Pretrial detainee Gregory May brought suit against Cook County Sheriff Michael Sheahan and unnamed Sheriffs Department employees, alleging that the conditions ■ of confinement faced by detainees taken to Cook County Hospital are unconstitutional in several respects, as well as illegal under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). Sheahan moved to dismiss May’s suit in the district court on a variety of grounds, including qualified immunity. The district court concluded that Sheahan has qualified immunity from May’s ADA claim, but otherwise denied Sheahan’s motion to dismiss. Sheahan has filed this interlocutory appeal to challenge the district court’s rejection of his qualified immunity defense with respect to May’s surviving claims. We affirm.
I
In early January 1999, Gregory May was arrested for possession of a controlled substance. Unable to post bond, May was held at Cook County Jail in the custody of Cook County Sheriff Michael Sheahan, who oversees the jail. Seven days later, May, who suffers from AIDS, was taken by ambulance to Cook County Hospital. At the hospital, May claims he was subject to various Sheriffs Department policies that violated his rights.
One such policy allegedly requires hospital detainees to be shackled, hand and foot, to their beds despite the 24-hour presence of an armed guard. May claims that as a result of this policy he has been shackled to his bed 24 hours-a-day, which has caused him physical and emotional pain and has impeded his ability to assist in his own defense. Another policy supposedly provides that hospital detainees will not be taken to assigned court dates and will not be otherwise accommodated (by telephone or video conference, for example). Pursuant to this policy, May claims that he has been unable to present a motion to reduce his bond or attend any court appearances. Still other policies allegedly restrict or deny hospital detainees access to their lawyers, visitors, legal materials, telephones, typewriters or computers, books and magazines, and recreational activities. According to May, because of these policies he has been denied access to his attorney, has been unable to receive visitors, has been prevented from assisting in his own defense, and has had limited or no access to various ordinary amenities of confinement in Cook County Jail.
Based on these allegations, May asserted four claims against Sheriff Sheahan: (1) that the different treatment afforded jail detainees and hospital detainees violates his constitutional right to equal protection; (2) that Sheahan’s restrictive hospital detainee policies violate his constitutional
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right of access to the courts; (3) that Sheahan’s policy of shackling all hospital detainees to their beds around the clock violates his constitutional right to freedom from bodily restraint; and (4) that Sheah-an’s restrictive hospital detainee policies violate the ADA. Sheahan filed a motion to dismiss May’s complaint under Fed. R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), arguing, among other things, that qualified immunity protected him from liability. The district court granted Sheahan’s motion with respect to May’s ADA claim against Sheahan in his individual capacity on qualified immunity grounds, but denied the motion in all other respects. Exercising his right to take an interlocutory appeal from an order rejecting a qualified immunity defense,
see Mitchell v. Forsyth,
II
Before we come to the merits of Sheahan’s appeal, we must address a jurisdictional question. The order Sheahan appeals decided a motion to dismiss directed at May’s Amended Complaint. While this appeal was pending, however, May twice further amended his complaint, both times with the district court’s permission, so that his Third Amended Complaint now appears to be the operative complaint in the district court.
1
If these subsequent amended complaints have, in fact, superseded May’s original Amended Complaint, the present appeal would be moot because there would no longer be a live dispute over whether Sheahan is entitled to qualified immunity based on the allegations in the Amended Complaint.
Cf. Chan v. Wodnicki,
Such a result, however, depends on whether May’s second and third amended complaints supersede his original Amended Complaint, a question that turns on the district court’s authority to accept the second and third amended complaints despite the pendency of this appeal. As a general matter, a notice of appeal “divests the district court of its control over those aspects of the case involved in the appeal.”
Griggs v. Provident Consumer Discount Co.,
Applying this rule to interlocutory qualified immunity appeals under
Mitchell v. Forsyth, supra, Apostol v. Gallion,
To resolve this issue we must determine whether such proceedings are “aspects of the case involved in the appeal.” In the years since
Apostol,
the Supreme Court has made clear that a
Forsyth
appeal implicates more than just a public official’s right to avoid a trial, it also protects a public official from burdensome pretrial proceedings, including, most notably, discovery.
Behrens v. Pelletier,
But what about a district court’s authority to accept an amended complaint? It might be argued that the filing of an amended complaint places little or no particular burden on a defendant public official and, thus, does not involve (and is ancillary to) whether the public official should have to undergo the burdens of litigation. Moreover, allowing a district court to accept an amended complaint during the pendency of a Forsyth appeal might better conserve judicial resources on appeal by short-circuiting (that is, making moot) any appeal involving a complaint on which the plaintiff no longer wishes to stand. Under such a rule, successive For-syth appeals involving successive complaints would be less likely.
Ultimately, however, these arguments are not persuasive. To begin with, an order allowing the plaintiff to file an amended complaint that supersedes the complaint at issue in a pending
Forsyth
appeal plainly implicates “an aspect of the case involved in the appeal.” The question a court of appeals must answer in a
Forsyth
appeal following the denial of a motion to dismiss is whether the defendant public official is entitled to qualified immunity (and can therefore avoid the burdens of further litigation) based on the allegations in the plaintiffs complaint.
Behrens,
Moreover, allowing a plaintiff to file an amended complaint while a Forsyth appeal is pending does place a litigation burden on a defendant public official. In response to each amended complaint, the public official will likely want to file an answer and a motion to dismiss, and possibly appeal any unfavorable decision. Having to take these steps compromises a defendant public official’s right to avoid the burdens of litigation. Of course, depriving the district court of jurisdiction to accept an amended complaint during a Forsyth appeal will not forever prevent a plaintiff from amending his or her complaint, but it will give the court of appeals the opportunity to both pass on many of the allegations the plaintiff will likely end up relying on and offer guidance to the district court (and the parties) on the legal issues involved in the case. By doing so, the court of appeals can limit the burden on the defendant public official in responding to any post-appeal amended complaint, a result consistent with the purpose of a Forsyth appeal.
Furthermore, the risk that judicial resources might be wasted by successive
Forsyth
appeals regarding complaints the
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plaintiff no longer wishes to stand on is. mitigated by two facts. First, as the Supreme Court has recognized, successive
Forsyth
appeals are uncommon.
Behrens,
Finally, to the extent that the case law relating to a district court’s jurisdiction while a
Forsyth
appeal is pending tends to support any particular resolution of the precise issue presented by this case, it tends to support our resolution. For instance, in an Eleventh Amendment interlocutory appeal that relied on
Apostol
in determining whether the district court retained jurisdiction during the appeal, this court described Apostol’s holding broadly as requiring a stay of all proceedings to protect a defendant’s right to be free of litigation.
Goshtasby v. Board of Trustees,
Ill
Government officials performing discretionary functions are entitled to a qualified immunity that shields them from damages liability “insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights.”
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
In applying this legal framework to review a qualified immunity claim, we ask two questions: (1) whether the plaintiff has asserted a violation of a constitutional right, and (2) whether the applicable constitutional standards were clearly established at the time in question.
Levenstein v. Salafsky,
A. Equal Protection Claim
In support of his equal protection claim, May alleged that pursuant to the policies of Sheriff Sheahan and for no legitimate reason, pre-trial detainees housed in Cook County Jail are treated differently than those at Cook County Hospital. Specifically, according to May’s complaint, hospital detainees, unlike jail detainees, are not taken to court on assigned court dates and are shackled to their beds. Likewise, again according to May’s complaint, hospital detainees do not have the same access as jail detainees to lawyers, legal materials, reading materials, various prison programs, and visitors. In the prison context, the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment requires inmates to be treated equally, unless unequal treatment bears a rational relation to a legitimate penal interest.
Hudson v. Palmer,
Sheahan primarily argues that hospital detainees and jail detainees do not warrant equal treatment because they are not similarly situated and different treatment is rationally related to security concerns. It is not the case, however, that any difference in the nature of a detainee’s confinement justifies different treatment. See
Williams,
Sheahan further argues that, at the time in question, it was not clearly established that his treatment of hospital detainees would violate the equal protection clause. However,
Williams v. Lane
makes clear that differences in treatment among inmates in different confinement situations will support an equal protection claim.
B. Access to the Courts Claim
In setting out his access to the courts claim, May alleged that Sheriff Sheahan’s restrictive hospital detainee policies preclude him from appearing in court, impede his access to his attorney, and prevent him from assisting in his own defense. Those seeking to vindicate their rights in court enjoy a constitutional right of access to the courts that prohibits state actors from impeding one’s efforts to pursue legal claims.
Lewis v.
Casey,
Sheahan defends against this claim primarily by arguing that May failed to allege an actual injury and thus cannot state a claim. Admittedly, May’s allegations in this regard are vague. But, his complaint can be read to allege that he has been detained longer than would otherwise be necessary if he could go to court. In relevant part, he alleged,
Plaintiff will not be taken to any scheduled court appearances thereby delaying the final disposition of his case; causing him to remain in custody for a longer period of time; preventing him from requesting a lowering of his bond as a result of his serious illness; delaying all other motions which require his personal attendance; and impeding his access to his attorney.
Under the generous standards applicable to a complaint reviewed on a motion to dismiss, this allegation is sufficient to state an access to the courts claim.
Sheahan further contends that, at the time in question, it was not clearly established that his alleged policies could violate a detainee’s right of access to the courts. However, numerous precedents recognize a detainee’s right of access to the courts, both as a general matter and with respect to legal assistance and participation in one’s case.
Bounds,
C. Substantive Due Process Claim
In support of his freedom from bodily restraint claim, May alleged that pursuant to Sheriff Sheahan’s policy of shackling hospital detainees to their beds, he was shackled to his bed around the clock despite his weakened state and despite being watched by armed guards.
5
The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment prohibits the use of bodily restraints in a manner that serves to punish a pre-trial detainee.
Youngberg v. Romeo,
Sheahan principally argues that his practice of shackling hospital detainees is rationally related to his legitimate security concerns. Certainly, shackling all hospital detainees reduces the risk of a breach of security and thus furthers a legitimate non-punitive government purpose. But, it is hard to see how shackling an AIDS patient to his or her bed around the clock, despite the continuous presence of a guard, is an appropriate policy for carrying out this purpose. Such a policy is plainly excessive in the absence of any indication that the detainee poses some sort of security risk.
Cf Wolfish,
Sheahan also argues that, at the time in question, it was not clearly established that around the clock shackling of a hospital detainee would violate the Constitution. Sheahan’s argument, however, relies on characterizing the relevant constitutional right in a way that essentially demands precedent involving an almost identical factual scenario. Such particularity is not required.
Wilson,
IV
May’s complaint adequately states a claim for each of the constitutional violations he alleges and the contours of each of the constitutional .rights he asserts was clearly established at the time in question. Therefore, Sheriff Sheahan is not entitled to qualified immunity on the constitutional claims May asserts. Accordingly, we Af *885 FIRM the district court’s order denying Sheahan’s motion to dismiss with respect to these claims.
Notes
. May’s amended complaints have added new allegations and provided factual detail regarding his original allegations, in addition to identifying the unnamed defendants and joining additional plaintiffs.
. The scope of the divestiture of jurisdiction effected by a
Forsyth
appeal is limited, however. The district court has authority to proceed forward with portions of the case not related to the claims on appeal, such as claims against other defendants or claims against the public official that cannot be (or simply are not) appealed. Still, a district court might find it best to stay an entire case pending the resolution of a
Forsyth
appeal. See,
e.g., Monfils v. Taylor,
. In an effort to establish that legal uncertainty does exist, Sheahan cites
Rivera
v.
Sheahan,
No. 97 C 2735,
. In arguing for the opposite conclusion, Sheahan again cites
Rivera v. Sheahan,
which rejected a somewhat similar access to the courts claim.
. As the district court recognized, May’s complaint also suggests ' a claim that Sheahan’s practice of shackling May to his bed amounted to deliberate indifference to a serious medical need (also a due process violation, see
Zentmyer v. Kendall County, Ill.,
