This prisoner’s civil rights suit raises a multitude of claims, but only two have sufficient merit to warrant discussion.
While a pretrial detainee in an Indiana county jail, Higgs got into a fight with another inmate and was placed in “lock-down segregation,” a form of solitary confinement. He filed a grievance with the jail authorities, who ten days after he had been placed in lockdown segregation wrote him that he had been “placed on lockdown for repeatedly threatening and harassing other inmates and has continued on lock-down as he has repeatedly cussed and attempted to intimidate correction staff.” His request for a hearing was denied, and he spent a total of 34 days in segregation before being allowed to rejoin the general jail population.
A pretrial detainee cannot be placed in segregation as a punishment for a disciplinary infraction without notice and an opportunity to be heard; due process requires no less.
Rapier v. Harris,
Unfortunately we cannot determine from the record whether Higgs was placed in lockdown segregation for preventive purposes or as punishment. The statement of the jail authorities that we quoted is the only evidence, apart from the unexplained length of his detention; there is no *439 evidence on why 34 days rather than 24 or 44. And the statement is ambiguous; its wording is equally consistent with a punitive purpose and with a preventive purpose. The case must be remanded for further proceedings on this question.
And on another as well, the plaintiffs claim that he has been a victim of retaliation. In his amended complaint, Higgs charged that after bringing this suit he was again placed in lockdown segregation, for 11 days, to “punish” him for filing the suit. The district court dismissed this part of the complaint for failure to state a claim, on the ground that the allegation of retaliation was “conclusory” and that Higgs had “not alleged a chronology of events from which retaliation can be inferred.” But as the Supreme Court and this court have emphasized, there are no special pleading rules for prisoner civil rights cases.
Swierkiewicz v. Sorema,
In all but these two respects, the judgment is affirmed.
AFFIRMED IN PART, VACATED IN PART, AND Remanded.
