121 Misc. 2d 238 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1983
OPINION OF THE COURT
Petitioner brings this article 78 proceeding to challenge the determination of a superintendent’s proceeding concluded on October 7, 1982. The original superintendent’s proceeding held to consider the underlying incident was concluded on March 3, 1982. That proceeding was remanded due, inter alia, to respondents’ admission that the hearing officer failed to personally interview petitioner’s witnesses, although it would not have jeopardized institutional security or correctional goals to do so, and that petitioner was not informed of the substance of his witnesses’ statements.
The decision to annul the original proceeding and remand for a new hearing was rendered from the Bench on August 19, 1982. An order was signed on September 1,
The second proceeding, which is now under attack, was convened on October 1, 1982 before Captain Curran. Captain Curran disqualified" himself during the course of the proceeding which was reconvened on October 4, 1982 before Deputy Superintendent Wayne Barkley. Hearing Officer Barkley did not personally interview petitioner’s witnesses. Instead, he merely listened to tapes of interviews conducted by Captain Curran. The hearing officer also allegedly failed to interview confidential informant witnesses, relying instead on an interview of Lieutenant J. Wood, who interviewed the confidential informant witnesses. Hearing Officer Barkley also interviewed security personnel. The petitioner was not present during any of these interviews.
Petitioner pleaded not guilty to the charges against him. The hearing officer nonetheless affirmed the charges brought against the petitioner. This was done prior to permitting the petitioner to read the statements of his witnesses or to listen to the transcript of their interviews with Captain Curran. The discipline imposed upon petitioner was 360 days’ loss of good time.
Petitioner alleges that this determination was arbitrary and capricious, an abuse of discretion and that it was reached in violation of the governing rules and regulations. It is argued that the hearing officer failed to interview any individual who witnessed the underlying incident or had direct knowledge thereof, thereby disabling him from judging the credibility of such witnesses. Secondly, the hearing officer is alleged to have failed to interview an employee who witnessed or had direct knowledge of the relevant incidents of misbehavior. (Matter of
Respondents emphasize the violent nature of petitioner’s prison record. Beginning with his incarceration for murder and other crimes of violence, petitioner, serving a life sentence, has been the subject of numerous prison disciplinary actions. Petitioner’s disciplinary record is an extensive compendium of violent acts and other transgressions of prison rules. The charges underlying the proceeding at bar are that petitioner stabbed and seriously wounded two inmates on February 12, 1982.
The court’s review of the information provided by confidential witnesses indicates that the information is reliable and that it supports the disposition reached by respondents. Moreover, the decision to maintain the confidentiality of these sources is reasonable in light of the information provided and the petitioner’s reputation. Under no circumstances should petitioner or his counsel be given access to this material. The use of confidential informants has been sanctioned by the case law where, as here, the need for confidentiality appears on the face of the record. (Matter of Guzman v Coughlin, 90 AD2d 666; Matter of Gross v
Petitioner’s key assertion is that the hearing officer did not personally interview petitioner’s witnesses and that he was therefore unable to judge their credibility. While respondents now imply that these interviews were not personally conducted due to the needs of institutional safety and security, the hearing officer quite clearly stated on the record that he had reviewed tapes of Captain Curran’s interviews with petitioner’s witnesses, whereupon he gave the following reasons for not personally interviewing these witnesses:
“O.K., Captain Curran in doing the first proceeding did interview the other three individuals, o.k., I have that on tape * * *
“Normally the procedure would be for me to disregard that and interview those three individuals again and start over. However, I have listened to the tape, ah, I am going to present that tape as evidence, ah, in listening, having reviewed the Captain’s interview all three inmates according to their testimony, ah, I see no need to interview them again. Since they have already stated that they have no knowledge that you were involved in any stabbing * * *
“Ah, you were in the yard at the time, you were in the corridor at the time but according to those three witnesses they did not see you involved with this inmate * * *
“All these individuals said is that they didn’t see you. That didn’t mean you couldn’t be involved. They just said they didn’t see you involved. It doesn’t mean you weren’t involved * * *
“Well, just a second if I somebody says to me did you see that man, ah, hit the other guy and I said no, I didn’t see him hit him. That doesn’t mean the guy didn’t hit him, does it? I mean I may have turned my head, I may have been around the corner. He may have still been the same person that hit him. I just didn’t see it. I, that’s all those witnesses are saying, they didn’t see you do it.”
However, a review of the transcripts of the interviews with these witnesses reveals that they went beyond simply stating that they didn’t see petitioner do it. They all placed
It is the hearing officer’s duty to impartially and fairly conduct a superintendent’s proceeding over which he presides, in accordance with the governing regulations. Where, as here, a stark question of credibility is presented, it is imperative that the hearing officer personally interview the accused inmate’s witnesses. In the case at bar, the hearing officer did not interview any witnesses with direct knowledge of the incident. Clearly such witnesses should have been interviewed, given petitioner’s denial of guilt, especially if any employee witnesses existed. (Matter of De Mauro v LeFevre, 91 AD2d 1156; Matter of Hilton v Dalsheim, 81 AD2d 887; Matter of Longo v Fogg, 71 AD2d 955; Matter of Jackson v Kuhlmann, 109 Misc 2d 437; 7 NYCRR 253.4 [c].)
The inmate witnesses should have been personally interviewed by the hearing officer. The original proceeding was annulled and the matter was remanded to permit, inter alia, a correction of this very defect as conceded by respondents. Finally, although there were apparently no correctional facility employees who witnessed the stabbings, there were employees who could have shed light on the circumstances surrounding these incidents, yet the hearing officer failed to personally interview them.
The hearing officer’s failure to interview the petitioner’s inmate witnesses is compounded by other errors in the proceeding. In answer to petitioner’s assertion that his witnesses were not interviewed in his presence, respondents, departing from the unsatisfactory rationale relied upon by the hearing officer, now assert that to have interviewed his own witnesses in his presence would have
Finally, respondents concede that petitioner was not permitted to listen to the tapes of interviews with his witnesses until after the hearing officer had reached a determination as to the charges. They maintain that the regulations require only that petitioner be confronted with and permitted to comment on evidence supporting the charges against him prior to a decision being rendered. (7 NYCRR 253.4 [e].) If there was error in not permitting petitioner to review the tapes prior to the disposition, such error is said to be harmless and not prejudicial since his witnesses’ statements all supported petitioner’s position.
Petitioner contends that he was entitled by regulation to, at the very least, hear his witnesses’ statements prior to the conclusion of the proceeding. The failure to do so is said to have unduly restricted his right to comment fully on the evidence before the hearing officer.
The petitioner’s right to comment on the evidence prior to a final disposition of the charges against him has been settled by the cases. (Matter of Kincaide v Coughlin, 86 AD2d 893, app dsmd 57 NY2d 682; Matter of Romano v Ward, 96 Misc 2d 937.) The court need not resolve at this time the question of whether an accused inmate at a superintendent’s proceeding is entitled to hear all the evidence considered by the hearing officer, excluding that not revealed for reasons of confidentiality, before he is given an opportunity to comment and before a final disposition is reached. It is sufficient to observe that this would certainly be the preferable procedure.
The superintendent’s proceeding concluded on October 7, 1982 is hereby annulled and the charges upon which it was based are dismissed, with prejudice. Petitioner’s record is to be expunged of all references to this proceeding and the good time of which he was deprived is to be restored.