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THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal ISSN 1076-769X Vol. 12 No.3, Spring/Summer 1998 Friends and Colleagues Remember Activist Attorney Robert F. Bensing Robert F. Bensing, a staffattorney with the Southern Center for Human Rights, died February 3 of injuries sustained in a car accident after meeting with inmate clients about a recently settled case at the Valdosta State Prison in Georgia. The state ofGeorgia agreed to pay $283,000 over charges ofabuse and brutality committed by prison staff. Local press reported the inmates' victory in the case the same day Bensing died. This issue ofthe Journal is dedicated to his life and work. Bensing, who spent his entire career working in public interest law, recently received the ACLU of Georgia's 1997 Civil Liberties Award. He began practicing prison litigation 15 years ago with Prisoners' Legal Services ofNew York in Plattsburgh. In 1995, he moved to the Southern Center for Human Rights in Atlanta. Bensing also volunteered his services on behalf of refugee and immigrant rights. In his most recentprison case, Anderson v. Gamer, Bensing exposed the seemingly state-sanctioned horrors endured by prisoners during shakedowns at Hays and Walker State Prisons. Bensing's efforts brought a successful conclusion to a suit where 20 prison employees testified and corroborated the accounts ofbeatings and attacks carried out by prison guards on unresisting inmates. Many ofthe incidents were committed in the presence"'ofthe state's corrections commissioner, Wayne Garner. Colleagues recall Bensing as a gentle, kind, and laid-back individual. He was a vegetarian with little concern for money or status. One colleague recalled, "He only cared about his clients and their interests. Bob exhibited not the slightest need to prove anything about himself to anyone. He was at ease with himselfand with anyone else, from the high and mighty to the poorest person in the dingiest prison cell." Family and friends also jokingly remembered his often "disheveled" dress and love ofjunk food. ''Bob was not flashy. He wore clothes that looked like they had been bought at KMart ten years ago and slept in the night before. It pained him to wear a tie, and, given the collection of ties he had, it often pained us to see him wearing them." Fellow staff members say Bob always had a supply of Oreo cookies on hand, whether in the office or out interviewing clients, which he was "occasionally" willing to share. Stephen B. Bright, Director of the Southern Center for Human Rights, delivered the eulogy for Bensing. Bright's tribute to his friend and colleague best and poignantly descri~s the wonderfully devoted and compassionate man the prisoners' rights community has lost: Bob's life was a ministry to those most in need. He traveled down that road seldom taken oftrying to bring to life the dream of equal justice for all. He lived out his belief in human rights -- that all people are entitled to dignity, even those who have offended us most grievously. He was a great humanitarian. He knew that people were much more than the worst thing they ever did in their lives. The Southern Center for Human Rights honored Bensing posthumously with the "Service to Prisoners Award" at its 1998 awards dinner held at the Washington Stouffer ~ Renaissance Mayflower Hotel on October 6. INSIDE THE JOURNAL Case Law Report. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Court of Appeals Cases. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . District Court Cases. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . AIDS Project Update. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Prison News. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Highlights from the NPP's Docket NPP Publications ' 2 2 19 33 34 35 35 THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal-- page 2 Spring/Summer 1998 Case Law Report -- Highlights of Most Important Cases by John Boston Court of Appeals Cases PrisonUtigationReformActIInForma Pauperis Walp v. Scott, 115 F.3d 308 (5th Cir. 1997). The plaintiff was denied IFP status by the district court, which interpreted the Prison Litigation Reform Act as barring the filing of a civil rights complaint by a prisoner who had failed to pay the costs--all ofthem--associated with filing a previous claim, which was still pending. (He was apparently broke; he had been assessed 14 cents as an initial filing fee and that is all he had paid.) At 309: "Nowhere does the PLRA require a prisoner to pay the entire filing fee in a prior civil case before filing a second complaint." This result is also inconsistent with the balance struck by the PLRA, which provides that in no event shall prisoners be prohibited from suing because they have no means to pay the initial fee. In addition, it turns the "three strikes" rule into a "one swing" rule. Grievances and Complaints about PrisonIProcedural Due ProcessDisciplin~ryProceedings McLaurin v. Cole, 115 F.3d 408 (6th Cir. 1997). The plaintiff alleged that a disciplinary charge was filed in retaliation for his filing a grievance against the officer. The record reveals that the plaintiffhad threatened to kill the officer, and it is therefore not surprising that the officer issued the charge. The plaintiff failed to prove that the filing of the grievance was a substantial ormotivating factor, and the officer's actions were not shocking to the conscience. The court is not only wrong in adopting the "shock the conscience" test (see concurring opinion), but completely muddies the water as to why the officer'§ action did not meet the standard--because it was justified, or because it was not sufficientlyegregious evenifunjustified? It also seems to engage in appellate factfinding, since the court grantedjudgment as a matter of law after the plaintiffs case, and it does not appear that the plaintiffadmitted threatening to kill the officer. ReligionIDamages-IntangibleInjuries Warner v. Orange County Dept. of Probation, 115 F.3d 1068 (2d Cir. 1997). The plaintiff was required to attend Alcoholics Anonymous as a condition ofprobation, which was recommended as a matter of routine by the county probationdepartmentfor defendants with alcohol problems. He objected to the religious component of the program. Compelled attendance at A.A. sessions violated the Establishment Clause. They had a substantial religious component and plaintiffs participation was coerced. The result would be different had he been offered a reasonable choice of therapy providers. The damage award of $1.00 was proper. The court engages in a homily about the evils of a substantial damage award in these circumstances and the attractiveness of a good faith defense, which does not exist for municipalities. Use of ForceNerbal AbuselPersonal Involvement and SupervisoryLiability/ Damages-Punitive Estate ofDavis by Ostenfeld v. Delo, 115 F.3d 1388 (8th Cir. 1997). The plaintiffwas slow in obeying instructions about handcuffing for l!.search. He asked for a higher-ranking officer to be present. Defendants convened a "movement team" to conduct a cell extraction. Movement teams generally were supposed to use no more forc~ than necessary, and records of200 movement team instances showed only two serious injuries. Movement team incidents are videotaped and all staff involved are supposed to submit reports, which are reviewed through the chain of command. The officerresponsible for restraining the plaintiffs head lunged onto him as he lay unmoving on his bed, struck him repeatedly about the head and face, and smashed his chin against the concrete floor. The other team members did not intervene and did not report this force or any injury to the plaintiff. The Superintendentreviewed the incidentand observed from the video tape that the plaintiffwas bleeding, but did not order any further investigation. The videotape was later lost. There was no system for tracking complaints against officers, and the sUperinteQ.dentrememberednone against the main defendant, but the court found that several such prior complaints had been dismissed without investigation. The district courtproperly found that the main officer defendant violated the Eighth Amendment, based on its determination that the plaintiffwas more credible. Its conclusion that force was used maliciously and sadistically is supported both by the disproportion between the force used and the force needed and by the fact that the defendant taunted and threatened the plaintiff the day after the incident. He was not entitled to qualified immunity. The court agrees that striking an unresisting inmate 20 to 25 times in the head while four other officers were restraining him and two THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal -- page 3 others were standing by is a violation of clearly established law. (The Superintendent testified that any blow would be excessive on these facts.) The other members ofthe movement team were properly held liable for knowing failure to intervene. At 1395: "A prison official may be liable for failure to protect an inmate from a use of excessive force if he is deliberately indifferent to a substantial risk ofserious hann to an inmate." This law was clearly established. Their failure to report the plaintiff's injury is evidence ofdeliberate indifference. The movement team supervisor was properly held liable for the same reason. The Superintendent was properly held liable based on evidence that he knew ofthe main defendant's propensity to use excessive force, based on one incident in which he had authorized an investigation and others in which he took no action. These facts support a finding of deliberate indifference. The plaintiff sustained numerous contusions and lacerations, including one laceration requiring internal and external sutures. The district court awarded $10,000 in compensatory damages jointly and severally against all the defendants and $5000 in punitive damages against the main officer defendant and the Superintendent. The award of punitive damages was proper against both defendants. PrisonUtigationReform Act/InForma Pauperis Santerv. Quin/an, 115 F.3d 355 (5th Cir. 1997). The petitioner sought a writ of mandamus from the district court directing a state court to review his state writ on the merits, and appealed its denial. The Prison Litigation Reform Act does not apply because the action is not an appeal of a judgment in a civil case. Mandamus actions that seek relief Spring/Summer 1998 analogous to civil cases should be treated as civil under the PLRA, while actions directed to criminal proceedings are not. allegedly unconstitutional policy, a plaintiff must submit to the challenged policy." Religion-Practices--Beards, Hair, DresslExhaustion of Remedies/ .#? Standing Use of ForcelPre-Trial Detainees Jackson-Beyv. Hans/maier, 115 FJd 1091 (2d Cir. 1997). The plaintiffalleged that he was precluded from wearing to his father's funeral white garments and a red fez as required by the Moorish Science Temple religion. As a result, he chose not to go to the funeral. Departmental policy required prisoners to register their religious affiliations in order for these to be accommodated. The plaintiff was registered as a Muslim and not an MST adherent. Policy also said that prisoners may not wear religious garb ofreligions other than their own. Another policy required prisoners attending funerals to wear civilian clothing issued by the state, but defendants admitted that they will accommodate religious requirements in this respect. The plaintiff lacked standing to challenge the refusal to let him wear his religious garb because he had refused to follow the standard procedure of registering his religion and failed to show that doing so would have been futile. He did not challenge the constitutionality of the registration requirement, which the court notes places a minor burden on religious rights while serving important purposes for prison officials. The court refuses to interpret DOCS documents indicating that only the Sunni and American Muslim Mission sects are recognized as meaning that the plaintiff would not have been accommodated, and weighs the fact that defendants made some accommodation after this lawsuit was filed. At 1096: "As a general matter, to establish standing to challenge an Rileyv. Dorton, 115 F.3d 1159 (4th Cir. 1997) (en banc). The plaintiff alleged that a police officer stuck a pen a quarter of an inch into his nose, threatening to rip it open, and slapped him across the face with "medium force." The Fourth Amendment govems use offorce during arrest, investigatory stop, or other "seizure" of a person, but this is not a Fourth Amendment case because the force was used two hours and ninety miles from the place ofarrest. Also, the plaintiffwas arrested pursuant to a valid warrant, and is therefore a pre-trial detainee under the law of the Fourth Circuit. The court rejects the holdings of several circuits that "arrest" extends through the period of custody by the arresting officers. This is not a Fifth Amendment case because the plaintiffdid not incriminate himself and the incident of which he complains was not an interrogation. The claim is governed by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, which does not prohibit de minimis uses of force. At 1167: "Punishmentmust mean somethingmore than trifling injury or negligible force." The plaintiff made claims of psychological injury, but the record does not support them; his medical records show that he has made numerous complaints about all manner ofmedical and psychological claims except for the lingering effects of his treatment after arrest. PrisonUtigationReformAct/In Forma PauperislProtection from Inmate AssaultIPleading Gibbs v. Roman, 116 FJd 83 (3d Cir. 1997). The plaintiffalleged that a prison .~------------------------- THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal -- page 4 librarian pennitted an inmate law clerk to read his legal papers, thereby disclosing that he had been a government infonnant, resulting in threats on his life and physical attacks by other inmates. The district court erred in dismissing the claim under the "three strikes" provision; the plaintiff's allegations of threats and assaults met the statutory requirement of "imminent danger of serious physical injury." At the pleading stage, allegations in the complaint should be construed as true, and this principle applies to allegations ofimminent danger. The defendants may subsequently challenge these allegations and the district court must then determine whether they are credible as of the time the alleged incident occurred, and not as ofthe time the complaint was filed. The court may rely upon sworn affidavits or depositions or may hold a hearing. Procedural Due Process-Administrative Segregation, Disciplinary Proceedings/Personal InvolvementandSupervisoryLiability Sealey v. Giltner, 116 F.3d 47 (2d Cir.1997). Theplaintiffwasaccusedof assault, fighting and weapons possession. He was found not guilty at a disciplinary hearing, since there was no employee witness and a confidential infonnant's report was unsubstantiated, but he was placed in .administrative segregation based in part on the confidential information indicating involvement in extortion and strong arming. The determination was reversed on administrative appeal but on rehearing he was put back in segregation, and this time the determination was upheld. However, he had been transferred and released from segregation. At 51, citing Williams v. Smith: A supervisory official is liable for constitutional violations if he or she (1) directly participated in the violation; (2) failed to remedy the violation after learning of it through a report or appeal; (3) created a custom or policy fostering the violation or allowed the custom or policy to continue after learning '5f it; or (4) was grossly negligent in supervising subordinates who caused the violation. A letter to the Commissioner that was referred to the Director of Special Housing for review did not render the Commissioner liable under this standard. The plaintiff should have the opportunity to show that he was deprived ofliberty under Sandin based on the fact that he faced an indefmite term in SHU and actually served 152 days. At 52 n. 1: "Prior to Sandin, we assessed an inmate's entitlement to procedural protections in light of the potential penalty he or she faced." On remand, the court should also consider whether the defendants "acted in bad faith, labeling as administrative a confinement that only could bejustified as punitive and if so whether the notice Sealey received was adequate." (52-53) Ifthe segregation was administrative, the court should consider whether the initial notice and explanations at later hearings sufficed to justify the full tenn of the segregation. Spring/Summer 1998 disorder and that seizures would likely be triggered by alcohol withdrawal. It was clearly established that "an official acts with deliberate indifference when he knows that an inmate is in serious need ofmedical care, but he fails or refuses to obtain medical treatment for the imp.ate," or "intentionally delays providing an inmate with access to medical treatment, knowing that the inmate has a life-threatening condition or an urgent medical condition that would be exacerbated by delay." (1425) A prior decision established that "sheriffs and jailers cannot place or keep a chronic alcoholic in jail without any medical supervision, when the defendants are aware that the alcoholic is suffering from a severe fonn of alcohol withdrawal." (1426) Id.: "... [A] jail official who is aware ofbut ignores the dangers ofacute alcohol withdrawal and waits for a manifest emergency before obtaining medical care is deliberately indifferent to the inmate's constitutional rights." At 1426: "Whether each of the defendants had the requisite knowledge ofthe seriousness ofLancaster's medical needs is a question of fact subject to demonstration in the usual ways, including inference from circumstantial evidence." All the defendants here could be found to have the requisite knowledge and to have planned to keep him in jail without medical supervision or treatment Pre-Trial DetaineeslMedicai Care- until he had a seizure. StandardsofLiability-SeriousMedicai The county sheriff was a final Needs/State Officials and Agencies/ policymaker, but whether for the state State Law Immunities ofAlabama and not the county is at issue Lancaster v. Monroe County, Alfl., in another case; the court defers 116 F.3d 1419 (11th Cir. 1997). The resolution of the issue. (McMillian v. decedent was arrested for DWI. He fell Monroe County, Ala., 117 S.Ct. 1734 out ofa top bunk and hit his head on the (1997) has held that Alabama sheriffs are floor and died a couple of days later of state officials in their law enforcement an intra cranial hemorrhage. His capacity.) condition was consistent with seizures. Jailers'sued in their official capacities His family had repeatedly warned are state officials in Alabama, and everyone in sight that he had a seizure entitled to Eleventh Amendment THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal -- page 5 immunity. Sovereign immunity bars state law claims against the Sheriff for negligent performance of the statutory duty to provide medical care. The court reaches the same conclusion about jailers. PrisonLitigationReform ActJIn Forma Pauperis Williams v. Roberts, 116 F.3d 1126 (5th Cir. 1997). Under the Prison Litigation Reform Act; appellate courts must assess fees from IFP litigants at the moment the appeal is filed, even if it is later dismissed. PrisonLitigationReformActJIn Forma Pauperis Williamson v. Mark, 116 F.3d 115 (5th Cir. 1997). Financial screening under the Prison Litigation Reform Act is to be done in the district court; this appeal is held in abeyance and the question ofthe plaintiffs financial status, assessment offiling fee, etc., is remanded to the district court. The substance of his appeal concerns the district court's assessment ofthe PLRA filing fee in that court; ifthe court finds any merit to that claim, it will remand to the district court for reassessment of the district court filing fees. If the plaintiff is ultimately dissatisfied with the resolution of that issue and wants to appeal from it, he can file a new notice of appeal and proceed without paying a second appellate filing fee. publications did not counsel violence, and there is no evidence that they have ever caused a disruption. Certainly the views expressed in the publications are racist and separatist, but religious literature may not be banned on that ground alone." The material expressed opposition to integrated celling,"" and inmates have no right to insist on segregation, but that doesn't mean they give up their religious beliefs or that these materials necessarily cause violence or refusal to occupy cells as ordered. Also, when the PublicationsReview Committee examined the same materials, it voted to approve them. ld,: "Prison authorities ... have not been consistent in rejecting these materials, a fact which leads us to believe that rejection, when it occurred, was an exaggerated response." The district court awarded $1.00 in compensatory damages and $500.00 in punitive damages. The award ofpunitive damages is upheld; the court's finding that the defendants were callously indifferent to plaintiffs' right to read the materials was not clearly erroneous. The court had already held the blanket ban unconstitutional at the time these materials were rejected, and a defendant here was a defendant in the earlier action. Color ofLawlMental Health CarelPreTrial Detainees Bucknerv. Toro, 116FJd450(l1th Cir. 1997). The plaintiff was arrested and subsequently developed a "conversionreaction" and was unable to walk. He received treatment from Prison Religion/Publications/Damages-Health Services, Inc., and alleged that Intangible Injuries, Punitive Williams v. Brimeyer, 116 F.3d 351 his condition went undiagnosed and has (8th Cir. 1997). A blanket ban on become permanent. At 452: "When a private entity like materials from the Church of Jesus Christ Christian is unconstitutional. The PHS contracts with a county to provide defendants had a publication review medical services to inmates, it performs procedure but didn't use it. The plaintiff a function traditionally within the was entitled to the particular materials exclusive prerogative of the state.... he was denied. At 354: "The incoming In so doing, it becomes the functional equivalent of the Therefore the policy reqluirement Monell and progeny apply. This requirement is not an immunity which arguably does not apply to a private defendant; it is a limitation on municipal liability to cases where the entity actually caused the violation. Criminal Proceedings Turk v. White, 116 F.3d 1264 (9th Cir. 1997). A statute providing for life imprisonment without parole for state prisoners convicted of assault likely to produce great bodily injury committed while the prisoner was already serving a life sentence did not deny equal protection, even as applied to a prisoner whose underlying life sentence was later vacated. The prisoner's status was used to defme the offense and not to enhance the penalty. The interest in stopping prisoners serving life sentences from attacking guards provided a rational basis for the classification. PrisonLitigationReformActJIn Forma Pauperis Gay v. Texas Dept. ofCorrections State Jail Div.., 117 F.3d 240 (5th Cir. 1997). The filing fee requirements ofthe Prison Litigation Reform Act apply to prisoners who file a notice of appeal while incarcerated but are subsequently released. (The Second Circuit has reached the opposite conclusion.) Sexual AbuselMunicipallties Sewell v. Town ofLake Hamilton, 117 F.3d 488 (11th Cir. 1997). The plaintiff alleged that she was sexually molested by a police officer after arrest. A jury awarded $452,000 in damages. The municipality is not liable for failure to train and supervise, since the proper behavior (refraining from sexual abuse) was obvious to all without training or supervision. THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal-- page 6 PrisonLitigationReform ActIIn Forma Pauperis/Appeal Baugh v. Taylor, 117 F.3d 197 (5th Cir. 1997). The district court dismissed the plaintiffs claims as frivolous based on answers he provided to a questionnaire, and certified that an appeal was not taken in good faith. At 200: "A prisoner litigant who has been denied IFP status for appeal, or whose appeal has been certified as taken in bad faith, must pay the full filing fee and other costs when due, without the benefit of the accommodating assessment procedures found in section 1915(b)." The court rejects the Sixth Circuit's conclusion in Floyd v. United States that district courts may only certify non-prison appeals as not taken in good faith. A district court's certification that an appeal is not taken in good faith is subject to appellate review; the court harmonizes 28 U.S.C. § 1915(a) with Fed.R.App.P. 24(a), contra Floyd, which held that the rule was repealed in part. The district court is required under Rule 24(a) to state the reasons for its certification. The litigant may then, within the time prescribed by Rule 4, pay the full filing fee and costs and proceed with the appeal, or contest the certification decision by filing a motion for leave to proceed IFP with the court ofappeals....Such a motion, if successful, will be deemed to be a timely notice of appeal. The motion must be directed solely to the certification decision and not the merits. At 202 (footnote omitted): "The said motion and deemed notice of appeal shall be a filing for purposes of the PLRA and will trigger the financial screening and assessment procedures thereof." Ifsuch a motion is successful, the court will order briefing on the merits ofthe appeal. However, ifthe merits of the IFP decision and the appeal are so intertwined as to constitute the same issue, the court may decide the merits as well as the IFP issue. (Will they give notice and ask for briefmg ofthe merits in such a case? They don't say.) If the prisoner persists in appealing despite an adverse decision on the motion, the filing fee must be paid within 30 da's or the appeal will be dismissed for lack of prosecution. Transfers Polandv. Stewart, 117FJd 1094 (9th Cir. 1997). At 1098: "The Attorney General may, at her discretion, waive the federal sovereign's strict right to exclusive custody of a prisoner and transfer a federal prisoner to a state sovereignty to enable the state to subject the prisoner to conviction for a crime against it." Here, the petitioners were turned over to state authorities so they could be prosecuted for a capital crime. Protection from Inmate Assault! Qassification/AppointmentofCounsel Hamilton v. Leavy, 117 FJd 742 (3d Cir. 1997). The plaintiff has a long history ofbeing assaulted and has been placed in protective custody and transferred out of state. He was returned to Delaware to prosecute civil actions in the state courts and a guard denounced him as a snitch in the presence of inmates. The Multi-Disciplinary Team (MDT) unanimously recommended that he be placed in protective custody, but they took no immediate action to protect him; they forwarded their recommendation to the Central Institutional Classification Committee (CICC), which did nothing. Less than two months later he was assaulted by another prisoner, who pled guilty and said he did it because the plaintiff was a snitch. The district court erred in granting summary judgment to the chair of the CICC based on her affidavit that said Spring/Summer 1998 there was no danger to the plaintiffat the prison where he was held. The MDT's recommendation, which considered the plaintiffs history of assaults and acknowledged that his safety concern was statewide, constituted evidence of a substantial risk ofharm and provided the CICC chair with knowledge of the risk. Since she 'knew he had been labeled a snitch, a fact-finder could infer that she knew the threat was imminent. The circumstantial evidence was sufficient to support an inference ofknowledge and the "no action" decision demonstrated conscious disregard of the risk. The MDT defendants acted reasonably in forwarding their recommendation to the CICC per prison procedure, but they did not necessarily act reasonably in doing nothing after. their recommendation was rejected. At 747 n. 1: The district court's suggestion that the plaintiff must give advance notice ofhis safety concerns is inconsistent with Farmer; the question is whether the defendants knew about the risks. The district court should have appointed counsel. It erred in concluding that the plaintiffdid not have a colorable claim, and he appears to be ill-equipped to litigate in light of medical evidence thathe suffers from a paranoid delusional disorder. Publications Owen v. Wille, 117 F.3d 1235 (11th Cir. 1997). The plaintiff was denied publications containing nude photos. The defendants did not dispute that a blanket ban on such photos would be unconstitutional. Uncontradicted evidence showed that each publication sent to a prisoner was reviewed by at least three prison officials. Summary judgment for the defendant was proper. There is no examination ofthe individual publications by the court; however, there THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal -- page 7 is no indication that such examination was sought. The censorship regulations are not described and the court does not pass on their constitutionality, much less whether the publications actually violated them. Habeas CorpuslProcedural Due Process Woratzeck v. Arizona Bd. ofExec. Clemency, 117 F.3d 400 (9th Cir. 1997). The plaintiff argued that the procedural deficiencies in his clemency hearing denied due process and he should not be executed just yet. The plaintiffs claim was appropriately brought via § 1983 and not habeas corpus, since a favorable decision would not necessarily imply the invalidity of the punishment imposed; it would merely provide him with another clemency hearing. The involvement of his former defense attorney and the Attorney General in opposing his clemency petition did not deny due process. Since there are no substantive limitations in the Arizona clemency scheme, there is no liberty interest arising from state law. However, the court applies the Sixth Circuit's decision that clemency plays an integral part in a state's criminal justice procedure and therefore must be conducted with due process even if clemency itsel(is not required, and finds that due process was not violated because the proceeding did not "shock the conscience" even if the involvement of attorney general and former defense counsel were "unfortunate and inexcusable." PrisonLitigationReform Act!In Forma Pauperis Kincade v. Sparkman, 117 F.3d 949 (6th Cir. 1997). The Prison Litigation Reform Act's filing fee requirements and three strikes provision do not apply to petitions for habeas corpus or postconviction relief; these are not civil actions for PLRA purposes. Persons seeking such relief are required only to file a statement ofassets and inability to pay the fees to proceed IFP. At 952: "... [A] prisoner may not attempt to e10ak another civil action, such as an alleged civil rights violation, under the auspices of § 2254 and § 2255." In such a case the district court must assess the filing fee. In Forma Pauperis Marts v. Hines, 117 F.3d 1504 (5th Cir. 1997) (en banc). At 1506: "... [W]e now hold that dismissals as frivolous or malicious should be deemed to be dismissals with prejudice unless the district court specifically dismisses without prejudice. . .. Unexplained dismissals without prejudice will necessitate a remand." The appeals court has the authority to change dismissal without prejudice to dismissal with prejudice even in the absence ofa crossappeal. The "Analysis" section of this opinion begins (1505): "Once again we consider the application of limited judicial resources to an ever increasing number ofprisoner pro se filings." Eight out of 18 judges dissent from this holding. The PLRA is not considered. AppeallModification of Judgments! Contempt/Class Actions-Settlement of ActionslInterventionlAccess to Courts-Punishment and Retaliation Twelve John Does v. District of Columbia, 117 F.3d 571 (D.C.Cir.1997). A contempt motion was to be settled with some ofthe heavy fines held in abeyance and ultimately returned ifthe District met required staffing levels. Prisoners filed pro se motions asking the court to oust class counsel, permit them to intervene as a subclass, appoint a receiver, and Spring/Summer 1998 grant an anti-retaliation order. Subsequently 1100 of 1300 prisoners in the jail signed petitions supporting the dissidents. All motions were denied except for the anti-retaliation order and allowing dissident class members to be added to the group that meets with class counsel. A modified consent decree is an order granting, continuing, modifying, refusing or dissolving an injunction and is therefore appealable. The named interveners had all been transferred to other jails and were not even seeking retransfer. However, they have standing on appeal. At 575: "A party certified as class representative may pursue the class claim even after his purely individual claim becomes moot, ... and a named plaintiffwho has merely asked for class certification may appeal the denial ofclass certification even after his individual claim becomes moot." The district court did not abuse its discretion in denying the motion to intervene as a subclass. The question is whether the dissidents were adequately represented by class counsel. The claim that class counsel failed to maintain adequate communication with, and to be sufficientlyresponsive to, class members is rejected; the dispute relates to counsel's failure to embrace the dissidents' agenda, which went beyond the scope of the consent judgment that counsel was enforcing. W0 r k Assignments!Pre-Trial Detainees/Class Actions-Certification of ClasseslMootness Wade v. Kirkland, 118 F.3d 667 (9th Cir. 1997). The plaintiff challenged working conditions of"chain gang" labor. He was transferred from the jail while class certification was pending and the district court dismissed as moot without ruling on certification. The court remands for a ruling on certification, THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal-- page 8 including a detennination whether the plaintiff may remain as the class representative or whether other class members with live claims should be allowed to intervene. Had the plaintiffs claims become moot after certification, mootness would have had no effect on the action or the plaintiffs status as class representative. Had they become moot after denial of class certification, he would have standing to appeal the denial. By analogy, this plaintiff also has standing under Geraghty. In some cases it may be appropriate to resolve a motion on the merits before deciding a class certification motion, but not in this case. The plaintiff "purported to represent short-tenn inmates in a countyjail, presenting a classic example of a transitory claim that cries out for a ruling on certification as quickly as possible." (670) The district court must, of course, detennine the merits of the "transitory claim" argument. If the claims are "inherently transitory," the action is not moot regardless of lack of evidence that anyone will be subject to the acts that gave rise to the claims. In addition, the court may certify a class in such an action, based on the plaintiffs standing at the outset ofthe case, under the relation back doctrine. for possession of drugs but not placed in the general inmate population, at least if there is reasonable suspicion that they have additional drugs or weapons on their persons.... However, it was cle'itrly established in May 1994 that a strip search ofa person arrested for driving while under the influence ofdrugs but not placed in the general jail population is not justified in the absence of reasonable suspicion that the arrestee has drugs or weapons hidden on his or her person. Pre-Trial Detainees/Suicide PreventionlUse of Force-Chemical Agents Monday v. Oullette, 118 F.3d 1099 (6th Cir. 1997). The plaintiff called l}. mental health hotline; the person he talked to thought he might have overdosed and called the police. He refused to go to the hospital with them. The police said they would have to pepper spray him if he didn't go with them. He didn't, and they did. The plaintiff spent about five days in the hospital as a result. The defendant had probable cause to believe that plaintiff was attempting to commit suicide. The use of pepper spray to arrest him was reasonable given Searches-.:Person-Arrestees Foote v. Spiegel, 118 F.3d 1416 (1Oth the plaintiffs size, the fact that he had Cir. 1997). The plaintiffwas stopped in been drinking, and his adamant refusal traffic and arrested because she was to go to the hospital. The defendant believed to be under the influence of testified that it would have been more marijuana. She was strip searched dangerous to put his hands on the pursuant to a policy that applied to all plaintiff. persons arrested on drug charges. No drugs were found. HabeasCorpus/GoodTimelProcedurai The defendant was not entitled to DueProcess-DisciplinaryProceedings! qualified immunity for the strip search. Ex Post Facto Laws At 1425: Hallmarkv. Johnson, 118 F.3d 1073 It is not clearly unconstitutional (5th Cir. 1997). A 1993 administrative to strip search persons arrested policy abrogated the fonner policy that Spring/Summer 1998 gave prison officials discretion to restore good time that had been forfeited as a result of disciplinary proceedings. The policy applied to good time already forfeited. The directive does not violate the Ex Post Facto Clause. It does not present a retroactive denial of an opportunity to reduce a prison sentence, not does it involve the cancellation of good time credits already earned. It presents only a "speculative" possibility of extending the prisoners' tenns, since there had been only a speculative possibility ofgetting the good time back. No liberty interest in forfeited good time credits exists because Texas law previously made restoration ofgood time discretionary. One petitioner alleged that he was denied the names of his alleged coconspirators' names when charged with conspiracy to create a work stoppage; however, he did not explain how the lack of that piece of infonnation prejudiced his defense. There is no right to crossexamination at disciplinary hearings. The refusal ofstate courts to consider prison disciplinary proceedings via habeas corpus does not state grounds for relief in federal court. Prison Litigation Reform Act In re Stone, 118 F.3d 1032 (5th Cir. 1997). A petition for a writ ofmandamus addressed to the plaintiffs federal sentence credit was not subject to the fee provisions of the Prison Litigation Refonn Act because in substance it was not a civil action but an appeal. The nature ofthe underlying action governs the nature of the mandamus, and since' the underlying action was for postconviction relief, it wasn't civil and didn't invoke the PLRA. Access to Courts-Punishment an Retaliation Oliver v. Fauver, 118 F.3d 175 (3 THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal-- page 9 Cir. 1997). The plaintiff alleged that Texas Tort Claims Act because her claim legal mail had been returned without arose out of the negligence of the mailing and in one case opened. Lewis employee who left her alone with the v. Casey overruled this circuit's prior assailant in an unsupervised location, not holding in Bieregu v. Reno that mail- out ofthe assailant's intentional tort. The opening denies court access without employee's negligence was a pro:Ypiate regard to actual injury. This plaintiff cause of the injury, and the assailant's showed no injmy, since his papers arrived criminal act was foreseeable. in court and his appeal was adjudicated. Medical Care Logan v. Clarke, 119 F.3d 647 (8th Suicide PreventionlPre-Trial Detainees Barrie v. Grand County, Utah, 119 Cir. 1997). The plaintiff complained of F.3d 862 (10th Cir. 1997). A claim on substantial backpain and a painful fungal behalf of a prisoner who committed skin infection. Defendants were not suicide before he was taken before a deliberately indifferent to his medical magistrate is to be adjudicated under the needs. Prison doctors attempted to treat deliberate indifference standard and not him on numerous occasions, though their Fourth Amendment objective choice ofmedications was limited by his reasonableness. Contrary authority history of drug abuse. The pain-killers arising from alleged intentional physical he was offered were not completely assaults by police is distinguished. ineffective. He was denied a bottom Claims based on jail suicide "are bunk because he did not meet the prison's considered and treated as claims based criteria for medical assignment. The on the failure ofjail officials to provide delay in sending him to a specialist for medical care for those in their custody." his skin condition was not deliberate Summary judgment is granted to indifference. defendants on the merits. ProceduralDueProcess-Disciplinary Sexual AbuselPendent and ProceedingslHabeas Corpus Supplemental Claims; State Law in Stone-Beyv. Barnes, 120 F.3d 718 Federal Courts (7th Cir. 1997). The plaintiff claimed Downey v. Denton County, Texas, thathis placementin segregation violated 119 F.3d 381 (5th Cir. 1997). The due process because there was no plaintiff was sexually assaulted by an evidence to support his guilt. His claim employee ofthe Sheriffs Department and was not cognizable under § 1983 because bore a child as a result. The employee his conviction had not been invalidated was convicted of "official oppression." via state process or called into question A jury awarded $100,000 against the via federal habeas corpus. The comt says county and $1 million against the that in its previous decisions, applying assailant. Heck v. Humphrey, it treated the The district court did not err in "judgments" of prison disciplinary granting the individual defendants committees in the same manner as supervisoryjudgment on partial findings criminal judgments, and that Edwards on the ground that there was no evidence v. Balisok "confirmed the correctness of that the Sheriffknew ofa substantial risk our view." of harm to the plaintiff or disregarded This is not quite right. Balisok--a case such a risk. involving loss of good time--relied on The plaintiffcould recover under the Preiser v. Rodriguez, another good time Spring/Summer 1998 case, which emphasized habeas corpus after exhaustion ofstate remedies as the exclusive remedy when immediate or earlier release is sought. Heck v. Humphrey, a criminal case, had emphasized the analogy between a § 1983 claim ofunfounded criminal prosecution and the tort,of malicious prosecution, which requires as an element that the prosecution have been terminated favorably to the defendant. Balisok and Heck were both authored by Justice Scalia, butthe Balisokopinion studiously avoids reliance on Heclts malicious prosecution analogy with its emphasis on the judgment in the criminal case. In this case, which involves no loss of good time, the court entirely glosses over the analytical question ofthe relation of Heck's and Balisok's holdings: Does it make any difference in applying Heck that the sentence imposed was one ofdisciplinary segregation alone, as opposed to segregation coupled with a loss of good-time credits? ... In our view, it does not. The Supreme Court was concerned in Heck not only with the particular sentence imposed, but also with the fact of the prisoner's conviction itself.... The "conviction" in the prison disciplinary sense is the fmding of guilt on the disciplinary charge, and if success on the plaintiffs section 1983 claim necessarily would imply the invalidity of that finding, then Heck bars the claim until such time as its requirements are satisfied. Administrative Segregation/ ProceduralDueProcess-Disciplinary Proceedings/Cruel and Unusual Punishment/Sanitation Beverati v. Smith, 120 F.3d 500 • THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal -- page 10 (4th Cir. 1997). The plaintiffs were placed in disciplinary segregation for a month and retained there for five or six months after these terms ended after being found in possession of escape paraphernalia. Their treatment was not "atypical and significant" and therefore they were not deprived ofliberty under Sandin. The regulations state that conditions are mostly similar to those iJ:1 general population and that "even those conditions that are more restrictive are not particularly onerous. Indeed, the differences in conditions specified in the prison regulations appear to be fairly common ones, leading the other courts ofappeals to conclude that confmement to administrative segregation does not implicate a liberty interest." (504) The plaintiffs alleged that the conditions of confmement do not match the regulations: ... [T]heir cells were infested with vennin; were smeared with hmnan feces and urine; and were flooded with water from a leak in the toilet on the floor above. . . . In addition, Inmates maintain that their cells were unbearably hot and that the food they received was cold. . . . [They] did not receive clean clothil1;g, linen or bedding, as often as required by the regulations governing administrative segregation; that they were permitted to leave their cells three to four times per week, rather than seven, and that no outside recreation was permitted; that· there were no educational or religious services available; and that food was served in considerably smaller portions.. " Accepting Inmates' version of the conditions in administrative segregation, as we must for purposes ofreview of the grant of summary judgment, we conclude that although the conditions were more burdensome than those imposed on the general prison population, they were nc1t so atypical that exposure to them for six months imposed a significant hardship in relation to the ordinary incidents of prison life. The conditions described do not constitute a "grossly excessive punishment" under the Eighth Amendment. Even assuming administrative segregation canbe viewed as a punishment, proportionality analysis is necessary only with respect to capital sentences and life without the possibility of parole. The court says the plaintiffs did not challenge the conditions as violating the Eighth Amendment. Suicide Prevention Mathis v. Fairman, 120 F.3d 88 (7th Cir. 1997). The decedent committed suicide. The defendants had seen him talking to himself; he had expressed fears that someone was going to kill him. They sent him to mental health staff, who concluded that no treatment was necessary; he denied suicidal impulses. He was checked every half hour. The defendants were not deliberately indifferent. On these facts they had no knowledge that the decedent posed a danger to himself. Odd behavior by itself is not enough to confer knowledge of a risk of suicide. Spring/Summer 1998 commenced. The defendant psychiatrist was entitled to qualified immunity for the period before Washington. He was not entitled to qualified immunity for the period after Washington. The district court held that he should have known about Washington (decided February 27, 1990) by~ the time he examined the plaintiff on March 20, and the appeals court holds that this line is reasonable. A damage award of $9,500 is not an abuse of discretion for a three-month period during which the plaintiffwas first medicated and then experienced continuing symptoms after the medication was stopped. The court conclusorily rejects that argument that nominal damages are appropriate because the plaintiff would have received the same treatment regardless ofthe process lie was provided. Religion-Services WithinInstitution! Color of Law Montano v. Hedgepeth, 120 F.3d 844 (8th Cir. 1997). The plaintiff is a practitioner of "Messianic Judaism," which means that he is "a Christian who studies from a Jewish perspective." The sect is few in number and not officially recognized and its members receive only one hour a week in the chapel, like other unrecognized faiths. The "religious consultant for Judaism" asked the prison chaplain to exclude Messianic Jews from traditional Jewish observances, which he did, and then members of the Protestant group asked him to exclude the plaintiff from Protestant services on the ground ofhis nonconforming beliefs, Damages-Assault and Injury/ which he also did, though only after Psychotropic Medication convening a meeting of"mature Christian Dobyv. Hickerson, 120 FJd 111 (8th brothers" to question the plaintiff about Cir. 1997). The plaintiff was his beliefs. (The court uses the word administered antipsychotic medications "excommunication" to describe this involuntarily without the protections of exclusiort.) Later he was offered the right Washington v. Harper, which was to return, but declined because his beliefs decided 22 days after the medication was were unaltered and he feared that THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal -- page 11 indicating that they actually passed would be excluded again. The district court held that the through the mails are not sufficient, and plaintiffs religious expression was not there are no receipts or acknowledgments burdened by his exclusion from activities showing actual delivery. ofreligious groups he did not agree with. The appeals court does not reach this Modification of JudgmentslPerscYnal issue, holding instead that the chaplain PropertylMonitoring and Reporting! did not act under color ofstate law. The Appeal Hookv. State ofArizona, 120 F.3d court analogizes to Polk County v. Dodson, which it finds "profoundly 921 (9th Cir. 1997), withdrawing 98 F.3d instructive" in its holding that a publlc 1177 (9th Cir. 1996). A 1973 consent defender's job is marked by lack ofstate decree provided that prisoners could supervision and the exercise of receive three "holiday packages" a year. independentjudgment, the latter ofwhich The district court abused its discretion is mandated by the Sixth and Fourteenth in not granting the defendants' motion Amendments. This analysis does not to modify. The enormous increase in remove all professionals from the reach prison population (1759 to 19,500) and of § 1983. Prison doctors, held to act the high proportion (70%) who were under color oflaw in West v. Atkins, do controlled substance abusers constituted not face the state as adversaries. sufficient changed circumstances to However, Polk County governs here. A justify the modification. Mandatory prison chaplain is not a state actor when sentencing legislation was enacted after performing "inherently ecclesiastical the consent judgment was signed. The functions" as opposed to "administrative package provision is now an "excessive and managerial tasks" (851). At 850 burden" on prison authorities that has diminished their ability to maintain (footnote omitted): security and safety and is therefore . . . In our nation, [the "detrimental to the public interest." (The excommunication] is simply not fact that only 6 of 97,000 packages in a the type ofdecision it falls upon four-year period were found to have the government to make. Absent any showing that Vande Krol controlled substances did not weigh relied upon religious doctrine as against modification; rather, it showed a subterfuge and deceptively that prison officials needed to detail personnel to inspect the packages if they used the excommunication process tQ impose the will of were allowed.) The case is remanded for the district court to determine a suitable prison administrators, we cannot modification. (The earlier opinion simply say that the expulsion of said the provision should be deleted.) Montano from the Protestant The district court erred in modifying group is fairly attributable to the state. the consent decree to require defendants to permit "hot pots." Though defendants Federal Officials and Prisons/Service had permitted them for some time, there of Process is no evidence that the parties intended Chester v. Green, 120 F.3d 1091 to include them as a contractual right (10th Cir. 1997). The case is dismissed within the consent decree, and "no one without prejudice for failure to obtain suggests the Constitution confers such service within 120 days. Certified mail a right." (925) There are no factual or receipts that did not have stamps legal changes to justify modifying the Spring/Summer 1998 decree. Appointment of a special master is generally an interlocutory order and not appealable, but it may be appealed in the course of an appeal from an order adopting or rejecting .a master's recommendations. It is appealable here because it is inextricably intertwined with the appealable modification order. The appointment was justified here by exceptional circumstances consisting of the Department's history of noncompliance, which the court said it lacked resources to monitor constantly, and the complexity of the underlying litigation. The Prison Litigation Reform Act is not discussed. Prison RecordslHabeas Corpus Butterfield v. Bail, 120 F.3d 102-3 (9th Cir. 1997). The plaintiffcomplained that the defendants relied on false information in his prison file to find him ineligible for parole. His claim implicates the validity of the denial of parole and therefore his continuing confmement, and therefore is barred by Heck v. Humphrey. Although he seeks only damages, a ruling that the denial was procedurally defective would presumably result in his parole, and the only measure of his damages would be the extent of his unmerited confinement. Hazardous Conditions and Substances/Attorneys' Fees Weaver v. Clarke, 120 F.3d 852 (8th Cir. 1997). The plaintiff brought suit over exposure to environmental tobacco smoke; while a motion for a preliminary injunction was pending, the defendant imposed a smoking ban in the prisons, stating that "pending inmate litigation . . . are [sic] concerns that must be addressed." The plaintiffwas a prevailing party; the district court's finding that the suit was a "necessary and important factor" THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal-- page 12 in achieving the smoking ban is' upheld. The district court correctly fOlmd that the defendants were not deliberately indifferent, since the defendants took steps to house the plaintiff in a smokefree cell and enforcing the smoking restriction. Work AssignmentslPersonal Property Vignolo v. Miller, 120 F.3d 1075 (9th Cir. 1997). The court previously held that Nevada prisoners have a property interest protected by due process in the interest earned on their accounts. The prison system then revised the "fiscal agreement" that prisoners are required to sign to provide "I understand that the funds on deposit in my savings will not accrue interest for my sole benefit." The plaintiffrefused to sign and he was fired from his prison job. After he filed suit, the legislature amended state statutes to eliminate prisoners' rights to the interest on their accounts. At 1078: "... [E]ven in a prison setting, the Constitution places some limits on a State's authority to offer discretionary benefits in exchange for a waiver of constitutional rights." Therefore the fact that there is no constitutionalright toprisonemployment does not bar his claim that he was deprived ofa benefit for failing to waive his (the~ constitutional right to interest. Sexual AbuselDamages-Assault and Injury, PunitiveIMunicipaiitieslPreTrial Detainees Mathie v. Fries, 121 F.3d 808 (2d Cir. 1997). The plaintiff was found to have been repeatedly sexually abused and assaulted by a jail official. The district court's findings are not clearly erroneous. A compensatory damages award of $250,000 is not excessive in light ofthe emotional injuries found by the district court. The district court's statement that he realized that part of the plaintiffs Spring/Summer 1998 emotional distress resulted from unrelated causes that were not compensable (like being sentenced to 10 to 30 years in prison) was sufficient to address the issues of multiple causation. .1$> The district court held that it need not consider the defendant's personal finances in determining punitive damages since he would benefit from an indemnity agreement. At 816: "Although we do not decide the question ofwhether a factfinder can rely upon the existence of an indemnity agreement in order to increase an award of punitive damages, we rule that a fact-fmder can properly consider the existence of such an agreement as obviating the need to determine whether a defendant's limited financial resources justifies some reduction in the amount that would otherwise be awarded." This defendant did not present any evidence of his fmancial resources, so there was nothing before the court to support reduction of punitive damages. Nonetheless, $500,000 is excessive; the court directs its reduction to no more than $200,000. The damages should not have been awarded against the defendant in his official and individual capacities; an official capacity award is permissible only on a showing ofmunicipal liability. a Prison Litigation Reform Act Alexanderv. United States, 121 F.3d 312 (7th Cir. 1997). The Prison Litigation Reform Act does not apply to collateral attacks on criminal convictions. Procedural Due Process-Propertyl Federal Prisons and OfficialslPrison Litigation Reform ActJIn Forma Pauperis Pena v. U.S., 122 F.3d 3 (5th Cir. 1997). A motion by a prisoner under Rule 41(e), Fed.RCrim.P., for the return of seized property is a "civil action" subject to the filing fee requirements of the Prison Litigation Reform Act. Although no criminal charges were ever filed against this prisoner in connection with the property, the decision does not rest on that fact. The appeal is held in abeyance for the district court to rule on the plaintiffs IFP application and order the payment of fees under PLRA. The district court had dismissed as moot because the government, after "considerable delay," filed an answer stating that the propertY had been destroyed, without explanation. At 4 n. 3: Three other circuits have held that destruction ofthe property does not moot the action because a damage claim remains. PrisonLitigationReform ActIIn Forma Pauperis James v. Madison Street Jail, 122 F.3d 27 (9th Cir. 1997). The plaintiffs pro se action was dismissed for failure timely to provide a trust account statement pursuant to the Prison Litigation Reform Act. The prisoner submitted a sworn statement that he had mailed it within the 30-day period but it arrived late. The rule of Houston v. Lack applies to the filing oftrust account statements, so the district court must either accept the allegation or make a factual finding to the contrary on a sufficient evidentiary showing by the adverse party. Prison Litigation Reform Act Duvall v. Miller, 122 F.3d 489 (7th Cir. 1997). The plaintiffalleged that his prison file contains erroneous information, which "patently fails to state a claim," and his suit was dismissed. The dismissal was a "strike" under the PLRA; this appeal is also a strike even though it is not taken informa pauperis, since the statutory provision is not limited to IFP cases. i I THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal-- page 13 The termination provision does not deny equal protection. It does not burden the right of access to courts. At 1090: "The right to enforce a consent decree that goes beyond the bounds of constitutional necessity is not equivalent to the right to bring constitutional grievances to the attention ofthe colJl:s." Therefore rational basis scrutiny applies. The provision is rationally related to promoting "principles of federalism, security, and fiscal constraint in the unique context of detentional and correctional institutions." (1090) The termination provision does not deprive the plaintiffs of vested rights because application of the doctrine depends on the existence of a final judgment; a judgment not final for separation ofpowers purposes is also not fmal for due process purposes. Besides, "Congressmay prevent a victorious party Judicial DisengagementlPrison from enforcing in equity a valid judgment. See Fleming v. Rhodes. ..." Litigation Reform Act Plaintiffs are not Gavin v. Branstad, 122 F.3d 1081 (1091) (8th Cir. 1997). The judgment unconstitutionally deprived of their termination provision of the Prison contract rights; Congress may impair Litigation Reform Act is not such rights if it has a rational basis. unconstitutional. It does not violate the rule against legislative abrogation offinal Prison Litigation Reform ActlMedicai judgments; Congress may alter the CarelTriallAppeal Norton v. Dimazana, 122 F.3d 286 remedial powers ofthe judiciary, as well as the substantive law, and thereby affect (5th Cir. 1997). The plaintiff has a Prison pre-existing injunctive judgments. chronic prolapsed rectum. Although the judicial power embodied officialswere notdeliberatelyindifferent, in Rule 6O(b) does not confer a legislative since he got a lot of care. At 292: power, the fact that a consent decree may "Disagreement with medical treatment be reopened means that it is not the "last does not state a claim for Eighth word" of the judiciary and therefore is Amendment indifference to medical not final for separation of powers needs." purposes. The distinction between public The Prison Litigation Reform Act's rights and private rights is irrelevant; the filing fees do not deny access to the source of the underlying rights has courts. Thatright extends no further than nothing to do with the separation of "the ability of an inmate to prepare and powers issues. transmit a necessary legal document to The termination provision does not the court." (290) Proceeding without unconstitutionally prescribe a rule of payment offees is a procedural privilege decision because it leaves the judicial that Congress may extend or withdraw, functions of interpreting the law and and in any case no one is prevented from applying the law to the courts. going to court because oflack ofmoney. Hazardous Conditions and Substances/Qualified Immunity Rochon v. City ofAngola, La., 122 F.3d 319 (5th Cir. 1997). The plaintiff alleged that he has been subjected to environmental tobacco smoke since 1981. The defendants are not entitled to dismissal on qualified immunity grounds because ofthe Supreme Court's holding in Helling v. McKinney. Qualified immunity requires a bifurcated analysis: (a) whether the plaintiff alleges a constitutional violation, based on current law, and (b) whether the defendants' conduct was "objectively reasonable;" based on the law at the time of defendants' actions. It appears that the court is saying that the plaintiff meets requirement (a) and is remanding for further proceedings that would address . requirement (b). Spring/Summer 1998 The provisions "level the playing field" betweenprisoners and other IFP litigants, since they make prisoners consider the cost of filing. The districtcotntheldwhatamounted to a Spears hearing. The admission of an affidavit by a doctor whom the plaintiff was not able to cross-examine was harmless error because the cotnt did not rely on it. The plaintiff was ..ntit entitled to a copy ofthe transcript ofthis hearing, since he has not shown why it is necessary and his appeal has'::beeQ. determined to be frivolous. !.!..IU'v··'.r.?'., Damages--Assault E:n(andf Injulj¥ Protection froms<1nmateifiAssaultY Deference ovr% Newman v;.''Halmesj"id,22d;':3dif)S;(!) (8th Cir. 1991). ~Thefwo;;plaiti'tiffsNvere awarded $5OO;eachpy~jurYi~1fler5anQther inmate, whQs was; !Sup}ioS~.d)lt'03,:he~~D disciplinarydoc.kup,jass~ult~d(a1idJout them. The. iappeals 'eQurt:affmns(~?The lack ofevidence that thelassailantpOsed a known risk to the victims does not bar the claim. At652 (empl1asisdn originalJ): ". . . [W]henqiprisont 5adtn1tlistrat<:its conclude that,al1dtupates?chat;ged"with rule violatioi1s<shdUld (1)eQisolated::a:~ dangerous, it wouldsencr()~lj:hhpon'the administrators' greaterdlcnowle'dgeio[ prison conditions foru:s;l~o~;holdiQls'xa matter oflaw that releaseofsuch\ifnnllteS to the general prison populatiorltdoesl1ot create a substantial risk that theYi~ll attack others." The defendant officer's conduct in leaving the assailant's door unlocked presents a close question of deliberate indifference vs. negligence, "particularly since it is well-settled that Holmes's violation ofan internal prison regulation does not by itself give rise to an Eighth Amendment claim." (653) The court defers to the jury's view ofthe evidence, which could be viewed as reflecting a lack of candor by the defense. THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal-- page 14 PrisonLitigationReformActJIn Forma Pauperis In re Washington, 122 F.3d 1345 (10th Cir. 1997). A petition for a writ of mandamus is a civil action, and a prisoner subject to the PLRA's "three strikes" provision must pay the filing fee in advance in such a proceeding. Federal Officials and Prisons! Deference Roussos v. Menifee, 122 F.3d 159 (3d Cir. 1997). The plaintiffcompleted a 500-hour drug treatment program in order to be eligible for early release. The Bureau of Prisons ruled him ineligible because his sentence had been enhanced two levels because ofthe finding ofa gun in his vacation home, leading the BOP to classify his offense as a "crime of violence." That definition is contrary to the statutory definition and is invalid. The BOP program statement is entitled to "some deference" but not ifit conflicts with the statute. Access to Courts-Assistance of CounsellHabeas Corpus Lamp v. State ofIowa, 122 F.3d 1100 (8th Cir. 1997). The petitioner sought to avoid application of habeas corpus procedural default rules because he had not had adequate access to courts. In fact, he had had an attorney. The fact that he could only commwricate with his attorney by mail and his attorney failed to raise claims that the petitioner directed did not make his"access inadequate. Searches-Visitors/QualifiedImmunity Varrone v. Bilotti, 123 F.3d 75 (2d Cir.1997). The plaintiff, the son ofa prisoner, was required to submit to a strip search in connectimi with a visit to his father based on information that he would be bringing in drugs. A search of prison visitors without reasonable suspicion violates clearly established law. Although neither this circuit nor the Supreme Court had Spring/Summer 1998 explicitly applied this standard, it was PrisonLitigationReform ActJIn Forma "clearly foreshadowed" in light of Pauperis authority in other circuits and authority Newlin v. Helman, 123 F.3d429 (7th not precisely on point in this circuit. Cir.1997). Ifa district court finds that Reasonable suspicion is stronger than an appeal is not taken in good faith, the a hunch but weaker than probable cause. plaintiff cannot proceed in forma The standard was met by information pauperis. This remains true under the given to prison officials by an assistant Prison Litigation Reform Act, contra the district attorney who was deputy chief Sixth Circuit's conclusion in McGore v. ofthe narcotics bureau that was "precise, Wigglesworth. However, appellate specific and detailed," and review ofthe conclusion that the appeal circumstantially corroborated, as to the is not taken in good faith may be had likelihood that the plaintiff would be without prior assessment and collection bringing in drugs. There is no of the PLRA fee. But if the prisoner requirement that the person authorizing simultaneously files a notice of appeal, the search independently investigate the indicating a desire to go forward reliability of the informant. regardless of IFP eligibility, the filing The ministerial/discretionary fee is irrevocably due--immediately if distinction has been questioned in the appeals court affirms the finding of connection with qualified immunity but lack of good faith, in installments if it continues to be articulated. The court reverses. Appellate filing fees are to be does not reach the question here, but assessed and collected by the qistrict holds that subordinates performing court. ministerial functions at the order, no~ Prisoners who lack assets but not facially invalid, ofa superior officer with "means"-i.e., who have an income--must immunity, is also immune. be assessed an initial partial filing fee, and must pay it before the comt considers Qualified Immunity the merits ofhis complaint. (I.e., it must Naylor v. State of La. Dept. of be collected under the statute; neither the Corrections, 123 F.3d 855 (5th Cir. prisoner nor the prison has any control 1997). A prison "drill instructor" after the complaint or notice of appeal allegedly locked the two plaintiffs and is filed.) 18 other inmates in a supply closet for The fees for separate proceedings are three hours, placing a towel under the to be assessed cumulatively (i.e., door to cut off ventilation. The two concurrently and not consecutively). plaintiffs felt dizzy and nauseated and One plaintiff's appeal is in bad faith, their requests to go to sick call were since he seeks $20 million in damages denied; one plaintiff defecated on from defendants who have absolute or himself. The magistrate judge denied qualified immwrity, and since he suggests defendant's motion for summary no reason why the district court was judgment based on qualified immunity wrong to dismiss for having missed the because there were issues ofmaterial fact statute of limitations. and the record was not sufficiently Under the three strikes provision, a developed to decide whether the dismissal for failure to state a claim is defendant's conduct was objectively one strike, and an unsuccessful appeal reasonable. The case "fits squarely is a second one. At 433: "Obstinate or within that class of unappealable, fact- malicious litigants who refuse to take based qualified immunity orders" that no for an answer incur two strikes." The are not appealable immediately. court cites the deterrence of frivolous litigation, ignoring the fact that the statute :I U THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal -- page 15 also extends to non-frivolous failures to state a claim. The district court found that another plaintiffwas barred from proceeding IFP by the three strikes provision. This plaintiff cannot appeal IFP. However, he can appeal the determination that the three strikes provision applies without partial prepayment of fees. If the court affirms, the plaintiffthen owes two fees (for filing the complaint and the appeal), and both must be paid before the appeal can go fOIWard. In addition, until the fees have been paid, no other civil litigation can be filed. Complaints under 28 U.S.C. § 2241, the post-conviction remedy statute for federal prisoners, are civil actions under the PLRA insofar as they do not affect the validity of the criminal sentence. Dental Care/In Forma Pauperis! Service of Process Moorev. Jackson, 123 FJd 1082 (8th Cir. 1997). The district court directed the U.S. Marshals to serve the defendants, but only after the plaintiff completed waiver of service forms, and then dismissed many defendants for failure to serve process. This was error. 28 U.S.C. § 1915(d) says that the "officers of the court shall issue and serve all process and perform all duties" in IFP cases, so it is the Marshals' job to fill out the forms as long as the plaintifffinnishes the information necessary to identify the defendants, which he did in his complaint. The Marshals' failure to do theirjob is automatically good cause for failure timely to serve process. The plaintiffcomplained that it took from April to December to get adequate treatment for a toothache, and he lost the tooth. (He only got care after he filed this lawsuit.) He repeatedly asked for medical service during this period. The district court erred in dismissing the dentist defendant for lack ofevidence he knew of the plaintiffs problem; his knowledge could be inferred from the plaintifl'srepeatedcomplaintsandentries in his medical records. The district court also erred in dismissing Correctional Medical Services, the contract provider, for failure to demonstrate a policy or custom ofdestroying or ignoring requests for care. However, there was a factual issue whether there was such a poly::y. The court notes (1088 n. 5) that defendants chastise the plaintiff for repeatedly complaining about the same thing from April through August, then say that his complaining only once during the next three months indicated that his condition was not an emergency. Religion-ServicesWithinInstitutionl Prison Litigation Reform Act Anderson v. Angelone, 123 FJd 1197 (9th Cir. 1997). Prison regulations prohibiting prisoners from acting as ministers of prison churches, and requiring leadership from outside clergy, do not violate the First Amendment. The defendants have concerns for giving inmates incentives to "inflame or exert influence" over others or to "advocate radical or inflammatory positions" to drum up support, and for inmates' using religious activity as a cover for gang or other unlawful activity. The plaintiffhas other ways to exercise his religious rights, such as helping out the prison chaplain. The appeals court dismisses the appeal under the Prison Litigation Reform Act, rather than affirming the district court's judgment, because it concludes that it does not state a claim. Mental Health CarelDisablediState Officials and Agencies Clarkv. State o/California, 123 FJd 1267 (9th Cir. 1997). Plaintiffs, a class of prisoners with developmental disabilities, brought suit under the Americans with Disabilities Act, the Rehabilitation Act, and § 1983. Congress effectively abrogated the states' Eleventh Amendment protection in the Americans with Disabilities Act Spring/Summer 1998 and the Rehabilitation Act under Section 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment, notwithstanding the holding in Seminole Tribe v. Florida. The Fourteenth Amendment gives Congress "the same broad powers as does the Necessary and Proper Clause. . .. [These powers] extend beyond conduct which is unconstitutional, and Congress may create broad~r equal protection rights than the Constitution itself mandates." (1270) Congress has previously held that the disabled are protected by the Equal Protection Clause, so these statutes are within the scope ofappropriate legislation under the Fourteenth Amendment, and neither provides remedies so sweeping that they exceed the harms that they are designed to redress. The court refuses to restrict the scope ofCongress's power under Section 5 to the protection ofthose classes afforded a higher level ofscrutit}y by the courts. Under the Rehabilitation Act, California waived its Eleventh Amendment immunity When it accepted federal funds. Access to Courts Greenev. Brigano, 123 FJd917 (6th Cir. 1997). The petitioner elected to appeal pro se. The state refused to provide him a copy ofhis trial transcript, even though ifhe had accepted the offer of free appellate counsel his counsel would have been entitled to review the transcript filed in court without charge. The state's argument that this satisfied the right of court access required the petitioner to relinquish the constitutional right to proceed pro se in order to exercise the Fourteenth Amendment right to the basic tools of adequate appellate review. The court distinguishes its precedents holding that refusing an offer of counsel waives any right to access to a law library. Food Phelps v. Kapnolas, 123 FJd 91 (2d THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal -- page 16 Spring/Summer 1998 an injunction remedying violations ofthe merely limited the federal courts' to enforce Americans with Disabilities Act and the jurisdiction them Rehabilitation Act. prospectively. The provision does not A judgmentrequiring the submission preventthe enforcement ofconstitutional of detailed remedial plans is generally rights because constitutionally required not an appealable injunction. This one reliefcan still be enforced. The provision is appealable because it substantially does not prescribe a rule of decision prescribes the contents of the pttm and because it changes the underlying law, because entry of a more specific order i.e., the powers of the federal courts. will not alter the court's "appellate Und~ the court's construction, the perspective" on the questions presented termination provision does not deny equal for review. protection. Strict scrutiny is not The Rehabilitation Act and the applicable because the "initial right of Telephones/Consent Judgments Gilday v. DuBois, 124 F.3d 277 (1 st Americans with Disabilities Act apply access to the courts" is not burdened. The Cir. 1997). The plaintiff obtained a to state prisons. They do not contravene statute meets the rational basis test consent judgment in 1984 prohibiting the Eleventh Amendment; the Ex parte because the purpose of avoiding the interception ofhis telephone calls except Young fiction applies to injunctive relief entanglement offederal courts in prison as specifically authorized by statute and against state officials under these statutes. litigation is legitimate, and the provision court order. In 1994, after having The applicability of Young is not affected is rationally related to it. Romer does not contracted with a private firm for prison by the complexity of the remedy or by govern because the plaintiffs in that case telephone services, the Department of the statutory nature of the claims. were barred from relief from all three Corrections promulgated new regulations branches of government. . which provide for recording and Prison Litigation Reform Act/Judicial The termination provision does not authorize real-time surveillance of all Disengagement deny due process by impairing contract calls except authorized legal calls. The Benjamin v. Jacobson, 124 F.3d 162 rights; the rationalbasis test is applicable. plaintiffrefused to accept a PIN number (2d Cir. 1997). The Prison Litigation It does not terminate vested rights under these conditions and moved fQr Reform Act's termination provision is because there is no vested right in the contempt. constitutional, but only ifit is construed prospective enforcement of the An earlier decision in Langton v. to end the prospective enforcement of judgments. Hogan refusing to modify a similar consent decrees in federal court. "The The district court erred in vacating injunction to permit monitoring and underlying contract, in its time made into the consent decrees. Plaintiffs have the recording in the absence of evidence of a judgment, is left untouched" and may option to seek to show entitlement to telephone abuse by the plaintiffs in that be enforced in state court. The statute's continuing federal court relief under § case did not preclude the defendants; the reference to termination of prospective 3626(b)(3), or to seek enforcement in court did not rule on the legality under reliefis ambiguous and can be read either state court. The panel continues the stay the injunction of monitoring and to bar the future enforcement ofconsent that had kept the Consent Decrees in recording,. Another decision concerning decrees, except insofar as they are effect pending decision, until such time the Langton injunction does not preclude tailored to a federal right, or to render as the Supreme Court acts on any possible the defendants because the injunctions them null and void unless they met the petition for certiorari. are not identical. narrow tailoring requirement. The court The court construes the injunction adopts the first interpretation, both on WomenNisiting· to preclude only unlawful monitoring of its merits and to avoid the serious Bazzetta v. McGinnis, 124 F.3d 774 calls and validates the defendants' constitutional questions that the second, (6th Cir. 1997). The prison system telephone system under the injunction judgffient-annulling interpretation would institutedvisitingrestrictions forbidding and the relevant statutes. raise. visitors under 18 who are not children, Under the court's construction, the step-children or grandchildren; forbidding Disabled!Appeal/State Officials and termination provision does not violate visiting with natural children if the Agencies the Plaut rule concerning the legislative prisoner's parental rights have Armstrongv. Wilson, 124F.3d 1019 vacation of judgments because the terminated for any reason; limiting (9th Cir. 1997). The district court entered judgments are untouched. Congress has visiting list to only 10 people who Cir. 1997). The plaintiff alleged inter alia that being placed on a seven-day diet ofbread violated the Eighth Amendment. The district court dismissed the claims against most defendants as frivolous without making specific reference to this claim. The court cannot say that there are no facts under which the allegation might constitute an Eighth Amendment violation. The case is remanded for further proceedings. THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal-- page 17 not "immediate family"; requiring minor children to visit only with an adult legal guardian with proof of legal guardianship; limiting "members of the public" to only one prisoner's visiting list); permitting denial of all visiting except from clergy and attorneys based on two major misconducts involving substance abuse; barring all former prisoners from visiting anyone except "immediate family." These restrictions apply only to contact visits. These restrictions are all reasonably related to legitimate interests and are upheld. Access to CourtslPrison Litigation Reform ActlIn Forma Pauperis Church v. Attorney General ofCom. ofVa. , 125 FJd 210 (4th Cir. 1997). The Prison LitigationReform Act's filing fees provisions do not apply to cases pending when the statute was passed. At 212: "Under the standard of Landgraf, if we require Church to now pay a filing fee that he was not required to pay when he filed his appeal, we 'impair [a] right [he] possessed when he acted.'. .. Although the increased up-front cost imposed by § 804(b) may deter prisoners from pursuing claims that they may otherwise have pursued--one of the arguments for enacting the PLRA--their right of access to the courts has nevertheless been diminished...." This change in law is not merely procedural. Underpre-PLRA law, the court erred in dismissing the plaintiff's action as frivolous after he had paid a partial filing fee. TransferslProcedural Due ProcessTransfers Israelv. Marshall, 125 FJd 837 (9th Cir. 1997). A California statute provides that when a prisoner has been convicted oftwo or more crimes, the last sentence shall be served concurrently with the others unless the sentencing court determines they should nm consecutively. State courts have held that this entitles a California prisoner to be transferred to the custody ofa state in which he or she owes time on a prior sentence ifthat state will not credit the California time. California officials wrote to Missouri officials on behalf of the petitioner, but they refused to accept the petitiOfler, rendering his California and Missouri sentences effectively consecutive. The plaintiff's state law right to be permitted to return to Missouri--which the court assumes without deciding is a liberty interest under Sandin--does not imply a right to require Missouri to accept him. The California Department of Correction's letter stating that the petitioner was available for transfer constituted all the process that was due (even though it was not on the proper form); California was not required to offer to deliver him to Missouri all expenses paid. In any case, Missouri's refusal to accept him was unconditional. Spring/Summer 1998 Sandin analysis applies. Under it, 15 days in segregation is not atypical and significant. The court suggests that the plaintiff's claim is not so much a procedural due process claim as one for malicious prosecution, which may implicate substantive due process concerns. For prisoners, one approach to this problem is that procequral due process is all they are entitled t~. There might also be an Eighth Amendment violation in the deliberate abuse of power for purposes of calculated harassment. At 1137 "Broadly (emphasis in original): speaking, the Constitution does not create a cause of action for arbitrary and purposeless acts by officials per se, ...; it prohibits the abuse ofpower that effects a Significant deprivation." The court equates this term with "shocking the conscience," a standard that 15 days' segregation does not meet. The court then suggests that "punishment" is an inappropriate rubric for arbitrary and ProceduralDueProcess-Disciplinary vindictive acts, and returns to the Due Proceedings/Cruel and Unusual Process Clause. At 1137 (footnote Punishment omitted): "Perhaps a useful approach is Leslie v. Doyle, 125 F.3d 1132 (7th to say that a frame-up or malicious Cir.1997). The plaintiff was placed in prosecution is in and ofitselfan inchoate disciplinary segregation for 15 days for breach ofsubstantive due process, which what he alleged were baseless charges; matures into a viable claim if the an administrative review board agreed. consequences are sufficiently severe." At 1135: "We agree with Leslie that (I.e., ifthey affect a liberty interest.) ld.: the Eighth Amendment embodies a "We do not try today to sort out this bog principle ofproportionality. . .. We also oflegal theories" since the plaintiff got agree with Leslie that a punishment procedural due process and his imposed for no offense at all is, as a deprivation did not impinge on a liberty matter ofmathematics, disproportionate. interest under Sandin. But the Eighth Amendment does not mandate a precise formula applying to Religion-ServicesWithinInstitutionsl all punishment." Punishments must be Use of Force--RestraintslEqual objectively sufficiently serious to Protection implicate the Eighth Amendment. Freeman v. Arpaio, 125 FJd 732 (9th Placement in segregation for false Cir. 1997). The plaintiff alleged that charges does not constitute an illegal prison officials refused sometimes to let seizure. The Fourth Amendment applies Muslimprisoners attend weekly services, only where there is a deprivation of that only Muslim inmates were "some meaningful measure ofliberty to handcuffed or shackled on their way to which [a person is] entitled," and the services and required to sign attendance THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal -- page 18 sheets, that Muslims were not given notice ofservices as were other inmates and that they were subjected to abusive epithets by prison officials. The claim of refusal to permit attendance at services raised a material issue of fact under the Turner standard. Defendants' claim that services were actually canceled because the Imam didn't show up, which arguably would satisfy Turner, merely raised a factual dispute; plaintiffs claimed that defendants simply did not open Muslims' cell doors. The other complaints do not raise constitutional issues under Turner, separately or in the aggregate; to do so, interference withreligious practice must be "more than an inconvenience; the burden must be substantial and an interference with a tenet or beliefthat is central to religious doctrine." (737, quoting Graham v. GIR., 822 F.2d 844, 851 (9thCir.1987)). ThisNinthCircuit standard is more rigorous than that followed in most other courts. The claims ofdenial ofservices and ofshackling on the way to services raise equal protection claims. Defendants' explanation of their shackling practice is incoherent and does not address the claimed inequality, leaving a factual issue in dispute. Note that this practice is upheld under Turner but not equal protection; the court says that equal protection. rights are limited by "legitimate penological interests" but does not cite the Turner test. MedicalCare-StandardsofLiabilityDeliberateIndifferencelAppointment of Counsel Parham v. Johnson, 126 F.3d 454 (3d Cir. 1997). The plaintiffcomplained ofa ringing ear. Tinnitus was diagnosed after a "simple exam," though it is generally not diagnosed without .a comprehensive diagnosis (sic) (citing a medical journal article). The doctor prescribed Cortisporin, even though the PDR says nothing about using it for Tinnitus. The doctor continued it for 114 days although the PDR says it should be used for no more than 10 and the plaintiff experienced symptoms that should have resulted in its discontinuation. During this time the plaintiffwas found to have a laceration ofthe eardrum; he rerested repeatedly to be allowed to see an ear specialist, but the doctor refused. The plaintiffnow has severe hearing loss. The magistrate judge directed the appointment of counsel, but two years later the clerk had Ilot acted, and the district court denied a renewed motion, reasoning that since no expert testimony was involved the plaintiff could competently present his case. The district court then directed a verdict for the defendant, in part because ofthe lack of expert testimony. There is no constitutional or statutory right to appointment of counsel. However, this court has rejected the "exceptional circumstances" test for discretionary appointment of counsel. Tabron v. Grace, 6 F.3d 147,155-57 (3d Cir. 1993). The plaintiff's case was arguably meritorious. He did not have the ability to present an effective case, as shown by the failure to present a prima facie' case at trial. His inability to introduce the Cortisporin bottle into evidence exemplified the need for counsel. Complex discovery rules and medical issues requiring expert testimony support the need for counsel. At458-57n.7: Medicalrnalpractice is not deliberate indifference. However, the facts alleged could support a finding ofdeliberate indifference. The rule that courts do not second-guess treatment decisions assumes that an informed judgment has been made. When a prisoner is denied access to a physician capable of evaluating the need for treatment, deliberate indifference is shown. Inappropriate treatment for no valid reason states a claim for deliberate indifference. The appellate court's resort to Spring/Summer 1998 medical treatises and journals not in the record is extremely unusual. MootnessIRellgioolPre-TriaIDetaineesl Oass Actions-Certification of Oasses Muhammadv. City ofNew YorkDept. of Correction, 126 F.3d 119 (2d Cir. 1997). The plaintiff, who alleged inadequate accommodation for the Nation of Islam ·ih the City jails, had been released by the time this case was filed. His claim is moot. The fact that the defendants agreed not to seek dismissal on the grounds of standing, ripeness, or mootness is beside the point, since these matters are jurisdictional. Such agreements "disserve the court." The "capable of repetition, yet evading review" exception is usually invoked to preserve a class action after the named representatives' claims have become moot. Here, no class was certified, nor could it· be after the mootness of the named plaintiff's claim. While the exception may also be invoked where the challenged action is too briefin duration to be litigated before it ends, and there is a reasonable expectation the complaining party will be subjected to it again, this plaintiff did not attempt to litigate until he was out ofjail. Nor can he state any basis for an expectation that he will be in jail again. ProceduralDueProcess-Disciplinary Proceedings Walker v. McClellan, 126 F.3d 127 (2d Cir. 1997). A prisoner did not in 1990 have a clearly established right to have witnesses interviewed when the prisoner was unwilling to state the relevance of their proposed testimony and did not offer a defense to the charges at the hearing. Under those circumstances testimony may be deemed irrelevant or unnecessary. Federal Officials and Prisonsl Deference Venegas v. Henman, 126 F.3d 760 THl:: NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal -- page 19 (5th Cir. 1997). Federal statute provides for sentence reductions for nonviolent offenders who complete a substance abuse program. The Bureau of Prisons did not exceed its authority in excluding from the program's benefits those prisoners who had been convicted of weapons possession by a felon or ofdrug offenses enhanced because of weapons possession. The Bureau of Prisons' internal agency guidelines are entitled to the same deference from the judiciary as are regulations promulgated under the Administrative Procedure Act as long as they are based on a permissible construction of the authorizing statute. cohorts in the Aryan Brotherhood. He wanted to go somewhere nearer his home in Washington to serve his ten-year sentence, but efforts to transfer him to a state prison failed. Defendants proposed to transfer him to Marion, where he would have to go back into segregation. q. It is not necessary to serve the United States in a Bivens action against individual federal defendants. Defendants disclaimed any present intention to transfer the plaintiff to Marion; the claim is moot, notwithstanding the usual rule about voluntary cessation in the face of litigation, since the plaintiff conceded ProceduralDueProcess.....Disciplinary that the transfer had become unlikely. The plaintiff has not alleged a ProceedingslBabeas Corpus Luszv. &ott, 126F.3d 1018 (7th Cir. constitutional violation; placing him in 1997). The plaintiff lost good time in segregation for his safety is within a disciplinary proceeding and sued in defendants' discretion and courts must federal court for due process violations. defer to their decisions. Since he would His claim is barred under Heck, which be relatively safe in the Marion "applies to judgments handed down in segregation unit, and since the defendants prison disciplinary proceedings." (1021) had taken some action to protect his Even though he was convicted of more safety, were not deliberately indifferent. than one charge, invalidating one ofthe A single stray callous remark by a prison charges would "likely" imply the official does not establish deliberate invalidity ofthe loss ofsome ofhis good- indifference. The plaintiff is not entitled to an time credits. The court acknowledges that a disciplinary case could involve injunction prohibiting his incarceration claims not barred under § 1983 by Heck in a pre-trial detention facility, even that could be extricated from claims that though it lacks the programs that a are barred, but the argument is waived penitentiary would have. There is no constitutional or statutory right to in this case. rehabilitation programs. There is no constitutional right to District Court Cases physical access to a law library; delivery Federal Officials and Prisons/ of the materials is sufficient. I Unsentenced Convicts and Convicts Held in Jails/Service of Process/ MoomesslInjunctiveReliefffransfersl Protection from Inmate Assault/Law and Law Books/ Libraries Rehabilitation Dodson v. Reno, 958 F.Supp. 49 (D.P.R. 1997). The plaintiff was transferred to a federal jail in Puerto Rico so he wouldn't be killed by his former Pr~TrialDetaineeslSearches-PersonPrisonerslPr~Trial Detainees Richerson v. Lexington Fayette Urban County Government, 958 F.Supp. 299 (E.D.Ky. 1996). A blanket policy requiring strip searches of all detainees upon return from court to the jail's general population, even those held on minor misdemeanor charges or traffic Spring/Summer 1998 offenses, is unconstitutional. Habeas CorpuslFederal Officials and Prisons/Standing Martinezv. Ensor, 958 F.supp. 515 (D.Colo. 1997). The Heck/Preiser exhaustion rule applies in suits against federal defendants. Private citizens lack authority to initiate a federal criminal prosecution and therefore lack standing to seek such relief. Religion--Practices-Beards, Hair, DresslEqual ProtectionlLawLibraries and Law BookslRecreation and and Unusual Exercise/Cruel PunishmentlPrograms and Activities Daviev. Wingard,958F.Supp.1244 (S.D.Ohio 1997). The plaintiff alleged that he is a Nazarite, who has taken the Nazarite vow not to cut his hair (Numbers 6:5). He was disciplined for refusing to get his hair cut and then forced to cut his hair. He was also placed in the "PRIDE" unit ("Progressive Readjustment Inmate Development Environment"), a behavioral modification training program. The haircut policy serves the compelling interests of contraband control, suppressing gang identifiers, and promoting identification ofescapees, and is the least restrictive means ofdoing so. Allowing religious exceptions would promote manipulative behavior and cause resentment by other inmates. Therefore the policy does not violate the Religious Freedom Restoration Act or the First Amendment. Barring long hair for male prisoners but allowing it for females does not deny equal protection. The court applies intermediate scrutiny to this gender-based distinction. The haircut rule passes muster because male inmates pose different issues of safety, security, and discipline than do females; they are less likely to be violent offenders, to be classified as high security, to commit prison violence, to escape or to use drugs. THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal-- page 20 The plaintiffs claim ofdenial of law library access is dismissed in the absence of a showing that the defendants were responsible for it. However, he met the injury requirement by alleging that he was unaware of certain court rules because the prison provided him with books with pages missing. A claim oflimited recreation, based on a rule that barred gymnasium privileges, did not provide sufficient information to determine whether there had been a constitutional violation. Placement in the PRIDE unit, which defendants claim not to be punitive but designed to assist in adjustment and improved attitudes, is not a punishment within the meaning of the Eighth Amendment. (Wrong, though the result may be right in this case.) Prison Litigation Reform Act/Judicial DisengagementlEqual Protection! Crowding Jensen v. County of Lake, 958 F.Supp. 397 (N.D.Ind. 1997). A jail conditions suit was filed in 1974 and settled in 1980 and again (after a contempt motion) in 1982. The defendants moved to terminate under PLRA. The PLRA's termination provision does not violate the separation ofpowers. Congress has power to modify the remedial powers of the federal courts, as well as' the substantive law, and thereby affect previously entered injunctions. Such changes constitute circumstances justifying modification under Rule 60(b). The result may decrease the utility of consent decrees, but that is a policy matter for Congress. The PLRA's termination provision does not deny equal protection. The rational basis test governs and is satisfied by the interest in preserving state sovereignty from overzealous federal cowt supervision in prison litigation. For the same reason, the statute does not unconstitutionally impair contractual obligations, assuming a consentjudgment is a contract. The fact that the contract was designed to protect constitutional rights does not matter. The motion to terminate is taken under advisement because the plaintiffs alleged that dangerous overcrowding persists and has unconstitutional consequences such as violence. The plaintiffs will be given an opportunity to show ongoing constitutional violations. The court does not explain how the automatic stay fits into the picture. Access to Courts-Law Libraries and Law Books/Color of Law Kain v. Bradley, 959 F.Supp. 463 (M.D.Tenn. 1997). The plaintiff was transferred to a Corrections Corporation of America facility that did not provide a full law library; instead, a local attorney was contracted to help inmates file complaints, supplemented by a limited law library. The attorney would also provide copies of cases and statutes for pending litigation. The plaintiffs argument that had he had access to an adequate law library he might have presented a winning argument does not establish actual injury as that term is used in Lewis v. Casey. After all, he did file a response to the defendants' motion to dismiss. The court also notes that the plaintiffdid not identify the legal issue he is concerned with when he did have access to a law library in a state prison. Another plaintiffwho had blown the statute of limitations before he got to the CCA facility also failed to show prejudice. These plaintiffs therefore lacked standing; the court does not hold that CCA's arrangement is constitutional. Medical Care-Serious Medical Needsl Equal Protection-Race De laPaz v. Peters, 959F.Supp. 909 (N.D.Ill. 1997). The plaintiff is incontinent as a result of a spinal cord injury. The Medical Director recommended that he be permitted to take Spring/Summer 1998 daily showers and be given an adequate supply of clothing and bedding. However, prison medical staffonly gave him a permit to shower three times a week. He asked to go to the honor block, which had shower facilities designed for handicapped persons, but was denied because he did not meet the security criteria. The plaintiffs incontinence is a serious medical need. However, defendants were not indifferent to it. The fact that a doctor said a long time ago that plaintiffshould have daily showers shows no more than a disagreement with the course oftreatment. The defendants did give him more shower privileges than other inmates. In any case they were entitled to qualified immunity, since there is no case law supporting more frequent showers. The small number of Hisp~ic prisoners in the honor dorm is insufficient to show he was excluded for racial reasons; the court grants summary judgment despite evidence that other prisoners who did not meet the formal criteria had been admitted. An "isolated and perhaps unfair event, or a mere inconsistency in prison management" does not deny equal protection. Medical Care-FeeslEqual Protection! Procedural Due ProcesslEx Post Facto Laws Gardnerv. Wilson, 959 F.Supp. 1224 (C.D.Calif. 1997). A $5.00 copayment requirement for medical visits, not applicable to inmates with no money, life-threatening or emergency situations, or follow-ups initiated by medical staff, does not violate the Eighth Amendment. Defendants did not fail to provide medical care or delay it. The co-payments do not deny equal protection because there is a rational basis for the policy. Taking funds from the plaintiffs account to pay for medical visits did not deny due process. He had notice of the THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal-- page 21 law and he initiated the medical visit, and the prison grievance system permitted challenge to erroneous charges. At 1229: "Due Process requires no more than notice and the post-deprivation grievance process." The co-payment requirement is not an ex post facto law, since it is not punishment and does not apply to events occurring before its initiation, and it is not a bill of attainder either. Theories--Due ProcesslEqual Protection Jubilee v. Horn, 959 F.Supp. 276 (E.D.Pa.1997). Thep1aintiffallegedthat defendants had intentionally delayed completing the paperwork for his parole application, deliberately used erroneous and incorrect infonnation in reviewing his status,· and maliciously used their procedures to prevent him from being timely considered for parole. These allegations state a substantive due process claim. A legislative grant of discretion does not amount to a license for arbitrary behavior even in the absence of a The protectable liberty interest. allegation that this treatment deprived the plaintiff of the process afforded to similarly situated prisoners stated an equal protection claim. FoodlUse of ForcelHygienelMedical Care Dennis v. Thurman, 959 F.Supp. 1253 (CD.Calif. 1997). The plaintiffrefused to leave his cell" for a search. An officer shot a 37mm gas gun, which shoots rubber blocks, at the floor; the ricochet fractured the plaintiffs leg. Use of the gun wasjustified by the plaintiff's refusal to leave the cell. At 1261: "Water and functioning plumbing are basic necessities of civilized life." The shut-off of water to the segregation unit for 36 hours did not violate the Eighth Amendment. Deprivation ofsanitation for short times during violent episodes is acceptable. Defendants had a legitimate reason for turning off the water: prisoners had in the past used the water to flood the cell block. A 45-minute delay in treatment for the plaintiffs leg injury did not constitute deliberate indifference. Work AssignmentslMedical Care-Serious Medical Needs Jones v. Hannigan, 959 F.8upp. 1400 (D.Kan. 1997). The plaintiff had epididymitis, which was treated with antibiotics and an athletic supporter, with direction to avoid strenuous activity. He was given a medical restriction form but his work supervisor nevertheless insisted that he perform heavy lifting, and he hurt himself. The plaintiffs epididymitis and back injury were serious needs. They had been diagnosed and treated, a lay person could be expected to recognize the need for treatment, and they affected the plaintiffs daily activities and caused pain. However, there was no deliberate indifference; at most, there was inadvertence in sending him back to work. His criticisms of his treatment amounted to no more than differences of opinion with the treatment. Pre-Trial DetaineesfUse of Force/ Summary Judgment Cole v. Pence, 960 F.supp. 157 (N.D.lll.1997). The plaintiffalleged that a· deputy sheriff hit him for passing a cigarette to another detainee. The defendant is not entitled to summary judgment, even though the plaintiffs deposition is contradictory in some respects. Rights of Particular GroupslNonEnglish LanguageslMedical CareStandards of Liability-Deliberate IndifferencelMedical Care-Staffing, Medical Records, ExaminationsIMental Health CarelMedical Privacy/ Programs and ActivitieslEqual Spring/Summer 1998 Protection/Classification--Race/ Injunctive Relief--Changed CircumstanceslProcedural Due ProcesslProcedural Due ProcessDisciplinary ProceedingslReligion-Services Within InstitutionslPendent and Supplemental Claims; State Law in Federal Courts/Classification-Race Frank/if! v. District ofColumbia, 960 F.Supp. 394 (D.D.C. 1997). Because of the lack of bilingual staff and staffs ignorance of or failure to follow directives concerning provision of interpreters, Hispanic prisoners who speak no or limited English have difficulty accessing the medical and mental health care system in the D.C. jails; receive inadequate care; and are not provided with adequate information that they can understand concerning diagnoses, treatment plans, and risks. Continuity of care is "sadly lacki!1g." Confidentiality is routinely violated by requiring other inmates or correctional staff to interpret. Hispanics are not provided information on how to request HIV tests and the HIV counseling they receive is inadequate. At 428: "Systemic deficiencies in access to medical and mental health care may constitute deliberate indifference under the Eighth Amendment." Deliberate indifference may be shown by repeated examples ofnegligent acts or by proving systemic and gross deficiencies in staffmg, facilities, equipment or procedures. At 429: "To satisfy the Constitution, a medical facility must be adequately staffed." Inadequate bilingual staffwere provided. At 430: While the right to confidentiality of medical communications is qualified in a prison setting, ... a prisoner's right to privacy is only limited by valid penological interests. . . . Outside of emergencies, however, there is no valid penologicaljustification for disclosing an inmate's THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal -- page 22 medical condition through the use of correctional officers or other inmates as interpreters in medical encounters. At 430: "A correctional facility must provide health care screening to identify potential medical problems and communicable diseases, ... and medical records must be marked and sufficiently organized to allow the provision of adequate care." . Defendants fail to identify Hispanic prisoners in need of mental health services, to make necessary and appropriate treatment available to them, to monitor and insure continuity ofcare for them, to obtain informed consent to administration ofpsychotropic drugs, and to protect their confidentiality. These systemic failures constitute deliberate indifference. The court declines to award injunctive relief under the D.C. Code provision imposing a duty ofcare on the Department of Correction, although it has been construed to extend the common law of torts to prisoners; it is not settled that injunctive relief is available under it. There is a lack of programs for Hispanic prisoners who speak limited English; they lose both the benefit ofthe programs and the opportunity to earn good time credits for participating in them. However, prisoners have no right to voc~tional, rehabilitative or educational programs or to parole, and there is no equal protection violation because there is no evidence prisoners are denied access to programs because they are Hispanic. The failure to offer the same range ofprograms in Spanish as in English does not deny equal protection. Religiousprogramming for Hispanic prisoners is limited. However, the record does not establish a violation of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act. The plaintiffs failed to establish.a pattern ofracially motivated harassment or a racially hostile environment. Staff generally responded appropriately to such incidents. At 432: "The defendant's failure to provide qualified interpreters at disciplinary hearings and parole hearings is an affront to due process." Due process protects the rightl "to participate meaningfully in critical proceedings." At433: "While prisoners may have no liberty interest in parole per se, ... that is not say [sic] that inmates can be deprived of a fair hearing once the District ofColumbia determines that a hearing will be held. . .. Once the defendant decides to conduct a parole hearing, due process demands that the hearing be conducted in a fair and meaningful manner." At 406 (footnote omitted): While the defendant offered evidence regarding a flurry of activity within the Department ofCorrections in the weeks prior to trial, the record as a whole establishes that these meager steps, taken five years after the District was placed on notice of the underlying problems, were nothing more .than a weak attempt to shield its deliberate indifference from judicial scrutiny once it became clear that this case was going to trial. Spring/Summer 1998 the present tense and he was out ofjail when he filed suit; the court may not screen sua sponte to determine if the complaint states a claim. Medical CarelPersonal Involvement and Supervisory LiabilitylDisabled Saunders v. Horn, 960 F.Supp. 893 (E.D.Pa. 1997). The court affirms the magistrate 'Judge's recommendations reported at 959 F.Supp. 689 (E.D.Pa. 1996). The Commissioner and Superintendent could be held liable for the deprivation to plaintiff of medically recommended orthopedic shoes, since he had written to them to complain. This is not a case where correctional officials rely on medical professionals who are caring for the prisoner; rather, correctional staff took the plaintiff's shoes and their supervisors acquiesced. The Americans with Disabilitie~Act applies to state prisons. Suicide PreventionIMental Health CareiColorofLaw/QualifiedImmunity Hartman v. Correctional Medical Services, Inc", 960 F.Supp. 1577 (M.D.Fla. 1996). The decedent was identified as a suicide risk by a person who had the title, but not the qualifications, of clinical psychologist. He recommended a "later medical No such referral was referral." PrisonLitigationReform ActIIn Forma conducted; he authorized the decedent's PauperislUse of Force removal from suicide watch three days Kane v. Lancaster County Dept. of later without having had any mental Corrections, 960 F.Supp. 219 (D.Neb. health consultation; he documented the 1997). The plaintiff, a former detainee, decedent's depression at that time. The sued defendants including Officers John decedent committed suicide without ever Doe, Richard Roe, Donald Duck, Daffy having seen a ment:al health professional Duck, Mickey Mouse and Minnie Mouse, or having been provided any treatment. for beating, starving, and robbing him The "clinical psychologist" is not while he was jailed. The complaint is entitled to qualified immunity; the court not frivolous, even though the use of notes evidence that he was more cartoon character names is not good interested in getting people out ofsuicide pleading practice. watch quickly because ofpressure from The plaintiff is not a prisoner for the corporation that employed him, and purposes ofthe PLRA informa pauperis about his upcoming vacation, than the amendments, since the statute speaks in decedent's welfare. THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal -- page 23 !I tJ Correctional Medical Services, Inc., is entitled to raise the defense ofqualified immunity. (Probably wrong--if municipalities are not entitled to it, corporations, which also can only be held liable based on corporate policies, should not be either.) However, CMS is not entitled to summary judgment, since evidence that it permitted a person with only a master's degree and no professional licenses to have authority over mental health referrals and suicide precautions raised a factual issue as to a policy of deliberate indifference. Use of Force-Restraints, Chemical AgentslMental Health CarelPendent and Supplemental Claims; State Law in Federal Courts Price v. Dixon, 961 F.Supp. 894 (E.D.N.C. 1997). The plaintiff was maced the placed in four-point metal restraints for 28 hours after throwing urine on officers. His condition was checked every 15 minutes and he was released regularly for bathroom breaks. The court rejects his claim that he was unlawfully denied mental health care; he had been treated and diagnosed repeatedly by mental health professionals. He had been thrown out of the mental health unit and placed in segregation at the time ofthe incident, but his complaint about this merely demonstrates a difference of opinion about treatment. The use of mace and restraints did not violate the Eighth Amendment. At 900: "... [Ut is accepted that prisoners may be subdued with mace when acting disorderly as long as the use is neither excessive nor applied solely for the purpose ofinflicting pain or punishment." Four-point restraints are not improper ifother control methods don't work. The defendants are entitled to qualified immunity for keeping him in them for 28 hours because based on his long historyofdisruption, defendants believed that safety required it. The defendants are also entitled to qualified immunity Spring/Summer 1998 in doing something that is contrary to their own policy. It gets better: defendants said that they had changed their policy to make sure male employees were on hand. This "should be commended. The ability to find an accommodation does not, however, undermine the conclusion of the Court that the old practice was the least Searches-Person-PrisonerslRellgionJ restrictive means ofcarrying out policy." Use of Force The prison was also constrained by a Collins v. Scott, 961 F.Supp. 1009 class action judgment requiring gender(E.D.Tex. 1997). The Muslim plaintiff neutral assignments of staff. complained that he had been strip The use of a stun shield did not searched by a female officer over his violate the Eighth Amendment, since the religious objection and shocked with a plaintiff was repeatedly given the stun shield to conduct the search forcibly. opportunity to comply with orders and (By the time this happened, there were did not do so. The use ofthe shield was several male officers in the area who less potentially harmful than the use of could have conducted the strip search.) pepper gas or bare hands. The plaintiff did not establish a violation of the Religious Freedom Federal Officials and Prisons/ Restoration Act. Although he has a Rehabllitation/LawLibraries and Law sincere religious belief in modesty, the Books Koran's prohibition is against nudity Amen-Ra v. Department ofDefense, before either sex. The plaintiffs 961 F.Supp. 256 (D.Kan. 1997). The "willingness to forego his religious belief plaintiffs are inmates in the United States in some contexts is one indicator that the Disciplinary Barracks. They challenged beliefis not central or fundamental to the the Inmate Treatment Plan Program, religion." (1014) The court finds it which allegedly violated their privilege "ironic" that the plaintiff is willing to against self-incrimination by requiring forego his religious beliefs to the extent them to take responsibility for their that the prison's written policy requires. criminal behavior. The court rejects their The departure from the prison system's claim. rules was "a rare exception. An isolated Claims oflimited access to the law incident of unremarkable proportions library do not establish a constitutional does not rise to the level of a violation in the absence of injury. constitutional violation." (1014) "It should further be noted that the Plaintiff Access to Courts--Punishment and acknowledged that Allah understands the RetaliatiOn/Communication and situation." Id. Expression The defendants have shown a Talbert v. Hinkle, 961 F.Supp. 905 compelling interest in maintaining (ED.Va. 1997). The plaintiffalleged that security and the strip search practice is he was fired from his law library job the least restrictive means of furthering because he filed a class action complaint. that interest. The prison also has a valid His claim is rejected because he did not security concern that inmates not dictate showthat his discharge adversely affected policy. Note that the court is holding that his right of court access. (This misses the defendants have a compelling interest the point; if accepted, it essentially and have used the least restrictive means abolishes retaliation claims.) His for allegedly failing to let the plaintiff wash the mace off. The court does not rule on the constitutionality of this treatment. A state statute requiring medical examination before assignment of prisoners does not apply to placement in restraints. t j THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal -- page 24 placement in segregation was not shown to have resulted from his litigation activities; ifit resulted from his showing to other inmates a letter from a state senator about the abolition of parole, it would have been justified because defendants had reason to believe this activity would increase tensions in the prison. Access to Courts-Punishment and RetaliationffypewriterslProcedura. Due Process-Property Spruytte v. Govorchin, 961 F.Supp. 1094 (W.D.Mich. 1997). The plaintiff won a state court suit to be permitted to possess a particular word processor. Two <Jays after its final resolution, the plaintiff '1fjl~d this suit, alleging that prison officials' decision to deny him a substitute word processor late in the state court \litig~on constituted retaliation for the ,.e!!'die.r"stagesof the litigation, and seeking a ruling on the alleged practice ,. 9(\~lVttg decisions in such cases before :~iheating· ?'..:'s~,<Th~?plaintiff,who hearing that obstructed his obtaining the word processor denied due process is barred by the Parratt rule, since he had a post-deprivation remedy and used it successfully. Protection from Inmate Assault! 4Survival of Actions and Wrongful Death UtigationlPersonal Involvement and Supervisory Liability/Class Actions-Effect of Judgments and Pending Litigation Velazquez-Martinez v. Colon, 961 F.Supp. 362 (D.P R. 1997). The decedent was murdered by other prisoners. The Corrections Administrator who started seven days before the murder could not be held liable for conditions that may have caused the murder. The Commandant of Custody Officers who knew that there were no locks on the doors and inadequate staff surveillance, and who did nothing about it, could be held liable. The fact that there were orders in place in class action litigation did not absolve him of responsibility. had resolved all tQQ:1t~r£laims in the state court litigation, ,~~9 standing to bring this claim either :~~Jothe right to have a word processor (which he had won) or the alleged .practice ofdecision before hearing in the grievance process. There was no access to courts claim because tht?e is no constitutional right to a typewriter or word processor. Any problemaIising from noncompliance with orders in the state court litigation should have been addressed in the state court litigation. The plaintiffhad no retaliation claim, but the magistrate erroneously applied a standardrequiring "egregious abuse of governmental power." At 1102: "Retaliation against an individual for exercise ofhis First Amendment rights is itself a First Amendment violation." The matter is not one of substantive due process. The plaintiffs claim of a tainted In Forma PauperislDiscovery Rivera v. DisAbato, 962 F.Supp. 38 (D.N.J. 1997). Apro se litigant is not entitled to a free copy of his own deposition taken by defendants in the action. The court cites the Prison Litigation Reform Act, which says nothing about deposition transcripts, for the proposition that prisoner litigants are generally to bear their own litigation costs. Besides, the prisoner was there, and he knows what he said and could have taken notes. The court apparently did not consider Rule 26(b)(3), Fed.R.Civ.P., which provides: "Aparty may 9btain without the required showing [of need] a statement concerning the action or its subject matter previously made by that party." Personal Propertyffypewriters/ Procedural Due Process-Property Bannan v. Angelone, 962 F.Supp. 71 Spring/Summer 1998 (W.D.Va.1996). Aregulationrestricting the personal property that prisoners may possess, and giving them a period oftime to dispose of property authorized under the fonnerregulation but not the new one, is not unconstitutional. At 74: "Unless other rights such as religion or speech are involved, jails may thus constitutionally disallow the possession of personal property." Disallowing word processors or typewriters does not violate the plaintiffs right of court access in the absence of a specific showing of injury. The court takes judicial notice that most inmates file civil actions with nothing more than pen and paper. A rule requiring prisoners to release prison officials from civil liability for property loss does not deny due process. Prison regulations provide for recovery of property or compensation for i!S loss through the grievance process. (This is limited to $50 except in specified circumstances.) The court apparently also considers the compulsory release a "knowing and intelligent waiver." Providing prisoners notice ofthe new policy and up to 12 months to dispose ofnonconforming property, along with notice of confiscation and a right to appeal, satisfies due process. EmergencylProcedural,Jurisdictional and Litigation QuestionslProcedural Due ProcesslWork Assignments/ Programs and ActivitiesNisiting Alley v. Angelone, 962 F.Supp. 827 (ED.Va.1997). Theplaintiffschallenged prison officials' conduct during a lockdown under' RICO. However, conclusory allegations ofconspiracy are insufficient. RICO plaintiffs must allege that they have been injured in their business or property as well as identifying specifically two or more predicate acts of"racketeering." InjUl)' to business does not encompass loss ofprison employment because prisoners do not have a constitutional right to work assignments. THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal -- page 25 There is no liberty interest in prison employment Wlder Sandin. (What about a property interest? The court glosses over the question.) Lockdowns do not impose atypical and significant hardship under Sandin, since a lockdown is essentially institution-wide segregation. Therefore no hearing is required. The potential effect on good time of restrictions on employment and program participation is not a liberty interest protected by due process. The Constitution does not protect "unfettered" visitation. Psychotropic Medication Enis v. Dept. 0/ Health and Social Services o/Wisconsin, 962 F.Supp. 1192 (W.D.Wis.1996). The plaintiff, who was acquitted on grounds ofinsanity in 1974 and has been incarcerated ever since, was entitled to a determination that he was dangerous to himself or others and that administration ofpsychotropic drugs was in his best medical interest. His procedural rights are generally governed by Washington v. Harper; even though incompetent he is not entitled to appointment of a guardian. Further medication is enjoined until the necessary findings are made by an independent decision-maker. ClassActions-Certification ofClasses, Conduct of Litigation/Law Libraries and Law Books Gomezv. Yemon, 962F.Supp. 1296 (D.Idaho 1997). Thedefendantsmoved for summary judgment and to decertify the plaintiff class in a court access suit after Lewis v. Casey. They alleged that the named plaintiffs lacked standing because they could not show actual injury. Once a class has been certified, ifthe named plaintiffs had legitimate cases at that time, their transfer does not moot the case. Plaintiffs have provided sufficient evidence that several class members have lost their claims because of deficiencies in the law libraries. Defendants' claim that these prisoners were able to file actions and did not suffer injury would require weighing of facts not appropriate at the summaryjudgment stage. The court also need not TId a mini-trial on each claim to determine whether it is meritorious; no such evidence was submitted in Lewis. Plaintiffs will be allowed to join new named plaintiffs. Lewis does not require decertification of the class, since plaintiffs have shown that there are plaintiffs who meet the new injury criteria. The court declines to order new notice ofthe litigation to be posted in the prisons to assist plaintiffs' counsel in identifying inmates who have been injured by lack of court access. Prison Litigation Reform ActIVerbal Abuse/Grievances and Complaints about PrisonlProtection from Inmate AssaultlEqual Protection Thomas v. Hill, 963 F.Supp. 753 (N.D.Ind. 1997). An officer was arrested for dealing drugs to inmates, and he communicated to other officers and prisoners that the plaintiff had set him up. The plaintiff was threatened and harassed. At 755: "Verbal harassment or abuse of prisoners by guards does not state a constitutional deprivation Wlder § 1983." However, informing other prisoners that the plaintiff had taken action that impacted the availability of drugs may indicate deliberate indifference to his safety. The facts alleged also state a claim of retaliation for exercising his First Amendment rights (presumably the right to report illegal conduct) and ofan attempt to prevent him from testifying against the officer. Unfair treatment of the plaintiff as an individual does not violate the Equal Protection Clause; the treatment must result from his membership in a particular Spring/Summer 1998 class. The Prison Litigation Reform Act's prohibition on claims for mental or emotional injury without a showing of physical injury does not bar this suit. The court assumes that the claim is one for "mental or emotional injury," but it declines to apply the statute retroactively because to do so "attaches new legal consequences to events completedbefore the provision's enactment." (758) Summary JudgmentIFederal Officials and PrisonslPersonal Property Melvin v. United States, 963 F.Supp. 1052 (D.Kan. 1997). Theplaintiffwas supposed to move to another housing unit; he moved most ofhis property and left the rest hidden behind the bed. An officer, not seeing the property, left the cell unlocked and his property was taken. At 1056: "Failure ofa pro se litigant to timely respond to the defendant's motions must amoWlt to a 'clear record of delay and contumacious conduct' before dismissal is justified." The plaintiff's untimely response is considered. Under the Federal Tort Claims Act, plaintiff's claim is adjudicated under Kansas law. Loss of property is compensable. At n. 1: Although prison officials may restrict the property a prisoner may possess, once the inmate is allowed to possess it, a protected interest in the property arises. The court reviews the law of conversion and bailment as applied to prisoners in various states. It concludes that bailment relationships in a prison are "based on mutual benefit" (as opposed to gratuitous bailments, bailments for hire, and bailee as insurer). Since theft is a danger against which a bailee must protect, and since a mutual benefit bailment is governed by a standard ofordinary care, the plaintiffhas established a prima facie case ofliability. .... THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal-- page 26 ProceduralDueProcess-Disciplinary ProceedingslPunitive Segregation! Hygiene Porter v. Coughlin, 964 F.Supp. 97 (W.D.N.Y. 1997). The plaintiff was charged with participation in the 1991 Southport riot and sentenced to 36 months in segregation; he was also indicted, convicted and sentenced to additional prison time. A state court invalidated his disciplinary conviction because the hearing officer had failed to make certain findings; it is unclear whether a new hearing was ever held. He was then given a new misbehavior report based on the criminal conviction for the same acts and was sentenced to in SHU, reduced five years administratively to 36 months. He also received other charges at various times and spent' about five years in SHU cumulatively. The 36 months segregation imposed after the criminal conviction is atypical and significant under Sandin. However, the plaintiffreceived due process. The denial oftwo witnesses (the countyjudge and the prosecutor involved in his criminal prosecution) and the denial of others because they had no involvement in the underlying actions were justified. In any case the purpose of the hearing was to determine whether the plaintiff had been found guilty of a criminal offense, not to reargue the merits of the underlying-charge. The criminal trial provided the process due. The Double Jeopardy Clause is not applicable in prison disciplinary proceedings. The plaintiffs SHU confinement might constitute cruel and unusual punishment if, as he asserts, he was "placed in a cell inclose proximity to feces-throwing inmates, inmates threw feces in plaintiffs cell or directly at him, and this conduct was condoned, encouraged, or permitted by the prison authorities ... then plaintiff seems to have a strong argument that he was subjected to barbarous treatment, posing a substantial risk ofserious harm." (104) ProceduralDueProcess-Disciplinary Proceedings Gomez v. Kaplan, 964 F.Supp. 830 (S.D.N.Y. 1997). At 835: After September 1993, "the clearly esUWlished law in this Circuit required prison disciplinary hearing officers to make an independent assessment ofthe reliability ofconfidential informants, and to create and preserve a record ofthat assessment." This rule applies if the hearing officer relies "to any degree" on confidential informant testimony. Protection from Inmate Assault! Personal Involvement and Supervisory of Process/ Liability/Service Municipalities Watson v. McGinnis, 964 F.Supp. 127 (S.D.N.Y. 1997). The plaintiff alleged that an officer told other inmates that he had snitched on them; he had complain~ to the superintendent; and subsequently he had been slashed by another inmate. The Superintendent and a captain could not be held liable because he forwarded the plaintiffs letter immediately to a captain, who informed the plaintiff that the matter would be investigated. At 130: "The law is clear that allegations that an official ignored a prisoner's letter are insufficient to establish liability." The officer who labeled the plaintiff a snitch to other inmates could be held liable for the resulting assault. The Magistrate Judge recommended that the complaint be dismissed for lack ofservice, but the districtjudge declines to do so because the plaintiffs objection shows that efforts to serve have been made. Use of ForcelMedical CarelUse of Force-RestraintslRecreation and ExerciselProcedural Due Process Dawes v. Coughlin, 964 F.Supp. 652 (N.D.N.Y.1997). The court finds for the Spring/Summer 1998 defendants on the facts of two use of force incidents in which the plaintiff sustained cuts, swelling and scrapes and which the court finds the plaintiff initiated. The court rejects the plaintiffs claim that he was denied an x-ray of his ribs for two months on the ground that he was fully examined after the use of force in question and no injury was observed to his ribs. He was not taken to scheduled x-rays on four separate occasions because he continued to act in a threatening and offensive manner toward staff. When he was finally x-rayed, there was no damage to his ribs. His medical need was not serious. The defendants issued various restraint orders and deprivation orders depriving the plaintiff of all out-of-cell activities because of his violent and threatening behavior. They did not,deny due process; the daily review of deprivation orders, the availability ofthe grievance program, and the availability ofa judicial remedy in state court provide the process due. Restraining the plaintiff during his recreation periods did not violate the Eighth Amendment when done for security and safety purposes. Hazardous Conditions and Substances Simmons v. Sager, 964 F.Supp. 210 (W.D.Va. 1997). The plaintiff complained that although his prison living units had a designated smoking area, the ventilation system did not prevent some smoke from filtering into the rest ofthe dorm, and that his requests for assignmentto a non-smoking housing unit were refused. The defendant is granted summary judgment. The plaintiff, though he complained generally about childhood respiratory problems, alleged no specific medical symptoms resulting from ETS and made no complaints to medical staff at the prison. He also did not show that the level ofexposure he experienced was one society would not tolerate. At 213: THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal -- page 27 "As society has not yet demanded that all public areas be kept free ofETS, the court cannot find that society would require prisons to do so." The defendant was not deliberately indifferent, having taken some steps to protect the plaintiff, and having had good reasons for not taking other measures he requested like opening the outside doors. Statutes of LimitationslParties DefendantIProtection from Inmate Assault Byrd v. Abate, 964 F.Supp. 140 (S.D.N.Y. 1997). The plaintiff was stabbed by another inmate in a mental observation unit and lost his eye. At the time of the attack, the officer assigned to supervise the area was relieving another officer who was in the bathroom. He was sued as John Doe. The Corporation Counsel delayed identifying him for months until after the statute of limitations had run. The amended complaint identifying the new defendant relates back to the filing ofthe initial complaint. The court construes the inability to identify the defendant as a "mistake" under Rule 15(c), Fed.R.Civ.P., contrary to Second Circuit precedent, because in this case the plaintiff sought timely to join the defendant and the Corporation Counsel failed to disclose his identity or to produce discovery. The defendant had constructive knowledge of the claim because he and the other defendants were represented by the same attorney. the $10,000 award. The statute permits awards of up to 150% ofthe damages, which the court suggests is the outer limit of proportionality. ThePLRAfixesfeesat 150%ofCJA rates, which are $45 an hour out ofcourt and $65 an hour in court in this district, e. yielding $67.50 and $97.50 respectively. Travel time is compensated at $40 as suggested by the defendants. The court applies 25% of the plaintiff's judgment to satisfy the fee award. Grievances and Complaints about PrisonNerbal AbuselProcedurai Due Process-Disciplinary Proceedings Brown v. Coughlin, 965 F.Supp. 401 (W.D.N.Y. 1997). Theplaintiffalleged that officers fabricated disciplinary charges in retaliation for his administrative complaints. These allegations make out a constitutional claim and are sufficiently supported by evidence to withstand summary judgment. Recourse to administrative forums is protected by the right to petition for redress of grievances; administrative complaints enjoy as much constitutional protection as does litigation. False disciplinary charges do not deny due process in the absence of evidence that they were made in retaliation for the exercise of constitutional rights. Vague threats of harm do not state an Eighth Amendment violation; the court distinguishes a case involving Attorneys' FeeslPrison Litigation threats of death. Reform Act Clarkv. Phillips, 965 F.Supp. 331 Unsentenced Convicts and Convicts (N.D.N.Y. 1997). The plaintiff was Held in JaUslProtection from Inmate awarded $10,000 by a jury for an Assault unspecifiedEighth Amendment violation. Earrey v. Chickasaw County, Miss., The attorneys' fees sought by the 965 F.supp. 870 (N.D.Miss. 1997). The plaintiffwere for time spent in proving plaintiff, an accused parole violator, was and seeking redress for an actual violation beaten by other inmates injail. Nighttime .of the plaintiff's rights. A fee of checks are not made in the jail. Some $7921.96 is "proportionately related" to or all ofthe door locks are inoperative. Spring/Summer 1998 There was no direct visual surveillance, only an intercom microphone and an emergency switch, which the plaintiff was kept from reaching by his assailants. The plaintiff not entitled to the Wolfish due process standard in the absence of evidence that defendants actually intended to punish him for his alleged crime. An inference ofpunitive intent from the conditions ofconfinement is not warranted for a parolee. It is unclear whether the Farmer v. Brennan subjective deliberate indifference standard is applicable to a claim against a municipality. Some courts have assumed that municipal liability requires only a policy of objective deliberate indifference but that a judgment against the municipality requires a showing of subjective deliberate indifference by an official. This court adopts that position. The facts alleged by the plaintiffare sufficient to withstand summary judgment under the Farmer deliberate indifference standard. Attorneys' FeeslPrison Litigation Reform Act Hadix v. Johnson, 965 F.supp. 996 (W.DMich. 1997). The Prison Litigation Reform Act's restrictions on attorneys' fees do not apply to services performed before the statute's passage; to hold otherwise would result in an impermissible retroactive effect. The attorneys had an expectation on prior law that they would receive reasonable fees if they prevailed, and $112.50 is not reasonable because it is not the market rate. The court uses as a basis for calculation of PLRA fees the $75 rate authorized by the Judicial Conference for attorneys with their offices in Detroit or Washington, D.C. ProceduralDueProcess-Disciplinary Proceedings Hayes v. McBride, 965 F.Supp. 1186 THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal -- page 28 (N.D.Ind. 1997). A substance was confiscated from the petitioner's cell and the officer said he admitted it was polyurethane, an intoxicant. The petitioner denied making such an admission. The failure of officials to produce the substance at the hearing did not deny due process. However, the failure actually to identify it as an intoxicant, combined with the lack ofany uncontroverted evidence that it was an intoxicant, meant that there was insufficient evidence to sustain .a disciplinary conviction. The court says this is not reweighing the evidence, but insisting upon "some evidence" that possesses "sufficient indicia of reliability." (Citing Meeks v. McBride, 81 F.3d 717, 720 (7th Cir. 1996)). Use of ForcelFederal Officials and PrisonslPre-Trial Detainees Santiago v. Semenza, 965 F.Supp. 468 (S.D.N.Y. 1997). The defendant officer is entitled to summary judgment in this use of force case; even accepting the plaintiffs story that the defendant attacked him, his first blow missed ("An attempted blow does not rise to the level of a constitutional violation. ") Considering that the plaintiffhad slipped his cuffed hands to the front and that there was a melee going on in the cell, the defendant's actions, which at most inflicted bruises or a scratch, did not deny due process. The court applies the Johnson v....Glick standard. Prison Litigation Reform Act/Judicial DisengagementlEqualProtectionIDue Process James v. Lash, 965 F.Supp. 1190 (N.D.Ind. 1997). The court earlier applied the judgment termination provisions of the Prison Litigation Reform Act a 1982 consent decree requiring recognition of the American Muslim Mission. 949 F.Supp. 691 (N.D.Ind. 1996). On this motion by plaintiffs under Rule 60(b), the court adheres to its decision and upholds the statute against the constitutional challenges that were not raised in the initial proceeding. At 1196: "... [T]he specific relief granted by a consent decree never becomes 'fmal' to the extent th.It it is beyond reconsideration." Id.: -"Had Congress enacted § 3626(b)(2) to read 'vacate' or 'rescind' rather than 'terminate,' and 'Judgment' rather than 'prospective relief the court's conclusion in regard to the separation ofpower challenge might likely be different." Under Rule 60(b) and equity principles, the plaintiffs never had the right to expect that the prospective relief would continue in perpetuity. The rational basis test applies to plaintiffs' equal protection argument, and the interest in preserving state sovereignty from overzealous federal court supervision is legitimate. The court assumes that a consent decree is subject to an impairment of contract challenge, and upholds the statute under the rational basis test. PrisonLitigationReform ActIIn Forma Pauperis Johnson v. Hill, 965 F.Supp. 1487 (E.D.Va. 1997). The plaintiffalleged that he was incarcerated for a week after the Parole Board had ordered his release and that he was beaten by another inmate while confined. He paid the full filing fee. The plaintiffs complaint is subject to pre-screening under the Prison Litigation Reform Act even though he is no longer a prisoner, since he was a prisoner when he filed and he brought the suit "in his capacity as a prisoner; that is, it advances his concerns about alleged misconduct by prison officials and injuries received at the hands ofanother inmate." (1488 n. 2) The complaint is subject to prescreening even though the paid the entire filing fee; the relevant PLRA provision Spring/Summer 1998 applies to all prisoner cases even ifthey are not in forma pauperis. The court dismisses on statute of limitations grounds. PrisonLitigationReformActIIn Forma Pauperis Witzke v. Hiller, 966 F.Supp. 538 (E.D.Micb. 1997). The plaintiffhad three "strikes" Under the Prison Litigation Reform Act and was barred from proceeding without prepayment of the filing fee. The application of the PLRA based on strikes occurring before its passage does not have an impermissible retroactive effect. ProceduralDueProcess-Disciplinary ProceedingslHabeas CorpuslEqual Protection Hester v. McBride, 966 F.Supp. 765 (N.D.Ind. 1997). Amendments tq the habeas corpus statute restricting the scope ofreview apply to determinations made by administrative bodies includingprison disciplinary boards. Witness statements corroborating the accusation constituted "some evidence" notwithstanding a statement obtained by the plaintiffthat contradicted them. The failure to use a polygraph in interviewing witnesses did not deny due process. The failure to provide witness statements by confidential informants did not deny due process. The fact that another prisoner got a lesser sentence did not establish an equal protection violation; the other prisoner was charged with a less serious offense and there is no evidence ofdiscriminatory purpose. Failure to comply with prison regulations concerning timeliness ofthe disciplinary hearing does not violate the Constitution. There is no due process claim for ineffective assistance by an inmate advocate. THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal -- page 29 ProceduralDueProcess-Disciplinary Proceedings Terrel/v. Godinez, 966F.Supp. 679 (N.D.TIl. 1997). Segregation for 60 days is not atypical and significant under Sandin. Even if it was, this plaintiff received due process. He failed to identify witnesses, so denial ofwitnesses did not deny due process. There was "some evidence" in the fact that contraband was found in a ventilation duct that was accessible from eight different cells including his own; the court can't weigh the strength of the evidence. He also failed a polygraph test (which he had requested); that is evidence against him. Use of ForceNerbal Abuse Brown v. Croce, 967 F.Supp. 101 (S.D.N.Y. 1997). The plaintiff alleged that an officer called him racial names and slapped him twice in the face. He was not injured. The use of force was de minimis. Malice is not shown, since the slaps and use of racial epithets occurred after the plaintiff "interfered with and harassed an officer." (He stated at his disciplinary hearing that he was screaming as loudly as he could. This occurred in the mental health office, where he was trying to see his doctor.) Racial slurs and epithets are not actionable. Use of ForcelRes Judicata and CoUateral Estoppel Caridi l!:" Forte, 967 F.Supp. 97 (S.D.N.Y. 1997). The plaintiffs conviction for resisting arrest precluded his claim for excessive force during the arrest, since proving the resisting arrest claim requires proving that force was needed to effectuate the arrest. The court relies onPastre v. Weber, 907 F.2d 144 (2d Cir. 1990). The court seems to exclude the possibility that some force was needed but the force used was excessive. Force used at the station house was also not excessive; the defendant officer "displayed commendable calm in the face of outrageous abuse from a one-man crime wave." The court reaches this conclusion on a summary judgment motion without being very clear about what the plaintiffs story actually was. 'il!- ProceduralDueProcess-Disciplinary Proceedings/Grievances and Complaints about Prison Walker v. Roth, 967 F.Supp. 250 (E.D.Mich. 1997). Theplaintiffalleged that he was subjected to a false disciplinary charge because he threatened to file a grievance. Such retaliation against prisoners must "shock the conscience" or "egregiously abuse governmental authority" to be actionable. There is a conflict in this district court on that point and the court (253 n. 6) rejects the contrary analysis of Riley v. Kurtz, 893 F.supp. 709 (E.DMich. 1995). False disciplinary charges do not deny due process. In any case, this plaintiffwas convicted ofinsolence and the facts support the charge. Drug Dependency Treatment! Rehabilitation/Religion/Prison Litigation Reform Act Kerr v. Puckett, 967 F.Supp. 354 (E.D.Wis. 1997). The plaintiff alleged that a prison drug rehabilitation program violated the Eighth Amendment because of its intellectually coercive nature (my characterization of his claim) and the Establishment Clause because of its religious content. The defendants are entitled to qualified immunity because the Seventh Circuit decision in point was not decided until after the conduct complained of. In addition, to the extent that his damage claims are for mental or emotional injwy, they are barred by the Prison Litigation Reform Act. This provision applies even though the plaintiff was no longer a prisoner when he filed. Spring/Summer 1998 Dental CareIMedical Care-Standards ofLiability/PendentandSupplemental Claims; State Law in Federal Courts/Prison Litigation Reform Act Gindrawv. Dendler, 967 F.Supp. 833 (E.D.Pa.1997). Theplaintiffallegedthat a prison dentist pulled the wrong tooth and subsequently, trying to pull another tooth damaged in the first extraction, broke that tooth and chipped another. At 836: "... [T]he exercise by a doctor of his professional judgment is never deliberate indifference." The plaintiffs complaint about the quality of treatment does not establish deliberate indifference. The number of examinations conducted, the extensive treatment given, the referral to another physician and the prescription of medication is enoughto negate deliberate indifference. Generally, a medical malpractjce claim must be supported by expert testimony, but there is no such requirement where the matter is so simple and the lack ofskill or care is so obvious to be within a lay person's understanding. Breaking a tooth and leaving the roots in the jaw is not evidence ofmalpractice absent an expert report. The same is true of using more force than necessary to extract a tooth. The court notes that it gave the pro se plaintiff plenty of opportunity to get an expert. The claim for removing the wrong tooth cannot be dismissed on the state of the record, though the court does not decide that no expert testimony is required. This claim may also constitute an assault and battery. At 840: "Performing a medical procedure without informed consent is a technical assault and battery." The provisions of the Prison Litigation Reform Act for dismissal at any time it is determined that a complaint fails to state a claim apply to cases filed before the statute was passed; the provisions are wholly procedural, and there is no right to have a court hear a __ J THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal -- page 30 complaint that does not state a claim. the exhaustion requirement. Habeas CorpuslProcedural Due Process-Disciplinary Proceedings Protection from Inmate Assault Rice v. McBride, 967 F.Supp. 1097 (N.D.Ind. 1997). The petitioner was disciplined for threatening to kill his wife and her live-in boyfriend. His habeas corpus petition is governed by the AntiTerrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act's restrictions, which presume the correctness offacts found by state courts and require a showing of unreasonably application of clearly established federal law as determined by the Supreme Court. This provision is applicable to determinations made by administrative bodies. There was some evidence to support the conviction despite the fact that the petitioner presented conflicting evidence (an officer's statement that the petitioner and his wife appeared to be on good terms). The evidence relied on is reliable, although some of it came from a confidential source. The failure to obtain a witness statement from the petitioner's wife did not deny due process; she was not present when the officers heard the petitioner utter his threat, and there was other evidence that the threat was made. Dowling v. Hannigan, 968 F.Supp. 610 (D.Kan. 1997). Prison authorities received an anonymous note stating that the plaintiff would be attacked b"'y his assailant because he had informed on the assailant for his drug activities. The assailant and his cell were searched and he was denied yard privileges, but the plaintiffwas not told of the threat. The next day the plaintiffwas attacked with a razor blade. He alleged that one ofthe defendants saw the attack and did nothing. These allegations are sufficient to withstand summary judgment. Pre-Trial Detainees/Personal Involvementand SupervisoryLiability Ingalls v. Florio, 968 F.Supp. 193 (D.N.J. 1997). The court addresses summary judgment motions in 4~ consolidated actions brought by detainees and sentenced inmates at a county jail in 1992-93, which the court stayed pending resolution of a class action. At 197 n. 1: "The standards under the Due Process Clause are the same as standards under the Eighth Amendment for measuring conditions and medical treatment." Allegations that supervisory Prison Litigation Reform Act! defendants had direct knowledge of Exhaustion of Remedies Morgan v. Arizona Dept. of allegedly unconstitutional conditions or Corrections, 967 F.supp. 1184 (D.Ariz. that they persisted in promoting the 1997). The court lacks jurisdiction over policies that resulted in those a complaint by a prisoner who failed to unconstitutional conditions are sufficient exhaust the prison grievance system to support their personal liability. Since before filing. The court has no discretion litigation and negotiations had been going under the Prison Litigation Reform Act on about the disputed conditions for a to grant a continuance to permit decade before the events complained of, exhaustion. The factthat prison officials a jury could find that their level of did not respond timely does not excuse knowledge indicated deliberate exhaustion. The action is dismissed indifference. without prejudice. Crowding (198): Extreme The plaintiffs complaint ofan assault overcrowding, resulting in five or six by another inmate constitutes a "prison inmates in cells designed for one or two conditions" complaint and is subject to and inmates routinely sleeping on the Spring/Summer 1998 floor, made out a constitutional claim. Sanitation (198): "Deplorable conditions ofsanitation," including toilet paper in such short supply that inmates fought over it, made out a constitutional claim. Food (198): Food storage and preparation areas infested with vermin leading to contamination of food made out a constitutional claim. Recreation (198): Recreation opportunities so limited as to deny inmates any physical exercise, and denial of outdoor recreation for periods in excess of a year, made out a constitutional claim. Use ofForce, Protectionfrom Inmate Assault (199-200): "repeated serious assaults ... by both guards and other inmates," including a riot plus more isolated instances (including an officer's poisoning an inmate's food with s9ap containing lye and placement of one plaintiff, who had an order for segregation, in general population where he was assaulted), made out a constitutional claim. The various allegations "tend to have a mutually reinforcing effect in establishing the possible existence ofa risk ofharm from such violence. That is, the chronologically earlier instances of assaults may reasonably be considered by a jury as indicating a serious risk which defendants did not act to eliminate." (200) The lack of evidence ofsteps that the County defendants took to lessen these risks means that they could be found deliberately indifferent. Statutes ofLimitations, Medical Care (200-01): Allegations of denial of medical care are treated as continuing violations not barred by the statute of limitations. Medical Care (202): Constitutional claims are made out by allegations that: (a) a screw came loose from the steel plate in a prisoner's jaw, causing infection, and it took two weeks to see even a nurse; (b) an inmate contracted THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal -- page 31 tuberculosis but received no treatment for a month; (c) an inmate fractured his hand but did not see a doctor for fifteen days and did not receive an x-ray for over five weeks; (d) an inmate who was urinating blood and in excruciating pain was not taken to the hospital until he contacted a newspaper. Medical Care--Denial of Ordered Care (202): A prisoner who broke his hand and was advised to sleep with his hand elevated to permit proper healing of the fractures was forced to sleep on the floor without any means of elevating his hand; he was also denied pain medications. These allegations made out a constitutional claim. Law Libraries and Law Books (20203): Allegations ofdenial oflaw library access are dismissed for lack ofproofof harm. Inability to assist one's criminal defense attorney does not meet this requirement because defendants generally assist their attomeys only with fact issues, not legal research. Plaintiffs must allege under Lewis v. Casey that some nonfrivolous action "was dismissed or could not be filed because of library restrictions." 203 n. I: A plaintiffmust be "completely unable to present his claim in the sense required by Casey." Telephones, Attorney Consultation (203-04): Limited telephone access to counsel is not a constitutional violation as long as inmates can communicate with counsel in writing or by visits. Religion (204-05): The plaintiffs' religious claims are all dismissed because none ofthem iJ;].dicate what sincerely held religious beliefs were substantially burdened by limitations on religious services that prevented them from going as often as they wanted. At 205: in any case, "the fair apportioI1Inent of access to prison resources for the benefit of inmates of all faiths constitutes a compelling governmental interest, accomplished in the least restrictive manner. . . ." Allowing Muslims to gather only on their own tier rather than jail-wide is not shown to have substantially burdened their exercise and the defendants had a compelling interest in security in limiting gatherings. Spring/Summer 1998 challenge the statute, since under it he owes the county money and has actually paid some. The plaintiff did not have standing to challenge an alleged county practice Recreation and Exercise of sendirig indigent offenders to jail for Davidson v. Coughlin, 968 F.Supp. 121 non-payment of fines, since he was no (S.D.N.Y. 1997). At 129: longer incarcerated. Because exercise is one of the €asic The plaintiffstated a claim under the human needs protected by the Eighth Excessive Fiiles Clause. The imposition Amendment, prisoners must be afforded ofcosts ofincarceration under the statute some opportunity for exercise. . . . is punishment; it is imposed only on those Although a prisoner may satisfy the convicted of crimes, and not those objective component of the Eighth detained before trial, so it cannot be Amendment rest by showing that he was analogized to a user fee. However, on denied meaningful exercise for a the merits, the court holds that the fine substantial period oftime, ... temporary is not unconstitutional because it is not denials ofexercise may be constitutional. disproportionate to the fine imposed for Providing less than one hour a day the offense or to fines imposed in ofoutdoor exercise repeatedly over a 30- contempt cases generally. day period did not violate the Eighth The plaintiffstated a claim under the Amendment, since it was of limited Double Jeopardy Clause, but loses on the duration and only a partial deprivation; merits because the fine is not the plaintiffwas allowed otherout-of-cell disproportionate to the damage caused activities and had the opportunity for in- to the government. cell exercise; and the deprivation was The plaintiff's equal protection claim imposed as a sanction to encourage is rejected because the indigency standard compliance with prison rules. The used by the defendants is not a standard complete denial of exercise was for no ofabsolute indigency but is the same as longer than 14 days. used for indigent medical and financial Allegations that the plaintiff was assistance programs. repeatedly provided with less than a full hour's recreation and occasionally denied Legal Assistance Programs/Standing his yard period entirely over a period of Smith v. Armstrong, 968 F.Supp. 40 four and a halfmonths did not make out (D.Conn.1996). This class action about an Eighth Amendment violation. court access was subjudice when Lewis The defendants were entitled to v. Casey was decided. The Department of Correction qualified immunity because at the time of the violations the Second Circuit had terminated its contract with Legal "only vaguely outlined the Eighth Assistance to Prisoners, which provided Amendment right to exercise." (134) representation to prisoners, and contracted with a new program, which Personal Property/StandinglEqual gives advice and assists in preparing Protection papers, but does not represent inmates, Grove v. Kadlic, 968 F.Supp. 510 is forbidden to discuss with them the (D.Nev. 1997). The plaintiffwas billed "operation of the institution," and must $630 for 18 days in jail under a state disclose any information involving safety statute requiring non-indigents to pay for or security. The prisons apparently have being jailed. law libraries. The plaintiff had standing to No plaintiffestablished actual injwy; J. THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal -- page 32 they all managed to file claims and no one had a complaint dismissed for failure to meet a teelmical requirement or a claim they could not get into court. The lack ofindependence ofthe new program does not rise to the level complained ofin Smith v. Bounds. Why the court rules on this question in the absence of standing is unclear. Beating and VentilationlPrison Litigation Reform ActlExhaustion of Remedies!Service of ProcesslPro Se LitigationlNegligence, Deliberate Indifference and Intent Mitchell v. Shonig, 969 F.Supp. 487 (N.D.TIl. 1997). The plaintiffalleged that temperatures in his cell ranged from 32 to 50 degrees because his cell was at the end ofthe gallery and the windows were improperly installed. The plaintiffstates a claim to the extent that he alleged extended exposure to temperatures 50 degrees or lower. The lack ofsignificant injwy is not fatal to his claim; "the Eighth Amendment requires protection from severe discomfort as well as frostbite and hypothermia." (490) Allegations thatthe plaintiffinfonned defendants of the conditions, they were in a position to alleviate them, and they did nothing are sufficient to allege deliberate indifference. The court accepts the statement to this effect in this pro se litigant's brief as part of the complaint. The plaintiff need not show that the defendants.. intended or desired the resulting hann; all he needs to show is that the official acted or failed to act despite the knowledge of a substantial risk ofhann. The Prison Litigation Refonn Act's exhaustion of administrative remedies requirement is not applicable to pending cases. The fact that it is procedural does not mean it should be so applied; it would attach new legal consequences to completed events and would violate the Seven:th Circuit's "no mousetrapping" principle. The court notes that the defendants did not move to dismiss until after the plaintiffs time had expired to appeal the grievance. The plaintiffs reliance on the Marshal to serve process and on the Marshal's statement that process hadbeen served constituted good cause for ihiling to accomplish service within 120 days. Attorneys' Fees and CostslPrison Litigation Reform Act Blissett v. Casey, 969 F.Supp. 118 (N.D.N.Y. 1997). A week's delay in filing a fees motion is deemed excusable neglect. The Prison Litigation Refonn Act's limitations on fees do not apply to services performed before the statute became effective. Nor do they apply to work done after the statute was passed in a case in which the attorneys agreed to represent the plaintiffbefore then; the opposite holding would "failO to take into account the [attorneys'] reasonable expectations" as ofthe time they took the case and would impose a new obligation on the plaintiff, to pay a proportion of his recovery as attorneys' fees. Fees are awarded at up to $150 an hour, with smaller amounts for non-legal work. Federal Officials and Prisons! PsychotropicMedicationlMagistratesl Injunctive RelieflExhaustion of Remedies United States v. McAllister, 969 F.Supp. 1200 (D.Minn. 1997). The respondent sought judicial review of a detennination that he should be involuntarily medicated. The magistrate judge ordered that he not be medicated pending further order of the court, but now states that he erred because magistrates lack that authority; they may only issue a Report and Recommendation. The federal regulations concerning forcible medication of prisoners are consistent with the requirements of Washington v. Harper. Since there is no Spring/Summer 1998 right to counsel in a medication proceeding, it was not unconstitutional to fail to notify the respondent's courtappointed lawyer first. The administrative record does not substantiate the reasons for medicating the respondent; though there was evidence that might have supported medication, the doctor who reviewed the medication proposal did not make a finding ofnecessity, and it is not clear whether the treating/evaluating psychiatrist/clinician presented clinical data and background infonnationrelative to the need for medication as the regulations require. Injunctive relief is not appropriate because prison personnel have stopped forcibly medicating the respondent and therefore he has not established the necessary imminent risk of harm. The medication order is reversed .and remanded for reconsideration by the agency. The court has jurisdiction to consider this case under the Administrative Procedures Act, which provides for judicial review of all federal agency actions unless a statute provides otherwise. Mandamus does not lie because medication decisions are not ministerial. The respondent exhausted his administrative remedies. The usual Bureau ofPrisons administrative process was not available to him because there was an alternative procedure, which he utilized, and the regulations exclude such cases from the regular administrative remedy. The court declines to appoint a "health care guardian" for the respondent. John Boston is the Director of the Prisoners' Rights Project, Legal Aid Society ofNew York. ~ THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal -- page 33 Spring/Summer 1998 NPP AIDS In Prison Project Update Prison Systems Change HIV-Testing Policies by Jackie Walker, Project Coordinator For the past eight years, mv testing in prisons has largely been conducted on a voluntary basis. Currently, only 16 state systems and the Federal Bureau of Prisons (FBOP) conduct mandatory mv testing. Similarly, the response of correctional health organizations and many correctional doctors has been against mandatory testing. The National Commission on Correctional Healthcare has consistently supported voluntary testing since 1987 as the best means of managing HIV in corrections. Additionally, the American Public Health Association and the World Health Organization have also encouraged voluntary testing. Earlier this year a roundtable of correctional doctors issued the publication, "Management of the HIVPositive Prisoner," which discusses a variety of issues from HIV-testing policies to women's issues. The roundtable noted a number of disincentives for prisoners seeking mv testing, including the distribution of medication, medical segregation or clustering, lack of access to job opportunities, and prohibition against conjugal visits. The doctors urged policy makers to remove these obstacles by creating an atmosphere that encourages voluntary HIV testing. They proposed actively offering prisoners mv testing, access to HIV testing on demand throughoutincarceration, andappropriate follow-up care for prisoners testing positive. Despite widespread support for voluntary mv testing, some systems are moving towards mandatory testing. In 1998 HIV-testing policies have changed or are set to change in Texas, South Carolina, and the FBOP. The Texas Department ofCriminal Justice (IDC]) revised its HIV-testing policy to include routine testing ofall prisoners. The Sbuth Carolina Department of Corrections recently also began mandatory HIV screening of prisoners. Similarly, congressional legislation, H.R. 2070 the Corrections Officer and Safety Act of 1998, institutes the mandatory HIV testing of all prisoners in the FBOP. Changes in Texas, South Carolina, and the FBOP may foreshadow the future of HIV-testing policies in other systems across the country. In the fall of 1997, the IDCJ reviewed and amended its HIV/AIDS policies. Changes included the implementation ofa routine HIV-testing policy. Dr. Lannette Linthicum, IDCfs Interim Medical Director, explains, "We felt it was essential to identify our HIVpositive offenders early in the course of their illness and start antiretroviral therapy before extensive immune damage occurs." According to Dr. Linthicum, the IDC]'s revised testing policy includes screening all consenting prisoners for high-risk behaviors and mv testing of high-risk groups. Pre- and post-test counseling is provided based on Texas Department of Health and Centers for Disease Control models. The Texas HIV-testing process is currently divided into two phases. In the first phase, prisoners in highest risk categories are being tested. The second phase will include testing ofall prisoners. Public health nurses have until May 1999 to screen all prisoners at their facilities. The TDCJ's new mv-testing policy seems to have initiated a trend. The FBOP is following suit by imposing its own mandatory mv-testing policy. The original purpose of the proposed legislation, H.R. 2070 the Corrections Officer and Safety Act of 1998, was to protect correctional staff from possible transmission of the HIV virus by identifying infected prisoners through testing. HoWever, several amendments expanded the scope of the bill. Under the amended H.R. 2070, anyone convicted of a federal offense and sentenced to serve six or more months would be tested for the HIV virus. The FBOP currently offers voluntary HIV testingduring incarceration and performs mandatory HIV testing for everyone exiting the system. Ifthe amended H.R. 2070 passes, counseling, health care, and support services must be provided for both prisoners and staff who test HIV positive. In the midst of these changes, prisoners' advocates are raising a variety of concerns from access to adequate medical care to the availability ofHIV testing. Although most systems say that prisoners will have access to treatment, complaints from prisoners living with mv/AIDS indicatecontinuingproblems. For instance, preliminary results from a recent survey by the Correctional HIV Consortium found that only 18% of prisoners living with HIV/AIDS are receiving the appropriate anti-retroviral therapy. These figures prompt some advocates to question whetherrnandatory testing will actually result in the treatment of infected prisoners. Mike Haggerty ofthe Correctional mv Consortium says, "I would be in favor if [testing] was tied to mandatory treatment as the community standard. And ifresources were in place for that purpose only. Other than that, [the new testing policies] smack of political expedience, separate but unequal and get to the back ofthe bus." He also reminds us, "It's so negative and horrendous to be HIV-positive in prison. It's one ofthe reasons people are staying THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal-- page 34 out of treatment." Prisoners' advocates also raise concerns about access to HIV testing. In New York, a program funded by the New York AIDS Institute permits community-based organizations to provide HIV testing to select prisons. Jack Beck ofthe Prisoners' Rights Project reports that he has seen a decline in complaints from prisons covered by this program. However, he still receives complaints about delays in HIV testing and inadequate counseling performed within the correctional system. For Beck, mandatory HIV testing is problematic: "It's using funds that could be more effectively used in HIV/AIDS education programs. These programs are more effective in getting folks into HIV testing. It's not just a bad idea, but its diverting funds from a more effective program." Cultural and linguistic issues also impact access to HIV testing. Romeo Sanchez ofthe Latino AIDS Commission explains, "Latinos comprise 34% of the prison population in New York. But there is a lack of Spanish-speaking health care and Spanish-language providers interpreters in the correctional system. This makes it very difficult or impossible forSpanish-language-dominantprisoners to receive access to testing information, pre/post test counseling and preventive treatment options." He also feels any HIV-testing program must include other services su~h as staff training in the delivery of pre/post test counseling and accommodations to facilitate adherence to treatment regimens. Ultimately, Sanchez feels the internal aspects of prisons make it difficult for mandatory HIV testing to have an impact. "There is a lack ofconfidentiality in prisons and this information could be misused against the prisoner. The fact is prisons lack the necessary resources, support systems, trained personnel, medical staff, etc., to provide appropriate responses to all those ~ testing positive." Spring/Summer 1998 PRISON NEWS Several books have been published this year that acknowledge and celebrate prison writers and literature. Each publication stresses the importanie of inmate expression and the role it plays in educating those within as well as outside prison walls. JailhoU8e Journalism: The Fourth Estate Behind Bars, written by James McGrath Morris, recounts the historical movement and modem day struggle of inmates who report, write, and publish their own newspapers and magazines in American prisons. Morris emphasizes the impact of prisoners publications on correctional reform and the culture ofan incarcerated community. The book also details the stories of many of the most prominent prisoner journalists. Copies can be obtained through McFarland & Company, Inc., Box 611, Jefferson, NC 28640. conditions of confinement, and prison labor. For more information, contact Common Courage Press, Box 702, Monroe, ME 04951. The Federal Prison Guidebook, 1st. edition, by Alan Ellis, includes information designed to educate defense attorneys and defendants on various aspects of prison life in the Bureau of Prisons system. It catalogues each facility within the federal system and describes the programs, policies, and history for inmates. Ellis covers issues such as vocational and educational opportunities, library facilities, counseling services, housing accommodations, and visiting hours for each facility. For information on ordering, contact the Law Offices ofAlan Ellis, P.O. Box 2178, Sausalito, CA 94966-2178. Prison Writing in 20th-Century America, edited by H. Bruce Franklin, contains stories, poems, and articles collected from nearly 40 former and current inmates in America's correctional institutions and presents an insightful history ofprisons over the last 100 years. Writers include: Malcolm X, Mumia Abu-Jamal, Assata Shakur, and Jack London. The publisher is Penguin Group, PenguinPutnarn, Inc., 375 Hudson Street, New York, NY 10014. The National Prison Project is a special project ofthe ACLU Foundation which seeks to strengthen and protect the rights of adult and juvenile offenders; to improve overall conditions in correctional facilities; and to develop alternatives to incarceration. The reprinting of Journal material is encouraged with the stipulation that the National Prison Project Journal be credited as the source of the material, and that a copy of the reprint be sent to the editor. Subscriptions to the Journal are $30 ($2 for prisoners) prepaid by check or money order. The Journal is published quarterly by the National Prison Project of the ACLUF: The Ceiling ofAmerica: An Inside Look at the U.S. Prison Industry, edited by Daniel Burton-Rose and the editors ofPrison Legal News, Dan Pens and Paul Wright, compiles essays and articles from the highly regarded prisoner publication, Prison Legal News. The writings provide informed critiques on various criminal justice issues, including the correctional industrial complex, public and media perceptions of crime and prisoners, 1875 Connecticut Ave., NW, Ste. 410 Washington, DC 20009 Phone: (202) 234-41BO FAX: (202) 234-4890 e-mail: gotschnpp@ao1.com (NO COLLECT CALLS) NPP Director: Journal Editor: Editorial Assistants: Regular Contributor: Elizabeth Alexander Jenni Gainsborough KaraGotsch Laura Kamoie John Boston THE NATIONAL PRISON· PROJECT Journal-- page 35 Spring/Summer 1998 Highlights from the National Prison Project Docket Onishea v. Herring (Alabama): This class action challenges the segregation and exclusion of all HIV-positive prisoners from all prison programs and activities available to other prisoners. Following trial, the district court ruled against plaintiffs on every issue. The Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals reversed and remanded for trial before a new judge. The court subsequently granted rehearing before all the judges of that circuit, which is scheduled for argument on October 20, 1998. Amatel v. Reno (D.C.): This case challenges the "Ensign Amendment," passed by Congress in 1996, which prohibits the Federal Bureau of Prisons from allowing prisoners to receive publications featuring nudity. On August 12, 1997, the district court held the statute unconstitutional and granted a permanent injunction against its enforcement by the Bureau of Prisons. The defendants appealed to the District ofColumbia Court of Appeals. By a 2-1 vote, the court, in August 1998, reversed Hadix v. Johnson (Michigan): This and remanded for further proceedings. cases involves medical and mental health care and access to courts at the State Gomez v. Vernon (Idaho): This case Prison of Southern Michigan. In one of challenges retaliation and the denial of the most important victories against access to courts. Plaintiffs completed an PLRA, the NPP won a decision in May eight-week trial on the retaliation claim 1998 from the Sixth Circuit Court of in March of 1998 and are awaiting a Appeals holding that courts were not to decision. apply the PLRA "automatic stay" (suspension of relief) provision except Amos v. Maryland Dept of Public under ordinary equitable principles; any Safety and Correctional Services other statutory construction would be (Maryland): NPP represents several unconstitutional. wheelchair-bound plaintiffs at the Roxbury Correctional Institution in their Cody v. Hillard (South Dakota): This damages actions against the State for its class action challenges medical and failure to accommodate their disabilities mental health care, physical plant and in the design and operation of the sanitation, shop safety, legal access, and facility. The Fourth Circuit Court of overcrowding at the South Dakota State Appeals had ordered the case dismissed. Penitentiary. A consent decree was In June 1998, the Supreme Court granted entered in 1985. In 1996, the defendants plaintiffs' writ of certiorari and vacated filed a motion to vacate the consent the decision dismissing the case. The decree, which the district court granted plaintiffs have now rebriefed the issue in in April 1997. The Eighth Circuit the court of appeals. reversed and remanded in March 1998. .. National Prison Project Publications ORDERING INFORMATION: NPP publications are available prepaid. Send check or money order to: NPP, 1875 Connecticut Ave., NW, #410, Washington, DC 20009, (202) 234-4830... The National Prison Project Journal, a quarterly publication highlighting prison litigation and other prison issues. $30 annual subscription ($2 for prisoners). The Prisoners' Assistance Directory, lists local, state, national, international organizations provide services to prisoners, offenders, and their families. and that ex11 th edition, July 1996. (12th edition, 1998, forthcoming late fall 1998.) $30. 1998 AIDS in Prison Bibliography, revised and greatly expanded. Lists resources on AIDS in prison available from the NPP and other sources, including correctional policies on AIDS, educational materials, medical and legal articles, and recent AIDS studies. $10. AIDS in Prison: The Facts for Inmates and Officers, is an educational tool for prisoners, corrections staff, and AIDS service providers. The booklet answers questions concerning the meaning of AIDS, available medical treatment, and legal rights and responsibilities. Available in English and Spanish. Single copies free; call for bulk order pricing. TB: The Facts for Inmates and Officers, answers commonly asked questions about tuberculosis (TB) in a simple question-answer format. Discusses what tuberculosis is, how it is contracted, symptoms, treatment, and the impact of HIV infection on TB. Single copies free; call for bulk order pricing. Spring/Summer 1998 THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT Journal -- page 36 ATTENTION -- RENEWAL NOTICE Your subscription to the National Prison Project JOURNAL has expired if your customer ill number (located at the top right corner of the address l~bel below) ends with the~tters WI97, SP98, or SU98. Renew today so you won't miss an issue of this important publication! _ _ Yes, I want to subscribe to the JOURNAL for another year. Enclosed is my check for $30 ($2 for prisoners). _ _ The address on the label b.elow is correct. My name or address has changed to: Name: Address: City: State: Zip: _ Please return this entire page. Thanks for your continued interest! National Prison Project American Civil Liberties Union Foundation 1875 Connecticut Ave., NW Suite 410 Washington, DC 20009 ... Non-Profit U S Postage Paid Permit No. 1228 Merrifield, VA