Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge EDWARDS.
Thе question presented in this appeal is whether three officials of the District of Columbia Government can be held personally liable for injuries suffered by inmates during the course of a prison riot. The District Court granted summary judgment in favor of the plaintiff-inmates, finding that the riot and a related cell-block fire were foreseeable consequences of unconstitutional overcrowding at the facility and that the defendant-officials had exceeded the scope of their qualified immunity in deliberately failing to avert the dangerous conditions. We reverse because we find that the defendants’ conduct was protected by qualified immunity.
I. Background
On the afternoon of July 22, 1983, inmates at the District of Columbia’s Central Detention Facility (“D.C. Jail” or “Jail”) staged a small riot, allegedly to protest prison conditions. During the course of the riot, some inmates set a fire inside a cell block, the result of which was that a number of inmates were injured before prison authorities could safely evacuate the area. The appellees in this case, plaintiffs below, were 17 inmates injured by the fire. Eight of the plaintiffs were pretrial detainees at the time of the incident, and the remaining nine were convicts serving sentences.
The plaintiffs brought suit in District Court against the District of Columbia, the Mayor and two top corrections officials, alleging that the riot and fire were caused by unconstitutional overcrowding at the D.C. Jail, and that the defendant-officials violated 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983, 1985 and 1986 (1988) by failing to prevent the foreseeable melee. 1
This law suit follows in a continuing series of court cases challenging living conditions inside the District’s correctional facilities. During the 1970s, unconstitutional conditions were found to exist at the District’s old jail facility.
See Inmates, D.C. Jail v. Jackson,
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In 1986, when this case first came to trial, the District Court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendants, holding that the plaintiffs could not show that their fire-related injuries were proximately caused by the defendants’ conduct in fostering overcrowding; simply put, the trial judge found that “such a wantonly self-destructive act was unforeseeable as a matter of law.”
See Marsh v. Barry,
On remand, the trial court found that the fire was indeed part and parcel of the riot and that both were caused by the overcrowded conditions at the Jail.
See Marsh v. Barry,
The defendant-officials now appeal that ruling, arguing that their decisions concerning prison administration fell within the scope of their qualified immunity. We agree and therefore reverse the District Cоurt’s judgment.
II. Analysis
A. Constitutional Injury
To support liability under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, it was necessary for the District Court to find that the defendants violated some right of the plaintiffs secured by federal statute or the Constitution.
3
Here, the plaintiffs attributed the defendants’ liability to their conduct in permitting prison overcrowding in violation of the plaintiffs’ rights under the Constitution. The foundation of the constitutional right is different for the two classes of plaintiffs: the
pretrial detainees
must rely upon the Fifth Amendment’s guarantee of due process, whereas the
convicted plaintiffs
must ground their claims upon the Eighth Amendment’s ban on cruel and unusual punishment.
4
In either ease, we
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have no pause in agreeing that, under recent case law, prison overcrowding may violate the Constitution where it is so egregious that it endangers the safety of inmates.
See Morgan v. District of Columbia,
With this said, however, we have grave doubts about the findings of liability in this case. First, with respect to the plaintiff-appellees who were convicted inmates, the District Court expressed uncertainty as to whether the overcrowded conditions at the Jail were unconstitutional. After finding that the overcrowding at the D.C. Jail had created an environment ripe for a violent explosion—a factual predicate that could support, under recent case law, a conclusion that prison conditions violated the Constitution—the District Court wrote that “it is not clear whether ... the facility was sufficiently overcrowded to violate the constitutional rights of permanent prisoners.”
See Marsh,
Second, with respect to the plaintiffs who were pretrial detainees, the District Court
did
find the overcrowding unconstitutional, but it rested this conclusion upon a 1975 judicial opinion dealing with conditions at the old jail.
See id.
at 19 n. 22 (citing
Campbell v. McGruder,
These concerns give us pause in considering the District Court’s conclusions on liability.
See Inmates of Occoquan v. Barry,
B. Qualified Immunity
The three defendant-officials in this case were plainly protected by qualified immunity in the performance of their discretionary functions related to prison administration.
See Procunier v. Navarette,
As an initial matter, we must first consider the significance of the fact that, at the time of the 1983 riot, the defendants were subject to a court order in
Campbell
defining certain entitlements of the pretrial detainees. The existence of this court order might appear at first blush to dispose of the qualified immunity question, at least with respect to the pretrial detainees: at the time of the officials’ conduct, they were under judicial mandate to take certain measures to safeguard the rights of pretriаl detainees; the existence of the court order “clearly established” the detainees’ rights and, because the officials were later found to be in contempt of that order, the defendants could be said to have violated those “clearly established” rights.
See Jackson v. Hollowell,
As attractively direct as this approаch might be, we cannot adopt it. First, the scope of the entitlements that could be said to have been “clearly established” by the court order in Campbell were relatively narrow. They concerned the precise conditions under which prison officials could engage in the practice of “double-celling” pretrial detainees. Second, and most importantly, it is not clear whether the officials were actually in violation of the court order at the time of the riot and fire. The decision finding the defendants in contempt of the District Court’s 1982 order documents violations only until July 19, 1983. For the period following that date, the court did not resolve whether all alleged constitutional deficiencies had been cured, as the defendants claimed, or whether the conditions continued to violate the express standards of the order. See Campbell v. McGruder, Civ.Action No. 1462-71, mem. op. at 14, 25 & n. 7 (D.D.C. Sept. 30, 1983) (noting that defendants insisted all “double-cеlling” of pretrial detainees at the Jail ceased on July 19, 1983, although “the accuracy of this representation is uncertain”). Because the riot at issue in this case occurred on July 22, 1983, the contempt order cannot be relied upon to establish the defendants’ violation of the detainees’ “clearly established” constitutional rights at the time of their injury. 6
Thus, as noted at the outset, the principal question in this case concerns the сlarity of the case law as it existed in mid-1983 with respect to the constitutional entitlements of both the pretrial detainees and
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the convicted prisoners. We recognize that there were indications by 1983 that the Eighth and Fifth Amendments protected convicted inmates and pretrial detainees against egregious prison overcrowding and against foreseeable and reasonably preventable acts of violence by fellow inmаtes.
7
At the same time, however, the Supreme Court had only begun to direct its attention to these questions and, as of mid-1983, the “contours” of the constitutional protections remained sketchy.
See generally, Inmates of Occoquan,
With regard to pretrial detainees, the Supreme Court’s sole pronouncement came in 1979, in a case in which it held that the conditions of pretrial confinement at a New York City jail did not amount to punishment and were therefore constitutional.
See Bell v. Wolfish,
While confining a given number of people in a given amount of space in such a manner as to cause them to endure genuine privations and hardship over an extended period of time might raise serious questions under the Due Process Clause as to whether those conditions amounted to punishment, nothing even approaсhing such hardship is shown by this record.
Id.
at 542,
The only other guidance given by the Court before 1983 with respect to the rights of pretrial confinement came by implication in
Youngberg v. Romeo,
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The Supreme Court’s guidance concerning thе Eighth Amendment’s protections for convicted inmates was scarcely more definitive by 1983. In 1976, the Supreme Court held that “deliberate indifference” by prison officials to the medical needs of sick or injured inmates could amount to cruel and unusual punishment where it results in “unnecessary and wanton infliction of pain.”
See Estelle v. Gamble,
From these pronouncements it could reasonably be surmised that prison overcrowding, if sufficiently egregious, could violate prisoners’ Eighth Amendment rights and, even more readily, pretrial detainees’ Fifth Amendment rights. A reading of these cаses also would have suggested, however, that conditions must be rather stark before the Court would overcome its oft-stated reluctance to second-guess correctional officials in the administration of prisons.
See Inmates of Occoquan,
We do not mean in any way to minimize the hardships and trauma suffered by the plaintiffs as a result of the July 1983 prison riot. Nor do we mean to endorse conduct by the defendants that, in the most flattering light, appeared to constitute foot-dragging and sluggishness in thе face of a serious administrative challenge and that, in the harsher light of hindsight, may well have constituted a violation of the inmates’ constitutional rights. At the same time, however, we are required to recognize that the constitutional landscape upon which the defendants maneuvered was only dimly illuminated. Because the state of the law was then unsettled, we must conclude that the defendant-officials acted within the *1192 scope of their qualified immunity in the events leading up to the riot and fire.
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the District Court is reversed.
So ordered.
Notes
. The plaintiffs also included several pendent common-law tort claims in their amended complaint but the District Court did not advert to these in its most recent ruling. Because the trial court did not purport to rule on any of these claims, and because no issue concerning them has been brought before this court, we have no oсcasion to address them. We note, however, that should any of these claims survive, it is doubtful that they would fare any better than the federal claims under the applicable common-law immunity standard.
See District of Columbia v. Thompson,
. The question of the defendants’ asserted qualified immunity was neither presented to nor considered by the court during the first appeal of this case.
. Section 1983 provides:
Every person who, under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any Stаte or Territory or the District of Columbia, subjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States ... to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party injured....
42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1988). The Supreme Court recently reiterated the appropriate framework for evaluating section 1983 claims:
A determination that § 1983 is available to remedy a statutory or constitutional violation involves a two-step inquiry. First, the plaintiff must assert the violation of a federal right.... Second, even when the plaintiff has asserted a federal right, the defendant may show that Congress "specifically foreclosed a remedy under § 1983,” by providing a "comprehensive enforcement mechanis[m] for protection of a federal right.”
Golden State Transit Corp. v. City of Los Angeles,
.In each case, the conditions constituting the constitutional violation may be essentially the same—overcrowding that makes prison life unsafe and indecent—although the threshold for establishing a constitutional violation is clearly lower for the pretrial detainees. For the latter group, not yet convicted of any crime, the question is whether prison conditions "amount to punishment of the detainee.”
Bell v. Wolfish,
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. No question of personal liability was presented in Morgan.
. While not dispositive, it is noteworthy that the orders and contempt citation in
Campbell
were issued against the defendants in their official capacities; this did not afford a basis for imposing individual liability.
See, e.g., Headley v. Bacon,
.
See, e.g., Doe v. District of Columbia,
. In the years since 1983, the Supreme Court has provided further guidance about the scope of the due process rights of pretrial detainees.
See United States v. Salerno,
. For a post-1983 case explicating the Eighth Amendment’s reach into prison administration, see
Whitley v. Albers,
