This is yet another in a long line of cases evaluating when the procedural protections of the Due Process Clause attach to disciplinary hearings in New York State prisons. Because the plaintiff put forward sufficient evidence in resisting the defendants’ motion for summary judgment that would allow a reasonable jury to find that the punishment imposed as a result of his disciplinary hearing violated his liberty interests, and because the defendant failed to show that those liberty interests were not clearly established, we conclude that the district court (Baer, J.) properly denied the defendant’s motion for summary judgment on the basis of qualified immunity.
BACKGROUND
This case arises from a dispute between a New York State prisoner, plaintiff-appel-lee Anthony Palmer, and a corrections officer, defendant Ronald Goss. Following a physical altercation between Palmer and Goss at the Sing Sing Correctional Facility — the substance of which is not before us, but the conflicting accounts of which can be found in the opinion and order of the district court,
Palmer v. Goss,
No. 02 Civ. 5804(HB),
In the process of appealing Richards’s decision, Palmer realized that a portion of the tape of the hearing — containing the. purportedly exculpatory testimony of a corrections officer named Wyllie — is inaudible, although the testimony immediately before and after Wyllie’s is clear. From this, Palmer inferred that Richards, realizing that Palmer could not be convicted in light of Wyllie’s testimony, intentionally erased Wyllie’s testimony so that his verdict would sustain review. Ultimately, because of the defective hearing tape, the state reversed Richards’s findings and expunged the hearing’s outcome from Palmer’s record. Palmer, proceeding pro se, then brought suit in the district court pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against Goss, Richards, and other defendants alleging, inter alia, that Richards violated his due process rights by intentionally erasing the tape of the hearing.
The defendants moved for summary judgment. Richards argued that he was entitled to qualified immunity because Palmer’s confinement in SHU for 77 days was too brief to implicate a liberty interest protected by the Due Process Clause and could' "not, therefore, trigger concomitant due process rights, and that in any event, Palmer “received all the process he was due.” The district court denied Richards’s motion, finding that the length of Palmer’s sentence, when combined with his expulsion from the Family Reunion Program, could amount to an “atypical and significant hardship” within the' meaning of
Sandin v. Conner,
DISCUSSION
We have jurisdiction pursuant to the collateral order doctrine, under which “a district court’s denial of a claim of qualified immunity, to the extent that it turns on an issue of law, is an appealable ‘final decision’ notwithstanding the absence of a final judgment,” and we review the district court’s decision
de novo. Savino v. City of New York,
The “initial inquiry” of our qualified immunity analysis is to determine whether any right of Palmer’s was violated at all.
Saucier v. Katz,
Our cases “make clear that duration is not the only relevant factor. The conditions of confinement are a distinct and equally important consideration in determining whether a confinement in SHU rises to the level of ‘atypical and severe hardship _’”
Ortiz v. McBride,
- A confinement longer than an intermediate one, and under “normal SHU conditions,”
3
is “a sufficient departure from the ordinary incidents of prison life to require procedural due process protections under
Sandin.” Colon,
For example, in
Welch,
the plaintiffs affidavit specifically alleged, beyond the normal SHU conditions detailed above in note 3, that he endured “far inferior” hygienic conditions in SHU than prisoners in the general population and that he received “inadequate amounts of toilet paper, soap and cleaning materials, a filthy mattress, and infrequent changes of clothes.”
Welch controls the case before us. In Palmer’s case, as in Welch, where the duration of confinement, 77 days, was not long enough to constitute an atypical and significant deprivation by itself, 4 we look to the conditions of confinement. In an affidavit submitted in opposition to the defendants’ motion for summary judgment, Palmer averred as follows:
The atypical and significant hardship this plaintiff suffered due to his wrongful confinement in S.H.U. was being deprived his property, [i.e.,] personal clothing, grooming equipment, hyg[i]enic products and materials, reading materials, writing materials, school books, personal food and vitamin supplements, family pictures as well as personal correspondences, being mechanically restrained whenever this plaintiff was escorted, and being out of communication from his family, were the hardships that this plaintiff suffered while in S.H.U.
This affidavit, which has not been contradicted, raises genuine questions of material fact as to the conditions under which Palmer was confined and how those conditions compared to the conditions imposed on the general prison population.
See Welch,
Having found, “on a favorable view of the parties’ submissions,” that Palmer’s right to due process may have been infringed, we move to the second prong of a qualified immunity analysis and “ask whether the right was clearly estab
*67
lished.”
Saucier, ■
533 U.S. at .201,
The same factual question that prevents us from determining whether Palmer’s liberty interest was infringed by his SHU confinement also prevents us from deciding, whether Richards is entitled to qualified immunity. Given the state of the record, it is impossible to conclude that Palmer endured merely the normal SHU conditions that we have surveyed in our previous cases; instead, it is possible that Palmer endured unusually harsh SHU conditions that constituted an “atypical and significant deprivation” under
Sandin,
in which case Palmer’s right to due process protections was clearly established. Richards made no effort before the district court to demonstrate what Palmer’s conditions were, content to rest on the argument that “since plaintiff served only 77 days in SHU, no liberty interest is implicated.” We had repeatedly held, prior to Palmer’s disciplinary hearing in August 2000, that SHU confinements shorter than 101 days would deprive a prisoner of a liberty interest — and thus trigger due process rights — if the conditions of confinement were severe enough.
See, e.g., Colon,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the order of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. For this reason, we cannot dispose of this appeal on the ground that Palmer received all the process that he was due, as the intentional destruction of evidence does not comport with clearly established standards of procedural due process.
See Black v. Coughlin,
. Of course, a prisoner must first show that the state created a liberty interest, by statute or regulation, before he can show that the interest was infringed.
Frazier,
. See N.Y. Comp.Codes R. & Regs. tit. 7, §§ 304.1-.14, 305.1-.6 (2003) (listing the "services” and "controls” of the special housing units). Under the "normal conditions of SHU confinement in New York,” the prisoner is:
placed in a solitary confinement cell, kept in his cell for 23 hours a day, permitted to exercise in the prison yard for one hour a day, limited to two showers a week, and denied various privileges available to general population prisoners, such as the opportunity to work and obtain out-of-cell schooling. Visitors [are] permitted, but the frequency and duration [is] less than in general population. The number of books allowed in the cell [is] also limited.
Colon,
. The actual duration of confinement is relevant to determining whether any liberty interest was infringed,
see Colon,
. We recognize the difficulty of requiring a hearing officer to decide whether due process protections are implicated before he passes down the very sentence that triggers those protections. See
Colon,
. It may be, of course, that Palmer's actual deprivation was neither atypical nor significant in comparison to the ordinary incidents of prison life, or that it was not clearly so, and We do not foreclose the possibility that Richards might prevail on a subsequent motion for summary judgment, should the District Court permit Richards to bring such a motion.
