Lead Opinion
We voted to hear the initial argument of this appeal en banc, a procedure we reserve for extraordinary circumstances, so that we might give plenary review to a complex of urgent social and political conflicts persistently seeking solution in the courts as legal problems, a phenomenon de Tocqueville commented upon many years ago. Democracy in America, vol. I at 290 (Vintage ed. 1945)'. The elaborate opinion and order below raise important questions concerning the federal constitutional rights of state prisoners which neither Supreme Court precedent nor our own past decisions have answered. The sparse authority from other courts is for the most part either inconclusive or conflicting.
I.
PROCEEDINGS BELOW AND JURISDICTION
This is an appeal from an order entered May 14, 1970, by Judge Motley, sitting in the Southern District of New York,
Sostre does not appeal from the dismissal by the district court of his action against the Governor, in which Sostre had asserted the Governor’s complicity in racial discrimination in the administration of New York’s prison system.
Because there was no finding below that Warden Mancusi had in any way violated Sostre’s constitutional rights, the case against him should also have been dismissed. In refusing this dismissal, Judge Motley observed that Commissioner McGinnis “has the power to re-transfer Sostre to Attica.”
We agree with the district court that Sostre was not required as a precondition of maintaining this suit to perform the meaningless and plainly futile gesture of writing a letter to defendant McGinnis. See Houghton v. Shafer,
Moreover, because Sostre “is not challenging the validity of his sentence with the ultimate object of obtaining release” from prison, Hancock v. Avery,
II.
FACTS
A. Circumstances of Sostre’s Commitment to Punitive Segregation
On June 25, 1968, Warden Follette ordered that Sostre be committed pursuant to Section 140 of the New York Correction Law, McKinney’s Consol. Laws, c. 43,
On June 25, 1968, the day he put Sostre in segregation, Follette called Sostre to his office. At this meeting, Follette questioned Sostre about his attempt that morning to mail to an attorney, Miss Joan Franklin of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, a letter with handwritten legal papers attached, including a motion for use in the trial of Mrs. Geraldine Robinson. Mrs. Robinson is described by Judge Motley and the parties on appeal as Sostre’s “codefendant.” Although she was joined with Sostre in the indictment which resulted in Sostre’s imprisonment, they were not tried together. Follette told Sostre “he must confine his legal activities to his own incarceration” and accordingly that the motion would not be mailed. Follette explained that he objected to Sostre’s attempt to “practice law” without a license. Sostre believed that he had a right to mail legal papers in behalf of Mrs. Robinson and refused to assure Follette, as Follette requested, that he would discontinue attempting to mail such documents through normal prison channels.
During the same interview, Follette questioned Sostre about a reference to an organization known as “R.N.A.,” mentioned by Sostre in his letter to Miss Franklin and to which Sostre had referred in earlier correspondence. “R.N. A.” in fact referred to the Republic of New Africa, which Sostre identified at the trial before Judge Motley as a black liberation or black separatist organization. Sostre disputed Follettee’s tstimo-ny that Sostre had lied about R.N.A. at the June 25 interview by persistently claiming at that time that it was a “federal agency * * * ‘Recovery National Administration’ or something like this.” Sostre did admit, as Follette asserted at trial, that after responding to a few questions Sostre refused to discuss R.N.A. further. The plaintiff’s justification for his silence was that Follette had persisted in labelling R.N. A. a “subversive organization.” Sostre “clammed up,” as he testified, to avoid antagonizing Follette by further explaining or defending R.N.A.
Follette testified without contradiction that the organization known as the Republic of New Africa was of sufficient concern to him to have been the object of an investigation before the interview with Sostre. Follette feared that “this organization was a cloak for an attempt to organize prison inmates for riot and insurrection,” based on information obtained from the F.B.I. and the New York State and Buffalo City Police. “[T]he possibility of insurrection at Green Haven” was a “major fear” to Follette at all times, but particularly so in June, 1968. Security at the prison had been weakened, in Follette’s view, by an exceptionally high turnover of correction officers, approaching a rate of about fifty percent each year. An influx of new officers had not yet been cleared through the New York State Identification and Intelligence System. Moreover, Sostre had exacerbated Follette’s concern with the possibility of major disorder because of a statement in a letter that Sostre had written to his sister, dated May 19, 1968:
As for me, there is no doubt in my mind whatsoever that I will be out soon, either by having my appeal reversed in the courts or by being liberated by the Universal Forces of Liberation.
This sentence is included in a broad indictment of militarism and oppression in this country and a prediction that “the power structure” would soon be overthrown.
Follette insists that his decision to commit Sostre to segregation reflected (1) Sostre’s declared intent to defy Fol-lette’s order by preparing legal papers for his co-defendant; (2) his intransig
Judge Motley disbelieved each of Fol-lette’s asserted motives for punishing Sostre, crediting instead Sostre’s testimony that Follette was motivated by Sostre’s threat to sue Follette over his withholding the motion papers intended for Mrs. Robinson. Additionally, Judge Motley attributed to Follette an intent to punish Sostre because of his earlier activism in bringing litigation related to the practice of the Black Muslim religion in New York prisons and “because he is, unquestionably, a black militant who persists in writing and expressing his militant and radical ideas in prison.” Judge Motley held that the summary meeting with Warden Follette which resulted in Sostre’s commitment to segregation did not afford due process of law to Sostre before his “liberty” was taken.
Apart from the events of the June 25 interview, Judge Motley also dismissed as one of Follette’s reasons for continuing Sostre’s incarceration in segregated confinement several items of “contraband” which Follette claimed were the fruit of a search of Sostre’s cell conducted immediately after he entered segregation. These items consisted of (1) two small (3 inches by 5 inches) pieces of heavy black emery paper covered with an abrasive material like sand which, according to Follette, could be flaked off and in some manner attached to a string to fashion an instrument capable of sawing through cell bars; (2) six tables of contents torn from issues of the Harvard Law Review and stamped by prison officials to indicate that the books, Sostre’s personal property, were not to circulate to other prisoners; (3) a letter' dated June 10, 1968, from the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York addressed to a fellow-prisoner of Sostre’s, Juan Moline, a Puerto Rican, which Sostre later explained he was translating for Moline from English into Spanish. Judge Motley believed Sostre’s testimony that he had never seen the pieces of emery paper before they were introduced by defendants at trial.
Sostre remained confined in punitive segregation for twelve months and eight days, until Judge Motley restrained his continued punishment pendente lite on July 2, 1969. By regulation, Sostre lost the opportunity to earn 124% days of good behavior credit while he was segregated.
1. Isolation from Human Contact
Although for four months only one other prisoner was confined with Sostre in his small “segment” of five cells, the entire punitive segregation unit at Green Haven housed on the average about 15 prisoners at any one time. During the period between June 28, 1967, and September 18, 1968, 179 prisoners were held in segregation for a total of 8,960 days. From September 19, 1968 to July 3, 1969, when Sostre was there, a total of 79 inmates were segregated at Green Haven. Of these, about ten percent were held in “protective” segregation. This term is used to describe those who are segregated from the general population to protect them from harm rather than as punishment. These prisoners were incarcerated in cells entirely separated from Sostre’s cell in the punitive segregation unit. The other prisoners were confined in cells near Sostre’s, so that he would have been able to communicate with them, albeit with some difficulty depending on the distance between Sostre and the other prisoners. We are informed of an incident where one prisoner brought to solitary and placed in another group of cells committed suicide. Sostre was able to communicate with this inmate and indeed was able to dictate a legal document to him.
Finally, although we do not doubt that “the crux of the matter is human isolation,” as Judge Motley observed, Sostre aggravated his isolation by refusing to participate in a “group therapy” program offered each inmate in segregation beginning October or November 1968. “Therapy” sessions were conducted in groups of about eight per class, generally one each week or ten days, under the guidance of a “recreation supervisor,”
2. Other Conditions of Sostre’s Segregated Confinement
Judge Motley heard extensive testimony describing such important details as Sostre’s diet, his opportunity for exercise, the hygienic conditions of his cell, and the possibility for intellectual stimulation. It can hardly be questioned that his life in segregation was harsher than it would have been in the general population, but neither was it clearly unendurable or subhuman or cruel and inhuman in a constitutional sense.
Thus, Sostre would not be served seconds of the main course upon his demand; but there was no testimony that he would have had that privilege in the general population. He was denied the dessert that would have been available to the general population; but apart from the dessert his diet still consisted of 2800 to 3300 calories a day.
Hygienic conditions were at least minimally adequate to permit Sostre to remain clean and healthy. Thus, Sostre was allowed to shave and shower with hot water once each week. The furnishings of his normal-sized (6 ft. x 8 ft.) cell included a toilet and a face bowl with running cold water, and he was provided with soap and a towel.
The strictures on Sostre’s intellectual fare were severe. He could not buy or receive books, magazines or newspapers, and his access to the prison’s library collection was limited to a selection among approximately thirty-five volumes, mostly “shoot-em-ups” as Sostre described them, chosen by the prison guards. Still, light from a single bulb, controlled by the guards and usually turned on early in the morning and off at 10 p.m., was adequate for reading. And although he could not attend school or watch television, as could the inmates in the general population, any material related to the law requested by him would be brought to his cell.
Pursuant to the usual practice at Green Haven, Sostre was sentenced to “solitary” confinement for an indefinite period. According to New York Correction Law Section 140, “submissiveness” was to be the touchstone for his release. Follette testified that Sostre could have returned to the general population either by successful participation in group therapy or by agreeing to live by the rules of the prison. Sostre’s contention is that he refused to agree to obey rules that he considered an infringement of his constitutional rights.
C. Censorship and Possession of Literature
Defendant Follette censored Sostre’s correspondence with Joan Franklin of the NAACP, the attorney of record representing Sostre on appeal from his conviction. Follette regularly excised from letters passing between Sostre and Miss Franklin “objectionable” material — anything which “in his judgment was not relevant to Sostre’s appeal.” In accordance with Rule 47 of the Inmate Rule Book which restricts inmates’ correspondence to persons on an approved mailing list, Warden Follette in late September, 1968, refused to forward a letter from Sostre to the United States Post Office Inspector, in which Sostre complained of Green Haven’s practice of not returning to prisoners receipts for certified mail. The district judge found that each of these actions violated Sostre’s First Amendment right to freedom of speech.
About August 3, 1969, a month after his release from segregation, Sostre was deprived of the use of the prison exercise yard and the privilege of attending movies because he possessed “inflammatory racist literature” in his cell. The literature consisted of articles written by Sostre himself on paper properly in his possession. Most of the articles consisted of extracts from magazines and newspapers which Sostre was also permitted to have and read in his cell. The extracts included quotations from Mao Tse Tung, poetry written by a prison inmate, the names of the officers, the party program, and rules of conduct of the Black Panther Party; the officers and oath of allegiance of the Republic of New Africa; a “program” for Black Student Unions; and the poem “If We Must Die,” by Claude McKay. In addition, guards found in Sostre’s cell an article which he had written himself, entitled “Revoluntionary Thoughts.” The district court found that Sostre’s punishment for possessing this material constituted another infringement of his freedom of expression.
III.
THE DISTRICT COURT’S ORDER
Upon these findings which we have necessarily sketched, Judge Motley on May 14, 1970, entered the following order, which because of its complexity and importance to the questions we must decide, we reproduce in full. The district court subsequently granted a stay of its order pending appeal as to the bracketed portions. A stay as to the remainder of the order was denied.
It is now ordered, that defendants Follette, McGinnis and Mancusi, their employees, agents, successors, and all persons in active concert and participation with them be, and they are hereby, perpetually enjoined and restrained from:
1) Returning plaintiff to punitive segregation for charges previously preferred against him;
2) Placing plaintiff in punitive segregation or subjecting him to any oth
a. giving him, in advance of a hearing, a written copy of any charges made against him, citing the written rule or regulation which it is charged he has violated;
b. granting him a recorded hearing before a disinterested official where, he will be entitled to cross-examine his accusers and to call witnesses on his own behalf;
c. granting him the right to retain counsel or to appoint a counsel substitute;
d. giving him, in writing, the decision of the hearing officer in which is briefly set forth the evidence upon which it is based, the reasons for the decision, and the legal basis for the punishment imposed.
[3) Censoring, refusing to mail or refusing to give to Sostre: 1) Any communication between Sostre and the following — (a) any court; (b) any public official or agency; (c) any lawyer; (d) his co-defendant in the criminal matter pending against him; and, 2) Any letter relating to any legal matter to or from any other inmate who requests the assistance of Sostre in translating that letter into English.]
4) Punishing Sostre for sharing with other inmates his law books, law reviews, and other legal materials, and from refusing to permit Sostre to assist any other inmate in any legal matter as long as defendants have not provided any court approved alternative means of legal assistance for such inmates.
[5) Punishing Sostre for having in his possession political literature and for setting forth his political views orally or in writing, except for violation of reasonable rules approved by the court regulating freedom of speech.]
[It is further ordered that the above named defendants submit, within 90 days from the date of this order, for approval by this court, proposed rules and regulations governing the following:
1) the receipt, distribution, discussion and writing of political literature;
2) all future disciplinary charges and hearings with respect thereto where the possible punishments include solitary confinement, punitive segregation or any other segregation, and any other punishment in connection with which there is loss of, or inability to earn, good time credit.]
It is further ordered that the above named defendants and their agents credit plaintiff with the 124% days of good time credit which he was unable to earn while wrongfully incarcerated in punitive segregation from June 25, 1968 to July 2, 1969.
[It is further ordered that the plaintiff, Martin Sostre, recover of the defendants, Warden Follette, and Commissioner McGinnis the sum of $13,-020.00.]
IV.
PUNISHMENT FOR POLITICAL BELIEFS AND LEGAL ACTIVITIES
The question as to the propriety of withdrawing from incarcerated individuals constitutional privileges enjoyed by citizens of the community, although troublesome, is not new to the courts. It is clear that in many respects the constitutionally protected freedoms enjoyed by citizens-at-large may be withdrawn or constricted as to state prisoners, so far as “justified by the
Sostre does not shrink from characterizing himself as a “jailhouse lawyer” and the record before us does justice to this label, as does the history of Sostre’s earlier period of confinement in New York prisons from 1952-64 following his first conviction for selling narcotics. It is not unreasonable to suppose, as the district court apparently did, that Warden Follette was aware of Sostre’s Black Muslim activities during that period; of his solitary confinement in Attica Prison for four years, resulting from his religious activism; and of his success in securing through earlier litigation before this court the recognition of certain constitutional liberties for state prisoners. See Pierce v. LaVallee,
On this evidence, we cannot conclude that the district judge was “clearly erroneous” in attributing improper motives to Follette, affording as we must “due regard * * * to the opportunity of the trial court to judge of the credibility” of Sostre and Follette, F.R. Civ.P. 52(a). See Zenith Radio Corp. v. Hazeltine Research, Inc.,
V.
CRUEL AND UNUSUAL PUNISHMENT
A reflection of maturing sensitivity in this country to the condition of some of our prisons may be seen in the district court’s finding that deprivations such as Sostre endured for a year may not again be inflicted on New York State prisoners for longer than fifteen days, and only then for serious violations of prison rules. Otherwise, Judge Motley held, such punishment would run ashoal of the Eighth Amendment prohibition of cruel and unusual punishment, as applied to the states through the due process guarantee of the Fourteenth Amendment, Robinson v. California,
We respect the outrage, given form and content by scholarly research and reflection, that underlay the expert testimony at trial of Sol Rubin, for many years Counsel for the National Council on Crime and Delinquency, and Dr. Seymour Halleck, a psychiatrist at the University of Wisconsin with long experience in state correctional practices. Mr. Rubin testified that Sostre’s segregated environment was degrading, dehumanizing, conducive to mental derangement, and for these reasons “a gross departure” from enlightened and progressive contemporary standards for the proper treatment of prison inmates. Dr. Hal-leek feared that the isolation from human contact in punitive segregation might cause prisoners to hallucinate and to distort reality. Long-term isolation might have so serious an impact, in fact, as to “destroy” a person’s “mentality.” Dr. Halleck singled out for particular censure Green Haven’s “group therapy” program, whose compulsory aspects he found repugnant to effective treatment of participants and indeed inconsistent with minimal standards of professionalism among trained group counsellors.
Nor would candor permit us to dismiss -these opinions as aberrational among those views revealed in relevant sources referred to us by counsel or known to us through our own research. To the contrary, it would not be misleading to characterize many of the opinions of plaintiff’s experts as fairly representative of the perspective of adherents to the “new penology,” see Knuckles v. Prasse,
We do not question, either, the relevance to an inquiry under the Eighth Amendment of opinions which may represent a progressing sense of humaneness as well as a new calculation as to the efficacy of penal practices. See Trop v. Dulles,
For a federal court, however, to place a punishment beyond the power of a state to impose on an inmate is a drastic interference with the state’s free political and administrative processes. It is not only that we, trained as judges, lack expertise in prison administration. Even a lifetime of study in prison administration and several advanced degrees in the field would not qualify us as a federal court to command state officials to shun a policy that they have decided is suitable because to us the choice may seem unsound or personally repugnant. As judges we are obliged to school ourselves in such objective sources as historical usage, see Wilkerson v. Utah,
Accordingly, we have in the past declined to find an Eighth Amendment violation unless the punishment can properly be termed “barbarous” or “shocking to the conscience.” See Church v. Hegstrom,
It is undisputed on this appeal that segregated confinement does not itself violate the Constitution. See Burns v. Swenson,
In arriving at this conclusion,
Finally, we cannot agree with Judge Motley that even if New York might in an appropriate ease subject a prisoner to the conditions of Sostre’s segregated confinement, had Follette’s motives been as he described them, the punishment would in any event have been unconstitutionally disproportionate to the offense. Were we to rule otherwise, we would deny to prison authorities the power to use an entirely constitutional means of discipline in response not only to a credible threat to the security of the prison, but in response to a prisoner’s refusal to answer appropriate questions put by prison authorities and to obey valid prison regulations.
VI.
PROCEDURAL DUE PROCESS A divergence of perspectives similar to those we have seen in considering the Eighth Amendment issue is presented in
Sostre presses upon us a variety of cases, relied upon by the district court and said to be analogous to this case, in which federal courts have required states to square corners before exacting a penalty by following procedures similar to those mandated by Judge Motley. Particular importance is attached to Goldberg v. Kelly,
Our recent decision in Escalera v. New York City Housing Authority,
Somewhat closer in point to the present case is Mempa v. Rhay,
Federal courts disagree as to the reach of Mempa to probation revocation proceedings generally. See the extensive citation of cases in Hewett v. North Carolina,
[A]s a generalization, it can be said that due process embodies the differing rules of fair play, which through the years, have become associated with differing types of proceedings. Whether the Constitution requires that a particular right obtain in a specific proceeding depends upon a complexity of factors. The nature of the alleged right involved, the nature of the proceeding, and the possible burden on that proceeding, are all considerations which must be taken into account.
Hannah v. Larche,
Beyond the process of guilt determination and initial incarceration, courts have displayed greater reluctance to import all the trappings of formal due process. Thus, a panel of this court has recently held that formal trial-type due process is not a requirement in connection with a parole release determination. Menechino v. Oswald,
Most important, we think it inadvisable for a federal court to pass judgment one way or another as to the truly decisive consideration, whether formal due process requirements would be likely to help or to hinder in the state’s endeavor to preserve order and discipline in its prisons and to return a rehabilitated individual to society. It would be too simplistic to dissociate the impact of punishment meted out after a disciplinary hearing from the method by which the hearing itself is conducted. As one court has observed: “The association
between men in correction institutions is closer and more fraught with physical danger and psychological pressures than is almost any other kind of association between human beings.” Edwards v. Sard,
We are particularly unwilling to interfere with state administrative processes when reliable, detailed information or empirical studies are as scanty as they are on the subject of prison disciplinary procedures. See Corrections at 16; D. Glaser, The Effectiveness of a Prison and Parole System 172 (1964) (“prison discipline * * * has not received extensive objective research by anyone”). Judge Learned Hand wisely instructed us “ [c] onstitutions are deliberately made difficult of amendment; mistaken readings of them cannot easily be corrected. Moreover, if they could be, constitutions must not degenerate into vade mecums or codes; when they begin to do so, it is a sign of a community unsure of itself and seeking protection against its own misgivings.” The Spirit of Liberty 179 (1952).
Analogies and recommendations called to our attention do not go far to advance Sostre’s position. Neither the Model Penal Code nor the Manual of the American Correctional Association would require confrontation and cross-examination, calling of witnesses by the prisoner, counsel or counsel substitute, or a written statement of evidence and rationale.
Indeed, it appears that, among those practices known to us, only in the federal correctional system must a formal proceeding, including each of the elements in the district court’s mandate, precede forfeiture of good time allowances. Bureau of Prisons, Policy Statement: Withholding, Forfeiture, and Restoration of Good Time (No. 7400.6 Dec. 1, 1966). Notably, however, these formalities need not accompany discipline that results in the withholding of good time credit, as Judge Motley would require.
We therefore find ourselves in disagreement with Judge Motley’s eon-clusion that each of the procedural elements incorporated in her mandatory injunction are necessary constitutional ingredients of every proceeding resulting in serious discipline of a prisoner. In thus rejecting Judge Motley’s conclusions, however,
VII.
RIGHTS OF COMMUNICATION AND EXPRESSION
A. Correspondence
The distaste with which some observers view prolonged segregated confinement attaches as well to that kind of isolation flowing from restrictions on and censorship of prisoners’ correspondence:
The harm censorship does to rehabilitation cannot be gainsaid. Inmates lose contact with the outside world and become wary of placing intimate thoughts or criticisms of the prison in letters. The artificial increase of alienation from society is ill advised.
The values commonly associated with free expression — an open, democratic marketplace of ideas, the self-development of individuals through self-expression, the alleviation of tensions by their release in harsh words rather than hurled objects — these values that we esteem in a free society do not turn to dross in an unfree one. “Letter writing keeps the inmate in contact with the outside world, helps to hold in cheek some of the morbidity and hopelessness produced by prison life and isolation, stimulates his more natural and human impulses, and otherwise may make contributions to better mental attitudes and reformation.” Palmigiano v. Travisono,
Whatever wisdom there might be in such reflection, we cannot say with requisite certitude that the traditional and common practice of prisons in imposing many kinds of controls on the correspondence of inmates, lacks support in any rational and constitutionally acceptable concept of a prison system. See McCloskey v. Maryland,
Sui generis in both logic and the case law, however, are letters addressed to courts, public officials, or an attorney when a prisoner challenges the legality of either his criminal conviction or tHe conditions of his incarceration. See, e. g., Johnson v. Avery,
Thus, we do not believe it would unnecessarily hamper prison administration to forbid prison authorities to delete material from, withhold, or refuse to mail a communication between an inmate and his attorney, see Burns v. Swensen,
On the other hand, if a communication is properly intended to advance a prisoner’s effort to secure redress for alleged abuses, no interest would justify deleting material thought by prison authorities to be irrelevant to the prisoner’s complaint. The danger that an official will improperly substitute his judgment for that of the correspondent’s then preponderates. For similar reasons, prison officials may not withhold, refuse to mail, or delete material from otherwise protected communications merely because they believe the allegations to be repetitious, false, or malicious. See Nolan v. Scafati,
Accordingly, we agree with Judge Motley that it was improper for Warden Follette to delete material from correspondence between Sostre and his attorney merely because Follette thought the material irrelevant to Sostre’s appeal of his conviction. We believe it was also improper for Follette to refuse to mail a letter of complaint to the Postal Inspector. We leave a more precise delineation of the boundaries of this protection for future cases. We need only add that when we say there may be eases which will present special circumstances that would justify deleting material from, withholding, or refusing to mail communications with courts, attorneys, and public officials, we necessarily rule that prison officials may open and read all outgoing and incoming correspondence to and from prisoners.
B. Prisoner Legal Aid
Johnson v. Avery,
Since Sostre never requested permission, there is no cause for an injunction to enforce the Johnson rule. We assume that permission would be granted as a matter of course, subject only to reasonable conditions. Nor can we consider unreasonable the Green Ha
C. Possession of Literature and Mere Expression of Beliefs
Our holding that prisoners may not be punished for their beliefs carries the necessary corollary that we may not permit punishment for the mere expression of those beliefs. One can hardly speak of beliefs apart from their expression, cf. Fulwood v. Clemmer,
However, Sostre was punished simply for putting his thoughts on paper, with no prior warning and no hint that he intended to spirit the writings outside his cell. To sanction such punishment, even though in the judgment of prison officials the writings were “inflammatory” and “racist,” as in the instant case, would permit prison authorities to manipulate and crush thoughts under the guise of regulation. The intimidating threat of future similar punishment would chill a wide range of prisoner expression, not limited to that expression which Follette might in fact deem dangerous enough to discipline. The danger of undetected discriminatory punishment of ideas is particularly acute
VIII.
CONCLUSION
Because of the nature of this case, the multitude and complexity of claims raised and the extent of Judge Motley’s considered opinion and the injunctive and other relief granted, we have been compelled to engage in this protracted exegesis. In light of what we have set forth, our conclusions follow.
A. Injunctive
1. Although not necessary to the disposition of Sostre’s complaint, the district court held that several elements of trial-type procedure, enumerated in its order, were required by due process in every instance of prisoner discipline resulting in withholding of good time credit to the prisoner or loss of his opportunity to earn good time. Because of the importance of the question to the state of New York, and the frequency with which similar questions are being litigated in district courts of this jurisdiction, we are compelled to say that the district court was in error. All of the elements of due process recited by the district court are not necessary to the constitutionality of every disciplinary action taken against a prisoner. In light of this, we reverse the district court insofar as it enjoined defendants and others from so disciplining Sostre that he loses accrued good time credit or is unable to earn good time credit without full compliance with all the procedural steps set forth in Judge Motley’s injunction. We do not thereby imply that discipline in New York prisons may be administered arbitrarily or capriciously. We would not lightly condone the absence of such basic safeguards against arbitrariness as adequate notice, an opportunity for the prisoner to reply to charges lodged against him, and a reasonable investigation into the relevant facts — at least in cases of substantial discipline. However, as consideration of Sostre’s ease does not properly raise any question whether New York prisons regularly or systematically ignore minimal due process requirements, we must reverse the order of the district court that defendants submit for its approval, proposed rules and regulations governing future disciplinary actions. In this connection, we note that New York State has recently promulgated rules and regulations governing prison discipline which appear to give inmates new procedural protections.
2. The refusal to mail Sostre’s letter to the Post Office Inspector, complaining of prison practices, clearly infringed Sostre’s Fourteenth Amendment rights. We also affirm Judge Motley’s order insofar as it enjoins defendants Follette and McGinnis, their employees, agents, successors, and all persons in active concert and participation with them, from deleting material from, refusing to mail or refusing to give to Sostre: (1) Any communication between Sostre and the following — (a) any court; (b) any public official or agency; or (c) any lawyer —with respect to either his criminal conviction or any complaint he may have concerning the administration of the prison where he is incarcerated. We reverse, however, insofar as Judge Motley enjoined nonarbitrary restraint of communication between Sostre and his co-defendant in the criminal matter pending against him.
3. There is no cause for an injunction to enforce the principles announced in Johnson v. Avery, supra, since no infractions of those principles have been
4. We have held that Sostre was improperly punished for possession of constitutionally protected literature. We perceive no reason, however, to set political speech apart from other kinds of constitutionally protected speech. We therefore modify the district court order so as to enjoin defendants Follette and McGinnis, their employees, agents, successors, and all persons in active concert and participation with them, from punishing Sostre for having literature in his possession and for setting forth his views orally or in writing, except for violation of reasonable regulations. We do not hereby enjoin officials from taking reasonable measures to prevent prisoners from inciting disturbances and otherwise to protect the security and order of New York prisons, consistent with prisoners’ rights to freedom of expression. Also we do not believe that there is any need for the extraordinary procedure requiring defendants to submit rules and regulations governing the receipt, distribution, discussion and .writing of political literature for the approval of the district court.
5. We have no reason to conclude that New York prison officials will not abide by the constitutional rights of prisoners as we define them today. We have refused to set aside Judge Motley’s findings that Warden Follette unlawfully committed Sostre to segregated confinement because of his legal activities and beliefs. Warden Follette, however, is deceased and we perceive no threat that others will duplicate his improper conduct. Accordingly, we vacate that portion of the district court order which enjoined defendants and others from returning Sostre to punitive segregation for charges previously preferred against him.
B. Good Time Credit
Since we have held that Sostre was unlawfully confined to punitive segregation on account of his political beliefs and legal activities, we agree with Judge Motley’s order requiring Sostre to be credited with 124% days of earned “good time.” Sostre may not be penalized because of his time in segregation by remaining incarcerated longer or by becoming eligible for parole later than he otherwise would. We do not consider the argument that Sostre may not have earned the credit even if he had remained in the general population to be of substance. Whether he would or would not have earned it is pure speculation. Since Sostre’s constitutional rights have been violated, we resolve the doubt in his favor. Moreover, this is the only feasible way to ensure that Sostre is not again unlawfully penalized by arbitrary action.
C. Money. Damages
All parties seem to agree upon two principles with which we also are in accord. First, Section 1983 authorizes recovery of compensatory, and, in an appropriate case, punitive damages
It follows from these principles
In any event, we are persuaded to reverse the award of punitive damages. Warden Follette’s improper conduct in segregating Sostre so far as appears reflected no pattern of such behavior by himself or by other officials. The deterrent impact of a punitive
award would be of minimal use. See Green v. Wolf Corp.,
It is appropriate, lest our action today be misunderstood, that we disclaim any intent by this decision to condone, ignore, or discount the deplorable and counter-productive conditions of many of this country’s jails and prisons. We strongly suspect that many traditional and still widespread penal practices, including some which we have touched on in this case, take an enormous toll, not just of the prisoner who must tolerate them at whatever price to his humanity and prospects for a normal future life, but also of the society where prisoners return angry and resentful. Nevertheless, we would forget at our peril and at the peril of our free governmental process, that we are federal judges reviewing decisions made in due course by officers of a sovereign state. We have interpreted and applied the law as it appears to us in light of circumstance and principle. We do not doubt the magnitude of the task ahead before our correctional systems become acceptable and effective from a correctional, social and humane viewpoint, but the proper tools for the job do not lie with a remote federal court. The sensitivity to local nuance, opportunity for daily perseverance, and the human and monetary resources required lie rather with legislators, executives, and citizens in their communities. See, Amsterdam, The Supreme Court and the Rights of Suspects in Criminal Cases, 45 N.Y.U.L.Rev. 785, 810 (1970) .
Notes
. On June 12, the district court ruled that Follette’s successor as Warden (now called Superintendent) of Green Haven
. We also agree with Judge Motley that defendants have not demonstrated the adequacy of other relevant administrative procedures. See
. Section 140 was repealed and replaced with a new Section 137, effective July 8, 1970 (McKinney Supp.1970). Section 137, subd. C of the new statute vests the Superintendent of each correctional facility (formerly called the Warden) witli discretion to “keep any inmate confined in a cell or room apart from the accomo-dations provided for inmates who are participating in programs of the facility, for such period as may be necessary for maintenance of order and discipline.
. On July 11, 1968, Deputy Warden Saw-ner called Sostre before a “disciplinary court,” conducted by Sawner alone, and charged Sostre with sending letters covertly to unauthorized correspondents under the guise of writing to his sister, Letitia. Sostre admitted the infraction, which Follette claimed to have been under in
. New York State prisoners may earn a maximum of ten days “good behavior time” credit each month, thereby advancing both the date the prisoner will be eligible for parole and the date he is entitled as of right to be “conditionally released” (that is, released from custody subject to parole conditions). Prison authorities may restore good behavior time withheld or revoked. See N.Y.Penal Law §§ 70.30, subd. 4, 70.40, subd. 1 (McKinney’s Con-sol.Law, c. 40 1967) ; N.Y. Correction Law §§ 230, 803 (McKinney 1968). The repeal of Section 230, as of July 8, 1970 (McKinney Supp.1970), does not affect allowances for good behavior permitted prior to that date. Forfeiture of the chance to earn “good time” credit during punitive segregation is prescribed by regulation. 7 N.Y.Codes, Rules & Regulations, Correction § 60.6(c).
. See n. 11, infra.
. Several prisoners who had served time in Green Haven’s punitive segregation unit testified that more punishing than the deprivation of desserts was the loss of tire opportunities available to the general population to receive food packages from the outside, to borrow snacks from other prisoners, and to earn pay with which to buy extra food from the prison commissary.
. On the date Sostre was released from segregation he was punished by confinement to his cell for several days, ostensibly because “dust” was found on his cell bars. Although Judge Motley found that this jmnishment represented “retaliation for his legal success,” no relief was predicated on this finding and hence the incident need not concern us further.
. A panel of this court on July 10, 1970, expedited the appeal and granted a further stay of subparagraph 2 to the extent that it was limited to placing Sostre in l>unitive segregation for more than three days at any one time or a total of more than ten days, pending the hearing of this appeal.
. All Commissioner McGinnis knew or should have known of the reasons for Sostre’s confinement # was communicated to him by Follette, see
. Dr. William C. Johnston, a psychiatrist and Director of Mattawan State Hospital for the criminally insane, with extensive experience in dealing' with mentally disturbed prisoners, rejected Dr. Halleck’s assessment. Dr. Johnston reported that he had in fact supervised a successful compulsory group counseling program wliile Director of Dannemora State Hospital. Dr. Johnston also did not agree with plaintiff’s experts that segregated confinement would likely endanger prisoners’ sanity.
. Hearings on H.R. 6964, H.Subcomm. No. 3, Comm, on the Judiciary, 89th Cong., 1st Sess., at 2 (May 20, 1965) (testimony of Nicholas deB. Katzenbacli).
. See U. S. Bureau of Prisons. The Residential Center: Corrections in the Community (1970).
. See, e. g., Garabedian, Challenges for Contemporary Corrections, 33 Fed.Prob. No. 1, at 3 (Mar. 1969); Rachin, The Message Corrections Must Get Across, 34 Fed.Prob. No. 2, at 3 (June 1970); Summary of The Report of the President’s Task Force on Prisoner Rehabilitation (1970), 34 Fed.Prob. No. 3, at 3 (Sept. 1970). We do not ignore New York’s active participation in this reform movement. See N.Y.Correction Law Art. 26 (McKinney Supp.1970) (work release program).
. “Traditional prisons, jails, and juvenile institutions are highly impersonal and authoritarian. Mass handling, countless ways of humiliating the inmate in order to make him subservient to rules and orders, special rules of behavior designed to maintain social distance between keepers and inmates, frisking of inmates, regimented movement to work, eat, and play, drab prison clothing, and similar aspects of daily life — all tend to depersonalize the inmate and reinforce his belief that authority is to be opposed, not co-operated with * * * Such an attitude is. of course, antithetical to successful reintegration.” President’s Commission on Law Enforcement and Administration of Justice, Task Force Report: Corrections 11 (1967) (hereinafter cited as “Corrections”) .
. Chief Justice Burger, a persistent critic of our system of criminal justice which places every protection around an accused but seems to abandon him when he is sentenced to prison, recently observed that “a man in a cage needs incentive, motivation, and something to look forward to.” U. S. News and World Report 32 (Dec. 14, 1970).
. Cf. Burns v. Swenson,
. Indeed, the first prisons in this country, widely imitated in Europe, were intended “to serve as placets] for reflection in solitude leading to repentance and redemption.” The Eastern State Penitentiary in Pennsylvania (1829). where inmates lived, worked, and exercised without being permitted to talk with fellow prisoners “was copied abroad perhaps more than any other American invention.” Corrections 3. See American Correctional Ass’n, Manual of Correctional Standards 13 (3d ed. 1960) [hereinafter cited as “Manual”]. All forms of prison punishment in this country pale by comparison with those endured by Henri Charriere in the dungeons and French Penal Colony described in his book Papillon (Morrow 1970).
. See Tenn.Code Ann. § 41-707 (maximum 30 days solitary for each offense) ; Corrections 210 (disciplinary confinement maximum 30 days); American Correctional Ass’n, Manual 418* (punitive segregation maximum 30 days); American Law Institute, Model Penal Code § 304.7 (3) (Proposed Official Draft 1962) (disciplinary confinement maximum 30 days). However, comparisons and extrapolations are hazardous where factual contexts are lacking. For example, The American Correctional Association, Manual 419, would apparently not proscribe indefinite confinement to “administrative segregation.” The practical distinction intended between “punitive” and “administrative” segregation may or may not parallel that at Green Haven Prison between “punitive” and “protective” segregation.
. Mo.Rev.Stat. § 216.405, cited in Burns v. Swenson,
. Bureau of Prisons, Policy Statement: Inmate Discipline. No. 7400.5A, 1[ 3.e, App. B 11 l.cl (S) (July 2, 1970).
. The Supreme Court has struck clown a choice of punishments only when the penalty was authorized in almost no other civilized jurisdiction. Trop v. Dulles,
. Judge Feinberg expresses the view in his dissent, that “isolation of an adult prisoner for a sharply limited period as punishment for a serious breach of prison discipline” would be constitutional. But then he goes on to ask rhetorically whether solitary or segregated confinement “for two years instead.of one, or for five years, or for ten, or more,” would be constitutional. We have made an effort to suggest the impracticality of setting any specific time period for segregated confinement, beyond which the punishment would be “cruel and unusual.” In some instances, depending upon the • conditions of the segregation, and the mental and physical health of the inmate, five days or even one day might prove to be constitutionally intolerable. We would ask our dissenting brother in turn, would nine months, six months, or three months of segregated confinement be unconstitutional, without reference to the circumstances of confinement?
Judge Feinberg is also properly concerned with “endless solitary confinement * * * unless the prisoner ‘gives in.’ ” Our response is that- we are concerned also. But one must ask on what was it that Sostre was expected to “give in.” He was asked to show a change in his intransigent defiance of several prison regulations, defiance which posed a credible threat to the security of the prison, by attending group therapy sessions. Does it violate principles of fundamental decency to insist that a prisoner comply with reasonable rules applicable to all similarly situated?
. In response to Judge Feinberg’s dissent, we emphasize that no one testified that based on his observation or as the result of a physical or psychological examination of Sostre, he concluded that Sostre was being adversely affected or that his physical or mental health was threatened. We note that the record shows that a prison physician visited Sostre’s segregation unit daily, and at no time did the physician observe, or did Sostre call to his attention, any such effects.
Indeed, the experts before the district court were in conflict even over the hypothetical question whether the conditions that Sostre experienced in segregation would be dangerous to the sanity of “a prisoner.” See p. 190 and fn. 11, supra. On the basis of these conflicting expert opinions, Judge Feinberg observes that the district court found as a fact that, these conditions “could only serve to * * * undermine the sanity of the prisoner” * * * when imposed for more than fifteen days. We do not agree with our brother that we are required to declare this “finding” to be either right or wrong, either “clearly erroneous” or adequately supported by the record and therefore correct. We are not concerned here with conflicting testimony of witnesses to the same unique historical event. The question, rather, is a general-one: whether the Eighth Amendment absolutely forbids a state to use a means of discipline when there is no evidence of any physical or psychological injury to the health of the prisoner who complains of the measure, and also when the opinions of the experts as to the effects of the type of discipline are in conflict. To hold the district court either right or wrong would be tantamount to ruling that either Dr. Ilalleck or Dr. Johnston is right, and the other is wrong. That is not our function, nor was it the function of the district court. It is a judgment among competing, rational policies,
. This element distinguishes the instant case from Krist v. Smith,
. In view of the widely recognized and critical shortage of specialists such ns psychologists in prison systems generally, it would defy reality to discount the value of the group therapy program because of the somewhat limited training and experience of the loader. Corrections 205. As noted above, p. 190 and fn. 11 supra, the expert testimony at trial below conflicted as to the impact on the effectiveness of group sessions of coercing prisoners’ participation.
. E. g.. Wright v. McMann,
. We stress the seriousness of the multiple offenses charged against Sostre by Warden Follette, see pp. 183-185, supra, and express no view as to the constitutionality of such segregated confinement as Sostre experienced if it were imposed for lesser offenses. Specifically, we express no view as to the constitutionality of such segregated confinement if it had been imposed on account of any one or any combination of the offenses charged against Sostre other than all of them.
. Judge Foley of the Northern District of New York has adopted the procedural aspect of Judge Motley’s order. Wright v. McMann.
. In Townsend v. Burke,
. See Shapiro v. Thompson,
. Cf. Coffin v. Reichard,
. See Note, The Supreme Court, 1968 Term, 83 Harv.L.Rev. 193, 197 (1969).
. Followed in Lewis v. Rockefeller,
. For similar reasons the Court in Williams v. New York,
. Plaintiff was not systematically denied safeguards afforded non-prisoners prior to a transfer to a different state institution. See Baxstrom v. Herold,
. See American Law Institute, Model Penal Code § 304.7(2) (Proposed Official Draft 1962) (before inflicting punishment, warden to be advised by disciplinary committee after “hearing” where prisoner would appear after receiving notice of charges) ; American Correctional Ass'n, Manual 409 (expeditious hearing, adequate investigation, regular channel for appeal, written report of the infraction found and disposition).
. Accord, Burns v. Swenson,
. “A first tenet of our governmental, religious, and ethical tradition is the intrinsic worth of every individual, no matter how degenerate. It is a radical departure from that tradition to subject a defined class of persons, even criminals, to a regime in which their right to liberty is determined by officials wholly unaccountable in the exercise of their power. * * *” Corrections 83. See Hirsch-kop & Millemann, The Unconstitutionality of Prison Life, 55 Va.L.Rev. 795, 834 (1969) (discipline should be based on “proven facts” and should be “rationally related to the objective sought”).
. The Court in Escoe v. Zerbst,
. On appeal, the order of’ the district court dismissing the complaint in Nolan was reversed with instructions to take evidence to determine whether any “as
. Defendants have appended to their brief on appeal new rules and regulations recently promulgated by the New York Department of Correction and effective October 19, 1970, governing, among other things, prisoner discipline in all state correctional institutions which appear to provide some new procedural safeguards. We consider it inappropriate to comment on the constitutional adequacy of the new procedures for they were adopted after the events before us on this appeal.
. Singer, Censorship of Prisoners’ Mail and the Constitution, 56 A.B.A.J. 1051 (1970).
. “Restrictions on tlie extent and character of prisoners’ correspondence and examination or censorship in relation thereto have always been regarded as inherent incidents in the conduct of penal institutions and the control of confinements, activities, preoccupations and other relationships therein.” Lee v. Tahash,
. Nor docs Johnson sanction inter-prison legal aid among prisoners. • Some slight incremental value might be discerned were the right of access to courts extended so as to embrace a right to the aid of jailhouse lawyers wherever they might be incarcerated. Any gain, however, would bo outweighed by the consequential added interference with prison discipline and the danger that more aggressive prisoners would abuse their expanded power. A co-defendant stands in no better position than any other jailhouse lawyer in this respect.
. Thus, legal material might be acquired either from the prison library, through the prisoner’s own outside sources, or even from Sostre himself, with prior approval of prison officials.
. The authoritarian “boss” inmate is no chimera. See Corrections 40. The Court in Johnson v. Avery,
. A case of suppression would, however, require us to decide the relevance of such doctrines as the “clear and present danger test” that courts have relied upon in other contexts to decide the validity of restraints operating directly upon the content of speech. See Schenck v. United States,
. See note 42, supra.
. In granting this relief to Sostre, we do not resolve the question whether a claim for relief grounded solely on the contention that good time credit was unconstitutionally withheld or forfeited would, standing alone, support an action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, without compliance with the exhaustion requirement of 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b), (c). See p. 182, supra.
. As state administrative officials, defendants are not entitled to the protective immunity from a judgment for damages that has been extended to judges, Pierson v. Ray,
. Judge Motley awarded $25.00 compensatory damages per day for every day that
. We do not now decide the question, not passed on below and neither briefed nor argued orally on this appeal, whether plaintiff may yet recover damages against a party not before us.
Concurrence in Part
(concurring in part and dissenting in part):
I agree with most of Judge Kaufman’s thoughtful and thorough opinion, but disagree in two respects and therefore dissent in part.
I agree with Judge Feinberg that the district court’s finding that Sostre’s segregation for more than one year was cruel and unusual punishment is supported by the record. Punishment of a nature found likely to bring about an inmate’s insanity should be proscribed whether or not it is shown to have succeeded in doing so in the particular case, and whether or not it could be alleviated by “submission.”
This requires also, it seems to me, that recovery against McGinnis be upheld. The court found (and Judge Kaufman’s opinion emphasizes, page 182 and page 189) that McGinnis had been fully informed as to Sostre’s long segregation, a finding supported by the Fol-lette deposition testimony and exhibits, and had done nothing to terminate it although empowered to do so, and although he knew Follette had kept men in segregation for periods as long as four and five years in the past. Follette was liable in damages to Sostre for violation of his civil rights, and I would rule that McGinnis was properly held also liable. I would not, however, assess
Concurrence in Part
(dissenting and concurring) :
Because I agree with most of the exhaustive majority opinion, I regret that I find it necessary to dissent from the treatment of the cruel and unusual punishment point and from the reversal as to defendant McGinnis. As to the former, the majority opinion reaches three results, from each of which I dissent. The most important of these is the refusal to hold that there must be a definite limit on how long a prisoner may be kept in punitive segregation, or solitary confinement.
Before considering these three aspects of the majority opinion, it must be emphasized that Sostre was segregated for over a year and, as Judge Motley noted, would in all likelihood still be effectively isolated but for the intervention of the district court. There is an intimation in the majority opinion that Sostre was not effectively cut off from usual day to day contact with other human beings,
ancholy detail the conditions that were imposed upon Sostre and the reasons why. I will not repeat them here except to note that the full vindictive flavor of defendants’ treatment of Sostre is indicated by one incident, relegated to a footnote in the majority opinion. The day after Judge Motley ordered Sostre’s release from over a year of segregation, he was again disciplined for having “dust on his cell bars.” This caused him to miss the regular July 4th celebration, which would have brought him in contact with prisoners from another part of the prison, such contact being permitted only once a year on July 4. Judge Motley found that the punishment was imposed upon Sostre in retaliation for his legal success before her.
The district judge found that the isolation imposed on Sostre was “dangerous to the maintenance of sanity” and “ ‘could only serve to destroy completely the spirit and undermine the sanity of the prisoner.’ ”
On the second assumption, what the majority does is to hold that Sostre’s lengthy, unlimited isolation, which was “dangerous” to his sanity, does not violate the eighth amendment. With deference, I disagree. The standard for determining “cruel and unusual punishment” has been expressed in a number of ways, all imprecise; e. g., “the wanton infliction of pain,” Louisiana ex rel. Francis v. Resweber,
The fact that solitary confinement for an indefinite period has historically been accepted as a viable instrument of prison discipline does not prevent us from finding that it violates the eighth amendment. What might once have been acceptable does not necessarily determine what is “cruel and unusual” today. Recently, the Eighth Circuit has held that whipping by strap is proscribed, although it had once been a familiar practice. Jackson v. Bishop,
The second fundamental reason why I differ with the majority opinion stems from the contrast between what it finds necessary to decide and what it refuses to decide. As indicated above, the majority states in an extended dictum that if the warden’s motives had been proper, the combined effect of Sostre’s alleged violations would have been “serious” enough to justify the harsh punishment he received. Thus, the majority stresses “the seriousness of the multiple offenses charged against Sostre” and expresses “no view as to the constitutionality of such segregated confinement if it had been imposed on account of any one or any combination of the offenses charged against Sostre other than all of them.” But the fact is that two of the allegedly serious “multiple offenses” were Sostre’s refusal to desist from preparing legal papers for a codefendant and his possession of six tables of contents torn from issues of the Harvard Law Review. I would not hold unconstitutional the isolation of an adult prisoner for a sharply limited period as punishment for a. serious breach of prison discipline, e. g., what the majority calls “a credible threat to the security of the prison,” see p. 194, supra. But these two offenses were simply not grave enough to justify the extremely severe punishment visited upon Sostre. Accordingly, the ex-cessiveness of the penalty for these two alleged transgressions would alone violate the eighth amendment’s proscription of cruel and unusual punishment, and I would say so.
Finally, while the majority reaches out to decide that Sostre’s confinement would have been constitutional under a hypothetical set of facts, it refuses to rule that his punishment was cruel and unusual even though it was actually meted out for improper reasons. It is true that the majority also leaves open the constitutionality of such “confinement as Sostre experienced,” if imposed for “lesser offenses.” The inconsistency of this approach is apparent since if such confinement, in the majority’s view, could ever be so excessive a penalty as to be unconstitutional, it should be declared so when there was no basis for the confinement at all.
In sum, keeping Sostre in solitary for over a year was “cruel and unusual punishment” because (1) the length and open-ended nature of his confinement threatened sanity; (2) two of the alleged offenses were so minor as to make the penalty constitutionally disproportionate; and (3) the ostensible reasons were a pretext for vindictive action. I also agree with Judge Smith’s opinion with regard to defendant McGinnis. For the reasons and to the extent set forth above, I dissent.
HAYS, Circuit Judge, dissenting (with whom MOORE, Circuit Judge, concurs):
I dissent from the affirmance of any grant of injunctive relief or damages.
In deciding this ease the majority have overlooked two fundamental guiding principles. The first is that although persons serving sentences in prison for crime are not to be denied all constitutional protections, there are significant differences between the constitutional rights such prisoners may assert and the constitutional rights of those who are free from prison restraints. For example, although the majority holds that Sostre is protected by the Constitution in his right orally to set forth his political opinions to his fellow prisoners, it may be that even they would balk at a claim that the Constitution gave Sostre the right, similar to the
In the present ease Warden Follette testified that Sostre’s punishment was based upon (1) defiance of Follette’s order to desist from preparing legal papers, (2) refusal to answer proper questions,
Observance of the correct legal principles would lead in this case to reversing the trial court with respect to all relief granted.
. See, c. g., “[W]e cannot agree [that the conditions Sostre endured] require that similar punishments be limited in the future to any particular length of time,” p. 191, supra; “[T]he Eighth Amendment [does not forbid] indefinite confinement under the conditions endured by Sostre for all the reasons asserted by Warden Follette until such time as the prisoner agrees to abide by prison rules,” p. 193, supra.
. "[H]e was not as isolated in his segregation as ‘solitary’ would imply,” see p. 183, supra.
. See p. 185, supra.
. Through the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment. See Robinson v. California,
. In order to maintain discipline prison inmates may be required to answer questions fully and completely. See United States ex rel. Sperling v. Fitzgerald,
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring) :
I concur in each of the results reached in the majority opinion. Nevertheless, I am concerned that the discussion there with reference to Due Process rights of a state prisoner who is threatened with loss of good time credit or with a loss of the chance to earn such credit because of an alleged infraction of prison rules would seem inaccurately to portray the obligation of a federal court asked to “interfere with state administrative processes” on constitutional grounds. I submit that it is our duty, mandated by the U. S. Constitution, authorized by Congress,
. See, e. g., 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
. It may be that despite t,liis disclaimer in the majority opinion we have in fact decided that minimum standards are not met if the prisoner is not at least confronted with an accusation, informed of the evidence against him, and is afforded a reasonable opportunity to explain his actions. See pp. 196, 198, 203, supra. However, it does seem clear that decision as to what are wholly acceptable minimum standards is left for another day through case-by-ease development.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring) :
I concur in Judge Kaufman’s thorough opinion’exeept as to Section VI regarding Procedural Due Process. While I agree in reversing those provisions of paragraph 2-of the order of the district court, I see no need to express any opinion on what the New York State authorities should do when determining whether or not to withhold or withdraw good time credit, or the general principles which should govern such situations.
