On December 31, 1974, defendant Gunter was appointed Superintendent of MCI Walpole, the commonwealth’s maximum security institution which for some years has been a scene of virtually continuous disruption. 1 His appointment followed by five days the murder of an inmate, the discovery of a cache of guns and ammunition and the consequent beginning of a lockup of the entire institution. In order to end the lockup and resume normal operations Gunter determined to survey the population and segregate potentially dangerous and disruptive inmates in the B wing. Inmates were notified on January 9 that they would be meeting with classification committees to review their current classification status and program needs in relation to their placement within the prison. 2 At the brief committee hearings inmates had no opportunity to hear or challenge adverse comments by committee members or record notations, which were discussed out of their presence. In making the actual housing assignments, defendants relied on personal knowledge and the inmates’ reputations as well as the survey reports prepared by the five classification committees. Gunter reviewed these reports after the assignments had been made, endorsing the notation “WC” (for “wrecking *1295 crew”) on the reports of those inmates thought by Butterworth and Waitkevich to be consistently involved in fomenting violence and disruption within the institution. On January 20 the new housing assignments were released and inmates were to be moved. Many forcibly resisted their transfers and caused extensive property damage. Plaintiffs were those taken to Block B-8, where near riot conditions prevailed for two and a half weeks until February 6.
Meanwhile, plaintiffs had filed suit on January 27 alleging the transfers deprived them of due process and seeking monetary and injunctive relief under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Their motion for a temporary restraining order was denied, and after a trial beginning on February 10 their complaints were dismissed on April 29. The court found that defendants correctly perceived the situation at Walpole as an emergency, requiring the immediate reorganization of the' entire institution. It found that the procedures employed in making the reassignments contravened defendants’ regulations and were seriously deficient, but that defendants had intended in good faith to devise an emergency plan for housing reassignment consistent with their estimate of the need for a speedy resolution of the crisis at Walpole, and that the shortcomings were excusable in the circumstances.
We turn to the now-familiar two-step inquiry: did the transfers cause plaintiffs grievous loss? If so, what procedures does due process require, balancing the state’s interest against those of the prisoner?
Gomes
v.
Travisono,
The court found the procedure employed violated defendants’ own regulations and was seriously deficient in not affording plaintiffs an opportunity to rebut or explain adverse aspects of their records or unfavorable comments by prison staff. 4 The court found, however, that defendants correctly perceived the situation at Walpole as an emergency requiring the immediate reorganization of the entire institution. In these circumstances, it concluded, defendants were justified in dispensing with normal due process requirements and deviating from even the emergency procedure embodied in their own regulations because they were inadequate to the circumstances. 5
The record supports these findings.
6
However, the passage of time may have altered the complexion of things and the court’s judgment of dismissal makes no provision for this. A decree in equity may speak as of its date.
Stonega Coke & Coal Co. v. Price,
While some process may therefore yet be due, the very magnitude of the emergency move and the probable continuance of a sensitive situation dictate a wide degree of discretion on the part of the district court on remand. As the court observed, the reclassification program is a continuing one. Presumably some plaintiffs have already been given the hearing. Others may be scheduled for hearing
9
in the near future. If it appears that there are some as to whom no such hearings are contemplated within a reasonable time, and no sufficient justification for such delay exists, the court will have the authority to deal with these cases. Where the hearings do not result in a determination that a reasonable basis existed for including an inmate in the mass transfer, the authorities should expunge the fact of transfer from that plaintiff’s record or at least include a notation that the determination had been made under emergency conditions not comporting with due process so that there should remain no continuing adverse impact by reason of the transfer on plaintiff’s opportunities for transfers, furloughs, or
*1298
parole.
See Preiser v. Newkirk,
Vacated and remanded.
Notes
. During 1974 the Norfolk County Grand Jury returned 48 indictments for assaults within the institution. There was a murder (fifteen during the past three years), five attempted murders, two suicides, one major disturbance, and a strike of correctional officers.
. The court below found:
“Five committees were formed for the purpose of carrying out the survey. The chairman of each committee was either a treatment director or chief social worker from another institution. The other members were one correction officer and one social worker, both from the Walpole staff. In general, the appointments were made so that the correction officer would have had personal knowledge of the inmates who were assigned to that particular committee. The function of the committee was to review the institutional file of each inmate, interview him and fill out a survey report for each inmate. The completed questionnaires were then reviewed by a committee consisting of [Deputy Superintendent] Berman and Deputy Superintendents Butterworth and Waitkevich, who then designated the general housing classification for each inmate with an ‘A’ or ‘B’ endorsed on the top of the report.”
. The court found:
“[T]he contemplated level of security in the ‘B’ wing, even assuming the most favorable projection described by Superintendent Gunter, is more stringent than it is in ‘Block A,’ or than it was in ‘Block B’ before the lock-up of December 26, 1974. In general, inmates assigned to the ‘B’ wing of the institution will not have the freedom of the institution nor will they mingle with the inmates of the ‘A’ wing. Meals will be served in the blocks and various rehabilitation and recreational programs will be offered in special areas in the ‘B’ section rather than in the school, library, shop arid other specialized areas available to inmates of the ‘A’ block. Visiting privileges are fewer, more circumscribed as to number of visitors and subject to prior approval by the administrative officers of the prison. The cells, recreational areas, eating facilities and visiting areas are less desirable than those available to inmates in the ‘A’ section. There is no privacy in the cells. An inmate assigned to the ‘B’ section is less likely to be considered for transfer to a medium security institution, for furloughs and for parole, than an inmate assigned to the ‘A’ section.”
At issue is not a simple loss of privileges but a significant modification of the overall conditions of confinement. See, e.
g., Fano v. Meachum,
. Defendants contend that affording plaintiffs a hearing would be a vacuous gesture inasmuch as there are no controverted issues of fact to be resolved. The provision for a hearing in defendants’ own reclassification regulations belies this contention, and the cases unanimously mandate that such a hearing be granted even in proceedings not triggered by any specific acts of misconduct but based on general assessments of the inmate’s record. See
Gomes v. Travisono, supra
at 541. See also
Catalano v. United States,
. Defendants’ regulations, D.O. 4400.2 § 4.2a(2), prescribe that in emergencies inmates undergoing reclassification may be placed in “awaiting action status” pending the reclassification, but do not permit reclassification without the normal panoply of procedural protections elsewhere .established by the regulations. Such a failure to follow established procedure, plaintiffs contend, itself violates due process.
See King v. Higgins,
. Plaintiffs question the existence of an emergency during the period when the reclassification occurred, observing that the record shows no incidents from the beginning of the lockup on December 26 until the beginning of the transfers on January 20. However, prison officials reacting in good faith to perceived emergency situations must not be unduly hindered by overbroad federal judicial scrutiny, on the basis of hindsight, of the factual basis underlying their actions.
Gomes v. Travisono, supra,
. The Department of Correction regulations do not set the frequency of classification review but leave it to the individual prison to establish a review policy. The frequency is to depend at least in part on the discretion of administrators in individual cases. Some of plaintiffs’ survey reports suggested review as soon as possible; others in January 1976; still others contained no recommendation at all.
Cf. La Batt v. Twomey,
. A total of 101 inmates out of a population of 570 were shifted into the more adverse conditions of B wing. The burden of affording them a classification hearing would not seem insurmountable considering that classification is an on-going process anyway as the court found.
. Since “[t]he primary responsibility for articulating standards of due process lies with those who have the most intimate knowledge of both the interests of the prisoners and the administrative burdens entailed with providing due process within [a] prison,” Palmigiano v. Baxter, supra at 1286, we deem it appropriate that such hearings, if ordered, conform to the procedures mandated by defendants’ own classification regulations.
