OPINION OF THE COURT
Twо state corrections officials appeal from a judgment entered against them under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for allegedly violating a prisoner’s due process rights in connection with a prison disciplinary proceeding. One of the offenses for which the prisoner was found guilty at the disciplinary proceeding was possession or consumption of intoxicating beverages. The district court held that thе prisoner’s due process rights were violated because the beverages found in his cell were not preserved until the time of the hearing but were instead discarded in accordance with standard prison practice.
I.
Eddie Griffin is a prisoner at the Pennsylvania State Correctional Institution at Graterford. In March 1990, John Spratt and another Graterford corrections officer searched the cell in which Griffin was housed alone. The officers found a quantity of beverages that they believed were fermented. Spratt ordered Griffin to flush the liquid down the toilet, and Griffin complied.
Sprаtt then filed a misconduct report charging Griffin with (1) “[possession-of contraband — intoxicants, materials used for fermentation,” (2) “[mjaking fermented beverages,” and (3) “[p]ossession for consumption of intoxicating beverages.” In the report, Spratt stated that the officers had discovered approximately 15 gallons of beverages in Griffin’s cell. Spratt stated that ten gallons of fermented bevеrage had been found in a mop bucket behind Griffin’s cell cabinet and that approximately five gallons of fermented beverage had been discovered in a plastic milk bag behind his bunk. In addition, the report stated that numerous plastic one-gallon containers with residue from fermented beverage inside had been found in the cell.
In a subsequently filed declaration, Spratt stated that he hаd received on-the-job training for the purpose of identifying fermented beverages. Spratt also declared that he had been able to identify the beverages in question as fermented based on his “experience as a guard responsible for multiple cell searches.” He stated that the liquid in the bucket had been “foaming at the top” and that he had “recognized a strong stenсh of rotten fruit and smell of alcohol.” He further declared that he had been able to see “particles of fruit” in the liquid in the plastic bag and that the bag was “bloated, bellowed out, and ... felt warm.” Spratt’s declaration also explained that each week his search team at Grater-ford found about 40 to 60 gallons of contraband fermented beverage prepared by prisoners using fruit taken back to their cells after meals. Spratt stated that when he found contraband that he could identify as a fermented beverage he always asked the inmate to flush the beverage down the toilet.
A few days after the search, a disciplinary hearing was conducted by another corrections officer, J. Kevin Kane. The only two witnesses at the hearing were Griffin and Spratt. Griffin сlaimed that the beverages had not fermented at the time of confiscation, while Spratt testified that he believed, based on his experience and observations, that they had fermented. Griffin asked Spratt why he had not tested the beverages to determine if they had fermented and why he had not saved a sample of the beverages for analysis at a later date. Kane, however, ruled that those questions were irrelevant.
Kane found Griffin not guilty of making fermented beverages, but guilty of the other two violations — possession of contraband and possession or consumption of intoxicating beverages. Kane imposed a sanction of 60 days in disciplinary custody.
Griffin then commenced this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging, among other things, that Spratt and Kane violated his due procеss rights because the beverages found in his cell had not been tested or preserved until the time of the disciplinary hearing. The district court granted partial summary judgment for Griffin, holding that the destruction of the beverages violated his due process rights. The district court relied primarily on
Young v. Kann,
[Griffin’s] аbility to mount a defense to the charge of possessing a fermented beverage was severely restricted because the only physical evidence of his guilt was destroyed before it could be tested for fermentation or observed by a third party. The failure to produce this evidence at the disciplinary hearing, in the absence of a valid security concern, violated Griffin’s due process right to “present documentary evidence,” and “marshal the facts in his defense.” Wolff [v. McDonnell, 418 U.S. 539, 566, 564, [94 S.Ct. 2963 , 2979-80, 2978,41 L.Ed.2d 935 ] (1974)].
The district court also concluded
(id.,
quoting
Young,
The district court subsequently held a hearing on damages and issued a written opinion. The court reasoned that one of the misconduct charges for which Griffin was found guilty-possession of contraband-did not require proof that the beverages had actually fermented. The court therefore concluded (App. 164) that Griffin was entitled to damages "for the amount of time spent in disciplinary custody for both misconducts less the amount of time he would have been sanctioned for the single misconduct of ... possessing contraband." Finding that Griffin would have probably received a sanction of at least 30 days in disciplinary custody for the latter offense and that he had served only 30 days of the original 60-day sanction before release by the prisoner review board, the court concluded (id. at 163-64) that Griffin "spent no additional days in disciplinary custody аs a result of defendants' unconstitutional actions." The court therefore awarded no compensatory damages but awarded $1 in nominal damages. Spratt and Kane appealed.
II.
Although the damages at issue in this case are nominal, the constitutional question presented may have important practical consequences with respect to the administration of сorrections facilities within this circuit. When prison officials find what is believed to be a fermented beverage in a prisoner's cell-and according to Spratt's declaration in the present case, such beverages are found in great volume-must the officials preserve all or part of the beverage until the time of the prisoner's disciplinary hearing? Or may they follow the less formal practice, apparently employed at Graterford, i.e., permitting corrections officers to destroy seized beverages and later offer their opinions at disciplinary proceedings with respect to whether particular beverages were or were not fermented based on the beverages' odor, appearance, and other physical characteristics observed by the officers?
We begin by recognizing that "prison 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,
A. Griffin maintains, and the district court held, that the corrеctions officials violated Griffin’s right to present physical evidence in his defense. We disagree.
As noted, the district court relied heavily on our decision in Young v. Kann, supra, but we find this reliance misplaced. Young concerned a prisoner’s right to production of existing documentary evidence; the opinion in Young said nothing whatsoever about a prisoner's right to have physical evidence preserved. The present case, by contrast, did not involve a request for the production of existing evidence; instead, this case concerns the preservation of evidence. Thus, the question presented here is quite different from that in Young. 1
The Supreme Court and this court have decided cases dealing directly with the obligation of the prosecution or police to preserve physical evidence that might prove helpful to the defense in a criminal prosecution or probation revocation proceeding.
Arizona v. Youngblood, supra; United States v. Boyd,
In
Arizona v. Youngblood, supra,
the defendant was convicted for molesting and sodomizing a 10-year-old-boy. Semen samples were collected and tested by the police, but the tests did not yield any information about the identity of the assailant. The defendant contended that the prosecution violated his due process rights by failing to perform timely tests on the samples and by failing to preserve the samples. The Supreme Court rejected this argument, holding that “unless a criminal defendant can show bad faith on the part of the police, failure to preserve potential useful evidence does not constitute a denial of due process of law” (
We think that requiring a defendant to show bad faith on the part of the police both limits the extent of the police’s obligation to preserve evidence to reasonable bounds and confinеs it to that class of cases where the interests of justice most clearly require it, i.e., those cases in which the police themselves by their conduct indicate that the evidence could form a basis for exonerating the defendant.
The Supreme Court added
(id.
at 51 n. *,
*21
This court applied
Youngblood
in
United States v. Stevens,
We again applied
Youngblood
in
United States v. Boyd, supra.
In that case, Boyd’s probation was revoked because a urine test performed by a private laboratory indicated the presence of a cocaine metabolite. In accordance with its standard procedure, the laboratory maintained the urine specimen for two months but destroyed it before it could be tested by a defense expert and before the probation revocation proceeding. We rejected Boyd’s argument that his due process rights had been violated, stating (
Because [the] sample was destroyed pursuant to a standard procedure in which samples are only kept for two months, we do not believe there was bad faith on the part of the government.
We added (id.): “Although it is unfortunate that Boyd’s expert never had the opportunity to examine the sample, this does not rise to the magnitude of a constitutional violation.”
Under these precedents, it is clear that the failure to preserve the beverages found in Griffin’s cell would not have violated due process even if Griffin had been charged with a criminal offense rather than a prison disciplinary violation. The district court did not find that the corrections officers ordered Griffin to discard the beverages in order to prevent their possiblе use for exculpatory purposes at the disciplinary hearing. Moreover, there is no evidence in the summary judgment record that would support such a finding. Rather, the uncon-tradicted evidence indicates that it was standard procedure to discard all such beverages, and the officers provided a seemingly legitimate justification for this policy. They explained that preserving the large quantity of beverages regularly seized at the institution would be unsafe and disruptive to institutional order because closed containers of fermenting beverages can explode and would have to be stored in a secure area.
The district court attempted to distinguish
Arizona v. Youngblood, supra,
on several grounds, but we do not believe that these distinctions are valid. The district court wrote that the defendant in
Youngblood
unlike Griffin, “was not prejudiced by thе police’s failure to conduct tests.” The Supreme Court's decision in
Youngblood,
however, was not based on lack of prejudice. On the contrary, the Court acknowledged (
The district court also wrote that the samples in Youngblood were not “used as evidence against the defendant.” Nothing in the Supreme Court’s opinion, however, suggests that its decision was based in any part on the fact that no prosecution testimony regarding the samples was introduced. Furthermore, in Boyd, we applied Youngblood and upheld a probation revocation decision that was based on the results of a drug test of a urine sample that was destroyed in accordance with standard practice before the defense had an opportunity to conduct its own tests. Therefore, Boyd refutes the argument that Young-blood is limited to situations in which no evidence stemming from the destroyed evidence is utilized.
Finally, the district court tried to distinguish
Youngblood
on the ground that the trial court in that case instructed the jury that “if they found the State had destroyed or lost evidence, they might ‘infer that the true fact is against the State’s interest.’ ”
See
B. We likewise hold that the district court erred in concluding, based on
Young v. Kann,
that the hearing examiner violated Griffin’s constitutional rights by basing his decision regarding the nature of the beverages exclusively on Spratt’s testimony that he believed they had fermented. Spratt’s testimony would have been admissible even in a court proсeeding governed by the Federal Rules of Evidence
(see
Fed.R.Evid. 701, 702). Moreover, evidence of this
nature
— e.g., non-scientific evidence indicating that certain substances were illegal drugs — is sufficient to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt in a criminal trial.
2
Accordingly, there can be no question that it is constitutional to rely on such testimony as the basis for a decision in a prison disciplinary proceeding, where hearsay is allowed
(Wolff v. McDonnell,
Nothing in Young v. Kann undermines this conclusion. In that case, as previously noted, we held that the hearing officer had violated the prisoner’s rights by refusing to order production of the allegedly threatening letter that was used against him. In the passage from Young on which the district court relied, we added {id. at 1402) that the hearing officer’s “alleged sole reliance upon the oral summary of the cоntents of the letter provided, outside of Young’s presence, by the guard at the hearing may itself be a due process violation.” We interpret this statement to apply only where production of existing evidence is improperly withheld and hearsay is offered in its place. Because the situation here was very different, the statement has no application.
III.
We therefore reverse the judgment of the district court and remand for entry of summary judgment in favor of the defendants.
Notes
. The district court apparently felt that the principle underlying
Young
was not simply the right to production of existing evidence but a broader right to have potentially exculpatory evidence both preserved and produced. There is, however, no express support in
Young
itself for this broad interpretation. Moreover, this interpretation is irreconcilable with
Arizona v. Youngblood
and related cases. Under the Due Process Clauses and the Compulsory Process Clause of the Sixth Amendment, a criminal defendant has broad rights concerning the production of evidence.
See, e.g., Taylor v. Illinois,
. The prosecution "may establish the identity of a drug through cumulative circumstantial evidence. So long as the government produces sufficient evidence, direct or circumstantial, from which the jury is able to identify the substance beyond a reasonable doubt, the lack of scientific evidence is not objectionable.”
United States v. Schrock,
