Indiana inmate Jeffery Northern filed a petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, claiming that prison officials violated his due process rights when they failed properly to notify him of a disciplinary charge. The district court dismissed the petition, and we affirm. 1
Prison officials at Indiana Correctional Industrial Facility investigated allegations that Northern and two other inmates were
Northern filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus, which the district court later denied. In his petition, Northern alleged that he received 24-hour notice of the original charge, but not of the modified charge, and therefore, because he was convicted of an offense different from the offense identified in the original notice, his due process rights were violated. The district court found that Northern had received advance notice of the original charge, and that the reviewing authority’s modification of the charge on appeal was “of no consequence” because the evidence supported either charge. Thus, the court concluded that Northern’s due process rights were not violated.
On appeal Northern renews his argument that the reviewing authority’s modification of the charge violated due process because it did not give him advance notice, and thus he could not mount an appropriate defense. He argues that if he had originally been charged with attempted trafficking, his “defensive posture [at the CAB hearing] would have been different.”
Indiana inmates have a protected liberty interest in their credit-earning class,
Montgomery v. Anderson,
Here, Northern received advance written notice informing him of the facts underlying the charge. These facts were sufficient to apprise Northern that he could be subject to a trafficking charge. As set forth in the investigation report, Northern had been implicated in a scheme by which tobacco was bought and sold among inmates. According to the report, an unidentified prison staff member would repeatedly bring tobacco into the prison, hide it in the sanitation department so that Northern — who was working in the sanitation department — could access it, and then notify Northern of its location. The report further stated that Northern would retrieve the hidden tobacco while working, conceal it in supply boxes that he needed to deliver to specific units, and then deliver the tobacco to inmates while making deliveries for the sanitation department. Inmates receiving tobacco would send payment to Northern’s brother Michael, who was not incarcerated, and Michael in turn would pay the staff member who smuggled the tobacco into the prison. The CAB deemed these facts sufficient to find
In pressing his argument that notice was insufficient, Northern relies on a district court case,
Evans v. Deuth,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Despite Indiana’s urging, we decline to reconsider our decision in
Walker v. O’Brien,
