Plaintiff-appellant Len Martucci (Martuc-ci) appealed the entry of summary judgment against him in this action commenced pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging various constitutional violations by officials of the Anderson County, Tennessee, sheriff’s department in concert with an agent of the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation (TBI).
Martucci is currently incarcerated in a Tennessee prison, where he is serving a term for first degree murder. When Mar- *293 tucci was originally arrested on the murder charge in early 1988, he was committed to the pre-trial custody of the Anderson County jail, where he was detained until tried and convicted in December of that year. The instant controversy stems from Mar-tucci’s segregated confinement in that facility, for eight days between February 8 to 16, 1988, in a six by ten foot cell furnished only with a bed, sink, and toilet. During this period, Martucci was in the cell for 23 hours a day, with one hour allotted for exercise. His mail was withheld and he had no access to a telephone. On February 16, 1988, Martucci was returned to the general jail population.
At no time during his confinement was Martucci informed of the reasons for his segregation. It is not disputed that jail officials told him that he would be released once he “ceased causing problems.” It was conceded by all parties that Martucci had been segregated in this matter because an agent of the TBI, Curtiss Sturgill (Stur-gill), had reported to the Anderson County jailers that Martucci was planning an escape from the facility.
On February 13,1989, several days short of the one year anniversary of his release from segregation, Martucci filed a pro se complaint with the district court in which he named the Anderson County jailers along with various anonymous persons as parties-defendant. 1 In his complaint, Mar-tucci asserted three distinct constitutional claims arising out of the conditions of his confinement in the Anderson County jail. First, he alleged that he had been deprived of due process because he had not been afforded a hearing to challenge the asserted basis for his segregated confinement. Second, Martucci charged that his constitutional right of access to the courts had been abridged during the entire period of his pretrial detention because the jail facility contained no law library. Lastly, Mar-tucci alleged that he had been denied access to his mail in violation of the first amendment.
In granting summary judgment in favor of the defendants, the district court concluded that because Martucci’s segregation was for “administrative” and not “disciplinary” reasons, he had no due process right to a hearing to challenge the reasons for his separate confinement. In arriving at its decision, the district court cited the insufficiency of the evidence to rebut jailer Avery Johnson’s affidavit, which attested that Martucci had been segregated solely for “security” reasons. The district court further concluded as a matter of fact that the actions of the jailers had not been arbitrary or capricious, because in segregating Martucci they were acting upon credible information from a reliable source indicating that the prisoner was planning to escape. The district court decided that Mar-tucci had been placed in segregated confinement solely for “security” or administrative reasons, and consequently had not been disciplined for violating any prison rules or regulations.
This court’s evaluation of the constitutionality of the jailers’ conduct in this case must be conducted with due regard for their role as guardians of the institution’s security. It is without question that “[pjrison officials must be free to take appropriate action to ensure the safety of inmates and corrections personnel and
to prevent escape
or unauthorized entry.”
Bell v. Wolfish,
With more specific relevance to the case at bar, it is important to note that “the ‘essential objective of pretrial confinement is to insure the detainee’s presence at trial.’ ”
Bell v. Wolfish,
Because the conditions imposed on Martucci during the eight days of his segregated confinement were “reasonably related to [the] legitimate governmental objective” of aborting his escape and insuring his presence at trial,
see Bell v. Wolfish,
Nor did the lack of a hearing at which Martucci could contest the reasons for his confinement constitute a violation of his rights to procedural due process. (Martucci’s pro se complaint, which must be liberally construed,
2
can be interpreted to challenge both the
conditions
of his confinement under the due process clause and
Bell v. Wolfish,
as well as the
process
by which he was separated from the general jail population and subjected to segregated incarceration.) The federal Constitution, standing alone, does not confer upon prisoners a “liberty interest” in any particular form of confinement.
See Hewitt v. Helms,
In support of his claim to a constitutionally cognizable liberty interest arising under state law, Martucci referred to regulations promulgated by the Tennessee Corrections Institute under the authority of T.C.A. § 41-4-140. In relevant part, these regulations govern the procedures applicable to the detention of prisoners in local jails and lock-up facilities. In the chapter styled “Discipline,” there is a provision that requires the jailers to provide for “disciplinary hearings” in “cases of alleged violations of prisoner conduct rules.” When a prisoner is subjected to segregated confinement in response to an alleged rule infraction, the disciplinary hearing must occur within 72 hours of his placement in isolation.
Martucci is unable to derive a liberty interest from these regulations. As the district court determined, and as supported by the record, Martucci was
not
subjected to “discipline” for violation of a prison rule. Rather, he was reasonably placed in segre
*295
gated confinement for what amounted to purely administrative reasons — reasons anchored in a desire to foil his escape, thereby preserving institutional security and insuring Martucci’s presence at trial.
3
Because he was not, in the germane sense of the term, subjected to “disciplinary confinement,” Martucci had no right under the Tennessee Correctional Institute regulations to a “disciplinary hearing” within three days of his segregation. The regulations do not mandate hearings upon the imposition of
administrative
segregation, but refer only to disciplinary or punitive segregation. The absence of language conditioning the imposition of administrative segregation upon a due process hearing is dispositive of Martucci’s procedural due process claim.
See Hewitt v. Helms,
Martucci’s remaining constitutional claims are similarly without merit. Martucci was not denied access to the courts because the record disclosed that jail officials were in the practice of providing legal materials to inmates “upon request.” The record also disclosed that Martucci was represented by appointed counsel during the entire length of his detention at the facility. “[A] prisoner’s constitutionally-guaranteed right of access to the courts [is] protected when a state provides that prisoner with either the legal tools necessary to defend himself, e.g., a state-provided law library,
or the assistance of legally trained personnel.” Holt v. Pitts,
Martucci argues that although he was represented by appointed counsel during his criminal murder trial, he was nevertheless denied access to the courts insofar as the instant section 1983 cause of action was concerned, reasoning that his counsel was appointed to defend him in the criminal case and not to represent him as a plaintiff in a civil rights action. There is, however, nothing in the record to lend support to the presumption that Martucci was barred from discussing his segregated confinement — and the legal implications thereof— with his appointed attorney. The availability of counsel during Martucci’s period of pre-trial confinement, coupled with the jailers’ unrebutted assertion that they provided inmates with legal materials upon request, defeats Martucci’s access to courts claim.
Finally, Martucci’s claims that he was denied access to incoming mail and that he was deprived of the opportunity to send mail during the time that he was separately confined in violation of the first amendment,
see Procunier v. Martinez,
The jailers’ decision to withhold both incoming and outgoing mail was legitimate under the dual standards enunciated in
Proeunier
and
Turner v. Safley.
First, withholding mail destined for a prisoner believed to be planning an escape is “reasonably related” to the legitimate penological interest of maintaining institutional security. Second, in connection with the curtailment of outgoing correspondence, the jailers were lawfully motivated to regulate, on a content-neutral basis, Martucci’s ability to correspond with individuals outside the penal institution for so long as there existed reason to believe that an escape attempt was imminent. The jailers’ response to this exigency—which was to prevent Martucci from sending or receiving
any
mail—was reasonably tailored to their concerns, because any size or type of package or envelope could have contained information relating to Martucci’s scheme.
See Turner v. Safley,
Accordingly, for the reasons expressed herein, the judgment of the district court is hereby AFFIRMED.
Notes
. At the time he commenced suit, Martucci was not aware of the identity of agent Sturgill. On June 15, 1989, several months beyond the expiration of the statute of limitations applicable to section 1983 actions in Tennessee, Martucci moved to amend the complaint to specifically name Sturgill as a defendant. The district court granted Sturgill’s motion to dismiss the complaint against him as time-barred, reasoning that the denomination of Sturgill as party-defendant could not “relate back” to the timely filing of the original complaint under Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(c). In light of the disposition reached herein, the question of whether the district court abused its discretion in so ruling is of no consequence to the instant appeal and is therefore not addressed.
. Franklin v. Rose,
. Martucci argues that because he was told by one of the jailers that he would be released from segregated confinement if he "ceased causing problems," he must have been subjected to "discipline" for violation of a prison regulation. The quoted statement from the jail official is, however, equally consistent with a finding that Martucci was administratively segregated in response to a report that he was scheming to escape.
. The district court failed to address Martucci’s mail claim, but a remand on this issue is not necessary for it may be decided on the basis of the appellate record.
