DECISION AND ORDER
Pro se plaintiff Lawrence Dawkins (“Dawkins”) brought this action pursuant to 42 U.S.C § 1983 (“§ 1983”) against defendants Deputy Superintendent of Security Paul Gonyea (“Gonyea”), Lieutenant Steven Katz (“Katz”), and Superintendent Raymond Cunningham (“Cunningham”) (collectively, “Defendants”), 1 all of whom at the relevant times in this action were officials of the New York State Woodbourne Correctional Facility (“Woodbourne”). Dawkins alleges violations of his rights under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution. Dawkins seeks compensatory relief and an order of declaration for these alleged violations. 2 Defendants now move to dismiss the complaint pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). For the reasons discussed below, Defendants’ motion to dismiss is GRANTED, and Dawkins is granted leave to replead.
I. BACKGROUND 3
On December 7, 2006, Katz issued the Report, a misbehavior report identify
Based on the Report, a disciplinary hearing was held on December 13 and 14, 2006, presided over by Gonyea. During the hearing, Dawkins requested, from both Katz and Gonyea, the identity of the second person listed in the Report as also being responsible for the heroin distribution. Dawkins’s requests were denied.
On December 10, 2006, Dawkins received a letter from another inmate, Alonzo Cheeks (“Cheeks”), which stated that Cheeks believed Dawkins to be innocent of the alleged violations and that Dawkins was being charged with these violations based only on his association with Cheeks. In his letter, Cheeks stated that he wished to come forward to testify on Dawkins’s behalf, writing to Dawkins: “I’m willing to be a witness and testify in [sic] your behalf. ...” Cheeks wrote, “whoever it was that implicated you did so under the pretense that because we are cool the way we are that you knew what was going on when you didn’t.” (Reply, Ex. B (Letter from Cheeks to Dawkins, dated Dec. 10, 2006)). Gonyea read Cheeks’s letter into the record on December 13, 2006. However, it was not until the second day of the hearing that Cheeks was identified as the other inmate listed with Dawkins in the Report. That same day, Dawkins was informed that Cheeks had refused to testify.
At the hearing, a confidential witness testified outside of Dawkins’s presence. Gonyea reviewed a confidential tape and confidential testimony from Katz outside of Dawkins’s presence as well. Katz and an inmate at Woodbourne, named “Ayala,” did testify in Dawkins’s presence during the hearing.
At the close of the hearing, Gonyea found Dawkins guilty, stating that the evidence relied upon was the “written report and verbal testimony of Lt. Katz that he received confidential information from [a] reliable source” and “confidential testimony of a source that substantiated the written report of Lt. Katz.” (Record Sheet.) Gonyea sentenced Dawkins to a year of confinement in SHU. Dawkins remained in SHU for a total of 280 of days from December 7, 2006 to September 12, 2007, released before the one-year sentence imposed due to his good behavior.
After the hearing, Dawkins filed an administrative appeal of Gonyea’s decision. On February 28, 2007, Dawkins received a decision from Donald Selsky (“Selsky”), the Director of Special Housing/Inmate Disciplinary Programs for the New York State Departmеnt of Correctional Services, affirming Gonyea’s decision.
Dawkins then filed this action,
5
al
In response to Dawkin’s remaining claims, Defendants move to dismiss the Complaint on the grounds that: (1) Defendants are entitled to immunity under the Eleventh Amendment; (2) Dawkins’s claims of inadequate notice of charges and time to prepare his defense fail as a matter of law; (3) Dawkins has failed to allege personal involvement for defendants Cunningham and Katz; and (4) Defendants are entitled to qualified immunity.
II. DISCUSSION
A. LEGAL STANDARD
“To survive a motion to dismiss, a complaint must contain sufficient factual matter, accepted as true, to ‘state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.’ ”
Ashcroft v. Iqbal,
— U.S. -,
In the case of a pro se litigant, the court reads the pleadings leniently and construes them to raise “the strongest arguments that they suggest.”
McPherson v. Coombe,
To state a claim under § 1983, Dawkins must allege that Defendants, while acting under color of state law, deprived him of federal constitutional or statutory rights.
See Pabon v. Wright,
Dawkins contends that his due process rights were violated because: (1) the notice he received was inadequate to apprise him of the charges against him; (2) the hearing officer relied on statements of the informant without making an independent assessment of the informant’s credibility; and (3) the hearing officer did not allow him to present certain evidence.
1. Eleventh Amendment
The Elеventh Amendment bars a suit by a citizen of a state against that state or one of its agencies, absent the state’s consent to such a suit or an express statutory waiver of immunity.
See Pennhurst State Sch. & Hosp. v. Halderman,
To the extent that Dawkins is suing Defendants in their official capacities to recover monetary damages, his claims are barred by the Eleventh Amendment.
See Graham,
While Dawkins initially asserted claims against Defendants in their official capacities, in his Reply he claims that he is asserting his claims against Defendants in their individual capacities. Because of Dawkins’s pro se status, the Court will read his claims to be asserted against Defendants in their individual capacities.
However, even if defendants are named in their individual capacities, the state may be the real party in interest, and thus the suit may still be barred by the Eleventh Amendment. Therefore, for a § 1983 claim to survive an Eleventh Amendment challenge, “a plaintiff must demonstrate the defendant’s direct or personal involvement in the actions which are alleged to have caused the constitutional deprivation.”
Spencer v. Doe,
To survive a motion to dismiss, a § 1983 complaint against a supervisor need only allege that the supervisor was personally involved in the constitutional deprivation; it need not plead detailed facts about the involvement.
See Locicero v. O’Connell,
a. Claim Against Katz
Dawkins alleges that Katz violated his due process rights by filing the Report which provided inadequate notice of the charges against Dawkins, resulting in Dawkins’s placement in SHU the same day the Report was filed. Dawkins has pled sufficient facts suggesting that Katz, who signed and created the Report, directly participated in the alleged constitutional violation by not providing Dawkins with adequate notice to prepare a defense. Therefore, Dawkins’s claim against Katz for providing Dawkins with inadequate notice of the charges against him is not barred by the Eleventh Amendment.
b. Claim Against Cunningham
Because Dawkins has consented to dismiss Cunningham from this action, (Reply ¶ 23), the Court dismisses Dawkins’s claim against Cunningham.
c. Claim Against Gonyea
Dawkins’s claim against Gonyea is based on Gonyea’s role as the hearing officer at the disciplinary hearing. Dawkins alleges that Gonyea “participated directly in the alleged constitutional violation” when he failed to conduct an adequate assessment of the confidential informant’s credibility and when he failed to adequately justify his denial of Dawkins’s request to hear testimony from Katz, the confidential witness, and any evidence gathered from the confidential tape.
See Colon,
2. Due Process
Dawkins’s due process claim alleges three procedural deprivations: (1) inadequate notice; (2) failure to conduct a proper assessment of the confidential informant’s credibility; and (3) unwarranted denial of requests to call witnesses and present a defense. To proceed on a due process claim with respect to a prisoner’s disciplinary proceeding, a plaintiff must establish (1) possession of a liberty interest and (2) deprivation by defendants of that interest as a result of insufficient process.
See Odom v. Calero,
No. 06 Civ. 15527,
a. Liberty Interest
“Prison discipline implicates a liberty interest when it ‘imposes atypical and significant hardship on the inmate in relation to the ordinary incidents of prison life.’ ”
Ortiz v. McBride,
Generally, periods of confinement in SHU lasting fewer than 101 days have been found not to amount to atypical and significant hardship.
See, e.g., Sealey v. Giltner,
No firmly established, bright-line rule exists to determine at what point a prisoner’s confinement in SHU rises to the level of “atypical and significant hardship.”
Wilkinson v. Austin,
Dawkins’s 280-day confinement
7
in SHU falls at the high end of the range that requires an additional determination of the particular conditions of confinement before a court can find that the prisoner possessed a liberty interest. To allege a cognizable due process claim, Dawkins must allege that the conditions of
However, the Court grаnts Dawkins leave to replead so that he may provide factual allegations describing the conditions of his confinement in SHU that he claims would support a finding of atypical and significant hardship. Factors the Court may use to assess the severity of Dawkins’s time in SHU include any evidence of the “psychological effects of prolonged confinement in isolation and the precise frequency of SHU confinements of varying durations.”
Howard,
b. Insufficient Process
For Dawkins’s due process claim to survive Defendants’ motion to dismiss, he must allege that he was deprived of a liberty interest as a result of insufficient process.
See Wright v. Coughlin,
i. Adequate Notice
Due process requires that, in a prison disciplinary hearing resulting in the imposition of solitary confinement, an inmate must be afforded advance written notice of the charges against him and a written statement of facts supporting the disposition and reasons for the disciplinary action taken.
See Kalwasinski v. Morse,
Dawkins acknowledges receiving written notice of the charges against him on December 8, 2006, five days before the disciplinary hearing commenced and sufficiently in excess of the 24-hour minimum period required by
Wolff. See Wolff,
According to New York State regulation, “[t]he misbehavior report shall include ... the date, time and place of the incident.” 7 N.Y.C.R.R. § 251-3.1(c)(3) (“§ 251-3.1(c)(3)”) (emphasis added.) Defendants argue that “the date, time and place where the confidential information was disclosed was set forth in the misbehavior report, as well as the fact that an investigation was launched based on the informant’s information that a large heroin ring was operating within the facility.” (Memorandum of Law in Support of Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss, dated October 3, 2008 at 8 (emphasis added)). They further argue that “[t]he misbehavior report is clear on its face providing 12/7/06 as the incident date, 9:45 a.m. as the incident time, references violations of Rule 113.25 (shall not sell any narcotic or controlled substance or conspire to introduce such items into the facility) and Rule 114.10 (smuggling).” (Id. at 12.) However, it is clear from the Report that the incident date and time recоrded are the date and time the confidential informant conveyed information to officers, not the date and time Dawkins actually participated in the alleged violations.
Although Defendants argue that they have provided the information required under § 251-3.1(c)(3), it is the date, time and place of the
incident
that is required, not the date, time and place of the
disclosure
of confidential information. Defendants cite to
Hameed v. Mann,
Additionally, the Report indicated that the place of the incident was Woodbourne, identifying no sites within the facility where Dawkins allegedly engaged in the charged conduct. By identifying the incident location as the entire Woodbourne facility, the Report essentially provided Dawkins with “no notice of where within his then-limited universe his misconduct was alleged to have occurred.”
Sira,
Further, the Report failed to specify “the particulars of the alleged incident of misbehavior involved.” 7 N.Y.C.R.R. § 251-3.1(c)(1). Dawkins stated that the Report “failed to give a general idea of how the herion [sic] was being distributed.” (Complaint ¶ 3.) While this information is not required for due process, adding these particulars may have provided Dawkins with enough information that the Report could be deemed to prоvide him with adequate notice.
Moreover, while the Report did indicate that more than one inmate was involved, it failed to identify this other individual and the specific roles played by Dawkins and the unnamed inmate, as required by the New York Regulations.
See
7 N.Y.C.R.R. § 251-3.1(c)(4) (requiring that “when more than one inmate was involved in an incident, the report should, to the extent practicable under the given circumstances, indicate the specific role played by each inmate”). Further, it was not until the second day of his hearing that Dawkins was informed that Cheeks was the second inmate charged with the violation. This notification was not in compliance with the 24-hour advance notice required under
Wolff. See Wolff,
Although violations of state law procedural requirements do not by themselves constitute a deprivation of due process,
see Russell v. Coughlin,
ii. “Some Evidence ”
Due process in the prison setting requires “some evidence” to support a finding of guilt.
See Superintendent, Mass. Corr. Inst. v. Hill,
Ascertaining whether this standard is satisfied does not require examination of the entire reсord, independent assessment of the credibility of witnesses, or weighing of the evidence. Instead, the relevant question is whether there is any evidence in the record that could support the conclusion reached by the disciplinary board.
Id.
at 455-56,
The “some evidence” standard is satisfied only by “reliable” evidence.
See Luna v. Pico,
In the case at hand, all of the evidence supporting the charge against Dawkins derived from confidential sources. Although Dawkins submitted questions to be asked of the confidential witnesses, there is no indication that these questions were in fact posed to the witnesses. The only testimony presented in front of Dawkins was the testimony of Katz and inmate Ayala. “When sound discretion forecloses confrontation and cross-examination, the need for the hearing officer to conduct an independent assessment of informant credibility to ensure fairness to the accused inmate is heightened.”
Sira,
Gonyea, as hearing officer, relied on (1) the Report filed by Katz; (2) Katz’s verbal testimony during the disciplinary hearing that he had received confidential information from a “reliable” source; and (3) confidential testimony of a source, whom Gonyea found to be reliable based on several unspecified factors that substantiated the written Report оf Katz. (Report.) It is unclear whether the source that supplied the confidential testimony to substantiate Katz’s testimony was the same source that Katz’s testimony was based upon.
A proper assessment of an informant’s credibility would involve an inquiry into the informant’s record of reliability.
See Russell,
Because, аt this stage, it appears that Gonyea relied solely on a third party’s evaluation of the informant’s credibility, Dawkins has sufficiently alleged a due process violation under the “some evidence” standard, assuming he can later establish that he had a liberty interest at stake.
iii. Disclosure and Presentation of Evidence
Dawkins alleges that Defendants also failed to disclose to Dawkins the majority of the evidence supporting the guilty ruling, including the identity of the confidential informant or the substance of the information provided by Katz’s confidential testimony, the confidential testimony of the confidential informant, and the evidence presented on the confidential tape. Additionally, Dawkins was not afforded an opportunity to question the confidential informant. These circumstances, if established, would intensify the potential prejudice to Dawkins stemming from the inadequate notice he received.
The Supremе Court has found that an inmate facing disciplinary proceedings is entitled to know the evidence upon which a disciplinary ruling is based.
See Wolff,
First, because of the risk that disclosure of a confidential informant’s identity might pose to the safety of the informant and the prison as a whole, hearing officers retain discretion to deny an inmate’s request to call witnesses.
See id.
(noting that prison officials should be granted discretion in determining whether or not to call witnesses, both confidential and non-confidential, in a disciplinary hearing). Second, hearing officers are not required to call witnesses whose testimony is not necessary,
see id.
at 566,
Dawkins contends that while Cheeks volunteered to testify prior to Dawkins’s hearing, once it was revealed that Cheeks was the other inmate being charged he refused to come forward to testify. Dawkins states that Cheeks’s alleged refusal to testify prejudiced him. However, Gonyea was not required to call a witness who would refuse to testify.
See Silva,
Although Dawkins was not entitled to have Cheeks testify in court, he was entitled to have either information concerning the evidence upon which his disciplinary ruling was based or a reasonable explanation from Gonyea desсribing why he decided to deny the information.
See Sira,
Even if it had been clear that presenting witnesses in front of Dawkins posed a danger to the witnesses’ safety or the safety of Woodbourne as a whole, Dawkins still may have been entitled to be informed of the substance of thе witnesses’ testimony as well as the substance of the confidential tape. There is nothing in the record to suggest that informing Dawkins of the substance of the information obtained from the witnesses would have posed a safety risk.
See Sira,
iv. Qualified Immunity
Government officials performing discretionary functions generally enjoy qualified immunity from civil damages “in
“A right is clearly established if (1) the law is defined with reasonable clarity, (2) the Supreme Court or the Second Circuit has recognized the right, and (3) ‘a reasonable defendant [would] have understood from the existing law that [his] conduct was unlawful.’ ”
Johnson v. Goord,
The Court notes that the Supreme Court has urged courts to decide the issue of qualified immunity at the earliest possible opportunity.
See Saucier v. Katz,
Both the Supreme Court and the Second Circuit have clearly recognized an inmate’s due process right to receive advance written notice of the disciplinary charges against him so that he might “marshal the facts in his defense.”
See Sira,
Sira
clearly established that an independent assessment is necessary to satisfy the “some evidence” standard when a disciplinary decision is based solely on confidential information.
Sira,
Dawkins’s disciplinary hearing occurred in December 2006, well over a year after
Sira
was decided. Therefоre, Defendants are charged with the knowledge that an independent assessment of the confidential informant was necessary to satisfy Dawkins’s due process rights. However, further information may reveal that Gonyea made a reasonable independent assessment. If this case proceeds following the filing of an amended complaint, the Court will assess whether the method Gonyea chose to assess the reliability of the confidential information was “objectively reasonable” in light of the law at the time of the disciplinary hearing.
See Higazy v. Templeton,
Finally, “[a]n inmate’s due process right to know the evidence upon which a discipline ruling is based is well established.”
Sira,
Dawkins is advised that an amended complaint would constitute a complete replacement of his previous complaint.
See
III. ORDER
For the reasons stated above, it is hereby
ORDERED that the motion of dеfendants Paul Gonyea, Steven Katz, and Raymond Cunningham to dismiss the complaint of plaintiff Lawrence Dawkins (“Dawkins”) is GRANTED; and it is farther
ORDERED that Dawkins shall have leave to file an amended complaint within sixty (60) days of the date of this Order so as to replead his claim of a due process violation in accordance with the Court’s decision above.
The Clerk of the Court is directed to withdraw any pending motions and close this case.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. After filing his complaint, Dawkins dismissed Cunningham from this action. (See Reply to Defendants' Motion to Dismiss, dated December 11, 2008 ("Reply”), ¶ 23.)
. The Court need not discuss Dawkins's request for an order declaring that Defendants acted in violation of the United States Constitution. A finding regarding Dawkins's § 1983 claim will include any violations by prison officials of Dawkins's constitutional rights. See
Pitchell v. Callan,
.The facts below are taken from Dawkins’s complaint in this action, dated January 14, 2008 ("Complaint”). The Complaint references the Hearing Record Sheet, dated December 15, 2006 ("Record Sheet”), attached as Exhibit B to the the First Amended Declaration of Christopher L. Van de Water in Support of Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss, dated October 3, 2008 ("Amended Declaration”); and the Inmate Misbehavior Report ("Report”), issued on December 7, 2006, attached as Exhibit C to the Amended Declaration. In deciding a motion to dismiss, the Court may consider any documents that are attached to, referenced in, or integral to the preparation of the pleadings.
See Miller v. Lazard, Ltd.,
. The Court notes that Dawkins is currently housed in the Livingston Correctional Facility-
. Dawkins appears to have exhausted the administrative remedies available to him as required by Prison Litigation Reform Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a). Dawkins appealed the determination made at the Tier III hearing on the alleged violations, and received a ruling
. Dawkins stated in the Reply, that he was abandoning his Eighth Amendment claim. Therefore, the Court will not discuss that claim herein.
. When determining whether the prisoner had a liberty interest at stake, courts are to consider the "penalty ...
actually imposed,"
and not the maximum potential punishment.
Scott v. Albury,
