MARC T. TREADWELL, District Judge.
Magistrate Judge Stephen Hyles recommends dismissing Plaintiff Hines's Recast Complaint (Doc. 6) because Hines failed to exhaust her administrative remedies. Doc. 29 at 3-4. Hines objects. Doc. 30. The Court has reviewed the Recommendation and has made a de novo determination that the Magistrate Judge correctly concluded that Hines failed to demonstrate exhaustion of her administrative remedies.
On April 15, 2014, Plaintiff Hines filed civil action 5:14-cv-147 asserting an Eighth Amendment deliberate indifference claim against Defendant Nazaire for prescribing thyroid medication even though Hines had a healthy thyroid and then abruptly discontinuing it, causing significant injuries. Hines v. Nazaire, 5:14-cv-147-MTT-CHW, ECF Doc. 1 at 5. Nazaire filed a motion to dismiss asserting that Hines had not exhausted her administrative remedies. Id., ECF Doc. 20. After considering Hines's numerous and voluminous responsive filings (see id., ECF Docs. 23, 33, 35-38, 40) and her related amendments to her complaint (see id., ECF Doc. 29, 32), the Magistrate Judge recommended that Hines's claims against Nazaire be dismissed for failure to exhaust her administrative remedies. See id., ECF Doc. 42. On August 8, 2015, the Court, after considering Hines's two objections (see id., ECF Docs. 44, 46), a reply supporting her objections (Doc. 48), and her supplemental complaint (see id., ECF Doc. 53), adopted the Magistrate Judge's recommendation that Hines's claims against Nazaire be dismissed for failure to exhaust administrative remedies (the "First Nazaire Order"). See id., ECF Doc. 55. This ruling is now on appeal. See id., ECF Doc. 103.
On November 10, 2015, Hines filed this action, making allegations nearly identical to those in her first action. See Doc. 1, rescast, Doc. 6. Nazaire moved for dismissal of Hines's complaint, asserting the statute of limitations, failure to exhaust administrative remedies, collateral estoppel, res judicata, and failure to state a claim under the Eighth Amendment.
Id. at 3-4.
As Hines points out, in the First Nazaire Order, the Court found that Hines had filed at least one informal grievance and an appeal, but found "no evidence [Hines] [f]iled a formal grievance." Doc. 25 at 7. Hines disagrees with the Court's conclusion that this means that she failed to exhaust. Hines argues:
Id. at 7. Hines goes on to argue that no grievance appeal is required when prison officials do not respond to a grievance. Of course, these arguments miss the point of the Court's reasoning in the First Nazaire Order—that the then-applicable three-step grievance process required a formal grievance, and it does not appear that Hines filed such a formal grievance. See Doc. 55 at 4.
Hines asserts arguments not addressed in First Nazaire Order, the most salient of which rely on an alleged settlement offer from the prison system. See Docs. 27 at 11-13; 30 at 2-6 (reasserting that the settlement letter evidences exhaustion and reasserting that "Nurse Rogers," the administrator who allegedly signed the settlement letter, retaliated against her by destroying her grievance); see also 5:14-cv-147, ECF Doc. 87 at 12 (settlement offer letter). But Hines is estopped from asserting these arguments because she previously raised these arguments in her attempt to avoid an adverse exhaustion ruling on her related claims in 5:14-cv-147 against Nazaire's hiring superior, Dr. Billy Nichols, and Georgia Correctional Healthcare (GCH). See 5:14-cv-147, ECF Docs. 87, 93, 94, 96, 98, 99. The Court rejected her arguments there, and found the settlement letter to be a forgery. Id., ECF Doc. 101 at 4-5. She is accordingly collaterally estopped from reasserting these arguments here.
In any event, the Court remains convinced that the settlement letter is a forgery for the reasons it gave in the order dismissing Nichols and GCH.
In conclusion, the Recommendation (Doc. 29) is
5:14-cv-147, ECF Doc. 55 at 4.