Lead Opinion
Judge Pooler concurs in part and dissents in part in a separate opinion.
' Defendants-appellants Lynn Milling, Brian Griggs and Jason Cahill (collectively, “Defendants”) appeal from a judgment entered in favor of plaintiff-appellee Almighty Supreme Born Allah (“Allah”) in the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut (William I. Garfink-el, Magistrate Judge). Following a two-day bench trial, the district court ruled that Allah’s . due .process rights were violated when prison officials assigned Allah, who
BACKGROUND
The facts as found by the district court are not in dispute, see Almighty Supreme Bom Allah v. Milling, No. 11 Civ. 668,
I. Factual Background
A. The Inmate Classification Process
During the relevant time period, Allah was an inmate in the custody of the State of Connecticut Department of Correction (“DOC”). Pursuant to DOC administrative directive, each inmate is assigned to a DOC facility through a “classification process,” id. at *1, the goal of which is to place inmates in a facility appropriate for their individual needs while accounting for the security risk they pose. As part of the classification process, inmates are assigned an “overall risk score” of one (low risk) to five (high risk), id., calculated on the basis of certain risk factors, including the severity or violence of the inmate’s current offense, any history of escape or violence, and the inmate’s disciplinary history.
An inmate’s overall risk score can determine whether he or she is placed in Administrative Detention or Administrative Segregation, which are, as described in more detail below, “restrictive housing .status[es]” in DOC facilities that “provide[] for closely regulated [inmate] ■ management” and physical separation from the general prison population. A.. 82. Pursuant to DOC administrative directive, inmates who receive an overall risk score of five are placed in Administrative Segregation. In addition, and central to this case, if an inmate re-enters DOC custody after having been released from a prior term of incarceration with an overall risk score of five, the inmate is automatically placed in Administrative Detention upon re-entry pursuant to DOC administrative directive, pending a determination within 15 days of whether Administrative Segregation should be continued. If a continuance is recommended, a “classification hearing” must be held within 30 days, at which a hearing officer is required to “examin[e] evidence to support the classification, including statements by the inmate and/or any witnesses.” Allah,
DOC administrative' directives leave discretion to prison officials to discontinue Administrative Segregation for inmates who re-enter DOC custody after being released from a prior term of incarceration with an overall risk score of five. But the district court found, on the basis of Defendants’ testimony at trial, that placement in Administrative Segregation “will continue” for such inmates except in specific circumstances: where the inmate was close to completing all three phases of the Administrative Segregation program or had been' released from DOC custody more than five years before re-entry. Id. at *5, In such cases, the inmate “might not be continued in Administrative Segregation.” Id.
In December 2009, after being sentenced to 27 months’ imprisonment for violating probation, Allah was in DOC custody as a post-conviction prisoner with an overall risk score of three and was incarcerated at Carl Robinson Correctional Institution, a medium-security “open campus dormitory-style facility.” Id. at *4. On December 22, 2009, Allah and approximately fifty other inmates were standing near a control station waiting for a commissary visit when they were told that the visit would be delayed. Allah asked the correctional officer in the control station if he could speak to a lieutenant about the delay—a request that was apparently perceived, in the context of a facility with a history of riots, as an attempt to incite other inmates to protest the delay. In response, a lieutenant was called to the scene with prison staff and dogs, and Allah later received a disciplinary report charging him with “Impeding Order,” id., to which he pled guilty. Thereafter, following a hearing, 'Allah’s overall risk score was increased to five, and on February 11, 2010, he was placed in Administrative Segregation, where he remained until his release from DOC custody on March 25, 2010.
Allah does not challenge his placement in Administrative Segregation, as a post-conviction prisoner, on that occasion.
C. Allah’s Subsequent Arrest and Return to Administrative Segregation
Following his release, Allah was arrested on new drug-related offenses and returned to DOC custody as a pre-trial detainee on September 13, 2010. Consistent with the classification procedures described above, Allah was placed in Administrative Detention upon re-entry and transferred to Northern Correctional Institution (“Northern”), a maximum-security facility, pending a classification hearing to determine whether he should be reassigned to Administrative Segregation. On September 23, 2010, Allah received written notice of the hearing, which stated in relevant part as follows: “According to the DOC Classification Manual, any inmate who discharges while on Administrative Segregation (A/S) shall be re-admitted at that status. You were placed on A/S on 02/08/10. Since that time you discharged and returned to the DOC without completing the program.” A. 109.
Plaintiffs classification hearing was held on September 30, 2010. The hearing, officer, Defendant Griggs, explained to Allah that he was being considered for placement in Administrative Segregation because he had been discharged from a prior term of incarceration while on that status. Hearing records prepared by prison officials note that Allah stated at the hearing that “[he] was in Phase One,” A. 106, ostensibly referring to the fact that Allah was in the first of the thi-ee phases of Administrative Segregation when released from his prior term of incarceration.
On October ' 4, 2010, Griggs recommended that Allah be placed in Administrative Segregation, reasoning in relevant part as follows:
Summary of placement rationale: According to the DOC Classification Manual, any inmate who' discharges while on Administrative Segregation (A/S) shall be re-admitted at that status. I/M Allah was placed on A/S on 02/08/10. Since that time he discharged and returned to the DOC without completing the program. . .•.
Reason(s) for recommendation: Inmate Allah did not complete the program, therefore, he needs [to] continue in Administrative Segregation placement tocomplete program requirements prior to being placed in general population.
A. 106-07. Defendant Milling, in her capacity as Director of Offender Classification and Population Management, authorized the placement the same day, writing on the approval form, “Continue in A.S. program Phase TBD by facility.” A. 107..
D. Administrative Segregation at Northern
As a result of the classification process described above, Allah was placed in Administrative Segregation at Northern while a pretrial detainee from October 4, 2010 to September 26, 2011.
During Phases II and III, which generally last around three months each, some of those restrictions are relaxed, see id. at *2-*3 (describing the differences between Phases I, II and III), and inmates complete “programming” called “Thinking for a Change” that is designed to improve their anger management and coping skills, id. at *4. That programming is completed in a group setting, which allows inmates to gradually'increase their' interaction ’ with others as they progress through Phases II and III of Administrative Segregation, thereby facilitating their return to the general prison population. Progression through the phases of Administrative Segregation is contingent on “successful completion of the prior phase.” Id. at *2.
Allah began Phase I of Administrative Segregation on October 4, 2010 and was alone in his cell for approximately 23 hours a day during the placement. Because inmates are not permitted to walk to the shower area naked and must wear leg irons while showering during Phase I, Allah had to shower in his underwear and
On December 13,2010, Allah was recommended for Phase II of Administrative Segregation but refused to sign a “progression document” setting forth the expectations of inmates in Phase II because he did not want to consent to the placement and felt that he should not be in Administrative Segregation as a pretrial detainee. Id. at *6. He later consented to progression to Phase II because it would allow him 'additional’contact'with his family, and on April 27, 2011, Allah progressed to Phase II. Approximately four months later, Allah progressed to Phase III and completed that phase on November 3, 2011, at which point he was transferred to Cheshire Correctional Institute and taken out qf Administrative Segregation,
At trial, Allah testified that his placement ■ in Administrative Segregation strained .his relationship with his family because it was difficult for his wife to travel to Northern and because he did not want his four-year old daughter to see him in restraints during visits. Allah also testified that while in Administrative Segregation, he “rarely slept,” “lost weight,” “always rested in such a way where he could ‘get up immediately’ if necessary to protect himself,” and felt - paranoid and “always ... on guard and on edge.” Id. at *7. Those feelings of paranoia persisted even after Allah’s release from DOC custody.
II. Procedural History
In April 2011, while in Phase I of Administrative Segregation, Allah brought suit against Defendants in the district court pursuant to 42 U.S.C: §" 1983, asserting that prison officials violated his due process rights when they placed him in Administrative Segregation in October 2010 while a pretrial detainee. In December 2015, the district court held a two-day bench trial at which Allah and all three Defendants testified. Thereafter, the district court issued a written opinion ruling that Defendants had violated Plaintiffs due process rights and rejecting Defendants’ claims that they were entitled to qualified immunity. The district court entered judgment in favor of Allah and awarded him $62,650 in compensatory damages. This timely appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
On appeal, Defendants challenge the district court’s determination that Allah’s due process rights were violated when he was placed in Administrative Segregation in October 2010 while a pretrial detainee; Defendants' also challenge the district court’s ruling that they were not entitled to qualified immunity.
I. Allah’s Due Process Claim
“[U]nder the Due Process Clause, a detainee may not be punished prior to an adjudication of guilt in accordance 'with due process of law.” Bell v. Wolfish,
In many cases, a pretrial detainee’s placement iñ a restrictive housing status like Administrative Segregation may be determined to be reasonably related to legitimate governmental purposes. In Wolfish, the Supreme Court recognized that the government has a legitimate interest in thé security of prisons, and that prison officials should be afforded deference “in the adoption and execution of policies and practices ... needed to preserve internal order and discipline and to maintain institutional security?’ Wolfish,
Here, the district court found no such evidence. Prison officials did not, for example, make an “individualized or specific finding of the risk Allah may have presented in the fall of 2010,” or any “real determination ... [or] individualized assessment ] that Administrative Segregation was appropriate for Allah” during that time period. Allah,
On those findings of fact, which Defendants do not squarely challenge and in which we find no clear error, we agree with the district court that Allah’s substantive due process rights were violated when he was assigned to Administrative Segregation in October 2010 while a pretrial detainee. Although prison officials are to be afforded deference in matters of institutional security, such deference does not reheve officials from the requirements of due process or permit them to institute restrictive measures on pretrial detainees that are not reasonably related to legitimate governmental purposes. See Wolfish,
That practice may serve as a useful rule of thumb for determining when an inmate who has previously been identified as a security risk is sufficiently rehabilitated, such that prison officials may want to consider whether he or she should re-enter the general prison population. We do not quarrel with the proposition that such rules of thumb may often be appropriate in guiding the many day-to-day decisions that prison officials must make to safeguard institutional security. But when such rules of thumb are appliéd inflexibly to justify severe restrictions on pretrial detainees at the expense of any meaningful consideration of whether those restrictions are justified by a legitimate governmental purpose, due process concerns come into play. Here, prison officials adhered reflexively to a practice that did not allow for individualized consideration of Allah’s circumstances and that required him to be placed in Administrative Segregation regardless of his actual threat, if any, to institutional security. On that basis, Allah was isolated in his cell for up to 23 hours a day; required for months to wear restraints whenever out of his cell, including when showering; allowed very limited opportunities to see his family; and subjected to the numerous other restrictions described above.
Defendants argued before this Court and the district court that they justifiably placed Allah in Administrative Segregation because his prior disciplinary record warranted that placement as a special security measure. We reject the factual premise of that argument, see supra note 4, and conclude that Allah’s placement in Administrative Segregation violated due process because the placement was not based on any concern about institutional safety, but simply on Allah’s prior assignment to (and failure to complete) Administrative Segregation during a prior term of incarceration. We note, however, that even had Defendants adequately considered Allah’s disciplinary history, it is not clear that Allah’s placement would be constitutional. Under Wolfish, a restriction related to a legitimate goal such as institutional security will still be punitive if it is excessively harsh.
loading a detainee with chains and shackles and throwing him in a dungeon may ensure his presence at trial andpreserve the security of the institution. But it would be difficult to conceive of a situation where conditions so harsh, employed to achieve objectives that could be accomplished in so many alternative and less harsh methods, would not support a conclusion that the purpose for which they were imposed was to punish.
Id. at 539 n.20,
Here, Defendants have failed to show how certain aspects of Allah’s confinement during Phase I of Administrative Segregation were reasonably related to the ostensible goal of prison security. For instance, Defendants have not adequately explained how limiting Allah to a single, 15-minute phone call and a single, 30-minute, non-contact visit with an immediate family member per week, allowing him to keep only five pieces of mail in his cell, or permitting him to keep a radio but not a television, related to any security risk suggested by his disciplinary record. Similarly, other aspects of Allah’s confinement during Phase I, although plausibly related to security concerns in general, were so excessively harsh as to be punitive. Allah was kept in solitary confinement for 23 hours a day for almost seven months. During that time, he was forced to showér in leg irons and wet underwear. He received “absolutely no programming or counseling or therapy” during that period. Allah,
To be sure, we have upheld the placement of pretrial détainees in Administrative Segregation in the past, including for purposes of the detainees’ protection. See Cabral,
Under the circumstances of this case, prison officials’ October 2010 placement of Allah in Administrative Segregation cannot be said to be reasonably related to institutional security, and Defendants have idem tified no other legitimate governmental purpose justifying the placement. Accordingly, we conclude that the district court “permissibly .., inferred] that the purpose of the governmental action [was] punishment that may not constitutionally be inflicted upon detainees qua detáinees.” Wolfish,
II. Qualified Immunity
Having decided that Allah’s substantive due process rights were violated, we nonetheless conclude that Defendants are entitled to qualified immunity.
Allah argues, and the district court concluded below, that Defendants are not entitled to qualified immunity because Wolfish and its progeny clearly established the “right to be free from punishment before guilt” under substantive due process, Ap-pellee Br. 30, and prison officials therefore should have understood that assigning. Allah to Administrative Segregation solely on the basis of his prior assignment to that program violated his constitutional rights. Allah’s argument, however, sets the qualified immunity analysis at an impermissibly “high level of generality.” Al-Kidd,
We agree that Wolfish and its progeny put prison officials on notice that pretrial detainees have a substantive due process right not to be subjected to restrictions amounting to punishment. But just as “[t]he general proposition, for example, that an unreasonable search or seizure violates the Fourth Amendment is of little help in determining whether the vio-lative nature of particular conduct is clearly established,” Al-Kidd,
As noted above, in assigning Allah to Administrative Segregation, Defendants were following an established DOC practice. No prior decision of the Supreme Court or of this Court (or, so far ás we are aware, of any -other court) has assessed the constitutionality of that particular practice. Moreover, neither Wolfish nor any' subsequent decision has prohibited the confinement of -pretrial detainees under the conditions imposed here if those conditions are imposed upon an individualized finding that a particular detainee poses a threat to security.
Accordingly, we conclude that Defendants were entitled to qualified immunity and cannot be held liable for civil damages for violating Allah’s substantive due process rights.
CONCLUSION
' For the foregoing reasons, we REVERSE the judgment of the district court, and direct the entry of a judgment in favor of Defendants.
Notes
. On September 26, 2011, Allah became a post-conviction prisoner after pleading guilty to the charges for which he was arrested in September 2010. On November 3, 2011, having completed Phase III of the Administrative Segregation'program, he was transferred to Cheshire Correctional Institute and released from Administrative Segregation, and on May 30, 2012, he was released from DOC custody. Allah does not challenge his placement in Administrative Segregation during his time as a post-conviction prisoner.
. Defense counsel suggests in passing that . Defendant Cahill was not involved in the decision to place Allah in Administrative Segregation, but does not squarely argue that the district court erred in determining that Cahill had the requisite personal involvement for liability under § 1983. See Wright v. Smith,
. Claims under the Wolfish framework concern a pretrial detainee’s substantive due process rights. See Wolfish,
. Defendants’ primary argument on appeal attempts to duck the district court's findings of fact. Specifically, without challenging the relevant findings of fact for clear error, Defendants assert that Allah’s October 2010 placement in Administrative Segregation was based on Allah’s involvement in the December 2009 incident, and thus stemmed from concerns about Allah’s continuing threat to institutional security. The district court acknowledged that Griggs and Milling testified at trial that they had reviewed paperwork relating to the December 2009 incident in the course of determining that Allah should be reassigned to Administrative Segregation in October 2010, but it found, nevertheless, that the decision was based solely on the fact of Allah’s prior placement in (and failure to complete) Administrative Segregation during his prior term of incarceration. Allah,
. Although Griggs’ October 4, 2010 recommendation suggests that the practice of continuing Administrative Segregation was based on guidance in the "DOC Classification Manual,” Allah,
. It bears emphasis that this holding is rooted in Allah's status upon his readmission to DOC custody in September 2010, as a pretrial detainee. We have no occasion to assess the constitutionality of the practice of automatic assignment to Administrative Segregation as applied to inmates who are returned to DOC custody as post-conviction prisoners, and express no view on that subject. -
. For these reasons, we respectfully disagree with our dissenting colleague's view that Wolfish alone was sufficient ■ to put prison authorities on notice that the conditions applied to Allah, based on an aspect of his particular prior history at the institution, violated the Constitution. Wolfish suggested that certain generalized conditions at a detention facility, applied indiscriminately to every de-táinee, might be so severe that they could only be regarded as punitive, and not as mere incidents of confinement so as to assure the detainées’ presence at trial.
Concurrence in Part
concurring in part, dissenting in part, and dissenting from the judgment:
I concur with the majority’s holding that Allah’s constitutional rights were violated when prison officials failed to consider whether he posed a risk to the institution before placing him in extended solitary confinement. I would , additionally • hold, however,- that the restraints imposed in this case were unconstitutional as a response to the minimal infraction Allah committed. And I would not afford the defendants qualified immunity for having imposed the restraints.'
⅜? #
We must remember that Allah’s misdeed in this case was the asking of a single question. As the district court found,- and as defendants do not dispute, “Allah was standing with approximately fifty other inmates in his dormitory” on December 22 ;.., as they were “awaiting their turn to visit the commissary to purchase items that are sold only during the holiday season.” Almighty Supreme Born Allah v. Milling, No. 3:11cv668,
The defendant officials do not explain how Allah’s seemingly minor request led to disorder or a breakdown of security. The officials state, vaguely, that Allah “created a significant disturbance,” and “incited” a “protest.” Appellant’s Opening' Br. at 3. But defendants do not say any protest took place. Nor do they explain how Allah’s
For this conduct, defendants placed Allah in solitary confinement for more than a year, spread across two terms of incarceration. During part of that time, he was a pretrial detainee, which means that any restraints imposed upon him must be evaluated in light of Bell v. Wolfish,
In Wolfish, the Supreme Court explained that “the proper inquiry” for whether conditions may be imposed upon a pretrial detainee “is whether those conditions amount to punishment of the detainee.” Id. at 535,
The Supreme Court provided the following guidance for determining whether a condition imposed upon pretrial detainees amounted to unconstitutional punishment:
A court must decide whether the [condition] is imposed for the purpose of punishment or whether it is but an incident of some other legitimate governmental purpose. Absent a showing of an expressed intent to punish on the part’ of detention facility officials, that determination generally will turn on [1] whether an alternative purpose to which the restriction may rationally be connected is assignable for it, and [2] whether it appears excessive in relation to the alternative purpose assigned to it. Thus, if a particular condition or restriction of pretrial detention is reasonably related to a legitimate governmental objective, it does not, without more, amount to punishment. Conversely, if a restriction or condition is not reasonably related to a legitimate goal—if it is arbitrary or purposeless—a court permissibly may infer that the purpose of the governmental-action is punishment that may not constitutionally be inflicted upon detainees qua detainees.
Id. at 538-39,
The Supreme Court provided an illustration of this test, describing a scenario in which certain conditions are related to non-punitive purposes, but would nevertheless be disproportionate means of achieving those purposes:
[Ljoading a detainee with chains and shackles and throwing him in a dungeon may ensure his presence at trial and preserve the security of the institution. But it would be difficult to conceive of a situation where conditions so harsh, employed to achieve objectives that could be accomplished in so many alternative and less harsh methods, would not support a conclusion that the purpose for which they were imposed was to punish.
Id. at 539 n.20,
Several of the conditions in this cáse do not pass the test articulated in Wolfish,
Similarly, there is no good argument that Allah’s asking of a single question justifies more than a year of solitary confinement, mu.ch of it under, oppressive conditions. Dist. Ct. Op. at *3, *4-7. For many months during his time as a pretrial detainee, Allah spent twenty-three hours per day alone in his cell. Id. at *6. He was required to wear leg irons, and shackles behind his back, when he exited. Id. at *6. The leg irons stayed on even' when he showered. Id. at *6. He had few visits'with family, few phone calls, and few other privileges. Id. at *3.
I do not see how these conditions were materially different from “loading [him] with chains and shackles and throwing him in a dungeon.” Wolfish,
The majority’s analysis of this case is that Allah’s treatment was unconstitutional, but not because it was excessive in light of his minor infraction. The majority believes that Allah was put into Administrative Segregation only due to the policy of automatically placing detainees in Administrative Segregation as a result of their previous placement there. See Op. at 58 n.6. It appears, however, that the district court addressed this policy only because the court viewed the defendants’ principal justification for the restraints—i.e., their security concerns—as obviously wanting. See Dist. Ct. Op. at *9. Moreover, on appeal, defendants have primarily argued that they correctly placed Allah within Administrative Segregation because “he was a threat to safety and security,” Appellants’ Opening Br, at 13, 15, 20, 27. Nevertheless, the majority holds that the treatment was unlawful because it was based on the policy of automatically placing detainees in Administrative Segregation as a. result of their previous placement in that program.
Even if the majority is correct that Allah was punished based on that,policy, I would still deny the officials qualified immunity. As the majority notes, and as I agree, the policy “was not reasonably related to any legitimate government interest” at all. Op. at 58 n.6. Wolfish squarely stated that officials must have a very significant justification for “loading a [pretrial] detainee with chains and shackles and throwing him in a dungeon.”
In light of the similarity of Allah’s conditions to the Supreme Court’s example in Wolfish, and in light of the lack of legitimate
