OPINION
Issаc L. Herron, a Tennessee state prisoner, filed a civil rights complaint against various officials of the Cold Creek Correctional Facility and the Tennessee Department of Corrections (collectively, CCCF officials) pursuant to 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983, 1985, and 1986. Herron alleges that those officials violated his civil rights both directly, by burdening the exercise of his constitutiоnal rights, and indirectly, by retaliating against him for exercising those rights. The magistrate judge to whom the case was transferred dismissed Herron’s complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted, finding that the majority of Herron’s claims did not allege sufficient facts to constitute unlawful retaliation and the remainder of his claims were barred by issuе preclusion due to prior suits that Herron had brought.
On March 8, 1999, several months after the briefs in this appeal were filed, this court issued its en banc decision in
Thaddeus-X v. Blatter,
I. BACKGROUND
Herron brought two earlier lawsuits against the prison staff at CCCF before initiating this suit. In May of 1994, he filed an action titled Herron v. Bradley, alleging violations of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA), 42 U.S.C. § 2000bb, and his First Amendment rights to the free exercise of religion. In that case, Herron charged CCCF officials with *413 purposely interfering with his observance of religious feasts and services as a member of the Church of God. He also charged prison officials with violating his rights by terminating the visitation privileges of Marvin Brunken, a religious volunteer who had led Church of God services at the prison.
At an evidentiary hearing in the
Bradley
case, Herron alleged that prison officials were then in the prоcess of transferring him to another institution in retaliation for his attempts to seek legal redress against them. In an order dated March 28, 1997, the district court granted Herron’s motion to temporarily enjoin CCCF officials from transferring him to another facility. The district court concluded that RFRA provided Herron with a valid First Amendment claim and that CCCF officials were therefore not permitted to retaliate against Herron for asserting that claim. After the Supreme Court issued its opinion in
City of Boerne v. Flores,
In his second case, Herron v. Campbell, filed in November of 1995, Herron alleged unconstitutional interference with the fund-raising activities of the Church оf God at Cold Creek (CGCC), a church that Herron had incorporated. That case was dismissed in January of 1997 on the grounds that Herron had no standing to raise the corporation’s rights and, as a non-lawyer, had no right to argue on its behalf.
In the present case, filed in October of 1996, Herron charges CCCF officials with a series of civil rights violations, some of which arе. new and others of which were raised in Herron’s prior lawsuits. First, in his original complaint, Herron charges defendants with unconstitutional retaliation against the exercise of his First Amendment right to seek legal redress. Herron relates that he has filed several grievances on his own behalf, as well as on behalf of a group of Muslim inmates. In retaliation, he alleges that prison officials interfered with his religious services, denied his request to conduct business on behalf of GGCC, suspended his wife’s visitation privileges, terminated him from his prison job, and ordered him transferred to the South Central > Correctional • Center (SCCC). (Herron was not, in fact, transferred to SCCC, although he -- was subsequently transferred to Turney Center Industrial Prison — a move that he does not challenge in this case).
In his first supplement to the pending complaint, Herron charges three CCCF officials with taking further retaliatory actions against him for appearing before the institutional grievance board on behalf of a fellow inmate, Abu Bakar Muhammad. Two days after his appearance, Herron alleges that defendаnt Tuggle approached Herron while Herron was visiting with his wife and' instructed him to put his feet under the table. Herron and Tuggle then entered Into a dispute over the validity of this rule. Herron was later charged with and convicted of creating a disturbance, and sentenced to five days of punitive segregation, thirty days’ loss of visitation privileges, two months’ loss of' package privileges, and an infraction fine of three dollars. Herron claims that the disciplinary action was taken in retaliation for his having asserted his First Amendment rights to file grievances and to provide legal assistance to another inmate. He also, alleges several violations of his due process rights in the conduct of his disciplinary prоceeding and sentencing.
Finally, in his second supplement to the pending complaint, Herron alleges that his right to privacy was violated when prison officials. requested an additional copy of the charter and bylaws of CGCC. When Herron declined this request, CCCF officials allegedly retaliated against him by firing Brunken from his position as a religious volunteer. Hеrron claims that his First Amendment rights to the free exer *414 cise of religion were thereby infringed because, without Brunken, he was unable to observe the Feast of Pentecost in the proper manner, congregate for Sabbath evening services, conduct acts of charity, or produce his church newsletter. In depriving him of the opportunity to associate with Brunken, Herron also maintains that prison officials violated his freedom to associate and his right to privacy. Furthermore, Herron claims that he was singled out for differential treatment on the basis of his religious affiliation, in violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Herron’s original and supplemental complaints аlso charge CCCF officials with parallel violations of the Tennessee constitution.
On October 21, 1997, the defendants moved to dismiss all of Herron’s complaints for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted. By order dated April 16, 1998, the magistrate judge to whom the case had been transferred by consent of the parties granted Herron’s mоtion to file his second supplemental complaint, but contemporaneously granted the prison officials’ motion to dismiss all of Herron’s claims pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Herron filed a timely notice of appeal on April 29,1998.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Standard of review
We review a trial court’s decision to grant a motion to dismiss de novo.
See Weiner v. Klais & Co.,
B. Herron’s allegations of impermissible retaliation
The primary thrust of Herron’s complaint is that CCCF officials impermissibly retaliated against him for exercising his First Amendment right to file grievances and petition the courts for redress. In March of 1999, eight months after Herron had filed his appeal in this ease, an en banc panel of this court decided
Thaddeus-X v. Blatter,
There are two categories of retaliation claims — general claims of retaliation and claims that allege that an individual was retaliated against for the exercise of specific constitutional rights.
Thaddeus-X
clarifies the elements of each category аnd supplants previous cases that had blurred the lines between the two. General claims of retaliation are brought under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. To state a successful case of general retaliation, a prisoner must establish “an egregious abuse of governmental power” or behavior that “shocks the сonscience.”
See id.
at 387. In the great majority of cases, inmates are unable to survive summary judgment under this demanding standard. The rare exceptions have been in cases where, for example, a prison official issued death threats against an inmate with a cocked pistol at his head, or where prison officials trumped up false disciplinаry charges against an inmate and then proceeded to physically abuse him and
*415
levy harsh disciplinary sanctions against him.
See Cale v. Johnson,
The second category of retaliation claims involves allegations that state officials penalized an individual for the exercise of a specific constitutional right. In such cases, an inmate bears a lesser burden, and is only required to establish the fоllowing three elements: (1) the inmate engaged in protected conduct, (2) an advérse action was taken that would deter a person of ordinary firmness from continuing to engage in that conduct, and (3) the adverse action was motivated, at least in part, by the inmate’s protected conduct.
See Thaddeus-X,
1. Herron’s right to pursue his own grievances
An inmate has an undisputed First Amendment right to file grievancеs against prison officials on his own behalf.
See Noble v. Schmitt,
Herron’s only claim of retaliation for the exercise of his own right of access to the courts is advanced in his original complaint. In that complaint, he describes a series of adverse actions that CCCF officials allegedly took in response to his filing a lawsuit in Herron v. Bradley, a suit that charged prison officials with violating his First Amendment right tо the free exercise of religion. Herron specifically claims that CCCF officials suspended his wife’s visitation privileges, terminated his job, and ordered him transferred to the SCCC, all in retaliation for his filing a legal complaint.
The' underlying free exercise claims that allegedly sparked these incidents of retaliation were presented in Bradley. Indeed, concerned by Herron’s allegations that prison officials might retaliate against Herron for filing the' Bradley suit, the district court issued a preliminary injunction to prevent CCCF officials from transferring Herron to another facility while the case was pending. - Ultimately, though, the district court dismissed Herron’s entire complaint as frivolous in an order dated July 7, 1997, after RFRA was overruled.
In the sаme order vacating the preliminary injunction, the' district court stated that “[a]s Herron has no claim for interference with his First Amendment rights, he has no claim for retaliation.... ” Herron therefore may not now' allege specific retaliation by prison officials against him for pursuing the free exercise claims that were dismissed as frivolous in Bradley. To the extent that Herron is alleging a general claim of retaliation, the retaliatory acts alleged by Herron in this complaint, such as the suspension of his wife’s visitation privileges and a-threatened transfer to another facility, fall far short of the “shock the conscience” test.
2. Herron’s right to provide legal as- , .sistance to others.
Herron’s other retаliation claim, contained in his first supplemental complaint, alleges that CCCF officials impermissibly disciplined him for assisting Abu Bakar Muhammad in arguing a grievance before the prison board. The magistrate judge dismissed this claim, recognizing the principle that an-inmate does not generally have an independent right to help other prisoners with their legal сlaims.
See Thaddeus-X,
Herron does not assert in his complaint that Muhammad would have been unable to obtain access to the courts without him. Indeed, it appears that Herron is unaware of this requirement, because his brief erroneously asserts that his legal work оn behalf of other inmates is protected by Her-ron’s own First Amendment rights. The question, then, is whether Herron’s failure to allege that Muhammad required his assistance warrants dismissal of his claim at this stage. As stated above, a pro se plaintiffs complaint should only be dismissed under Rule 12(b)(6) if it is clear that relief would not be appropriate under any set of facts that could be proved.
See Estelle,
The case of
Gibbs v. Hopkins,
As an alternative ground for its holding, the magistrate judge also concluded that none of the disciplinary actions that Herron alleges in his first supplemental complaint rise to the level of impermissible retaliation. The magistrate judge drew upon
pre-Thaddeus-X
precedents in so holding, and mistakenly applied the general retaliatory standard to claims that allege retaliation against Herron’s exercise of First Amendment rights. Thus, rеgarding Herron’s most serious allegation that he was sentenced to five days of administrative segregation in retaliation for assisting Muhammad, the magistrate judge found that “a prison disciplinary conviction and confinement to segregation for creating a disturbance neither shocks the conscience nor egregiously abuses authority.” Under the proper standard expressed in
Thaddeus-X,
however, this court has found that placing an inmate in administrative segregation “could deter a person of ordinary firmness from exercising his First Amendment rights.”
Dunham-Bey v. Holden,
No. 98-15220,
With the exception of demonstrating that his assistance was needed by Muhammad, then, Herron has made out a prima facie claim of First Amendment retaliation under Thaddeus-X. He alleged that he engaged in protected conduct (legal assistance), that he was subsequently disciplined to a degree that might deter an ordinary person from such conduct, and that the two incidents were causally linked. Should Herrоn produce evidence showing that the inmate he assisted required that assistance, he will have established all three elements of a prima facie claim of unconstitutional retaliation. We therefore *417 reverse the magistrate judge’s dismissal of the retaliation claim alleged in Herron’s first amended complaint and remand to allow Herron to amend his complaint if he so chooses.
C. Herron’s equal protection claim
The magistrate judge properly dismissed Herron’s equal protection claim, which was raised in both his original and supplemental complaints. An equal protection claim must assert that the plaintiff suffered class-based discrimination.
See McCleskey v. Kemp,
III. CONCLUSION
For all of the reasons set forth above, we REVERSE the magistrate judge’s order of dismissal as to the retaliation claim found in Herron’s first supplemental complaint and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. We AFFIRM the dismissal of the remainder of Herron’s claims.
