Christоpher Holly was a pretrial detainee at Cook County Jail who was placed in segregation (that is, in solitary confinement) for two days without a prior hearing. He brought suit for damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the correctional officers responsible for placing him in segregation, contending that the denial of a predeprivation hearing meant that he had been deprived of liberty without due process of law. It is unclear what damаges he could prove for being confined to a cell for two days rather than being free to roam the dangerous general-population area of the jail — and dangerous it is. Ben Bradley, “Doing Time,” ABC News, Special Segment, Feb. 15, 2005, http://abclocal.go. com/wls/news/speeial segmеnt/print_ 021405_ss_doingtime.html (“last year, there were 29-seperate [sic ] stabbings inside the jail”); Tom Rybarczyk, “3 Inmates Are Stabbed During Fight in Cook Jail,” Chi. Trib., Jan. 23, 2005, Metro Section, p. 1 (fight between rival gangs at the jail sent three inmates to the hospital and left four others injured — “incident was at least the third stabbing in a Cook County Jail in the last four months. A stabbing in November left a 17-year-old suburban teenager dead”); Patrick Rucker & Jo Na-politano, “21 Hurt in Gang Fight at Cook Jail,” Chi. Trib., Oct. 17, 2004, Metro Section, p. 1 (15 inmates treated for superficial wounds by рaramedics and six taken to trauma centers); Jeff Coen, “Cook Jail Crowding Fuels New Volatility,” Chi. Trib., Mar. 3, 2003, News Section, p. 1 (“officials pointed to two stabbings in the jail in the last few weeks, including a Jan. 24 brawl that left 10 injured”); “4 High-Security Inmates Injured in Brawl,” Chi. Trib. (sports final ed.), Apr. 11, 2002, Metro Section, p. 3; Frank Main & Carlos Sadovi, “County Jail to Return Convicts to Prison,” Chi. Surtr-Times, Mar. 26, 2002, p. 7 (inmate “stabbed to death in a gang fight” on Saturday and the next day two inmates “stabbed with homemade knives and two others suffered head injuries in beatings with a 16-inch towel bar”); Dаvid Southwell, “Personal Approach Keeps Lake County Inmates in Line,” Chi. Surtr-Times, May 26, 1997, p. 40 (“officials at Cook County Jail said an inmate attacks a guard there once a month and that violence between inmates erupts once a week”).
Negligible as Holly’s damages undoubtedly are, there is no required minimum amount in controversy in a federal civil rights suit; and although being placed in segregation is too trivial an incremental deprivation of а convicted prisoner’s liberty to trigger the duty of due process,
Sandin v. Conner,
The guards in this huge, unruly jail (the third largest in the nation — its average daily population in 2002, when the incident that preciрitated Holly’s suit occurred, was 10,888, Bureau of Justice Statistics, U.S. Dep’t of Justice, “Prison and Jail Inmates at Midyear 2002,” p. 10) — -are required to do headcounts three times a day. Ill. Admin. Code tit. 20, § 701.140(g). According to the incident report, Holly was placed in segregation because he disrupted a headcount by standing in the doorway of his cell, preventing the guard who was conducting the headcount from' determining whether Holly’s cellmate was in the cell. When thе guard asked Holly to step to one side, he refused and told the guard to go fuck himself. After two days in segregation, Holly was given a hearing and then released back into the general population of the jail, apparently having been found not guilty of disrupting the headcount.
As we noted recently in
Ellis v. Sheahan,
Due process permits an arrest without a previous hearing because it is dangerous to allow a person who the police have probable cause to believe has committed a crime to roam at large while awaiting a hearing. It is equally dangerous to allow a prisoner who the guards have probable cause to bеlieve has violated a disciplinary rule to roam at large in the general jail population; Cook County Jail has the population of a town. Holly was separated from the general jail population much as arrest separates a free person from the free population, and the hearing he received 48 hours later was all the process that was due him.
This conclusion is supported by
Hewitt v. Helms,
The Court’s reasoning сontrols the present case, as other cases involving pretrial detainees recognize.
Benjamin v. Fraser,
Holly cites decisions in which no hearing was conducted even though the pretrial detainee had been in segregation for far longer than in this case — 34 days in
Higgs v. Carver,
AFFIRMED.
