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THE NATIONAL PRISON PROJECT A Project of the American Civil Liberties Union Foundation, Inc. Vol. 13, No.1 & 2, Spring/Summer 1999' ISSN 1076-769X Congressman Challenges P.rivatization Trend Representative Ted Strickland of Ohio's Sixth district introduced legislation on March 4, 1999 prohibiting placement of federal prisoners in private for-profit correctional institutions and denying grants to states and localities that contract with private facilities. At the time of publication, Rep. Strickland's Public Safety Act, H.R. 979, is stalled at the subcommittee level. The bill currently has 93 cosponsors; 68 Democrats and 25 Republicans. Congressman Strickland's interest in prison issues stems from his professional background and his state's tumultuous experiences. Before entering the House ofRepresentatives, Strickland worked as a psychologist for nine years at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility in L~casville, Ohio. During his first term in the House, a devastating riot broke out at the Lucasville prison. Strickland went to Lucasville and spent many hours consoling family members of trapped correctional officers. Then last year, the Northeast Ohio Correctional Center in Youngstown gained national notoriety. A Department of Justice report released in November of 1998, cited the inexperience and lack of training of staff at the private Corrections Corporation of America facility and the resulting excessive use of force by staff The report also noted CCA's failure to recognize its responsibilities as a correctional service provider and its reluctance to accept blame for unconstitutional conditions of confinement at its facility. District of Columbia prisoners transferred to the facility filed suit against CCA. After two stabbing deaths, several escapes and medically-related deaths, CCA settled the case and agreed to pay $1.65 million in damages. In a July 18, 1999 Washington Post editorial, Rep. Strickland called the United States' trend toward prison privatization "... a dangerous mistake." He asserted that in our democratic society, the deprivation of liberty is one of the most powerful controls a state exercises over its citizens, which must be exercised lawfully and humanely and free from inappropriate pressures such as . monetary rewards. Rapidly increasing incarceration rates caused by mandatory sentencing policies continue to worsen prison overcrowding. For-profit companies take advantage of the predicament many states and the federal government find themselves in because of bad criminal justice policies. They build and operate correctional institutions and benefit financially by housing inmates transferred from overcrowded public prisons. In nine years, the number of prisoners in private beds grew to 132,572 in 1998 from just under 11,000 in 1989. As indicated in the proposed Public Safety Act, the cost conscious private prison industry has little incentive to meet constitutional standards, encourage rehabilitation or establish productive instructional programming in a safe and secure correctional institution. A compC\ny's loyalty lies primarily with its stockholders. As a result, there have been serious problems in several private prisons. In a facility operated by Wackenhut Corporation in New Mexico, a riot resulted in several injuries and extensive facility damage. The riot occurred only a few months after two attempted cover-ups by supervisors of correctional staff's excessive use offorce and two inmate.stabbing deaths. Last year, a juvenile correctional fac;ility run by another for-profit company in .. ~ The National Prison Project JOURNAL Tallulah, Louisiana was taken over by the State because of inhumane conditions. A Justice Department investigation found that the young inmates were routinely beaten. Some of the strongest supporters of the Public Safety Act include correctional officers' unions and other coalitions. Organizations like the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, the American Federation of Government Employees, AFLCIO and the Corr.ections and Criminal Justice Coalition became active in the anti-privatization movement because of concerns over the loss of public jobs to the non-unionized, lower paid private sector. Private prisons' "costcutting" leads to the hiring of inexperienced and poorly trained staff; a major cause of the many private prison incidents and disturbances across the country. Phil Glover, President of AFGE's Council of Prison Locals, points out how cutbacks not only hurt the quality of staff, but affect all conditions of confinement. "To reduce costs, the private prison must cut staff, food, programs, and other items which in a prison setting are detrimental to safely housing convicted felons." Gerald W. McEntee, President of AFSCME, agrees: "The perils of prison privatization are clear -violence, escapes, and incidents of prisoner abuse are well-known On June 20, 1999, Governor George W. Bush of Texas vetoed a major civil rights bill. The Texas Legislature passed the bill to reform the way lawyers are appointed to represent poor people who are accused of a crime. The system that Texas has used for decades has been widely criticized by national press, defense lawyers, and civil liberties groups. It left elected state judges in charge of spending county money on lawyers who, in turn, influence the amount of time that judges must spend to and should not be tolerated. The adjudicate allegations against members of Congress who are sponsoring this legislation should be commended for recognizing indigent defendants. For example, some judges limit all fees in first degree felony cases to as low as that government -- and only government -- should have the awesome responsibility of incarcerating criminals and for keeping society safe from these individuals." The decision to place an offender in prison, and the decision to impose a particular length of sentence, are critical social policy decisions that should not be contaminated by profit considerations. Initiatives to end for-profit influences and restore government control over our criminal justice system should be applauded. Bush Vetoes Legislation for Indigent Defendants Spring/Summer 1999 $350 per case. This effectively requires lawyers, who perform all necessary investigation, motion practice, and trial preparation, to work for free. Some 25% of Texas judges who responded to a recent State Bar survey admitted that they have considered whether a lawyer has contributed to their election campaign in deciding who to appoint to represent an indigent defendant. Both of these common features of the present system can result in pressure on indigent defendants to plead guilty without thorough consideration of the risks and benefits of using Texas's Code of Criminal Procedure to test the charges. I NPP JOURNAL By Jerry Wesevich The National Prison Project is a special project of the 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 ofJOURNAL material is encouraged with the stipulation that the National Prison ProjectJOURNAL be credited as the source of the material, and that a copy of the reprint be sent to the editor. Subscriptions to theJOURNAL are $30 ($2 for prisoners) prepaid by check or money order. The JOURNAL is publjshed quarterly by the National Prison Project of the ACLUF: 1875 Connecticut Ave., NW, Ste. 410 Washington, DC 20009 Phone:(202) 234-4830 FAX:(202) 234-4890 E-mail:gotschnpp@aol.com (NO COLLECT CALLS PLEASE) NPP Director: Elizabeth Alexander Editor: Kara Gotsch Regular Contributor: John Boston 1 1 ~i 1 ~'I 2 ~ i _ _J The National Prison ProjectJOURNAL While the bill is not an instant comprehensive overhaul, it is a major first step in that direction. It addresses every major deficiency in Texas's present indigent defense structure as follows: (1) The counties whom pay for indigent defense must formally adopt any method that they choose for meeting the indigent defense responsibilities that are delegated to them by the State. By formal action of each county commissioners' court, counties may keep judges in charge of appointing counsel, they may choose a local or regional public defender system, or they may develop their own administrative system for appointing counsel. The state's current patchwork of laws that allow counties varying authority over what kinds of public defender systems they may adopt is abolished. Any method chosen by the counties must be publicized and open to any attorney who meets the county's published requirements. (2) Indigent defendants cannot be jailed for more than 20 days after they request counsel, and they must be told how to.request counsel. Present law requires appointment "as soon as possible" after a request for counsel is made by a defendant found to be indigent, but it sets no outside limit, nor does it require defendants to be told how to request counsel under each county's unique system. cases. (3) The state will begin gathering comprehensive data on the quality of indigent defense in each one of Texas's 254 counties so that all can learn from those with effective systems. The bill culminates several years of effort by Senator Rodney Ellis (D-Houston), who has fought for reform with a major indigent defense bill each legislative session since 1993. NPP counsel consulted with Sen. Ellis's current and former staff as the bill was drafted, and helped distill the key ideas from Sen. Ellis's previous efforts. NPP staff also explored the shape of appropriate reform with local judges, defense counsel, professors, pretrial services officers, and civil libertarians. Finally, NPP staff helped form a coalition to promote the legislation that included University of Texas law professor Raoul Schonemann, Texas Appleseed Center Executive Director Annette LoVoi, and Texas Criminal Defense Lawyers' Assn. counsel Keith Hampton. Despite these efforts, as quoted by Nat Hentoff's July 3 editorial in The Washington Post, Gov. Bush still believes, "Judges are better able to assess the quality of legal representation." Hentoff criticizes Bush's veto as ".. .indifference to, or ignorance of a fundamental constitutional right." Consequently, in some Jerry Wesevich is a staffattorney at NPP. jurisdictions people wait in jail up to four months before counsel is first appointed to look into their 3 Spring/Summer 1999 Recent Publications on Custodial Sexual Misconduct By Joanna SchwartzI and Giovanna Shay2 In 1991, the ACLUNational Prison Project (NPP) Bibliography ofMaterials on Women in Prison contained three items in the section entitled "Rape/Sexual Assault." In the 1999 update, NPP plans to include at least five times that number. Although NPP anticipates expansion of all sections of its forthcoming Bibliography on Incarcerated Women, the proliferation of literature on sexual misconduct against incarcerated women is particularly noteworthy. Successful civil rights cases, 3 criminal prosecutions, 4 investigative reports by human rights organizations, S and increasing popular media attention6 have contributed to growing awareness of the problem of sexual misconduct. This Note describes some of the most important publications about custodial sexual abuse of this decade. In 1996, Human Rights Watch released its report All Too Familiar: Sexual Abuse of Women in US. State Prisons. The report described sexual misconduct in Califorriia, the District of Columbia, Georgia, Illinois, Michigan, and New York. At the time of the report, most of these jurisdictions already had The National Prison Project JOURNAL faced litigation addressing custodial sexual misconduct. 7 "Sexual misconduct is often so entrenched," Human Rights Watch explained, "that, in those correctional systems where class action suits have not yet occurred . . . such abuse is stilI largely an invisible problem ...,,8 All Too Familiar focused popular media attention on public documented examples of the abuses behind prison walls. 9 Two years later, Human Rights Watch followed All Too Familiar with a special report on retaliation against women who had complained of abuse in Michigan state prisons. In Nowhere to Hide: Retaliation Against Women in Michigan State Prisons, Human Rights Watch documented retaliation against the plaintiffs in a lawsuit alleging sexual misconduct jointly prosecuted by private attorneys and the Department of Justice. 10 Human Rights Watch reported: "women believed they were being sent a clear message by the guards and the corrections department . . any attempt to protect themselves from sexual abuse by reporting it would result in punitive 'actions by guards. "n In response to these reports, U.N. Special Rapporteur on Violence Against Women, Radhika Coomaraswamy, toured the US. in June, 1998, to investigate sexual misconduct against female prisoners. The Special Rapporteur presented her report to the UN. Human Rights Commission in March, 1999. She concluded that, "it is clear that 4 sexual misconduct by male corrections officers against women inmates is widespread ,,12 In March, 1999, Amnesty International released another major report entitled Not Part of My Sentence: Violations ofthe Human Rights of Women in Custody. Not Part pfMy Sentence documented sexual misconduct in nineteen US. jurisdictions: Alabama, Arizona, California, the District of Columbia, Florida, Idaho, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Hampshire, New York, Ohio, Texas, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wyoming, and the Federal Bureau of Prisons. Amnesty concluded that many women in US. prisons and jails are subjected to "sexually offensive language; male staff touching inmates' breasts and genitals when conducting searches; male staff watching inmates while they are naked, and rape. ,,13 The report further concluded: "contrary to international standards, prisons and jails in the USA employ men to guard women and place relatively few restrictions On the duties of male staff As a consequence, much of the touching and viewing of their bodies by staff that women experience as shocking and humiliating is permitted by law. ,,14 Like the earlier Human Rights Watch report, Not Part ofMy Sentence received significant domestic press attention. IS In recent years, increasing numbers of state legislatures have responded to reports of sexual Spring/Summer 1999 abuse by criminalizing "consensual" sexual relations between inmates and corrections staff In 1998, Brenda Smith surveyed state criminal laws sanctioning custodial misconduct in An End to Silence: Women Prisoners' Handbook on Identifying and Addressing Sexual Misconduct. The survey indicated that thirty-five states and the District of Columbia provided such criminal sanctions. 16 In the forthcoming second edition of the manual, additional states including Montana,17 Tennessee,18 Virginia,19 and West Virginia20 will join that list. A few U.S. lawmakers also have attempted to address custodial sexual abuse. Last year, Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton commissioned a General Accounting Office (GAO) study on problems facing women in prison, including sexual abuse. 21 Released in July, 1999, the first installment of a two-part report addressed sexual misconduct in four correctional systems: the federal Bureau ofPrisons, California, Texas, and the District of Columbia.22 "Staff sexual misconduct occurs," the report stated, "although the full extent is unknown [due to inadequate reporting mechanisms]."23 In fact, the GAO noted that, "[n]one of the four jurisdictions we studied had readily available, comprehensive data or reports on the number, nature, and outcomes of staff-on-inmate sexual misconduct allegations. ,,24 It concluded that, "[t]he systemic The National Prison Project JOURNAL absence of such data or reports makes it difficult . . . to effectively address staff sexual misconduct issues." 2S Recent commentators have documented not only incarcerated women's experiences of abuse while in prison, but also their prior life experiences of physical and sexual abuse. 26 In April, 1999, the Bureau of Justice Statistics released findings on Prior Abuse Reported by Inmates and Probationers. 27 The BJS found that 57.2% of women state prison inmates had suffered physical or sexual abuse prior to admission, as compared to 16. 1% of male state inmates. 28 Advocates have relied on such findings to challenge cross-gender search and surveillance techniques, arguing that these practices cause undue distress to incarcerated women who have survived prior abuse. 29 The AeLU National Prison Project currently is updating its Bibliography on Incarcerated Women. Please send additional materials for inclusion to the attention ofGiovanna Shay, Soros Justice Fellow Attorney, AeLU National Prison Project. I. J.D. expected lViay, 2000, Yale Law School 2. Soros Justice Fellow Attorney, ACLU National Prison Project. This article was supported by a grant from the Open Society Institute's Center on Crime, Communities & Culture's Soros Justice Fellowship Program 3. See, e.g., U.S. v. Arizona, Settlement Agreement in Civil Action NO. 97-476-PHX-ROS (D. Ariz. March 11, 1999) (Arizona); Lucas v. White, Private Settlement Agreement in Civil Action No. 96-02905 (N.D. Ca. February, 1998XFederal Bureau of Prisons); Women Prisoners v. District ofColumbia, 877 F. Supp. 634 (D.D.C. 1994), vacated in part, modified in part, 899 F. Supp. 6S9, remanded, 93 F.3d 910 (D.C. CiT. 1996), cert. denied, 117 S. Ct. 1552 (1997XDistrict ofColumbia); Cason v. Seckinger, Consent Order filed in Civil Action No. 5 84-313-1-MAC (M.D. Ga. November 23, 1994XGeorgia). 4. See, e.g., P. Coyle & M. Perlstein, N.D. Cops Angry that Deputies Didn't Tell Them ofRape Case, NEW ORLEANS TIMES-PICAYUNE, March 6, 1999, at B2; Officer Accused ofAssault, CORRECTIONS DIGEST, April 16, 1999, at 7-8; Former Sheriffs Deputy Charged, CORRECTIONS DIGEST, April 9, 1999, at 8; Consensual Sex Still a Crime, CORRECTIONS DIGEST, February 26, 1999, at 6-7; Bob France, Ex-Jailer Sentenced, Declared Sexual Predator, THE NEWS-JOURNAL, September 23, 1998, at 3C. 5. See infra. Spring/Summer 1999 15. Barbara Vobejda,Abuse ofFemale Prisoners in U.S. Is Routine, Rights Report Says, WASH. POST, March 4, 1999, at All. 16. BRENDA V. SMITH, AN END TO SILENCE: WOMEN PRISONERS' HANDBOOK ON IDENTIFYING AND ADDRESSING SEXUAL MISCONDUCT 46-65 (1998). 17. Mont. Code Section 46-18-219, as amended by Mt. S.B. NO. 32, March 16, 1999. 18. Tenn. Code Section 41-21-241. 19. Va. Code Section 18-2-64.2. 20. W. Va. Code Section 25-1-22. 6. See, e.g., DATELINE, HONOR GUARD? WOMEN 21. Press Release, Norton Gets GAO to Study WHO SUFFER SEXUAL ABUSE AT THE HANDS OF 'Sexual Abuse and Sexual Harassment ofFemale GUARDS WHILE IN PRISON (November 1,1998); Prisoners, issued by Congresswoman Eleanor Nina Siegal, Locked Up in America: Slaves to the Holmes Norton, December 10, 1998. System, SALON MAGAZINE, http://wwww.salonmagazine.com/mwtlfeature/1998/ 22. U.S. GENERAL ACCOUNTING OFFlCE, WOMEN IN 09/cov_0Ifeature4.htm; Nina Siegal, Women in PRISON: SEXUAL MISCONDUCT BY CORRECTIONAL Prison, Ms., October 26, 1998, at 65; Bobbie Stein, STAFF, GAO/GGD-99-104, at 1 (1999). Life in Prison/Sexual Abuse: Guards Let Rapists into Women's Cells, THE PROGRESSIVE, July 1996, 23.Id. at 7. at 23. 7. See ALL Too FAMILIAR at 62, 110, 127,224. 24.Id. at 16. 8. ALL Too FAMILIAR at 5. 25.Id. 9. See, e.g., Steven A Holmes, With More Women in Prison, Sexual Abuse by Guards Becomes a Troubling Trend, N.Y. TIMES, December 27, 1996, at AI; Pierre Thomas, Growing Female Inmate Population Facing Greater Assault Risk, Study Says, WASH. POST, December 8,1996, at AI8. 26. See, e.g., Effective Management ofFemale Jail Detainees with Histories ofPhysical and Sexual Abuse, AMERICAN JAILS 50 (May/June 1998). 10. Also in 1998, the Women's Institute for Leadership Development (WILD) for H\lman Rights released HUMAN RIGHTS FOR WOMEN IN U.S. CUSTODY, which addressed human rights violations against incarcerated women, including sex'Ual misconduct. II. NOWHERE TO HIDE at 7. 12. Report ofthe Mission to the United States af America on the Issue ofViolence Against Women in State and Federal Prisons, Commission on Human Rights, 55th Sess., Agenda Item 12 (a) at 15, U.N. Doc. E/CN.4/1999/68/Add.2 (1999). See also Elizabeth Olson, U.N. Panel is Told ofRights Violations at U.S. Women's Prisons, N.Y. TIMES, March 31, 1999.atAI6. 13. NOT PART OF My SENTENCE at 38. In April, 1999, Amnesty also released a report entitled UNITED STATES OF AMERICA: THE FINDINGS OF A VISIT TO VALLEY STATE PRISON FOR WOMEN, CALIFORNIA. The report described problems including sexual abuse, stating that "inmates reported that it was common for some male officers to watch them dressing and undressing ... [and that I several guards were being investigated for seX'ual misconduct, including an alleged rape." FINDINGS OF AVISIT TO VALLEY STATE PRISON at 2. 14. Id., 39. 27. CAROLINE WOLF HARLOW, BUREAU OF JUSTICE STATISTICS SELECTED FINDINGS: PRIOR ABUSE REPORTED BY INMATES AND PROBATIONERS (April 1999). 28. [d., 1. 29. See, e.g., Michael P. Mayko, Prison Pat-Down Put Down: Inmates Tell Court Searches Recall Traumatic Events, CONNECTICUT POST, March 29, 1999, at AI. See also Jordan v. Gardner, 986 F.2d 1521,1525-26 (9th CiT. 1993). HIV/AIDS Support Groups Benefit Inmates By Jackie Walker According to the 1996-1997 Update: HIVIAIDS, STDs, and TB in Correctional Facilities, 67% of state and federal prisons provided mV1AIDS support groups coordinated by local The National Prison Project JOURNAL service organizations. Sixty-three percent of prisons offered support programing led by correctional staff and 33% had groups led by peer educators. In this article, a support group facilitated by correctional staff and another led by an AIDS service organization ~re profiled. u. S. Disciplinary Barracks at Ft. Leavenworth Between 1994 and 1998, an mY/AIDS group at the U.S. Disciplinary Barracks at Ft. Leavenworth provided prisoners living with lllV/AIDS, a range of options for support and education. A support group facilitated by Martha O'Neal, a social worker with Munson Army Hospital, and a staff nurse began as a outgrowth of O'Neal's individual counseling sessions with three prisoners living with mY/AIDs. The three initial prisonerparticipants then recruited other prisoners into the group. Although staffed by O'Neal, the prisoners had substantial input into the issues to be addressed by the program. Prisoners discussed practical issues including inmate and correctional officer relations and medication delivery problems. Some prisoners specialized in researching mY/AIDS treatment issues and shared their results with group members. Their expertise in mY/AIDS treatment issues became so well known that some prisoners living with mY/AIDS would seek advice from support group members instead of attending meetings. O'Neal described the group in this 6 way, "We used the empowerment approach, in which we were facilitating these inmates as fully responsible for themselves and their knowledge. " Since many prisoners in the group had release dates within five or six years, discharge planning became an integral part of group discussions. To give prisoners a sense of the process, O'Neal often asked prisoners with upcoming release dates to discuss their discharge plan with the group members. A typical plan covered issues on access to medication, employment or benefits, medical care, and partner notification. If a prisoner was being released locally, Ryan White representatives were brought in to help with the discharge plan. O'Neal explained, "In this way the process became more concrete and less frightening for everyone." Another benefit of the support group was its impact on the health of its members. During the program all but one participant received combination therapy with a protease inhibitor. Of those on combination therapy, all but one maintained undetectable viral loads for well over a year. This success was attributed, in part, to support group members encouraging each other to take their medications, monitor their diets, and exercise regularly. Over the course of the support group's existence, O'Neal was able to coordinate a range of activities: bringing in drug company representatives and arranging for support group members to co-present on Spring/Summer1999 HIY/AIDS issues for mental health staff She also showed and facilitated discussions on films like Philadelphia and The Band Played On. O'Neal offers the following advice to others interested in starting support groups: "First, recognize the best resource is your inmates. So look for leadership and the need among them. Second, always maintain participation on a voluntary basis. Third, maximize your access to good educational materials." Members of the AIDS/lllY support group, which ended in 1998, now participate in a prisoner led self-growth group. District of Columbia Jail During Willie Byrd's incarceration at the Correctional Treatment Facility in Washington, D.C., the support group for prisoners living with mY/AIDS first began. The group was founded in 1995 by two prisoners living with mY/AIDS, Cochise Robertson-El and the late Rosalind Moore-Bey. Now, an Outreach Advocate with the my Community Coalition (HCC), Byrd reflects, "Back then, I didn't make it known that I was mypositive." During his incarceration, he guarded his health status so closely that Robertson never knew.he was HIY-positive. He did not learn of Byrd's status until they both were released and working at HCC. These days Byrd co-facilitates a support group for prisoners living with mY/AIDS with the help of a mental health nurse and a discharge planner from Family Medical Counseling Services at The National Prison Project JOURNAL the District of Columbia Jail. The strongest aspect of the program includes the retelling of his own story of moving from invisibility to acceptance and empowerment. It is a story he regularly shares with both prisoners and members of the general community. Attendance at support group has ranged from 16 to 32 men. On a weekly basis an average of 23 men attend. Attendance in the group is voluntary and topics range from nutrition, to pressing issues like violations of confidentiality. Many of the prisoners who had stopped taking their medications prior to attending the support group now engage in a more active role in their healthcare. Attendance in the support group also has other benefits. The discharge planner from Family Medical Counseling Services works with prisoners with upcoming release dates to facilitate the transition into the community. The support group also gives prisoners a forum to address institutional problems. In one case, an inmate informed Byrd of the verbal harassment he endured and the confidentiality violations committed by a correctional officer. Grievances were later filed regarding this incident. Since then, Byrd has heard fewer complaints regarding violations of confidentiality. Some prisoners who hear about the group often wait weeks before coming. Byrd believes inmates wait because of the continuing stigma associated with HIV/AIDS and the lack of support they receive on their cell blocks. He says of these prisoners, "Until they come to the group many of them are living the life of a recluse." In many instances, Byrd says, the latecomers are sorry they had not attended meetings earlier and do Spring/Summer 1999 . become active participants. Jackie Walker is the AIDS in Prison Project Coordinator at NPP. Prison News Voices From Inside, an hour long video documentary produced and directed by Karina Epperlein is now available from New Day Films as an educational resource. The film chronicles the experiences of four incarcerated women who create poetry and music for a performance behind bars. Epperlein also highlights the women's relationships with their children and exposes the difficulty of separation for mother and child. Information about the video can be obtained by contacting: Karina Epperlein at Transit 2000, 641 Euclid Avenue, Berkeley, CA 94708 or by calling 510-559-8892. Case Law Report: Highlights of Most Important Cases By John Boston \ I ! J i i I l PLRA--Exhaustion of Administrative RemedieslRes Judicata and Collateral Estoppel/Access to Courts-Punishment and Retaliation White v. McGinnis, 131 F.3d 593 (6th Cir. 1997). 'the PLRA exhaustion requirement applies to a case filed after the statute was passed even though it concerns 7 events that pre-dated it. The plaintiff had filed a grievance but failed to appeal it. He did not allege that he was precluded from exhausting his remedies at this point. Dismissal for failure to exhaust should be without prejudice. A claim for retaliation for a lawsuit is not barred by the judgment in the earlier lawsuit. RehabilitationlProcedural Due ProcesslEx Post Facto Clause/Injunctive RelieflEqual ProtectionlHabeas Corpus Neal v. Shimoda, 131 F.3d 818 (9th Cir. 1977). A state statute provides that a "sex offender" is anyone who has been convicted at any time of any sex offense or who engaged in sexual misconduct during the, course of an offense, and that every sex offender in prison must go through a treatment program to become eligible for parole. The program requires admitting the The National Prison ProjectJOURNAL offenses and taking responsibility for the behavior. The district court rejected the claim that the definition of sex offender is over inclusive for equal protection purposes, and the argument is abandoned on appeal. A challenge to the sex offender statute is not barred by Heck and Preiser because, unlike a challenge to the procedures used in denying parole to a prisoner, an order making them eligible for parole does not guarantee their earlier release and does not change the standards for parole release. The plaintiffs' claim under the Ex Post Facto Clause is ripe because the state has taken "concrete action" that will bar their parole eligibility, even though they would not yet be eligible even without the statute. There is no benefit to either party in delaying decision. Their Ex Post Facto claim is rejected. Under Kansas v. Hendricks, the treatment requirement is treatment and not punishment, as evidenced by the fact that prisoners can be required to submit.to treatment for conduct of which they were not convicted. (There is a lengthy dissent on this point.) The sex offender program implicates a liberty interest. The stigmatizing effect ,of labeling as a sex offender is analogous to the effect of commitment to a mental hospital, held in Vitek v. Jones to require due process protections. Such labeling is "atypical and significant" under Sandin. The 8 fact that the treatment in Vitek was mandatory and this treatment is not does not matter, since refusal makes the prisoner completely ineligible for parole, creating a,"practical and inevitable coercive effect" that is "functionally equivalent" to the mandated treatment in Vitek. The same conclusion follows from Kentucky Dept. of Corrections v. Thompson, though the court notes that the case's analysis has probably been disapproved by Sandin. Here it is mandatory that the labeled inmate successfully complete the treatment program in order to become parole eligible; this elimination of discretion constitutes "mandatory language" applicable to the "substantive predicate" of sex offender labeling. The court then reiterates that the liberty interest at stake is similar to that in Vitek. (This is incorrect reasoning supporting a correct conclusion: if state law creates a liberty interest under pre-Sandin liberty interest analysis, it is because the substantive predicate of sex offender labeling follows from the mandatory language defining who can be ~o labeled.) The process due before sex offender labeling is that prescribed by Wolf/V. McDonnell. That means a prisoner actually convicted of a sex crime in an adversarial proceeding (including plea bargain) has already received due process. However, those who are merely indicted for such a crime have not, and the opportunity to Spring/Summer 1999 write a letter protesting the classification does not satisfy due process requirements. The plaintiff who was not convicted of a sex crime may not recover damages because the defendants are entitled to qualified immunity, but he is entitled to an injunction to remove the classification unless and until he receives a Wolff hearing. At 832: "Requiring inmates labeled as sex offenders to admit their offenses and take responsibility for their sexual behaviors as part of the treatment program does not violate the inmates' privilege against selfincrimination." One plaintiff had been convicted of rape, has expressed no intention to collaterally attack the conviction, and is therefore protected by the Double Jeopardy Clause from further prosecution. The other plaintiff entered into a plea agreement barring the state from prosecuting him in the future for his alleged sex offenses, and has given no indication he will ever seek to withdraw his plea. The contract and consent for the treatment program warned that information about other sex offenses need not be provided but that if it was, it would be reported to law enforcement authorities; such disclosures would be voluntary and not compelled. The sex offender treatment serves important and laudable goals and does not violate the Eighth Amendment. Procedural Due Process-- The National Prison ProjectJOURNAL Administrative Segregation/Habeas Corpus Brown v. Plaut, 131 F.3d 163 (D.C.Cir. 1997), cert. denied, 118 S.Ct. 2346 (1998). The plaintiffs challenge to his placement in administrative segregation need not be brought via habeas. Edwards v. Balisok applies only to cases involving loss of good time credits, not placement in segregation. HeclCs rationale for the favorabletermination requirement is not applicable here. At 168: Brown's action may not properly be analogized to a suit for malicious prosecution, as the decision he is challenging bears little resemblance to a judicial proceeding. Decisions to place inmates in administrative segregation are subject to greatly relaxed procedural requirements, and the Court has recognized that they are often made fairly informally, on the basis of "subjective" and "intuitive" considerations. Indeed, the administrative proceeding before the Housing Board entailed<.so little process that it would almost certainly be accorded no collateral estoppel effect. One of the Court's principal concerns in Heck was to limit collateral attacks on final judgments; but a proceeding that is incapable of giving rise to collateral estoppel hardly needs to be insulated from collateral attack. If this plaintiff were required to 9 proceed via habeas, so would prisoners with complaints about other conditions of confinement, extending Preiser far beyond the "core" of habeas corpus. The court explicitly acknowledges (168 n. 5) a conflict with the Seventh Circuit on this point; as noted,the "Supreme Court denied review. The court notes that application of the Sandin atypical and significant standard is hampered by ambiguity about the proper standard of comparison; the District argued that because the Attorney General can put D.C. prisoners anywhere, the proper standard was the most rigorous prison in the country. It notes other difficult questions in applying Sandin and moves on to address--but not actually decide-whether the plaintiff received the process due. Even though he was segregated for assaulting an officer, he did not establish that his confinement was disciplinary rather than administrative, so Woljf does not apply. On remand, the court should determine under Helms whether the plaintiff received notice that his appearance before the Housing Board was the only opportunity that he would receive to contest his segregation, and it is not clear that he had any notice that the alleged assault should be addressed at that hearing. (At 171 n. 9: Helms does not require advance notice, merely "some Spring/Summer 1999 Brown was not provided an accurate picture of what was at stake in the hearing, then he was not given his due process." Procedural Due Process-Administrative Segregation Neal v. District ofColumbia, 131 F.3d 172 (D.C.Cir. 1997). The plaintiff asked to be put in voluntary protective custody, which was supposed to be reviewed every 30 days under prison regulations, but wasn't. After six months he asked for a review, was reclassified for general population, but was not moved. After another several months he complained some more but was not returned to GP for another three months. The district court erred in its apparent assumption that if a state law does not create a private cause of action it cannot support a § 1983 claim that it creates a liberty interest. The plaintiffs confinement was not atypical and significant. He was out of his cell for periods ranging from five to nine hours every day and eight hours a week of outdoor exercise. At 175: "His placement in administrative segregation thus cost him approximately half of his out-ofcell time, eliminated his access to employment, and restricted his access to prison facilities, all over a six-month period." The deprivation in Sandin was shorter but more severe. notice." Noncompliance with a local rule requiring advance notice does not violate the Constitution.) At 172: "If Federal Officials and PrisonslWork Assignments Bagola v. Kindt, 131 F.3d The National Prison Project JOURNAL 632 (7th Cir. 1997). The plaintiff lost a hand in a machine while working at his Federal Prison Industries job. Theoretically he was not permitted in the area where the machines were installed, but he testified that he was in fact required to do so. There was evidence of failure to remedy safety violations identified by OSHA. 18 U.S.C. § 4126, the workers' compensation program for federal prisoners, does not preclude his constitutional Bivens claim. In those cases where an alternative remedial scheme was held pre-emptive, there was a significant opportunity to expose allegedly unconstitutional conduct, and that opportunity is absent from the compensation scheme. The claim is rejected on the merits because the record demonstrates no more than simple negligence. The defendants took measures that they thought were reliable and effective and continued to correspond with OSHA and discuss further safety measures rather than defying it. There is no evidence that the defendants knew the plaintiff was required to work in an area that he was theoretically supposed to stay out of Homosexuals and TranssexualslMedical Care-Serious Medical NeedslMental Health Care Maggert v. Hanks, 131 F.3d 670 (7th Cir. 1997). The plaintiff complained of failure to provide estrogen therapy for gender 10 dysphoria. The prison's psychiatrist refused to prescribe estrogen because he did not believe the plaintiff actually suffered from gender dysphoria, and the plaintiff (proceeding pro se) failed to submit a contrary affidavit by a qualified expert. Having decided summary judgment is appropriate on this narrow ground, Judge Posner continues to address the "broader issue" of prisoners' gender dysphoria litigation. Even though "[s]omeone eager to undergo this mutilation [transsexual surgery] is plainly suffering from a profound psychiatric disorder," prison officials are not obliged to provide the hormonal and surgical procedures necessary to "cure" it. They are protracted and expensive. At 671: "A prison is not required by the Eighth Amendment to give a prisoner medical care that is as good as he would receive if he were a free person, let alone an aftluent free person. He is entitled only to minimum care." At 672: "Withholding from a prisoner an esoteric medical treatment that only the wealthy can afford does not strike us as a form of cruel and unusual punishment. [W]e cannot see what is cruel about refusing a benefit to a person who could not have obtained the benefit if he had refrained from committing crimes." Id.: It is not the cost per se that drives this conclusion. For life-threatening or crippling conditions, Medicaid and other public-aid, insurance, and charity programs Spring/Summer 1999 authorize treatments that often exceed $100,000. Gender dysphoria is not, at least not yet, generally considered a severe enough condition to warrant expensive treatment at the expense of others. That being so, making the treatment a constitutional duty of prisons would give prisoners a degree of medical care that they could not obtain if they obeyed the law. We conclude that, except in special circumstances that we do not at present foresee, the Eighth Amendment does not entitle a prison inmate to curative treatment for his, gender dysphoria. Hazardous Conditions and SubstanceslFederal Officials and PrisonslWork Assignments Rish v. Johnson, 131 F.3d 1092 (4th Cir. 1997). The plaintiffs worked as orderlies in a prison hospital and complained that they were not provided with adequate protective clothing (i.e., clothing consistent with universal precautions) to protect them from the risk of infectious disease. The defendants are entitled to qualified immunity. At 1095-96: "In determining whether the legal right is clearly established, it is critically important to avoid defining the applicable right at too abstract a level." There is no case law establishing that universal precautions are constitutionally required. There is insufficient evidence to show that prison officials knew that exposure to The National Prison Project JOURNAL Spring/Summer 1999 moved to dismiss or for summary make improper factual findings judgment, supported by physician concerning state of mind even affidavits, institutional policies, though it acknowledged that and medical records responsive to some of the plaintiffs had serious the allegations in the complaint. medical needs. It found that They provided all of the plaintiffs' defendants had provided care, and medical records to their attorneys. if defendants respond reasonably They moved to stay further to a risk, they are not deliberately discovery pending decision of indifferent. At 1240: "In the face their motion, which was granted. of medical records indicating that The district court then granted treatment was provided and summary judgment on the ground physician affidavits indicating that that 19 of 20 named plaintiffs the care provided was adequate, an inmate cannot create a failed to demonstrate issues of material fact concerning question of fact by merely stating deliberate indifference to their that she did not feel she received PLRA--Three Strikes, Filing medical needs. Fees, adequate treatment. " ScreeninglMagistrateslLaw The district court did not One named plaintiff abuse its discretion in denying complained of failure to follow Libraries and Law Books Hains v. Washington, 131 further discovery. The plaintiffs the recommendations of outside F.3d 1248 (7th Cir. 1997). The did not move under Rule 56(f), consultants, "but a prison doctor prisoner plaintiff signed a limited Fed.R.Civ.P., articulating their remains free to exercise his or her consent authorizing the specific need for further discovery independent professional magistrate judge to conduct any (making this point only in a judgment and an inmate is not and all further proceedings; this footnote in their district court entitled to any particular course authorized the magistrate judge to papers), and defendants produced of treatment. " (1240) Plaintiffs' conduct PLRA screening and a lot of material which plaintiffs expert's opinion that a plaintiffs dismiss without the opportunity did not assert was inadequate. In record "raises questions about the for de novo review by the district their opposition to a stay of adequacy" of her care but does judge. discovery, they argued only a not "express an opinion that the generalized need for discovery. care provided was grossly WomenlMedical At 1238: "The plaintiffs said that inadequate or resulted in any Care/DiscoverylMootness/Sum they sought 'to discover critical serious harm" does not raise a mary Judgment/Class Actions-- facts, I • . . but they did not factual issue sufficient to bar Certification of ClasseslMedical articulate what particular critical summary judgment. (1241) facts they needed to develop or Care--Standards of Liability-Another expert's opinion that Deliberate Indifference hoped to unveil." The district based on a plaintiffs records Dulany v. Carnahan, 132 court did not abuse its discretion defendants' tuberculosis control is F.3d 1234 (8th Cir. 1997). This in concluding that the case was not adequate, without stating a case is an instructive model of ripe for summary judgment on the basis for that conclusion, does not how intelligent defendants extensive record that was made. raise a material factual issue. A respond to a medical care case Because the named plaintiffs statement that a plaintiffs hearing pled as a class action. could not demonstrate deliberate loss "mayor may not" have been The 20 named plaintiffs indifference, the district court averted by an.altemative course brought suit alleging inadequate denied class certification. of treatment raises no material medical care. The defendants The district court did not factual issue where prison the body fluids of other prisoners posed a substantial risk of harm to the inmates. An expert affidavit indicating that universal precautions have been the norm for years where workers may be exposed to body fluids is insufficient, since it also indicates that the risk of disease transmission from the kind of work the inmates were doing (e.g., handling laundry, not being exposed to puncture wounds or splashing blood) is negligible. 11 The National Prison Project JOURNAL officials tried but failed to treat the problem. Failure on some occasions to provide necessary supplies does not show deliberate indifference where the record showed that they "were generally ordered properly." (1243) At 1244: . . .The district court did not consider the affidavits of inmates who are not named as plaintiffs. We, too, decline to consider the affidavits and claims of persons who are not listed as plaintiffs. Unless at least one named plaintiff can demonstrate an actual or imminent injury in fact stemming from the deliberate indifference of prison officials, we have no basis on which to consider either system wide problems or on which to grant system wide relief Lewis v. Casey. At 1245: . . . A number of individual and isolated incidences [sic] of medical malpractice or negligence do not amount to deliberate indifference without some specific threat of harm from a related system wide deficiency, which is not present in this case. We are unable to find a single plaintiff who has been injured or is threatened with an imminent threat of harm by a negligent medical policy, procedure, or treatment recklessly offered or omitted by the defendants. Procedural Due Process-Disciplinary Proceedings/Summary 12 Spring/Summer 1999 plaintiff was denied access to the law library on several occasions. 133 (2d Cir. 1998). The plaintiff He was denied a jury trial even though he put a demand in his was accused of breaking at least complaint. He did not consent to 50 windows and starting a large fire in the course of a riot in the a bench trial by consenting to allow the magistrate judge to yard. He won an Article 78 proceeding on the ground that the enter final judgment. His failure hearing officer had not viewed to assert his right at the trial itself relevant videotapes. A second did not constitute a waiver hearing was judicially reversed on because he had made his request the ground that the hearing officer abundantly clear earlier. did not conduct it impartially and The denial ofjury trial was that the plaintiff was denied his harmless error because the case right to call witnesses (he was was not triable. The plaintiff was allowed one of three reql,lested). excluded from the law library because he failed to fill out the He served 168 days in SHU and request form completely. He also 120 days in keeplock. failed to show actual injury; he The district court erred in said he had been forced to finding that the plaintiffs confinement was not atypical and withdraw several cases but significant. It failed to consider admitted that he did not try to refile them. He failed to adduce the length of the plaintiffs any evidence of retaliation. confinement (which it found of The magistrate judge erred in "little import"). It failed to consider the distinctions between excluding an inmate witness's testimony as cumulative, but the administrative and disciplinary error was harmless because some segregation (concluding that the existence of the former meant that of the testimony is hearsay (this disciplinary segregation was not seems wrong; he alleged a atypical and significant). conspiracy, and the witness However, periodic review overheard remarks by a member differentiates them. The court of the conspiracy). reiterates its prior statements that careful fact-finding is necessary to .IntakelMunicipalities determine Sandin's applicability. Henry v. County ofShasta, The district court erred by 132 F.3d 512(9th Cir. 1997). crediting the defendants' version The plaintiff was arrested for refusing to sign a traffic ticket and of conditions in the SHU, which insisting on being taken the plaintiff disputed. immediately before a magistrate, as state law provides. When he Law Libraries and Law refused to sign papers at the jail, Books/TriallEvidentiary Questions he was put in a urine-stained McDonald v. Steward, 132 padded cell without his clothes. F.3d 225 (5th Cir. 1998). The The district court erred in Judgment Wright v. Coughlin, 132 F.3d I The National Prison Project JOURNAL holding that there was no evidence of a municipal policy. Affidavits of two other persons who said they had had similar experiences involving a number of county personnel support the claim of policy. Post-event evidence can support a finding of municipal policy. In fact, it is "highly probative" evidence when it involves similar incidents that took place after the plaintiff put the county on notice of what happened to him by suing. Statutes of LirnitationsIPLRA-Three Strikes Provision Lucien v. Jockisch, 133 F.3d 464 (7th Cir. 1998). The plaintiff alleged that he was transferred in retaliation for filing lawsuits. His claim is not time-barred; he alleged a pattern of transfers, and the limitations period is measured from the last of the transfers. The district court ruled that the plaintiff was barred from proceeding IFP by the three strikes provision. The complaint was sent to the clerk's office before the PLRA but was not formally filed until after IFP proceedings and therefore after the PLRA'~ passage. The plaintiffs PLRA liability for fees is determined by the date of filing, but for complaints as well as appeals that straddle the PLRA's passage in this way, the district court should give the litigant an opportunity to decide whether he wishes to go forward. The plaintiffs challenge to the three strikes provision is therefore not npe. 13 PLRA--Mental or Emotional Injury/Hazardous Conditions and Substances Zehner v. Trigg, 133 F.3d 459 (7th Cir. 1997). The plaintiffs complained of exposure to asbestos but had no current medical problems. Their claim is barred by the "mental or emotional injury" provision of the PLRA. The district court correctly held that this provision is constitutional because "it left the courts with power to enforce constitutional guarantees through remedies other than damages. " (461) The existence of qualified and absolute immunities means that damages are already unavailable for some constitutional violations. Congress created the § 1983 remedy and it can take it away. Section 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment "grants Congress broad power to determine how to enforce those provisions, and the courts are circumscribed in their power to interfere." (462) The district court held that there is a point beyond which constitutional remedies may nQt be restricted, but here other remedies, such as injunctive relief backed up with contempt sanctions, exist and save the statute from unconstitutionality. At 462: "As a legal conclusion, this point is unassailable." Prisoners currently being exposed to asbestos may obtain injunctions. If these plaintiffs develop asbestos-related illnesses, they will then be able to sue for damages. The mental or emotional Spring/Summer 1999 injury provision does not deny equal protection. Prisoners are not a suspect class. The statute does not "burden" or "impinge on" the fundamental right of court access because it only limits the relief available. Prisoners still have what the Constitution requires: "a reasonably adequate opportunity to present claimed violations of fundamental rights to the courts." (463, quoting Lewis v. Casey) Therefore rational basis'scrutiny applies, and all it requires is "that Congress rationally perceived a propensity among prisoners to file frivolous lawsuits and reacted to that perception in a reasonable way. The statute need not be the best possible reaction to the perception, nor does the perception itself need to be heavily buttressed by evidentiary support. It is enough that the perceived problem is not obviously implausible and the solution is rationally suited to address that problem." (463) The cqurt notes that the Supreme Court in Metro-North Commuter R.R. v. Buckley construed a statute to impose the same restriction on a group ofnonprisoners. Romer v. Evans is distinguished on the ground that this statute "imposes no such across the board restriction on access to government assistance" and therefore does not raise the same "inevitable inference" of ammus. The statute does not violate separation o~powers by directing the outcome of constitutional cases. Every statute establishing The National Prison ProjectJOURNAL a cause of action requires courts to determine whether the elements of the claim exist, and that doesn't prescribe a rule of decision. procedural due process because there was no clearly established right to predeprivation notice and hearing, even though subsequent decisions supported such a right. Spring/Summer 1999 upholds the termination provisions ofPLRA in a remarkably perfunctory opinion. The provision does not require reopening of a final judgment but "merely alter the prospective application of orders requiring injunctive relief" (942) The provision does not prescribe a rule of decision but "only prescribes the standard for authorizing a remedy in any given case." (943) The court says it would also reject the due process and equal protection arguments if they were before it (943 n. 3). Mental Health CarelMental Health Care-Restraints/Qualified Immunity Buckley v. Rogerson, 133 F.3d 1125 (8th Cir. 1998). The plaintiff alleged that he was repeatedly placed in restraints and segregation without medical approval during his confinement in a prison mental hospital. Evidence showed that correction officers were allowed to develop "treatment plans" and that Personal PropertylProcedural PLRA--Entry of "treatment" also included RelieflReligion--Practices--D}et Due Process--Property Oluwa v. Gomez, 133 F.3d Parrish v. Mallinger, 133 F.3d depriving the plaintiff of clothing, 1237 (9th Cir. 1998). The 612 (8th Cir. 1998). Prison blankets, bed and mattress in plaintiff said he is a "Nazarite officials seized funds sent by a segregation. His treating doctor Disciple" of Jesus Christ Messiah, prisoner to his wife after he checked on him every 90 days. There is a constitutional right prohibited by the Bible from received them from his mother (they stopped payment on the to med.ical approval of placement eating anything containing "dairy products, animal flesh, things that check) and applied them to his of in restraints or segregation. grow on vines (grapes or raisins, obligations under the Iowa Victim Under Youngberg, "the freedom from bodily restraint is at the core melons, cucumbers, squash, etc.), Restitution Act. At 614: "Defendants of the liberty interest protected by and poultry products." He was concede, as they must, that the due process clause." (1129) denied his diet because when Parrish has a property interest in The right was clearly established asked who else adhered to his by 1987. (This case was tried the money his mother sent him religion, he said "Adam and Eve." that is protected by the Due twice before the present appeal.) Later he said he was a Rastafarian. The court granted Process Clause of the Fourteenth This court has taken a "broad view" of what is clearly him summary judgment and Amendment. " injunctive relief sua sponte, The seizure did not deny established, looking to "all substantive due process, even available decisional law" in the holding that his Nazarite and though the statutorily mandated absence of binding precedent, and Rastafarian beliefs were not payment plan did not authorize mutually exclusive, that he was it cites local district court cases such a large seizure. At 615: and cases from other circuits sincere, and that Rasta is "However, this is nothing more here. protected by the.;First than an assertion that defendants Amendment. acted contrary to state law.... " PLRA--Judgment Termination Since defendants had no prior The defendants are entitled to Hadix v. Johnson, 133 F.3d notice of the plaintiff's claim of qualified immunity as to 940 (6th Cir. 1998). The court Rastafarianism, it was error to Visiting Bazzetta v. McGinnis, 133 F.3d 382 (6th Cir. 1998). In a prior decision, the court upheld limitations on visiting which the defendants had asserted applied only to contact visits. Now the defendants inform the court that they apply to all visits. The court makes clear that its decision did not apply to non-contact visits. 14 The National Prison Project JOURNAL grant summary judgment sua sponte against them. It was error to grant injunctive relief without making the findings required by the PLRA. Congress expressly prescribed the reach of 18 U.S.C. § 3626 and indicated that it was to apply to pending cases. The court does not engage in harmless error analysis because it is reversing for other reasons. Use of Force Stanley v. Hejirika, 134 F.3d Spring/Summer 1999 problems, threats against officers had been made, and the plaintiff was resisting. At 636: "If a 629 (4th Cir. 1998). After a punch or a kick did occur during disturbance in a segregation unit, these events, we cannot conclude the plaintiff was extracted from lin retrospect that the degree of his cell and his cell was searched. After he was back in his cell he force authorized or applied for incited inmates to set fires and security purposes was began hitting his cell door; he was unreasonable, and hence removed again and moved to unnecessary in the strict sense."' another unit. Force was used The injuries, while comparable to against him, resulting in bruising those in Hudson v. McMillian, of his arm, jaw, wrists and back, were inflicted in a very different Drug Dependency Treatment/FederalOfficials and a loosened tooth. The district context. judge found the defendants liable and Prisons Love v. Tippy, 133 F.3d 1066 based on a videotape. Medical Care--Standards of (8th Cir. 1998). The petitioners As a matter oflaw, the Eighth Liability--Serious Medical completed drug treatment Amendment was not violated. At Needs, Deliberate programs in order to qualify for 635: "We too have viewed the Indifference/In Forma early release but were denied on tape and thus have had the same PauperislDisabled the ground that they had been Hemmings v. Gorczyk, 134 opportunity as the magistrate F.3d 104 (2d Cir. 1998). The convicted of firearms offenses and judge had to evaluate this nonthe authorizing statute made only testimonial evidence." Therefore plaintiff sustained a ruptured tendon during a basketball game, persons convicted of "nonviolent they need not defer to his offenses" eligible for the findings. They find no malicious which prison medical staff diagnosed as a sprain; they then reduction. The Bureau of Prisons or sadistic conduct, but a could properly construe refused for two months to refer "rational reaction and measured "nonviolent offenses" to exclude response," though at times he was him to a specialist even though he had accurately diagnosed himself, offenses that Congress had "treated roughly." and one defendant allegedly took labeled "crimes of violence" in At 634 (emphasis supplied): another statute. [indent] In short, for an inmate to away his crutches. "Fanciful allegations" of prove an excessive force claim, he Martin v. Gerlinski, 133 F.3d must satisfy not only the "wide-ranging conspiracies" by 1076 (8th Gir. 1998). The subjective component that the the defendants can be dismissed in petitioners completed drug this in forma pauperis case. correctional officers acted with a treatment programs in order to The plaintiffs medical care sufficiently culpable state of mind, qualify for early release but were but also the objective component claims are not barred by the fact denied on the ground that their that he received some care, that his alleged injury was sentences had been. enhanced for though they are weakened. He sufficiently serious in relation to possession of dangerous has alleged facts that could show the needfor force to establish weapons. The use of sentencing constitutionally excessive force. "that his condition was factors by the Bureau of Prisons The plaintiffs injuries, as a sufficiently painful to satisfy the matter of law, were insufficient to objective prong of the deliberate was contrary to the authorizing statute, which referred only to the support liability, given that the indifference standard of the offense of which the prisoner had incident followed a disturbance by Eighth Amendment" and that the been convicted. inmates with disciplinary defendants willfully disregarded it 15 The National Prison Project JOURNAL for two months before sending him to a specialist who allegedly described his symptoms as "classic" and expressed shock at the failure to treat it. The allegation of deprivation of crutches was also not subject to dismissal. PLRA--Judgment Termination/Appeal United States v. State of Michigan, 134 F3d 745 (6th Cir. 1998). The defendants moved to terminate consent decrees and the district court entered an order granting the United States access to facilities, staff and documents for discovery purposes. It also postponed decision on the merits of the termination motion, though opining that recent hearings suggested a current or ongoing violation with respect to mental health care. The court lacks appellate jurisdiction. Defendants' argument that the district court was permitting the creation of an evidentiary record not contemplated by the PLRA is not a jurisdictional argument. While the grant of discovery denies the dissolution of injunctive relief at least temporarily, this is true of any action that defers a termination motion. Medical CarelMedicationlPreTrial DetaineesIRefusal of Treatment Johnson v. Meltzer, 134 F.3d 1393 (9th Cir. 1998). The plaintiff stole a car and had a collision in it, sustaining head injuries. The defendant doctors 16 Spring/Summer 1999 used a drug not approved by the Jurisdictional and Litigation FDA while he was unconscious Questions and without his consent. The Dunphy v. McKee, 134 F.3d district court dismissed his claim 1297 (7th Cir. 1998). The after construing it as a medical plaintiffs court-appointed lawyer care claim. The appeals court consistently failed to comply with construes his pro se complaint scheduling and case management orders and the case was ultimately liberally to state a claim for violation of his constitutionally dismissed for lack of prosecution. protected liberty interest in bodily The standards for such dismissals are no different for cases integrity. Washington v. Harper involving appointed pro bono and Riggins v. Nevada II demonstrate that due process counsel than they are for cases requires that if a doctor gives a with retained counsel; the court has discretion to take into drug to an inmate without his consent, the drug must be account all relevant factors under medically appropriate. II If the that standard, though they may be weighed differently. Here the doctors gave the drug for the plaintiffs benefit, they did not district court dismissed in a oneviolate his rights. If they used it line order that does not inform the for research purposes, they did appeals court whether it violate his rights. Since the form considered the efficacy of a less they filled out while he was severe sanction or tried to devise unconscious is labeled Consent a measure that would punish the for Participation in a Research lawyer rather than the client, or Project and says there is likely to what it thought of the merits of be no direct benefit to the patient, the case. The three-month delay there is a material factual question the plaintiff had requested appears on this point. reasonable enough to have A police officer did not warranted an explicit rejection if violate the plaintiffs rights by not granted. The case is taking his photograph and remanded for further proceedings. fingerprints while he was unconscious. Use of Force/Habeas Th~ plaintiff alleged that CorpuslPrivacy police officers woke him from his Jackson v. Suffolk County medically induced coma to Homicide Bureau, 135 F.3d 254 interrogate him. They denied it, (2d Cir. 1998). The plaintiff, but since there is police convicted of robbery and murder, documentation indicating an complained of excessive force interview took place on that date following arrest and the taking of and naming one officer, there is a nude photographs without his material factual question. consent during his post-arrest interrogation, which photographs Appointment of were displayed at his trial. CounsellProcedural, The district court erred in The National Prison Project JOURNAL dismissing under Heck v. Humphrey, which does not require dismissal of claims whose adjudication in the plaintiff's favor would not necessarily invalidate his conviction. The claims about the photographs, which plaintiff objected to on religious and privacy grounds, would not invalidate the conviction. The excessive force claims would also not invalidate his conviction, even though he is arguing on appeal that his confession was coerced, because the state court might find that the confessions did not result from the use of force or that the failure to suppress them was harmless error. However, they would "impact" the conviction. Since they have already accrued and the limitations period is running, the court should stay them pending the outcome of the appeal. The claims about the taking of the photographs are probably barred by the statute of limitations, since they were not asserted in the first, timely complaint. They do not relate back to the filing of that complaint because they do not arise from the same conduct as the excessiv~ force claim raised in that complaint. The claims about the photographs' use at trial may be within the limitations period. PLRA--In Forma Pauperis Provisions--Applicability-Persons LaFontant v. United States, 135 F.3d 158 (D.C.Cir.1998). An immigration detainee held for deportation is not a prisoner for 17 purposes of the filing fee provisions of the PLRA. He ceased being a prisoner when he was released on parole, even though he actually remained incarcerated. PLRA--Judgment TerminationlPre-Trial DetaineesIPLRA--Prisoner Release Orders/Crowding Tyler v. Murphy, 135 F.3d 594 (8th Cir. 1998). The plaintiffs prevailed at trial in a jail conditions case in the 1~nos; in 1993-94, the court issued injunctive orders establishing various population ceilings, which the appeals court remanded for reconsideration in light of the Helms Amendment. The court then granted a separate motion to establish a cap of 20 on technical probation violators at the jail. The Sheriff moved to dissolve that injunction and the motion was denied. That order is appealable. The Sheriff need not have appealed at the time the injunction was entered because it did not affect him until he tried to place more than 20 technical probation violators there. The order limiting the technical probation violator population violated the PLRA because it lacked the requisite findings, and the motion to dissolve it was denied in violation of the PLRA because the court failed to make the necessary findings at that point too. In addition, the order is clearly a prisoner release order, and the court did not make the findings necessary for such an order under Spring/Summer 1999 thePLRA. The PLRA's termination provision is constitutional for all the reasons stated in Gavin v. Branstad. A findings requirement does not cripple the court's remedial powers, and the statute permits continuation of relief when necessary. At 597: "Thus, the statute preserves a court's ability to remedy a current violation of federal rights. II Given the lack of the proper findings, the Sheriff need not wait two years to move to terminate; the immediate termination procedure is designed for cases that lack the findings. The district court is directed on remand to consider the Sheriff's motion to dissolve the technical probation violator population cap and his subsequent motion to terminate all prospective relief At 598: "... [P]laintiffs, who now face the termination of prospective relief, are entitled to seek new or extended prospective relief under the standards set forth in § 3626(a)." If they seek a prisoner release order, a three-judge court must be provided. At 598: "What is less clear from the statute's text is whether the § 3626(b)(3) findings that will av·oid termination of an existing injunction must in all cases be made by a three-judge court if the injunction includes a prisoner release order. II If the plaintiffs argue for both retention of old relief and entry of new relief, the prisoner release aspects of both should be referred to the threejudge court for efficiency's sake. The National Prison Project/OURNAL If new relief is not sought, it would be more efficient to have all findings made by the single judge. However, the court does not actually rule on the relationship between the two parts ofthe statute. PLRA--Filing Fees Chachere v. Barerra, 135 F.3d 950 (5th Cir. 1998). The plaintiff refused to execute the authorization forms for withdrawal of court fees from his account, arguing that the forms violate the PLRA because they do not recite that no money will be withdrawn when the account balance is below $10.00. However, the PLRA does not mandate use of any authorization form, or prescribe the contents of any form that is used, and there is no evidence that prison officials will not comply with the $10.00 limit. The motion to proceed on appeal is denied, and the case is remanded to permit the plaintiff an opportunity to execute the form. Suicide Prevention Williams v. Mehra, 135 F.3d 1105 (6th Cir. 1998). The decedent committed suicide in a state prison. He had a significant psychiatric history with a record of attempted suicide and suicidal ideation in jail, which was communicated to prison authorities. He had tried to commit suicide with an overdose of pills and his medication had been changed to liquid. He continued to express suicidal thoughts to prison mental health 18 staff. Nonetheless, his medication was changed back to pills, and he killed himself with an overdose. The right at issue is the right to receive necessary psychiatric care, not the right to be screened for suicidal tendencies--the decedent had been screened and was found to have them. This right is clearly established. A psychiatrist who did not have complete information on the decedent's mental health and suicide-related history was not deliberately indifferent for prescribing tablet medication and a follow-up in 30 days; he had no further contact with the decedent. Treating psychiatrists who saw the decedent on two and three occasions and had more complete information on his prior history could be found deliberately indifferent for not administering his medication in liquid form. Use of Force/Jury Instructions and Special Verdicts Parkus v. Delo, 135 F.3d 1232 (8th Cir. 1995). The plaintiff complained that he was beaten in retaliation after he attacked, choked, sexually assaulted, and injured a prison psychologist. The district court, in charging the jury on the malicious and sadistic standard, defined "sadistic" as "extreme or excessive cruelty or delighting in cruelty" as opposed to "regular cruelty." The district court did not abuse its discretion; this appeals court has used similar language in its holdings, as have Spring/Summer 1999 other courts. The plaintiff had no due process claim arising from the use of force; a hearing need not be held before applying force to quell a disturbance. The plaintiff was resisting vigorously. At 1235: "Without doubt, Parkus was punched, dropped, and pushed into walls and door frames, leaving the jury to decide whether the Eighth Amendment was violated." The findings of a state administrative board that one of the officers had been properly fired for the force he used against the plaintiff did not collaterally estop the officer from giving contradictory testimony at thjs trial. Although administrative findings can have collateral estoppel effect in Missouri, the administrative tribunal did not unambiguously decide the same issues as those in the litigation. State rules on the use of force are different from the constitutional standard. PLRA--Three Strikes Provision Garcia v. Silbert, 141 F.3d 1415 (lOth Cir. 1998). The three strikes provision of the PLRA does not apply to complaints filed before the PLRA was enacted. However, it does apply to postPLRA appeals in such cases.. The court reaffirms Green v. Nottingham's holding that prePLRA dismissals may be considered as strikes. This plaintiff should not have been p~rmitted to proceed IFP because he has three strikes. The statute is not jurisdictional, and The National Prison Project JOURNAL the court elects to reach the merits. The plaintiff is ordered to remit the entire balance of the filing fee to the court. Mapp v. Dovala, 138 F.3d 1335 (10th Cir. 1998). The plaintiff brought three cases in forma pauperis, of which two were dismissed for failure to state a claim and one was dismissed for failure to exhaust. He had previously brought another case that was dismissed for failure to state a claim. In light of these dismissals for: failure to state a claim, the plaintiff is not entitled to appeal without prepayment of' costs and fees. In any cases the appeals would be without merit. The court directs dismissal unless the plaintiff pays the fees within 90 days, but says that going forward "may not be a fruitful course of action." Implicitly, then, the plaintiff can decide not to pay, unlike the case with filing fees for prisoners not barred by the three strikes rule. Patton v. Jefferson County Correctional Center, 136 F.3d 458 (5th Cir. 1998). Pre-PLRA "strikes" cOJ.mt. Unappealed dismissals count as strikes. Actions that are brought under § 1983, but are dismissed for failure to exhaust because they seek habeas relief, are strikes. At 464: "Although the dismissal without prejudice of the habeas claim does not equate to a finding of frivolousness,)t more closely parallels such a conclusion than it does a determination of non-frivolousness. It is a 19 considered judgment that Patton asserted in his § 1983 suit a habeas claim that was premature as a matter oflaw." Id.: "It is more faithful to the intent of the PLRA to classify these dispositions as strikes." To hold otherwise would permit litigious prisoners to circumvent the statute by "creative joinder of actions." (Of course, the actions in question were pre-PLRA, so this reasoning makes no sense except as a manifestation of the reigning principle"Any excuse to get rid of a prisoner case. ") A dismissal as frivolous that is affirmed is a strike, even if modified to be without prejudice, and even if done on different grounds from those relied on by the district court. PLRA--Screening and Dismissal Bazrowx v. Scott, 136 F.3d 1053 (5th Cir. 1998). Dismissals under 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(c) should be reviewed de novo on appeal. At 1054 (footnote omitted): "Generally a district court errs in dismissing a pro se complaint for failure to state a claim under Rule 12(b)(6) without giving the plaintiff an opportunity to amend." However, such error can be ameliorated "if the plaintiff has alleged his best case, or if the dismissal was without prejudice." Id. (footnotes omitted). Here, the dismissal was harmless error because it was without prejudice. Federal Officials and Prisons/Drug Dependency Spring/Summer 1999 Treatment/Ex Post Facto Laws/Equal Protection Wottlin v. Fleming, 136 F.3d 1032 (5th Cir. 1998). A 1994 statute made prisoners convicted of nonviolent offenses who complete substance abuse programs eligible for early release. The exclusion by Bureau of Prisoner regulation of persons with prior convictions for rape, homicide, robbery or aggravated assault is not an abuse of discretion; the authorizing statute leaves BOP discretion to make this kind of omission. The exclusion does not deny due process; the mandatory language in the policy relates to procedures, not substantive criteria, and therefore does not create a liberty interest. It does not deny equal protection; since there is no right to be discharged early, the rational basis test applies, and categorizing by criminal record is rationally related to preventing the early release of potentially violent persons. The exclusion does not violate the Ex Post Facto Clause. Although the plaintiff was eligible for early release for a few months between the passage of the statute and the promulgation of the regulations, his eligibility was always subject to BOP discretion. Hazardous Substances and Conditions/DiscoverylFood/Qu alified Immunity/Summary Judgment LaBounty v. Coughlin, 137 F.3d 68 (2d C,ir. 1998). The plaintiff complained of chemical contamination in the prison's The National Prison Project JOURNAL that it was unreasonable for drinking water and exposure to defendants to believe that friable asbestos in the air. exposing the plaintiff to friable The plaintiff served asbestos did not violate the interrogatories and asked that documents responsive to them be Eighth Amendment, given the state of knowledge in 1991-92 produced as well. As a result of about asbestos. the failure to produce them, he was unable to name the chemicals placed in the water and was Modification of precluded from offering evidence J udgmentslRemedial Principles Harris v. City of to resist defendants' summary judgment motion. Absent any Philadelphia, 137 F.3d 209 (3d evidence that the documents were Cir. 1998). A 1991 consent produced, the court holds that the judgment in a crowding case district court should determine provided that the defendants whether he received the would develop a Management documents and if not, see that he Information System to carry out the requirements of the order. gets them and is able to oppose summary judgment. Five years later, the court entered Competing allegations by the a supplementary order setting plaintiff that friable asbestos was deadlines for getting parts of the constantly exposed and getting job done. into the air and by the defendants The order is appealable that any such damage is quickly because it modifies an injunction. repaired, neither supported by The order is reversed because documentary evidence, raise a the defendants never agreed to genuine issue of fact as to implement the MIS plan by a date whether the plaintiff was exposed certain under penalty of fines. to friable asbestos. The plaintiffs The consent decree "does not claims that he constantly provide the authority for the complained, and the defendants' district court to proceed in this lack of denial that he complained manner." (213) None of the orally, raised an issue offact as to deadlines in the original order had deliberate indifference. been violated. There is no The defendants are not indication that the procedures entitled to qualified immunity. It provided in the judgment for enforcement of the judgment's is important to define the right at issue neither too narrowly nor too terms was utilized, no indication broadly. It was too narrow to oflack of substantial compliance, describe it as "the right to be free and no contempt hearing. from crumbling asbestos." The challenged conduct is Federal Officials and encompassed by "the right to be PrisonslProcedural Due free from deliberate indifference Process--Property to serious medical needs." (74) Weng v. United States, 13 7 A rational jury could conclude F.3d 709 (2d Cir. 1998). At 713: 20 Spring/Summer 1999 "Courts have several times commented on the obligation on government, when it seeks to give notice of forfeiture to one it knows to be in its custody, to take the trouble to ascertain the place of confinement." At 714: "Absent special justifying circumstances, the least that can be asked of a federal government agency seeking forfeiture of the property of a federal detainee is that it determine where the claimant is detained and send the notice to the right institution. " Id. "We do not agree that a federal agency's mailing of a notice of forfeiture to a federal correctional institution where the property owner is detained . constitutes adequate notification of the forfeiture if the notice is not in fact delivered to the prisoner-owner. " Protection from Inmate Assault Oetken v. Ault, 137 F.3d 613 (8th Cir. 1998). The plaintiff was placed in the same cell as an inmate who had been in a fight; a few days later, that inmate attacked the plaintiff after an argument. The plaintiff said he told an officer that he was afraid of the other inmate, and that the officer did not intervene promptly when the fight started. The court credited the officer's contrary testimony, as was its prerogative and ruled against the plaintiff at trial. Testimony showed that after an inmate is in a fight, he may be double celled, but not with someone with whom he has a history of problems. The National Prison Project JOURNAL Soto v. Johansen, 137 F.3d 980 (7th Cir. 1998). The district court properly found for the defendant in an inmate assault case based on his credibility judgment that the defendant was not the person the plaintiff informed of the risk, and on his conclusion that the plaintiff did not provide enough information about his situation to require action. (The plaintiff was assaulted for refusing to pay "cell rent" to gang members; the defendant testified that he received lots of requests for cell changes and the mere mention of cell rent did not justify one.) his file and make sure he got the training. The finding for the plaintiff was clearly erroneous. The finding of de minimis injury does not compel a finding of de minimis force; "minor" is not de minimis. But it was clearly erroneous to find that the defendant's actions were not a good faith effort to maintain or restore discipline, since the prisoners involved had been involved in the yard incident and the bus was in an unfenced area. Even accepting that only one or two inmates were involved in the disturbance, the force was not excessive. The reason for not Use of Force--Chemical Agents letting the inmates off to wash off Baldwin v. Stalder, 137 F.3d the mace was "more than 836 (5th Cir. 1998). The plaintiff reasonable": the defendant was was "subdued" after protesting afraid that inmates would engage the treatment of another prisoner in further disruptions and in the yard. The next day, he and disturbance, and no one requested medical assistance. Air other inmates were put shackled on a bus for transfer, and some of movement is an approved way of the prisoners created a ameliorating the effect of mace, disturbance on the bus. The main and they left the bus windows open during the trip. "[P]erhaps defendant "fired a two second most importantly," the finding of burst of pepper mace down the middle of the bus." The inmates minor injury confirms the were not allowed to wash the reasonableness of that decision. mace off until the end of the bus ride three hours later. The Discovery district court found for the In re Wilkinson, 137 F.3d 911 defendants on the yard incident (6th Cir. 1998). Prison officials' but for the plaintiff on the bus general policy forbidding incident. It labelled his injuries prisoners from attending "minor" and did not award depositions conducted by counsel damages; instead, the main in their civil actions is upheld. defendant was ordered to attend The policy's justifications are"(1) excessive force training and the maintaining staff authority; (2) Secretary of Corrections, who preventing the aggrandizement of was no longer a defendant, was inmates; (3) avoiding unnecessary ordered to place a reprimand in tension; (4) protecting staff 21 Spring/Summer 1999 morale; (5) preserving limited resources." (913) (Note that these justifications would permit barring prisoner litigation entirely.) Prisoners have no constitutional right to attend any stage of their litigation. Defendants made arrangements for consultation with counsel before, after, and (telephonically) during depositions. A federal court has the authority to require production of a prisoner at a deposition based on a "demonstration that his physical presence will contribute significantly to a fair adjudication of his claim. "(915) The court enumerates factors to be weighed in deciding such claims. The prisoner has the burden of producing of showing need. The court grants a writ of mandamus vacating the district court's order to produce the plaintiff, subject to his making the required specialized showing of need. Sexual Abuse Berryhill v. Schriro, 137 F.3d 1073 (8th Cir. 1998). Several civilian maintenance workers grabbed the plaintiffs buttocks briefly. This conduct did not violate the Eighth Amendment because there is no evidence that the plaintiff suffered anything more than a brief unwanted touch. The plaintiff submits no evidence except his own characterization to show that it was a sexual assault.. No objectively serious injury, physical or psychological, was shown to have resulted. At 1076: "Certainly, sexual The Nationa.1 Prison Project JOURNAL or other assaults are not a legitimate part of a prisoner's punishment, and the substantial physical and emotional harm suffered by a victim of such abuse are compensable injuries. " Correspondence--Legal and Official Weiler v. Purkett, 137 F.3d 1047 (8th Cir. 1998) (en bane). The defendants refused to deliver a package of legal materials sent by the plaintiffs son; regulations permitted such packages to be received only from judges, attorneys and public officials. The regulation is not unconstitutional on its face under Turner. Nor is it unconstitutional as applied. The fact that ten other inmates filed affidavits saying that they had been permitted to receive similar packages did not matter; "after all, they might have received contraband through them. " (1050) At 1051: "Aprison policy that obstructs privileged inmate mail can violate inmates' right of access to the courts. " However, legal mail is not at issue because the regulation defin~s legal mail as correspondence from an attorney, judge, or public official. Therefore there is no court access claim. There is no substantive due process claim because receipt of packages from family members is not "a right 'rooted in the traditions and conscience of our people.''' (1051) Nobody's conscience is shocked. Differential enforcement of 22 the package policy did not deny equal protection because the plaintiff submitted no evidence of any classification by which defendants decided who could receive nonconforming packages and who could not. The dissenters argue that one way to show an exaggerated response under the Turner standard is to show that officials have not found it necessary to impose the restriction on other prisoners. Evidence of arbitrary enforcement is sufficient to withstand summary judgment. At 1053: "If the rule is not enforced as written but is occasionally invoked, one can infer that it is enforced according to some other less neutral principle than that stated." Spring/Summer 1999 The purpose of the relevant state constitutional provision (a 1901 amendment) was to "guarantee the political rights of prisoners" based on concerns that county courts were failing to punish sheriffs who allowed lynch mobs to take prisoners and kill them. Food/State Officials and Agencies/In Forma Pauperis Talib v. Gilley, 138 F.3d 211 (5th Cir. 1998). The plaintiff complained that his meals were withheld on about 50 occasions while he was confined to his cell during lockdown periods. The reason is that he refused to kneel with his hands behind his back before being served. At 213: "To aid in the determination of whether an IFP complaint is frivolous, this court MunicipalitieslPre-Trial has approved the use of Detainees Turquitt v. Jefferson County, questionnaires or an evidentiary Ala., 137 F.3d 1285 (lIth Cir. hearing. . . . Responses to such 1998) (en banc). A county an inquiry become part of the cannot be held liable under § plaintiffs pleadings." 1983 for injuries to a jail inmate At 214 n. 3: The court arising from the sheriffs questions whether the plaintiff has management of the jail because alleged a harm cognizable under under Alabama law the sheriff is a the Eighth Amendment. Missing state official and not a county one out of nine meals is hardly official. While counties have more than many working citizens some duties with respect to jails, miss over the same period. they are limited to funding and (Evidence? Forget it.) He also providing facilities and do not lost 15 pounds. include jail operations or The kneeling requirement is supervision of inmates. There is upheld as being reasonably related no evidence that this provision to legitimate penological interests. was passed to avoid liability, since The lack of a written policy is it predates Monell by decades. immaterial. At 215: "A policy is Parker v. Williams is overruled to a policy;--the question is simply the extent that it inconsistent with whether the record supports a this holding. finding that a policy exists." The The National Prison Project JOURNAL policy was affirmed in writing on each of the plaintiffs grievances. In any case the same standard is used in dealing with the actions of an individual officer and with prison-wide policies. The court is using the language of the Turner reasonableness test even though this is an Eighth Amendment case. The plaintiff also complained of the service of "Vita-Pro," a soy-based product occasionally used as a meat substitute. He conceded that it was nutritionally and calorically adequate. The district court dismissed as frivolous and the claim is abandoned on appeal. The Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Institutional Division, is a state agency immune from liability under the Eleventh Amendment. PLRA--Attorneys' Fees/Judicial Disengagement/Contempt/W 0 menlEducation and TraininglLaw Libraries and Law Books/Attorneys' Fees and CostslEqual Protection Glover v. Johnson, 138 F.3d 229 (6th Cir. 1997). The plaintiffs in tne late 1970s successfully challenged gender inequalities in treatment programs and law library facilities. The district court was unable over the subsequent period to obtain constitutional compliance and to terminate federal court supervision. The reason is largely (at 233): [indent]the court's loss of proper perception regarding its role. 23 Very substantially because of unfocused and misdirected advocacy by both sides in this litigation, and particularly because of the recalcitrant defendants' foot-dragging, the district court has been preoccupied with attempting to force the defendants to comply with the details, even the minutiae, of the intermediate methodologies the court has devised for remedying the constitutional deficiencies it found in 1979. The court has lost sight of the forest for its longtime attention to the trees. The defendants made a motion to terminate before the PLRA, and the district court noted noncompliance with various plans which had not actually been entered as court orders, but did not consider whether the program opportunities then being offered to women were constitutionally equal to those then being offered to men. The court imposed contempt fines for noncompliance with requirements concerning court access, vocational programming, and apprenticeship programs of $500 a day for each area, with.increases to $15,000 a day after two and a half months. Remedial plans that were never approved and adopted by the court and to which plaintiffs objected are not "consent decrees" that could hold the defendants to a higher standard than constitutionally mandated. Accordingly, the binding order is the 1981 Final Order, entered after a trial, and the relevant question is whether the Spring/Summer 1999 constitutional violations found at that time still exist. Although the court had to develop a specific methodology to remedy constitutional violations, those intermediate steps have become the focus of attention. There have been "monumental changes in circumstances." Compliance "has become a moving target. " (242) There is much additional rhetoric stating that the proper focus is constitutional compliance and termination of the litigation. However, even if defendants have complied with the Constitution, they may still be liable in contempt for violating court orders. The court directs the district court to conduct hearings and receive evidence and stipulations within 120 days concerning the program opportunities available to male and female inmates, and then to make particularized findings and conclusions as to their compliance with the Equal Protection Clause, with findings to be filed with the appeals court within 150 days. The court is to do the same with respect to the alleged denial of access to court. The court is to terminate jurisdiction as to matters in constitutional compliance. The PLRA is not mentioned here; the termination motion and all proceedings in the district court occurred before the PLRA. Contempt findings for failure to comply with remedial plans that the court had not adopted are reversed, since there was no "definite and specific order" that had been disobeyed. Even if it The National Prison Project JOURNAL adopted them when it denied defendants' termination motion, it could not retroactively impose contempt sanctions. Nor could defendants be held in contempt for violating "long-standing commitments" or an order in which the court said it was "strongly urging" the defendants to take certain actions. The court also "engag[ed] in judicial micromanagement" and "exceed[ed] its authority" in entering an order requiring the defendants actively to recruit prisoners for apprenticeships. The PLRA's attorneys' fees provisions lack the clear statutory directive that is necessary to support a statute's retroactive application. Their effect would be retroactive, where plaintiffs' attorneys have conducted themselves in conformity with the pre-existing law. Applying the PLRA would result in "attaching significant new legal burdens to the completed work, and . . . impairing rights acquired under preexisting law." (250) The court does not address postPLRAfees. Fees for an appeal abandoned by the defendants should be awaraed, both because the plaintiffs de facto prevailed and because fees for monitoring are proper. However, plaintiffs should not receive fees for interceding for class members on individual issues unless it can be shown that this work was related to the litigation, e.g., on a retaliation theory. The court observes that no federal appeals court has ever 24 Spring/Summer 1999 adopted the "parity" requirement permitted viewing only after the imposed by the district court, condemned has been strapped to the gurney and an IV saline which it says is of" dubious validity," but the defendants never solution is running. Formerly, when different methods of appealed it. execution were used, witnesses were permitted to watch the Procedural Due Process-whole show. Disciplinary Proceedings Scott v. Albury, 138 F.3d 474 The court upholds the (2d Cir. 1998) (per curiam). The regulations and reverses the plaintiff was sentenced to 60 days judgment. Execution by lethal injection involves as much as 20 of keeplock and was placed in minutes of preparation, compared SHU for about seven weeks. to about one minute of viewing of Under Sandin, the actual lethal gas executions, and that penalty assessed and not the length of exposure to witnesses potential penalty the prisoner faces is the measure of the liberty would increase the likelihood of deprivation. Courts should identification of execution team consider the "degree and members and consequent duration" of the sentence actually harassment of them and their families. imposed. (479) In determining whether The press has no defendants had discretion to place constitutional right of access to prisoners in SHU for non-punitive prisons or prisoners beyond that reasons, the court should have afforded the general public. The looked to the regulations as of the court rejects the district court's distinction of Pel!, Houchins and time of the plaintiffs deprivation (1987) and not as of the time of Saxbe on the ground that they the court's decision, which did not dealt with the everyday workings contain a catchall provision for of the prison, while execution is SHU admission or a provision for more similar to a governmental proceeding like a trial or hearing. general "administrative segregation. " The court also cites--without any clear statement whether it believes it is still good law--an Communication with 1890 Supreme Court decision MediaiStanding California First Amendment that upheld a ban on publishing any account of the details of an Coalition v. Calderon, 138 F.3d 1298 (9th Cir. 1998). The district execution beyond the fact that a court entered an injunction particular convict was executed requiring prison officials to allow on a particular day. At 1303: witnesses to view execution by "We stress that we are not lethal injection from the time the holding that the public and the inmate is secured to the gurney to press do not have First Amendment rights to view just after the pronouncement of executions." (Footnote omitted) death. State regulations The National Prison Project/OURNAL Here there is no evidence of an exaggerated response. The plaintiff association had standing to sue. Drug Dependency Treatment/PLRA--Mental or Emotional Injury Kerr v. Puckett, 138 F.3d 321 (7th Cir. 1998). The plaintiff alleged that drug treatment programs constituted "brainwashing" in violation of his constitutional rights. The action is not barred by the PLRA's mental or emotional injury provision because the plaintiff filed after he was released. A "prisoner" is not an "ex-prisoner" for the statute's purposes. This distinction makes "a modicum of sense: Congress deemed prisoners to be pestiferous litigants because they have so much free time on their hands and there are few costs to filing suit. Opportunity costs of litigation rise following release, diminishing the need for special precautions against weak suits." (323) The defendants are entitled to qualified immunity because no court has held that programs designed to change people's values are unconstitutional, and the details of the program he complained about are common to AA, military basic training, and prison boot camp programs. They do not violate the Eighth Amendment. PLRA--Filing Fees/Appeal Thompson v. Drewry, 136 F.3d 984 (5th Cir. 1998). The plaintiff was ordered to pay an 25 Spring/Summer 1999 argument is meritless. At 335: "Sandin dispensed with mechanical distinctions such as the one Arce offers and instead established an analysis under which the degree and duration of an inmate's restraint are the key considerations to determine the existence of a state-created liberty interest." The district court sufficiently examined the circumstances of the plaintiff's 18-day segregation, mentioning the deprivation of exercise and verbal harassment as well as the confinement itself The deprivations he suffered were not more onerous than those sanctioned in Sandin. The court mentions his sentence of25 years to life and notes that he was permitted to leave his cell to Procedural Due Process-shower and use the telephone. Administrative The district court improperly Segregation/Access to Courts-Confiscation and Destruction of granted summary judgment on the plaintiff's claim that he was denied Legal Materials Arce v. Walker, 139 F.3d 329 court access by destruction of his (2d Cir. 1998). At 334: A prison legal documents and by other abusive actions in retaliation for inmate is now required to meet a his litigation, since the defendants two-part test to establish the did not show the lack of material existence of a liberty interest factual issues. arising under a state statute or regulation: the inmate must establish that his confinement or Habeas Corpus restraint (1) creates an "atypical Buchanan v. Gilmore, 139 and significant hardship ... in F.3d 982 (4th Cir. 1998). The plaintiff, scheduled for execution, relation to the ordinary incidents of prison life," Sandin, and (2) complained that the Governor who passed on his clemency that "the state has granted its application was the Attorney inmates, by regulation or by statute, a protected liberty interest General at the time of prior proceedings in his case. Since his in remaining free from that confinement or restraint," Frazier underlying claim in the clemency v. Coughlin. application concerned error at trial, the relief he sought (stay of Sandin is not limited to punitive segregation; the execution until his clemency initial filing fee of$1.80, but did not; the court decided that he had shown good cause for failing and directed that he pay the full fee in installments. The plaintiff appealed. The order requiring payment of the fee is not appealable until entry of a final judgment. Before .the PLRA, an order denying IFP status was an appealable final order, but an order to pay in installments is not appealable as a final judgment because it does not end the litigation on the merits and does not close the courthouse door on the plaintiff Nor is it an appealable collateral order because there is no risk of important and irreparable loss. The National Prison Project JOURNAL Spring/Summer 1999 v. Garner. The defendants failed jurisdiction since the entire action was dismissed and the court did to show that there was no not specify that it was dismissed material issue of fact as to the without prejudice. objective reasonableness of their The district court's action was conduct. not an abuse of discretion. The At 452: "Although the point at which an arrest ends and court exercised "informed pretrial detainment begins is not discretion" and weighed the claimed right to privacy against always clear, ... we have held Pre-Trial DetaineeslUse of the countervailing public interest, that the Fifth or Fourteenth Force--Restraints noting that the plaintiffs identity Amendments begin to protect Gutierrez v. City ofSan was already known to the state persons' after the incidents of Antonio, 139 F.3d 441 (5th Cir. agency and staff, and there is 1998). The decedent was arrest are completed, after the prejudice to the public in not arrested in an irrational state, plaintiff has been released from knowing how public funds are saying that he had "shot some bad the arresting officer's custody, being spent. coke." He was too violent for and after the plaintiff has been in detention awaiting trial for a EMS to take him to the hospital, significant period of time. '" so the police hog-tied him in the Hazardous Substances and back of their car and drove to the (Emphasis in original) The ConditionslNegligence, hospital. He was DOA. The Fourth Amendment applies here Deliberate Indifference and because the hog-tying was done medical examiner said the hogIntent/Mootness Scott v. District ofColumbia, by the arresting officers near the tying contributed to his death. 139 F.3d 940 (D.C.Cir. 1998). scene of the arrest. The defendants were not The district court enjoined the entitled to qualified immunity defendants to provide the based on the lack of case law PrivacylPregnancy, Childbirth plaintiffs a smoke-free holding that hog-tying is and AbortionlProcedural, unconstitutional. At 446: environment at Lorton. The case Jurisdictional and Litigation "Whether a seizure is reasonable was not certified as a class action Questions and the plaintiffs have either been under the Fourth Amendment MM v. Zavaras, 139 F.3 d depends not only upon whether 798 (10th Cir. 1998). The released or transferred to a the seizure itself is unreasonable, plaintiff alleged that prison private prison in Ohio pursuant to but also upon how the police officials had denied her funds for the National Capital seize the individual or item . . . . transportation and medical Revitalization and Selfexpenses for abortion, and she The Fourth Amendment's Government Improvement Act of prohibition of the use of excessive requested leave to proceed 1997. At 941: "Normally, a pseudonymously. The district force by the police against seized prisoner's transfer or release from persons had thus been clearly court denied the motion, which a prison moots any claim he might established prior to November violated the court's procedural have for equitable relief arising 1994." Since there are studies rules including the obligation to out of the conditions of his from before that time indicating confer with the adversary. The confinement in that prison .... that hog-tying is a contributor to district court struck the complaint The cases do not distinguish "Sudden Custody Death and dismissed the action when the between intra- and interSyndrome," there was evidence plaintiff did not comply with the jurisdiction transfers of inmates." that hog-tying is deadly force, court's order that she ratify the (Footnote omitted.) The court subject to the "threat of serious complaint by disclosing her name. does not buy the "capable of harm" requirement of Tennessee The court has appellate repetition, yet evading review" petition could be considered by someone else) was really habeas relief that could not be obtained under § 1983, and was also a successive habeas motion barred by statute since the Supreme Court had rejected his claims. 26 The National Prison Project JOURNAL doctrine in this instance because deliberate indifference, since there nothing supports the likelihood of was no evidence of an the transferred plaintiffs returning "objectively intolerable risk." At 944: "It makes no sense to charge to Lorton. However, the someone with improperly injunction applies to them no matter where they are, so long as ignoring a danger that never existed." Id.: "Besides, it is hard they are under the District's jurisdiction, so the case is not to see how imperfect enforcement of a nonsmoking policy can, moot. The appeals court alone, satisfy Helling's subjective characterizes the district court as element. That the District even holding that "involuntary has such a policy militates against exposure to any level of seconda finding of deliberate hand tobacco smoke in prison indifference." (944) There was, violates the Eighth Amendment." in fact, considerable evidence of (942) There is no such per se enforcement of the policy. rule in Helling. The plaintiffs case lacked evidence to satisfy PLRA--Exhaustion of Hellings standard, consisting Administrative Remedies Brown v. Toombs, 139 F.3d entirely of anecdotal evidence and containing no "objective evidence 1102 (6th Cir. 1998). At 1104: [indent]In light of the plain of the level of second-hand smoke," except for the mandatory language of the statute defendants' measures that showed regarding exhaustion of remedies, them to be within OSHA and the legislative purpose underlying American Society of Heating, the plain language, and the sound Refrigerating, and Air policy on which it is based, this Conditioning Engineers court will henceforth require that standards. Although they prisoners filing § 1983 cases presented an expert who testified involving prison conditions must that second-hand smoke would allege and show that they have aggravate the plaintiffs' alleged exhausted all available state health problems, one plaintiff administrative remedies. A identified no specific medical prisoner should attach to his § conditions, and the other (who 1983 complaint the administrative had asthma and a history of decision, if it is available, showing the administrative disposition of thyroid cancer) presented no evidence of causal relationship his complaint. Exhaustion applies between his condition and an only to cases filed on or after increased risk of harm from April 26, 1996, the effective date second-hand smoke. The expert, of the Prison Litigation Reform who testified that risks of harm Act. varied tremendously with the This requirement should be enforced sua sponte. This case individual, did not examine the plaintiffs. should be dismissed without There is also no showing of prejudice. Absent a record 27 Spring/Summer 1999 showing exhaustion, the appeals court will dismiss appeals without prejudice. Judicial Disengagement Cody v. Hillard, 139 F.3d 1197 (8th Cir. 1998). The defendants moved to dissolve a long-standing consent decree, alleging substantial compliance, the district court granted the motion over the plaintiffs' objections. The motion was filed 10 days before the PLRA was passed, and the PLRA is not mentioned in this opinion. Terminating jurisdiction over a consent decree rests in the discretion of the district court, which should weigh specific terms governing continuation or supervision; the decree's underlying goals; whether there has been compliance with orders; whether defendants made a good faith effort to comply; the age of the decree; and the continuing efficacy of its enforcement. Here, there was evidence of past failure to comply with the decree and supplemental orders and of some remaining violations of the decree. The district court's order does not indicate whether he ignored this evidence or considered it inconsequential. At 1199: "Moreover, the ultimate question of whether the defendants are likely to comply with the Constitution in the absence of court supervision is a question offact, see Dowell . .., for which the district court made no finding." J:he court does not determine whether Rule 52, Fed.R.Civ.P., requires findings of The National Prison ProjectJOURNAL Spring/Summer 1999 Procedural Due Process-Disciplinary ProceedingslHabeas Corpus Sylvester v. Hanks, 140 F.3d 713 (7th Cir. 1998). The petitioner was sentenced to three years in punitive segregation for inciting a riot based on the view that he was the "Baye" referred to in an intercepted letter. The court expresses doubt whether this case should proceed under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, which permits attacks on the fact or Prison Records/Judicial duration of "custody." Sandin, Immunityflnjunctive Relief by implying that the difference Hill v. Sciarrota, 140 F.3d 210 (2d Cir. 1998). The plaintiff Protection from Inmate Assault between segregation and general population is not a deprivation of Jackson v. Everett, 140 F.3d alleged that probation personnel included in their report erroneous 1149 (8th Cir. 1998). The liberty, indicates that it can't be information that hurt his chances defendant got an anonymous note "custody" either. This makes a. that another inmate would kill the difference for procedural reasons of getting parole and excluded him from temporary release plaintiff. He investigated, both such as the need for a certificate programs. inmates denied any problems; the of appealability and the State law provides a night passed without incident; and applicability ofPLRA. The court procedure for challenging he reported the incident when his notes that recent Seventh Circuit allegedly erroneous information in shift ended the next morning. precedent holding that Balisok the criminal proceeding. In The plaintiff was stabbed by the precludes use of § 1983 to addition (at 214): "In a suit same inmate later that day. challenge segregation may require The defendant was not use of § 2254--though that case against custodial officials, an deliberately indifferent. There inmate has a constitutional right did not attempt to reconcile its was a known risk and he took to challenge the accuracy of the holding with Sandin and the fact information contained in his PSR steps to protect the plaintiff; when that few states afford collateral and in his prison records." (The the risk did not materialize, he review of prison disciplinary state ceurt case cited as authority reported the incident and went off decisions. The court cites cites Paine v. Baker.) There is a Spencer v. Kemna and notes the duty, at:Id had no knowledge of right to review the PSR for parole any risk subsequent to that. The new majority to treat hearings and challenges to parole district judge's conclusion that it Heck/Balisok as inapplicable denials. In light of these was "unreasonable" for the when collateral review is procedures, probation officials defendant not to search the two unavailable. The court concludes it need not decide the issue. enjoy absolute immunity from men for weapons immediately The "some evidence" damage liability for preparing and does not suffice to avoid standard--and its concomitant furnishing such reports to the summary judgment; court. (The reasoning is not . scrutiny of the record of prison reasonableness is a negligence spelled out.) disciplina,ry proceedings--may not standard. (The court ignores the fact that it is also the language of apply to discipline short of good The plaintiff is not entitled to time deprivation. The letter, the an injunction against the Farmer v. Brennan). fact and conclusions of law on motions to dissolve an injunction; the court can remand for findings and conclusions if its review would be hindered without them. The necessity of an evidentiary hearing depends on whether there are disputed factual questions, which is the case here; the district court should either hold such a hearing or articulate the rationale that would make it superfluous. 28 probation personnel on the ground that their report is causing him problems in prison and with parole. His remedy is to sue probation and parole personnel if they are using erroneous information. The court mentions that § 1983 was amended in 1996 to preclude injunctions against judicial officers for judicial acts unless a declaratory judgment was first violated, or was unavailable. Pub.L. No. 104-317, § 309(c), 110 Stat. 3847, 3853. The National Prison Project JOURNAL fact that the petitioner is called "Baye," and the fact that he had been heard to talk about a demonstration were "some evidence." The issues on this petition are supposed to be circumscribed by the habeas certificate of appealability. The court ignores other issues raised by the petitioner, except for one that has "potential merit" but is not "close enough" to call for a response by the defendants. Due process was not denied by the failure of prison officials to do anything more when two of the requested inmate witnesses declined to give written statements. Defendants were not obligated to make them appear in person or elicit reasons for their. refusal. The court distinguishes prior precedent (Forbes v. Trigg) on the ground that it involved good time. At 715: "When the sanction is less onerous, the Constitution requires less . . . ." When only "custody status" is at issue (at 716): "A prisoner is entitled to some kind of hearing, but an opportunity to present his own testimony, documentary evidence, aQ.d the testimony of willing witnesses is constitutionally sufficient for interests of this kind (if, to repeat, any process at all is due)." It is unclear why the court did not address whether Sandin eliminates any due process rights; defendants argued the question. PLRA--Filing Fees, Three Strikes/Access to Courts-Punishment and Retaliation 29 Spring/Summer 1999 Lucien v. DeTella, 141 F.3d responsible to make sure that 773 (7th Cir. 1998). An enough money to cover the 20% allegation that the plaintiff was of income requirement remains in his account, and also to notice classified as an escape risk prisons' mistakes and keep because of his litigation makes enough money on hand to cover out a constitutional claim. The plaintiff was assessed a them too. At 776: "Lurking in partial filing fee of $18, refused to the background is the question whether the prison itself may be pay though he had the money, liable if it fails to comply with a and the district court refused to file the complaint. At 774: "That judicial order under the PLRA." some of the income in the trust fund came from family members Searches--Person-is irrelevant. Gifts become the ConvictslW'omen property of the recipient.'~ Peckham v. Wisconsin Dept. Because the complaint was never ofCorrection, 141 F.3d 694 (7th filed, the plaintiff owes nothing to Cir. 1998). The female plaintiff complained of numerous strip the district court. The plaintiff. probably has searches. The court holds that three strikes. In the future, prisoners retain "some rights district courts should determine under the Fourth Amendment" whether the prisoner is eligible for (696-97 and n. 2), but it is partial and installment payments difficult to imagine many real-life before calculating the payments. scenarios where strip searches The district court is affirmed. would be unreasonable under the The plaintiff cannot recover what Fourth Amendment, and the ones in this case were not he has paid of the appellate fee. unreasonable. At 697: "More At 775: "All the partialprepayment and periodic-payment importantly, regardless of how provisions in the amended § 1915 one views the Fourth Amendment do is provide a means to collect in this context, it is the Eighth from prison trust accounts sums Amendment that is more properly that prisoners owe independently posed to protect inmates from unconstitutional strip searches, of § 1915 ... ." notably when their aim is The filing fee provisions are punishment, not legitimate not unconstitutional. institutional concerns." Here The court notes that the there is no evidence that the prison has not remitted the correct amount from the searches were for harassing or plaintiff s prison account and punishing purposes. describes what it has done as The court politely rejects "inexplicable." Since the fee Judge Easterbrook's assertion in should have been paid in full, all Johnson v. Phelan that prisoners have no reasonable expectations monies from whatever source should be remitted to the court of privacy, which he arrived at by pretending that Hudson v. Palmer until it is paid. The prisoner is The National Prison Project JOURNAL Spring/Summer 1999 Louisiana, 136 F.3d 430 (5th Cir. 1998). The ADA is a permissible exercise of Congress' authority under the Fourteenth Amendment to override the Eleventh Amendment. Under City of Boerne, the court must assess whether there is "congruence and Pro Se Litigation Murray v. Archambo, 132 proportionality" between the injury to be remedied and the F.3d 609 (lOth Cir. 1998). The means adopted. That standard is pro se plaintiff should not have met here given the record in had his case dismissed, with the Congress. The court should defer court deeming defendants' Drug Dependency to Congress on such questions, summary judgment motion TreatmentlFederal Officials confessed, for missing by one day especially iIi dealing with disabled and Prisons/Ex Post Facto a 15-day deadline for responding people, since the Supreme Court Laws Roya/v. Tombone, 141 F.3d to the motion. The court failed to in Cleburne said that Congress was the "ideal governmental 596 (5th Cir. 1998). The consider the required factors of branch" to address their legal actual prejudice, amount of petitioner was denied sentence treatment. (The City ofBoerne reduction notwithstanding his interference with the judicial completion of a drug abuse process, and the culpability of the inquiry is not an Eleventh Amendment question; it is a program in custody. The Bureau litigant. question about the ofPrisons had discretion under constitutionality of the statute as the statute to declare bank Disabled Autio v. AFSCME, Local applied to any non-federal robbery a crime of violence instrumentality. However, the 3139, 140 F.3d 802 (8th Cir. excluded from the sentence court treats it as part of the reduction program. The previous 1998). The Americans with Seminole Tribe inquiry, one policy, under which the petitioner Disabilities Act does not violate might have received a sentence the Eleventh Amendment. Unlike prong of which is whether Congress acted "pursuant to a reduction, conflicted with the the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, it is "plainly valid exercise of power. ") underlying statute and was erroneous as a matter oflaw. adapted" as a remedial measure even if it prohibits conduct that Application of the revised policy Religion mayor may not be In re Young, 141 F.3d 854 to the petitioner did not violate the Ex Post Facto Clause. unconstitutional. Its remedies are (8th Cir. 1998). The Religious not so sweeping that they exceed Freedom Restoration Act the harm they were created to continues to apply to the federal NON-PRISON CASES Bankruptcy Code, and as so . redress. Congress in Cleburne Pleading recognized that legislation applied does not violate the Stevens v. Umsted, 131 F. 3d providing special treatment for separation of powers, since the 697 (7th Cir. 1997). A complaint the disabled serves equal Constitution gives Congress that fails to specify the capacity in protection and that such decisions power over bankruptcy and the are peculiarly the legislature's which the defendants are sued is Necessary and Proper Clause gives it broad authority to usually construed to be against prOVince. them in their official capacities, legislate concerning bankruptcy. Coolbaugh v. State of but that fact is not conclusive. RFRA does not violate the addresses bodily privacy. Judge Easterbrook defends Johnson in his concurrence. Among the strip searches complained of are "adjustment time" searches, which are done when a prisoner in segregation receives additional segregation time, even if she doesn't leave the unit. No explanation for this practice appears in the opinion. 30 Where the parties have operated under the assumption that it is an individual capacity suit and the defendants have raised qualified immunity, it should be treated as an individual capacity case. The National Prison ProjectJOURNAL Establishment Clause. Norton. At 37: "The plaintiffs allegations that he was beaten until he lost consciousness meet the objective component of this inquiry." Allegations that the defendants beat him in retaliation Parties DefendantlMedical CarelUse of Force/Pro Se for the stabbing of the injured Litigation/SanitationLAdministr corrections officer, not in order to ative Segregation/Appointment preserve order (sic), would if true establish malicious and sadistic of Counsel Arnoldv. Moore, 980 F.Supp. intent. The case is "more than 28 (D.D.C. 1997). The plaintiff one of mistaken identity." alleged that he was trying to help The plaintiffs failure to an officer injured in a disturbance identify the officers who beat him when other officers did not require dismissal of his misinterpreted his actions and complaint; he should have an beat him badly even though he did opportunity for discovery. The court directs the not resist. He was placed for appointment of counsel. several days in a feces-infested cell without heat, running water, and with garbage and urine on the PLRA--Filing Fees floor, without bedding, a Copley v. Henderson, 980 jumpsuit, and eating utensils. He F.Supp. 322 (D.Neb. 1997). The was denied medical care for days. plaintiff voluntarily dismissed his At 33: " ... [T]he Court has action without prejudice and moved to stop collection of the a special responsibility to allow ample opportunity for amending partial filing fee, based on the magistrate judge's statement that pro se 'complaints ...." The this is permissible. The court is court treats affidavits submitted by the plaintiff as amendments not authorized to stop collecting a fee once the complaint is filed. rather than matters outside the pleadings. Because the plaintiff dismissed The D.C. Department of based on this incorrect advice, the Correction~ is not a suable entity. district judge construes the motion as one for relief from The alleged conditions of confinement "may be sufficient to judgment under Rule 60(b), Fed.R.Civ.P., and reinstates the show a denial of the minimal action to give the plaintiff the civilized measures of life's chance to decide if he wants to go necessities." (35) However, there is no evidence of the forward. Warden and Commissioner's knowledge of them, and in fact Federal Officials and PrisonsIPLRA--Screening and the Department investigated and removed the plaintiff after his DismissallMedical CarelWork complaints to Eleanor Holmes AssignmentslPersonal 31 Spring/Summer 1999 Involvement and Supervisory Liability Johnstone v. United States, 980 F.Supp. 148 (B.D.Pa. 1997). The screening and dismissal provisions of the PLRA apply to complaints filed before the statute's passage because they are merely procedural changes. Bivens claims may only be brought against federal officers; claims against the United States or its agencies are barred by sovereign immunity. Bivens claims may not be predicated on respondeat superior liability. (151, collecting cases) At 152: " ... [T]he law of Bivens actions has closely tracked developments in the law governing civil rights actions under § 1983." The plaintiffs medical care claim is supported by no allegations of deliberate indifference. The allegation that an officer assigned the plaintiff to a work assignment inconsistent with his medical condition, despite medical records stating that he should be restricted to light-duty work because of his heart condition, is not "facially inconsistent" with deliberate indifference, but is time-barred. Claims can be dismissed under Rule 12(b)(6) based on the statute of limitations, and the PLRA permits sua sponte dismissals under that rule, but there is a question of procedural fairness in doing so. The court resolves it against the prisoner without qualm. ' The National Prison Project/OURNAL MootnesslDisabledlProcedural Due Process--Classification, Disciplinary ProceedingslEqual ProtectionlPendent and Supplemental Claims; State Law in Federal Courts Randolph v. Rodgers, 980 F.Supp. 1051 (E.D.Mo. 1997). The claims of the hearingimpaired plaintiff were not mooted by his transfer from one prison to another because his claims are capable of repetition. At 1057: "Neither plaintiffs deafness nor his life sentence . . . is at all likely to change. If relief were denied as moot, defendants could simply transfer plaintiff back and forth . . . to evade review of these issues by any Court." The failure to provide a sign language interpreter at disciplinary hearings, resulting in two 30-day terms of segregation and reclassification, did not deny due process because the consequences were not atypical and significant under Sandin. Disabled people are not a suspect class. The plaintiff was not treated differently from similarly situated persons; his complaint is that he was treated the same. Therefore equal protection is not violated. The ADA and the Rehabilitation Act apply to state prisoners. However, the individual defendants are not the proper defendants. It is discrimination by the "public entity" that is forbidden, and the state Department of Correction is the only proper defendant. Alternatively, the defendants are 32 entitled to qualified immunity, since there was no binding authority that the statutes apply to prisoners. The plaintiffs failure to ask for an interpreter each time he sought medical care and each time he received a conduct violation does not disqualifY him from relief; he asked often enough, and was refused. The plaintiff is disabled and is otherwise qualified for such benefits as medical care, educational training, and participation in disciplinary and classification proceedings, and has not received the full benefit of them. Written communications and patience on the part of medical providers and teachers are not sufficient accommodation. The accommodation sought is not excessively burdensome; the plaintiff does not seek round-theclock service, and all the activities at issue (educational programs, disciplinary and classification hearings, and non-emergency medical care) can be scheduled in advance. No factual question is presented because these services are required by state statute; thus, the legislature "has determined that prqviding such services in the limited circumstances sought by plaintiff is not unduly burdensome. It is, after all, the state legislature that controls the defendants' budget, and the Missouri Department of Corrections should not be able to argue to this Court that the state legislature's determination is factually incorrect." (1062) Defendants are also liable Spring/Summer 1999 under a state statute providing for interpreters in prison. A private right of action will be implied where the legislature has failed to provide for any other form of enforcement. Pennhurst is not mentioned. The plaintiff is granted summary judgment on his injunctive claims. Rights of Staff Weicherding v. Riegel, 981 F.Supp. 1143 (C.D.Ill. 1997). An officer's Ku Klux Klan activities, which included a rally at his house and the distribution ofK1an literature, involved a matter of public concern, but it was not clearly established that his Fir~t Amendment rights outweighed prison officials' interests in maintaining racial harmony. The defendants are therefore entitled to qualified immunity for firing him. Pre-Trial DetaineeslProtection from Inmate Assault/MunicipalitiesIPLRA-Mental or Emotional InjurylLaw Libraries and Law Books Heisler v. Kralik, 981 F.Supp. 830 (S.D.N.Y. "1997). The plaintiff, charged with sexual assault on a minor, was held in jail in New Jersey and was transferred to a New York jail, where he was assaulted and suffered contusions and swelling. He was placed in protective custody until his transfer to state prison. Defendants' position that prison officials are liable for failure to protect only if a serious The National Prison Project JOURNAL physical injury results is he was on duty for a four-month inconsistent with Farmer v. period. Allegations of denial of law Brennan. At 837: "In sum, prison officials have a library access are dismissed constitutional duty to act absent allegations of harm; the reasonably to ensure a safe plaintiff said he pled guilty to escape conditions in the New environment for a prisoner when they are aware that there is a Jersey jail and doesn't say how significant risk of serious injury to not going to the law library that prisoner.... [T]he focus of .caused this result. The allegation that the Sheriff inquiry must be, not the extent of the physical injuries sustained in is a policymaker for the County an attack, but rather the existence on inmate security supports a claim of municipal liability. of a 'substantial risk of serious harm. '" (837) Even in medical care cases, deliberate indifference Protection from Inmate to a substantial risk of future AssauItNerbal harm is actionable. Abuse/Summary Judgment Defendants' argument that Watson v. McGinnis, 981 warnings passed to the New York F.Supp. 815 (S.D.N.¥. 1997). jail from the New Jersey jail Intentionally calling a pri'soner a snitch in order to do him harm established only that he was at risk in New Jersey is rejected, states an Eighth Amendment since the danger stemmed from excessive force claim. However, his crime and the likely reaction the officer is entitled to summary judgment because the plaintiff had of other prisoners. no admissible evidence that he In 1994, it was clearly had done this; it was all hearsay established that "intentional or reckless failure to take reasonable from other inmates. measures to protect a prisoner from threatened violence, even in Searches--PrisonlPendent and the absence of a prior act of Supplemental Claims; State violence directed at that inmate, Law in Federal Courts Thomas v. Irvin, 981 F.Supp. can createJiability" (839), and that the risk of injury is 794 (W.D.N.¥. 1997). The plaintiff was placed on "drug actionable. The PLRA's mental or watch" for seven days in a dry emotional injury provision does cell. not apply retroactively to cases At 798: "... [A] prison filed before PLRA's enactment. inmate does not have a viable The plaintiffs complaints of claim based solely on prison officials' failure to adhere to the denial of access to showers and recreation and the ability to clean requirements of prison his cell stated a claim against an regulations, directives or policy statements. II officer who was alleged to have Placement in drug watch did denied these items every time that 33 Spring/Summer 1999 not deny due process because it was not atypical and significant under Sandin. The room the plaintiff was kept in was larger than the average cell, was equipped with all essential items for rest and hygiene, he was allowed to exercise and smoke, and he received regular meals and daily medical attention. Defendants also have a substantial penological justification: stopping the drug trade. Drug watch did not violate the Eighth Amendment because of the alleged lack of ventilation; the plaintiffwas not placed at a substantial risk of serious harm and did not have any symptoms of respiratory problems, and defendants paid enough attention to him not to be deliberately indifferent. PLRA--Exhaustion of Administrative RemedieslProcedural Due Process--Disciplinary Proceedings, Transfers/MootnessIPLRA-Mental or Emotional Injury Evans v. Allen, 981 F.Supp. 1102 (N.D.Ill. 1997). A plaintiff who alleged that he used the grievance system, without a sp~cific statement that he exhausted, alleged sufficient facts that he might prove exhaustion; the court directs him, since he has to file an amended complaint anyway, to allege exhaustion more specifically. The plaintiffs complaints of 218 days in segregation, being restrained in cuffs and chains at visits, being subjected to racial The National Prison Project JOURNAL Spring/Summer 1999 appellate proceedings were completed--a second disciplinary charge was filed based on the criminal conviction itself. The plaintiff was convicted and sentenced to seven years in SHU, reduced on administrative appeal back to five years. The state courts reversed and ordered expungement again, holding that the new sanction was contrary to the prior order requiring expungement. The plaintiff had spent two years in SHU. The plaintiff asserted substantive, not procedural, due process, thereby subjecting himself to a standard of "arbitrary, conscience-shocking, or oppressive in a constitutional sense" (194, citation omitted). . Bringing a second disciplinary proceeding doesn't meet this standard, though it may have been "incorrect or ill-advised." In any case the defendants enjoy qualified immunity. Although there might be a clearly established right not to be confined after a favorable judicial decision, it was not so clear that the second disciplinary Procedural Due Process-proceeding was barred based on Disciplinary Proceedings Howard v. Pierce, 981 the state court proceedings here Sexual AbuselDiscovery Giron v. Corrections Corp. of F.Supp. 190 (W.D.N.Y. 1997). when the prisoner had been The plaintiff was found guilty in a subsequently convicted in criminal America, 981 F.Supp. 1406 (D.N.M. 1997). The plaintiff disciplinary proceeding of court. alleged that she was raped by a murdering another inmate and The defendants did not correctional officer at a private was sentenced to 5 years in SHU. dispute, and the court accepts for prison. The defendant demanded A state court reversed and the sake of argument, that the that she list all her sexual contacts ordered the conviction expunged segregation time here was starting five years before the on the ground that the wrong date atypical and significant under alleged rape, and provide manner, appeared in the misbehavior SandhI. type, date, location, and "all report. The prisoner was then persons present" during each judicially convicted of murder. Husbaluis v. McClellan, 990 sexual contact. The next year--but before the F.Supp. 214 (W.D.N.Y. 1998). abuse, having bodily fluids thrown on him, and being so stressed that he attempted suicide do not establish that conditions were significantly more harsh than in the general prison population. He was not denied a liberty interest under the Sandin "atypical and significant" standard. Denial of a transfer did not deny due process. The filing offalse disciplinary charges does not deny due process. Prisoners may be required to request witnesses in advance at disciplinary hearings. Day-ofhearing requests may be summarily denied. A transfer from one prison to another moots injunctive claims arising from the first prison unless the plaintiff can demonstrate he is likely to be transferred back. The plaintiffs claims are barred by the PLRA mental or emotional injury provision since he alleges no physical harm; the claim that bodily fluids were thrown on him does not satisfy the statute. 34 Under Rule 412, Fed.R.Ev., as amended in 1994, evidence of sexual behavior or predisposition is admissible only if the proponent demonstrates its admissibility and shows that its evidentiary value substantially outweighs the dangers, including harm to the victim as well as prejudice to the parties. At 1407: "Although Rule 412 controls the admissibility of evidence rather than its discoverability, it must inform that proper scope of discovery in this case." The defendant argued that the plaintiff had put her mental and emotional condition in issue and that he needed to speak to her former sexual partners to learn her pre-existing condition. The court observes that this information would be outside their expertise. As to her mental condition, the court holds that the evidence is relevant only to the extent that such sexual contact caused pain and suffering, i.e. "were violent or damaging to her in any way." The National Prison ProjectJOURNAL The plaintiff was sentenced to a year in SHU with a recommendation of a year's loss of good time; he obtained administrative reversal after serving about six months. The court had previously dismissed on the ground that there was no liberty deprivation under Sandin. Miller v. Selsky does not change this result; the loss of privileges, the neverimplemented loss of good time, and the six months' confinement are not atypical and significant. The court cites evidence that many of the inmates in SHU had such sentences. The conditions are not "dramatically different" from those in general population, and prisoners could be placed in similar circumstances in administrative segregation at will. Whitlock v. Johnson, 982 F.Supp. 615 (N.D.IlI. 1997). The prison Adjustment Committee barred all in-person witness testimony, "calling" witnesses only by written statements generated from ex parte interviews by unsworn hearing investigators. Although prison officials have a great deal of discretion in' determining whether witnesses can be called, they must exercise that judgment case by case. At 619: The defendants' practice "does not merely qualify an inmate's right to call witnesses-it eviscerates it." Summary judgment is granted to the plaintiffs and the parties are directed to confer on the form of a final judgment. 35 Heating and VentiiationNerbal Abuse/Access to Courts-Punishment and Retaliation Jones v. Bishop, 981 F.Supp. 290 (S.D.N.Y. 1997). The plaintiffs complaint of a cold cell resulting from windows being open did not meet the objective prong of the Eighth Amendment, since other inmates remedied the cold by wearing sweats or long johns, and the only harm was depression. Nor did he show deliberate indifference, since he did not complain to anyone. Verbal abuse (here, being called "super-rape-po" and "tree jumper," whatever that is) does not state a § 1983 claim. Seizure of the plaintiffs indictment and delay in giving him access to law books did not deny access to courts in the absence of proof of injury. Access to Courts--Punishment and Retaliation Davis v. Kelly, 981 F.Supp. 178 (W.D.N.Y. 1997). Transfers may not be done in retaliation for a prisoner's exercise of constitutional rights. The plaintiff must show that the conduct at issue was constitutionally protected and was a substantial motivating factor in the decision to transfer; the defendants must then show that the prisoner would have been transferred anyway. The claim is rejected on the facts. The supposed reason for the transfer was that "plaintiff had been incarcerated at Attica for ten years and had become too familiar with facility staff and procedures." (182) Spring/Summer 1999 Suicide PreventionlRes Judicata and Collateral Estoppel/Class Actions--Effect of Judgments and Pending LitigationlPendent and Supplemental Claims; State Law in Federal Courts/Survival of Actions and Wrongful Death Litigation/Color of Law/Qualified Immunity McDuffie v. Hopper, 982 F.Supp. 817 (M.D.Ala. 1997)., The decedent had a long and well-known history of suicidal tendencies, but when he got to a prison with medical services provided by Correctional Medical Services, his psychotropJc medications were stopped and he was put in isolation, where he hanged himself. Medical personnel who worked for a private provider are not entitled to qualified immunity; contrary Eleventh Circuit authority has been undermined by Richardson v. Knight. The court also raises, but does not decide, whether the corporation itself-since it is treated like a municipality for purposes of the policy requirement in establishing liability--should also be treated like a municipality and denied qualified immunity on that ground as well. The court recites the Eleventh Circuit boilerplate on prison suicide. The court notes the utility of expert testimony in a case of this nature. Liability is supported here by testimony that it is a "serious departure from contemporary standards of psychiatric care" to terminate a large dose of medication without The National Prison Project JOURNAL considering alternatives and not to contact the patient's previous physicians, and that putting him in isolation worsened the problem. Solitary confinement is not treatment. The corporation had a policy of reducing medications without a clear rationale and without a system for monitoring the consequences. Another expert testified that defendants' view that the decedent was faking his symptoms was "markedly erroneous" in view of his history and that the defendant doctor inappropriately brought punishment factors into his treatment. The fact that the decision to take a person off suicide watch is a professional decision does not settle whether defendants were exercising professional judgment when the decedent died. A pending class action concerning mental health conditions does not preclude this case. Since there is no final judgment, there is no res judicata issue, and since nothing has been found factually, there is no collateral estoppel. The plaintiffs claims do not abate ul\Per a state statute which has been interpreted to mean that unfiled tort claims do not survive the plaintiffs death. At 830: "As is demanded by logic, the statute has been held not to abate actions for wrongful death." Claims for personal injury damages to the plaintiff himself before death do abate. LightinglLength of Stay/Cruel and Unusual Punishment-36 Spring/Summer 1999 Snelling v. Riveland, 983 F.Supp. 930 (E.D.Wash. 1997). 643 (N.D.Iowa 1997). The The plaintiff complained that plaintiffs alleged that their cells letters and copies of Genesis were illuminated 24 hours a day magazine were rejected under the by a 60-watt light bulb which they prison system's prohibition on were forbidden to cover. "sexually explicit" materials, Cases challenging continuous which is itself explicit and illumination have yielded mixed detailed. The record showed that 24% of the prison population is results because such cases are fact-driven. Here, the plaintiffs incarcerated for sex crimes, there alleged that the lighting made it is an ongoing problem of sexual very difficult to sleep. The court assaults, consensual sexual finds that an inference of behavior, and sexual harassment psychological harm arises from offemale staff, and a "significant the length of time (283 nights and number" of inmates are infected 550 nights respectively) to which with HIV or hepatitis. There were around 70 rule infractions the plaintiffs were subjected to for sexual or "sexually-related" "lighting so far removed from misconduct a year including natural conditions." (648) til: several for rape. Defendants' "There can be little doubt that subjecting prisoners to continuous policy requires review of each publication or piece of darkness would at least raise a constitutional question. . . . What correspondence individually, with notification to other facilities is in question here, continuous lighting, which is just as foreign a when a particular item is found to condition as continuous darkness, violate policy. Over two million should at least raise an inference publications are made available to state prisoners through the of a constitutional violation. Washington State Library and the Similarly, the effectiveness of prisons' own collections. sleep deprivation as a tool of The policy is upheld under the torture has long been recognized." (Citing 1930 report Turner standard based on of ABA Committee on Lawless evidence that "inmates exposed to Enforcement of Law.) pornography become desensitized and require more and more Summary judgment is denied graphic material which may because there are triable issues both on the question whether the ultimately result in acting out objective prong of the Eighth sexual fantasies. Because of the Amendment standard are met and lack of physical relationships of on the question whether it is choice in prison," the result is an increased possibility of penologically necessary for surveillance to leave the lights on homosexual acts that may spread all the time. disease. Aggressive and predatory behavior that may result endangers the lives and Publications Proof of Harm Shepherd v. Ault, 982 F.Supp. The National Prison Project JOURNAL at issue was adopted with the safety of staff and inmates. subjective intent to punish Material that is degrading to prisoners because they are women leads to disrespect for disabled. (What happened to female staff. The defendants deliberate indifference?) A submitted studies supporting disincentive to malinger is "penal these claims, which the plaintiff in nature," but not cruel. (proceeding pro se) did not The ADA applies to state refute. The policy serves security and rehabilitation objectives. The prisons. Prisoners in three subclasses plaintiffs have alternative means (inmates unable to engage in any of exercising their First Amendment rights because they work, recreational or training can read things not prohibited by activities because of physical or the policy. The defendants mental impairment; inmates cannot control the distribution of receiving mental health treatment, and inmates housed at a reception materials once they enter the prison and cannot keep them from and medical center for treatment) being read by sex offenders. The are "otherwise qualified" under the authorizing statute, which fact that some sexually explicit provides for gain time for a materials have been obtained prisoner who "works diligently, through the library does not participates in training, uses time undermine the policy; these are simply mistakes. constructively, or otherwise engages in positive activities." The "program," for ADA Disabled/Good TimelHabeas purposes, is defined by the statute Corpus/Class Actions-and not the regulations Certification of Classes promulgated under it. A Raines v. State ofFlorida, regulation that "fragments" the 983 F.Supp. 1362 (N.D.Fla. opportunity to earn the maximum 1997). The plaintiffs challenged gain time by separating the four restrictions on the award of statutorily defined activities, "incentive gain-time" to disabled allowing healthy prisoners to earn prisoners. A regulation that had provided fQ.r the award of gain the maximum but denying that time for "positive activities" other opportunity to disabled prisoners who cannot engage in all four than work was amended and made more restrictive. activities, violates ADA. The The plaintiffs' allegations do court rejects the argument that not support an Eighth prisoners who are not "routinely Amendment claim. Liberty is not available for work" are not a "basic human need" and its otherwise qualified. At 1374: denial does not implicate the "Plaintiffs seek no Eighth Amendment. Contra, accommodation," since anybody Sample v. Diecks, 885 F.2d 1099, can "use time constructively" or 1108 (3d Cir. 1989). Nor is there engage in "positive activities." any evidence that the regulation Therefore the question whether 37 Spring/Summer 1999 an accommodation is reasonable, and the financial and administrative burdens on the defendants, need not be considered. (The court thus defines a revision in defendants' regulations as not being an "accommodation" despite defendants' claim that the reason for their policies is to discourage malingering and false or exaggerated claims of disability.) The court raises the question of whether tile subclass of persons at reception centers-usually there for specialty consultations--are appropriately class-certified, and directs the parties to address the question at trial. Defendants are entitled to summary judgment as to the fourth subclass, which apparently consists of prisoners with some ability to work, who alleged that their disabilities weren't taken into account in allocating gain time. Defendants' policy is to the contrary, the statistical differences betwe~n this subclass and nondisabled prisoners are slight, and the existence of anecdotal evidence of individual disparities does not justify class relief Damage claims for failure to award gain time are not within the court's jurisdiction under Heck v. Humphrey. At 1376: "The reasoning of Heck applies whether a claimant is in or out of custody." That is probably wrong under Spencer v. Kemna (U.S. 1998). PLRA--Filing FeeslHabeas Corpus The National Prison Project JOURNAL Smith v. Coyne, 984 F.Supp. 1186 (N.D.Ill. 1998). The plaintiffs claims are barred by Heck v. Humphrey, but the court imposes the PLRA filing fees despite the fact that the case should have been brought as a habeas petition after exhaustion of state remedies. Procedural Due Process-Disciplinary Proceedings!Access to CourtslHabeas Corpus ljarone v. Hatcher, 984 awards summary judgment on his statement of reasons claim. The plaintiff is directed to show that he should be awarded judgment in an amount greater than $1.00. The plaintiffs unspecified court access claim is dismissed for lack of evidence that being able to file an opposition to the motion to dismiss his habeas petition would have made any difference. Procedural Due Process-Disciplinary Proceedings!AccidentslFood Warren v. Irvin, 985 F.Supp. F.Supp. 1304 (D.Nev. 1997). The plaintiffs claim based on a 350 (W.D.N.Y. 1997). The disciplinary proceeding that plaintiffs disciplinary conviction resulted only in segregation is was reversed administratively, but barred by Edwards v. Balisok. he was not released from SHU The court thinks it is compelled pending rehearing. After 16 days, by Ninth Circuit precedent to he was given a new hearing and read Balisok broadly. At 1308 n. found guilty and given the same 1: Relief from conditions of penalty. The decision was confinement is available via reversed because the second habeas corpus in the Ninth hearing was not timely, and the Circuit. conviction was expunged. Balisok bars only claims that The 161 days the plaintiff if accepted would invalidate the spent in SHU is not atypical and punishment, so the plaintiffs significant under Sandin. The complaint that he was not given a temporary loss of privileges fell statement ofreasons and evidence "within the expected parameters is not barred. However, of the sentence imposed by a discipliQary segregation does not court oflaw" (354, citation constitute an atypical and omitted). The loss of good time significant deprivation absent credits does not deprive a evidence that segregation prisoner of liberty if they are conditions violate the Eighth completely restored before they Amendment or would extend the affect the plaintiffs sentence. plaintiffs sentence, or that it is Lengthy disciplinary confinement different from administrative is a "normal element of the New segregation, even though the York prison regime" according to plaintiff was in it for a year. data on the sentences of persons However, the restitution order of in SHU on a particular date. The $33.48 deprived him ofa conditions oflife in SHU "are not property interest, so the court dramatically different from those 38 Spring/Summer 1999 experienced in the general population." (355) Deprivation of water for three days because the plaintiff was flooding his cell and deprivation of one meal because he refused to return his tray and cup from the previous meal did not violate the Eighth Amendment. The plaintiffs allegation that he was injured because defendants made him store his property on the floor and the lights were off in his cell is dismissed because he did not explain who turned his lights off and he used the word "negligent" rather than alleging deliberate indifference. PLRA--Exhaustion of Administrative Remedies Alexandroai v. California Dept. of Corrections, 985 F.Supp. 968 (S.D.Cal. 1997). The plaintiff checked a box on the court's form complaint indicating that he had exhausted his remedies, but failed to. attach the documentation required by the form Or to give any detail of his exhaustion in the complaint. The defendants submitted evidence that he had not exhausted. The court dismisses his complaint without prejudice. PLRA--Exhaustion of Administrative RemedieslExhaustion of Remedies!State Officials and AgencieslMedical Care-Standards of Liability-Deliberate IndifTerencelPleadinglPersonal Involvement and Supervisory The National Prison Project JOURNAL Liability Barry v. Ratelle, 985 F.Supp. 1225 (S.D.Cal. 1997). The plaintiff alleged that doctors recommended and state officials approved hernia surgery but he never received it, and he also never received a truss promised by the prison physicians. The plaintiff had exhausted his administrative remedies; he pursued each level of review and did not receive responses to his appeals. He is not required to comply with the exhaustion requirements 0f the California Tort Claims Act to pursue his federal claim, although he would have to do so for a pendent state law claim. The legislative history ofthe PLRA refers only to prison grievance procedures, not tort claim procedures, and there is no indication Congress intended to overrule Felder v. Casey. In the Ninth Circuit, plaintiffs with claims in which subjective intent is an element must satisfy a heightened pleading standard by stating in their complaints "nonconclusory allegations setting forth evidence of unlawful intent . . . specific and concrete enough to enable {lefendants to prepare a response.... " (1239, citation omitted). Circumstantial evidence will suffice. The allegations of knowledge and failure to act, supported by correspondence, appeal forms, etc., indicated that defendants had the necessary notice. The complaint does not state a claim against the prison warden for denial of medical care because there are no allegations of 39 personal involvement. At 1239: "A supervisor may be liable for constitutional violations of subordinates, however, if the supervisor participated in, directed, or knew of the violations and failed to act to prevent them." The plaintiff had written several times to the prison medical director, so there was sufficient allegation of his liability. The plaintiffs allegation that defendants allowed him "to remain in pain for nearly two years without even giving him a truss once the need for surgery was identified" sufficiently alleges deliberate indifference to a serious medical need. The plaintiffs failure to indicate that the defendants were sued in their individual capacities is a pleading defect requiring dismissal, but the court grants leave to amend. Use of ForcelProcedural Due Process--Disciplinary Proceedings/Damages-PunitivelEvidentiary QuestionslPre-Trial DetaineeslUnsentenced Convicts and Convicts Held in Jails Wilson v. Philadelphia Detention Center, 986 F.Supp. 282 (E.D.Pa. 1997). The plaintiff, a federal prisoner awaiting sentencing, got into a fight with another inmate, was struck twice by an officer after he was in handcuffs, was given a disciplinary charge, and spent ten days in segregation before being found not guilty and returned to population. A jury awarded Spring/Summer 1999 compensatory damages of $3,500 and punitive damages totalling $10,001. The special verdict form did not separate the claims. The court applies the Wolfish standard to this unsentenced convict; defendants failed to argue that Wolfish does not apply until after the trial and the filing of post-trial motions. In any case (289 n. 12), the Third Circuit has held that unsentenced persons are to be treated like pre-trial detainees. The record supported the conclusion that the ten-day period of segregation was punitive in nature; the court cites the contradictory justifications for the delay in the hearing. At 289 n. 12: defendants' reliance on Sandin v. Conner is inappropriate in the case of an unsentenced prisoner. Punitive damages of $5,000 each against the officials who participated in the disciplinary process and $1 against the officer who beat the plaintiff are upheld. The record supports a finding of recklessness based on the failure to provide a timely hearing, and the amounts do not shock the conscience. The officer who beat the plaintiff was absent from the jurisdiction at the time oftrial taking a training course for another job. The court sustained an objection to use of his discovery deposition at trial but permitted defense counsel to present a trial deposition; however, it excluded the portions concerning the reasons for his absence from trial, since he had The National Prison Project JOURNAL voluntarily made himself unavailable and had had ample time to inform the court of his schedule conflict. The exclusion does not warrant a new trial. RestraintsIPre-Trial Detainees/Intake Casaburro v. Giuliani, 986 F.Supp. 176 (S.D.N.¥. 1997). The plaintiff was arrested for soliciting a prostitute. He was variously handcuffed behind his back, handcuffed to a hook 12 inches above the floor, and then handcuffed to the front of the cell in a standing position, despite his repeated complaints of a prior medical problem of his back and neck. Keeping a prisoner handcuffed for over seven hours inside a holding cell may be an exaggerated response under Wolfish. At 180: "Although there may be a legitimate reason for doing so, it is not apparent at this stage of the litigation." The court applies Eighth Amendment analysis to this detainee case and seems to think that the Hudson malicious/sadistic test governs. weeks and then the test was forcibly administered. Under the Turner standard, the annual PPD policy is upheld. X-rays are not an alternative because they identify only those persons with active TB and not those exposed, for whom additional monitoring and INH therapy are required. Placement in respiratory isolation was not cruel and unusual. punishment. Deprivation of communication, clean bedding, clean clothing and hot food do not deny basic human needs. Nor did the plaintiff show deliberate indifference, since the policy of isolation and monitoring does not wantonly inflict pain. (Of course, the question is really whether the conditions of isolation inflict pain.) The videotape of the forcible administration of the test shows that staff did not act with malicious and sadistic intent. The (unspecified) severity of the plaintiffs wounds did not sufficiently support her claim. Medical Care--Examinations, QuarantinelUse of Force Hasenmeier-McCarthy v. Rose, 986 F.Supp. 464 (S.D.Ohio PLRA--In Forma Pauperis Provisions--ApplicabilitylEqual ProtectionfPersonal Prope~tylMental Health Treatment West v. Macht, 986 F.Supp. 1998). State prison policy requires annual PPDs of all prisoners. After submitting four times, the plaintiff refused her fifth PPD as violating her religion's prohibition against admitting artificial substances into her body. She was put in respiratory isolation for several 1141 (W.D.Wis. 1997). The plaintiff, detained after the completion of his prison sentence pursuant to a state "sexual predator" law, was not a "prisoner" for purposes of the PLRA. (Defendants agreed.) The prisoner's complaint that he, unlike all other similarly 40 Spring/Summer 1999 situated persons, was denied his release money from his prisoner savings at the Department of Corrections, is an equal protection claim that is not without basis in law or fact. Protection from Inmate Assault/Evidentiary QuestionsfPersonal Involvement and Supervisory Liability Payne v. Collins, 986 F.Supp. 1036 (E.D.Tex. 1997). The white plaintiff was allegedly kicked to death by inmates of other races wearing steel-toed boots. The prison's "chief administrative supervisor" could, not be held liable because there was no evidence that he was responsible for the issuance of steel-toed boots or the policy permitting inmates access to housing units other than their own. The concession that he was "ultimately responsible for inmate housing decisions" (1059) could establish nothing more than respondea(superior liability. His approval of a "geographic housing policy" (all prisoners from the same geographic area housed together) did not support liability because he did not appreciate its deleterious effect on prison security and therefore did not know of the resulting risks. Although he did decide not to impose experience and competency requirements for officers in close custody areas higher thaJ;l those established by prison system as a whole, comparison with similar cases The National Prison Project JOURNAL shows that this is not "the kind of official nonfeasance constituting an Eighth Amendment violation." (1060) The officer on duty is not entitled to summary judgment based on evidence that an officer stationed where she was would have seen the violence involving the plaintiff at an earlier point than she acknowledged. Though she may not be obliged to intervene physically and put herself in danger, or to leave her post contrary to prison regulations, she was required to take ~ action to stop the violence. However, summary judgment is appropriate on plaintiffs theory that the officer broke prison regulations by failing to report observations of "suspicious prison activity"; breach of prison regulations is not an Eighth Amendment violation. The court overrules defendants' objections to a correctional expert's affidavit; his "extensive training and education in prison operations" qualified him to testify about maximum security institutions, including those in Texas, despite his lack of direct familiarity with the particular institutions. The court similarly overrules objections to particular opinions about what staffknew or saw. A prison report produced by defendants as part of their initial disclosure under the Federal Rules is admissible; defendants' production of it in discovery is sufficient authentication of it. A hearsay objection to the report is overruled because the report is an ~. 41 admission by a defendant. An Operational Review Report done after the incident at issue (but apparently not prompted by that incident) is admissible as a business record because all the hearsay in it was from persons acting in the regular course of business. Spring/Summer 1999 medical needs. Pain, suffering and mental anguish caused by delay in care may be actionable as well." ContemptlFinancial Resources Carty v. Schneider, 986 F.Supp. 933 (D.V.!. 1997). The defendants were held in contempt in an earlier opinion for massive violations of a consent judgment. Medical Care--Standards of The defendants have taken Liability--Serious Medical sufficient measures, mainly NeedslDisabled Miller v. Michigan Dept. of alleviation or crowding (which the Corrections, 986 F. Supp. .1 073 court terms the "bad seed" of (W.D.Mich. 1997). The plaintiff many constitutional violations) to suffers from bowel and bladder the point of compliance with the incontinence and must wear consent judgment's population "adult undergarments, or cap, that the court declines to 'Attends.'" Defendants impose monetary sanctions. At intermittently failed to provide 939: "... [T]he court should these over a four-day period with select the least intrusive sanction the predictable consequences. that the court determines will At 1080: "The court accepts coerce the contemnor to comply." that incontinence of bowel and Id: "... [C]ognizant of the bladder may be characterized as a socioeconomic and sociopolitical factors pertaining to the Virgin serious medical condition." However, the relevant question is Islands, the court finds that monetary contempt sanctions whether the plaintiffs need for treatment was serious. Id: "The would affect drastically the public interest and, perhaps more seriousness of the unmet medical importantly, would impede need can only be evaluated in light of the effect of these delays. " progress and thwart the defendants' continuing efforts to Here, the plaintiff failed to show "unnecessary infliction of pain or remedy the conditions of a worsening of his incontinence confinement at the CJC." The condition." (1081) At worst, he court warns that failure to suffered indignity and discomfort, continue making progress may which nobody but a few staff lead to a different result in the members saw because he was in future. segregation. At 1081: "In At 938: "a lack of funding reaching this conclusion, the does not serve as an acceptable Court recognizes that serious or excuse for defendants' noncompliance, ~specially since many permanent physical injury is not prerequisite to recovery for of the problems which the deliberate indifference to serious defendants face do not require II\'Ii!!l§!_----~~~~~------------- - - - - - - -~- ~~ The National Prison ProjectJOURNAL Spring/Summer 1999 Defendants' argument that manual body cavity search, because it is more intrusive, must plaintiff has not shown he was convicted because of his race is be supported by probable cause. Visiting/Searches--Person-beside the point; the court grants In addition, the purpose of a Visitors and Staff Laughter v. Kay, 986 F.Supp. prison visitor search is to prevent additional time for the defendants to make the right argument. 1362 (D.Utah 1997). The wife of contraband from entering the Discovery is available in a prison. Here, defendants did not a prisoner had her visits habeas proceeding only for "good suspended because syringes were let the plaintiff visit even after cause," which the plaintiff has not passing the search, so the search found in her (borrowed) car shown. was not justified by legitimate trunk. After her privileges were reinstated a few days later, prison security concerns; it was no more Medical Care--Standards of than a search for evidence in a personnel obtained a warrant to Liability--Serious Medical criminal investigation. search all her and her children's Defendants' claim of exigent NeedslMedical Care-body cavities for drugs, based on Standards 'of Liability-circumstances is frivolous, given information relating to a Deliberate IndifferencelMedicaI that they obtained a search completely different inmate and warrant and did so the day before Care--Special DietslDisabled his wife. The plaintiff, who was Rouse v. Plantier, 987 the visit. six months pregnant, and her F.Supp. 302 (D.N.I. 1997). The The plaintiffs consent does two-year-old son, were searched. plaintiffs sued on behalf of all Nothing was found, but her visits not legalize a search that was insulin-diabetic prisoners in the were suspended anyway for based on an invalid warrant. Adult Diagnostic and Treatment almost a year. The obstetrician Center in New Jersey. found that her vaginal wall had Procedural Due Process-Under the deliberate been tom and put her on bed rest. Disciplinary ProceedingslEqual indifference standard, "a plaintiff There was no probable cause ProtectionlHabeas need not trace a harm to one here because there was no Corpus/Discovery specific act or omission," since connection in the affidavit on Henard v. Newkirk, 987 conditions" alone or in which the warrant was based F.Supp. 691 (N.D.Ind. 1997). combination" can violate the between the information about One year in segregation is not Eighth Amendment (307). drugs and the plaintiff and her atypical and significant under Defendants do not seriously husband or child. No reasonably Sandin. Conditions in dispute that the medical needs of competent officer could have disciplinary segregation at the diabetics are serious. believed there was probable plaintiffs prison are not Defendants are not entitled to cause, so defendants are not substantially more restrictive than entitled ta qualified immunity. summary judgment on the claim restrictions in the state's most Additional information allegedly secure pnson. of inadequate diets, given presented orally to the judge who Failure to follow internal plaintiffs' expert's report showing procedures is of no significance in lack of portion control, issued the warrant did not sufficiently establish probable unavailability of diabetesestablishing atypical and cause either. significant hardship. appropriate meals, snacks, or Defendants' good faith belief The plaintiff alleged that he low-sugar foods, and failure to that they had probable cause is and another black inmate were individualize diets, as well as irrelevant. sentenced more harshly than four evidence that diet meals were Prison visitor searches must white inmates charged with the sometimes spoiled, otherwise generally be supported by same offense, and submitted inedible, or 'unavailable. reasonable suspicion. However, a affidavits from three of them. Defendants alleged that the inordinate financial expenditures. " 42 The National Prison ProjectJOURNAL plaintiffs refused diet meals but rejects defendants' attempt to plaintiffs showed that the characterize the right asserted as "refusal" evidence was subject to the right to have blood sugar interpretation. The fact that tested up to four times a day, etc. plaintiffs may have on occasion The defendants are entitled to bought food from the commissary qualified immunity on the ADA is not a defense given the prison's claim because it was not established in the Third Circuit inadequate program. On plaintiffs' medical care that the statute applied to claim, the court rejects the prisoners until 1997. argument that all of plaintiffs' The court notes that because expert evidence is merely the named plaintiffs are no longer disagreement with doctors' confined at the institution, and professional judgment. Expert one of them is no longer insulintestimony may be helpful in dependent, they may not be understanding the prevailing adequate class representatives for norms against which conditions purposes of injunctive relief, and are to be evaluated, particularly plans to address the question at a where the issue is medical care conference. The absence of and not prison security. There is current class representatives does sufficient evidence to conclude not moot the case but shifts the that the risks of inadequate focus from justiciability to the treatment were obvious and that suitability of the representative defendants were aware of them. plaintiffs. The Commissioner is not shown to have been deliberately Voting/Classification--Race indifferent by the service on him Farrakhan v. Locke, 987 five years previously of F.Supp. 1304 (E.D.Wash. 1997). interrogatories. There is The plaintiffs challenged unspecified but sufficient Washington's felon evidence as to the mental state of disenfranchisement scheme on the the other defendants. ground that it was racially The defendants are not discriminatory under the entitled to qualified immunity on Constitution and results in vote the Eighth Amendment claims; denial and dilution under the the right to medical care was Voting Rights Act. clearly established, and their claim The "plain statement rule" that they acted objectively does not apply to the Voting reasonably is refuted by the same Rights Act; that statute does not evidence that supports liability alter the usual constitutional (for example, evidence that they balance between federal knew that glucose should be government and states because tested no less often than once a that was already done by the Civil day, and for some of the plaintiffs War Amendments. Nor does the it was tested fewer than 20 times "results test" of the Voting Rights a year). At 313 n. 10: The court Act, as amended in 1982 to 43 Spring/Summer 1999 eliminate the intent requirement, violate § 2 of the Fourteenth Amendment. Although felon disenfranchisement is not per se unconstitutional, Congress can prevent. the states from using it to discriminate based on race. The Voting Rights Act is not unconstitutional under City of Boerne as so interpreted. The plaintiffs state a claim for vote denial under the Voting Rights Act based on their allegation that Mrican, Hispanic and Native Americans are targeted for prosecution of serious crimes and are over represented in the prison population. The court rejects the view that the case should be dismissed because of policy considerations favoring felon disenfranchisement or that fact that plaintiffs' own illegal behavior has played a role in their disenfranchisement. Plaintiffs' vote dilution claim is dismissed; such a claim requires more than an allegation of disparate impact. Plaintiffs' Fourteenth Amendment claim is dismissed because discriminatory intent must be shown and "neither the Complaint nor the Court's own research reveal any circumstantial or direct evidence that would tend to support this claim." (1314) (Evidence? On a motion to dismiss?) Law Libraries and Law Books United States v. Beckwith, 987 F.Supp. 1,345 (D.Utah 1997). A defendant proceeding pro se was entitled to access to the law The National Prison ProjectJOURNAL library in the federal courthouse for two hours a day for five consecutive days, and for two hours a day three days a week thereafter. At 1348: "trial courts must be allowed reasonable and flexible discretion to implement the right to self representation in the context of pretrial preparation by detainees." Usually, where a defendant has standby counsel, personal access to a library is not required. At 1348: "A pretrial detainee representing himself, who is indigent must be afforded unlimited mail access to the court, standby counsel, and the prosecution, unless abused at which point it may be restricted." Federal Officials and Prisons!Procedural Due Process--Property!Procedural Due Process--Work Assignments Del Raine v. Bureau of Prisons, 989 F.Supp. 1373 (D.Kan. 1997). A federal prisoner denied "longevity pay" by the Federal Industries Program for unsatisfactory work performance was not denied due process because the relevant regulations did not create a property interest in such pay. Bureau ofPrisons regulations characterize longevity pay as an addition to regular pay that is only available to those who have not been declared ineligible. This interpretation is reasonable and deserves deference. (The court completely misses the point under standard property interest analysis. The regulations say that 44 the pay shall be added unless the inmate is declared ineligible, which may be done because of "unsatisfactory work performance." This language should create a property interest analysis in the same manner as statutes saying that public employees may be fired "for cause.") Juveniles/Color of Law!Psychotropic Medication Lemoine v. New Horizons Ranch and Center, 990 F.Supp. 498 (N.D.Tex. 1998). The decedent died at age 12 in an institution "designed to treat wayward or troubled youth in a rugged, rural setting through work-hardening programs." It had no on-site medical staff and was 30 miles from the nearest medical facility. The decedent was taking Ritalin, Mellaril, and Tegretol. They apparently didn't work very well. As punishment for "prior inappropriate behavior," he was assigned to build a rock wall outdoors on a day when the temperature reached 103 degrees. He died of heat stroke (his temperature measured at 108 degrees shortly before geath) and was also found to have many bruises, contusions and blisters on his body. A doctor employed by a private juvenile institution to which a state has delegated 24hour care of troubled juveniles is a state actor, by analogy to private prisons. The court applies the public function test of state action. A private physician contracting with such a facility is Spring/Summer 1999 a state actor under West v. Atkins. PLRA--Exhaustion of Administrative Remedies/Summary Judgment/Medical RecordslEvidentiary Questions Russo v. Palmer, 990 F.Supp. 1'047 (N.D.III. 1998). The plaintiff alleged that he filed a grievance twice but every time he sent it to the grievance officer it was returned to him unsigned and unfiled. The court held a hearing and finds the allegation incredible, though it admits (1049 n. 1) that if a prisoner were prevented from exhausting, the court could "overlook" the prohibition. However, the failure to exhaust . bars only his injunctive claim, since the grievance process does not provide for money damages. At 1050 n. 4: If the plaintiff were afraid the limitations period would run while he exhausted, he could file the complaint and ask that its injunctive aspects be stayed pending exhaustion. This appears inconsistent with the statutory language which suggests that exhaustion must precede filing the complaint. The plaintiffs' medical records do not support the defendants' motion for summary judgment on the plaintiffs medical care claim. They are inadmissible hearsay because there is no underlying affidavit, deposition testimony, or anything else establishing a foundation for them. The court also finds most of them "indecipherable." PLRA--Exhaustion of The National Prison Project/OURNAL Spring/Summer 1999 Administrative Remedies Lacey v. C.S.P. Solano Medical Staff, 990 F.Supp. 1199 (B.D.Cal. 1997). The PLRA exhaustion requirement is not jurisdictional. This conclusion is supported both by Supreme Court law and (at 1203 n. 4) by the screening provisions of the PLRA, which provide for dismissal as frivolous or malicious or as not stating a claim regardless of whether remedies have been exhausted. The court couldn't do that if it didn't have jurisdiction. At 1204 n. 6: The court construes "prison conditions" in the exhaustion provision to have as broad a meaning as suggested by the statutory definition of "civil action with respect to prison conditions," including both ongoing practices and specific acts of alleged misconduct. The prison grievance process is not an "available" remedy to a prisoner with a damage claim because it does not provide for monetary relief This view is consistent with the long-standing recognition that inadequate administrative remedies need not be exhausted. The state Tort Claims Act need not be exhausted under the PLRA exhaustion provision. The legislative history both of the current provision and of its predecessor indicate that Congress was concerned with grievance systems and not with ArresteeslMunicipalities Magill v. Lee County, 990 F.Supp. 1382 (M.D.Ala. 1998). The jail's policy was to strip search everybody before they were put into a cell (including holding cells). These searches supposedly involved only the removal of "outer garments" (i.e., "not panties or brassiere for women). Persons who have obtained a bond or are obtaining one at the time of booking are supposedly not searched. One plaintiff testified that she removed all her clothes during the search· and that the search was conducted while her husband was trying to bond her out. The policy is constitutional. Since the only defendants are the Sheriff and the county, only the policy is at issue, and there is no evidence that the defendants condoned violations of their policy. The court relies on Bell v. Wolfish and an 11 th Circuit case in which there was reasonable suspicion; it ignores the large amount of case law from other jurisdictions holding that reasonable suspicion is required up to the point where the prisoner is to be admitted to the jail's general population. At 1387: The court notes that it remains an open question whether an Alabama sheriff is a county or state official when jail policies are at issue. Homosexuals and QuestionslMedical Care-Standards of Liability--Serious Medical Needs/Equal ProtectionlPersonal Involvement and Supervisory Liability Farmer v. Hawk, 991 F.Supp. 19 (D.D.C. 1998). The plaintiff is a pre-operative transsexual who has not been provided with hormone therapy although alleges she had been taking female hormones for years before incarceration. She alleges she received no psychotherapy until six years after incarceration, after she tried to sever her scrotum with a razor, and has received none since 1996. These allegations are disputed. This action is not precluded l;>y the pendency of another action, at a prison from which the plaintiff has been transferred, challenging inadequate care there. This suit challenges the treatment of transsexuals throughout the federal prison system. There is a third case that is more similar to this one, but this one was filed earlier. This complaint is not mooted by the plaintiff's transfer, since it is system wide and not directed toward a particular prison. Transsexualism is a serious medical condition for which prisoners have a right to receive treatment. The right was clearly established based on the decisions of four other circuits (at least one of which the plaintiff has been in). tort claims procedures. Transsexuals/Federal Officials Bureau ofPrisons policy to Pre-Trial Detainees/Searches-Person-- and PrisonslMootnesslProcedural, Jurisdictional and Litigation provide care that is either "medically mandatory" or "presently medically necessary" ~. 45 The National Prison Project JOURNAL not infected. also calls for treatment for transsexualism. Therefore the system's medical director cannot DisabledlMedication/AIDS/Spe be found liable for failure to cial Diets promulgate a new policy. Callaway v. Smith County, However, his responses to her 991 F.Supp. 801 (E.D.Tex. complaints acknowledging and 1998). The plaintiff, prescribed sanctioning the withholding of AZT and Crixivan, got no Crixivan for five days and then any treatment could constitute half-doses for the next 15 days. deliberate indifference. The argument that the director is not When he saw a doctor after 19 responsible for the day-to-day days, his dosage was promptly care of particular prisoners is increased. He was not able to get a high-protein, high-calorie diet. rejected because Bureau of His viral load, formerly Pris~ns policy calls for hormone therapy for transsexuals to be undetectable, increased to a measurable level by the time he authorized by the medical director, and because his response left the jail, though it had decreased by the time of the in her case ensured that care would not be provided. The hearing. The plaintiff was kept in medical director is therefore not a "side cell" like other inmates entitled to qualified immunity. with communicable diseases and At 29: "The right to treatment then placed in lockdown. does not include the right to a The ADA and Rehabilitation specific mode of treatment." Act do not apply to prisons and There is a factual dispute as to jails. (Wrong.) whether the plaintiff is receiving The failure to provide the any treatment. plaintiff with medication, and to Prisoners who suffer from do it in the right amounts. was mental illness other than merely negligent. transsexualism are not required to Suit against the University of document their receipt of Texas Health Center, the medical treatment before incarceration, as care provider, was barred by the Eleventh Amendment. transsexuals are with respect to hormone treatment. (The court The failure to see a doctor for rejects defendants' attempt to 19 days or to see the head doctor deny what their policy says.) The for 56 days is not proof of court denies summary judgment deliberate indifference since the on the plaintiff's equal protection plaintiff saw nurses and went to claim because the record does not the clinic numerous times. provide sufficiently expert The plaintiff's segregation evidence to determine whether was not unconstitutional; transsexual inmates are similarly classification of inmates is situated with other mental typically relegated to the broad illnesses, or transsexuals with discretion of prison officials. No AIDS similarly situated to those abuse of discretion was shown. 46 Spring/Summer 1999 The failure to provide a better diet was not unconstitutional; when he finally saw the chief doctor, the doctor ordered that he get double portions of food. It took a week for this order to get to the kitchen, and the plaintiff was released a week later. The case is dismissed as frivolous and for failure to state a claim after an evidentiary hearing. IntakelDisabled Hanson v. Sangamon County Sheriffs Dept., 991 F.Supp. 1059 (C.D.Ill. 1998). The deaf plaintiff was arrested for possession of cannabis; no attempt was made to communicate with him by the investigating officers, he was not told his bail amount, and a telephone device for the deafwas not provided. As a result he spent 13 hours in jail whereas everyone arrested with him was out in four hours. The county jail is a public entity and the ADA is applicable to it, and the plaintiff has sufficiently alleged that he was denied services and activities because of his disability, i.e., an opportunity to post bond and to make a telephone call. The absence of a case in point does not entitle the Sheriff to qualified immunity. Medical Care--Standards of Liability--Deliberate IndifTerencelMedication/Qualifi ed Immunity/Color of Law1M unic,ipalitieslMonitoring /Pendent and Supplemental Claims; State Law in Federal The National Prison Project JOURNAL Courts Nelson v. Prison Health Services, Inc., 991 F.Supp. 1452 (M.D.Fla. 1997). The decedent died in jail of a myocardial infarction without a doctor's ever having been called. One nurse was fired, two were put on probation, and one resigned to take another job. The sheriff was entitled to qualified immunity because he was not involved in the decision to withhold medical treatment. The defendant nurses, employees of Prison Health Services, are not entitled to qualified immunity under Richardson v. McKnight, which by its terms applies to "major lengthy administrative tasks" such as providing medical care to a jail. Private medical providers are state actors. Evidence that nurses did not verify the decedent's medications, resulting in her going 36 hours without it, could support liability. At 1463: "Delays such as this may in and of themselves amount to 'deliberate indifference. '" Responding to chest pain by giving the decedent nitroglycerine and telling. her to self-medicate, rather than following the jail's own protocol and giving her an EKG and calling the physician on duty, was "treatment so cursory as to amount to deliberate indifference." (1464) One nurse who chose to remain in the dining hall to finish her breakfast rather than respond to the third complaint of chest pain, and then delayed seeing her, accused her of "theatrics," failed to call a doctor, 47 and did not call an emergency response team until she had stopped breathing, could be held liable. At 1464: "Jackson's dogged refusal to provide medical care was clearly tantamount to deliberate indifference." Evidence of a custom "longstanding and widespread" enough to be a county policy of deliberate indifference is provided by reports of a court monitor who found "pervasive and deep-seated failures" including staffs "unwillingness to respond to inmates' request for treatment, especially requests by female inmates," a pattern corroborated by PHS's own memoranda chastising the nurses. This evidence may also support liability of the corporation. The county sheriff could not be held liable under state law for malpractice. Neither the county nor the sheriff in his official capacity were "health care providers" who could be held liable for medical malpractice under state law. The nurses' conduct could subject them to liability for malpractice. Publications/Appointment of Counsel Powell v. Riveland, 991 F.Supp. 1249 (W.D.Wash. 1997). The prison system's policy prohibiting much sexually explicit material is upheld under the Turner standard based on evidence that sexual assault and consensual sex are a problem at the prison and that viewing pornography leads to aggressive and predatory behavior. The Spring/Summer 1999 defendants cite a "four-factor syndrome" common to men who view pornography: addiction, escalation, desensitization, and a tendency to act out the behaviors viewed in the pornography. The court specifically upholds the censorship of magazines called Swank and Fox. The court reiterates its refusal to appoint counsel in this case. NON-PRISON CASES Municipalities White-Ruiz v. City ofNew York, 983 F.Supp. 365 (S.D.N.Y. 1997). The plaintiff police officer is found after trial to have been subject to retaliation by unidentified police officers for having reported a corrupt act by another officer to departmental officials. The court concludes that the City is liable because the violation of the plaintiffs rights was caused by an unwritten Department policy "that sanctioned a 'custom or usage' by lower level officials and officers (1) to discourage reporting of corrupt acts by police officers and (2) to retaliate against officers who did bring such misconduct to the attention ofDepartment authorities." (391) The court relies mainly on the Mollen Commission report. Use of ForcelPersonal Involvement and Supervisory Liability Cunningham v. Gates, 989 F.Supp. 1256 (C.D.Cal. 1997). At 1261: The court does not regard the law to be settled that, The National Prison ProjectJOURNAL by falsifying police reports and giving peIjured corroborating testimony regarding the use of excessive force by others, officers become liable for the use of force itself The court also does not consider it to be settled law that such acts can make the officer liable to the plaintiffs for denial of the right to a fair trial, or for other deprivation of due process, until the trial is over, and the plaintiff has not prevailed. It is settled law, however, that if a group of officers agree that if and when some of them knowingly commit unlawful acts others will falsify records and testify falsely to cover up the truth of the relevant events, all of those involved are liable for the unlawful acts. An official is liable in his individual capacity if he "set[s] in motion a series of acts by others, or knowingly refused to terminate a series of acts by others, which he kn[e]w or reasonably should [have] know[n], would cause others to inflict constitutional injury." The allegation in this case is that members of the Special Investigative Services of the LAPD would identifY criminals by modus operandi, establish a stakeout, let them commit crimes despite having probable cause to arrest them beforehand, and then kill them. Use of Force/lndemnification Cunningham v. Gates, 989 F.Supp. 1262 (C.D.Cal. 1997). The court dismisses on qualified immunity grounds claims against the Mayor, but not against other defendants including police supervisory officials, city attorneys, and members of the City Council, for the alleged continuing refusal to do anything about the police "code of silence," and for the policy of accepting officers' versions of excessive force incidents despite more credible evidence to the contrary. The allegations against the attorney defendants include the failure to use information National Prison Project American Civil Liberties Union Foundation 1875 Connecticut Avenue, NW Suite 410 Washington, DC 20009 ~21 Spring/Summer 1999 generated in the course of civil rights litigation for disciplinary and other purposes and their insulation ofofficers from punitive damage awards by settling cases where such damages have been awarded or by advocating that the City Council pay the awards. The allegations against the Council members are of a policy of indemnification that perpetuates the use of excessive force. Service of Process Slavov v. Marriott International, Inc., 990 F.Supp. 566 (ND.I11. 1998). Apro se litigant is entitled to rely on the U. S. Marshals to serve process, and the fact that the Marshals took ten months to tell him that he needed to fill out another form constituted good cause for failure timely to serve process. John Boston is the Director ofthe Prisoners' Rights Project, Legal Aid Society ofNew York. Non-Profit. U.S. Postage PAID Permit No. 5248 Washington, DC