Avila v. Schnell

U.S. District Court, District of Minnesota

Avila v. Schnell

Trial Court Opinion

                 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                            
                    DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                                


 Adolfo Gutierrez Avila, Jr.,       Case No. 22-cv-3180 (NEB/DLM)        

               Plaintiff,                                                

 v.                                                                      
                                       ORDER AND REPORT                  
 Paul Schnell, Vicki Janssen, Jeanette  AND RECOMMENDATION               
 Wilson, Jessica Olson, and Tina Sneen,                                  
 being sued in their individual capacities,                              

               Defendants.                                               


    This matter is before the Court on Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss pro se Plaintiff 
Adolfo Gutierrez Avila, Jr.’s First Amended Complaint, Mr. Avila’s de facto motion to 
further amend his complaint, and Mr. Avila’s renewed Motion to Appoint Counsel. (Docs. 
115, 117 (Motion to Dismiss & Memorandum in Support), 133–34 (Second Amended 
Complaint1  &  Memorandum  in  Support),  145,  147  (Motion  to  Appoint  Counsel  & 
Memorandum in Support).)                                                  
    Mr. Avila, an inmate in Minnesota state prison, asserts each of the named defendants 
violated  his  Eighth  Amendment  rights  in  establishing  and  instituting  a  COVID-19 
mitigation strategy that caused him to become infected with the virus in November of 2020, 

1 On Mr. Avila’s docket, this document is entitled Amended Complaint. (Doc. 133.) In 
fact, it is his Second Amended Complaint, having already amended once as a matter of 
course.  (See  Doc.  140  (directing  Clerk’s  Office  to  file  Mr.  Avila’s  first  amended 
complaint), Doc. 141 (First Amended Complaint).) For reasons identified in the Court’s 
August 15, 2023 Text-Only Order (Doc. 140), the ordering of these documents on the 
docket may cause some confusion.                                          
and again about 18 months later. (Doc. 141 at 7, 14.) According to his First Amended 
Complaint, Mr. Avila seeks relief on behalf 44 similarly-situated inmates as well. (Docs. 

141 at 1, 143 (denying Plaintiff’s motion for class certification without prejudice).)  
    Defendants moved to dismiss Mr. Avila’s First Amended Complaint because (1) he 
failed to allege personal involvement of any individual defendant sufficient to establish 
liability;  (2)  the  COVID-19  mitigation  strategies  that  Mr.  Avila  attacks  were  not 
unconstitutionally deficient; and (3) each of the defendants would be entitled to qualified 
immunity. (Doc. 117.) Mr. Avila responded to Defendants’ motion directly (Doc. 125), 

and  also  by  seeking  to  amend  his  complaint  again  (Docs.  133  (Second  Amended 
Complaint), 134 (Memorandum in Support)). Defendants oppose the Court’s consideration 
of Mr. Avila’s Second Amended Complaint due to technical and procedural deficiencies, 
and also based on futility, asserting that Mr. Avila’s proposed amendments would not 
revive his claims. (Doc. 142.)                                            

    For the reasons stated below, the Court recommends denying Mr. Avila’s motion to 
amend his complaint based on futility, as the Second Amended Complaint fails to state a 
claim. The Court further recommends granting Defendants’ motion to dismiss Mr. Avila’s 
First Amended Complaint, which contains fewer relevant factual allegations than his 
Second Amended Complaint. Finally, the Court recommends denying Mr. Avila’s renewed 

motion to appoint counsel.                                                
                         BACKGROUND                                      
Procedural Matters                                                        

    Mr. Avila filed this prisoner civil rights action under 
42 U.S.C. § 1983
 on December 
27, 2022, alleging that five Minnesota Department of Corrections (“DOC”) prison officials 
violated his Eighth Amendment right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment while 
imprisoned.  (Doc.  1  at  7.)  He  moved  to  amend  his  complaint  on  July  5,  2023, 
contemporaneously filing his First Amended Complaint and several affidavits and exhibits. 
(Docs. 34 (Motion), 34-1 (First Amended Complaint), 39-111 (Affidavits and Exhibits).) 

Because Mr. Avila was entitled to amend his complaint as a matter of course, see Fed. R. 
Civ. P. 15(a)(1), the Court denied Mr. Avila’s motion to amend as moot, and ordered him 
to file a clean copy of his First Amended Complaint. (Doc. 124.) Meanwhile, Defendants 
moved to dismiss Mr. Avila’s First Amended Complaint. (Doc. 115.)         
    Mr. Avila did not file a clean copy of the First Amended Complaint in response to 

the  Court’s  order.  Rather,  he  filed  a  Second  Amended  Complaint,  together  with  a 
memorandum  in  support  of  the  Second  Amended  Complaint.  (Docs.  133  (Second 
Amended Complaint), 134 (Memorandum in Support).) Given Mr. Avila’s failure to file a 
clean  First  Amended  Complaint,  the  Court  directed  the  Clerk’s  Office  to  file  the 
previously-submitted First Amended Complaint (found at Doc. 34-1) as a new docket 

entry. (Doc. 140.) Subsequently, Defendants filed a memorandum opposing Mr. Avila’s 
motion to amend his complaint (Doc. 142), and Mr. Avila renewed his motion to appoint 
counsel (Doc. 145).                                                       
Substantive Background – The First Amended Complaint2                     
    Mr.  Avila’s  case  concerns  the  COVID-19  pandemic’s  effect  on  Minnesota 

prisoners. Mr. Avila is an inmate who, during the operative period of the complaint, was 
at the Minnesota Correctional Facility at Rush City (“MCF-Rush City”). (Doc. 141 at 7, 
14.) Each of the defendants works for or with the Minnesota Department of Corrections 
(“DOC”): Paul Schnell is the DOC commissioner; Vicki Janssen is the Warden of MCF-
Rush City; Jeanette Wilson is the Health Services Administrator for MCF-Rush City; 
Jessica Olson is the registered nurse (“RN”) Supervisor for MCF-Rush City; and Tina 

Sneed is listed as “C.O. Health Services” for MCF-Rush City (collectively “the DOC 
Defendants”). (Id. at 6.) Mr. Avila alleges that during the COVID-19 pandemic, the DOC 
Defendants acted with deliberate indifference to his health and safety by their practice “of 
intentionally, incorrectly applying quarantine measures to Minnesota inmates (Avila) so to 
overcome the covid-19 outbreaks faster.” (Id. at 7.) Mr. Avila contends that because of the 

DOC Defendants’ actions, he was exposed to and infected with the COVID-19 virus on 
November 13, 2020. (Id.)                                                  
    More specifically, Mr. Avila alleges the following facts. On November 5, 2020, Mr. 
Avila’s cellmate tested positive for COVID-19. (Id. at 8.) Mr. Avila tested negative. (Id.) 
Mr. Avila’s cellmate was not separated from him. (Id. at 8, 13.) Rather, Mr. Avila and his 

infected cellmate were locked “[i]n their 8 ft. by 12 ft. two men cell for at least 10 days 23 


2 Defendants recognize that since this matter comes before the Court on a motion to 
dismiss, all factual matters in Mr. Avila’s complaint are accepted as true. (Doc. 117 at 2 
n.1.)                                                                     
hours a day.” (Id. at 8.) Mr. Avila sent a kite (that is, written correspondence with staff) to 
health services on November 14, 2020, complaining that he was not being separated from 

his sick cellmate. (Id.) On November 19, 2020, Mr. Avila was informed he had tested 
positive for COVID-19. (Id.) According to Mr. Avila, his infection was the product of 
DOC’s pattern of “intentional compelled exposure,” with no use of single cells. (Id. at 16.) 
Mr. Avila avers that he became infected with the COVID-19 virus again 18 months after 
his  first  infection,  which  he  also  attributes  to  DOC’s  failed  COVID-19  mitigation 
measures. (Id. at 10, 14, 16.)                                            

    Mr. Avila alleges that each of the DOC Defendants treated him (and all Minnesota 
inmates) with deliberate indifference to their safety. (Id. at 7.) He claims that Paul Schnell 
“created a policy or custom under which unconstitutional practices occurred and allowed 
the  continuance  of  such  a  policy  or  custom.”  (Id.  at  10.)  According  to  Mr.  Avila, 
Commissioner Schnell had the power and duty to protect inmates under his custody and 

care and failed in that duty “during the unprecedented COVID-19 virus global pandemic.” 
(Id. at 11.) Mr. Avila asserts that Commissioner Schnell knew of the infection risks of 
COVID-19, and knew that social distancing was the most effective mitigation strategy, yet 
refused  to  implement  that  strategy  in  Minnesota  prisons.  (Id.  at  12–13.)  Instead  of 
practicing social distancing, COVID-19 infected inmates were not removed from their 

units and not separated from their cellmates, even if the cellmate tested negative. (Id. at 
13.)                                                                      
    As for Warden Vicki Janssen, Mr. Avila states that she failed to adopt, implement, 
or enforce mitigating measures such as social distancing to protect inmates at MCF-Rush 
City. (Id. at 6, 14.) Mr. Avila accuses Warden Janssen of failing to “respond to evidence 
of misconduct by subordinates on the Isolation policy,” leading him to become infected 

with COVID-19 twice while housed at MCF-Rush City. (Id.)                  
    As for Defendants Jeanette Wilson, Jessica Olson, and Tina Sneen, Mr. Avila 
contends that each of them failed to “adopt, follow, [and] implement the D.O.C. Isolation 
policy based on the CDC guidelines for prisons.” (Id. at 15.) More specifically, Mr. Avila 
states that these individuals were in MCF-Rush City’s health services “chain of command” 
and were responsible for making decisions about, and safeguarding, inmate health. (Id.) 

Mr. Avila sent kites to Ms. Wilson, Ms. Olson, and Ms. Sneen regarding his COVID-19 
concerns in November and December of 2020, but received no response. (Id. at 4, 9, 15; 
see also Doc. 1-2 at 4, 7–10.3)                                           
Substantive Background – The Second Amended Complaint                     
    Although  Mr.  Avila  filed  a  Second  Amended  Complaint  (Doc.  133)  and  a 

Memorandum in Support of that complaint (Doc. 134), he did not include a marked-up 
version of the amended complaint. That is important, not just because it is required by this 
Court’s rules, see D. Minn. LR 15.1(b), but because without a redlined version of Mr. 
Avila’s proposed Second Amended Complaint, it is exceedingly difficult to determine what 
he has changed from his First Amended Complaint. (Compare generally Doc. 141 (First 


3 Mr. Avila attached a number of Exhibits to his original complaint, see Doc. 1-1 (Exhibit 
List), but then failed to include them with his First or Second Amended Complaints. 
Although incorporation by reference is not preferred, given the limitations inherent in Mr. 
Avila’s pro se, incarcerated status (as well as Defendants’ reference to these exhibits, see, 
e.g., Doc. 117 at 2), the Court will consider them.                       
Amended Complaint) with Doc. 133 (Second Amended Complaint).) That is particularly 
true because, while Mr. Avila’s Second Amended Complaint bears many similarities to his 

First Amended Complaint, there are differences, too, which are not readily apparent from 
simply comparing the two documents.                                       
    Most  notably,  Mr.  Avila  asserts  in  the  Second  Amended  Complaint  that 
Commissioner Schnell is personally liable by virtue of his “direct order [for prisons] to 
implement ‘stay with unit’ plans.” (Doc. 133 at 6.) According to Mr. Avila, this resulted in 
“trapping inmates (like mice in a box) to one unit,” which did not provide space for social 

distancing. (Id.) Mr. Avila also faults Commissioner Schnell for not separating COVID-
positive inmates from COVID-negative ones, and not providing single cells for inmates. 
(Id.) Mr. Avila claims that Commissioner Schnell was aware of the distinctive risks 
COVID presented to prisons, but disregarded those risks in implementing the DOC’s 
mitigation plan. (Id. at 7.)                                              

    As  for  Warden  Janssen,  Mr.  Avila  mostly  repeats  in  the  Second  Amended 
Complaint allegations made in his First Amended Complaint. (Compare Doc. 141 at 14 
with  Doc.  133  at  12.)  Mr.  Avila  additionally  claims  that  Warden  Janssen  helped  to 
“implement” Commissioner Schnell’s “stay with unit” plan. (Doc. 133 at 12.) 
    With respect to Defendants Jeanette Wilson, Jessica Olson, and Tina Sneed, Mr. 

Avila again repeats allegations made in his First Amended Complaint. (Compare Doc. 141 
at 15 with Doc. 133 at 13.) He further asserts in his Second Amended Complaint that each 
of these defendants should have been more attuned to his personal vulnerabilities as it 
relates to COVID-19 because they were aware of his pre-existing medical conditions. (Doc. 
133 at 13.)                                                               

    Finally, in his Second Amended Complaint, Mr. Avila clarifies that his second 
COVID-19 infection occurred “around February 3, 2022” at MCF-Rush City, and was also 
attributable to Commissioner Schnell’s “stay with unit” plan. (Id. at 11.) Mr. Avila also 
informs that he is now incarcerated at the Minnesota Correctional Facility in Faribault, 
Minnesota (“MCF-Faribault”), and asserts that there is (or more accurately, was, at the time 
of filing) a COVID-19 outbreak at MCF-Faribault which he blames on the same “stay with 

unit” plan that has been in place since 2020. (Id. at 3, 8.) Mr. Avila does not, however, 
suggest that he has been infected with COVID-19 as a part of this MCF-Faribault outbreak. 
                           ANALYSIS                                      
    Defendants advance three arguments in support of their motion to dismiss Mr. 
Avila’s First Amended Complaint: (1) that Mr. Avila did not allege sufficient personal 

involvement against any individual defendant to support his claims; (2) that Mr. Avila’s 
assertions  of  failed  COVID-19  mitigation  efforts  do  not  state  a  cognizable  Eighth 
Amendment claim; and (3) that even if Mr. Avila’s pleading states claims against one or 
more defendant, all defendants are entitled to qualified immunity. (Doc. 117.) 
    Defendants also oppose Mr. Avila’s attempt to file his Second Amended Complaint. 

They argue that Mr. Avila’s quick-twitch amendments to make minor changes “needlessly 
complicat[e] this Court’s docket and the progression of this litigation.” (Doc. 142 at 6.) 
They also assert that Mr. Avila’s proposed amendments do not cure the deficiencies 
identified in Defendants’ motion-to-dismiss pleadings, such that any amendment would be 
futile.                                                                   

I.   The viability of Mr. Avila’s Second Amended Complaint.               
    After Defendants moved to dismiss Mr. Avila’s First Amended Complaint, he filed 
his Second Amended Complaint. (Doc. 133.) “Eighth Circuit precedent instructs that courts 
should not decide a party’s motion to dismiss without also considering the opposing party’s 
pending motion to amend the pleadings.” Hazley v. Roy, No. 16-cv-3935 (SRN/TNL), 
2018 WL 1399309
, at *5 (D. Minn. Mar. 20, 2018); Amen El v. Schnell, No. 20-cv-1327 

(DSD/ECW), 
2022 WL 1110981
, at *5–20 (D. Minn. Jan. 31, 2022) (deciding viability of 
inmate’s motion to amend COVID-19 civil rights complaint before ruling on defendants’ 
motion to dismiss), R. & R. adopted, 
2022 WL 766402
 (D. Minn. Mar. 14, 2022), aff’d, 
No. 22-2115, 
2022 WL 17228817
 (8th Cir. July 29, 2022). Because Mr. Avila’s proposed 
Second  Amended  Complaint  contains  more  information  than  his  First  Amended 

Complaint, efficiency dictates that the Court should start by determining the viability of 
Mr. Avila’s Second Amended Complaint.                                     
A.   Mr. Avila’s procedural deficiencies.                                 
    Defendants argue in the first instance that Mr. Avila’s Second Amended Complaint 
should be rejected because his amendments have been “piecemeal and repetitive,” and 

because he failed to comply with Local Rule 15.1’s requirement that proposed amendments 
be highlighted through redlined submissions. (Doc. 142 at 6–7.) No doubt, Mr. Avila’s 
noncompliance with D. Minn. LR 15.1(b) has made this Court’s task more difficult, and 
likely forced Defendants to try to hunt for differences between the operative First Amended 
Complaint and Mr. Avila’s proposed Second Amended Complaint. And it is true that Mr. 
Avila’s Second Amended Complaint appears to add some information that he could have 

included sooner. But Mr. Avila is a pro se prisoner-litigant—a position that comes with 
some challenges. His pleadings are to be construed liberally, not just in terms of what the 
pleadings themselves say, but also in how those pleadings are presented. Accord Hazley, 
2018 WL 1399309
, at *5 (finding no error in magistrate judge’s decision to broadly 
construe filings by “cobbling together” allegations from several pleadings); Popoalii v. 
Correctional Med. Servs., 
512 F.3d 488, 497
 (8th Cir. 2008) (“A court abuses its discretion 

when it denies a motion to amend a complaint unless there exists undue delay, bad faith, 
repeated failure to cure deficiencies by amendments previously allowed, undue prejudice 
to  the  non-moving  party,  or  futility  of  the  amendment.”).  Mr.  Avila’s  technical 
shortcomings are not so dramatic as to support denying his motion to amend on this basis. 
B.   Futility.                                                            

    Defendants’  primary  argument  in  opposing  Mr.  Avila’s  Second  Amended 
Complaint is that his amendments are futile. According to Defendants, the “information 
added to the proposed second amended complaint does not overcome the deficiencies in 
[Mr. Avila’s] previous complaints.” (Doc. 142 at 8.)                      
    While leave to amend should generally be freely given, Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(a), a court 

may properly deny a motion to amend where the amendment would be futile. Popoalii, 
512 F.3d at 497
. Where a party opposes amending a complaint based on futility, “the Court 
must determine whether the proposed claims state a claim for relief.” Amen El, 
2022 WL 1110981
, at *6. As such, although framed in terms of amendment, in actuality, a court 
faced with a futility argument applies the same standard it does when considering a motion 
to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). Id.; see also Zutz v. Nelson, 
601 F.3d 842
, 850–51 (8th Cir. 2010). Here, Defendants’ opposition to Mr. Avila’s proposed 
Second Amended Complaint is based on the same arguments raised in seeking dismissal 
of the First Amended Complaint: (1) that Mr. Avila has not alleged sufficient personal 
involvement of any defendant to support a liability finding; (2) that he makes no cognizable 
Eighth Amendment claim; and (3) that qualified immunity insulates each defendant from 
liability. The Court addresses each argument in turn.                     

    1.   Personal Involvement.                                           
    To sustain § 1983 claims against public officials in their individual capacities, “a 
plaintiff must plead that each Government-official defendant, through the official’s own 
individual actions, has violated the Constitution.” Reynolds v. Dormire, 
636 F.3d 976, 979
 
(8th Cir. 2011) (quoting Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 
556 U.S. 662, 676
 (2009)). “In requiring a 

plaintiff to allege that each defendant was personally involved in the deprivation of his 
constitutional rights, we assess each defendant relative to [their] authority over the claimed 
constitutional violation.” Jackson v. Nixon, 
747 F.3d 537, 543
 (8th Cir. 2014).  
Commissioner Schnell                                                      
    According to Mr. Avila, Defendant Paul Schnell, as DOC Commissioner, created 

and maintained a “stay with unit” policy that was an constitutionally inadequate response 
to the COVID-19 pandemic. Mr. Avila does not allege that Commissioner Schnell was 
directly involved in any aspect of Mr. Avila’s two COVID-19 infections, other than by 
maintaining a policy that which Mr. Avila says is to blame for those infections. Defendant 
asserts that in the absence of any allegation of Commissioner Schell’s direct involvement, 
his general supervisory authority over Minnesota prisons cannot be a basis for liability. 

    Defendant is correct, but that does not end the matter. “Even if a supervisor is not 
involved in day-to-day operations, his personal involvement may be found if he is involved 
in  ‘creating,  applying,  or  interpreting  a  policy’  that  gives  rise  to  unconstitutional 
conditions.” Jackson, 
747 F.3d at 543
 (quoting Bonner v. Outlaw, 
552 F.3d 673, 679
 (8th 
Cir. 2009)). That Commissioner Schnell may have had general supervisory authority over 
Minnesota prisons is not what is important; the question is whether Mr. Avila pled more 

than this, since “an allegation that the DOC director authorized an unconstitutional policy 
may be sufficient to state a claim for actions taken directly by the director.” Jackson, 
747 F.3d at 544
 (internal quotation and citation omitted).                    
    Mr. Avila’s Second Amended Complaint is sufficient—as a matter of pleading—to 
demonstrate Commissioner Schnell’s involvement in the alleged unconstitutional conduct. 

Mr. Avila asserts that Commissioner Schnell was the architect of the “stay with unit” order 
that required Minnesota prisoners to remain in their units even when infected with COVID-
19, resulting in enhanced contagion. (Doc. 133 at 6-7, 10-11.) Broadly construing the 
Second  Amended  Complaint  (as  the  Court  must,  given  Mr.  Avila’s  pro  se  status), 
Commissioner Schnell’s policies were also responsible for Mr. Avila being forced to bunk 

with his COVID-19 positive roommate in their cell. (Id. at 6, 10.)        
    Mr. Avila’s prison was under “the control and supervision” of the Commissioner, 
who bore responsibility for prescribing the conditions of inmates’ confinement. 
Minn. Stat. § 241.01
, subds. 1, 3a(b). Crediting Mr. Avila’s allegations, Commissioner Schnell created 
and maintained policies consistent with his statutory powers, but which violated Mr. 
Avila’s constitutional rights. Mr. Avila does not seek to impose liability based on the 

Commissioner’s  mere  supervisory  authority,  but  rather  due  to  imposing  prison-wide 
policies that were unconstitutional. As a matter of pleading, that is sufficient to establish 
the type of personal involvement required to maintain an action against any particular 
defendant.                                                                
Warden Janssen                                                            
    Mr. Avila alleges that MCF-Rush City Warden Janssen is liable under § 1983 by 

virtue of “helping implement Paul Schnell’s directive to ‘stay with unit’ plans.” (Doc. 133 
at 12.) Mr. Avila asserts that Warden Janssen knew that inmates were at risk, but did not 
“rebel[] against” the Commissioner’s “stay with unit” directives. (Id.) Mr. Avila does not 
allege that Warden Janssen she was responsible for creating any DOC policy at issue here, 
that she deviated from any DOC policy directives, or that she had any direct involvement 

in his two COVID-19 infections.                                           
    A warden “might be liable if the warden had made policy decisions resulting in the 
alleged unconstitutional conditions.” Ouzts v. Cummins, 
825 F.2d 1276, 1277
 (8th Cir. 
1987). But Mr. Avila appears to plead just the opposite: that Warden Janssen made no 
policy decision, and merely followed the Commissioner’s directives. Absent some other 

indication of personal involvement or failure to supervise offending employees, this is 
insufficient to sustain a § 1983 claim against Warden Janssen.            
Jeanette Wilson, Jessica Olson, and Tina Sneen                            
    According to Mr. Avila, Defendants Jeanette Wilson, Jessica Olson, and Tina Sneen 

are health services administrators at MCF-Rush City, and were all aware of Mr. Avila’s 
preexisting medical conditions. (Doc. 133 at 13.) Mr. Avila was informed by corrections 
personnel that these defendants were responsible for making “isolation decisions.” (Id.) 
When Mr. Avila was not separated from his COVID-19 positive cellmate, he wrote kites 
to each of these defendants. (Id.) None of these defendants timely responded to Mr. Avila’s 
kites by moving him to a safer location. (Id. at 3, 11, 13–14.) Mr. Avila subsequently 

became infected with COVID-19. (Id. at 11–13.) This scenario, according to Mr. Avila, 
played out the same way twice—in November of 2020, then again in February of 2022. 
(Id.)                                                                     
    Crediting  Mr.  Avila’s  allegations—as  the  Court  must  at  this  stage  in  the 
proceedings—he has alleged enough personal involvement of each of these defendants to 

sustain a § 1983 claim. By Mr. Avila’s assertions, all three defendants were responsible for 
decisionmaking regarding inmate isolation during the COVID-19 pandemic; all three were 
aware that Mr. Avila was housed with a COVID-19 positive cellmate in close quarters; 
none of the three took corrective action; and Mr. Avila was subsequently infected with 
COVID-19. Because these defendants were “directly responsible for the conditions and at 

least some of the actions” giving rise to Mr. Avila’s claims, he has alleged sufficient 
personal involvement. Madewell v. Roberts, 
909 F.2d 1203, 1208
 (8th Cir. 1990). 
    2.   Eighth Amendment.                                               
    Defendants assert that even if Mr. Avila has sufficiently alleged direct and personal 

involvement, he cannot sustain his claims because he has not established any cognizable 
Eighth  Amendment  violation.  It  is  well  settled  that  the  Eighth  Amendment  protects 
prisoners  from  inhumane  treatment.  Farmer  v.  Brennan,  
511 U.S. 825, 832
  (1994). 
However, the Court agrees with Defendants that it is not entirely clear what precise theory 
animates Mr. Avila’s claims, since he invokes terms used for failure to protect claims, as 
well as deliberate indifference to medical needs claims.                  

    There are similarities to each theory. A failure to protect theory is rooted in prison 
officials’ constitutional obligation to “take reasonable measures to guarantee the safety of 
the inmates.” 
Id.
 at 832 (quoting Hudson v. Palmer, 
468 U.S. 517
, 526–27 (1984)). To 
sustain a claim based on failure to protect, “the inmate must show that he is incarcerated 
under conditions posing a substantial risk of serious harm.” Id. at 834. A medical-needs 

claim is similar, requiring a showing that the plaintiff suffered from an objectively serious 
medical condition. Fourte v. Faulkner Cty., 
746 F.3d 384, 387
 (8th Cir. 2014). 
    But both a failure to protect and a medical needs claim require more than just an 
objectively serious risk or condition. Rather, for such claims, “the Constitutional question 
is whether Defendants acted with ‘deliberate indifference.’” Saylor v. Nebraska, 
812 F.3d 637
, 643–44 (8th Cir. 2016) (quoting Wilson v. Seiter, 
501 U.S. 294, 303
 (1991) (cleaned 
up)). Although “deliberate indifference” in common nomenclature may seem a passive 
phrase, similar to apathy, in Eighth Amendment parlance it means more: “deliberate 
indifference” is “akin to criminal recklessness.” Saylor, 
812 F.3d at 644
 (quoting Jackson 
v. Buckman, 
756 F.3d 1060, 1065
 (8th Cir. 2014) (in turn quoting Scott v. Benson, 
742 F.3d 335, 340
  (8th  Cir.  2014)));  see  also  See  Amen  El,  
2022 WL 1110981
,  at  *  11–12 

(recognizing Eighth Amendment plaintiff must demonstrate  that the defendant had a 
“culpable state of mind,” in that they were aware of the risk of harm and deliberately 
indifferent to it) (quoting Hines v. Smith, No. 16-cv-3797 (DSD/SER), 
2018 WL 7050674
, 
*4 (D. Minn. Dec. 20, 2018)), R. & R. adopted, 
2019 WL 234778
 (D. Minn. Jan. 16, 2019).  
    Consistent with other courts in this district, this Court believes that COVID-19 poses 
an  objectively-serious  medical  risk.  Amen  El,  
2022 WL 1110981
,  at  *12;  see  also 

Mohammed S. v. Tritten, No. 20-cv-793 (NEB/ECW), 
2020 WL 2750836
, at *22 (D. Minn. 
Apr. 28, 2020) R. & R. adopted, 
2020 WL 2750109
 (D. Minn. May 27, 2020). The question, 
then, is whether Mr. Avila has alleged facts from which a court could find that Defendants 
knew of and disregarded an objective risk with a reckless state of mind.  
    As Defendants correctly note, a number of courts in this District have “declined to 

find  deliberate  indifference  to  medical  needs  in  cases  involving  prison  COVID-19 
protocols.” (Doc. 142 at 15 (quoting McCollum v. Titus, No. 21-cv-1774 (NEB/JFD), 
2023 WL 3822544
, at *5 (D. Minn. May 3, 2023), R. & R. accepted, 
2023 WL 3821566
 (D. 
Minn. Jun. 5, 2023)).) That is true, but none of those cases involved the type of forced-
close contact and exposure claims raised by Mr. Avila. For instance, in McCollum, the 

plaintiff  challenged  his  prison’s  COVID-19  mitigation  measures,  which  included 
ineffective cleaning, poor air quality, limited social distancing, and officers disregarding 
safety and sanitation protocols. 
2023 WL 3822544
, at *2. In Amen El, the allegations were 
similar: “mixing” of COVID-19 positive and negative inmates in the same unit (but not the 
same cell), poor sanitation, lax enforcement of the prison’s masking policy, and being 
forced to move to a cell vacated by a COVID-19 positive inmate 10 days earlier. 
2022 WL 1110981
, at  *14–16.  In  Blevins  v.  Schnell,  No.  20-cv-1194  (NEB/KMM),  
2021 WL 5088164
, at *1–2 (D. Minn. Sept. 15, 2021), R. & R. adopted, 
2021 WL 5087550
 (D. Minn. 
Nov. 2, 2021), the inmate-plaintiff complained that he was not given appropriate personal 
protective equipment, was forced to mingle with other prisoners and visitors who might be 
sick, and lived in a space that did not allow for social distancing. And in Frohlich v. United 
States, No. 20-cv-2692 (PJS/HB), 
2021 WL 2531188
, at *3–4 (D. Minn. Jun. 21, 2021), a 

habeas petitioner sought relief because of similar concerns.              
    Mr. Avila’s claims are different. If he were simply complaining that the DOC 
Defendants had generally not done enough to prevent the spread of COVID-19, it would 
be difficult to distinguish his case from those cited above. Here, there is more. Mr. Avila’s 
core allegation does not involve shoddy enforcement, poor sanitation, or a generalized 

inability to social distance. Rather, he alleges that his constitutional rights were violated by 
Commissioner Schnell’s forced-exposure plan, which resulted in Mr. Avila being placed 
in a small cell with an inmate who Defendants knew had tested COVID-19 positive.4 When 
Mr.  Avila  sought  to  be  moved  through  the  appropriate  channels—those  defendants 
responsible for isolation decisions—his request was ignored. In short order, Mr. Avila 

himself tested positive for COVID-19. It could well be that Defendants could present 

4 In Frohlich, the court noted that “confining Frohlich to a 9-by-12-foot cell with a cellmate 
is not deliberately indifferent.” 
2021 WL 2531188
, at *3. While that is true as a general 
matter, the calculus changes once the person’s cellmate is known to be infected with 
COVID-19.                                                                 
evidence that rebuts Mr. Avila’s allegations, but at this early stage in the proceedings (and 
given the Court’s obligation to credit Mr. Avila’s assertions), Mr. Avila has done enough 

to demonstrate a viable Eighth Amendment claim related to being forced to share a small 
cell with a known COVID-19 positive cellmate.                             
    3.   Qualified Immunity.                                             
    Even if some of Mr. Avila’s claims could otherwise proceed, however, qualified 
immunity shields all defendants from liability. “Qualified immunity shields federal and 
state officials from money damages unless a plaintiff pleads facts showing (1) that the 

official violated a statutory or constitutional right, and (2) that the right was ‘clearly 
established’ at the time of the challenged conduct.” Ashcroft v. al-Kidd, 
563 U.S. 731
, 735 
(2011). “If the law at [the] time was not clearly established, an official could not reasonably 
be expected to anticipate subsequent legal developments, nor could he fairly be said to 
‘know’ that the law forbade conduct not previously identified as unlawful.” Harlow v. 

Fitzgerald, 
457 U.S. 800, 818
 (1982). “Clearly established” means that the legal principle 
relied on must be settled, and also “clearly prohibit the [official’s] conduct in the particular 
circumstances before him.” D.C. v. Wesby, 
583 U.S. 48
, 63 (2018); see also Mullenix v. 
Luna, 
577 U.S. 7, 12
 (2015) (clearly-established inquiry must be undertaken in light of the 
specific context of the case, not as a broad general proposition). “This requires a high 

‘degree of specificity.’” Wesby, 583 U.S. at 63 (quoting Mullenix, 
577 U.S. at 13
). 
    While an inmate’s Eighth Amendment right to be free from harm in prison is clearly 
established, the Court cannot conclude that the specific conduct that Mr. Avila attacks 
here—being in a cell with a COVID-19 positive cellmate—was so clearly unconstitutional 
that “every reasonable official” would know. Wesby, 583 U.S. at 590. On the contrary, 
cases from this district and throughout the country have endorsed prison officials’ broad 

discretion  in  determining  the  appropriate  COVID-19  mitigation  measures.  See,  e.g., 
Harmon v. Harris, 
2023 WL 5499595
 (8th Cir. May 15, 2023) (summarily affirming 
district court’s5 grant of qualified immunity to prison officials faced with allegations of 
constitutionally inadequate COVID-19 response, including shared housing); McCollum, 
2023 WL 3822544
. In light of this authority, the Court cannot conclude that DOC’s double-
bunking policy stepped so far outside of Eighth Amendment bounds that any official would 

understand the policy was unconstitutional. Accord al-Kidd, 563 U.S. at 743 (“Qualified 
immunity gives government officials breathing room to make reasonable but mistaken 
judgments about open legal questions.”) To the extent that Mr. Avila raised cognizable 
claims against some defendants, those defendants are shielded by qualified immunity. 
II.  Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss the First Amended Complaint.           

    The  Court  has  concluded  that  amendment  of  Mr.  Avila’s  Second  Amended 
Complaint  would  be  futile  based  on  qualified  immunity.  Not  surprisingly,  his  First 
Amended Complaint fares no better, since it contains sparser allegations. The Court thus 
recommends  granting  Defendants’  motion  to  dismiss  Mr.  Avila’s  First  Amended 
Complaint.                                                                




5 Harmon v. Harris, 4:22-cv-0716 (BRW/ERE), 
2023 WL 176578
 (E.D. Ark. Jan. 10, 
2023), R. & R. adopted, 
2023 WL 1766482
 (E.D. Ark. Feb. 3, 2023).         
III.  Mr. Avila’s Renewed Motion to Appoint Counsel.                      
    Mr. Avila has renewed his motion to appoint counsel. However, given the Court’s 

recommendation that Mr. Avila’s First Amended Complaint be dismissed and his motion 
to amend the complaint be denied as futile, the Court sees no reasoned basis to appoint 
counsel at this point. Accordingly, the Court denies Mr. Avila’s renewed motion to appoint 
counsel.                                                                  

ORDER

    Based on the above, and on all the files, records, and proceedings in this action, IT 

IS ORDERED that:                                                          
 1)  Plaintiff Adolfo Gutierrez Avila, Jr.’s Motion to Appoint Counsel (Doc. 145) is 
    DENIED.                                                              

                      RECOMMENDATION                                     
    Additionally, based on the above, and on all the files, records, and proceedings in 
this action, IT IS RECOMMENDED that:                                      
    1)  Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss Mr. Avila’s First Amended Complaint (Doc. 
      115) be GRANTED;                                                   
    2)  This action be DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE; and                     
    3)  Mr.  Avila’s  motion  to  further  amend  that  complaint  (Docs.  133,  134)  be 
      DENIED.                                                            

Date: January 30, 2024              s/Douglas L. Micko                   
                                   DOUGLAS L. MICKO                      
                                   United States Magistrate Judge        
                            NOTICE                                       
Filing Objections: The portion of this document that is a Report and Recommendation is 
not an order or judgment of the District Court and is therefore not appealable directly to 
the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals. Under Local Rule 72.2(b)(1), “a party may file and 
serve  specific  written  objections  to  a  magistrate  judge’s  proposed  findings  and 
recommendations within 14 days after being served with a copy” of the Report and 
Recommendation.                                                           
A party may respond to those objections within 14 days after being served a copy of the 
objections. See D. Minn. LR 72.2(b)(2). All objections and responses must comply with 
the word or line limits set forth in Local Rule 72.2(c).                  

Trial Court Opinion

                 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                            
                    DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                                


 Adolfo Gutierrez Avila, Jr.,       Case No. 22-cv-3180 (NEB/DLM)        

               Plaintiff,                                                

 v.                                                                      
                                       ORDER AND REPORT                  
 Paul Schnell, Vicki Janssen, Jeanette  AND RECOMMENDATION               
 Wilson, Jessica Olson, and Tina Sneen,                                  
 being sued in their individual capacities,                              

               Defendants.                                               


    This matter is before the Court on Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss pro se Plaintiff 
Adolfo Gutierrez Avila, Jr.’s First Amended Complaint, Mr. Avila’s de facto motion to 
further amend his complaint, and Mr. Avila’s renewed Motion to Appoint Counsel. (Docs. 
115, 117 (Motion to Dismiss & Memorandum in Support), 133–34 (Second Amended 
Complaint1  &  Memorandum  in  Support),  145,  147  (Motion  to  Appoint  Counsel  & 
Memorandum in Support).)                                                  
    Mr. Avila, an inmate in Minnesota state prison, asserts each of the named defendants 
violated  his  Eighth  Amendment  rights  in  establishing  and  instituting  a  COVID-19 
mitigation strategy that caused him to become infected with the virus in November of 2020, 

1 On Mr. Avila’s docket, this document is entitled Amended Complaint. (Doc. 133.) In 
fact, it is his Second Amended Complaint, having already amended once as a matter of 
course.  (See  Doc.  140  (directing  Clerk’s  Office  to  file  Mr.  Avila’s  first  amended 
complaint), Doc. 141 (First Amended Complaint).) For reasons identified in the Court’s 
August 15, 2023 Text-Only Order (Doc. 140), the ordering of these documents on the 
docket may cause some confusion.                                          
and again about 18 months later. (Doc. 141 at 7, 14.) According to his First Amended 
Complaint, Mr. Avila seeks relief on behalf 44 similarly-situated inmates as well. (Docs. 

141 at 1, 143 (denying Plaintiff’s motion for class certification without prejudice).)  
    Defendants moved to dismiss Mr. Avila’s First Amended Complaint because (1) he 
failed to allege personal involvement of any individual defendant sufficient to establish 
liability;  (2)  the  COVID-19  mitigation  strategies  that  Mr.  Avila  attacks  were  not 
unconstitutionally deficient; and (3) each of the defendants would be entitled to qualified 
immunity. (Doc. 117.) Mr. Avila responded to Defendants’ motion directly (Doc. 125), 

and  also  by  seeking  to  amend  his  complaint  again  (Docs.  133  (Second  Amended 
Complaint), 134 (Memorandum in Support)). Defendants oppose the Court’s consideration 
of Mr. Avila’s Second Amended Complaint due to technical and procedural deficiencies, 
and also based on futility, asserting that Mr. Avila’s proposed amendments would not 
revive his claims. (Doc. 142.)                                            

    For the reasons stated below, the Court recommends denying Mr. Avila’s motion to 
amend his complaint based on futility, as the Second Amended Complaint fails to state a 
claim. The Court further recommends granting Defendants’ motion to dismiss Mr. Avila’s 
First Amended Complaint, which contains fewer relevant factual allegations than his 
Second Amended Complaint. Finally, the Court recommends denying Mr. Avila’s renewed 

motion to appoint counsel.                                                
                         BACKGROUND                                      
Procedural Matters                                                        

    Mr. Avila filed this prisoner civil rights action under 
42 U.S.C. § 1983
 on December 
27, 2022, alleging that five Minnesota Department of Corrections (“DOC”) prison officials 
violated his Eighth Amendment right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment while 
imprisoned.  (Doc.  1  at  7.)  He  moved  to  amend  his  complaint  on  July  5,  2023, 
contemporaneously filing his First Amended Complaint and several affidavits and exhibits. 
(Docs. 34 (Motion), 34-1 (First Amended Complaint), 39-111 (Affidavits and Exhibits).) 

Because Mr. Avila was entitled to amend his complaint as a matter of course, see Fed. R. 
Civ. P. 15(a)(1), the Court denied Mr. Avila’s motion to amend as moot, and ordered him 
to file a clean copy of his First Amended Complaint. (Doc. 124.) Meanwhile, Defendants 
moved to dismiss Mr. Avila’s First Amended Complaint. (Doc. 115.)         
    Mr. Avila did not file a clean copy of the First Amended Complaint in response to 

the  Court’s  order.  Rather,  he  filed  a  Second  Amended  Complaint,  together  with  a 
memorandum  in  support  of  the  Second  Amended  Complaint.  (Docs.  133  (Second 
Amended Complaint), 134 (Memorandum in Support).) Given Mr. Avila’s failure to file a 
clean  First  Amended  Complaint,  the  Court  directed  the  Clerk’s  Office  to  file  the 
previously-submitted First Amended Complaint (found at Doc. 34-1) as a new docket 

entry. (Doc. 140.) Subsequently, Defendants filed a memorandum opposing Mr. Avila’s 
motion to amend his complaint (Doc. 142), and Mr. Avila renewed his motion to appoint 
counsel (Doc. 145).                                                       
Substantive Background – The First Amended Complaint2                     
    Mr.  Avila’s  case  concerns  the  COVID-19  pandemic’s  effect  on  Minnesota 

prisoners. Mr. Avila is an inmate who, during the operative period of the complaint, was 
at the Minnesota Correctional Facility at Rush City (“MCF-Rush City”). (Doc. 141 at 7, 
14.) Each of the defendants works for or with the Minnesota Department of Corrections 
(“DOC”): Paul Schnell is the DOC commissioner; Vicki Janssen is the Warden of MCF-
Rush City; Jeanette Wilson is the Health Services Administrator for MCF-Rush City; 
Jessica Olson is the registered nurse (“RN”) Supervisor for MCF-Rush City; and Tina 

Sneed is listed as “C.O. Health Services” for MCF-Rush City (collectively “the DOC 
Defendants”). (Id. at 6.) Mr. Avila alleges that during the COVID-19 pandemic, the DOC 
Defendants acted with deliberate indifference to his health and safety by their practice “of 
intentionally, incorrectly applying quarantine measures to Minnesota inmates (Avila) so to 
overcome the covid-19 outbreaks faster.” (Id. at 7.) Mr. Avila contends that because of the 

DOC Defendants’ actions, he was exposed to and infected with the COVID-19 virus on 
November 13, 2020. (Id.)                                                  
    More specifically, Mr. Avila alleges the following facts. On November 5, 2020, Mr. 
Avila’s cellmate tested positive for COVID-19. (Id. at 8.) Mr. Avila tested negative. (Id.) 
Mr. Avila’s cellmate was not separated from him. (Id. at 8, 13.) Rather, Mr. Avila and his 

infected cellmate were locked “[i]n their 8 ft. by 12 ft. two men cell for at least 10 days 23 


2 Defendants recognize that since this matter comes before the Court on a motion to 
dismiss, all factual matters in Mr. Avila’s complaint are accepted as true. (Doc. 117 at 2 
n.1.)                                                                     
hours a day.” (Id. at 8.) Mr. Avila sent a kite (that is, written correspondence with staff) to 
health services on November 14, 2020, complaining that he was not being separated from 

his sick cellmate. (Id.) On November 19, 2020, Mr. Avila was informed he had tested 
positive for COVID-19. (Id.) According to Mr. Avila, his infection was the product of 
DOC’s pattern of “intentional compelled exposure,” with no use of single cells. (Id. at 16.) 
Mr. Avila avers that he became infected with the COVID-19 virus again 18 months after 
his  first  infection,  which  he  also  attributes  to  DOC’s  failed  COVID-19  mitigation 
measures. (Id. at 10, 14, 16.)                                            

    Mr. Avila alleges that each of the DOC Defendants treated him (and all Minnesota 
inmates) with deliberate indifference to their safety. (Id. at 7.) He claims that Paul Schnell 
“created a policy or custom under which unconstitutional practices occurred and allowed 
the  continuance  of  such  a  policy  or  custom.”  (Id.  at  10.)  According  to  Mr.  Avila, 
Commissioner Schnell had the power and duty to protect inmates under his custody and 

care and failed in that duty “during the unprecedented COVID-19 virus global pandemic.” 
(Id. at 11.) Mr. Avila asserts that Commissioner Schnell knew of the infection risks of 
COVID-19, and knew that social distancing was the most effective mitigation strategy, yet 
refused  to  implement  that  strategy  in  Minnesota  prisons.  (Id.  at  12–13.)  Instead  of 
practicing social distancing, COVID-19 infected inmates were not removed from their 

units and not separated from their cellmates, even if the cellmate tested negative. (Id. at 
13.)                                                                      
    As for Warden Vicki Janssen, Mr. Avila states that she failed to adopt, implement, 
or enforce mitigating measures such as social distancing to protect inmates at MCF-Rush 
City. (Id. at 6, 14.) Mr. Avila accuses Warden Janssen of failing to “respond to evidence 
of misconduct by subordinates on the Isolation policy,” leading him to become infected 

with COVID-19 twice while housed at MCF-Rush City. (Id.)                  
    As for Defendants Jeanette Wilson, Jessica Olson, and Tina Sneen, Mr. Avila 
contends that each of them failed to “adopt, follow, [and] implement the D.O.C. Isolation 
policy based on the CDC guidelines for prisons.” (Id. at 15.) More specifically, Mr. Avila 
states that these individuals were in MCF-Rush City’s health services “chain of command” 
and were responsible for making decisions about, and safeguarding, inmate health. (Id.) 

Mr. Avila sent kites to Ms. Wilson, Ms. Olson, and Ms. Sneen regarding his COVID-19 
concerns in November and December of 2020, but received no response. (Id. at 4, 9, 15; 
see also Doc. 1-2 at 4, 7–10.3)                                           
Substantive Background – The Second Amended Complaint                     
    Although  Mr.  Avila  filed  a  Second  Amended  Complaint  (Doc.  133)  and  a 

Memorandum in Support of that complaint (Doc. 134), he did not include a marked-up 
version of the amended complaint. That is important, not just because it is required by this 
Court’s rules, see D. Minn. LR 15.1(b), but because without a redlined version of Mr. 
Avila’s proposed Second Amended Complaint, it is exceedingly difficult to determine what 
he has changed from his First Amended Complaint. (Compare generally Doc. 141 (First 


3 Mr. Avila attached a number of Exhibits to his original complaint, see Doc. 1-1 (Exhibit 
List), but then failed to include them with his First or Second Amended Complaints. 
Although incorporation by reference is not preferred, given the limitations inherent in Mr. 
Avila’s pro se, incarcerated status (as well as Defendants’ reference to these exhibits, see, 
e.g., Doc. 117 at 2), the Court will consider them.                       
Amended Complaint) with Doc. 133 (Second Amended Complaint).) That is particularly 
true because, while Mr. Avila’s Second Amended Complaint bears many similarities to his 

First Amended Complaint, there are differences, too, which are not readily apparent from 
simply comparing the two documents.                                       
    Most  notably,  Mr.  Avila  asserts  in  the  Second  Amended  Complaint  that 
Commissioner Schnell is personally liable by virtue of his “direct order [for prisons] to 
implement ‘stay with unit’ plans.” (Doc. 133 at 6.) According to Mr. Avila, this resulted in 
“trapping inmates (like mice in a box) to one unit,” which did not provide space for social 

distancing. (Id.) Mr. Avila also faults Commissioner Schnell for not separating COVID-
positive inmates from COVID-negative ones, and not providing single cells for inmates. 
(Id.) Mr. Avila claims that Commissioner Schnell was aware of the distinctive risks 
COVID presented to prisons, but disregarded those risks in implementing the DOC’s 
mitigation plan. (Id. at 7.)                                              

    As  for  Warden  Janssen,  Mr.  Avila  mostly  repeats  in  the  Second  Amended 
Complaint allegations made in his First Amended Complaint. (Compare Doc. 141 at 14 
with  Doc.  133  at  12.)  Mr.  Avila  additionally  claims  that  Warden  Janssen  helped  to 
“implement” Commissioner Schnell’s “stay with unit” plan. (Doc. 133 at 12.) 
    With respect to Defendants Jeanette Wilson, Jessica Olson, and Tina Sneed, Mr. 

Avila again repeats allegations made in his First Amended Complaint. (Compare Doc. 141 
at 15 with Doc. 133 at 13.) He further asserts in his Second Amended Complaint that each 
of these defendants should have been more attuned to his personal vulnerabilities as it 
relates to COVID-19 because they were aware of his pre-existing medical conditions. (Doc. 
133 at 13.)                                                               

    Finally, in his Second Amended Complaint, Mr. Avila clarifies that his second 
COVID-19 infection occurred “around February 3, 2022” at MCF-Rush City, and was also 
attributable to Commissioner Schnell’s “stay with unit” plan. (Id. at 11.) Mr. Avila also 
informs that he is now incarcerated at the Minnesota Correctional Facility in Faribault, 
Minnesota (“MCF-Faribault”), and asserts that there is (or more accurately, was, at the time 
of filing) a COVID-19 outbreak at MCF-Faribault which he blames on the same “stay with 

unit” plan that has been in place since 2020. (Id. at 3, 8.) Mr. Avila does not, however, 
suggest that he has been infected with COVID-19 as a part of this MCF-Faribault outbreak. 
                           ANALYSIS                                      
    Defendants advance three arguments in support of their motion to dismiss Mr. 
Avila’s First Amended Complaint: (1) that Mr. Avila did not allege sufficient personal 

involvement against any individual defendant to support his claims; (2) that Mr. Avila’s 
assertions  of  failed  COVID-19  mitigation  efforts  do  not  state  a  cognizable  Eighth 
Amendment claim; and (3) that even if Mr. Avila’s pleading states claims against one or 
more defendant, all defendants are entitled to qualified immunity. (Doc. 117.) 
    Defendants also oppose Mr. Avila’s attempt to file his Second Amended Complaint. 

They argue that Mr. Avila’s quick-twitch amendments to make minor changes “needlessly 
complicat[e] this Court’s docket and the progression of this litigation.” (Doc. 142 at 6.) 
They also assert that Mr. Avila’s proposed amendments do not cure the deficiencies 
identified in Defendants’ motion-to-dismiss pleadings, such that any amendment would be 
futile.                                                                   

I.   The viability of Mr. Avila’s Second Amended Complaint.               
    After Defendants moved to dismiss Mr. Avila’s First Amended Complaint, he filed 
his Second Amended Complaint. (Doc. 133.) “Eighth Circuit precedent instructs that courts 
should not decide a party’s motion to dismiss without also considering the opposing party’s 
pending motion to amend the pleadings.” Hazley v. Roy, No. 16-cv-3935 (SRN/TNL), 
2018 WL 1399309
, at *5 (D. Minn. Mar. 20, 2018); Amen El v. Schnell, No. 20-cv-1327 

(DSD/ECW), 
2022 WL 1110981
, at *5–20 (D. Minn. Jan. 31, 2022) (deciding viability of 
inmate’s motion to amend COVID-19 civil rights complaint before ruling on defendants’ 
motion to dismiss), R. & R. adopted, 
2022 WL 766402
 (D. Minn. Mar. 14, 2022), aff’d, 
No. 22-2115, 
2022 WL 17228817
 (8th Cir. July 29, 2022). Because Mr. Avila’s proposed 
Second  Amended  Complaint  contains  more  information  than  his  First  Amended 

Complaint, efficiency dictates that the Court should start by determining the viability of 
Mr. Avila’s Second Amended Complaint.                                     
A.   Mr. Avila’s procedural deficiencies.                                 
    Defendants argue in the first instance that Mr. Avila’s Second Amended Complaint 
should be rejected because his amendments have been “piecemeal and repetitive,” and 

because he failed to comply with Local Rule 15.1’s requirement that proposed amendments 
be highlighted through redlined submissions. (Doc. 142 at 6–7.) No doubt, Mr. Avila’s 
noncompliance with D. Minn. LR 15.1(b) has made this Court’s task more difficult, and 
likely forced Defendants to try to hunt for differences between the operative First Amended 
Complaint and Mr. Avila’s proposed Second Amended Complaint. And it is true that Mr. 
Avila’s Second Amended Complaint appears to add some information that he could have 

included sooner. But Mr. Avila is a pro se prisoner-litigant—a position that comes with 
some challenges. His pleadings are to be construed liberally, not just in terms of what the 
pleadings themselves say, but also in how those pleadings are presented. Accord Hazley, 
2018 WL 1399309
, at *5 (finding no error in magistrate judge’s decision to broadly 
construe filings by “cobbling together” allegations from several pleadings); Popoalii v. 
Correctional Med. Servs., 
512 F.3d 488, 497
 (8th Cir. 2008) (“A court abuses its discretion 

when it denies a motion to amend a complaint unless there exists undue delay, bad faith, 
repeated failure to cure deficiencies by amendments previously allowed, undue prejudice 
to  the  non-moving  party,  or  futility  of  the  amendment.”).  Mr.  Avila’s  technical 
shortcomings are not so dramatic as to support denying his motion to amend on this basis. 
B.   Futility.                                                            

    Defendants’  primary  argument  in  opposing  Mr.  Avila’s  Second  Amended 
Complaint is that his amendments are futile. According to Defendants, the “information 
added to the proposed second amended complaint does not overcome the deficiencies in 
[Mr. Avila’s] previous complaints.” (Doc. 142 at 8.)                      
    While leave to amend should generally be freely given, Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(a), a court 

may properly deny a motion to amend where the amendment would be futile. Popoalii, 
512 F.3d at 497
. Where a party opposes amending a complaint based on futility, “the Court 
must determine whether the proposed claims state a claim for relief.” Amen El, 
2022 WL 1110981
, at *6. As such, although framed in terms of amendment, in actuality, a court 
faced with a futility argument applies the same standard it does when considering a motion 
to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). Id.; see also Zutz v. Nelson, 
601 F.3d 842
, 850–51 (8th Cir. 2010). Here, Defendants’ opposition to Mr. Avila’s proposed 
Second Amended Complaint is based on the same arguments raised in seeking dismissal 
of the First Amended Complaint: (1) that Mr. Avila has not alleged sufficient personal 
involvement of any defendant to support a liability finding; (2) that he makes no cognizable 
Eighth Amendment claim; and (3) that qualified immunity insulates each defendant from 
liability. The Court addresses each argument in turn.                     

    1.   Personal Involvement.                                           
    To sustain § 1983 claims against public officials in their individual capacities, “a 
plaintiff must plead that each Government-official defendant, through the official’s own 
individual actions, has violated the Constitution.” Reynolds v. Dormire, 
636 F.3d 976, 979
 
(8th Cir. 2011) (quoting Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 
556 U.S. 662, 676
 (2009)). “In requiring a 

plaintiff to allege that each defendant was personally involved in the deprivation of his 
constitutional rights, we assess each defendant relative to [their] authority over the claimed 
constitutional violation.” Jackson v. Nixon, 
747 F.3d 537, 543
 (8th Cir. 2014).  
Commissioner Schnell                                                      
    According to Mr. Avila, Defendant Paul Schnell, as DOC Commissioner, created 

and maintained a “stay with unit” policy that was an constitutionally inadequate response 
to the COVID-19 pandemic. Mr. Avila does not allege that Commissioner Schnell was 
directly involved in any aspect of Mr. Avila’s two COVID-19 infections, other than by 
maintaining a policy that which Mr. Avila says is to blame for those infections. Defendant 
asserts that in the absence of any allegation of Commissioner Schell’s direct involvement, 
his general supervisory authority over Minnesota prisons cannot be a basis for liability. 

    Defendant is correct, but that does not end the matter. “Even if a supervisor is not 
involved in day-to-day operations, his personal involvement may be found if he is involved 
in  ‘creating,  applying,  or  interpreting  a  policy’  that  gives  rise  to  unconstitutional 
conditions.” Jackson, 
747 F.3d at 543
 (quoting Bonner v. Outlaw, 
552 F.3d 673, 679
 (8th 
Cir. 2009)). That Commissioner Schnell may have had general supervisory authority over 
Minnesota prisons is not what is important; the question is whether Mr. Avila pled more 

than this, since “an allegation that the DOC director authorized an unconstitutional policy 
may be sufficient to state a claim for actions taken directly by the director.” Jackson, 
747 F.3d at 544
 (internal quotation and citation omitted).                    
    Mr. Avila’s Second Amended Complaint is sufficient—as a matter of pleading—to 
demonstrate Commissioner Schnell’s involvement in the alleged unconstitutional conduct. 

Mr. Avila asserts that Commissioner Schnell was the architect of the “stay with unit” order 
that required Minnesota prisoners to remain in their units even when infected with COVID-
19, resulting in enhanced contagion. (Doc. 133 at 6-7, 10-11.) Broadly construing the 
Second  Amended  Complaint  (as  the  Court  must,  given  Mr.  Avila’s  pro  se  status), 
Commissioner Schnell’s policies were also responsible for Mr. Avila being forced to bunk 

with his COVID-19 positive roommate in their cell. (Id. at 6, 10.)        
    Mr. Avila’s prison was under “the control and supervision” of the Commissioner, 
who bore responsibility for prescribing the conditions of inmates’ confinement. 
Minn. Stat. § 241.01
, subds. 1, 3a(b). Crediting Mr. Avila’s allegations, Commissioner Schnell created 
and maintained policies consistent with his statutory powers, but which violated Mr. 
Avila’s constitutional rights. Mr. Avila does not seek to impose liability based on the 

Commissioner’s  mere  supervisory  authority,  but  rather  due  to  imposing  prison-wide 
policies that were unconstitutional. As a matter of pleading, that is sufficient to establish 
the type of personal involvement required to maintain an action against any particular 
defendant.                                                                
Warden Janssen                                                            
    Mr. Avila alleges that MCF-Rush City Warden Janssen is liable under § 1983 by 

virtue of “helping implement Paul Schnell’s directive to ‘stay with unit’ plans.” (Doc. 133 
at 12.) Mr. Avila asserts that Warden Janssen knew that inmates were at risk, but did not 
“rebel[] against” the Commissioner’s “stay with unit” directives. (Id.) Mr. Avila does not 
allege that Warden Janssen she was responsible for creating any DOC policy at issue here, 
that she deviated from any DOC policy directives, or that she had any direct involvement 

in his two COVID-19 infections.                                           
    A warden “might be liable if the warden had made policy decisions resulting in the 
alleged unconstitutional conditions.” Ouzts v. Cummins, 
825 F.2d 1276, 1277
 (8th Cir. 
1987). But Mr. Avila appears to plead just the opposite: that Warden Janssen made no 
policy decision, and merely followed the Commissioner’s directives. Absent some other 

indication of personal involvement or failure to supervise offending employees, this is 
insufficient to sustain a § 1983 claim against Warden Janssen.            
Jeanette Wilson, Jessica Olson, and Tina Sneen                            
    According to Mr. Avila, Defendants Jeanette Wilson, Jessica Olson, and Tina Sneen 

are health services administrators at MCF-Rush City, and were all aware of Mr. Avila’s 
preexisting medical conditions. (Doc. 133 at 13.) Mr. Avila was informed by corrections 
personnel that these defendants were responsible for making “isolation decisions.” (Id.) 
When Mr. Avila was not separated from his COVID-19 positive cellmate, he wrote kites 
to each of these defendants. (Id.) None of these defendants timely responded to Mr. Avila’s 
kites by moving him to a safer location. (Id. at 3, 11, 13–14.) Mr. Avila subsequently 

became infected with COVID-19. (Id. at 11–13.) This scenario, according to Mr. Avila, 
played out the same way twice—in November of 2020, then again in February of 2022. 
(Id.)                                                                     
    Crediting  Mr.  Avila’s  allegations—as  the  Court  must  at  this  stage  in  the 
proceedings—he has alleged enough personal involvement of each of these defendants to 

sustain a § 1983 claim. By Mr. Avila’s assertions, all three defendants were responsible for 
decisionmaking regarding inmate isolation during the COVID-19 pandemic; all three were 
aware that Mr. Avila was housed with a COVID-19 positive cellmate in close quarters; 
none of the three took corrective action; and Mr. Avila was subsequently infected with 
COVID-19. Because these defendants were “directly responsible for the conditions and at 

least some of the actions” giving rise to Mr. Avila’s claims, he has alleged sufficient 
personal involvement. Madewell v. Roberts, 
909 F.2d 1203, 1208
 (8th Cir. 1990). 
    2.   Eighth Amendment.                                               
    Defendants assert that even if Mr. Avila has sufficiently alleged direct and personal 

involvement, he cannot sustain his claims because he has not established any cognizable 
Eighth  Amendment  violation.  It  is  well  settled  that  the  Eighth  Amendment  protects 
prisoners  from  inhumane  treatment.  Farmer  v.  Brennan,  
511 U.S. 825, 832
  (1994). 
However, the Court agrees with Defendants that it is not entirely clear what precise theory 
animates Mr. Avila’s claims, since he invokes terms used for failure to protect claims, as 
well as deliberate indifference to medical needs claims.                  

    There are similarities to each theory. A failure to protect theory is rooted in prison 
officials’ constitutional obligation to “take reasonable measures to guarantee the safety of 
the inmates.” 
Id.
 at 832 (quoting Hudson v. Palmer, 
468 U.S. 517
, 526–27 (1984)). To 
sustain a claim based on failure to protect, “the inmate must show that he is incarcerated 
under conditions posing a substantial risk of serious harm.” Id. at 834. A medical-needs 

claim is similar, requiring a showing that the plaintiff suffered from an objectively serious 
medical condition. Fourte v. Faulkner Cty., 
746 F.3d 384, 387
 (8th Cir. 2014). 
    But both a failure to protect and a medical needs claim require more than just an 
objectively serious risk or condition. Rather, for such claims, “the Constitutional question 
is whether Defendants acted with ‘deliberate indifference.’” Saylor v. Nebraska, 
812 F.3d 637
, 643–44 (8th Cir. 2016) (quoting Wilson v. Seiter, 
501 U.S. 294, 303
 (1991) (cleaned 
up)). Although “deliberate indifference” in common nomenclature may seem a passive 
phrase, similar to apathy, in Eighth Amendment parlance it means more: “deliberate 
indifference” is “akin to criminal recklessness.” Saylor, 
812 F.3d at 644
 (quoting Jackson 
v. Buckman, 
756 F.3d 1060, 1065
 (8th Cir. 2014) (in turn quoting Scott v. Benson, 
742 F.3d 335, 340
  (8th  Cir.  2014)));  see  also  See  Amen  El,  
2022 WL 1110981
,  at  *  11–12 

(recognizing Eighth Amendment plaintiff must demonstrate  that the defendant had a 
“culpable state of mind,” in that they were aware of the risk of harm and deliberately 
indifferent to it) (quoting Hines v. Smith, No. 16-cv-3797 (DSD/SER), 
2018 WL 7050674
, 
*4 (D. Minn. Dec. 20, 2018)), R. & R. adopted, 
2019 WL 234778
 (D. Minn. Jan. 16, 2019).  
    Consistent with other courts in this district, this Court believes that COVID-19 poses 
an  objectively-serious  medical  risk.  Amen  El,  
2022 WL 1110981
,  at  *12;  see  also 

Mohammed S. v. Tritten, No. 20-cv-793 (NEB/ECW), 
2020 WL 2750836
, at *22 (D. Minn. 
Apr. 28, 2020) R. & R. adopted, 
2020 WL 2750109
 (D. Minn. May 27, 2020). The question, 
then, is whether Mr. Avila has alleged facts from which a court could find that Defendants 
knew of and disregarded an objective risk with a reckless state of mind.  
    As Defendants correctly note, a number of courts in this District have “declined to 

find  deliberate  indifference  to  medical  needs  in  cases  involving  prison  COVID-19 
protocols.” (Doc. 142 at 15 (quoting McCollum v. Titus, No. 21-cv-1774 (NEB/JFD), 
2023 WL 3822544
, at *5 (D. Minn. May 3, 2023), R. & R. accepted, 
2023 WL 3821566
 (D. 
Minn. Jun. 5, 2023)).) That is true, but none of those cases involved the type of forced-
close contact and exposure claims raised by Mr. Avila. For instance, in McCollum, the 

plaintiff  challenged  his  prison’s  COVID-19  mitigation  measures,  which  included 
ineffective cleaning, poor air quality, limited social distancing, and officers disregarding 
safety and sanitation protocols. 
2023 WL 3822544
, at *2. In Amen El, the allegations were 
similar: “mixing” of COVID-19 positive and negative inmates in the same unit (but not the 
same cell), poor sanitation, lax enforcement of the prison’s masking policy, and being 
forced to move to a cell vacated by a COVID-19 positive inmate 10 days earlier. 
2022 WL 1110981
, at  *14–16.  In  Blevins  v.  Schnell,  No.  20-cv-1194  (NEB/KMM),  
2021 WL 5088164
, at *1–2 (D. Minn. Sept. 15, 2021), R. & R. adopted, 
2021 WL 5087550
 (D. Minn. 
Nov. 2, 2021), the inmate-plaintiff complained that he was not given appropriate personal 
protective equipment, was forced to mingle with other prisoners and visitors who might be 
sick, and lived in a space that did not allow for social distancing. And in Frohlich v. United 
States, No. 20-cv-2692 (PJS/HB), 
2021 WL 2531188
, at *3–4 (D. Minn. Jun. 21, 2021), a 

habeas petitioner sought relief because of similar concerns.              
    Mr. Avila’s claims are different. If he were simply complaining that the DOC 
Defendants had generally not done enough to prevent the spread of COVID-19, it would 
be difficult to distinguish his case from those cited above. Here, there is more. Mr. Avila’s 
core allegation does not involve shoddy enforcement, poor sanitation, or a generalized 

inability to social distance. Rather, he alleges that his constitutional rights were violated by 
Commissioner Schnell’s forced-exposure plan, which resulted in Mr. Avila being placed 
in a small cell with an inmate who Defendants knew had tested COVID-19 positive.4 When 
Mr.  Avila  sought  to  be  moved  through  the  appropriate  channels—those  defendants 
responsible for isolation decisions—his request was ignored. In short order, Mr. Avila 

himself tested positive for COVID-19. It could well be that Defendants could present 

4 In Frohlich, the court noted that “confining Frohlich to a 9-by-12-foot cell with a cellmate 
is not deliberately indifferent.” 
2021 WL 2531188
, at *3. While that is true as a general 
matter, the calculus changes once the person’s cellmate is known to be infected with 
COVID-19.                                                                 
evidence that rebuts Mr. Avila’s allegations, but at this early stage in the proceedings (and 
given the Court’s obligation to credit Mr. Avila’s assertions), Mr. Avila has done enough 

to demonstrate a viable Eighth Amendment claim related to being forced to share a small 
cell with a known COVID-19 positive cellmate.                             
    3.   Qualified Immunity.                                             
    Even if some of Mr. Avila’s claims could otherwise proceed, however, qualified 
immunity shields all defendants from liability. “Qualified immunity shields federal and 
state officials from money damages unless a plaintiff pleads facts showing (1) that the 

official violated a statutory or constitutional right, and (2) that the right was ‘clearly 
established’ at the time of the challenged conduct.” Ashcroft v. al-Kidd, 
563 U.S. 731
, 735 
(2011). “If the law at [the] time was not clearly established, an official could not reasonably 
be expected to anticipate subsequent legal developments, nor could he fairly be said to 
‘know’ that the law forbade conduct not previously identified as unlawful.” Harlow v. 

Fitzgerald, 
457 U.S. 800, 818
 (1982). “Clearly established” means that the legal principle 
relied on must be settled, and also “clearly prohibit the [official’s] conduct in the particular 
circumstances before him.” D.C. v. Wesby, 
583 U.S. 48
, 63 (2018); see also Mullenix v. 
Luna, 
577 U.S. 7, 12
 (2015) (clearly-established inquiry must be undertaken in light of the 
specific context of the case, not as a broad general proposition). “This requires a high 

‘degree of specificity.’” Wesby, 583 U.S. at 63 (quoting Mullenix, 
577 U.S. at 13
). 
    While an inmate’s Eighth Amendment right to be free from harm in prison is clearly 
established, the Court cannot conclude that the specific conduct that Mr. Avila attacks 
here—being in a cell with a COVID-19 positive cellmate—was so clearly unconstitutional 
that “every reasonable official” would know. Wesby, 583 U.S. at 590. On the contrary, 
cases from this district and throughout the country have endorsed prison officials’ broad 

discretion  in  determining  the  appropriate  COVID-19  mitigation  measures.  See,  e.g., 
Harmon v. Harris, 
2023 WL 5499595
 (8th Cir. May 15, 2023) (summarily affirming 
district court’s5 grant of qualified immunity to prison officials faced with allegations of 
constitutionally inadequate COVID-19 response, including shared housing); McCollum, 
2023 WL 3822544
. In light of this authority, the Court cannot conclude that DOC’s double-
bunking policy stepped so far outside of Eighth Amendment bounds that any official would 

understand the policy was unconstitutional. Accord al-Kidd, 563 U.S. at 743 (“Qualified 
immunity gives government officials breathing room to make reasonable but mistaken 
judgments about open legal questions.”) To the extent that Mr. Avila raised cognizable 
claims against some defendants, those defendants are shielded by qualified immunity. 
II.  Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss the First Amended Complaint.           

    The  Court  has  concluded  that  amendment  of  Mr.  Avila’s  Second  Amended 
Complaint  would  be  futile  based  on  qualified  immunity.  Not  surprisingly,  his  First 
Amended Complaint fares no better, since it contains sparser allegations. The Court thus 
recommends  granting  Defendants’  motion  to  dismiss  Mr.  Avila’s  First  Amended 
Complaint.                                                                




5 Harmon v. Harris, 4:22-cv-0716 (BRW/ERE), 
2023 WL 176578
 (E.D. Ark. Jan. 10, 
2023), R. & R. adopted, 
2023 WL 1766482
 (E.D. Ark. Feb. 3, 2023).         
III.  Mr. Avila’s Renewed Motion to Appoint Counsel.                      
    Mr. Avila has renewed his motion to appoint counsel. However, given the Court’s 

recommendation that Mr. Avila’s First Amended Complaint be dismissed and his motion 
to amend the complaint be denied as futile, the Court sees no reasoned basis to appoint 
counsel at this point. Accordingly, the Court denies Mr. Avila’s renewed motion to appoint 
counsel.                                                                  

ORDER

    Based on the above, and on all the files, records, and proceedings in this action, IT 

IS ORDERED that:                                                          
 1)  Plaintiff Adolfo Gutierrez Avila, Jr.’s Motion to Appoint Counsel (Doc. 145) is 
    DENIED.                                                              

                      RECOMMENDATION                                     
    Additionally, based on the above, and on all the files, records, and proceedings in 
this action, IT IS RECOMMENDED that:                                      
    1)  Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss Mr. Avila’s First Amended Complaint (Doc. 
      115) be GRANTED;                                                   
    2)  This action be DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE; and                     
    3)  Mr.  Avila’s  motion  to  further  amend  that  complaint  (Docs.  133,  134)  be 
      DENIED.                                                            

Date: January 30, 2024              s/Douglas L. Micko                   
                                   DOUGLAS L. MICKO                      
                                   United States Magistrate Judge        
                            NOTICE                                       
Filing Objections: The portion of this document that is a Report and Recommendation is 
not an order or judgment of the District Court and is therefore not appealable directly to 
the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals. Under Local Rule 72.2(b)(1), “a party may file and 
serve  specific  written  objections  to  a  magistrate  judge’s  proposed  findings  and 
recommendations within 14 days after being served with a copy” of the Report and 
Recommendation.                                                           
A party may respond to those objections within 14 days after being served a copy of the 
objections. See D. Minn. LR 72.2(b)(2). All objections and responses must comply with 
the word or line limits set forth in Local Rule 72.2(c).                  

Reference

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