Thе intricacies attending the law of prisoners’ due process rights can confuse even the most experienced of lawyers. Little wonder then that Anselmo Soto, a prisoner acting pro se, struggled to assert the appropriate due proсess doctrine when he initiated this action against prison officials. Yet, Soto’s instinct that he may not have received the process that was due him was sound. And the facts he alleged clearly describe an actionable due process violation.
Perhaps misled by Soto’s inability to articulate pellucidly the strongest basis for his claim, the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York (Neal P. McCurn, Judge) adopted a Magistrate Judge’s report which found no due process violation in Soto’s allegations, and dismissed Soto’s complaint for failure to state a claim. Now aided by counsel, Soto appeals that judgment to this Court. Since Soto’s pro se submissions must be read liberally and he has alleged facts which indicate that his rights were violated, we reverse and remand.
BACKGROUND
On July 30, 1989, a corrections officer saw Soto, an inmate at the Auburn Correctional Facility, swallow an unknown substance during a pat frisk. As a result, Soto was confined to the prison hospital, where he was placеd under a drug watch and had his urine and feces collected.
Three misbehavior reports followed. The first, dated July 30, 1989, charged Soto with *171 being the subject of an investigation. This report was eventually dismissed because it failed to allege a violatiоn of a prison rule. The second, dated July 31, 1989, was filed after Soto’s urine tested positive for cannabi-noids, and it charged Soto with violating the prison rule prohibiting narcotics use. The third, dated August 1, 1989, was filed after marijuana was found in Soto’s feces. Like the second report, it charged Soto with violating the prison rule prohibiting narcotics use.
On July 31, 1989, as a result of the second misbehavior report, Soto was placed in “keeplock,” a “form of administrative segregation in which the inmate is confined to his cell, deprived of participation in normal prison routine, and denied contact with other inmates.”
Gittens v. LeFevre,
On August 14, 1989, prison officials began a Tier III hearing to address the substance of the charge in the third misbehavior report. Soto was found guilty and sentenced to a loss of privileges and to 90 days in keeplock. After an unsuccessful administrative appеal, Soto brought an Article 78 proceeding in state court. There he alleged that his August 14 hearing was held in violation of N.Y.Comp.Codes R. & Regs. (“N.Y.C.R.R.”) tit. 7, § 251-5.1(a) — which provides that a disciplinary hearing “must be commenced as soon as is reasonably practicable following the inmate’s initial confinement pending said ... hearing, but, in no event may it be commenced beyond seven days of said confinement. ...” The state court agreed that § 251-5.1(a) had been violated, and it ordered the annulment of Soto’s rule violation conviction and the removal of all references to it from Soto’s records.
Soto then filed a pro se complaint in the District Court against the corrections officer who conducted the August 14 hearing, the Superintendent of the Auburn 'Correctional Facility, аnd the Director of Inmate Discipline for the Department of Corrections. In this complaint, Soto clearly alleged a violation of his due process rights, but whether he primarily charged that his due process rights were violated becausе 7 N.Y.C.R.R. § 251-5.1(a) had been transgressed, or because he had not been given an informal hearing before or shortly after being put in keeplock, is less certain.
Magistrate Judge Ralph W. Smith, Jr., interpreted Soto’s complaint as based solely on the failure of prison officials to hold the Tier III hearing on the third report within the terms of 7 N.Y.C.R.R. § 251-5.1(a). Magistrate Judge Smith recognized that the defendants had violated § 251-5.1(a), but he concluded that such a violation of a state regulation standing alone did not establish a constitutional claim. Apparently realizing that due process requires that a formal disciplinary hearing be conducted “at a meaningful time and in a meaningful manner,”
Patterson v. Coughlin,
DISCUSSION
In
Hewitt v. Helms,
This Court has repeatedly held that, since 7 N.Y.C.R.R. § 251-1.6(a) specifies certain conditions that must be met to permit a prisoner’s placement in keeplock, New York’s regulations create a liberty interest for prisoners in remаining free from administrative confinement.
See Lowrance v. Achtyl,
Though Soto seems to have received notice of the charges against him (which prompted his transfer into administrative segregation), Soto’s submissions indicate that he was not afforded, “within a reasonable time,” either (1) an opportunity to present his views concerning his transfer, or (2) a review of the basis for his transfer. Indeed, it appears that Soto did not receive any process whatsoever until the Tier III hearing, addressing the substance of the second misbehavior report, was commenced on August 6, 1989 — a full seven days after his transfer into administrative сonfinement. At the August 6 hearing, moreover, Soto was denied any chance, formally or informally, to address the third misbehavior report (dated August 1,1989). The only hearing, formal or informal, on this report did not take place until the second Tier III hearing was bеgun on August 14, 1989 — fully fifteen days after Soto’s “administrative” segregation.
The failure to provide informal review procedures within even as short a time as seven days in connection with a transfer into administrative confinement states a due process claim.
See Russell,
Defendants do not seriously dispute Soto’s factual allegatiоns. But, stressing certain language in Soto’s submissions and the fact that his action names officials involved with the August 14 hearing, they maintain that Soto’s complaint must be read as basing a claim solely on the prison officials’ failure to conduct a formal Tier III hearing on the third misbehavior report within the time frame set by 7 N.Y.C.R.R. § 251-5.1(a). This, of course, was the ground on which the state court ultimately ordered the annulment of the charge in the third misbehavior report. But, as the Magistrate Judge properly noted, the violation оf 7 N.Y.C.R.R. § 251-5.1(a) alone would not be enough generally to establish a constitutional claim.
See Davis v. Scherer,
The issue, therefore, resolves itself to a simple one. Can we read Soto’s submissions as making the claim that his due process rights were violated because no informal hearings were held when he was placed in confinement, or must we read them as focusing only on the violation of 7 N.Y.C.R.R. § 251-5.1(a)?
The answer to this question is clear. Because Soto was acting
pro se, “we
read his supporting papers liberally, and will interрret them to raise the strongest arguments that they suggest.”
Burgos v. Hopkins,
CONCLUSION
Since Soto alleged facts that support a valid due process claim premised on Hewitt and its progeny, we reverse the District Court’s dismissal for failure to state a claim and remand for further proceedings.
Notes
. New York regulatory and case law provides that an inmate can be transferred into keeplock when a prison official reasonably believes a" prison rule has been violated.
See Bowe v. Smith,
. Soto’s submissions indicate that the charge of the second report was dismissed because prison officials failed to obtain an extension of time to conclude the August 6 hearing. Defendants do not explain why this procedural failure prompted the dismissal of the misconduct charge of the second report.
. The requirement that a prisoner receive, in connection with an initial transfer to administrative sеgregation, at least some notice and opportunity to be heard is distinct from and in addition to the requirement that a prisoner receive, in connection with the adjudication of misconduct charges that might result in punitive/disciplinaiy confinеment, the much more extensive procedural protections that are set forth in
Wolff v. McDonnell,
. The curious handling of Soto’s misbehavior charges and the 15-day delay before a hearing on the third misbehavior report might also ground a viable claim. By lodging multiplе misconduct charges against a prisoner based on a single incident, denying a request for a consolidated hearing, scheduling hearings sequentially with intervening delays, and confining a prisoner to administrative segregation until the completion of all hearings, prison officials create the basis for a charge that "administrative segregation [was] used as a pretext for indefinite confinement of an inmate."
Hewitt,
. To the extent that Soto’s claim does not name the most apрropriate parties, he should be permitted upon remand to amend his complaint to name the proper parties.
See Branum v. Clark,
