Correctional officers found a tobacco pipe containing a residue which field tested positive for marijuana on federal prisoner Thomas Raymond Henson. The officers instituted disciplinary proceedings against him for possession of marijuana. Henson requested a urinalysis test, which came back negative, but the Bureau of Prisons (“BOP”) denied his request to retest the pipe residue at his own expense. After a hearing, he was found guilty and his punishment included the loss of fourteen days of good time credit. 1
BOP does not challenge the district court’s conclusion that Henson had a statutorily-created liberty interest in his good time credit.
See Madison v. Parker,
We have not previously addressed whether the denial of a drug retest during disciplinary proceedings, when the prisoner has otherwise been afforded adequate process, violates a prisoner’s due process rights. Considering the parties’ respective interests in this case, however, it is clear that BOP did not violate Henson’s rights. BOP has a strong interest in “avoiding burdensome administrative requirements that might be susceptible to manipulation” and in “act[ing] swiftly on the basis of evidence that might be insufficient in less exigent circumstances.”
Id.
at 455-56,
On the other hand, Henson identified no specific need for the retest (either by showing that the test is unreliable or that it was improperly administered) or any case law supporting a general right to retest positive drug results.
2
Given that there was “some evidence” supporting the punishment,
3
Hill,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Henson was also stripped of thirty days of visiting time, commissary time, and telephone privileges, and he was placed in administrative segregation for fifteen days. He only challenges his loss of good time credit on appeal.
. Several courts have rejected similar claims.
See Koenig v. Vannelli,
. As noted, Henson was found in an area where drug use was reported, he was ob
The only evidence which arguably weighed in Henson’s favor was his negative urinalysis test. Given that he was charged with possession rather than use, however, this evidence only minimally weighed in his favor.
