ROMARIO VERMOND WALLER v. JAMES BANKS, WARDEN; DARRYL GOLDEN, ASSISTANT WARDEN; CURTIS MEINZER, DEPUTY WARDEN; D. COMPTON, VARNER REHAB PROGRAMS MANAGER; WENDY KELLEY, DEPUTY DIRECTOR; LARRY MAY, DEPUTY DIRECTOR; ROSLYN WILLIAMS, CORRECTIONAL OFFICER; AND CARMICKLE, CORRECTIONAL OFFICER
No. CV-11-403
SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS
October 10, 2013
2013 Ark. 399
PRO SE APPEAL FROM THE LINCOLN COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, 40LCV-10-112, HON. JODI RAINES DENNIS, JUDGE
PER CURIAM
While an inmate at the Varner Supermax Unit (VSM) of the Arkansas Department of Correction (ADC), appellant Romario Vermond Waller filed a pro se civil rights action against various prison officials pursuant to the Arkansas Civil Rights Act,
On October 12, 2009, while an inmate in the East Arkansas Regional Unit (EARU), appellant stabbed a correctional officer in the chest with a piece of fence wire. As a consequence of the assault, appellant was issued a Notice for Supermax Placement. Following a hearing, the EARU Classification Committee recommended that appellant be placed at VSM, and appellant was given notice of the committee‘s decision. Upon transfer from EARU to VSM, appellant was temporarily housed in administrative segregation. At his November 2, 2009 hearing before the VSM Classification Committee, appellant informed the committee that he had assaulted the officer because he lost his temper. Subsequently, the committee assigned appellant to the VSM Incentive Level Program. The Placement Review document in the record provides that, at the review, appellant was given a copy of the VSM handbook and advised that he had fifteen days to appeal his placement.2 While the record includes a number of grievances filed by appellant stemming from his placement in the Program, it does not include an appeal of the committee‘s placement decision.3
In contending that the ADC infringed on his constitutional rights, appellant first argues that a violation of his right to due process occurred based on the ADC‘s alleged failure to provide him with notice or a hearing before assigning him to the VSM Incentive Level Program. In the eighteen-month Program, assigned inmates are expected to participate in programming as well as follow ADC rules and regulations to progress through the Program‘s five levels. According to the ADC, programming, which consists of viewing videos and answering questions about the material, is designed to rehabilitate inmates by building character, developing coping skills, and teaching socially acceptable ways of behaving.7 In his brief, appellant states that inmates assigned to the Program are subject to longer periods of privilege loss for disciplinary infractions than other VSM inmates,8 but he acknowledges that all VSM inmates, including those assigned to the Program, receive the same treatment in other areas, including access to mail,
To succeed on his due-process claim, appellant must first demonstrate that he was deprived of a liberty interest when he was assigned to the VSM Incentive Level Program. Because appellant was not deprived of a liberty interest when he was assigned to the Program, he cannot show that the process that he was provided was inadequate. In the prison context, the deprivation of a liberty interest is created by the imposition of an atypical and significant deprivation that was a dramatic departure from the basic conditions of confinement. Sandin v. Conner, 515 U.S. 472, 484 (1995); Crawford, 2010 Ark. 124 (no due-process violation based on ADC officials refusal to change appellant‘s housing or working assignments); Munson, 375 Ark. 549 (loss of class status and privileges do not comprise a liberty interest); see also Smith, 2013 Ark. 248 (no protected right or interest in a particular classification status or that status‘s privileges); Renfro, 2013 Ark. 40 (claim of loss of privileges is insufficient to assert deprivation of a liberty interest). Because the assignment to the VSM Incentive Level Program cannot be considered a dramatic departure from the ordinary incidents of prison life, appellant failed to state a deprivation of a liberty interest as necessary to claim a due-process violation based on lack of notice and a hearing.
In his brief, appellant describes the VSM Incentive Level Program as a behavior-
Appellant next alleges gender discrimination based on his argument that the VSM Incentive Level Program violates his right to equal protection because there is no similar
Accordingly, because appellant failed to raise any legitimate constitutional issue in his petition, we affirm the trial court‘s dismissal of the complaint with prejudice based on his failure to state a claim for relief.
Affirmed.
Romario Vermond Waller, pro se appellant.
Dustin McDaniel, Att‘y Gen., by: Christine A. Cryer, Ass‘t Att‘y Gen., for appellee.
