Lead Opinion
Appellant Michael Rinaldi, who at all relevant times was an inmate in custody at United States Penitentiary, Lewisburg ("Lewisburg" or the "Institution"), appeals the District Court's dismissal of his complaint
I. Factual Background
Between November 2011 and 2012, while housed at Lewisburg, Rinaldi filed a number of administrative requests, including one related to an alleged assault and one related to alleged retaliation. He initiated his assault claim with an "informal resolution,"
The following day, February 2, Rinaldi was transferred to another unit. According to Rinaldi's complaint, Appellee Counselor Baysore had previously warned Rinaldi that unless he stopped filing requests, "she would have him moved to a different unit and placed in a cell with an inmate who was known for assaulting his cellmates," and Appellee Officer Gee, who conducted the transfer, told Rinaldi that the reason he was being moved was because he "didn't listen" to those warnings. JA 61. Despite his protests, Rinaldi was transferred and placed in a cell with a new cellmate (Cellmate #2), who, Rinaldi alleges, threatened him by informing Lewisburg personnel, including Officer Gee and Counselor Baysore, "that if Rinaldi were placed in the cell he would kill [him]." JA 61. Over the course of the next three weeks, Rinaldi asserts he "suffered cuts and bruises and emotional distress" from several physical altercations with Cellmate #2. JA 61 .
Rinaldi sought administrative relief for the alleged retaliatory transfer on February 2, but because he allegedly was concerned
about the risk of further retaliation, he opted not to file an informal resolution or initial retaliatory transfer request directly with the Institution. Instead, he followed the procedure for "Sensitive" requests, filing this claim (the "Retaliation Request") directly with the Regional Director. According to BOP records, the Retaliation Request was rejected as procedurally improper with directions to first file it at the Institution, which Rinaldi declined to do.
Separately, Rinaldi also sought to obtain administrative relief for the assault by Cellmate #2. Although Rinaldi was required to file an informal resolution and formal request with the Institution,
You appeal the response from the Warden at USP Lewisburg and claim you were forced into a cell with another inmate who you allege threatened to kill you prior to being placed in the same cell. You also state you were once assaulted by a previous cellmate and received injuries ... [T]here is no record of you being assaulted by your previous or current cellmate ... Accordingly, your appeal is denied.
JA 168.
II. Procedural History
Unable to obtain redress through the BOP grievance process, Rinaldi, initially proceeding
pro se
, filed a complaint in the Middle District of Pennsylvania raising three claims relevant to this appeal: (1) a First Amendment claim based on the retaliatory conduct alleged in the Retaliation Request; (2) an Eighth Amendment claim based on the cell placement and resulting attack by Cellmate #2 alleged in his appeal of the Assault Request; and (3) a claim pursuant to the Federal Tort Claims Act ("FTCA"),
The District Court granted the Government's "Motion to Dismiss or, in the alternative, Motion for Summary Judgment," concluding (1) the First Amendment claim was barred by the PLRA, 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a), because Rinaldi had declined to file his Retaliation Request with the Institution and thus had not exhausted the Retaliation Request; (2) the Eighth Amendment claim covering the assault by Cellmate #2 was likewise unexhausted because Rinaldi failed to file an initial request and raised it only in the appeal of his Assault Request; and (3) the Court did not have jurisdiction over the FTCA claim because cellmate assignments fall within the discretionary function exception to the FTCA's waiver of sovereign immunity.
After appointing pro bono counsel on appeal, we directed the parties to address, among other things, whether Rinaldi failed to exhaust his administrative remedies regarding his First and Eighth Amendment claims and the applicability of the discretionary function exception to Rinaldi's FTCA claim.
III. Jurisdiction and Standard of Review
The District Court had jurisdiction under
IV. Discussion
Below we consider whether Rinaldi exhausted his First Amendment and Eighth Amendment claims before turning to Rinaldi's FTCA claim.
A. Exhaustion under the PLRA
Congress enacted the PLRA to reduce the "disruptive tide of frivolous prisoner litigation."
Woodford v. Ngo
,
[n]o action shall be brought with respect to prison conditions under Section 1983 of this title, or any other Federal law, by a prisoner confined in any jail ... until such administrative remedies as are available are exhausted.
42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a) (emphasis added). Exhaustion is thus a non-jurisdictional prerequisite to an inmate bringing suit and, for that reason, as we held in
Small v. Camden County
, it constitutes a " 'threshold issue that
courts
must address to determine whether litigation is being conducted in the right forum at the right time.' "
While
Small
made clear that factual disputes relevant to exhaustion may be resolved by a district judge without the participation of a jury,
1. Rinaldi's First Amendment Retaliation Claim
Rinaldi argues that his First Amendment claim should not have been dismissed on exhaustion grounds because the safety risks of filing directly with the Institution rendered that administrative remedy unavailable. Because we must measure whether Rinaldi exhausted his administrative remedies against the yardstick of the grievance procedures set forth in the relevant BOP regulations,
see
(a) Exhaustion of BOP Administrative Remedies
As a general matter, inmates must (1) attempt an informal resolution with staff at the institution,
id
. § 542.13(a) ; (2) file a formal complaint with the institution,
Here, Rinaldi considered his Retaliation Request a "Sensitive" request and therefore filed it with the Regional Director in the first instance. As discussed above, however, the Regional Director rejected it on the procedural ground that Rinaldi should have filed first with Lewisburg.
(b) Unavailability of Administrative Remedies
The PLRA requires only "proper exhaustion," meaning exhaustion of those administrative remedies that are "available."
Woodford
,
We too have encountered circumstances in which a grievance process, though "officially on the books,"
Ross
,
Rinaldi now asks us to recognize another circumstance in which the grievance process is unavailable,
i.e.
, where an inmate is deterred from pursuing an administrative grievance by a prison official's serious threats of substantial retaliation-a circumstance that Rinaldi contends falls squarely within
Ross
's third category because a prisoner's ability to take advantage of the grievance process has then been "thwarted" by prison administrators "through ... intimidation."
Ross
,
We agree that serious threats of substantial retaliation can trigger this third category of unavailability, and thus join our Sister Circuits who have held, even before
Ross
, that administrative remedies are not "available" under the PLRA where a prison official inhibits an inmate from resorting to them through serious threats of retaliation and bodily harm.
As the Tenth Circuit eloquently explained in
Tuckel v. Grover
, it is "difficult to accept the proposition that an administrative remedy is available in any meaningful sense if its use will result in serious retaliation and bodily harm."
42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a), but also is "faithful to the underlying purposes of the PLRA,"
id.
at 1253, as it "reduces any incentive that prison officials otherwise might have to use threats to prevent inmates from exhausting their administrative remedies" and "thereby safeguards the benefits of the administrative review process for everyone,"
Turner
,
With
Ross
, the Supreme Court too has recognized that "intimidation" by prison officials can "thwart inmates from taking advantage of a grievance process" and thus render that process "unavailable."
(c) The Showing Required to Prove Unavailability
The burden to plead and prove failure to exhaust as an affirmative defense rests on the defendant.
Ray v. Kertes
,
To determine what showing is required to establish unavailability based on "intimidation," we find helpful guidance in the reasoning of other Courts of Appeals. In
Turner v. Burnside
, the Eleventh Circuit held that an inmate must show both that "the threat actually did deter the plaintiff inmate from lodging a grievance or pursuing a particular part of the process"; and that "the threat is one that would deter a reasonable inmate of ordinary firmness and fortitude from lodging a grievance or pursuing the part of the grievance process that the inmate failed to exhaust."
We also find the
Turner
test a sensible one.
But the subjective component also has a role to play. For even though a showing that an inmate of reasonable fortitude would be deterred offers relevant circumstantial evidence of subjective deterrence,
see
Hope v. Pelzer
,
In sum, we perceive a valuable role for both the objective and subjective components of the Turner test and today adopt it as our own. To defeat a failure-to-exhaust defense, an inmate must show (1) that the threat was sufficiently serious that it would deter a reasonable inmate of ordinary firmness and fortitude from lodging a grievance and (2) that the threat actually did deter this particular inmate.
(d) Application to Rinaldi
As applied here, Rinaldi's Retaliation Request unquestionably satisfies the objective test for unavailability. Accepting the allegation that Rinaldi's continued resistance to the grievance process is what led prison authorities to house him with a cellmate they knew threatened to kill him, we have little trouble concluding that "a reasonable inmate of ordinary firmness and fortitude" would be "deter[red] ... from lodging a grievance or pursuing the part of the grievance process that the inmate failed to exhaust."
Turner
,
Because the District Court did not have the benefit of the test we announce today and because we had not yet clarified in Paladino what procedures are required when a district court must resolve factual disputes relevant to exhaustion, the District Court did not have occasion to determine whether Rinaldi made the requisite showing of subjective deterrence. Nonetheless, the Government urges that we should affirm, rather than remand, because the record reflects that Rinaldi filed a number of grievances after the allegedly retaliatory transfer-a circumstance that the Government contends, in effect, negates subjective deterrence as a matter of law. We are not persuaded.
As the Seventh Circuit has observed, the "ability to take advantage of administrative grievances is not an 'either-or' proposition. Sometimes grievances are clearly available; sometimes they are not; and
sometimes there is a middle ground where, for example, a prisoner may only be able to file grievances on certain topics."
Kaba
,
Accordingly, we will vacate the District Court's dismissal of Rinaldi's First Amendment claim, and will remand for the District Court to consider subjective deterrence in the first instance.
2. Rinaldi's Eighth Amendment Assault Claim
Rinaldi also challenges the District Court's dismissal of his Eighth Amendment claim for failure to exhaust. As explained below, even though he did not initiate a new grievance for the assault by Cellmate #2 and raised that claim for the first time in the appeal of his original Assault Request, exhaustion was satisfied under our case law because the Regional Director denied it on the merits.
In
Camp v. Brennan
,
The Government contends in its briefing that our precedent was abrogated by the Supreme Court's decision in
Woodford v. Ngo
,
Although
Woodford
did not specifically address whether review on the merits of an otherwise procedurally defaulted claim constitutes "proper exhaustion," the Court's reference to
Spruill
and its reliance on principles of habeas and administrative law in evaluating PLRA exhaustion support that conclusion.
To be clear, and with sensitivity to the thoughtful concerns raise by our dissenting colleague, we do not today create any "broad ... exception" to the exhaustion requirement.
See
Dissent at 277. We simply reaffirm, as we held in
Camp
, that when an inmate's allegations "have been fully examined on the merits" and "at the highest level," they are, in fact, exhausted.
In reaching this conclusion, we are in good company. Other Courts of Appeals too have held that merits review satisfies exhaustion under the PLRA and that, because PLRA exhaustion turns on the remedies and grievance procedures that the particular prison has available, treating a claim as exhausted where a prison chooses not to enforce those procedures does not contravene the PLRA.
See
Reyes v. Smith
,
In sum, because Rinaldi's Assault Request was denied at the highest level on the merits and therefore was properly exhausted under the PLRA, we will vacate the District Court's dismissal of Rinaldi's Eighth Amendment claim.
B. Rinaldi's FTCA Claim
The District Court construed Rinaldi's claim that the Government "forc[ed] him to reside with an inmate that [the BOP] knew, or should have known, had expressed an intention to kill [him],"
Rinaldi
,
The FTCA offers a limited waiver of the federal government's sovereign immunity from civil liability for negligent acts of government employees acting within the scope of their employment.
Berkovitz v. United States
,
Although we have not previously addressed in a precedential opinion whether BOP housing and cellmate assignments meet this test, other Courts of Appeals have held uniformly that they do.
See
Montez ex rel. Estate of Hearlson v. United States
,
Here, both prongs of the discretionary function test are satisfied. At the first prong, housing and cellmate assignments unquestionably involve an "element of judgment or choice,"
Gaubert
,
V. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we will vacate and remand for further proceedings concerning Rinaldi's First and Eighth Amendment claims and will affirm the District Court's judgment in all other respects.
The District Court considered the Government's "Motion to Dismiss or, in the alternative, Motion for Summary Judgment," JA 68, as one "for dismissal primarily under Rule 12(b)(6),"
Rinaldi v. United States
,
As explained in greater detail below, an "informal resolution" is the first step that must be taken by an inmate in the Bureau of Prisons ("BOP") as part of its 4-step grievance process. The subsequent steps are the filing of a formal "request" at the institution, an appeal to the BOP Regional Director, and a final appeal to the General Counsel of the BOP.
See
There is some ambiguity in the record as to whether Rinaldi took a further appeal of the rejection by the Regional Director to the General Counsel. However, the Government does not raise and thus has waived this issue as a basis for Rinaldi's failure to exhaust, instead resting its argument exclusively on Rinaldi's failure to refile the "Sensitive" request with the Institution.
See
United States v. Albertson
,
The assault by Cellmate #2 was "unrelated" to the assault by Cellmate #1 and thus was required to be filed as a separate grievance.
It appears that Rinaldi's further appeal to the General Counsel, though summarily denied, was also denied on the merits because the BOP database entry indicated a status code "DNY," meaning a "request or appeal denied substantially in full." JA 170, 179.
Rinaldi also raised a claim pursuant to the Religious Freedom Restoration Act ("RFRA"), 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000bb
et seq.
, based on his inability to attend congregational prayer while housed in the Special Management Unit at Lewisburg, as well as a claim construed as a
Bivens
claim based on a violation of the Free Exercise Clause of the United States Constitution.
See
Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of Fed. Bureau of Narcotics
,
While the District Court concluded, based on the discretionary function exception, that it "lack[ed] jurisdiction over Plaintiff's claims against the United States and all other Defendants in their official capacity,"
Rinaldi
,
It appears that there are two potentially applicable regulations-and, by extension, two applicable procedures-when a "Sensitive" request is rejected.
See
Given our conclusion that this circumstance falls within the third category described in
Ross
, we do not have occasion to address, as have some of our Sister Circuits, whether
Ross
's three categories are exhaustive or merely illustrative.
See, e.g.
,
Andres v. Marshall
,
Indeed, federal courts are well accustomed to applying tests involving both an objective and subjective component in the prisoner litigation context.
See, e.g.
,
Hudson v. McMillian
,
The Government's suggestion that the Assault Request was not "fully examined" on the merits, Appellee's Br. 21, is refuted by the Regional Director's decision, which addressed both assaults and concluded that the appeal was "denied" because "there is no record of [him] being assaulted by [his] previous or current cellmate. " JA 168 (emphasis added). As the Government acknowledges elsewhere in its brief, "denials" in contrast to "rejections," are "on the merits." Appellee's Br. 22-23.
The Government appears of two minds on this point, as it indicated at oral argument that it "is not taking the position that ... Spruill or Camp are called into question by Woodford or Ross ," and that if this Court "conclude[s] that the Regional Administrator did address [Rinaldi's] ... Eighth Amendment assault claim [ ] on the merits that it's properly exhausted for purposes of Federal Court." Tr. of Oral Arg. 42:12-22. Having considered carefully whether Woodford and Ross alter our approach, we conclude they do not.
Our dissenting colleague correctly observes that "the Supreme Court has not imported all [habeas and administrative law] principles" into PLRA exhaustion, and has rejected, for example, an analogy to the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act's tolling provision. Dissent at 278 & n.6. But the Court's rejection of analogies to habeas and administrative law in rare and specific contexts only points up its reliance on them as a general matter to guide its PLRA exhaustion jurisprudence, and we see no reason to abjure that reliance here, particularly given the Court's approving citation to Spruill .
The Dissent argues that "most of our sister circuits to consider the issue addressed grievances the substance of which had proceeded through each step of the administrative process," Dissent at 279, and, specifically, that the Ninth Circuit "qualified its holding on this point." Dissent at 279 (citing
Reyes
,
To the extent Rinaldi argues the discretionary function exception cannot apply because his allegations relate to unconstitutional acts, he fails to recognize the premise of the FTCA claim he seeks on appeal to reinstate: The FTCA only waives sovereign immunity for torts recognized under the law of the state in which the conduct was alleged to have occurred. Although Rinaldi referenced the Eighth Amendment, the District Court reasonably construed his claim as an FTCA claim, and it is that claim that Rinaldi now argues was erroneously dismissed.
See
Rinaldi
,
Cf.
Ashford v. United States,
Concurrence in Part
I join the Majority's thoughtful analysis of Rinaldi's Federal Tort Claims Act claim and exhaustion of his First Amendment claim under the Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA). I write separately on the PLRA's exhaustion requirement, 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a), as it relates to Rinaldi's Eighth Amendment claim.
Rinaldi-a federal inmate-alleges that prison officials unconstitutionally retaliated against him by forcing him to cell with an inmate who had threatened to kill him.
See
U.S. Const. amends. I, VIII. Despite conceding his failure to comply with applicable administrative remedy procedures as required by § 1997e(a), Rinaldi invokes separate reasons why his First and Eighth Amendment claims may be deemed exhausted and considered by the District Court.
The Supreme Court has strictly interpreted § 1997e(a), and the Court's most recent analysis of exhaustion in
Ross
counsels against a broad articulation of a merits exception to proper exhaustion. I recognize the well-established exceptions to exhaustion in habeas corpus and administrative law. But in
Ross
, the Court made clear that the PLRA's statutory exhaustion provision "stands on different footing" from judge-made exhaustion doctrines.
I.
As the Majority Opinion explains, the United States Bureau of Prisons (BOP) has a multi-tiered administrative remedy program. To exhaust administrative remedies, an inmate must first file an informal remedy request through an appropriate institution staff member via a BP-8 form.
See
Here, Rinaldi filed an informal remedy request on January 29, 2012, claiming to have been assaulted by a previous cellmate. Rinaldi requested that the institution discontinue its practice of forcing inmates to cell together regardless of compatibility because "[f]orced double celling creates a hostile environment and increases the incidence of assaults." JA 164. The informal request was denied and Rinaldi filed Request for Administrative Remedy #675165 (BP-9). This request was denied by the Warden on the grounds that "[a]ll inmates are screened for compatibility prior to placement." JA 165.
Rinaldi appealed to the Northeast Regional Office. At this stage in the institutional review process (BP-10), Rinaldi introduced a new claim that, on February 2, 2012, he was celled with an inmate who had threatened to kill him. Rinaldi framed this as evidence that the Warden's reason for denying his remedy request-that inmates are screened for compatibility-was untrue, noting he had provided his case manager with the names of other inmates he "would like to cell with." JA 167. The Regional Office denied his appeal, reasoning that inmate compatibility is considered and there was "no record of [Rinaldi] being assaulted by [his] previous or current cellmate." JA 168. Rinaldi then appealed to the General Counsel, who denied the appeal and closed the case with the code "DNY."
Thereafter, Rinaldi filed suit in federal court, proceeding
pro se
. As relevant here, Rinaldi alleged that being forced to cell with an inmate who had threatened to kill him violated his Eighth Amendment rights. The District Court dismissed the claim for Rinaldi's failure to exhaust because the BOP's regulations prohibit an inmate from raising issues for the first time on appeal.
See
Now represented by counsel, Rinaldi concedes procedural error because he never presented his current claim to the institution (BP-8 and BP-9 levels).
II.
My colleagues conclude Rinaldi's Eighth Amendment claim was exhausted because, even though he raised its factual predicate for the first time midway through the grievance process, his grievance was denied on the merits at the highest level. I disagree. The Supreme Court's most recent analysis of the PLRA's mandatory exhaustion requirement, in Ross , did not decide the question we face today. But Ross did signal the Court's continued reluctance to tolerate broad exceptions to the PLRA's statutory exhaustion requirement.
Moreover, the Supreme Court explained in
Ross
that, under the PLRA, the question of exhaustion "in all cases is one of statutory construction."
A.
Central to the PLRA's effort to "reduce the quantity and improve the quality of prisoner suits" was its exhaustion requirement.
Porter v. Nussle
,
Most recently, in
Ross
, the Court considered a "special circumstances" exception
to the exhaustion requirement.
In rejecting the special circumstances test, the Court clarified that "mandatory exhaustion statutes like the PLRA establish mandatory exhaustion regimes, foreclosing judicial discretion."
B.
Requiring a decision on the merits at each available stage of the administrative process is, moreover, consistent with how the Supreme Court has construed § 1997e(a) 's text and the purposes of the PLRA's exhaustion provision.
In
Woodford
, the Court interpreted § 1997e(a) to require "proper exhaustion."
This construction would appear to be inconsistent with a broad merits exception. This is not a case where the grievance bears some procedural defect, but the substance of the grievance is nevertheless considered at all administrative steps (for example, the initial filing was untimely or an appeal deadline was missed but these errors were overlooked). In such a case, the prisoner has used all steps the agency holds out, complying with the agency's "critical rules," and the administrative remedy system functions effectively as if no defect were present. But here, Rinaldi raised the factual basis for his current Eighth Amendment claim only midway through the grievance process.
As for the PLRA, we have described the "three interrelated objectives" of exhaustion as follows: "(1) to return control of the inmate grievance process to prison administrators; (2) to encourage development of an administrative record, and perhaps settlements, within the inmate grievance process; and (3) to reduce the burden on the federal courts by erecting barriers to frivolous prisoner lawsuits."
Spruill v. Gillis
,
Take, for example, the goal of developing an administrative record. If the procedural defect is that an inmate interjects a claim at the final stage of the BOP's remedy process, then a denial with the code "DNY" would suffice to have exhausted that claim on the merits.
C.
Analogies to well-established exceptions in habeas and administrative law are useful. But the Supreme Court has not imported all of these principles into the PLRA's exhaustion regime.
III.
Notably, most of our sister circuits to consider the issue prior to
Ross
addressed grievances the substance of which had proceeded through each step of the administrative process.
See, e.g.
,
Hill v. Curcione
,
In fact, the Ninth Circuit in
Reyes v. Smith
expressly qualified its holding on this point: "we hold that a prisoner exhausts 'such administrative remedies as are available,' under the PLRA despite failing to comply with a procedural rule if prison officials ignore the procedural problem and render a decision on the merits of the
grievance at each available step of the administrative process
."
IV.
Exhaustion provisions, like § 1997e(a), are designed "to give the agency a fair and full opportunity to adjudicate [party] claims."
Woodford
,
In addition to the grievances at issue in this appeal, Rinaldi asserts he filed over 50 administrative remedy requests while housed at USP-Lewisburg. Based on some of these remedy requests, Rinaldi's complaint alleged other civil rights violations related to his confinement, including that: his Fifth and Eighth Amendment rights were violated when officials denied him access to adequate recreation; the denial of his ability to worship in congregation violated his right to religious freedom; and being forced to have psychological review conducted through his cell door resulted in him being denied proper medical care and violated his right to confidentiality with his doctor.
The District Court found these claims administratively exhausted but concluded Rinaldi had failed to state claims for inadequate access to adequate recreation and inadequate psychological treatment. Rinaldi does not appeal that decision. Furthermore, as noted by the Majority, our decision in
Mack v. Warden Loretto FCI
,
An exception to the initial filing requirement at the institutional level exists "[i]f the inmate reasonably believes the issue is sensitive and the inmate's safety or well-being would be placed in danger if the Request became known at the institution."
As noted, at the BP-8 and BP-9 levels, review takes place within the specific institution. At the BP-10 and BP-11 levels, review takes place at the regional and national level.
Woodford's
reference to our decision in
Spruill v. Gillis
,
The status codes used by the BOP relating to administrative remedies distinguish between appeals that are closed on the merits and those that are rejected.
The Majority asserts its approach "avoids subjecting prisoners and prison administrators alike to a futile exercise and provides judicial review of the prison's final decision on the merits." Maj. Op. at 272. But the PLRA was enacted to "improve the quality of prisoner suits,"
Porter
,
As Rinaldi concedes, his Eighth Amendment claim should have been filed separately under the BOP's regulations because it involves a separate issue. See 28 C.F.R. 542.14(c)(2) ; 542.15(b)(2). Indeed, Rinaldi never presented his Eighth Amendment claim at the institutional level-that is, to the prison officials at Lewisburg. When a grievance such as Rinaldi's is not presented at the institutional level, prison officials are stripped of the opportunity to address prisoner grievances within their institution. And we-as an eventual reviewing court-lose the benefit of the expertise and specialized knowledge possessed by those who staff the institution. Such an approach does not serve to "improve the quality" of suits before us.
For example, in
Woodford
, the Court rejected a comparison between the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act's (AEDPA) tolling provision and the PLRA, noting "the AEDPA and PLRA provisions deal with separate issues: tolling in the case of the AEDPA and exhaustion in the case of the PLRA,"
As we noted in
Spruill
, "the Supreme Court has consistently located the procedural default component of federal habeas law in the independent and adequate state ground doctrine, a doctrine that, in the habeas context at least, is grounded in concerns of comity and federalism."
In the administrative law context, the D.C. Circuit has explained exhaustion is a "judicially-created doctrine ... which permits courts some discretion to waive exhaustion."
Washington Ass'n for Television & Children v. F.C.C
.,
The one exception is
Whatley v. Warden, Ware State Prison
, but even in
Whatley
, the inmate's first informal grievance referred back to an earlier grievance containing the substantive allegations that later formed the basis of his appeals and complaint.
See
