This is an appeal from the district court’s order granting the application for habeas corpus filed by Morris Broussard, a Texas state prisoner, challenging'a-prison disciplinary conviction on due process grounds. For the reasons that follow, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
I.
Broussard is an inmate in the Texas Department of Corrections, Institutional Division, serving a ninety-nine year sentence. In 1991, a confidential informant advised the warden of the Eastham Unit at which Broussard was incarcerated that Broussard and another inmate, Lane, were planning an escape. The informant further advised that, to facilitate their escape, the two inmates had hidden bolt cutters in the kitchen area, where both men worked. The warden ordered Hammers, a captain at Eastham, to investigate the tip, and a search of the kitchen confirmed the presence of the bolt cutters. Broussard and Lane were charged with the possession of contraband intended for use in an escape, and both were found guilty. The primary evidence offered at the prison disciplinary hearings was the testimony of Captain Hammers, the investigating officer. Hammers related the information provided to the warden by the informant and confirmed that the bolt cutters had been found in the commissary. Hammers had not interviewed the informant personally, and did not know the identity of the informant or anything about the informant. Captain Hammers knew only what the warden had told him. The disciplinary hearing officer did not allow the inmates to question Hammers as to the reliability of the informant, nor did the hearing officer receive evidence from Hammers in camera on the subject. The disciplinary hearing officer found Broussard and Lane guilty, and the prisoners lost all “good time” they had accumulated.
Broussard then filed a § 1983 civil rights complaint in the district court, alleging that his due process rights had been violated during the disciplinary hearings. The magistrate judge assigned to the case conducted a hearing pursuant to
Flowers v. Phelps,
II.
We begin by recognizing that “[p]rison disciplinary proceedings are not part of a criminal prosecution, and the full panoply of rights due a defendant in such proceedings does not apply.”
Wolff v. McDonnell,
A.
The government does not contend that the evidence presented to the hearing officer would permit the officer to find that the confidential informant’s tip was reliable. Instead, the government argues that due process concerns can be satisfied where additional information supporting the reliability of a confidential informant is presented in a later proceeding, after the disciplinary board hearing.
As stated above, due process requires that there be some evidence supporting the disciplinary determination.
Hill,
In
Taylor,
the Tenth Circuit observed in dicta that additional documentation supporting the reliability of the confidential informant could be submitted to the district court at some time after the conclusion of the disciplinary hearing.
Id.
Similarly, the Seventh Circuit, in
Wells,
reasoned that “the district court may ... give prison officials the opportunity to supplement the administrative record.”
Wells,
The government urges us to follow the reasoning of Wells and Taylor and hold that petitioner’s due process rights have not been violated, because information establishing the reliability of the confidential informant was given by the warden, in camera, to the magistrate judge in Broussard’s § 1983 case. We are not persuaded *877 by the government’s argument. In both Wells and Taylor, the testifying officer had some knowledge of the confidential informant’s identity and the facts surrounding his reliability. In our case, Captain Hammers had no knowledge of the identity of the confidential informant, or any other fact supporting the confidential informant’s reliability. 4 Where a witness gives significant general testimony to the disciplinary board that supports a confidential informant’s reliability, we do not foreclose the state from presenting additional details supporting reliability to the board or a federal court in a later proceeding inquiring into the details of that witness’s knowledge. 5 In this case, however, no evidence was presented to the disciplinary board tending to support the confidential informant’s reliability. Under these circumstances, we agree with the district court that the prison disciplinary board violated Broussard’s right to due process by considering the confidential informant’s tip as probative evidence.
B.
Prison disciplinary proceedings are overturned only where no evidence in the record supports the decision.
See Smith v. Rabalais,
III.
■ For the above reasons, the judgment of the district court conditionally. granting Broussard’s petition for habeas corpus relief is AFFIRMED. The TDCJ may provide Broussard with a new, constitutionally adequate hearing within ninety days of the issuance of our mandate. If such a hearing is not provided, petitioner’s disciplinary conviction is hereby vacated and TDCJ is ordered to reinstate his good time credits.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
.
See Preiser v. Rodriguez,
.
See, e.g., Taylor v. Wallace,
.
See, e.g., Hensley v. Wilson,
. As the district court noted, the proceedings here did not comply with the TDCJ’s rules governing the use of confidential informants at disciplinary proceedings. TDCJ’s regulations provide:
If information provided by a confidential informant will be used at the disciplinary hearing as additional evidence, the investigating officer must:
b. have interviewed the informant(s) who must have some knowledge of the incident/circumstances of the alleged offenses; and determine how the knowledge was gained which led the investigator to a conclusion of guilt;
e. testify at the disciplinary hearing that the testimony of the confidential informant is believed to be reliable, based upon his/ her interview, and describe in general terms the substance of the accusation and the conclusion drawn therefrom ...
Office for Disciplinary Coordination, TDCJ, Administrative Memorandum — Disciplinary No. 89-VI.E.4-01.
.
See Wells,
