Like most other states, Wisconsin holds some sex offenders past the ends of their prison sentences. Those deemed “sexually violent persons” are subject to civil commitment of indefinite duration under Wis. Stat. ch. 980. See Adams v. Bartow, 380 F.8d 957 (7th Cir.2003). Plaintiffs are among those detained, or committed, under Chapter 980. They were held in the Wisconsin Resource Center until June 2001, when all but one were moved to the Sand Ridge Secure Treatment Center. Individual treatment plans used at the Resource Center contemplated the possibility that misconduct would lead to what the state calls “therapeutic seclusion”: placement in a cell that contains only a concrete platform (which serves as a bed), a toilet, and a sink. Detainees in seclusion often were deprived of clothing and other amenities. Secluded detainees were allowed out, in shackles, one hour a day on weekdays and not at all on weekends (when staffing levels were lower). When the staff thought that secluded detainees might be ready for return to the general population, they were allowed out two hours a day, but still kept in restraints. One plaintiff was held in seclusion for 82 consecutive days (and more than 100 days all told in 1998); all plaintiffs have been held in seclusion for at least 20 consecutive days.
In this suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 the detainees contend that “therapeutic seclusion” as practiced in the Wisconsin Resource Center violated their rights under the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment. See
Youngberg v. Romeo,
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Plaintiffs’ claims rest on the principle articulated in
Youngberg
that “[p]ersons who have been involuntarily committed are entitled to more considerate treatment and conditions of confinement than criminals whose conditions of confinement are designed to punish.”
Defendants allow that these rules may be apt for normal detainees, such as the profoundly retarded plaintiff in
Youngberg
who was committed because, with an 18-month-old mind in a 33-year-old body, he was unable to control his impulses and had become too unruly for his family to handle. By contrast, defendants contend, persons committed under Chapter 980 are “nontraditional” detainees who may be handled more roughly. The word “nontraditional” is a mantra in defendants’ briefs. Yet
Seling,
a case about persons detained as sexually dangerous predators, quoted favorably from
Youngberg.
So did
Foucha v. Louisiana,
Qualified immunity is available unless the rules of law on which plaintiffs rely are so clearly established that a reasonable state actor is bound to understand
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how they apply to the situation at hand. See, e.g.,
Saucier v. Katz,
To get anywhere on this appeal, defendants would have to establish that no decision by a person with an advanced degree is open to question in litigation. Defendants have masters degrees in psychology. Their legal position boils down to a contention that holders of such degrees never need fear liability, even if the whole medical profession and every published scholarly article are against them. We grant the proposition, which may be found in Young-berg itself, that states are entitled to experiment. Detainees need not receive optimal treatment, and the Constitution does not immediately fall into line behind the majority view of a committee appointed by the American Psychiatric Association. In a world of uncertainty about how best to deal with sexually dangerous persons, there is room for both disagreement and trial-and-error; all the Constitution requires is that punishment be avoided and medical judgment be exercised. But this is a far cry from saying that anything goes — that if the holder of a masters degree in psychology were to decide that sex offenders should be lobotomized and subject to daily electroshock “therapy,” no court could gainsay that decision. Prisons may attract those members of the profession most disposed to stem measures, which makes some outside supervision vital.
What sets this case apart from others in which the defendants received immunity, such as
Allison v. Snyder,
AFFIRMED
