Aaron E. Isby has been held in administrative segregation—or, as it is better known, solitary confinement—for over ten years and counting. He filed suit against various prison employees under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that his continued placement in administrative segregation violated his Eighth Amendment right to be free from cruel or unusual punishment as well as his Fourteenth Amendment rights under the Due Process Clause. Isby sought leave to proceed in forma pauperis in the district court, despite" having already accumulated three “strikes” for filing frivolous suits or appeals and thus being restricted under the Prison Litigation Reform Act (“PLRA”) from seeking pauper status. 28 U.S.C. § 1915(g). Unaware of Isby’s strikes, the district court granted Isby’s request. The court later granted summary judgment in favor of defendants on the due process claim, and, following a bench trial, entered judgment against Isby on his Eighth Amendment claim.
Still unaware of Isby’s three-strikes status, the district court granted him leave to proceed in forma pauperis on appeal. After briefing on appeal was complete, Isby’s restricted status came to our and the parties’ ¿ttention; and two days prior to oral argument, defendants-appellees moved to dismiss this appeal “due to [Isby’s] deceptive acts in failing to inform the district court of his numerous ‘strikes’ under the [PLRA].” For the reasons that follow, we deny the motion to dismiss, affirm the district court with respect to Isby’s claim under the Eighth Amendment, and reverse and remand for further proceedings on Isby’s due process claim.
I. Background
A. Factual Background
In 1989, Isby was convicted of robbery resulting in serious bodily injury and incarcerated at the Pendleton Correctional Facility in Indiana. In October of the following year, a counselor at Pendleton allegedly became verbally abusive. In response, Isby hit him in the face, resulting in officers gassing Isby and entering his cell with dogs, a fire hose, and a fully-armored cell-extraction team. In the ensuing altercation, one of the dogs was killed, and Isby stabbed two correctional officers—one in the neck, and the other in the head, through a helmet. See Isby v. Clark,
After his second conviction, Isby was moved among various facilities in Indiana and received several major-conduct reports for Class A or B infractions, including battery (in June 1999) and intimidation (in October 2005). On October 4, 2006, Isby was transferred to the Wabash Valley Correctional Facility. During his first nineteen days at Wabash Valley, he was housed in the general population and was not involved in any infractions, write-ups, or disturbances. On October 23, however, Isby was transferred to department-wide administrative long-term segregation (now called administrative restrictive-status housing) in the Secured Housing Unit (“SHU,” now called the “Special Confinement Unit” or “SCU”).
Per the district court’s findings at trial, Isby also may be outside his cell for social visits, attorney visits, medical appointments, showers, and meetings with prison staff as needed. However, because Isby is housed in the SCU, he does not have access to the vocational, work, or educational programs offered to general-population inmates. Isby is also limited to one personal phone call each week (and legal calls as needed), whereas general-population inmates receive daily telephone access. Isby may communicate with correctional staff when they are on the range (ie., cell block), as well as with medical and mental-health personnel when they pass out medication and conduct mental-status reviews. He also may communicate orally with other inmates when they are in the recreation area and from cell to cell, though when inmates communicate on the range, other inmates will sometimes disrupt the conversation with radios or by speaking loudly. Isby can send letters to and receive mail from family and friends; but all outgoing legal and personal mail and incoming personal mail is subject to an open-mail rule so that staff can check for contraband and ensure that the sender or recipient matches who is listed on the envelope.
The district court found that cells in the SCU contain security lights that vary be
The district court found that temperatures in the SCU are maintained within normal limits, although the court noted that, on at least one occasion, temperatures approached forty degrees, and some inmates had to be moved to other housing for their own safety. Various inmates testified that they “freeze” during the winter and “burn ... up” in the summer. Regardless of the season, inmates sleep on a thin, vinyl-covered foam mattress laid over a concrete slab, with a light knitted blanket and two sheets. Isby complains that these sleeping arrangements started causing him back problems in 2013. His medical records reflect that his symptoms improved somewhat by July 2014 with osteopathic manipulative treatment.
Isby has eaten all of his meals alone from food trays passed by correctional officers through a narrow port in the cell door. Aramark Food Services contracts with Indiana to provide meals to prison inmates, including ■ those housed in the SCU. Sample Aramark menus introduced during trial reflect that the standard daily caloric intake for an adult male is 2800 calories per day, but the actual number of calories served, averaged over a weekly basis, has never matched or exceeded this standard.
Inmates in the SCU are allowed to shower three times a week (as opposed to daily in the general population), and trial testimony reflected that the water in the showers alternates between “scalding hot” and freezing cold. Inmates also testified that toilets do not flush adequately, in some instances leaving feces, or the odor of feces, present in a cell for multiple days. SCU inmates are provided with a change of clothing once a year and new underwear every six months. The standard-issue clothing for a SCU inmate is a thin red jumpsuit. In winter, inmates are also provided with a “very, very thin” coat, and, if they can afford it, they have the option of purchasing additional warm clothing from the commissary. During trial, a number of
A number of inmates, including Isby himself, testified to feelings of anger, frustration, and helplessness resulting from prolonged and isolated detainment in the SCU. However, Isby is not receiving and has not received treatment for mental illness, and seriously mentally ill inmates are not housed in the SCU. Isby has been seen by mental-health providers at weekly, thirty-day, and ninety-day intervals to determine whether he has any mental-health concerns that would require him to be removed from the SCU. Records of these visits from 2012 to 2014 show that Isby reported no mental-health concerns, though he said things like, “I’m doing the best I can under the circumstances,” “I’m okay but I’d be better if they let me out of here,” and “How do you think I’m doing,” and complained about his time in segregation being excessive. There is no record that Isby ever requested but was refused mental-health treatment.
Inmates in administrative segregation have their placement reviewed every thirty days.
In the over-ten-year period that Isby has been assigned to the SCU, IDOC’s stated reason for his continued placement following each review has been the same: ‘Tour status has been reviewed and there are no changes recommended to the Southern Regional Director at this time. Your current Department-wide Administrative segregation status shall remain in effect unless otherwise rescinded by the Southern Regional Director.” During the 2015 bench trial on Isby’s Eighth Amendment claim, Lieutenant Nicholson testified that he had never recommended that Isby be released from the SCU between 2006 and the present time “[bjecause he killed a ... dog and stabbed two officers,” referring to the incident that had occurred in 1990. In response to questions from the court, Jerry Snyder, the SCU Unit Team Manager, testified at trial that he had never recommended that Isby be released from the SCU because of the incident in 1990, because Isby had not signed up for two voluntary programs offered by IDOC to recondition inmates housed in the SCU for return to the general population, and because Isby had been “extremely argumentative and disrespectful with staff.” The record shows that Isby received a major-conduct report for disorderly conduct in October 2007, but that he had no major disciplinary infractions from early 2009 until December 2014.
Offenders in the SCU may also request a more formal review of their placement every ninety days. If such a request is made, a casework manager interviews the inmate and submits a report to the Review Committee and Unit Team Management, who then decide whether or not to keep the inmate segregated from the general population. According to Snyder, documents used in the thirty-day reviews are initially reviewed by the case worker assigned to the inmate, and then by various other individuals up the chain of command, culminating in a review by Snyder himself, and, if release from the SCU is recommended, by the executive director of operations for the IDOC in Indianapolis. The parties dispute the extent to which Isby has requested any such hearing. Defendant Beverly Gilmore, a case worker at Wabash Valley, claimed that Isby requested only two ninety-day reviews, and it is undisputed that full reviews were conducted on or about April 7, 2011, and June 27, 2011, both of which included interviews with Isby and reports considered by the Review Committee. In contrast, Isby asserted in an October 2013 affidavit that he has requested this more formal review “over [t]en times since December 19, 2009,” with his most recent requests for review being submitted in June 2012 and May 2013.
The IDOC also offers self-help programs designed to assist offenders with examining their past behavior and formulating new perspectives. Two of these programs are the Actions, Consequences, and Treatment (“ACT”) Program and the Moral Re-conation Program. They both include counseling to help inmates learn how to make better decisions. To participate in the ACT Program, the offender must write a request to his caseworker, and the caseworker and Unit Team Manager Snyder choose the participants. The fifth and last phase in the ACT Program involves release from the SCU and transfer to a different unit or facility. The Moral Reconation Program is a twelve-phase cognitive-behavior program, and an offender must likewise make a request in order to participate. These programs offer a means for inmates to potentially earn their way out of the SCU, though in the past, some inmates have also been released from the SCU without having participated in these programs.
Isby believes that the ACT Program is a “mind restructuring program ... designed to ... indoctrinate certain prisoners and turn them into snitches.” Isby has declined to participate in these types of programs. According to defendants-appellees, had Isby expressed interest in participating in either program, he would have been recommended immediately.
The IDOC has also implemented the New Castle Correctional Facility transition program, a step-down program for offenders who have been in restrictive-
In August 2014, Snyder advised Isby that Snyder was considering transferring Isby from the SCU to the New Castle transition unit. Snyder explained that prison officials were reviewing all offenders who had been in restrictive-status housing for five or more years, and that officials probably would recommend transfer to New Castle in all of those cases because of the length of time the inmates had been in a restrictive setting. While discussing the program, Isby became adamant that he would not go and that they could not make him go to New Castle. He said there was no reason for him to go to the New Castle transition unit because he did not need to and was not interested, and he demanded to be released to general population at Wabash Valley. Snyder continued to try to talk to Isby, but Isby kept interrupting him. Snyder eventually discontinued the interview, and although several other long-term segregation inmates were recommended for and transferred to New Castle, Isby received no such recommendation or transfer. Snyder said he did not recommend Isby for the program because it requires cooperation. Snyder also expressed concern at the bench trial that if Isby were placed in general population without going through a transition program, his anger issues would present a safety concern for other offenders and prison staff.
B. Procedural Background
Isby filed this lawsuit in May 2012, and the district court granted his request to proceed in forma pauperis. His second amended complaint alleged, among other things, that his then six-year (and now ten-year) assignment to the SCU violated the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment, and that he had not been afforded adequate review of his continued assignment to the SCU, in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause.
In September 2013, after the dismissal of two defendants,
In July 2015, the district court held a two-day bench trial on Isby’s Eighth Amendment claim.
The district court noted that although it was “greatly disturbed” by the length of time Isby has spent in administrative segregation, his continued placement is “a result of his own refusal to cooperate in any way with prison officials in efforts to transition him into the general housing population.” The court recognized that Isby “cannot be punished forever for killing a canine and attacking prison officers in 1990,” but nonetheless determined that the prison’s insistence that Isby participate in a prison-mandated transition program was “not unreasonable.” Because “no case under similar circumstances where duration alone, coupled with a prisoner’s refusal to participate in correctional programming, supported a finding of a constitutional violation,” the district court found no violation of Isby’s Eighth Amendment rights.
On appeal, Isby again sought and was granted leave to proceed in forma pauper-is. On February 3, 2017, after briefing was completed and only five days before oral argument, another panel of this Court dismissed a separate appeal by Isby in a different case, in which Isby had contended that prison officials burdened his religious exercise by failing to serve him kosher food. See Isby-Israel v. Lemmon, No. 16-2697,
Three days later, defendants-appellees moved to dismiss this appeal, contending that “[t]he facts and circumstances in this appeal are nearly identical [to those of Isby-Israel]”-, noting several other occasions on which Isby had been told by federal judges that he had “struck out”; and characterizing Isby as having deceived the district court. We took their motion with the case for resolution following oral argument.
II. Discussion
A. Motion to Dismiss the Appeal
We first consider whether to dismiss this appeal based on Isby’s failure to alert the court to his three strikes and to pay the requisite filing fees. Under the PLRA, prisoners who have accrued three “strikes” from filing actions or appeals dismissed as frivolous are barred from bringing another action in federal court without prepayment of fees. See 28 U.S.C. § 1915(g). The law of our Circuit requires such litigants to disclose to the court the fact that they have “struck out” and to pay all fees upfront, or risk dismissal of their case as a sanction for misconduct. See, e.g., Gay v. Chandra,
Isby does not dispute that he was aware of his three strikes when he initially brought this action in district court and when he appealed. Nor could he credibly do so, given the many other cases he has brought that were dismissed explicitly on the basis of his litigation history. See, e.g., Isby v. Bennet, No. 2:16-cv-00351-LJM-MJD,
Defendants-appellees argue that we ought to dismiss Isby’s appeal because he concealed his restricted status from the district court when he sought pauper status below and on appeal. See Sloan v. Lesza,
We note that defendants-appel-lees do not argue that § 1915(g) imposes a jurisdictional bar to our hearing Isby’s appeal; they simply observe that we may sua sponte raise § 1915(g) as a basis for dismissal. By its terms, § 1915(g) does not preclude a prisoner from bringing suit in federal court entirely; rather, the prisoner may either prepay in full all filing fees or make a showing of imminent danger of serious physical injury in order to proceed with a federal suit. See, e.g., Abdul-Akbar v. McKelvie,
As Isby’s three strikes do not bar us from hearing his appeal, we may consider whether to exercisé our discretion to reach the merits of Isby’s case. See Fed. R. App. P. 3(a)(2) (“An appellant’s failure to take any step other than the timely filing of a notice of appeal does not affect the validity of the appeal, but is ground only for the court of appeals to act as it considers appropriate, including dismissing the appeal.”); cf. Arobelidze v. Holder,
Isby’s deception by omission is certainly not lost on us, and we agree with defendants-appellees that Isby’s counsel’s payment of all fees owed to this Court and the district court does not remedy his fraud. However, we have recognized the possibility of a lawyer paying for a prisoner’s filing fee as a viable option under § 1915(g)— albeit in the context of borrowing the fee from one’s attorney with the promise of reimbursement under 42 U.S.C. § 1988. See Lewis v. Sullivan,
B. Eighth Amendment Claim
We now turn to Isby’s appeal from the district court’s verdict on his Eighth Amendment claim. We review the court’s legal conclusions de novo and its factual findings for clear error, see, e.g., Ernst v. City of Chi,
In cases involving the conditions of confinement in a prison, two elements are required to establish a violation of the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment: first, an objective showing that the conditions are sufficiently serious—ie., that they deny the inmate “the minimal civilized measure of life’s necessities,” Rhodes v. Chapman,
Moreover, although Isby points out that “[s]ome conditions of confinement may establish an Eighth Amendment violation in combination when each would not do so alone,” this occurs “only when they have a mutually enforcing effect that produces the deprivation of a single, identifiable human need such as food, warmth, or exercise.” Wilson v. Seiter,
Moreover, “[ojbviously influencing whether prolonged segregation constitutes cruel and unusual punishment is the existence of feasible alternatives.” Meriwether,
C. Fourteenth Amendment Claim
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment on Isby’s due process claim de novo, construing all facts and drawing all reasonable inferences in Isby’s favor. See, e.g., Collins v. Al-Shami,
The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment applies only to deprivations of life, liberty, and property. “Otherwise states are free to act summarily.” Marion v. Radtke,
The district court concluded that, “[g]iven the length of time Isby[ ] has been confined in administrative segregation, ... and accepting [his] undisputed sworn statements concerning the conditions of his confinement as true for purposes of the summary judgment motion, ... a due process liberty is at stake.” Defendants-appel-lees sensibly do not contest the conclusion that the extraordinary length of Isby’s segregation in the SCU implicates his due process rights. See, e.g., Harris v. Caruso,
The Supreme Court held in Hewitt that the Due Process Clause mandates that prison officials periodically review whether an inmate placed in administrative segregation continues to pose a threat.
The decision whether a prisoner remains a security risk will be based on facts relating to a particular prisoner—which will have been ascertained when determining [whether] to confine the inmate to administrative segregation'—-and on the officials’ general knowledge of prison conditions and tensions, which are singularly unsuited for “proof’ in any highly structured manner.... [T]he ongoing task of operating the institution will require the prison officials to consider a wide range of administrative considerations.
Id. As the district court here rightly explained, we and other circuits have interpreted Hewitt as entitling inmates to an “informal and nonadversary” periodic review (the frequency of which is committed to the discretion of the prison officials) that keeps administrative segregation from becoming a pretext for indefinite confinement. Westefer v. Neal,
Isby takes issue with the perfunctory nature of his thirty-day reviews, emphasizing that, despite the amount of time that has passed since the 1990 incident,
With respect to the first factor, Isby’s private interest is considerably lessened' because of his status as an inmate. See, e.g., Hewitt,
Next, we consider the government’s interests, which are substantial. Maintaining institutional security and safety are crucial considerations in the management of a prison, and, to the extent that an inmate continues to pose a threat to himself or others, ongoing segregation may well be justified. See, e.g., Bell v. Wolfish,
Defendants-appellees claim that “[t]here is no mystery as to why Isby remains in the SCU,” and the undisputed-facts portion of the district court’s summary judgment order states that Isby has been kept in segregation because of his extensive conduct-report history, past behavior, violent tendencies, inability to cooperate with Wabash Valley staff, and other factors. However, the first two items in this list are limited to occurrences in the past, and it is unclear whether the other three items occurred in the distant or recent past as opposed to currently affecting Isby’s readiness to return to the general prison population. Meanwhile, Lieutenant Nicholson highlighted the 1990 incident as the main reason for Isby’s continued placement in segregation. If it is in fact the ease, as defendants-appellees suggest, that Isby is still being held in administrative segregation because of his ongoing refusal to cooperate with staff and to participate in any of the self-help programs, then it seems easy enough to include that explanation in the output of his thirty-day reviews. See Toevs v. Reid,
Defendants-appellees emphasize that the law does not require that an inmate receive a statement of reasons for their retention in administrative segregation. See Westefer,
Several other circuits have also criticized review procedures like those we have here. See, e.g., Incumaa v. Stirling,
Given the long stretches of time during which Isby had no serious disciplinary problems, as well as the conflicting evidence as to the reasons for his ongoing segregation, Isby has raised triable issues of material fact regarding whether his reviews were meaningful or pretextual. See id. at 610 (“Review with a pre-ordained outcome is tantamount to no review at all.”). Here, the repeated issuance of the same uninformative language (without any updates or explanation of why continued placement is necessary) coupled with the length of Isby’s confinement, could cause a reasonable trier of fact to conclude that Isby has been deprived of his liberty interest without due process. Moreover, our concerns with the thirty-day review process bring us to the ninety-day reviews, and the parties and the district court agree there is a disputed issue of material fact in Isby’s case with respect to these more formal reviews. Further testimony and evidence at trial could clarify the reasons for Isby’s ongoing segregation and convince a trier of-fact that his reviews were not pretextual. However, his due process claim ought to have survived summary judgment.
D. Qualified Immunity
Because the district court found no violation under the Fourteenth Amendment, it did not have to reach the question of qualified immunity. We now consider whether summary judgment on Isby’s due process claim was nonetheless warranted on that ground. See United States v. Flores-Sandoval,
In considering whether qualified immunity applies, we must inquire: “(1) whether the facts, taken in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, show that the defendant violated a constitutional right; and (2) whether that constitutional right was clearly established at the time of the alleged violation.” Hernandez v. Cook Cty. Sheriff’s Office,
It is well established that whenever process is constitutionally due, no matter the context, it must be granted in a meaningful manner. Cf. Armstrong v. Manzo,
Although some appellate courts that have considered this issue have concluded that qualified immunity applied, see, e.g., Toevs,
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, Isby is ordered to pay in full all outstanding fees to this Court and the district court, and we Affirm the district court on Isby’s Eighth Amendment claim and Reverse and Remand on his Fourteenth Amendment claim.
Notes
. Indiana Department of Corrections (“IDOC”) Policy #01-04-101, “Adult Offender Classification,” allows for an offender to be placed in department-wide administrative segregation when that offender has a history of battery on others, presents an extraordinary threat to themselves or others, or presents special safety and security concerns. Section 11-10-1-7 of the Indiana Code similarly provides that an inmate may be involuntarily
. According to Isby, defendants-appellees neither gave him a hearing prior to placing him in administrative segregation in 2006 nor notified him of his placement by prison mail, and he was placed in the SCU absent any emergency condition, charge, prison disturbance, or investigation. As the district court noted, however, with respect to any claim arising from Isby's initial placement in the SCU without notice or a hearing, the two-year statute of limitations applicable to § 1983 actions arising from an alleged injury in Indiana has expired. See Ind. Code § 34-11-2-4; Serino v. Hensley,
As an aside, from December 29, 2014, to March 29, 2015, Isby was held in disciplinary restrictive-status housing in the SCU. His placement in this even more restrictive form of segregation presumably stemmed from a December 2014 incident described in further detail below, see infra n.8; and his time in disciplinary restrictive-status housing is not at issue in this appeal.
. This means that Isby's general, non-legal mail is routinely searched and read. Outgoing legal mail is checked to ensure that it is entitled to treatment as legal mail but is not otherwise read, copied, or otherwise interfered with in either sending or receipt.
. The meals served apparently average approximately 2500 calories, or just under ninety percent of the standard.
. Isby takes issue with the district court’s focus on only his recent weight fluctuations, but as the defendants-appellees point out in their brief, the court focused on the more recent time period because Isby had submitted into evidence Aramark menus dating back only to September 2010; and any claim accruing before May 15, 2010, would be barred by the two-year statute of limitations.
.Section 11-10-1-7 of the Indiana Code provides that the IDOC "shall review an offender [involuntarily segregated from the general population] at least once every thirty (30) days to determine whether the reason for segregation still exists.” Ind. Code § 11—10— l-7(a) and (b).
. See IDOC Policy #02-01-111, VILA (“It shall not be necessary to hold a formal Classification Committee Hearing in order to complete this review.”).
. In December 2014, Correctional Officer Jay-mison Bennett went to Isby's cell to retrieve the phone from Isby when his twenty minutes of allotted phone time was up. Isby became
. The operative complaint named as defendants Richard Brown (Superintendent at Wabash Valley), Bruce Lemmon (Commissioner of IDOC), James Wynn (Director of Classification for IDOC), Stanley Knight (Interim Deputy Commissioner for IDOC), Jack Hendrix (Assistant Superintendent at Wabash Valley), Jerry Snyder (SCU Unit Team Manager at Wabash Valley), Beverly Gilmore (Casework Manager at Wabash Valley), Julie Snider (Counselor at Wabash Valley), and Dusty Russell (Custody Supervisor at Wabash Valley).
. In June 2013, defendants Knight and Lem-mon moved to dismiss, arguing that sovereign immunity barred Isby’s action against them and that neither of them was personally involved in the alleged deprivations of Isby’s constitutional rights. Isby did not oppose this motion, and in July 2013, the district court dismissed Knight and Lemmon.
. After Isby presented his case during the bench trial, defendants Wynn, Beverly, Gilmore, Snider, Hendrix, and Russell moved for judgment as a matter of law in their favor. The district court granted that motion as to Wynn, Snider, and Russell, leaving Brown, Hendrix, Snyder, and Gilmore as the remaining defendants below.
. Isby cites to Keenan v. Hall,
. But see Kervin v. Barnes,
. It is true that there is no guarantee that participating in the IDOC self-help programs would necessarily lead to Isby’s return to the general population (unlike compliance with the prison rules at issue in Rodriguez or Freeman, or the explicit testimony by prison officials in Sostre), or that program participation
. Defendants-appellees claim that the trial transcript does not support Isby's assertion that the 1990 incident is the sole reason for his placement in the SCU. But Lieutenant Nicholson did testify that he never recommended Isby for release from the SCU "[b]e-cause he killed a ... dog and stabbed two officers.” Nicholson also testified, however, that he was not the sole decisionmaker, and Isby himself stated that he was eventually told that he was in the SCU because of his “conduct history” generally.
. Defendants-appellees argue that Smith held that the thirty-day review process at issue in this case passed constitutional muster. But what we held in Smith was that the prison officials’ uncontroverted affidavits established that the inmates received notice and an opportunity to be heard on the front end as well as sufficiently frequent periodic reviews. See
. In response to a question from the district court during the bench trial, defendant Jerry Snyder, the Unit Team Manager for the SCU at Wabash Valley, confirmed that he did not recall any conduct by Isby that prompted his move from the general population to the SCU. And even accepting the district court’s findings of fact on this issue and the trial testimony that Isby was "extremely argumentative and disrespectful,” our own case law warns that long stretches of solitaiy confinement may be too strict of a punishment for mere behavioral problems. See Kervin,
. The district court’s bench-trial order on Isby’s Eighth Amendment claim concluded that Isby had “avenues that he could, take to lead him to general population” (emphasis added), which "he simply has chosen not to attempt.” But these conclusions do .not necessarily bear on Isby’s due process claim {i.e., as to whether the existing process was sufficient).
. The Third Circuit also elaborated that ”[w]here ... the goal of the placement is solely and exclusively to encourage a prisoner to improve his future behavior, the review should provide a statement of reasons, which will often serve as a guide for future behavior (i.e., by giving the prisoner some idea of how he might progress toward a more favorable placement).” Toevs,
. The Second Circuit noted that, "in the main, Proctor's behavior [in administrative segregation] has remained positive,” that he "has gone long stretches—including one period of almost four years—without any disciplinary reports,” and that he “received just one disciplinary report between December 2011 and the close of the record in this case.”
. At the hearing held shortly thereafter, the hearing officer found that Proctor posed a threat to the prison based on his criminal history and misbehavior, including his past escape and his bad behavior during his first years in disciplinary segregation.
