Ricky Joe Rapier brought a § 1983 claim against the Sheriff of Vigo County, Indiana, .various employees of the Vigo County Jail, and a police detective (collectively, “the defendants”) for alleged violations of his constitutional rights during his detention at the jail while awaiting trial. He seeks review of the district court’s decision to grant summary judgment for the defendants. For the reasons set forth in the following opinion, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
I
BACKGROUND
A. Facts
On July 19, 1992, Mr. Rаpier was arrested by the Terre Haute Police for disorderly conduct, resisting law enforcement, and three counts of battery on a law enforcement officer. He remained at the Vigo County Jail as a pretrial detainee until June 6, 1993. On July 31, 1992, Mr. Rapier was seen taking two food trays for himself, in violation of the Jail Rules. When confronted about this violation, Mr. Rapier became combative and was moved to the “drunk tank.” While in the tank, Mr. Rapier yelled obscenities and insults at two jail officers.
On August 4, 1992, Officer Higginbotham and an inmate-trustee placed a food tray for Mr. Rapier on the shelf of the door to the solitary cell where he was being held. 1 Mr. Rapier threw the tray of food and iced tea at the officer and the trustee. When Officer Harvey, the supervising officer, arrived on the scene, Mr. Rapier threw a container of urine at him. Mr. Rapier then floоded his cell by stuffing things in the toilet and was found holding part of a spoon, which inmates are required to return after meals for safety reasons. Mr. Rapier was then moved to another solitary, cell.
On September 25, 1992, Mr. Rapier attacked inmate-trustee Griffin, using a *1002 weapon fashioned from a broken broom handle. Mr. Rapier stabbed Griffin in the back and face and then chased after him. Griffin required hospital treatment for his injuries. On the same day, Mr. Rаpier was placed in solitary confinement. Mr. Rapier was charged with Battery, a class C felony, for his attack on Griffin and pleaded guilty on May 3,1993.
When Mr. Rapier was placed in solitary confinement after the September 25 attack, he did not receive written notice or a hearing or any other process. His misconduct continued while he was in solitary confinement, resulting in various interdepartmental reports and memоranda, and he remained there for 270 consecutive days. For various periods of time during his segregation, Mr. Rapier’s phone and commissary privileges were suspended, he was denied writing materials, he received no access to recreational facilities, he was denied showers and personal hygiene items, and, on three occasions, Mr. Rapier was denied the non-pork meals he requested. In addition, inmatе-trustee Griffin was allowed to serve Mr. Rapier his meals. While deprived of various services and supplies while in solitary confinement, he was not deprived of anything necessary for his sustenance.
B. Holding of the District Court
The district court granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment because it found that Mr. Rapier had not established the deprivation of a right secured by the Constitution or federal law. We shall summarize the court’s resolution of the issues relevant tо this appeal.
The district court first determined that Mr. Rapier’s placement in solitary confinement without notice or a hearing did not violate.his due process rights. Although due process entitles a pretrial detainee to be free from punishment prior to an adjudication of guilt, the court explained, a disability imposed during pretrial detention does not constitute impermissible punishment if it is reasonably related to a legitimate government objective and is not imposed with intent to punish.
See
R.76 at 8-9 (citing
Bell v. Wolfish,
The district court also held that Mr. Rapier’s free exercise rights werе not violated when he was denied non-pork meals on three occasions out of 810 meals. The court found that the denials did not result from jail policies or regulations but instead resulted from occasional shortages due to limited resources.
The district court, having concluded that Mr. Rapier did not suffer the deprivation of any federally secured right, found it unnecessary to analyze the defendants’ claim of qualified immunity.
II
DISCUSSION
We begin with the fundamental principle that a person held in confinement as a pretrial detainee may not be subjected to any form of punishment for the crime for which he is charged.
See Bell v. Wolfish,
legitimate interests that stem from its need to manage the facility in which the individual is detained. These legitimate operational concerns may require administrative measures that go beyond those that are, strictly speaking, necessary to ensure that the detainee shows up for trial. For example, the Government must be able to take steps to maintain security and order at the institution and make certain no weapons or illicit drugs reach detainees.
Id.
at 540,
In addition to the regulatory measures that prison officials may take to ensure the effectiveness of pretrial confinement, a pretrial detainee can be punished for misconduct that occurs while he is awaiting trial in а pretrial confinement status. Notably, the basis for this punishment is not the underlying crime of which he stands accused; rather, this punishment is based upon the detainee’s actions while in pretrial confinement.
See Mitchell v. Dupnik,
Unlike sentenced prisoners for whom much institutional punishment can be considered to be within the parameters of the imposed sentence of confinement,
see Sandin v. Conner,
Similarly, in
Collazo-Leon v. United States Bureau of Prisons,
Although this circuit has not directly decided whether a pretrial detainee has the right to procedural due process in connection with a punishment for disciplinary infractions, we have indicated in dictum in
Whitford v. Boglino,
In sum, prison officials have considerable leeway to punish convicted prisoners for misconduct committed while in prison without affording them further procedural protection. The Due Process Clause simply guarantees convicted prisoners the right to be free of punishment that is beyond the normally expected incidents of prison life.
See Sandin v. Conner,
Because the same conduct may be the basis for either nonpunitive, regulatory restrictions or punitive sanctions, it is often important to distinguish between nonpunitive measures and the punitive measures that are subject to due process restrictiоns. We cannot accept the suggestion of the amicus, relying on
Hewitt v.
Helms,
In our view, a more fruitful methodology for distinguishing between punitive and non-punitive actions against pretrial confi-nees can be found in
Bell,
the Court’s watershed case involving pretrial confmees and a holding left undisturbed by
Sandin. Bell
established that a particular measure amounts to punishment when there is a showing of express intent to punish on the part of detention facility officials, when the restriction or condition is not rationally related to a legitimate non-punitive government purpose, or when the restriction is excessive in light of that purpose.
See Bell,
We turn to the record before us. Whether the actions of the defendants constituted punishment for Mr. Rapier’s conduct while in confinement — punishment that could be imposed only with the sort of procedural protections contemplated by the decisions of our sister, circuits in
Mitchell
and
Collazo-Leon
— involves factual questions that might well not be subject to resolution on summary judgment. Even when we resolve any ambiguity in Mr. Rapier’s favor, however, we must conclude that the defendants enjoy qualified immunity. As a general rule, government officials performing discretionary functions are “shielded from liability for civil damages insofar as their conduct does not violate ‘clearly established’ statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.”
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
It does not appear that, at the time the defendants acted, the law was sufficiently clear to apprise them that maintaining Mr. Rapier in segregation throughout the period in question was not sufficiently related to the legitimate governmental objective of maintaining good order and discipline within the detention facility or that it was excessivе in light of that objective. Keeping in mind that we must accord the decisions of prison officials in this regard a great deal of latitude, we cannot say that a reasonable person would have considered the decision to segregate Mr. Rapier to be unnecessary. Nor, on this record, is there evidence that the defendant officials should have been aware that their action constituted deliberate-indifference to a substantial risk to Mr. Rapier’s safety.
We also believe that, even if the acts of the defendants constituted punishment under Bell, it was not clearly established, at the time the defendants acted, that certain procedural protections must attend any disciplinary measures taken against pretrial detainees. Although Bell had established that a pretrial detainee could not be punished for the underlying offense for which hе was being held, the law was not clearly established with respect to the need for additional procedural safeguards when prison officials impose punitive sanctions for misconduct while awaiting trial. Nor was it clearly established how one ought to differentiate between administrative action designed to assure the safe running of the facility and punitive action. Under these circumstances, we believe that the district court’s judgment ought to be affirmed on the ground that the -defendants are entitled to qualified immunity. 4
*1007 Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment for the defendants.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The record does not indicate why Mr. Rapier was being held in a solitary cell at this time, or at what point after he was placed in the drunk tank he was moved to the solitary cell.
. We point out in passing that nothing in the Supreme Court's decision in
Sandin v. Conner,
.
See also Ingraham v. Wright,
. We also affirm the district сourt’s grant of summary judgment for the defendants on Mr. Rapier’s free exercise claim. Mr. Rapier submits that the jail’s denial of his request for a *1007 pork-free meal on three occasions, out of approximately 810 meals that he received while incarcerated, constituted an impermissible burden on his free exercise of religion.
We cannot accept this argument. De min-imis burdens on the free exercise of religion arе not of constitutional dimension.
See, e.g., Walsh v. Louisiana High Sch. Athletic Ass'n,
