Sitemap | Contact | Search | Employment
 
  Subscribe to SPLC news:
  Landmark Cases  
  Case Docket  
  Immigrant Justice  
  School to Prison Pipeline  
  Mississippi Youth Justice  
  Publications  
  Legal News  
  Legal FAQ  
  Legal Assistance  
Hate Map
Hate Map
Brown v. James
Communication Device Case

AGENDA AREA: Health Justice

Case Number: 98-663-N
Court where filed: USDC Middle District of Alabama
Date filed: 06/11/1998
Status: Settled
 
Plaintiffs: Danielle Brown, a child who suffers from a severe speech disorder that prevents her from being able to articulate sounds that form words, on behalf of a class of similarly situated persons
Defendants: Alabama Governor Fob James; Alabama Medicaid Commissioner Gwendolyn Williams
Co-Counsel: Alabama Disabilities Advocacy Program (http://www.adap.net/ )
Lewis Golinker
Date(s) of Disposition:
12/18/1998: Settlement approved by Court
Amended Complaint : First amended complaint 9-25-98

Settlement : Settlement agreement 12-15-98


Preventing medical discrimination against the disabled
Six-year old Danielle Brown was born without the ability to form sounds to make words. She needed a special device called an augmentative and alternative communication device (AAC) that uses symbols, pictures, and a keyboard to help her communicate, but Medicaid had refused to pay.

The Center sued the agency, arguing that the AAC device was just as necessary to people with severe speech disorders as hearing aids are to people with hearing loss. Given that Medicaid already paid for hearing aids and other medically necessary equipment, failure to pay for the ACC devices violated the Medicaid Act and federal laws designed to protect disabled Americans from discrimination.

The suit was filed in June 1998 with help from the Alabama Disabilities Advocacy Program and the Assistive Technology Law Project. It was settled soon after and Medicaid began paying for the device for Danielle and other children and adults with severe speech disorders. One expert estimated that at least 35 Alabamians a year would need the ACC device.

» Return to the Case Docket