Ncpls Access Newsletter September 2002
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The Newsletter ofNOIth Carolina Prisoner Legal Services, Inc. NCPLS ACCESS IMPACT Credit: Department of Correction Acts Quickly to Comply with Ruling of State Supreme Court in Hearst By Mmwging Attorney Kar; L. Hamel & Senior Attomey SIIS"" H. Pollitt Since the establishment of the program, the time spent in Intensive Motivational Program of Alternative Correctional Treaunent (IMPACT) has been credited against tenns of imprisonment. Occasionally, either because of misunderstanding or oversight, an inmate would not receive credit against his sentence. In such cases, NCPLS could help to correct the problem by filing a Illotion for IMPACT credit on behalf of our clients. Those Illotions were routinely granted. In recent years, however, some judges reportedly denied IMPACT credit, which caused uncertainly in the law. With a recent decision of the North Carolina Supreme Court, there can no longer be any question thai inmates arc entitled to credit for time they spent at IMPACT. In State ofNorth Carolina v. William Amhony Hearst, No. 684PAOI (N.c. S.Ct., filed Aug. 16,2002), the Court nl1ed that a defendant whose suspended sentence was activated was entitled to credit under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 15-196.1 for time spent in the IMPACT program, reversing the lower court. The North Carolina COllrt of Appeals earlier mled against the inmate in the Hearst case, and consequently, new motions for IMPACT credit had to be delayed. Buncombe COllJlIY Assistant Public Defender William H. Leslie represented the inmate in his appeal to the State Supreme Court, and appearing as amicus curiae (friend of the court), NCPLS Attorneys Kari Hamel and Susan Pollitt supported Mr. Leslie in successfully arguing that the lower court decision in Hearst should be reversed. (COli/iI/lied 011 page 2) ns;iJe III;s.,s'"s"u"e":------..... MPACT Credit: Depurtmen/o! Correction Act.~ Quickly 10 Comply K'ith Ruling of State Supreme COlli in /fearst tktainers in Immigratifm Pmaedin.t:s :,4meri"an Correctional Association AdfJptS Sta"durd GOI'er"illg I"male Telepho"e Sen'ice.\ Vo",n, s Prison Cluss Action Sellted he Eq'fat Protection Clu'fse in tl,e Prisolt COn/ext J NCPLS ACCESS Page 2 (Continuedfrom page J) ACCESS is a publication ofNorth Carolina Prisoner Legal Services. Inc. Established in ]978. NCPLS is a non-profit. public service organization. The program is govemed by a Board of Directors who are designated by various organizations and institutions. including the North Carolina Bar Association, the North Carolina Association of Black Lawyers, the North Carolina Association of Women Attorneys, and law school deans at UNC, Duke, NCCU, Wake Foresl and Campbell. NCPLS serves a population of more than 33.500 prisoners and 10,000 prelrial delainees, providing infonnation and advice concerning legal rights and responsibilities, discoumging frivolous litigation, working toward administrative resolutions of legitimate problems. and providing repre~cntalion in all State and federal couns to ensure humane conditions of confinement and to challenge illegal convictions and sentences. Board of Direcfors Volume II, Issue 3, September 2002 IMPACT Credit Now that the Supreme Court has ruled that IMPACT credit must be applied, CPLS will continue to assist inmates in getting that credit. Because people who have been required to participate in the lMPACT program generally receive relatively short active sentences, IMPACT credit needs to be calculated and applied before or soon after admission to prison. Otherwise, the inmate may end up serving the entire sentence before legal proceedings and the administrative process can be completed. <In fact, with the cooperation of the DOC, NCPLS has already identified approximately 150 inmates who may be entitled to immediate release under the Hearst case.) Ln an effort to assist in identifying inmates who may be eligible for, but have not yet received IMPACT credit, the DOC agreed to supply NCPLS a list of all inmates who may be eligible for the credit. The DOC also agreed to post notices in prison facilities across thc state. That cooperation demonstrates the Department's commitment to comply with governing law, and it means that many inmates will be released who might otherwise have been confined beyond the tenn of incarceration lawfully imposed. If you spent time at IMPACT and you believe you were not provided credit against your activated sentence for that time, you should write to us at: NCPLS, P.O. Box 25397, Raleigh, IC 27611. Detainers in Immigration Proceedings By Senior AlTomey Kristin D. Parks President, Gary Presnell Senator Frank W. Ballance, Jr. Jim Blackburn James A. Crouch, Esq. Professor Grady Jessup Paul M. Green_ Esq. Barry Nakell. Esq. Susan Olive. Esq. Professor Micbelle Robertson Lou Ann Vincent, C.P.A. Professor Ronald F. Wright Professor Fred Williams ACCESS IS publisbed four times a year. Articles. ideas and suggestions are welcome and may be directed to fsanders@ncpls.org. Federal Immigration Court convenes about every two months at Raleigh's Central Prison. Inmales who have pending immigration detainers are brought to court for the disposition of those detainers. The purpose of the proceeding is to determine whether the inmate will be deported. Often, these inmates do not understand the nature of the proceeding or their legal rights. CPLS anorneys are on hand to answer their questions and explain their rights. Generally, once a person has been convicted of what is called an "aggravated felony" (which includes most crimes pllIUshable by more than one year of imprisonment) there is little that can be done to prevent deportation upon release from prison. The immigration laws treat people with criminal convictions harshly. Signed into law on April 24, 1996, the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act [Pub. L. 104-132, 110 Stat. 1214], eliminated many defenses to deportation that had previously been available to people convicted of criminal offenses. If the conviction itself is valid, then deportation is often unavoidable. (Upon request, NCPLS provides a legal opinion concerning the validity of (Continued 01/ page 4) NCPLS ACCESS Volume II, Issue 3, September 2002 Page 3 American Correctional Association Adopts STANDARD GOVERNING INMATE TELEPHONE SERVICES The American Correctional Association (ACA) is a national, multidisciplinary organization of professionals representing all levels and facets of corrections and criminal justice. ACA establishes standards governing correctional practices and operations, and accredits institutions that comply with those standards. The ACA Standards Committee is the body that promuJgates standards which reflect "best practices" for all types of correctional facilities. In early August of this year, the following standard was unanimously adopted by ACA's Standards Committee at the Congress of Correction in Anaheim, CA: "Written policy, procedure and practice ensure that inmates! juvenile offenders have access to reasonably priced telephone services. Correctional agencies should ensure that: A. Contracts involving telephone services for inmates/juvenile offenders comply with all appli· cable state and federal regulations; B. Contracts are based on rates and surcharges that are commensurate with those charged to the general public for like services. Any deviation from ordinary consumer rates should reflect actual costs associated with the provision of services in a correctional setting; and C. Contracts for inmate/juvenile offender telephone services provide the broadest range of calling options determined by the agency administrator to be consistent with the requirements of sound correctional management. COMMENT When procuring and renewing telephone serices, correctional officials should inquire into the reasons for proposed deviations from standard charges and seek the best possible rates for the broadest possible range of calling options detennined to be consistent with sound correctional management. Toll-free calling and pre-paid or debit calling are among options that should be explored." The adoption of this standard concluded deliberations that extended for almost four years. But, although this standard represents the considered judgement of correctional professionals regarding best practices governing inmate telephone services, it is binding only on those facilities and systems that are accredited by ACA. None of North Carolina's adult correctional facilities are accredited by ACA, but ACA standards may provide a persuasive reference [0 officials who consider renewing the contract for inmate telephone services. [Editorial Note: NCPLS's Executive Director serves as a member of ACA's Standards Committee and was the proponent of the standard described in this article.] NCPLS ACCESS Page 4 Detainers (Continuedfrom page 2j criminal convictions to people in custody of the state of North Carolina, as well as legal representation in challenges to invalid or illegal convictions or sentences.) Reccntly, however, NCPLS attorneys Wendy Greene and Kristin Parks were successful in proving that a client from Guyana was eligible for derivative United States citizenship through his mother. Proof of citizenship is often difficult to obtain, but if it can be proven, it is a defense to deportation. In proving the case, NCPLS gathered original documents, including birth certificates, death certificates, and the client's mothcr's naturalization records. These materials were presentcd to the INS District Counsel. Bccausc the client's mother had become a naturalized citizen before the client twned 18 years old, and because his father had died before our client came to the United States, the client was eligible for United States citizenship through his mother. The District Counsel agreed, and the Immigration Judge issued an Order tenninating the removal proceedings against the client. In the Matter ofPersaud. Volume II, Issue 3, September 2002 Women's Prison Class Action Settled By Senior Attomeys Linda B. Weisel & Susan H Pollitt After five years oflitigation, parties to a class action lawsuit have reached a settlement in Thebaud ~ Jarvis, 5:97-CT-463-BO(3) (E.D.N.C. 1997). Filed on June 10,1997, on behalf of all women confined at the North Carolina Correctional Institution for Women (NCCIW), the complaint alleged serious deficiencies in the delivery of health care services to about 30 women and included allegations of life-threatening prescriptions for contra-indicated medication, systemic breakdowns in continuity of care, and deliberate indifference to the serious medical needs of inmates in violation of the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. On December 16,1997, thc Court certified the case as a class action. Following the favorable resolution of summary judgment proceedings, there was an extended period of investigation and discovery, which included the evaluation of thouands of documents and more than 30 depositions. That infonnation, together with the assessments of medical experts hired by the parties, provided the basis for settlement negotiations. The talks resulted in a "Joint Resolution," which was approved by Chief District Court Judge Terrence Boyle of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina, on July 8, 2002. The Joint Resolution requires the following: - The Defendants agree to use their best efforts to maintain the improvements in the health care system at NCCIW that have bccn accomplished during the course of the litigation. Among other commitments, Defendants have agreed: • to continue to seek money for the expansion of the medical and mental health facilities at NCCIW; • to continue to notify inmates of positive or negative HIV tests and other positive test results; and • to continue to use best efforts to retain accreditation by the National Commission for Correctional Health Care. The Defendants will also continuc to conduct Quality Improvement Reviews that include assessments of the timeliness of treatment, the chronic care program, medication administration, the accuracy of medical charts, and follow-up of abnonnal mammograms and pap smears. The Defendants also agree: • to modify medical OPUS to automatically schedule annual callbacks for pap smears and screening mammograms starting at age 50; • to maintain a secure board outside the dining hall listing all medical and mental health appointments; (Continued on page 7) PageS NCPLS ACCESS Volume II, Issue 3, September 2002 The Equal Protection Clause in the Prison Context By StaffAttorney Ken BUller The United States Federal Courthouse, Raleigh. NC The Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution provides that "no State shall ... deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws." U.S. Const. Amend. XIV, §§ I. The Equal Protection Clause is applied in connection with the ways governments make classifications among the population. This docs not mean that governments are prevented from making any types of classifications, but instead that decisiomnakers are prevented from "treating differently persons who are in all relevant respects alike." Nordlinger v. Hahn, 505 U.S. 1 (1992). An equal protection claim requires an inmate to "first demonstrate that he has been treated differently from others with whom he is similarly situated and that the unequal treatment was the result of intentional or purposeful discrimination." Morrison v. Garraghty, 239 F.3d 648, 654 (4th Cir. 2001). Thus, it is not enough that an action has had the effect oftreating groups of inmates differently. See Arlington Heights v. Metropolitan HallS. Dev. Corp., 429 U.S. 252, 265 (1977). Furthermore, it requires more than a prisoner's personal belief that he has been the victim of intentional discrimination. See Chapman v. Reynolds, 378 FSupp. 1137, 1140 (W.O. Va. I 974)(absent some evidence, the court will not look behind the decisions of prison officials on the mere allegation that they are racially motivated). Just because there has been an intentionally drawn distinction does not automatically mean that there has been a constitutional violation. The courts must decide whether the difference in treatment is a permissible one. Courts can view such classifications in one of three ways. In most cases, a statute, regulation, or policy is presumed to be valid and will be upheld if it is shown to be "rationally related to a legitimate state interest." See City ofCleburne v. Cleburne Living Or., Inc., 473 U.S. 432, 440 (1985). However, the courts give strict scrutiny to claims that concern discrimination based on either "suspect classifications" or "fundamental rights," including those made on the basis (Continued on page 6) Page 6 NCPLS ACCESS Volume]], Issue 3, September 2002 The Equal Protection Clause in the Prison Context (Continuedfrom page 5) of racc or national origin. These classifications will only be upheld if they arc narrowly tailored to serve a compelling state interst. Id., 473 U.S. at 440. Prison inmates are not a "suspect class" for equal protection purposes. Roller v. Gunn, 107 F.3d 227 (4th Cir. 1997) (noting that neither being a prisoner, nor being indigent, constitutes a suspect class for equal protection purposes). Some classifications (such as gender) have been afforded an intennediate level of scrutiny, where the classification "must serve important governmental objectives and must be substantially related to achievement of those objectives." Craig v. Boren, 429 U.S. 190, 197 (1976). This analysis applies to equal protection claims outside the prison context. However, inside the prison walls, additional factors arc considered. In Turner v. Safley, 482 U.S. 78 (1987), the Supreme Court held that a prison regulation that infringed upon inmates' constitutional rights would be upheld if it were shown to be reasonably related to a legitimate penological interest. The Fourth Circuit Court ofAppeals recently observed that prison officials must have the necessary discretion to operate prisons in a safe and secure manner and that: "In a prison context, therefore, we must detennine whether the disparate treatment is reasonably related to any legitimate penological interests. We apply this deferential standard even when the alleged infringed constitutional right would otherwise warrant higher scrutiny." Veney v. Wyche, 293 F.3d 726, 732 (4th Cir. 2002) (internal citations and quotations omitted). Veney applied the Turner standard to find that the prison authorities did not violate a homosexual inmate's right to equal protection by denying his request to be switched to a double occupancy cell. The Fourth Circuit has also upheld the decision of prison administrators which identified the "Five Percenters" as a security threat group and assigned them to long tenn administrative segregation or maximum control cells. In re: Long Term Administrative Segregation ofInmates Identified as Five Percenters, 174 F.3d 464 (4th Cir.), cert. denied, 528 U.S. 874 (1999). The court observed that the Constitution does not require that all inmate groups be treated as equal when differentiation is necessary to maintain prison security. In Morrison v. Garragty, 239 F.3d 648 (4th Cir. 2001), however, the Fourth Circuit struck do\V11 a regulation that required inmates seeking to possess Native American religious items to demonstrate that they were, in fact, Native Americans. This regulation, which distin,bJUished inmates solely on the basis of their race, could not withstand an equal protection challenge where the officials had not demonstrated that the requested religious items posed any less of a security threat in the hands of a Native American inmate. As you can see, equal protection claims in the prison context present certain inherent difficulties. The immediate problem is proving intentional discrimination. Many complaints concerning discrimination arise out of isolated decisions of prison officials. These include matters such as classification, job assignments, recreation issues, and similar issues. It is often easier to show discrimination where there is an established policy or regulation which applies to a large number of inmates. The second problem is the deference that such decisions receive from the courts. In matters that do not Concern race, gender or national origin, the courts apply the rational basis standard of review. Given the realities of prison life, it is often easy for prison officials to justifY a particular policy or decision. Even where strict scrutiny would nonnally apply, a violation will not be found if the particular distinction is validly related to a legitimate prison interest, such as security. Basically, the inmate will be required to show that the discrimination in question is either wholly arbitrary, or that there is a complete absence of relationship between the policy and the goal that it is alleged to promote. An inmate who believes that he or she has been the subject of improper discrimination may write to NCPLS for a review of the particular claim. However, it is a useful first step for the inmate to file a grievance. That process helps to establish the facts and aids in the investigative process. Additionally, federal civil rights laws require exhaustion of all available administrative remedies as a prerequisite to the institution of a lawsuit. See, for example, 42 U.S.c. §1997e(a). Volume U, Issue 3, September 2002 TCPLS ACCESS Page 7 Women's Prison Class Action Settled (Continuedfrom page 4) ,vorth Carolina Correctional Institutionfor Women (NCCIW), Raleigh. NC • to notify inmates affimlatively of negative test results (indicating I.here is no problem) for mammograms, pap smears, biopsies. and matters of comparable magnitude; • to maintain a system for inmates to notify the Health Treatment Administrator in writing of per~ ceived delays in follow~up treatment after a 60-day period has passed. In recognition of the improvements and the commitments Defendants have undertaken, Counsel for the Plaintiff Class. in consultation with I.he class representatives, will dismiss the case on July 8, 2003, unless there is objectively reasonable evidence that the Defendants have failed or refused to use their best efforts to maintain the accomplisbments or implement any material component of the Joint Resolution. During the monitoring period, Counsel for Plaintiffs will be able to inspect and copy appropriate and relevant documctlts. If the parties are unable to agree about any material component of the Resolution at the end of this period, Counsel for Plaintiffs may ask the Court to resolve the matter. NCPLS Senior Anomeys Linda Weisel and Susan Poll in, Counsel for the Plaintiff Class, are actively monitoring compliance wlth the Joillt Resolution and will evaluate Defendants' efforts to maintain the improvements and fulfill their obligations. All women who are confined at NeCIW are members of the plaintiff class. Class members can obtain a copy of the Joint Resolution by directing a written request to the attention of Linda Weisel or Susan Pollitt at NCPLS. THE NEWSLETTER OF NORTH CAROLINA PRISONER LEGAL SERVICES, INC. 224 S. Dawson Street PO Box 25397 Raleigh, NC 27611 Phone: (919) 856-2200 Fax: (919) 856-2223 Email: tsanders@ncpls.org Visit our website at: "f,ttp://www.ncpls.org