Defendants-appellants, who are prison officials, appeal from a judgment of the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut (Dorsey, /.), granting-in-part plaintiff-appellee Joe Burgos Vega’s motion for summary judgment. Vega, a prison inmate, sued Connecticut prison officials alleging, among other things, that they violated his liberty interests and procedural due process rights arising under the Fourteenth Amendment by failing to afford him a hearing before assigning him an inmate classification that, in his view, was tantamount to classifying him as sex offender. The district court granted Vega summary judgment and injunctive relief on this claim and dismissed the remaining ones.
Vega v. Lantz,
No. 3:03-cv-2248,
I. BACKGROUND
Vega is an inmate at the MacDougallWalker Correctional Institution, under the custody of the Connecticut Department of Correction (“DOC” or “the Department”). Vega’s incarceration resulted from his conviction for two counts of assault in the first degree in violation of Conn. Gen.Stat. § 53a-59 and one count of kidnapping in the second degree in violation of Conn. GemStat. § 53a-94. While the state also presented testimony that Vega committed sexual assault in the first degree in violation of Conn. GemStat. § 53a-70 (a)(1), he was acquitted of that charge. The state trial court sentenced Vega to a total term of sixty years of incarceration.
Vega’s convictions arose from acts he committed against a sixteen-year-old girl, with whom he had a sexual relationship, when he was twenty-nine-years old. The first violent act occurred during the fall of 1995, when he tore the victim’s clothes, hit her, and forbade her from attending her high school classes. The violence then crescendoed. During a series of events during late 1995, Vega stabbed the victim, burned her with a cigarette, and carved the name “Joey” on her chest with a piece of glass. Then in early 1996, he locked the victim in a bedroom with her infant son, and, on the evening of January 7, entered the bedroom, stabbed the victim, beat her and cut her nipple off of her right breast before forcing her to swallow it.
Following his conviction, Vega entered the custody of the DOC. As is customary, Department officials assigned him both a “needs score,” designed to assess what rehabilitative treatments were appropriate, and a “risk score,” designed to assess his risk of dangerousness. The officials responsible for these assessments included the defendants-appellants Theresa Lantz, the Commissioner of Correction (“Commissioner”), Jack Tokarz, the former Deputy Commissioner and Fred Levesque, the
According to the Department’s 2005 Objective Classification Manual, officials calculate a “needs score” by assigning point levels between 1 and 5 to inmates based on their medical needs, mental health needs, educational needs, vocational needs, substance abuse needs, community resource needs, and “Sexual Offense Treatment Needs” (“SOTN”). In calculating a risk score, officials consider a number of factors including the inmate’s risk of escape, the severity of the offenses, any history of violence, the length of the sentence, pending charges, disciplinary history and membership in a group that poses a security risk. An inmate with a SOTN score of 2 or higher may not receive a risk level score of 1 or 2 absent approval from the Commissioner.
When Vega was initially arrested in 1996, corrections officials assigned him a risk level of 4 and a SOTN score of 1. In June 1997 they reassigned him a SOTN score of 3, with a subcode of “U,” to denote that this classification was unverified. Following his conviction, his risk score and SOTN score remained the same with one change: his SOTN subcode of “U” was changed to “V” for “verified.” The Classification Manual describes persons with a SOTN score of 3 as individuals who “have a current conviction, pending charge or known history of sexual offenses involving physical contact with the victim(s) ... The offenses may include coercion, manipulation, or exploitation.”
In February 2001, Vega learned of his SOTN score and unsuccessfully requested reclassification on the ground that he had been acquitted of sexual assault. According to Vega, his classification as a sex offender exposed him to harassment from prison officials and other inmates, as well as a denial of access to various programs such as one that permitted him to tutor other inmates. Department officials dispute the allegations of harassment but acknowledge that they deemed it ill advised to permit Vega to serve as a tutor based, in part, on his high SOTN score.
In December 2003, Vega sued asserting various constitutional claims including violations of substantive and procedural due process, equal protection and the Eighth Amendment. Eventually, Vega moved for summary judgment on his due process claims, contending that the state unconstitutionally classified him as a sexual offender despite the fact he has not been convicted of a sexual offense. This miselassification, he contended, deprived him of a federal constitutional liberty interest in not being falsely stigmatized and a state-created liberty interest in not being labeled as a sex offender absent a criminal conviction. The parties cross-moved for summary judgement. The district court granted summary judgment to Vega on his procedural due process claims. It reasoned that “being classified as a sex offender invokes a constitutionally protected liberty interest” and, therefore, Vega was entitled to a hearing before the Department labeled him a sex offender.
Vega,
II. DISCUSSION
A.
We review a grant of summary judgment under Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure
de novo. Molinari v. Bloomberg,
B.
Vega alleged that DOC officials defamed him by branding him as a sex offender without due process. Generally, defamation is an issue of state, not of federal constitutional, law.
Lauro v. Charles,
To establish a “stigma plus” claim, a plaintiff must show (1) “the utterance of a statement sufficiently derogatory to injure his or her reputation, that is capable of being proved false, and that he or she claims is false,” and (2) “a material state-imposed burden or state-imposed alteration of the plaintiffs status or rights.”
Sadallah v. City of Utica,
Vega contends, and the district court found, that by classifying him as an inmate with a SOTN score of 3, the state stigmatized him as a sex offender. For support, Vega relies on
Doe v. Dept, of Pub. Safety,
where we found that the publication of a Connecticut sex offender registry plainly stigmatized “the people listed on it insofar as it assert[ed] that they [were] persons convicted of crimes characterized by the State as sexual offenses.”
Nonetheless, while it may be the case that, in certain circumstances, misclassification as a sex offender results in stigma plus, this possibility is of no particular assistance to Vega because he has not established a threshold requirement — the existence of a reputation-tarnishing statement that is
false. Codd v. Velger,
Vega has not alleged that the conduct underlying his conviction for assault — the removal of a teenage girl’s nipple and the forcing her to swallow it- — did not occur. Nor has Vega alleged that Department officials were unreasonable in classifying this conviction a “sexual offense” that involved “physical conduct,” the requirements for a SOTN score of 3 under the operative Classification Manual. 1 Since Vega did not allege falsity, he was not entitled to relief on his stigma plus due process claim and, accordingly, the district court erred in affording him injunctive relief.
C.
Vega also asserts in his § 1983 claim a due process violation arising from the deprivation of a state-created liberty interest.
Welch v. Bartlett,
Vega contended that he had a liberty interest in not being assigned the SOTN score he received based on acquitted conduct. The district court concluded that an earlier, no-longer-operative Classification Manual created such an liberty interest. The Manual stated that “nolled, dismissed, or withdrawn information, which is part of another crime, may be used to determine needs scores based upon the description of the crime from police reports, [pre-sentence investigation reports], or other reliable investigative reports.” Acquitted crimes, the district court observed, are not on that list, supporting, by negative inference, the conclusion that they should not count. The district court further concluded that under the earlier manual, “[n]o charge for which an offender has been found not guilty or the charge nolled, or dismissed, may be used to determine any risk score.” The court found that the disregard by DOC officials of this language resulted in atypical hardships in the form of denial of participation in certain treatment programs and threats from other inmates. The district court’s analytic approach runs up against the Supreme Court’s admonition in
Sandin
regarding the dangers of such negative inferences: “[W]e believe that the search for a negative implication from mandatory language in prisoner regulations has strayed from the real concerns undergirding the liberty protected by the Due Process Clause.”
More to the point, we believe the district court relied on the wrong manual. On his liberty interest claim, Vega sought only prospective injunctive relief, not monetary damages. Consequently, only the current regulations, not the older ones, are relevant. The current regulations provide that “nolled, acquitted, dismissed or withdrawn information, which is part of another crime, may be used to determine needs scores based upon the description of the crime from police reports, [pre-sentence investigation reports], or other reliable investigative reports.” Since the current regulations do not prohibit prison officials from considering acquitted conduct when assigning a needs score, they do not support the existence of a liberty interest.
Finally, the record strongly indicates that Vega’s SOTN score would be a 3 even if he had never been charged with, and acquitted of, sexual assault in the first degree. DOC officials averred that Vega’s SOTN score would be remain a 3, even absent the acquittal for sexual assault, because he was convicted of “Assault in the First Degree ... on the basis of the mutilation and amputation of his minor victim’s nipple.” Vega has contradicted neither the conduct supporting this conviction, nor the Department’s sworn averment that this convicted conduct sustains Vega’s SOTN score “standing alone.” As the district court noted, “there are numerous reasons why the crimes for which Vega was
If Vega had not been convicted of amputating a part of a sixteen year old girl’s body that is classified as a sexual organ under Connecticut law, this may well have presented a different case. Vega, however, does have such a conviction. And prison officials are under no constitutional obligation to blind themselves to reality in assessing Vega’s needs while he is in their care.
III. CONCLUSION
The judgment of the district court is reversed. The case is remanded so that the district court may enter judgment in favor of the defendants.
Notes
. See also Conn. Gen.Stat. §§ 53a-65(3), (8) (state criminal code defining "sexual contact” as contact with the "intimate parts” of a person, which include “the genital area ..., groin, anus ..., inner thighs, buttocks, or breasts.”); 18 U.S.C. § 2246(3) (federal criminal code defining "sexual contact” as the "intentional touching, either directly or through the clothing, of the genitalia, anus, groin, breast, inner thigh, or buttocks of any person with an intent to abuse, humiliate, degrade, or arouse or gratify the sexual desire of any person.”).
