Petitioner, a prisoner at Windsor Correctional Facility, petitioned the superior court under V.R.C.P. 75, alleging that the conduct of a prison disciplinary hearing had violated his due process right to an impartial hearing under the United States Constitution. At the disciplinary hearing, petitioner was found to have disobeyed an order of a corrections officer to stop smoking
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on his bed, and ordered to write a fifty-word essay on why smoking should not be done in bed. The superior court determined that the disciplinary proceeding had complied with the procedural due process requirements of
Wolff
v.
McDonnell,
On appeal, petitioner again argues that his constitutional rights were violated at the disciplinary hearing. In particular, he asserts that the hearing was not an impartial one in that the hearing officer acted as both prosecuting officer and witness. In considering this issue, it is important to keep in mind that a disciplinary hearing is not a criminal proceeding,
Baxter
v.
Palmigiano,
Our review of the merits is limited to deciding whether the court’s decision was clearly erroneous. V.R.C.P. 52(a);
Harlow
v.
Miller,
Affirmed.
In his motion for reconsideration, petitioner asserts that the Court overlooked his argument that the hearing officer acted improperly in presenting evidence as a witness, thus becoming personally involved in the outcome of the disciplinary proceeding. The evidence in question was a statement made by the hearing officer during the course of the proceedings that he had seen petitioner reading the smoking policy that was posted on the bulletin board. The statement was made while the hearing officer was presiding over the proceedings; at no time was he placed under oath as a witness, nor did he ever take the witness stand.
Petitioner was charged with refusing to obey an order of a staff member of the Windsor Correctional Facility. The evidence indicated that petitioner had been verbally warned against smoking in bed and that, subsequent to the warning, he was seen by a staff member smoking in violation of the order he had received. The hearing officer found that the evidence supported the charge that petitioner had refused to obey an order of a staff member. Thus, whether or not petitioner was seen reading the smoking policy was not a material issue in the proceeding. Further, subsequent to having made the statement to which petitioner objects, the hearing officer stated on the record that he accepted petitioner’s representation that he had not seen the written policy prior to the hearing.
Prejudice is not presumed; it must be established by the party claiming it.
State
v.
Tatko,
The motion for reconsideration is denied.
