th Cir. 2000) (quotation omitted); see also Winter, 555 U.S. at 22 (“Issuing a preliminary injunction based only on a possibility of irreparable harm is inconsistent with our characterization of injunctive relief as an extraordinary remedy that may only be awarded upon a clear
Second, the district court erred in its determination of the balance-of-the-harms and public-interest factors, which “merge” when, as here, “the Government is the opposing party.” See Nken v. Holder, 556 U.S. 418, 435 (2009) (noting as much in the stay context). The district court held that “[t]he threat of a continuing outbreak of COVID-19” outweighed “the damage to Defendants caused by an injunction requiring Defendants to comply with the CDC Guidance” because, the court said, the defendants had “not offered any evidence as to why the administrative burden resulting from compliance with an injunctive order outweighs the threat of serious illness or death” that would result from the virus. Dist. Ct. Order at 42–43. With regard to the public interest, it held that “an order requiring Defendants to implement various measures to reduce the spread of the virus in Metro West advances the public interest by reducing the chance of community spread.”
While the virus unquestionably poses a serious threat to inmates, the district court gave insufficient consideration to the burdens with which the injunction would saddle the defendants. Cf. Williams, 2020 WL 3056217, at *11 (noting that the district court‘s preliminary-injunction analysis was “incomplete” because “the district court gave scant attention to the harms the BOP argued would result from the injunction“). And to be clear, this is not (solely) about weighing health and safety against security and administrative efficiency; it is also about weighing health and safety against health and safety. As this Court explained in its stay order, the injunction stripped away at least some of the defendants’ discretion “to allocate scarce resources among different county operations necessary to fight the pandemic.” Swain, 958 F.3d at 1090. For example, because “the injunction require[d] that the defendants test all inmates with COVID-19 symptoms and everyone with whom they have been in contact,” it forced the defendants to “allocate limited testing resources to Metro West at the expense of other county facilities,” under pain of contempt. Id. Perhaps especially in the prison context, government officials have a keen interest in maintaining the necessary flexibility to react quickly in response to new information about the virus. The district court therefore erred in failing to consider the “damage [its] proposed injunction may cause” the defendants. Wreal, LLC v. Amazon.com, Inc., 840 F.3d 1244, 1247 (11th Cir. 2016) (quotation omitted).
Finally, while it doubtlessly advances the public interest to stem the spread of COVID-19, at Metro West and everywhere, the same public interest just as doubtlessly favors a proper allocation of public-health resources—an allocation that politically accountable (and often local) officials are best equipped to make. See S. Bay United Pentecostal Church v. Newsom, No. 19A1044, 2020 WL 2813056 (U.S. May 29, 2020) (Roberts, C.J., concurring in denial of application for injunctive relief) (“Our Constitution principally entrusts ‘[t]he safety and
III
While COVID-19 poses novel health risks to incarcerated inmates—and novel administrative challenges for jail and prison administrators—the law that the district court was bound to apply is well established. In order to obtain a preliminary injunction, the plaintiffs had to show a substantial likelihood of success on the merits of their constitutional claim, which means that they had to demonstrate the defendants’ deliberate indifference—which is to say their utter recklessness. Because the district court erred, among other ways, in erroneously concluding that the plaintiffs had met that requirement, we conclude that it abused its discretion in granting the preliminary injunction.11
VACATED AND REMANDED.
MARTIN, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
The COVID-19 pandemic is a health crisis without precedent in living memory. At the time we heard oral argument in this case, the virus had already claimed the lives of over 100,000 Americans. Ctrs. for Disease Control & Prevention, United States Coronavirus (COVID-19) Death Toll Surpasses 100,000 (May 28, 2020), https://www.cdc.gov/media/releases/2020/s0528-coronavirus-death-toll.html. COVID-19 is highly infectious and easily communicable. Of those infected, approximately 20% will become seriously ill and 1 to 3% will die. People with common health conditions including lung or heart disease, diabetes, and chronic liver or kidney conditions are at much greater risk of death. About 15% of them will die if they contract COVID-19.
Against this background, seven pretrial detainees held at the Miami-Dade Metro West Detention Center (“Metro West“) brought suit against Daniel Junior, the director of the Miami-Dade Corrections and Rehabilitation Department (“MDCR“), and Miami-Dade County. They sued on behalf of a putative class of people detained at Metro West during the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as a subset of people in pretrial custody at Metro West who are particularly vulnerable to injury or death if they contract the virus. The named plaintiffs all have preexisting medical conditions that place them among those at highest risk of death or serious illness if they are infected. They sought emergency declaratory and injunctive relief that would compel Metro West to take steps to reduce the risk of transmission of COVID-19 at the facility.1
As part of their emergency request for relief, Plaintiffs presented extensive evidence showing a unified expert consensus on two essential facts. First, the best way to prevent infection is through social distancing. Second, adequate social distancing was not possible at the population level in Metro West at the time they sought the injunction. Plaintiffs also submitted nearly two dozen sworn affidavits describing how jail staff and administrators had failed to implement adequate measures to maintain safe conditions even while Metro West remains dangerously crowded. On this record, I believe Plaintiffs are likely to succeed on their deliberate indifference claim. I would therefore affirm the preliminary injunction imposed by the District Judge.
I.
Because incarceration “strip[s] [detainees] of virtually every means of self-protection and foreclose[s] their access to outside aid,” the Constitution imposes affirmative obligations on jail officials to provide prisoners with “adequate food, clothing, shelter, and medical care,” and to “take reasonable measures to guarantee [their] safety.”2 Farmer v. Brennan, 511 U.S. 825, 832–33 (1994) (quotation marks omitted). Jail officials violate the
Plaintiffs seeking to prove this type of Fourteenth Amendment violation must show that jail officials acted with “deliberate indifference.” Farmer, 511 U.S. at 840. Plaintiffs must show
Goodman, 718 F.3d at 1331. While the first prong is objective, the second prong has both subjective and objective components. There must be a showing that jail officials actually knew of the risk and either disregarded it or failed to respond in a reasonable manner. Marbury, 936 F.3d at 1233; see Rodriguez v. Sec‘y for Dep‘t of Corr., 508 F.3d 611, 620 (11th Cir. 2007).
My review of this record amply supports the District Court‘s holding that Plaintiffs are likely to show their treatment amounted to deliberate indifference. Defendants acknowledge their subjective awareness of the objectively grave risk the COVID-19 pandemic poses to the safety of those detained at Metro West. But Defendants say they took reasonable steps, within the limits of their legal authority, to ensure detainee safety in the face of the COVID-19 threat. Unlike the majority, I see no abuse of discretion in the District Court‘s finding to the contrary. This record shows that Defendants knowingly maintained conditions that placed detainees at an impermissibly high risk of illness and death in two ways: first, by maintaining a dangerously high jail population; and second, by failing to implement needed safety measures that would reduce the risk of infection in that already unsafe population level. I address these two independent bases for finding deliberate indifference in turn.
A.
First there is Metro West‘s unsafe population density. I view the evidence that Defendants willfully incarcerated people at a population density that they knew to be unsafe as sufficient to show deliberate indifference. The majority opinion nonetheless concludes that Defendants cannot be found deliberately indifferent because they took other steps to decrease the risk of COVID-19 transmission and because they lack authority to release detainees without a state criminal court order. Maj. Op. at 27 & n.7. I reject this reasoning.
Social distancing is the most effective measure for reducing the risk of COVID-19 transmission. But we have unrebutted expert testimony showing that adequate social distancing was not possible at Metro West‘s population level at the time the preliminary injunction issued. Dr. Dushyantha Jayaweera and Dr. Hansel Tookes were appointed by the District Court to inspect and report on conditions at Metro West. They reflected the overwhelming expert consensus when they opined that the dense population of Metro West “makes it impossible to follow CDC guidance for social distancing measures, placing staff and inmates at risk for COVID-19 infection.” Because of this impossibility, the experts recommended an “urgent decrease” in the jail‘s population and increased screening for COVID-19. Defendants do not dispute the importance of social distancing or that it was effectively impossible to achieve social distancing with the population levels at Metro West when the injunction issued. Yet despite knowledge that the population level was unsafe, Defendants continued to detain significantly more people than Metro West can safely hold during this pandemic. As a result, people at Metro West were much more likely to contract COVID-19 than if the jail population were reduced.
Taken together, these facts make out elements of a claim of deliberate indifference. Defendants knew of the risk posed by overcrowding, knew that this risk could be most effectively abated by lowering the jail population, and yet did not take that step. This knowing failure to take necessary steps to prevent grave harm sits comfortably at the heart of what our Court
1.
The majority says that by taking other measures short of releasing detainees, Director Junior “has responded reasonably to the risk of the virus.” Maj. Op. at 27. But his taking some steps to reduce the risk of COVID-19 does not excuse his
failure to take the most important step for ensuring detainee safety. That is an “urgent decrease” in the detained population of Metro West. Director Junior’s knowing failure to do so supports a finding of deliberate indifference.
Under this Court’s precedent, “good faith efforts” to resolve health risks are insufficient to overcome evidence that jail staff “recklessly disregarded the necessary means to protect inmate safety.” LaMarca v. Turner, 995 F.2d 1526, 1538 (11th Cir. 1993). We know deliberate indifference may be shown by proving that a detention center knowingly took “an easier but less efficacious course of [medical] treatment.” McElligott v. Foley, 182 F.3d 1248, 1255 (11th Cir. 1999). And this Court has also found deliberate indifference where prison staff delayed or “fail[ed] to provide service acknowledged to be necessary.” Ancata, 769 F.2d at 704.
Here, the experts speak with one voice when they say reducing the population density at Metro West is “necessary” to reasonably prevent the spread of infection. Defendants were subjectively aware of the gravity of the threat posed by COVID-19. Director Junior familiarized himself with the CDC recommendations and communicated to jail staff that it was “now more important than ever that we all practice strict social distancing at all times, no exceptions.” It cannot seriously be doubted that Director Junior knew decreasing the jail population was the most effective way to reduce the risk of infection. Despite this, the population density of Metro West was still critically high at the time the preliminary injunction issued.
This record shows that Defendants recklessly failed to take the most essential step to ensuring the safety of Metro West detainees. In light of this, I am not persuaded that the other measures implemented at Metro West in place of lowering the jail population were sufficient to preclude a finding of deliberate indifference.
2.
Defendants claim they cannot be found deliberately indifferent for their failure to address unsafe crowding at Metro West because they lacked the authority to release detainees without a state court order. Unlike the majority, I do not think the scope of Defendants’ authority under Florida law controls the outcome of the deliberate indifference inquiry. Maj. Op. at 27 n.7.
State laws that compel jail officials to detain people in manifestly unsafe conditions cannot preclude a finding of deliberate indifference. In Smith v. Sullivan, 611 F.2d 1039 (5th Cir. 1980),3 our predecessor
If contrary state law obligations precluded finding deliberate indifference, federal courts would be powerless to enjoin unconstitutional prison conditions wherever state legislatures act to withhold prison officials’ authority to remedy them. But this cannot be the rule. In Brown v. Plata, 563 U.S. 493, 131 S. Ct. 1910 (2011), the Supreme Court affirmed relief given to address system-wide, Eighth-Amendment-violative conditions of confinement caused by overcrowding and lack of medical resources. See id. at 500, 520–25, 131 S. Ct. at 1922, 1936–39. In doing so, the Supreme Court stood behind a court-imposed remedy even though it required measures beyond the authority given to some jail officials under state law. Compare Coleman v. Wilson, 912 F. Supp. 1282, 1317 (E.D. Cal. 1995) (finding that prison officials’ lack of power or authority to address unconstitutional prison conditions caused in part by overcrowding “does not necessarily contraindicate scienter”) with Brown, 563 U.S. at 500, 131 S. Ct. at 1922 (affirming remedial order of three-judge court convened at the request of the Coleman court). Congress has also empowered federal courts to exceed the bounds of state law in order to correct violations of federal constitutional rights. The Prison Litigation Reform Act (“PLRA”) authorizes district courts to “require[] or permit[] a government official to exceed his or her authority under State or local law” when that relief is necessary to correct the violation of a federal right and no other relief is sufficient.
Because Plaintiffs seek injunctive relief against Director Junior in his capacity as a state official, they are not required to prove he personally disregarded the risk to their safety. In suits against state officials acting pursuant to state authority, “[p]ersonal action by defendants individually is not a necessary condition of injunctive relief.” Luckey, 860 F.2d at 1015. Director Junior’s continuing enforcement of state law has created widespread, untenably dangerous conditions for Metro West detainees and staff. And when state and local officials knowingly fail to meet their affirmative constitutional obligation to ensure safe jail conditions, “judicial authority may be invoked.” Hutto v. Finney, 437 U.S. 678, 687 n.9, 98 S. Ct. 2565, 2572 n.9 (1978) (quotation marks omitted). A rule that precludes federal judges from enjoining dangerous jail conditions mandated by state law would require those judges to abdicate a core function of their office.5
B.
Setting aside Defendants’ failure to reduce Metro West’s population, I am also not persuaded Defendants took sufficient steps to minimize the risk of transmission at that unsafe population level. The District Judge rejected Defendants’ assurances that “everything that could be done was being done” and found that the record “does not unequivocally demonstrate successful implementation of the policies, protocols and procedures identified in their declarations.” This record supports her finding. The majority describes in detail the remedial measures Defendants claim to have taken, noting that the District Court accepted those claims. Maj. Op. at 21–24. However, the District Court also set out in great detail the statements of the people detained at Metro West, which paint a far different picture.6 Together, they support the finding that Defendants systematically failed to implement policies adequate to ensure detainee safety at this high population level. This is sufficient, in my view, to support a finding of deliberate indifference.
In declarations submitted in support of Plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction, Metro West detainees describe beds placed so close together they can reach out and touch neighboring bunks. Tending to even their most basic daily needs requires close contact with other detainees. The limited showers, toilets, and telephones are placed close together and they are shared by up to 60 people. Detainees say it is often difficult or impossible to clean shared surfaces, such as phones, because they are not provided with disinfectant or other cleaning supplies. Defendants tell us that all staff and detainees are required to wear masks, but it appears adherence to this requirement is problematic. At the time the injunction was issued, detainees were each given a mask approximately once a week, but the masks are “soft,” “rip a lot,” and “get really dirty.” Sometimes the masks break after “two to three days.” Despite this, detainees are not always provided with replacements for broken masks and may be chastised or threatened with disciplinary action if they request a new one.
Taken together, the repeated failures to enact adequate social distancing measures documented in these declarations are sufficient to demonstrate a systemic, institutional pattern of deliberate indifference. The majority opinion is not sufficiently attentive to the way our Circuit has historically addressed deliberate indifference claims based on widespread unconstitutional conditions within a jail or prison. In cases like these, this Court has held that systemic deliberate indifference may be proved through a series of related examples that demonstrate a pattern of “indifference . . . to the suffering that results.” Thigpen, 941 F.2d at 1505 (quotation marks omitted). We have allowed plaintiffs to show deliberate indifference through a pattern of “systemic deficiencies” or “[r]epeated examples of delayed or denied medical care.” Rogers v. Evans, 792 F.2d 1052, 1057–59 (11th Cir. 1986). Similarly, a series of incidents closely related in time “may disclose a pattern of conduct amounting to deliberate indifference.” Id. at 1058–59. In light of the plaintiffs’ evidence here, I believe they are likely to prove a reckless failure to take medically necessary safety precautions at Metro West.
Remarkably, Defendants have not defended the practices attested to in the detainee declarations. The majority correctly points out that the CDC’s recommendations recognize that “[s]trategies will need to be tailored to the individual space in the facility and the needs of the population and staff.” Maj. Op. at 22 (alteration in original). Nevertheless, Defendants have given no explanation of why the actual conditions described by detainees were reasonably tailored to Metro West’s needs. With this gap in the evidentiary record, the District Court was not required to credit Director Junior’s assertion that the measures he implemented were adequate. “[A] factfinder may conclude that a prison official knew of a substantial risk from the very fact that the risk was obvious.” Hale v. Tallapoosa County, 50 F.3d 1579, 1583 (11th Cir. 1995) (quoting Farmer, 511 U.S. at 842, 114 S. Ct. at 1981). The majority opinion also places too much weight on the broad, laudatory preamble to Dr. Jayaweera and Dr. Tookes’ court-ordered inspection report, which praised Metro West staff for “doing their best balancing social distancing and regulation applicable to the facility.” Maj. Op. at 7, 22, 24, 26. It appears the District Court either discredited or declined to give dispositive weight to this portion of the report, because it did not mention this language anywhere in the preliminary injunction order. Under the circumstances, this was not clear error. Over Plaintiffs’ objection, Dr. Tookes and Dr. Jayaweera’s inspection was conducted at a predetermined time and was limited to predetermined locations within the jail. And this record includes declarations from detainees stating that immediately before the inspection Metro West staff made numerous last minute changes, including moving people out of cells that were going to be inspected so they would be less
II.
In closing, I will briefly describe why I part ways with the majority’s analysis of what it describes as “threshold issues”: municipal liability under Monell v. Department of Social Services, 436 U.S. 658, 86 S. Ct. 2018 (1978), and the PLRA’s administrative exhaustion requirement. Maj. Op. at 28.
Under Monell, a plaintiff seeking to hold a municipality liable for a constitutional violation must identify either an officially promulgated county policy or an unofficial custom or practice shown through the acts of a final policymaker. Grech v. Clayton County, 335 F.3d 1326, 1329 (11th Cir. 2003). I agree with the majority that, typically, district courts should address municipal liability in evaluating whether plaintiffs proceeding against a municipality are likely to succeed on the merits. Maj. Op. at 28–29. But I’ve set out why I think Plaintiffs may properly proceed against Director Junior as a state official under Ex parte Young. See supra, pages 45–47 & n.4. If Plaintiffs can get their desired relief by proceeding against Director Junior in his capacity as a state official, I don’t believe they are required to also show that they will prevail on their claims against Miami-Dade County under Monell.
Neither do I think the District Court erred in deferring its ruling on exhaustion. Defendants’ brief in opposition to the preliminary injunction included a scant two paragraphs of argument on administrative exhaustion and no citations to the record. But they tried to incorporate the arguments they made about exhaustion in a separate motion that is 97 pages long, including a 13-page brief and 84 additional pages of exhibits. That motion was filed on a different briefing schedule, and Plaintiffs had not yet responded to Defendants’ filing at the time the District Court ruled on the preliminary injunction. The District Court found that Defendants’ opposition to the preliminary injunction improperly attempted to incorporate by reference their separate motion to dismiss for failure to exhaust.
Our Court certainly would not opine on an issue that was merely incorporated by reference by one party and not fully briefed (for lack of opportunity) by the other. I am aware of no basis for requiring district judges to live by a different standard. Beyond that, administrative exhaustion is an affirmative defense for which Defendants bear the burden of proof. See Jones v. Bock, 549 U.S. 199, 212, 127 S. Ct. 910, 919 (2007); Turner v. Burnside, 541 F.3d 1077, 1082 (11th Cir. 2008). Before ruling on exhaustion, a district court must ensure the plaintiff has “sufficient opportunity to develop a record.” Bryant v. Rich, 530 F.3d 1368, 1376 (11th Cir. 2008). And although proving exhaustion is a “precondition to an adjudication on the merits,” it is not jurisdictional and may be raised by Defendants at various times in the course of litigation. Id. at 1374 & n.10.
Here, the District Court acted well within its discretion when it rejected Defendants’ attempts to incorporate a separate, sizeable filing into its brief. This Court traditionally gives “great deference to a district court’s interpretation of its local rules,” Clark v. Hous. Auth. of City of Alma, 971 F.2d 723, 727 (11th Cir. 1992),
III.
The COVID-19 pandemic is a global health crisis that has taken the lives of thousands and strained every level of our society and government. But crises do not lower the constitutional limits on the conditions in which people may be confined against their will. People held in prisons and detention centers are among the most vulnerable to the ravages of this devastating illness. I do not understand the Fourteenth Amendment to permit the knowing and willful detention of human beings in circumstances that place them at great risk of death or grave illness. I would affirm the District Court Order granting Plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction.
I respectfully dissent.
