ODDLY ENOUGH


ODDLY ENOUGH

Boil or bite, federal panel dismisses $50M inmate suit

SOMERSET, Pa.

It doesn’t matter whether a former western Pennsylvania county jail inmate had a boil or a spider bite, his injuries — and allegations that he wasn’t given proper medical treatment — aren’t worth $50 million, a federal appeals court determined.

A 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals panel refused to reverse a federal judge’s decision dismissing Ronald Sever’s lawsuit against the Somerset County Jail, the (Somerset) Daily American reported recently.

Sever, 50, claimed he suffered fever and terrible pain from a spider bite while an inmate in April 2010. He was jailed in the southwestern Pennsylvania lockup for failing to register as a sex offender, before being transferred to Virginia on charges in that state.

U.S. Magistrate Keith Pesto recommended the case be thrown out last year, noting Sever was properly treated for a boil while in jail — but that even if it was a spider bite, it resolved quickly with minimal care.

Jail medical records confirmed that Sever received antibiotics and a bandage in early May 2010 and continued to be treated in the Virginia lockup with antibiotics and Motrin. The inflamed area healed shortly after he was moved to that state, the lower court determined.

“I doubt that anyone having familiarity with boils and spider bites would agree with Sever’s claim that he was bitten by a spider,” Pesto wrote last year. “But whether it was a bite or a boil, an injury that resolves quickly, with minimal care, and without residual effects is not under any definition of the term a serious medical need.”

County solicitor Dan Rullo announced the appeals court decision, which was issued Jan. 23, at the county’s recent prison board meeting.

Sever filed the lawsuit on his own behalf and could not be reached to comment at the Keen Mountain Correctional Center in Oakwood, Va., where he’s serving a term that expires in 2018.

Camel chases cars in rural Los Angeles County

PALMDALE, Calif.

A camel created a ruckus in rural northern Los Angeles County when it got out of its enclosure and chased cars until it was rounded up.

Deputy Sheriff John Cereoli says the camel was reported to have escaped from someone’s property in the Acton area at 8:38 a.m. Friday and the incident lasted about a half-hour. The deputy says the camel was not injured.

Corrals and other animal enclosures are commonplace in the unincorporated high desert area north of Los Angeles.

Associated Press