296 F.R.D. 416 | E.D. La. | 2013
ORDER APPROVING CONSENT JUDGMENT AND CERTIFYING SETTLEMENT CLASS
Before the Court is the joint motion
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
This lawsuit arises from the alleged unlawful conditions of confinement at Orleans Parish Prison (“OPP”). Among other things, the lawsuit seeks to address deficiencies in safety and security, medical and mental health care, environmental conditions, fire safety, and Spanish language services at OPP. Inmates are currently housed in seven physical faeili
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Although the conditions at OPP have long been the subject of litigation, this particular lawsuit is the product of investigations and complaints arising in the past five years.
In September 2009, the United States, through the Department of Justice (“DOJ”), conducted a site visit at OPP and issued a letter to the Sheriff, describing findings of unlawful conditions related to inmate violence, staff use of force, mental health care, and environmental conditions.
On January 18, 2012, three youth inmates, through their next friends, filed a sealed complaint for injunctive and declaratory relief, alleging that unconstitutional conditions at OPP facilities subjected them to substantial risks of bodily harm or death.
On April 2, 2013, ten named OPP inmates (“Class Representatives”), seeking solely in-junctive relief, filed a complaint alleging that the Sheriff, the wardens of several OPP facilities, OPP’s medical director, and its psychiatric director were violating OPP inmates’ Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment rights. Class Representatives specifically alleged that defendants fail to provide constitutionally adequate medical care and mental health care.
Class Plaintiffs moved for a preliminary injunction, but discovery disputes delayed the consideration of this motion.
On September 24, 2012, the United States moved to intervene in the April 2 lawsuit, stating that such intervention would provide the most efficient resolution of Class Plaintiffs’ and the United States’ overlapping concerns.
On October 1, 2012, with leave of Court, the Sheriff filed two, substantively similar, third-party complaints against the City, one based on Class Plaintiffs’ claims and one based on the United States’ claims.
On December 11, 2012, Class Plaintiffs, the United States, and the Sheriff moved for the Court to approve a proposed consent judgment, notwithstanding the City’s decision to remain a nonparty to the agreement.
The consent judgment is a 49-page agreement
The purpose of this Agreement is to address the constitutional violations alleged in this matter, as well as the violations alleged in the findings letter issued by the United States on September 11, 2009. [OPP] is an integral part of the public safety system in New Orleans, Louisiana. Through the provisions of this Agreement, the Parties seek to ensure that the conditions in OPP protect the constitutional rights of prisoners confined there. By ensuring that the conditions in OPP are constitutional, the Sheriff will also provide for the safety of staff and promote public safety in the community.38
The substantive provisions of the consent judgment are organized by subject matter: protection from harm, mental health care, medical care, sanitation and environmental conditions, fire safety, language assistance, and youthful prisoners. Each subject is divided into several components, which address certain policies and practices. For example, mental health care is divided into the following components: screening and assessment, treatment, counseling, suicide prevention training program, suicide precautions, use of restraints, detoxification and training, medical and mental health staffing, and risk management.
Within each subject and component, the substantive provisions are a mix of broad guidelines and specific benchmarks. For example, under “screening and assessment” for mental health issues, the consent judgment requires that the Orleans Parish Sheriff’s Office (“OPSO”) “[djevelop and implement an appropriate screening instrument that identifies mental health needs, and ensures timely access to a mental health professional when presenting symptoms requiring such care.”
With respect to oversight, the consent judgment provides that the parties to the agreement “will jointly select a Monitor to oversee implementation of the Agreement,” with the Court resolving selection disputes.
Separate from the appointment of a Monitor, the consent judgment obligates OPSO to “hire and retain, or reassign a current OPSO employee for the duration of this Agreement, to serve as a full-time OPSO Compliance Coordinator.”
At a minimum, the Compliance Coordinator will: coordinate OPSO’s compliance and implementation activities; facilitate the provision of data, documents, materials, and access to OPSO’s personnel to the Monitor, SPLC, DOJ, and the public, as needed; ensure that all documents and records are maintained as provided in this Agreement; and assist in assigning compliance tasks to OPSO personnel, as directed by the Sheriff or his or her designee.46
In addition, the Compliance Coordinator is responsible for collecting the information the Monitor requires from OPSO.
As to funding, the consent judgment sets forth a process by which the Court will “determine the initial funding needed to ensure constitutional conditions of confinement at OPP, in accordance with the terms of this Agreement, and the source(s) responsible for providing that funding at an evidentiary hearing (‘funding trial’)” at which the parties to the agreement, as well as the City, shall have the right to participate.
The Consent Judgment provides specific procedures with respect to enforcement. For example, “if the Monitor, SPLC, or DOJ determines that Defendant has not made material progress toward Substantial Compliance with a significant obligation under the Agreement, and such failure constitutes a violation of prisoners’ constitutional rights, SPLC or DOJ may initiate contempt or enforcement proceedings against Defen-dant____”
With respect to termination, the consent judgment provides that it “shall terminate when Defendant has achieved Substantial Compliance with each provision of the Agreement and has maintained Substantial Compliance with the Agreement for a period of two years.”
After Class Plaintiffs, the United States, and the Sheriff filed their motion for approval of the consent judgment, briefing and conferences addressed the need for a fairness hearing.
THE FAIRNESS HEARING
At a fairness hearing commencing on April 1, 2013, the Court considered whether the proposed consent judgment was consistent with constitutional and statutory law and jurisprudence such that it should be approved as between Class Plaintiffs, the United States, and the Sheriff.
The parties provided extensive briefing on the legal issues implicated by the pending motions prior to the hearing.
CONSENT JUDGMENT ANALYSIS
I. Standard of Law
Generally, before entering a consent judgment, also called a consent decree, courts must decide whether it “represents a reasonable factual and legal determination based on the facts of record, whether established by evidence, affidavit, or stipulation.” Williams v. City of New Orleans, 729 F.2d 1554, 1559 (5th Cir.1984) (quoting United States v. City of Miami, 664 F.2d 435, 441 (5th Cir.1981)). Courts must also ascertain that the settlement is fair and that it does not violate the Constitution, statutes, or jurisprudence. Id. (citing City of Miami, 664 F.2d at 441). “In assessing the propriety of giving judicial imprimatur to the consent decree, the court must also consider the nature of the litigation and the purposes to be
If a consent judgment potentially affects third parties, courts must carefully scrutinize it to ensure that the effect “is neither unreasonable nor proscribed.” Williams, 729 F.2d at 1560 (quoting City of Miami, 664 F.2d at 441). Courts must “safeguard the interests of those individuals who [are] affected by the decree but were not represented in the negotiations.” Id.
Because the proposed consent judgment involves prospective relief with respect to prison conditions, an additional level of review applies. The Prison Litigation Reform Act (“PLRA”) provides:
Prospective relief in any civil action with respect to prison conditions shall extend no further than necessary to correct the violation of the Federal right of a particular plaintiff or plaintiffs. The court shall not grant or approve any prospective relief unless the court finds that such relief is narrowly drawn, extends no further than necessary to correct the violation of the Federal right, and is the least intrusive means necessary to correct the violation of the Federal right. The court shall give substantial weight to any adverse impact on public safety or the operation of a criminal justice system caused by the relief.73
Through the PLRA, “Congress sought to curtail federal courts’ long-term involvement in prison reform and halt federal courts from providing more than the constitutional minimum necessary to remedy federal rights violations.” Frazar v. Ladd, 457 F.3d 432, 438 n. 19 (5th Cir.2006) (citing 18 U.S.C. §§ 3626(a)(1)(A), (b)(3), (c)(1)). Compliance with the PLRA generally presents a higher bar to approval of a consent judgment than that imposed by caselaw.
The U.S. Supreme Court addressed the PLRA’s narrow tailoring requirement in Brown v. Plata, — U.S.-, 131 S.Ct. 1910, 179 L.Ed.2d 969 (2011), a prisoner release order case. In that case, the Court explained: “Narrow tailoring requires a fit between the remedy’s ends and the means chosen to accomplish those ends. The scope of the remedy must be proportional to the scope of the violation, and the order must extend no further than necessary to remedy the violation.” Plata, 131 S.Ct. at 1939-40 (internal quotations and modification omitted) (quoting Bd. of Trustees v. Fox, 492 U.S. 469, 480, 109 S.Ct. 3028, 106 L.Ed.2d 388 (1989)). Narrow tailoring does not require perfection. See Fox, 492 U.S. at 480, 109 S.Ct. 3028 (Narrow tailoring requires “a fit that is not necessarily perfect, but reasonable; that represents not necessarily the single best disposition but one whose scope is in proportion to the interest served.”) (internal quotations omitted). The Court must ensure that the relief provided in the proposed consent judgment is narrowly drawn, extends no further than necessary to correct the violation of a federal right, and is the least intrusive means of doing so.
The Court must also “give substantial weight to any adverse impact on public safety or the operation of a criminal justice system caused by the relief,” although the PLRA “does not require the court to certify that its order has no possible adverse impact on the public.” § 3626(a)(1)(A); Plata, 131 S.Ct. at 1941. “Whenever a court issues an order requiring the State to adjust its incarceration and criminal justice policy, there is a risk that the order will have some adverse impact on public safety in some sectors.” Plata, 131 S.Ct. at 1941. Accordingly, “[a] court is required to consider the public safety consequences of its order and to structure, and monitor, its ruling in a way that mitigates those consequences while still
II. Analysis
In asserting that conditions at OPP are unconstitutional, Plaintiffs face a high bar. To demonstrate a violation of inmates’ constitutional rights, Plaintiffs must show a substantial risk of serious harm to which prison officials were deliberately indifferent. Farmer v. Brennan, 511 U.S. 825, 834, 114 S.Ct. 1970, 128 L.Ed.2d 811 (1994). Demonstrating deliberate indifference requires that prison officials must “both be aware of facts from which the inference could be drawn that a substantial risk of serious harm exists, and must also draw the inference.” Id. at 837, 114 S.Ct. 1970. “[A] factfinder may conclude that a prison official knew of a substantial risk from the very fact that the risk was obvious.” Gates v. Cook, 376 F.3d 323, 333 (5th Cir.2004); see also Marsh v. Butler Cnty., 268 F.3d 1014, 1028 (11th Cir.2001) (en banc) (“Plaintiffs’ allegations that the County received many reports of the conditions but took no remedial measures is sufficient to allege deliberate indifference to the substantial risk of serious harm faced by inmates in the Jail.”).
Pretrial detainees and convicted prisoners “look to different constitutional provisions for their respective rights to basic needs such as medical care and safety.” Hare v. City of Corinth, 74 F.3d 633, 639 (5th Cir.1996) (en banc), rev’d on other grounds, 135 F.3d 320, 324 (5th Cir.1998). However, “no constitutionally relevant difference exists between the rights of pretrial detainees and convicted prisoners to be secure in their basic human needs.” Id. at 647. Plaintiffs rely on the Eighth Amendment standard for conditions of confinement.
The underlying constitutional violations alleged in this matter are systemic. As in Plata, “[Plaintiffs do not base their case on deficiencies” that occurred “on any one occasion,” and the Court “has no occasion to consider” whether any individual deficiency would “violate the Constitution ... if considered in isolation.” 131 S.Ct. at 1925 n. 3. Rather, “Plaintiffs rely on systemwide deficiencies” that allegedly subject inmates to a “substantial risk of serious harm” and cause conditions in OPP “to fall below the evolving standard of decency that would mark the progress of a maturing society.” Id.; see also Gates v. Cook, 376 F.3d at 333 (It is “important to note that the inmate need not show that death or serious illness has occurred.”).
Specific examples of dysfunction at OPP are representative of systemic deficiencies. The Court’s inquiry is not focused on whether any one of these examples demonstrates the violation of a constitutional right. See Plata, 131 S.Ct. at 1925 n. 3; see also Alberti, 790 F.2d at 1225 (“We need not determine whether any of these incidents individually constituted an Eighth Amendment violation, for the evidence established that the totality of the circumstances in the jails were eondemnable.”). The Court must determine, however, whether the proposed consent judgment is consistent with the PLRA.
“The Constitution does not mandate comfortable prisons, but neither does it permit inhumane ones.” Gates v. Cook, 376 F.3d at 332. The Constitution requires that inmates receive adequate food, clothing, shelter, medical care, and mental health care, and that detention facilities “take reasonable measures to ensure the safety of the inmates.” Id. (citing Farmer, 511 U.S. at 832, 114 S.Ct. 1970). The Fifth Circuit has held that, with respect to conditions of confine
These principles indicate that it is appropriate to consider the proposed consent judgment’s provisions grouped according to subject matter. This approach recognizes the multiple circumstances that have a “mutually enforcing effect” with respect to deficient conditions at OPP. Additionally, it permits the Court to consider in the aggregate the proposed remedies relevant to each underlying federal right. Accordingly, the Court will analyze the proposed consent judgment’s provisions with respect to the following alleged deficiencies at OPP: (1) safety and security, (2) medical care and mental health care, (3) environmental conditions, and (4) fire safety.
A. Safety and Security
Manuel Romero, an expert in jail administration, with a particular emphasis on security, staffing, and use of force,
Jeffrey Schwartz, an expert in security and operations of jails and prisons, has worked with more than 40 of the 50 state departments of corrections and toured hundreds of prisons and jails.
In 2012, OPP had over 600 transports to local emergency rooms for physical injuries, of which far more than half were related to violence.
1. Staffing and Supervision
Inadequate staffing is one of the most significant causes of the runaway violence at OPP.
Even with an exceptionally low level of staffing, administrators prioritize staffing nonsecurity posts before security posts, a practice opposite that used in most prisons and jails.
OPP does not maintain any policy or procedure with respect to minimum staffing levels where, for example, staff may be required to work overtime to ensure that inmates are at least minimally supervised.
The absence of staff at security posts means that staff members may not physically enter housing units when doing routine security checks because OPP policy prohibits them from entering housing units alone.
For instance, OPP records show that, on one particular evening, a deputy heard what he believed to be inmates fighting on a tier, as well as statements like “stick your finger in his butt and piss on him.”
2. Contraband
Although the Court recognizes that possession of contraband in a correctional facility is not necessarily unusual, OPP is plagued to a marked degree with contraband, including phones, weapons, and drugs.
Three videos, apparently filmed by inmates around the calendar year 2009
3. Classification
The failure to classify a substantial number of inmates risks “intermingling of inmates convicted of aggravated violent crimes with those who are first offenders or convicted of nonviolent crimes.” Gates v. Collier, 501 F.2d at 1308; see Stokes v. Delcambre, 710 F.2d 1120, 1124 (5th Cir.1983) (“[F]ailure to control or separate prisoners who endanger the physical safety of other prisoners can constitute cruel and unusual punishment”). A functioning classification system ensures that inmates are housed in a manner that increases the safety of inmates and staff by, for example, identifying and separating inmates likely to be predators from inmates likely to be victims.
On a sample date in December 2012, of the inmates who had proceeded past intake, approximately 35% had not been classified in any manner.
Because OPP does not have an effective system for reclassification, inmates who have violently assaulted other inmates may remain classified as “nonpredators.”
The importance of classification was illustrated by the following arc of one inmate’s violent actions, which ultimately caused another inmate to suffer severe and permanent brain damage:
*435 • In August 2011, E.L., a 20-year-old male inmate, was observed repeatedly striking a 50-year-old inmate in the face and back of the head in one of the Tents. The victim stated that E.L. “needed his medication.” E.L. was too “hostile and combative” to be interviewed about the event, and he threw a large trash can at one deputy and spit on another deputy’s face. In a separate incident, he threw a wet towel at a third deputy’s back, angry that she was moving his belongings to another Tent in response to the assault.133
• In September 2011, at HOD, E.L. began punching a 24-year-old inmate in the face because the other inmate was using a toilet that E.L. wanted to use. He threw the inmate into the bars of the cell hard enough to cause a head injury that required hospital treatment.134
• In October 2011, another inmate requested to be moved to a different HOD tier because E.L. was antagonizing him by throwing ice and water on him and attempting to fight him. The grievance was denied because the inmate “had enemies” on the other side of the same tier, and the record does not suggest the inmate was offered any relief.135
• In December 2011, E.L. had been antagonizing a certain deputy at HOD. At some point, E.L. was able to defeat the locking mechanism on his cell door, arm himself with a broken broomstick, and attack the deputy, hitting him in the face with the broomstick and fracturing his jaw. He also struck another deputy with the broomstick, possibly fracturing the deputy’s hand.136
• On June 18, 2012, K.M., a Templeman V inmate, reported via a sick call request that he had his “two teeth knocked out in a physical altercation on my tier.”137 On June 26, K.M. reported the attack to the Special Operations Division (“SOD”) and identified E.L. as his attacker.138 He stated that he had not come forward sooner because E.L. “bullies all the older inmates,” and K.M. was scared for his life.139
• On June 23, 2012, at Templeman V’s A-3 tier, a “step down psychiatric tier,”140 E.L. punched T.S., a 65-year-old man, several times in the face hard enough to knock him backwards. T.S. struck his head on a metal bench as he fell. A detective conducting a routine security check discovered T.S. lying on the ground with a pool of blood around his head. The punches and the strike to the back of the head caused T.S.’s brain to hemorrhage, resulting in a permanent, nearly “brain dead” state.141
E.L., an aggressive and predatory inmate with a penchant for administering blows to the head and face and for preying upon older inmates, ultimately caused T.S.’s severe and permanent brain damage.
E.L.’s attacks, which occurred across a variety of prison facilities, illustrate that, in the absence of adequate staffing and supervision, “even a low security housing unit with an unsophisticated inmate population will sink toward the lowest common denominator.”
4. Sexual Assault
OPP has an extraordinarily high level of rapes and sexual assaults, unprecedented in the many facilities toured by Romero.
Calculating the incidence rate of sexual assault at OPP is difficult.
There is no consistent practice by which staff respond to inmate reports of sexual assault.
A video admitted into evidence portrays an interview with an inmate who reported a sexual assault.
E.S., a former OPP inmate, testified that, on a daily basis at the original OPP, he saw violence, including “[flights, stabbings, people being sexually assaulted, just, you know, your average violence on the streets taken to the jailhouse.”
One night, after the lights were turned out at 10:30 p.m., E.S. was attacked by a group of 10-14 inmates.
At some point, the assailants picked up E.S. and carried him to a new location at the back of the dormitory, where they released him from the hog-tied position and tied him to a post, with his back to the post.
After the episode in which the attackers made E.S. dance, they made him shower.
E.S.’s testimony parallels a report by another inmate, A.A.,
While the incident was referred to the office of the Orleans Parish District Attorney, that office determined that “based on the circumstances and statements given, we would not likely prosecute this case if an arrest was made.”
The Court reiterates that the details of the described assaults are not discussed because they are brutal, although they are that, but because they are emblematic of systemic deficiencies in inmate safety and security. See Alberti, 790 F.2d at 1225 (“We recite the incidents of violence and sexual assault which follow not to exhaustively catalog conditions in the jails but to provide examples of the nature of evidence presented at the hear
5. Training and Accountability
Accountability systems are fundamental to prisoner and staff safety.
a. Grievance System
A grievance system permits inmates to make a written report to address anything from minor complaints to sexual assaults.
Grievances at OPP are sometimes effectively ignored because they are not addressed until an inmate leaves, at which time they are closed.
The failure of OPP to address even emergency grievances in a timely manner is inexplicable.
b. Use of Force & Investigations
OPP has deeply ingrained problems with respect to staff members’ uncontrolled use of force on inmates.
One of the most egregious allegations of use of force suggested that an officer ordered “hits” on particular inmates, either by instructing a tier rep to arrange a hit or by placing the inmate in an area where known enemies made violence likely.
As noted above, SOD investigates use of force reports, including reports of force by SOD members.
c. Tier Reps
Tier representatives (“tier reps”) are inmates in charge of maintaining order on their tiers.
Given the fundamental flaws in OPP’s classification system, predatory or aggressive inmates may become tier reps.
At Conchetta, D.R. attempted to break up a fight because of a concern that another inmate “was about to get really beat up.”
One especially troubling situation illustrates deficiencies associated with the use of tier reps, but also broader deficiencies related to staff accountability. OPP records show that a high-ranking male security officer regularly observed a female tier rep showering and escorted her to a private office after hours for “prolonged periods of time.”
Despite the witnessed sexual misconduct, the officer was permitted to resign, and there was never an investigation because of “insufficient evidence, the lack of witnesses and the statements taken.”
6. Conclusion
“It is well established that prison officials have a constitutional duty to protect prisoners from violence at the hands of their fellow inmates.” Longoria v. Texas, 473 F.3d 586, 592 (5th Cir.2006) (citing Farmer, 511 U.S. at 832-33, 114 S.Ct. 1970). The proposed consent judgment addresses the proven deficiencies relative to inmates’ safety and security. For example, it requires OPSO to ensure adequate staffing, regular security rounds, and direct supervision in units designed for this type of supervision.
With respect to training and accountability, the consent judgment provides that OPSO “shall develop, implement, and maintain comprehensive policies and procedures (in accordance with generally accepted correctional standards) relating to the use of force” and shall “develop and implement a single, uniform reporting system.”
OPP inmates are subject to an epidemic of violence.
B. Medical and Mental Health Care
During the course of the fairness hearing, the evidence, including credible witness testimony, exposed stark, sometimes shocking, deficiencies in OPP’s medical and mental health care system. Inmates with mental health issues are housed in deplorable conditions.
The consent judgment aims to remedy broad areas of medical and mental health care, including intake services, access to care, medication, staffing, suicide prevention, and records. The Court addresses each in turn.
1. Intake
At intake, prisoners with clear histories of self-harm, mental illness, or potential withdrawal from prescribed or illicitly acquired substances are cleared for placement in the general population without any medical or mental health consultation.
Dr. Bruce Gage, a correctional mental health care expert,
In his report, Dr. Gage stated that in several cases, including instances of inmate suicide, an initial referral to psychiatry could have changed the outcome of the cases.
T.W. provides a representative example with respect to the lack of intake screening and follow-up psychiatric services.
On November 16, 2012, T.W. received a psychiatric chronic care treatment plan from an OPP psychiatrist.
After Dr. Gage reviewed the records provided, “[t]here was not one example of a thorough psychiatric assessment by the OPP psychiatrist in any of the records and most were not even minimally adequate.”
OPP has one full-time psychiatrist who works 40 hours per week.
The experiences of D.R. and R.S. illustrate compounding inadequacies in mental and medical health care. D.R. testified as to the abhorrent conditions experienced by H.T., an inmate whom D.R. testified “seemed partially handicapped and mentally handicapped also,” based on the “things he would say,” “the way he got around,” and his inability to care for himself.
Another inmate’s slow suicidal decline similarly illustrates the deficiencies with respect to both medical and mental health care. R.S. came to OPP after a standoff with the police.
R.S.’s extreme depression caused a “failure to thrive,” which Dr. Gage described as occurring when people with severe depression or terminal illnesses stop eating and drinking, resulting in dehydration complications, including urinary tract infections, and complications related to inactivity, including pneumonia.
OPP staff observed and documented R.S.’s decline. He was seen daily by nurses and eight times by physicians.
Dr. Daphne Glindmeyer, an expert in mental health and psychiatry and juvenile mental health in corrections,
Dr. Glindmeyer conducted a site visit at the unit housing youth inmates.
3. Medication
Even where records demonstrated that medications are provided by agencies such as hospitals, and even when that fact is documented through reputable sources of information in the record, psychotropic medications are frequently discontinued at OPP.
At intake, psychotropic medications are stopped approximately 75-80% of the time, with some OPP treatment providers refusing to order them in any circumstance.
a. Detoxification and Withdrawal
OPP inmates who require a detoxification protocol are not consistently identified or effectively treated. For example, C.F.’s intake questionnaire indicates that she was taking 2 milligrams of a benzodiazepine, Xa-nax, four times daily, an amount and frequency which Dr. Glindmeyer characterized as “a lot,” pursuant to a prescription to treat her mental illness.
During Dr. Glindmeyer’s visit on December 20, 2012, she observed C.F. “screaming very loudly” that she “needed to go to a wedding and that she had a baby in her tubes and they needed to come cut it out right away.”
b. Untreated Mental Illness
OPP does not provide appropriate treatment to mentally ill inmates, even when they pose a danger to themselves or others. For example, S.T.
Another inmate, R.C., was transferred to the mental health unit on November 27,2012, less than a week after arriving at OPP.
4. Staffing
As with security and safety, OPP’s severe deficiencies in mental health and medical care are largely attributable to dramatically insufficient staffing.
The Court questioned Dr. Gage as to certain statements in his report characterizing
THE COURT: You have a statement in your report which states, “There’s a general pattern of reckless and callous disregard for the suffering and treatment needs of the mentally ill and chemically dependent in OPP.” That’s a very strong statement. Do you want to explain that at all?
THE WITNESS: Well, I would stand by that. I guess that would be the first thing that I would say. I mean, I’ve seen a number of jails and I have not seen conditions as deplorable as I have seen in this jail, and I have not seen such absence of mental health services in the context of just abysmal physical environments and the kind of failure to monitor people and so on that I was speaking about. It was just more dramatic than I have ever seen in any other institution.391
While the Sheriff and City have suggested that an inmate population reduction may occur in just a few months, the evidence suggests that OPP has inadequate staffing to treat even a reduced population.
5. Suicide Prevention
According to Dr. Gage, “[OPP] records and interviews with staff and inmates demonstrate a level of disregard and disrespect on the part of most staff towards the mentally and chemically dependent” that is made plain by the conditions on the residential mental health unit and “especially the approach to suicide monitoring.”
Suicide assessments at OPP are cursory and repetitive. Psychiatric contact with inmates is extremely brief, generally lasting less than five minutes.
On the suicide watch tier, records demonstrate that significant self-harm events were not listed as “sentinel events” that would trigger staff review.
OPP staff members’ ignorance of cut-down tools is particularly alarming. A cut-down tool is a type of knife “made to cut through layers of something that has been fashioned as a rope,” such as the “thick material that uniforms are made of.”
6. Records
Dr. Gage testified, and the Court has observed firsthand in connection with its own review, that record keeping at OPP is very poor.
Notes are undated, misdated, unsigned, and otherwise deficient.
7. Conclusion
The Court has reviewed the voluminous evidence regarding medical and mental health care at OPP and the measures in the amended proposed consent judgment that the signatories agree are necessary to address deficiencies. The evidence presented was largely targeted towards deficiencies in mental health care, although the evidence also shows deficiencies in non-mental health care treatment, in particular sick call requests, medication administration, and emergency room visits, that relate to the risk of suicide, violence, and contraband trade.
The consent judgment directly addresses OPP’s deficiencies with respect to medical and mental health care. For example, it requires that an inmate’s risk of suicide or other self-harm be evaluated within eight hours of arriving at OPP and it prohibits placing inmates in isolation who have not been screened.
“Just as a prisoner may starve if not fed, he or she may suffer or die if not provided adequate medical care. A prison that deprives inmates of basic sustenance, including adequate medical care, is incompatible with the concept of human dignity and has no place in civilized society.” Plata, 131 S.Ct. at 1928. OPP’s deficiencies with respect to medical and mental health care are widespread, and the deficiencies with respect to mental health care are particularly obvious and pervasive. Dr. Gage testified that OPP’s absence of mental health services is “dramatic” when compared to any other institution
C. Environmental Conditions
OPP facilities are in a state of disrepair.
OPP’s environmental conditions pose a security risk, and this risk endangers the lives of staff members and inmates, while also endangering the community through potential escapes.
D. Fire Safety
With respect to fire safety, Romero observed fire hazards, including electrical
The inability of staff to operate emergency exits is deeply worrisome and poses the type of problem that could result in a large-scale catastrophic fire event with many fatalities.
III. Statutory Rights
The United States alleges that OPP discriminates against Limited English Proficiency (“LEP”)
A policy guidance document issued by DOJ states that an entity’s obligation with respect to a particular service can be evaluated through an “individualized assessment that balances the following four factors: (1) [t]he number or proportion of LEP persons eligible to be served or likely to be encountered by the program or grantee; (2) the frequency with which LEP individuals come in contact with the program; (3) the nature and importance of the program, activity, or service provided by the program to people’s lives; and (4) the resources available to the grantee/recipient and costs.” Dep’t of Justice, Guidance to Federal Financial Assistance Recipients Regarding Title VI Prohibition Against National Origin Discrimination Affecting Limited English Proficient Persons, 67 Fed.Reg. 4145501, 41459 (June 18, 2002); see also Maricopa Cnty., 915 F.Supp.2d at 1080 (“DOJ coordinates government-wide compliance with Title VI and its interpretation of Title VI is entitled to special deference.”) (citations omitted).
While OPP has LEP inmates,
OPP also does not keep a record or otherwise identify staff members who are bilingual.
The proposed consent judgment provides for language assistance policies and procedures that will ensure compliance with Title VI. It requires, for example, that OPP provide Spanish translations of vital documents, including sick call forms and inmate handbooks, and that an appropriate number of bilingual staff members be available for translation or interpretation.
IV. Objections to Approval
The City has raised several objections to the proposed consent judgment. “A party potentially prejudiced by a decree has a right to a judicial determination of the merits of its objection.” City of Miami, 664 F.2d at 447. However, “[c]omplete accord on all issues [ ]is not indispensable to the entry of [a consent judgment].” Id. at 440. In “multiparty litigation, two parties may resolve all of the issues that do not affect a third party, ask the court to include only this settlement in a consent decree, and submit to the court for adjudication the remaining issues, disputed between them and the third party.” Id.
Although its legal arguments have been elusive at times, the City’s overarching objection is that the consent judgment has an unreasonable and proscribed effect on third parties as a result of the consent judgment’s funding provision, its unknown costs, its indirect effect on public safety, and its allegedly collusive history. The City also contends that the consent judgment extends further than necessary, in violation of the PLRA and state law. Finally, the City challenges particular provisions that require the Sheriff to “continue to” take certain actions and, relat-edly, contends that the consent judgment cannot be approved absent a plainly worded concession of liability on the part of the Sheriff.
A. Provision-by-Provision Approach
The City asserts that the Court must examine the proposed consent judgment “provision by provision,” making particularized findings that a federal right has been violated and injunctive relief is narrowly drawn and necessary with respect to each and every provision. In support of this argument, the City cites cases addressing the termination of consent judgments.
Nonetheless, the Court has taken great care to compare the evidence in support of the alleged violations of federal rights to the remedial provisions proposed in the consent judgment. Moreover, the City received the opportunity to challenge specific provisions of the consent judgment, ensuring they received even greater scrutiny.
B. Effect on Third Parties
1. Funding Provision
The City argues that the proposed consent judgment’s funding provision, Section V, has an impermissible effect on third parties. The City initially contended that Section V “impermissibly infringes on the City’s rights as a non-party,” by permitting “the Sheriff, the Plaintiff Inmates, and the Civil Rights Division [to] decide what is the appropriate level for funding for the Sheriffs office without affording the City an opportunity to be heard or a means to even have an evidentiary hearing.”
For the sake of clarity, all of the amendments to the proposed consent judgment are set forth below. Deletions are indicated through stricken text and insertions are underlined.
V. FUNDING
A. The Court shall determine the initial funding needed to ensure constitutional conditions of confinement at OPP, in accordance with the terms of this Agreement, and the source(s) responsible for providing that funding at an evidentiary hearing (“funding trial”). Defendant, third-party Defendant City of New Orleans (“City”), and Plaintiffs shall have the right to participate fully in the funding trial, including producing expert testimony and analysis regarding the cost of implementing this Agreement.
ArB. Defendant shall be responsible for implementation of this Agreement upon a definitive judgment with regard to such initial funding for this Agreement.
BtC. Once the funding is determined pursuant to Paragraph A, the funding amount thereafter may be adjusted on an annual basis to account for changes in the size of the prisoner population, inflation, or other operating costs. If the Parties Defendant and the City are unable to agree upon such adjustments to the annual budget, the Monitor will intervene and resolve the dispute. If the Monitor cannot resolve the dispute within 45 days, the dispute will be submitted to the district judge for resolution. Defendant, the City, and Plaintiffs The Par-ties agree to work in good faith to determine available cost savings measures that may result from the ongoing implementation of this Agreement or otherwise. GJ). Defendant will provide an annual budget for the expenditure of the funds for operation of OPP and an annual audited financial statement to the Monitor, the City, and the BsztiesPlaintiffs. The Monitor will assist in conducting oversight to ensure that funds for implementing this Agreement are allocated to achieve compli-anee with this Agreement.
IX. MONITORING
F. Monitor Distribution of OPSO Documents, Reports, and Assessments: Within seven days of receipt, the Monitor shall distribute all OPSO assessments and reports to SPLC, and DOJ, and the City. The Monitor also shall provide any OPSO compliance-related documents within seven days to DOJ, and SPLC, and the City upon request.467
The City specifically objects to the amendments because they “require the City to subject itself to the ‘assistance’ of the Monitor to set funding levels for the Sheriffs office.”
The City also objects on the basis that it cannot be required to appear in Court to settle funding disputes. There is a pending third-party complaint against the City. This claim and the law defining the relationship between the City and the Sheriff, including any funding obligations, are the source of any such requirement.
2. Effect on Public Safety Funding
The City next contends that the proposed consent judgment requires a “diversion of funds” that will adversely affect public safety and the welfare of the citizens of New Orleans who are not inmates at OPP.
First Deputy Mayor Andrew Kopplin testified relative to the effects that the proposed consent judgment could have on the City’s budget. Because the cost of implementing the proposed consent judgment and the party responsible for paying any additional costs have not yet been determined, the Court permitted the City to offer testimony regarding the effect that a price tag of $22.5 million would have on the City’s budget, should the City be required to pay such costs in full. Kopplin stated that the $22.5 million figure was based on a request from the Sheriff
It is important to emphasize that, at this stage of the proceedings, the Court does not know whether any additional revenue is needed to ensure that OPP inmates are afforded the full protections of the Constitution and Title VI. The Court has not yet heard argument on the City’s state law funding obligation or heard evidence relative to the funds available to the Sheriff and the Sheriffs spending of any such funds. Determining whether the City has an additional funding obligation and the amount of any such obligation is impossible at this stage. Accordingly, the Court will assume, for the sake of argument, that the City could be obligated to spend an additional $22.5 million on implementation of the consent judgment.
Kopplin testified that either significant layoffs and furloughs or a drastic reduction in the number of police officers and fire department employees available to respond to public emergencies would be necessary if the City was forced to spend an additional $22.5 million to remedy the conditions at OPP.
The PLRA requires courts to “give substantial weight to any adverse impact on public safety” caused by the entry of a consent judgment. 18 U.S.C. § 3626(a)(1). Plaintiffs assert that legislative history and caselaw demonstrate that this requirement is oriented towards the more direct effects on public safety associated with prisoner release orders and population caps.
The Court is well aware of New Orleans’ high homicide rate
The Court concludes that, even were it to give substantial weight to the public safety issues outside OPP, ignore the public safety issues inside OPP, and assume that the consent judgment will cost the City an additional $22.5 million, the proposed consent judgment complies with the PLRA.
Notwithstanding this conclusion, the Sheriffs funding claim will be subject to a rigorous examination through two hearings, and any future funding claims will be addressed through a process that includes the participation of the City and, potentially, the Court. The consent judgment, and the Court’s approach to its approval, are structured in a manner designed to minimize any indirect adverse effects on public safety. See § 3626(a)(1).
3. Cost & Taxes
Related to its argument that the proposed consent judgment’s implementation costs will draw resources from other areas of public safety, the City argues that it cannot afford the consent judgment. In particular, the City argues, “any increase in funding to the Sheriff’s] Office inevitably will require the City to increase taxes imposed against the citizens of the City of New Orleans.”
The City has had the opportunity to put forth evidence that the conditions at OPP meet constitutional muster or that the proposed consent judgment extends farther than constitutionally necessary. The City has not presented any evidence, including expert testimony, showing that conditions at OPP do not violate the Constitution or Title VI. The City has also not offered evidence with respect to an alternative, less costly or less intrusive, approach to remedying conditions at OPP. See Armstrong, 622 F.3d at 1071.
The Court anticipates that staffing will be one of the greatest costs associated with the proposed consent judgment. When it comes to staffing levels, the consent judgment provides the City with continuing opportunities to put forth evidence regarding the staffing and salaries needed to run a facility that meets constitutional and statutory requirements, including the PLRA. The uncontro-verted evidence, however, is that some increase in staffing is necessary to ensure that conditions at OPP meet constitutional minimum requirements.
The City’s proposed finding of law that “[t]he Court may not approve a proposed consent decree that results in the raising of taxes” is disingenuous.
4. Negotiating History
The City argues that the parties have colluded in drafting a consent judgment that fails to recognize the Sheriffs revenue streams and that treats the City as “an unlimited bank account for the benefit of the inmates and the Sheriff.”
The City describes as “unorthodox” the legislative landscape in which the City must finance a jail which is run by the Sheriff.
The City also objects to the Plaintiffs’ characterization of its role in negotiating the proposed consent judgment. Plaintiffs have asserted: “Since November 2011, the Sheriff and the City participated in negotiations to formulate a comprehensive remedy to [ ] unlawful conditions.”
After the Sheriff filed his two third-party complaints, the Court was advised that all parties, including the City, were prepared to enter into an interim consent judgment, subject to a dispute over the cost and funding of the interim consent judgment’s reforms.
[TJhere is no dispute with respect to those portions of the proposed consent judgment detailing unconstitutional conditions at Orleans Parish prison facilities as well as efforts that need to be undertaken to ensure that prison facilities satisfy constitutional standards. There is also no dispute that the City of New Orleans is responsible for funding those efforts that must be undertaken, pursuant to the proposed consent judgment, to remedy existing conditions. The only remaining issue before the Court is the level of interim and permanent funding required to remedy the unconstitutional conditions.493
The Court specifically confirmed the substance of this paragraph with counsel at the status conference. The confirmation was obtained through querying counsel for each party and receiving individual verbal affirmation that the parties were ready to sign the agreement.
Counsel were ordered to appear in person at the next status conference, ostensibly to provide the Court with the signed consent judgment, which would permit future development of the interim funding amount, and to discuss the appointment of a special master.
tion.
To be clear, the City’s negotiations with respect to the consent judgment carry no weight whatsoever in the Court’s analysis of the proposed consent judgment outside of its collusion analysis. The City had the right to refuse to sign the proposed consent judgment at any point, notwithstanding its prior apparent willingness to agree to the proposed reforms subject to a future resolution of the cost and funding dispute. The point of recounting this litigation history is to identify the persuasive evidence, including the procedural history of the case, that contradicts the City’s argument that it was left out of the negotiations process.
C. Louisiana Rev. Stat. Ann. § 15:738
The City argues that the proposed consent judgment is inconsistent with La.Rev.Stat. Ann. § 15:738, which provides:
No incarcerated state prisoner, whether before trial, during trial or on appeal, or after final conviction, who is housed in any jail, prison, correctional facility, juvenile institution, temporary holding center, or detention facility within the state shall have a standard of living above that required by the constitutions of the United States and the state of Louisiana, as ordered or interpreted by the appropriate courts of last resort, or by the standards set by the American Correctional Association. It is the intention of this legislature that, to the extent permitted by law, no inmate shall have a standard of living better than the state poverty level. Citizens*461 should not be worse off economically and living in conditions that are below those granted to inmates whose living standards are being paid for and subsidized by the hard-working and law-abiding people of the state of Louisiana.
At the fairness hearing and in its briefing, the City makes much of the fact that the proposed consent judgment would provide inmates with medical and mental health care to an extent that exceeds that provided to certain non-incarcerated citizens.
No one disputes that La.Rev.Stat. § 15:738 does not negate constitutional minimum standards. Moreover, the parties are well aware that governments carry a special responsibility for those in their custody. “To incarcerate, society takes from prisoners the means to provide for their own needs. Prisoners are dependent on the State for food, clothing, and necessary medical care. A prison’s failure to provide sustenance for inmates may actually produce physical torture or a lingering death.” Plata, 131 S.Ct. at 1928 (quotation omitted). The Court notes that the statute’s reliance on American Correctional Association standards implicates a higher level of care in some situations than that required by the Constitution.
The City argues, however, that in evaluating what the Constitution requires, the Court should take into account the unfortunate living conditions experienced by some impoverished non-incarcerated citizens of Louisiana.
D. Specific Provisions
Because the nature of the City’s objections to the proposed consent judgment remained amorphous even as the fairness hearing was imminent, the Court ordered the City to clarify its position: “The City shall identify with particularity the provisions of the proposed consent decree that it is challenging.”
In response, the City identified the funding provisions and fourteen substantive provisions beginning with the phrase “continue to.”
The Court has carefully examined the “continue to” provisions to which the City objects. These provisions address direct supervision and rounds; detection of contraband; inmate classification; grievances; training for special populations, including inmates with mental health issues; and building maintenance. The evidence was compelling that OPP suffers from serious deficiencies in these areas such that the consent judgment’s provisions are narrowly drawn, are necessary to remedy the violation of a federal right, and are the least intrusive means of doing so.
Moreover, even if the Sheriffs good faith efforts have resulted in recent changes, the proposed consent judgment remains necessary. The Fifth Circuit observed in Gates v. Cook, with respect to a state correctional department: “It is well settled that a defendant’s voluntary cessation of a challenged practice does not deprive a federal court of its power to determine the legality of the practice____ The fact that many of these conditions have persisted for years despite MDOC’s purported efforts leads us to likewise conclude that MDOC has not met the heavy burden of showing that its voluntary conduct has mooted any of the issues presented here.” 376 F.3d at 337; see also Gates v. Collier, 501 F.2d at 1321 (“Changes made by defendants after suit is filed do not remove the necessity for injunctive relief, for practices may be reinstated as swiftly as they were suspended.”). A defendant’s assurance that it is “already on the path towards compliance is insufficient to moot the issue.” Gates v. Cook, 376 F.3d at 343-42. According to Schwartz, “almost all of [the] problems given to OPSO in writing” in the 2008 National Institute of Corrections report “remain unmitigated today.”
The Court permitted the parties to add record citations to their proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law after the hearing.
For example, in its proposed conclusions of law, the City challenges as overbroad the provision stating that the consent judgment shall “terminate when the [Sheriff] has achieved substantial compliance with each provision of the Agreement and [has] maintained Substantial Compliance with the Agreement for a period of two years.”
The City additionally raises a new challenge to the failure to define “substantial compliance” with objective, quantifiable targets.
E. Admission of Liability
The City contends that “[ujnless [the Sheriff] admits to operating an unconstitutional facility, [ ] the decree is overly broad.”
While the Court is aware of the fact that the City and certain inmates may be dissatisfied with a ruling that does not require a plain admission of liability, this is an inherent part of a settlement, as opposed to a matter litigated through a full trial. By choosing to enter into a consent judgment, the parties may “avoid the collateral effects of adjudicated guilt.” United States v. City of Jackson, 519 F.2d 1147, 1152 n. 9 (5th Cir.1975) (quoted in City of Miami, 664 F.2d at 441-42).
In the consent judgment, Class Plaintiffs, the United States, and the Sheriff stipulate that the consent judgment “complies in all respects with the provisions of 18 U.S.C. § 3626(a)” and, specifically, “that the prospective relief in this Agreement is narrowly drawn, extends no further than necessary to correct the violations of the federal rights as alleged by Plaintiffs in the Complaints, is the least intrusive means necessary to correct these violations, and will not have an adverse impact on public safety or the operation of a criminal justice system____ Any admission made for purposes of this Agreement is not admissible if presented by Third Parties in another proceeding.”
“The requirements for the entry of relief in 18 U.S.C. § 3626(a)(1) may appear in some tension with any attempt by defendants to continue to deny legal liability while agreeing to the entry of the relief sought by plaintiffs.” Elizabeth Alexander, Getting to Yes in a PLRA World, 30 Pace L.Rev. 1672, 1684 (2010). Neither the PLRA nor easelaw requires a plainly worded concession of liability, and the Sheriff’s stipulation with respect to the consent judgment parallels the language in the PLRA. The Court must focus on whether the proposed relief complies with the Constitution, statutory law, including the PLRA, and jurisprudence. Whether the Sheriff’s stipulation amounts to a “cryptic” concession is not the Court’s concern. See Margo Schlanger, Plata v. Brown and Realignment: Jails, Prisons, Courts, and Politics, 48 Harv. C.R.-C.L.L.Rev. 165, 173-74 (2013); see also H.R.Rep. No. 104-21, at 24 n. 2 (1995).
V. Public Comments
The Court invited the general public, as well as OPP inmate class members, to comment on the proposed consent judgment. The Court received numerous public comments from individuals who are not incarcerated. Virtually every comment endorsed the proposed consent judgment.
The Court heard from a broad cross section of the community.
The consent judgment represents a reasonable factual and legal determination based on the extensive factual record. It is fair and consistent with the Constitution, statutes, including the PLRA, and jurisprudence. Its effect on third parties is not unreasonable or proscribed. Having concluded that the consent judgment is overwhelmingly supported by the evidence, including OPP records and persuasive trial testimony, the Court turns to the determination of whether the consent judgment is additionally a fair, adequate, and reasonable class settlement.
CLASS SETTLEMENT ANALYSIS
Class Plaintiffs have filed an unopposed motion
I. Standard of Law
When determining whether to certify a settlement class, courts must determine whether the requirements for certification are met and whether the settlement is fair, adequate, and reasonable, especially insofar as it affects inmates who are not named plaintiffs in the lawsuit.
Rule 23(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure permits certification of a plaintiff class only if four requirements are met: (1) the class is so numerous that joinder of all members is impracticable (“numerosity”); (2) there are questions of law or fact common to the class (“commonality”); (3) the claims or defenses of the representative plaintiffs are typical of the claims or defenses of the class (“typicality”); and (4) the representative plaintiffs will fairly and adequately protect the interests of the class (“representation”). Although courts need not consider the likely difficulties in managing a class action when considering a settlement class, courts must be cognizant when considering the other factors that there will not be a “later opportunity for class adjustments.” In re OCA No. 05-265, 2008 WL 4681369, at *6 (E.D.La. Oct. 17, 2008) (Vance, J.) (citing Amchem Prods., Inc. v. Windsor, 521 U.S. 591, 620, 117 S.Ct. 2231, 138 L.Ed.2d 689 (1997)). “The existence of a settlement class may even ‘warrant more, not less, caution on the question of certification.’” Id. (quoting Amchem, 521 U.S. at 620, 117 S.Ct. 2231).
Class certification is appropriate when a “rigorous analysis” confirms that the requirements of Rule 23(a) are met. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Dukes, — U.S. -, 131 S.Ct. 2541, 2551, 180 L.Ed.2d 374 (2011).
Plaintiffs seek certification pursuant to Rule 23(b)(2), which applies where a defendant has “acted or refused to act on grounds that apply generally to the class” such that injunctive or declaratory relief is appropriate. “Rule 23(b)(2) was created to facilitate civil rights class actions.” Thorn v. Jefferson-Pilot Life Ins. Co., 445 F.3d 311, 330 (4th Cir.2006) (citation omitted). “The key to the (b)(2) class is ‘the indivisible nature of the injunctive or declaratory remedy warranted — the notion that the conduct is such that it can be enjoined or declared unlawful only as to all of the class members or as to none of them.’ ” Dukes, 131 S.Ct. at 2557 (quoting Richard Nagareda, Class Certification in the Age of Aggregate Proof, 84 N.Y.U. L.Rev. 97, 132 (2009)). The claims at issue present a paradigmatic case for Rule 23(b)(2) relief. If an individual plaintiff successfully brought a lawsuit raising the systemic claims at issue here, the injunctive relief sought, “as a practical matter, would be dispositive of the interests of the other members not parties to the individual adjudications or would substantially impair or impede their ability to protect their interests.” Fed. R.Civ.P. 23(b)(2).
If certification requirements are met, the Court must still determine whether to approve the settlement. As a threshold matter, the Court looks to whether notice was provided “in a reasonable manner to all class members who would be bound by the proposal.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(e). With respect to the substance of the settlement, the Court inquires whether the settlement is fair, adequate, and reasonable pursuant to Rule 23(e). The Fifth Circuit has advised courts to consider six factors in making this assessment: “(1) the existence of fraud or collusion behind the settlement; (2) the complexity, expense, and likely duration of the litigation; (3) the stage of the proceedings and the amount of discovery completed; (4) the probability of plaintiffs’ success on the merits; (5) the range of possible recovery; and (6) the opinions of class counsel, class representatives, and absent class members.” Ayers v. Thompson, 358 F.3d 356, 369 (5th Cir.2004) (citing Parker v. Anderson, 667 F.2d 1204, 1209 (5th Cir.1982)).
II. Certification Analysis
A. Numerosity
“To satisfy the numerosity prong, ‘a plaintiff must ordinarily demonstrate some evidence or reasonable estimate of the number of purported class members.’” Pederson v. La. State Univ., 213 F.3d 858, 868 (5th Cir.2000) (quoting Zeidman v. J. Ray McDermott & Co., 651 F.2d 1030, 1038 (5th Cir.1981)). OPP has approximately 2,500 inmates,
B. Commonality
The common questions of law or fact required by Rule 23(a)(2) must be able to “generate common answers apt to drive the resolution of the litigation.” Dukes, 131 S.Ct. at 2551 (quoting Nagareda, 84 N.Y.U. L.Rev. at 132). “Before and after WalMart, courts have certified classes of incarcerated persons challenging specific, written, acknowledged, official policies.” Mathis v. GEO Grp., No. 08-CT-21, 2012 WL 600865, at *6 (E.D.N.C. Feb. 23, 2012) (citing cases). In M.D. ex rel. Stukenberg, the Fifth Circuit expressly disagreed with the proposition that a policy must injure each class member to provide the foundation for class wide relief. 675 F.3d at 847 — 18. “Rather, the class claims could conceivably be based on an allegation that the [defendant] engages in a pattern or practice of agency action or inaction — including a failure to correct a structural deficiency within the agency, such as insufficient staffing — ‘with respect to the
The mere incantation of the words “systemic violation” does not justify class certification. See id. at 844. For example, in M.D. ex rel. Stukenberg, plaintiffs alleged systemic violations of substantive due process, which defendants contended were not capable of resolution because they required an individualized “shocks the conscience” inquiry. Id. at 843. Here, however, Class Plaintiffs present claims that are susceptible to common answers. See Logory v. Cnty. of Susquehanna, 277 F.R.D. 135, 143 (M.D.Pa.2011) (“Unlike Dukes, where commonality was destroyed where there was no ‘common mode of exercising discretion that pervade[d] the entire company,’ here there is a solid [prison] policy that applied directly to all potential class members.”) (quoting Dukes, 131 S.Ct. at 2554).
The claims, defenses, relevant facts, and applicable substantive law demonstrate that certification is warranted with respect to Class Plaintiffs’ Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment protection from harm claims. Whether certain conditions at OPP either by themselves, or through a “mutually enforcing effect,” put inmates at á substantial risk of harm is amenable to a common answer. See Gates v. Cook, 376 F.3d at 333. Plaintiffs have identified practices with respect to staffing, contraband, supervision, and classification, for example, that uniformly create a substantial risk of harm for all class members.
The facts and law also demonstrate that Class Plaintiffs’ Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment medical and mental health care claims warrant certification.
C. Typicality
The typicality inquiry “focuses on the similarity between the named plaintiffs’ legal and remedial theories and the theories of those whom they purport to represent.” Stirman v. Exxon Corp., 280 F.3d 554, 562 (5th Cir.2002). Typicality is established where “the class representative’s claims have the same essential characteristics of those of the putative class.” Id. Here, Class Representatives consist of both pre- and post-trial detainees, and they present legal and remedial theories common to the class members. Compare Hawkins v. Comparet-Cassani, 251 F.3d 1230, 1238 (9th Cir.2001). While class members’ experiences at OPP may differ, “the claims arise from a similar course of conduct and share the same legal theory” and, therefore, “factual differences will not defeat typicality” in this case. Stirman, 280 F.3d at 562 (quotation omitted).
D. Adequacy of Representation
“Rule 23(a)’s adequacy requirement encompasses class representatives, then-counsel, and the relationship between the
III. Settlement Analysis
A. Notice
Rule 23(e) requires that class members be notified of a settlement, but notice “need only satisfy the broad reasonableness standards imposed by due process.” In re Katrina Canal Breaches Litig., 628 F.3d 185, 197 (5th Cir.2010) (internal quotations and citation omitted). Due process is satisfied if the notice provides class members with the “information reasonably necessary for them to make a decision whether to object to the settlement.” Id.
The Court approved a procedure in which a notice document and copy of the consent judgment were distributed to all inmates at OPP on a given date.
The Court previously determined that the amendments to the proposed consent judgment did not require new notice. The Court ruled, “the amendments do not alter the original Proposed Consent Judgment’s substance or effect in a manner that would require new briefing before the April 1, 2013 fairness hearing or a revised class notice.”
B. Fraud or Collusion
The consent judgment is the product of a protracted period of litigation between Class Plaintiffs, DOJ, the Sheriff, and the City.
C. Complexity, Expense, and Duration of Litigation
Class Plaintiffs observe that the expenses associated with this case are high because demonstrating deliberate indifference would require “significant statistical, anecdotal, and expert evidence.”
D. Stage of the Proceedings
With respect to the stage of the proceedings, including the depositions and expert reports completed, this case has progressed to a marked degree. Class counsel notes that four staff paralegal investigators, as well as multiple law clerks and interns, have spent “thousands of hours documenting conditions in the jail by interviewing people housed there.”
The City asserts that an absence of evidence at the fairness hearing supporting class certification and settlement prohibits the Court from certifying the settlement class and approving the settlement.
E. Plaintiffs’ Probability of Success & Possible Recovery
The Court concludes that Class Plaintiffs’ probability of success and the possible recovery associated with success supports approval of the consent judgment. As discussed with respect to the PLRA’s narrow tailoring inquiry, the Court concludes that the remedies set forth in the consent judgment address the allegations in Class Plaintiffs’ complaint. Moreover, class counsel notes that the injunctive relief addressed in areas relevant to the United States’ complaint in intervention will provide an additional benefit to many class members.
The City contends that the Court should consider “a defendant’s financial condition when deciding whether to approve a class action settlement.”
F. Opinions of Class Counsel, Class Representatives, and Absent Class Members
The opinions of class counsel strongly support entry of the proposed consent judgment.
One recurrent objection is that the proposed consent judgment does not go far enough because the Sheriffs compliance will be in appearance only, while the deficient conditions at OPP will persist or worsen.
The Fifth Circuit’s “jurisprudence [ ] makes clear that a settlement can be approved despite opposition from class members, including named plaintiffs.” Ayers, 358 F.3d at 373. The proposed consent judgment “gives OPP officials discretion in establishing the details of facility-specific policies designed to address constitutional infirmities,” but it also creates “concrete, baseline requirements.”
The Court finds that the proposed class satisfies the numerosity, typicality, commonality, and adequacy of representation requirements set forth in Rule 23(a) and additionally meets the requirements for certification pursuant to Rule 23(b)(2). Moreover, the proposed settlement fulfills the requirements associated with Rule 23(e). Accordingly, the Court certifies the class, defined as “all people who are currently or will be incarcerated at the Orleans Parish Prison,” and approves the class settlement.
CONCLUSION
Whether “budget shortfalls, a lack of political will in favor of reform,” and/or other factors are responsible for OPP’s deficiencies, these deficiencies must be remedied. Plata, 131 S.Ct. at 1936. Such conditions “are rarely susceptible of simple or straightforward solutions,” but the consent judgment presents a narrowly drawn yet comprehensive means of ensuring the protection of inmates’ federal rights. Id.
The federal rights at issue here, particularly with respect to the Constitution, establish minimum standards rather than ideals to which a correctional institution may aspire. These minimum standards are nonnegotiable. The Constitution guarantees that inmates, including convicted inmates and pretrial detainees who are presumed innocent, receive certain minimum levels of medical care and mental health care. It also guarantees that inmates will not be subject to a substantial risk of physical injury, sexual assault, or death to which officials are deliberately indifferent. The Court finds that the proposed consent judgment is the only way to overcome the years of stagnation that have permitted OPP to remain an indelible stain on
IT IS ORDERED that the motions are GRANTED.
. R. Doc. No. 101. Record citations are to Civil Action No. 12-859 unless otherwise noted.
. Consent Judgment. Record citations to "Consent Judgment” are to the document filed on this date, which incorporates the March 18, 2013 amendments discussed herein and grammatical and typographical corrections listed in a separate filing.
. R. Doc. No. 145.
. E.g., R. Doc. No. 159.
. This facility is also referred to as “Old Parish Prison.” E.g., Pl.Ex. 374, at 10; R. Doc. No. 405, at 26. The Court refers to this facility as the "original OPP” and to the seven facilities generally as "OPP.”
. Pl.Ex. 3; Pl.Ex. 374, at 7; Pl.Ex. 380.
. Pl.Ex. 85; Pl.Ex. 370; Pl.Ex. 374, at 32; Pl.Ex. 380.
. Pl.Ex. 88; Pl.Ex. 368; Pl.Ex. 374, at 13; Pl.Ex. 380.
. Pl.Ex. 374, at 15; Pl.Ex. 380.
. Pl.Ex. 374, at 16; Pl.Ex. 380.
. R. Doc. No. 374, at 7.
. Pl.Ex. 374, at 13-14; Pl.Ex. 380.
. Pl.Ex. 380.
. Pl.Ex. 380.
. The litigation before the Court is separate from that in Hamilton v. Morial, which was ongoing for approximately 40 years before that case was closed in 2008. See Hamilton Plaintiffs v. Williams Plaintiffs, 147 F.3d 367, 368 (5th Cir.1998) ("In 1969 a class action, Hamilton v. Schiro, was filed in the Eastern District of Louisiana challenging conditions in the New Orleans Parish Prison. In April 1970, the trial court found that the prison conditions were unconstitutional and issued a remedial decree, including a prisoner population cap.”); see also Civil Action No. 69-2443, R. Doc. No. 2007 (August 23, 2007) (dismissing plaintiffs' claims without prejudice), adopted by Civil Action No. 69-2443, R. Doc. No. 2041 (June 20, 2008) ("Magistrate Judge Chasez has done an outstanding job through the years and all parties to this litigation were fortunate to have her preside over this case. But this litigation has now run its natural course and the time has come to end it.”).
. Pl.Ex. 3, at 3.
. Pl.Ex. 3, at 6.
. Pl.Ex. 3, at 6.
. E.g., Pl.Ex. 3, at 60-61 (“Current classification practices are inadequate and require substantial improvements.... The Sheriff should request assistance from the National Institute of Corrections to develop a comprehensive new approach to inmate behavior management, including the development of a valid and effective system of inmate classification.").
. Pl.Ex. 1. DOJ issued a copy of the letter to Mayor Ray Nagin; T. Allen Usiy, counsel for the Sheriff; Penya Moses-Fields, City Attorney; and
. Pl.Ex. 2. DOJ issued a copy of the letter to Mayor Mitch Landrieu; T. Allen Usry, counsel for the Sheriff; Richard Cortizas, Acting City Attorney; and Jim Letten, United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Louisiana.
. Civil Action No. 12-138, R. Doc. No. 2.
. R. Doc. No. 1, at 36-37.
. R. Doc. No. 1, at 37.
. R. Doc. No. 2.
. R. Doc. No. 13. Subsequent litigation has focused on the April 2 complaint. The named plaintiffs in Civil Action No. 12-138, however, are parties to this settlement pursuant to its express terms and implicitly as class members. See Consent Judgment, at 1.
. E.g., R. Doc. No. 56.
. R. Doc. No. 71.
. R. Doc. No. 68, at 3.
. R. Doc. No. 69.
. R. Doc. No. 70.
. R. Doc. No. 70.
. R. Doc. Nos. 75, 76.
. R. Doc. Nos. 75, 76.
. R. Doc. No. 101.
. This number does not include the cover page and table of contents, which constitute an additional 4 pages and are numbered separately.
. Consent Judgment, at 1.
. Consent Judgment, at 1.
. Consent Judgment, at ii-iii.
. Consent Judgment, at 20.
. Consent Judgment, at 20-21.
. Consent Judgment, at 40-41. Monitor is defined to include "an individual and his or her team of professionals.” Consent Judgment, at 3.
. Consent Judgment, at 42. The consent judgment also requires the Sheriff to provide periodic compliance reports to the Monitor, although the Monitor is "responsible for independently verifying representations from [the Sheriff] regarding progress toward compliance, and examining supporting documentation.” Consent Judgment, at 42.
. Consent Judgment, at 41.
. Consent Judgment, at 39.
. Consent Judgment, at 39.
. Consent Judgment, at 39.
. Consent Judgment, at 38.
. Consent Judgment, at 38.
. Consent Judgment, at 38.
. Consent Judgment, at 43.
. Consent Judgment, at 43.
. Consent Judgment, at 43.
. Consent Judgment, at 43.
. Consent Judgment, at 44.
. E.g., R. Doc. Nos. 113, 126.
. E.g., R. Doc. Nos. 107, 113.
. E.g., R. Doc. No. 126.
. R. Doc. No. 145; see also R. Doc. No. 2.
. R. Doc. Nos. 384, 386, 389, 390.
. The Court has provided record citations for its findings, but these citations are not exhaustive lists of the evidence considered for a particular point. For example, the staggering level of violence at OPP is evidenced by the testimony of the experts and inmates, the number of investigated assaults, the high threshold required for such investigations, the records of hospital transports, and inmate grievances.
. These witnesses testified under their full names. As Katharine Schwartzmann, lead counsel for Class Plaintiffs, summarized: "It has taken enormous bravery for the plaintiffs to come forward and to tell the Court about their experiences. They have opened themselves up, their lives, their criminal histories up to review, to scrutiny, to cross-examination, and ... none of them stand to make a dollar out of this case." R. Doc. No. 412, at 34.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 66.
. R. Doc. No. 407, at 25.
. R. Doc. No. 408, at 82.
. R. Doc. No. 409, at 174-75.
. R. Doc. No. 410, at 57-58.
. R. Doc. No. 409, at 7.
. R. Doc. No. 411, ató.
. E.g., R. Doc. Nos. 399, 416, 427.
. E.g., R. Doc. Nos. 149, 197, 226-374, 387.
. E.g., R. Doc. Nos. 138-40, 153-55, 159, 173, 177, 179, 219-23, 367.
. 18 U.S.C. § 3626(a)(1)(A).
. The Court remains mindful of the different standards, but concurrently addresses the constitutional and statutory claims pursuant to both the jurisprudential standard and that set forth in the PLRA.
. Consent Judgment, at 44.
. The parties have not suggested the Court do otherwise. See R. Doc. No. 151, at 16 (arguing that such a stipulation is insufficient); R. Doc. No. 156-2, at 2 (noting that "Plaintiffs will provide a robust evidentiary record from which the Court can make the requisite findings under the [PLRA], The Court need not rely on the PLRA stipulation....").
. E.g., R. Doc. No. 140, at 105.
. In many cases, there is considerable overlap in the evidence relevant to different categories. For example, OPP’s deficiencies in medication administration are relevant to inmate medical care, inmate suicide, contraband practices, and inmate-on-inmate violence.
. R. Doc. No. 407, at 25. Romero has evaluated and assessed "well over a hundred prisons and jails in the United States.” R. Doc. No. 407, at 22.
. R. Doc. No. 407, at 44.
. Schwartz founded a non-profit criminal justice training and consulting organization in 1972. Since that time, he has worked with law enforcement and correctional agencies in the United States and Canada. Pl.Ex. 372, at 1. Schwartz has evaluated and assessed approximately 300 prisons and jails. R. Doc. No. 405, at 61-62.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 67-69; see also Pl.Ex. 372, at 5.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 69.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 11.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 77.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 78-77.
. Pl.Ex. 374, at 16-17.
. R. Doc. No. 412, at 38.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 8.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 8.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 78-79.
. Pl.Ex. 85; PLEx. 370.
. Pl.Ex. 85; Pl.Ex. 370; Pl.Ex. 372, at 15; Pl.Ex. 374, at 11.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 16.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 9.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 9.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 15-16.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 15.
. R. Doc. No. 407, at 71-73, 83; Pl.Ex. 374, at 11.
. R. Doc. No. 407, at 71; Pl.Ex. 374, at 11-13.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 16-19; Pl.Ex. 374, at 10.
. R. Doc. No. 406, at 113.
. R. Doc. No. 406, at 113.
. Pl.Ex. 11; Pl.Ex. 374, at 11-12.
. Pl.Ex. 11; Pl.Ex. 374, at 11-12; see also R. Doc. No. 407, at 71-72.
. Pl.Ex. 11.
. See Pl.Ex. 374, at 20, 23-24; City Ex. 13; R. Doc. No. 406, at 63; see also R. Doc. No. 411, at 82.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 86; see also R. Doc. No. 406, at 63, 161. The evidence shows that items like mops, brooms, buckets, and coolers are frequently used in assaults. There is no effective system for preventing inmates from using such items as weapons. See Pl.Ex. 372, at 21, 60.
. Pl.Ex. 374, at 23-24, 24 n. 6.
. R. Doc. No. 406, at 63, 132-33.
. Pl.Ex. 374, at 37.
. R. Doc. No. 407, at 5.
. City Ex. 13.
. City Ex. 13 ("CNN, y’all gonna get first bid on this tape ... Orleans Parish Prison exposed.”).
. City Ex. 13 ("Pop me one of them beers open ... Snort all that dope____”).
. Romero testified that he would expect some staff involvement given the level of dysfunction. R. Doc. No. 407, at 39-40. Such involvement would not be without precedent. In one documented instance, a female staff member, who was engaged in a "romantic relationship” with an inmate, warned the inmate to conceal a cell phone because of an upcoming shakedown. The staff member also sent text messages to the same inmate on his cell phone both while she was on and off duty. The staff member subsequently resigned. Pl.Ex. 58.
. R. Doc. No. 407, at 35-36.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 12-14; Pl.Ex. 374, at 30-33; R. Doc. No. 407, at 46-47.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 14; R. Doc. No. 407, at 46-50, 53, 57-62.
. Pl.Ex. 380; R. Doc. No. 406, at 82-85.
. Pl.Ex. 380; R. Doc. No. 406, at 82-85.
. Pl.Ex. 380; R. Doc. No. 405, at 83.
. E.g., Pl.Ex. 380; R. Doc. No. 407, at 46-50, 53, 57-62. Staff members acknowledged to Romero that correct placement of inmates was complicated by limitations associated with the number of beds available for certain types of inmates. Accordingly, inmates may be placed where there is space available, even if this placement is inconsistent with their classification. E.g., R. Doc. No. 407, at 53-54; see also Pl.Ex. 372, at 33 (noting that a juvenile requested a transfer because his roommate “gets aggressive,” but deputies responded that "there is nowhere for him to go”).
. R. Doc. No. 407, at 56-57.
. R. Doc. No. 407, at 56-58.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 10; Pl.Ex. 378, at 41; see R. Doc. No. 1, at 35.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 83.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 49.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 49.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 49.
. See R. Doc. No. 405, at 108 ("The same inmates who are a danger to other inmates are typically the most dangerous inmates for staff."); R. Doc. Nos. 228-29 (describing E.L.'s attacks on staff members). The Court is not familiar with E.L.’s classification status, as he was apparently not present at OPP on the date for which the classification census was sampled. See Pl.Ex. 380.
. See R. Doc. No. 407, at 109, 112.
. Pl.Ex. 223; Pl.Ex. 225; Pl.Ex. 227.
. Pl.Ex. 226.
. Pl.Ex. 224.
. Pl.Ex. 229.
. Pl.Ex. 246.
. Pl.Ex. 230.
. Pl.Ex. 230. The Court notes that there is no suggestion in the record that anyone investigated the identity of K.M.’s assailant despite the fact that his sick call request expressly cited an altercation as the source of his injuries. OPP does not utilize the data recorded by medical services to identify acts of violence, and medical staff are not subject to any policy that would encourage them to report injuries resulting from violence. Pl.Ex. 259, at 57-62; Pl.Ex. 372, at 56.
. Pl.Ex. 371.
. Pl.Ex. 222. E.L. subsequently trapped a deputy at Templeman V by grabbing his hand through a cell door food slot, and punching him in the face. The deputy was routed to the hospital. PLEx. 228.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 15. Staffing records for Tem-pleman V were provided with respect to a period ranging from May 2012 to December 2012. These records reflect that, more often than not, there was no deputy even assigned to A-3, the tier on which T.S. was attacked. Pl.Ex. 371.
. See also R. Doc. No. 405, at 82-83 (describing mentally ill and developmentally disabled inmates as vulnerable); R. Doc. No. 406, at 153 (describing mentally ill or developmentally disabled inmate forced to do "sexual dances”). "A substantial number of inmates on suicide watch” claim suicidality to avoid disciplinary segregation. Pl.Ex. 372, at 50. "That produces a toxic stew of acute psychiatric inmates, acute suicidal inmates and disciplinary segregation inmates. It is an accident waiting to occur.” Pl.Ex. 372, at 50; see also Pl.Ex. 260, at 106-07 (OPP’s medical director estimates that at least 90 percent of inmates who report being suicidal are not, in fact, suicidal).
. Pl.Ex. 374, at 38.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 121.
. Pl.Ex. 4, at 4. Although the Panel began with a focus on the now-closed South White Street Jail, it shifted its focus to OPP operations as a whole. Pl.Ex. 4, at 73. The Panel acknowledged that the shift in focus was, in part, related to the United States' allegations underlying this lawsuit. Pl.Ex. 4, at 73. The Court is mindful of the relationship between the Panel’s report, followup measures, and the United States’ complaint in intervention, and it has weighed the evidence accordingly.
. Pl.Ex. 4, at 82.
. The Court does not rely on the sexual assault rate suggested by Plaintiffs, as its applicability to current OPP facilities has not been established. See R. Doc. No. 416, at 42. In any case, however, sexual assault at OPP is all too common, and in part directly attributable to the absence of inmate supervision.
. Pl.Ex. 353.
. Pl.Ex. 353.
. Pl.Ex. 353.
. Pl.Ex. 374, at 38-41.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 112-13.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 113; see also Pl.Ex. 60.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 38.
. Pl.Ex. 374, at 38.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 112-13.
. Pl.Ex. 5 (video and transcript).
. See Pl.Ex. 5, at 54. According to Schwartz, it is common for OPP inmates who report sexual assaults to be Mirandized. R. Doc. No. 405, at 115 ("Before hello or anything else, the first thing that the investigator does is to Mirandize the victim.”).
. Pl.Ex. 5, at 41-42, 51.
. Pl.Ex. 5, at 41-42, 51.
. See R. Doc. No. 406, at 89. Schwartz asked staff members about inmates who report sexual assaults. According to Schwartz, “nobody said every inmate is lying,” but staff suggested "most of these inmates are fabricating,” to some extent. Schwartz also noted that "SOD staff continually violate the most crucial principle of medical care and mental health care in jails[:] custody and security staff may not act as gatekeepers for health or mental health services.” When SOD members determine a sexual assault report is unfounded, they refuse to provide the inmate with even a "cursory medical assessment.” PI. Ex. 372, at 39.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 26-27.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 30.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 31.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 31.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 31-32.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 32.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 32.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 32.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 32-33.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 31, 33.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 33-34.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 34.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 34.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 34-35.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 35.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 38-39. E.S. testified that he would have been "shocked” if the guard actually walked down the tier but, had the guard done so, "[i]t would have probably saved me.” R. Doc. No. 405, at 41.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 39.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 36.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 36.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 36.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 36-37.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 37.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 37-38.
. Additional details from E.S.’s testimony reveal other troubling circumstances surrounding his assault, including that it may have been foreseeable and preventable as an act of retaliation against E.S., organized by someone against whom E.S. was a witness in a criminal trial. R. Doc. No. 405, at 47-48.
. These initials are used for convenience. The inmate’s name has been obscured in the record, although other identifying information is available.
. The record suggests that this was one of two sexual assaults A.A. experienced at OPP. Pl.Ex. 324.
. The abrasions were still visible on January 11,2013. Pl.Ex. 324.
. Pl.Ex. 324. Schwartz's testimony suggested this witness was a deputy. R. Doc. No. 405, at 117-18. The Court discounts this suggestion as a likely misstatement because it is inconsistent with the underlying evidence.
. Pl.Ex. 324.
. Pl.Ex. 324.
. Pl.Ex. 324.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 118-19.
. E.g., Pl.Ex. 67; R. Doc. No. 405, at 119. According to A.A., he was "not the only one being tied up” and subjected to such attacks. Pl.Ex. 324.
. Pl.Ex. 374, at 33.
. Pl.Ex. 374, at 33.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 11.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 122-23.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 123.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 125-26.
. Pl.Ex. 302; R. Doc. No. 405, at 123.
. Pl.Ex. 302; R. Doc. No. 405, at 123.
. Pl.Ex. 302; R. Doc. No. 405, at 123-24.
. Pl.Ex. 305.
. PLEx. 305.
. Pl.Ex. 305.
. Pl.Ex. 305.
. Pl.Ex. 305; R. Doc. No. 405, at 124.
. Pl.Ex. 374, at 37.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 125-26.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 47.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 11, 40; Pl.Ex. 374, at 34.
. Pl.Ex. 374, at 37.
. Pl.Ex. 374, at 33.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 88.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 40; PLEx. 374, at 34.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 87.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 28.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 92.
. R. Doc. No. 406, at 87.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 101-02; Pl.Ex. 56.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 101-02; Pl.Ex. 56.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 102.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 102.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 40. Schwartz describes SOD as a tightly knit unit, which staff members perceive as elite. Pl.Ex. 372, at 40.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 90-91; Pl.Ex. 275.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 40.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 40.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 40.
. Pl. Ex 372, at 43; Pl.Ex. 374, at 17; R. Doc. No. 406, at 136-37. Although discussed in this subsection, the use of tier reps is relevant to several aspects of inmate safety and security.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 43.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 43-44; Pl.Ex. 374, at 17. Public comments from inmates endorsing the proposed consent judgment also discuss such "hits.” See, e.g., R. Doc. No. 240.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 43.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 43-44; Pl.Ex. 374, at 17; see also PI. Exs. 43, 47, 55 (describing stabbings related to food distribution); R. Doc. No. 406, at 138 (noting fights resulted from tier rep’s manipulation of food distribution); R. Doc. No. 407, at 43.
. See, e.g., Pl.Ex. 32; see also Pl.Ex. 372, at 44. This statement assumes that OPP would not knowingly choose such inmates to be tier reps. But see Pl.Ex. 372, at 44 ("A male inmate casually referred to the fact that the staff usually picked the person they perceived to be the toughest inmate on the unit as the tier rep.”).
. R. Doc. No. 406, at 136-42.
. R. Doc. No. 406, at 138.
. R. Doc. No. 406, at 138.
. R. Doc. No. 406, at 138-39.
. R. Doc. No. 406, at 139.
. R. Doc. No. 406, at 141-42. In another instance, female inmates reported tier reps openly engaging in sexual activities with other inmates, which an investigation confirmed. Pl.Ex. 374, at 18.
. R. Doc. No. 406, at 142-43.
. R. Doc. No. 406, at 143.
. R. Doc. No. 406, at 143.
. R. Doc. No. 406, at 144.
. R. Doc. No. 406, at 145-46.
. R. Doc. No. 406, at 145.
. R. Doc. No. 406, at 145.
. R. Doc. No. 406, at 146.
. R. Doc. No. 406, at 146-47.
. R. Doc. No. 406, at 147.
. R. Doc. No. 406, at 147.
. Pl.Ex. 374, at 19.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 44.
. Pl.Ex. 26.
. Pl.Ex.26.
. Pl.Ex. 26.
. Pl.Ex. 26.
. Pl.Ex. 26.
. Pl.Ex. 26. The same staff member was involved in an altercation with an inmate in which the staff member admitted to using shackles to choke the inmate. Pl.Ex. 7.
. Pl.Ex. 26.
. See Pl.Ex. 41; Pl.Ex. 61.
. Consent Judgment, at 12-13.
. Consent Judgment, at 17-18.
. Consent Judgment, at 18.
. Consent Judgment, at 5.
. Consent Judgment, at 10-11.
. Consent Judgment, at 16.
. Pl.Ex. 352, at 11.
. R. Doc. No. 408, at 156-57.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 27.
. R. Doc. No. 408, at 156; see Pl.Ex. 378, at 38 (describing individual with "psychotic symptoms” "with approximately ten plates of molded rotten food lying on the unoccupied upper bunk,” in a "dirty, malodorous” environment).
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 28.
. PLEx. 376, at 27.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 35.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 38; Pl.Ex. 378, at 31; R. Doc. No. 408, at 98-99.
. R. Doc. No. 408, at 82.
. Pl.Ex. 376. From 1993 to 2000, he was involved in a University of Washington/Department of Corrections collaboration project that established an inpatient residential mental health program at one of the prisons. R. Doc. No. 408, at 80. Between 1990 and 2008, Dr. Gage worked at Western State Hospital in Lakewood, Washington, setting up continuity of care between jails and the state hospital and consulting with jails on issues such as involuntary medication. R. Doc. No. 408, at 79; see also Pl.Ex. 376.
. R. Doc. No. 408, at 83.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 35.
. R. Doc. No. 410, at 58-60; see also Pl.Ex. 80-2.
. Pl.Ex. 80-2.
. Pl.Ex. 80-2.
. Pl.Ex. 80-2.
. R. Doc. No. 408, at 110.
. R. Doc. No. 408, at 110.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 20; see also Pl.Ex. 74.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 20; see also Pl.Ex. 74.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 20.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 20.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 20.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 20.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 20.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 20; see also Pl.Ex. 74.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 20.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 20-21.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 21.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 21.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 21.
. PlJEx. 376, at 21.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 37.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 37.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 32; R. Doc. No. 408, at 169. T.W. also told Dr. Gage, without being asked, that the OPP psychiatrist sometimes asks her, " ‘Are you suicidal or homicidal?’ and that's it.” Pl.Ex. 376, at 21.
. R. Doc. No. 408, at 122-23; see also Pl.Ex. 259, at 102-03.
. Pl.Ex. 312; Pl.Ex. 376, at 39-40; R. Doc. No. 405, at 124-25; R. Doc. No. 408, at 126-27.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 38.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 38.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 38.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 38; R. Doc. No. 408, at 114.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 39.
. R. Doc. No. 405-06.
. R. Doc. No. 406, at 408.
. R. Doc. No. 406, at 148.
. R. Doc. No. 406, at 148-150.
. D.R. testified that he was not sure how other inmates reattached the bag. "I didn't have the stomach for it.” R. Doc. No. 406, at 148. The Court notes that the inmates who took it upon themselves to care for H.T. were subject to the health risks potentially associated with direct exposure to fecal matter. "Frequent exposure to the waste of other persons can certainly present health hazards that constitute a serious risk of substantial harm.” Gates v. Cook, 376 F.3d at 341.
. R. Doc. No. 406, at 150; see also Pl.Ex. 376, at 20 (describing instance in which a different inmate was "not given his antipsychotic medication on at least one occasion because he was in a towel rather than jail clothing").
. R. Doc. No. 406, at 150.
. R. Doc. No. 408, at 150; Pl.Ex. 76-1.
. Pl.Ex. 76-2.
. Pl.Ex. 76-1.
. Pl.Ex. 76-1.
. R. Doc. No. 408, at 150.
. R. Doc. No. 408, at 151.
. Pl.Ex. 76-1.
. Pl.Ex. 76-1.
. Pl.Ex. 76-2.
. R. Doc. No. 408, at 150-51.
. Pl.Ex. 76-2.
. R. Doc. No. 408, at 150-51.
. See Pl.Ex. 167 (defining, in OPP’s suicide lecture materials, “passive suieidality” as "wanting to be dead”).
. R. Doc. No. 408, at 151.
. Pl.Ex. 76-2.
. R. Doc. No. 409, at 174-75.
. R. Doc. No. 409, at 174. For approximately the last nine years, she has also served as a consent judgment compliance monitor with respect to mental health care in Mississippi’s juvenile correctional facilities. Pl.Ex.- 379, at 4-5. She has previously served as the Director of Psychiatry for Louisiana State University Health Science Center’s Juvenile Corrections Program. Pl.Ex. 379, at 5.
. R. Doc. No. 409, at 213.
. R. Doc. No. 409, at 213.
. R. Doc. No. 410, at 7; see also Pl.Ex. 378, at 41-42.
. Pl.Ex. 378, at 42, 45; R. Doc. No. 410, at 11-12.
. R. Doc. No. 410, at 13-14.
. R. Doc. No. 410, at 14.
. R. Doc. No. 410, at 15.
. R. Doc. No. 410, at 15.
. R. Doc. No. 408, at 102.
. R. Doc. No. 408, at 101, 114-16.
. R. Doc. No. 408. at 101-02.
. R. Doc. No. 408, at 101-02; R. Doc. No. 408, at 102-03. As Schwartz noted, cessation of medication may be "logical if there was a reliable system for reassessing those inmates at a predetermined time, and if inmates could reliably get to sick call.” Pl.Ex. 372, at 25-26. The evidence demonstratés that there are no such reliable systems in place.
. R. Doc. No. 409, at 185; see also Pl.Ex. 180.
. R. Doc. No. 409, at 185-86; see also Pl.Ex. 180.
. Pl.Ex. 378, at 36-37.
. R. Doc. No. 409, at 189-90.
. R. Doc. No. 409, at 190; see also Pl.Ex. 378, at 37; Pl.Ex. 180.
. Pl.Ex. 378. at 37: R. Doc. No. 409. at 191.
. Pl.Ex. 378, at 37; R. Doc. No. 409, at 191.
. R. Doc. No. 409, at 191.
. R. Doc. No. 409, at 191.
. R. Doc. No. 409, at 192.
. R. Doc. No. 409, at 192.
. Pl.Ex. 378, at 22.
. Pl.Ex. 378, at 22. R. Doc. No. 409, at 191.
. R. Doc. No. 409, at 192.
. Dr. Gage’s report suggests that he witnessed C.F. being removed for evaluation, but his subsequent review of her records showed no evidence of any such evaluation or hospitalization. Pl.Ex. 376, at 48.
. The initials of this inmate are actually T.S., but they are not used here so as to avoid conflation with the other T.S., who was attacked by E.L.
. Pl.Ex. 73.
. Pl.Ex. 73.
. Pl.Ex. 73.
. Pl.Ex. 73.
. Pl.Ex. 73.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 19.
. Pl.Ex. 378, at 15.
. Pl.Ex. 378, at 15.
. Pl.Ex. 378, at 15.
. Pl.Ex. 378, at 15.
. Pl.Ex. 378, at 15.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 19; Pl.Ex. 378, at 16.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 19; Pl.Ex. 378, at 15-16.
. Pl.Ex. 91.
. R. Doc. No. 376, at 16; R. Doc. No. 408, at 160-61; see also Pl.Ex. 91. R.C. submitted a sick call request on November 26, 2012, stating, "I would like to receive my medicine that helps to keep my mind calm. I was being housed at Allen Correctional Facility. I was taking Haldol and Benadryl. Thank you & God Bless.” Pl.Ex. 91. The timing of this request suggests it may have been associated with his transfer.
. R. Doc. No. 408, at 160-61; see also Pl.Ex. 376, at 15; Pl.Ex. 91.
. Pl.Ex. 91.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 15; R. Doc. No. 408, at 161.
. R. Doc. No. 408, at 161.
. R. Doc. No. 408, at 161.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 43. Dr. Gage described R.C. as someone who "would have readily qualified for involuntary treatment with antipsychotics.” R. Doc. No. 408, at 161. In his report, Dr. Gage detailed numerous additional examples of inmates at OPP who were left untreated. See PI. Ex. 376, at 9-27.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 29.
. R. Doc. No. 409, at 196. Dr. Glindmeyer also testified that youth inmates seem to be controlled by another youth inmate, as opposed to by the deputies. This youth inmate was physically the largest inmate, and the other youth inmates appeared to wait for his acquiescence before responding to Dr. Glindmeyer’s questions. R. Doc. No. 410, at 8-9.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 29.
. R. Doc. No. 408, at 132.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 42.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 29.
. R. Doc. No. 408, at 186-187.
. R. Doc. No. 408, at 187.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 50.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 45.
. R. Doc. No. 408, at 171.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 45.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 46.
. See also Pl.Ex. 378, at 23.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 45-46.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 47.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 47.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 30; see e.g., Pl.Ex. 78; Pl.Ex. 81.
. R. Doc. No. 406, at 85.
. E.g., R. Doc. No. 410, at 46.
. R. Doc. No. 406, at 85-86.
. R. Doc. No. 406, at 85-86.
. R. Doc. No. 406, at 86; R. Doc. No. 408, at 159.
. R. Doc. No. 408, at 89, 94.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 30.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 31.
. R. Doc. No. 409, at 100.
. R. Doc. No. 409, at 100.
. R. Doc. No. 408, at 179-80.
. R. Doc. No. 408, at 177-78; see Pl.Ex. 376, at 34 — 35; Pl.Ex. 378, at 23. An inmate on suicide watch showed Schwartz a large bag of pills and a cup full of pills, totaling approximately 75 pills, which he had been stockpiling. Pl.Ex. 372, at 24-25. Schwartz reported the situation to OPP’s medical director. Pl.Ex. 372, at 25.
. R. Doc. No. 410, at 52-53.
. Pl.Ex. 376, at 50.
. Consent Judgment, at 20.
. Consent Judgment, at 21.
. Consent Judgment, at 22, 30.
. R. Doc. No. 408, at 187.
. R. Doc. No. 407, at 98.
. R. Doc. No. 407, at 100.
. R. Doc. No. 407, at 98, 101; see Pl.Ex. 374, at 45.
. E.g., Pl.Ex. 90; Pl.Ex. 374, at 46.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 55.
. R. Doc. No. 407, at 98.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 54; R. Doc. No. 412, at 26-27; City Ex. 13; see also R. Doc. No. 407, at 45 (unsanitaiy conditions portrayed in Ci1y Ex. 13 persist).
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 54.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 56; Several inmate letters described showers with "leech like” or “slug like” creatures, which one inmate described as "gnats before they transform.” E.g., R. Doc. Nos. 274, 294.
. R. Doc. No. 409, at 103-04.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 26-27.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 56; Pl.Ex. 374, at 47.
. Consent Judgment at 31-32.
. R. Doc. No. 407, at 102-03.
. Romero requested that staff members locate an emergency key for one of the housing units. Staff members located a key within about ten minutes, but it was the wrong key. A key located after an hour worked for one door but not for another. Ultimately, Romero concluded that the keys were kept in the warden’s office, but the warden is only there during the day and the keys are not otherwise available to staff. Romero suspected the locks had been sabotaged by inmates. R. Doc. No. 407, at 104-07.
. PLEx. 374, at 21.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 21, 45.
. Pl.Ex. 374, at 46.
. R. Doc. No. 407, at 103-04.
. Pl.Ex. 62.
. Pl.Ex. 62. The staff member was suspended for 5 days.
. E.g., R. Doc. No. 405, at 137; see also Pl.Ex. 372, at 44-46.
. R. Doc. No. 441, at 87-88.
. Consent Judgment, at 34.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 86.
. Stingers are constructed by cutting a live electrical wire with a shank and attaching a washer to the end of the wire. Inmates use stingers to heat up food. R. Doc. No. 406, at 101-02.
. Limited English Proficiency ("LEP”) characterizes individuals who cannot speak, write, or understand the English language such that their ability to communicate is limited. R. Doc. No. 407, at 108.
. R. Doc. No. 70, at 12. While conditions at OPP appear obviously inconsistent with the Prison Rape Elimination Act ("PREA”), PREA is not one of Plaintiffs' underlying causes of action. See, e.g., Ball v. Beckworth, No. 11-37, 2011 WL 4375806, at *4 (D.Mont. Aug. 31, 2011). Nonetheless, the parties appear to agree that the consent judgment should be tailored to remedy PREA violations. Compare R. Doc. No. 416, at 48 (filing by Plaintiffs, asserting: "The proposed Consent Judgment’s remedies regarding sexual abuse and sexual assault are the minimum necessary to correct OPP’s PREA-related deficiencies.”); R. Doc. No. 154, at 8 (suggesting that the consent judgment is not narrowly tailored to remedy PREA violations). The Court concludes that the consent judgment is narrowly drawn with respect to constitutional standards. To the extent PREA standards are relevant, the consent judgment is PLRA compliant with respect to
. R. Doc. No. 407, at 109.
. R. Doc. No. 407, at 112-13.
. R. Doc. No. 407, at 108-11.
. R. Doc. No. 407, at 110; see also R. Doc. No. 81-1, at 11 (English translation of declaration describing inability to obtain medical care because of language barrier).
. R. Doc. No. 407, at 111.
. R. Doc. No. 407, at 109, 112.
. R. Doc. No. 407, at 113.
. R. Doc. No. 407, at 113.
. R. Doc. No. 407, at 113.
. Consent Judgment, at 36-37.
. E.g., Pl.Ex. 374, at 49-50.
. R. Doc. No. 427, at 11 (citing Cason v. Seck-inger, 231 F.3d 777, 785 (11th Cir.2000)).
. E.g., R. Doc. No. 126, at 3.
. R. Doc. No. 153, at 7; see also R. Doc. No. 427, at 9-10.
. See R. Doc. No. 183, at 1-2.
. R. Doc. No. 219, at 1 (quoting R. Doc. No. 183).
. R. Doc. No. 219, at 2.
. R. Doc. No. 219, at 3-4.
. R. Doc. No. 183-2. Although the City did not object to the amendment of the monitoring provision, the Court includes it because it is relevant to the Court’s determination that additional notice to the class members was not required. The City has also not objected to the provision requiring that it "work in good faith to determine available cost saving measures.” See City of Miami, 664 F.2d at 442-44 (noting which provisions had been objected to by a third party); id. at 444 (The district court's "approval of the decree, insofar as it affected [the parties] and, patently, insofar as it is not objected to by the [third party] must be affirmed.”).
. R. Doc. No. 219, at 3.
. R. Doc. No. 183-2, at 1.
. R. Doc. No. 153, at 4.
. R. Doc. No. 409, at 15.
. R. Doc. No. 409, at 17-19.
. R. Doc. No. 409, at 19.
. R. Doc. No. 179, at 6.
. R. Doc. No. 412, at 62.
. E.g., R. Doc. No. 409, at 17-18.
. As counsel for the Sheriff articulated, "it's meant to be a jail. It’s not a hospital, it’s not a mental health ward, but that’s what’s coming into the jail more and more because all the health services are being cut everywhere else. So they are dumping them at the Sheriff's doorstep.” R. Doc. No. 412, at 45; see also 42 U.S.C.A. § 15601(3) ("America's jails and prisons house more mentally ill individuals than all of the Nation’s psychiatric hospitals combined. As many as 16 percent of inmates in State prisons and jails, and 7 percent of Federal inmates, suffer from mental illness.”).
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 135-37.
. Schwartz testified that, while the videos portraying inmates armed with a loaded gun, gambling, using intravenous drugs, and freely exiting and entering OPP to wander Bourbon Street are several years old, "my concern is that some of that could reoccur or is reoccurring” such that inmates could be endangering the non-incarcerated residents of New Orleans. R. Doc. No. 412, at 32.
. R. Doc. No. 412, at 42; R. Doc. No. 407, at 44 ("The security failures of the jail extend to the community."); Pl.Ex. 372, at 5 (OPP facilities are "significantly more dangerous for staff than most jails, and for no good reason.”).
. R. Doc. No. 153, at 5.
. See, e.g., R. Doc. No. 412, at 38.
. R. Doc. No. 153, at 6; R. Doc. No. 427, at 11.
. R. Doc. No. 151, at 14-15.
. In Williams, the Fifth Circuit observed that "the district court had to bear the full responsibility in this case to safeguard the interests of those individuals who were affected by the decree but were not represented in the negotiations.” 729 F.2d at 1560. The Court has not interpreted Williams to indicate that the City's participation in negotiations excuses the Court from its “full responsibility” to safeguard the City's interests as a third party.
. R. Doc. No. 159, at 2.
. See Schlanger, 81 N.Y.U. L.Rev. at 562-63, 623 (noting "not so very hard fought” litigation involving sheriffs).
. R. Doc. No. 140, at 2.
. R. Doc. No. 154, at 6.
. See R. Doc. Nos. 77, 81.
. R. Doc. No. 81; see also R. Doc. No. 156-6 (May 31, 2012 email from the City's then-Chief of Litigation, Sharonda Williams, to counsel for the United States and the Sheriff) ("I made some proposed edits to the last version that was circulated. Please see attached.”); R. Doc. No. 156-7 (July 11, 2012 email from the City's then-Chief of Litigation, Sharonda Williams, to counsel for the United States and Sheriff) ("See [] my redline of the most recent draft.”).
. R. Doc. No. 82 (listing participants).
. R. Doc. No. 82.
. R. Doc. No. 82.
. R. Doc. No. 86; see also R. Doc. No. 92.
. Another section of the Court has rejected this assertion. See United States v. City of New Orleans, 947 F.Supp.2d 601, 619, 2013 WL 2351266, at *10 (E.D.La.2013) (Morgan, J.) ("The City’s argument that it had no knowledge of the potential cost ramifications for the OPP Consent Decree at the time it signed the NOPD Consent Decree is patently false. At least as early as July 19, 2012, several days before the City signed the NOPD Consent Decree on July 24, 2012, the City was on notice that the Sheriff intended to request '$22.5 million of "new” estimated costs’ that would ‘bring the total budget for OPP to $45 million’ for 2013.”) (modifications omitted).
. See R. Doc. No. 86.
. E.g„ R. Doc. No. 412, at 53-54; R. Doc. No. 427, at 16.
. R. Doc. No. 407, at 32 ("In terms of the American Correctional Association, it does take it up to a little bit higher level because they have other things in those standards that go beyond the minimal required to operate a safe jail.”).
. R. Doc. No. 412, at 54.
. R. Doc. No. 412, at 39-40.
. R. Doc. No. 126, at 3 (emphasis in original). In the same order, the Court ensured the City was on notice of its obligation to argue at the fairness hearing any state-law funding defenses related to the overbreadth of the proposed consent judgment or the constitutionality of the conditions at OPP. The purpose of this approach was to avoid having to call the same expert witnesses and hear the same testimony at the funding hearing.
. R. Doc. No. 153, at 8-11.
. R. Doc. No. 153, at 8.
. - R. Doc. No. 159, at 19.
. R. Doc. No. 156-2, at 6.
. Pl.Ex. 372, at 20.
. R. Doc. No. 391.
. R. Doc. No. 126, at 3; R. Doc. No. 395.
. R. Doc. No. 126, at 3.
. See, e.g., R. Doc. No. 427, at 14.
. R. Doc. No. 427, at 14 (citing R. Doc. No. 101-3, at 43).
. R. Doc. No. 427, at 14-15.
. Consent Judgment, at 9.
. R. Doc. No. 405, at 21.
. R. Doc. No. 159, at 23.
. E.g„ R. Doc. No. 229, at 4-7; R. Doc. No. 237. at 2.
. Consent Judgment, at 44.
. R. Doc. Nos. 327, 329.
. R. Doc. Nos. 264. 320. 325.
. R. Doc. Nos. 256, 319, 322.
. E.g., R. Doc. Nos. 238, 251-54, 373.
. See R. Doc. No. 159, at 14 ("While the City does not question that constitutional standards must be satisfied, the federal Courts, like the Legislature, have recognized that serving steaks and cognac to inmates is not a constitutional entitlement."); R. Doc. No. 250, at 2 ("We are not asking for 'steaks and cognac.' We are asking that the over 2,000 people who continue to be held in the Orleans Parish jail be held in a safe, secure, and humane environment, with appropriate medical and mental health services and conditions fit for human habitation.”).
. E.g., R. Doc. No. 241; R. Doc. No. 250, at 2-3; R. Doc. No. 260; R. Doc. No. 331.
. R. Doc. No. 145.
. R. Doc. No. 145-1, at 6-7; see also R. Doc. No. 1, at 11; Consent Judgment, at 1. The City contends that the other parties have “marginalized” the City, such that "the City is not in a position to address” the certification issue. The City contends, however, that “it is inordinate, and tantamount to overkill, to certify a class in this case.” R. Doc. No. 159, at 8-9.
. Pl.Ex. 380.
. The Court need not address the Title VI claim brought by the United States because Class Plaintiffs alleged only constitutional claims.
. The Court notes that this case involves a single administrative entity responsible for multiple facilities. The evidence shows that the proposed consent judgment’s relief is appropriately applied to all seven facilities.
. As discussed above, the details relevant to Plaintiffs’ medical and mental health care claims, and the associated remedies, largely overlap. Accordingly, the Court considers the two claims together.
. R. Doc. No. 1, at 2-3.
. E.g., R. Doc. Nos. 229, 235-37.
. SeeR. Doc. No. 129; 131.
. See R. Doc. No. 129.
. See R. Doc. No. 129.
. See R. Doc. No. 129.
. R. Doc. No. 213.
. E.g., R. Doc. Nos. 395, 399.
. See R. Doc. No. 138, at 8; R. Doc. No. 411, at 22-23.
. R. Doc. No. 138, at 9.
. R. Doc. No. 138, at 9.
. R. Doc. No. 138, at 11 (citing R. Doc. No. 138-1).
. R. Doc. No. 138, at 11 (citing R. Doc. No. 138-1).
. R. Doc. No. 427, at 8.
. E.g., R. Doc. No. 137-4.
. R. Doc. No. 138, at 11.
. R. Doc. No. 427, at 8.
. See Cody v. Hillard, 88 F.Supp.2d 1049, 1059 (D.S.D.2000) ("This factor is not particularly important in the present case because the action is not for monetary damages.”).
. E.g., R. Doc. No. 138.
. E.g., R. Doc. Nos. 227, 229, 269, 270, 274, 275-76, 334, 353.
. E.g., R. Doc. No. 235.
. E.g., R. Doc. No. 227 (generally approving of proposed consent judgment, but noting concerns about noncompliance).
. E.g., R. Doc. No. 228.
. R. Doc. No. 1, at 37.
. E.g., R. Doc. Nos. 227, 229. While some inmates appear to no longer reside at OPP, the Court will address their contentions as objections without ruling on class standing.
. R. Doc. No. 229.
. E.g., R. Doc. No. 227.
. R. Doc. No. 229, at 10.
. R. Doc. No. 140, at 123.
. See, e.g., R. Doc. No. 392.