Canada et al v. Clarke et al
Filing
68
OPINION & ORDER granting 56 Motion for Summary Judgment; granting 60 Motion to Amend/Correct; denying 63 Motion for Summary Judgment. Signed by Judge James P. Jones on 9/27/2016. (tvt)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA
ROANOKE DIVISION
KELVIN A. CANADA,
Plaintiff,
v.
HAROLD CLARKE, ET AL.,
Defendants.
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Case No. 7:15CV00065
OPINION AND ORDER
By: James P. Jones
United States District Judge
Kelvin A. Canada, Pro Se Plaintiff; Nancy Hull Davidson, Office of the
Attorney General of Virginia, Richmond, Virginia, for Defendants.
The plaintiff, Kelvin A. Canada, a Virginia prison inmate proceeding pro se,
filed this civil rights action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Canada asserts constitutional
challenges to certain classification procedures that have allegedly prevented him
from earning his release from the highly restrictive segregation conditions at Red
Onion State Prison (“Red Onion”) in Pound, Virginia. Specifically, he claims that
he has been wrongly assigned to Intensive Management (“IM”) housing, a status at
Red Onion that is more restrictive and has fewer privileges than the similar
classification of Special Management (“SM”) and the general population. He
seeks monetary damages and injunctive relief.
1
After review of the record, I
conclude that the defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment must be granted.
I.
Canada is serving a sentence of life plus 41 years, 36 months, and 100 days
for convictions that include two counts of first degree homicide, five weapons
offenses, two counts of assault, and unlawful wounding of a corrections officer.
He alleges that after being assigned to administrative segregation for sixteen years,
he was arbitrarily classified to IM status for an incident that occurred in 1998
before he arrived at Red Onion.
Red Onion and its sister facility, Wallens Ridge State Prison (“Wallens
Ridge”), house all Virginia Department of Corrections (“VDOC”) “Level S”
inmates. Level S is reserved for inmates who must be managed in a segregation
setting. 2 Under current policies, once a VDOC inmate is classified as Level S,
1
Since filing this § 1983 action, Canada has been transferred to a prison facility
in Rhode Island. The defendants have not argued that his request for injunctive relief is
moot. Because Canada is still committed to state custody, and because there is no
indication in the record to the contrary, I find that there is a reasonable expectation that
he could be returned to the Virginia prison system in the future. I therefore will not
dismiss the request for injunctive relief as moot. Cf. Weinstein v. Bradford, 423 U.S.
147, 149 (1975) (per curiam) (stating that review of an inmate's claim for injunctive relief
is permissible where “(1) the challenged action was in its duration too short to be fully
litigated prior to its cessation or expiration, and (2) there was a reasonable expectation
that the same complaining party could be subjected to the same action again”).
2
According to the VDOC operating procedure for security level classification,
inmates are classified to Level S based on “segregation qualifiers,” including the
following: aggravated assault on a staff person or on another offender using a weapon or
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officials transfer him to one of these facilities, where he may participate in the
Segregation Reduction Step-Down Program designed to help him progress in
stages toward a return to the general prison population. (Operating Procedure
(“OP”) 830.A, at 9-34, ECF No. 57-1.) This OP became effective on February 18,
2013, with the stated purpose to provide “established procedures for incentive
based offender management which will create a pathway for offenders to stepdown from Security level S to lower security levels in a manner that maintains
public, staff and offender safety.” (OP 830.A(I).) The step-down program is goaloriented: when inmates exhibit positive behaviors, such as anger management and
respect, and succeed in completing the established goals in each stage of the
procedure, they are rewarded by moving to the next step and earning its additional
privileges.
As described in OP 830.A(III), each newly classified Level S inmate is
assessed and assigned to the appropriate privilege level within Level S: intensive
management (“IM”), special management (“SM”), or the reentry unit (reserved for
inmates within two years of release). An inmate is assigned to IM status if
evaluators determine that he has “the potential for extreme and/or deadly
resulting in serious injury; serious risk of escape; “[c]ommission of a crime of
exceptional violence and/or notoriety”; “[e]xcessive violent [d]isciplinary [c]onvictions”;
fire setting or rioting in prison that harmed a person or caused extensive property
damage; hostage taking; possessing firearms or other weapons; gang activity or
leadership; and manipulating staff or displaying predatory behavior.
(See OP
830.2(IV)(G)).
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violence,” as indicated by a history of violent disciplinary infractions against staff
or other inmates, or an “extensive criminal history and lifestyle that has escalated
so that extreme/deadly violence has become a behavior characteristic.”
(OP
830.A(III).) The policy expressly states that “[t]he potential for extreme or deadly
violence is not eliminated despite the offender’s daily institutional adjustment even
when providing more than a year of compliant, polite, and cooperative behavior
and attitude.” (Id.)
Alternatively, an inmate may be placed in IM status because of his
“routinely disruptive and threatening pattern of behavior and attitude” or because
he is “incarcerated for a notorious crime that puts [him] at risk from other
offenders.”
(Id.)
On the other hand, an inmate is assigned to SM status if
evaluators find that he has a history of “repeated disruptive behavior at lower level
facilities, . . . fighting with staff or offenders, and/or violent resistance” that
harmed staff or other inmates, but “without the intent to invoke serious harm, . . .
kill, or [cause] serious damage to the facility.” (Id.)
Inmates are further sub-classified under OP 830.A as follows, starting with
IM-0, the most restrictive status, and ending with the general population, the least
restrictive.
Intensive Management (IM):
IM-0
IM-1
IM-2
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IM-SL6
Special Management (SM):
SM-0
SM-1
SM-2
SM-SL6
Step-Down—Level VI General Population
Structured Living—Phase 1 and Phase 2
Security Level V General Population
The step-down program in OP 830.A is a so-called cognitive program that includes
pro-social goals and requires the inmate to complete a workbook set called the
Challenge Series, remain infraction free, meet responsible behavior goals, and
participate in self-improvement and education programs. When an inmate meets
the goals designated for a step, he may be advanced to the next step and receive the
additional privileges assigned to it.
All Level S inmates in the IM and SM categories are housed in single cells
and, until they reach the SM-SL6 stage, are restrained in handcuffs and shackles
and escorted by two officers whenever they leave their cells. Per policy, they
receive meals in their cells (the same types of meals that inmates in general
population units receive), receive not less than three showers per week, and have
out-of-cell recreation for one hour, five days per week. These inmates generally
can have two twenty-minute phone calls per month, one one-hour, non-contact
visit per week, limited use of radio and television, and limited commissary
purchases. They can possess at least two library books per week, receive and send
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mail, and possess legal and religious materials. The privileges an IM inmate may
earn under OP 830.A at IM-1 and IM-2 include more library books per week, more
commissary purchases, more non-contact visits or telephone calls, increased TV
time and channels, and even limited job possibilities. An inmate progressing to
SM-1 or SM-2 can earn even greater privileges.
IM or SM inmates who do not meet the standards for discipline, responsible
behavior, self-improvement, and programming can be moved back to a lower step.
Some inmates assigned to a lower step may be required to start over with the
Challenge Series; they must then work with treatment staff to complete its
exercises again to achieve positive changes in thought processes and social skills.
An inmate’s refusal to participate in the step-down program may also be grounds
for a reduction in his step assignment back to IM-0 or SM-0, where he may remain,
stripped of the privileges he had earned in the higher step, until he chooses to
participate.
Members of the Unit Management Team, a multi-disciplinary group of staff
who work in the housing units, track and rate each inmate’s progress toward the
goals of his assigned step. They rate his behavior every week as poor, acceptable,
or good in each of several categories, such as personal hygiene, standing for count,
and respect. Counselors rate the inmate’s program participation every week as
incomplete, complete, or positive effort. Officers in each of these groups are
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encouraged to communicate with inmates about these ratings — to acknowledge
positive
performance
and
motivate
improvement
where
needed.
(OP 830.A(IV)(D).)
When an inmate completes the Challenge Series curriculum and evaluators
deem that he has achieved its behavioral goals in SM-2, he is stepped down in
security level from Level S to SM-SL6.
(OP 830.A(IV)(F).)
At this point,
officials assess each inmate and assign him to one of three SL6 program pods
geared to safely reintroduce him into a social environment to interact with other
inmates and test his readiness for possible transfer to Level V and, eventually, to
other non-segregation settings. (Id.)
Inmates in the SL6 step-down pod may progress through two phases.3 In
SL6 Phase 1, they are still in single cells, but they are permitted to leave their cells
unrestrained for movement to the shower and recreation and, gradually, to
participate in the Thinking for a Change curriculum with other inmates in groups
of up to fifteen participants. (Id.) Inmates in SL6 Phase 2 are double-celled and
unrestrained for showers and recreation, have outside recreation with other inmates
3
In addition to the SM-SL6 step-down pod, inmates at this stage may be assigned
to: (a) the secure allied management (“SAM”) pod, designed for inmates who may be
vulnerable to victimization because of cognitive impairment or other factors; or (b) the
secure integrated pod (“SIP”), designed for inmates who intentionally commit multiple
minor disciplinary infractions to stay in segregated housing. The programming in the
SAM and SIP pods differs from the step-down pod and is intended to assess inmates’
ability to socialize safely with other inmates and encourage them toward a move to a
general population.
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for an hour, twice a week, and can walk to meals with other inmates to eat their
meals together in the dining hall.
The IM pathway under OP 830.A is different than the SM pathway. If an
inmate reaches IM-2 status, and officials determine that he cannot progress to the
SM steps toward classification to the SL6 pods, he can become eligible for
assignment to the lowest security level for an IM status inmate: Level 6-IM, also
known as the Closed Pod. The Closed Pod is expressly designed “to create an
opportunity for an increased quality of life for offenders possibly facing a long
term in high security.” 4 (OP 830.A(IV)(G)(1).) Closed Pod inmates continue to
have single-celled housing, segregated showers and recreation areas, and out-ofcell restraints, shackles, and dual escorts. Closed Pod inmates can, however, earn
more privileges than any other group of IM inmates, such as more in-pod job
assignments, more programming in-cell and in small groups in secure chairs, video
visitation, and longer in-person visitation.
4
OP 830.A(IV)(G)(2)(g) states:
Restricted freedoms and interaction with staff and other offenders for the
IM population is temporary. There is a strong commitment to develop a
model to support an improved quality of life and greater opportunities for
self-improvement for this dangerous population. The goal is to develop a
management strategy that includes reduced restrictions, increased freedoms,
and increased unrestrained interactions with others. However, at the time
of this writing, guidelines or models are not available for predicting safety
with a population that has a proven history of carrying out extreme and/or
deadly violence.
Once the larger Step-Down plan in general is
implemented and stable, attention will be focused on additional IM stepdown opportunities.
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In addition to the weekly progress ratings by the Unit Management Team,
OP 830.A(IV)(K)(5) requires that all segregation inmates, including those
participating in the step-down program, be routinely reviewed by the Institutional
Classification Authority (“ICA”). (OP 830.1, at 35-43, ECF No. 57-1.) According
to OP 830.A, Appendices F and G, Level S inmates are to receive an ICA review at
least every ninety days.
Among other things, the ICA reviews and acts on
recommendations for step increases or reductions.
In addition to Unit Management Team review of an inmate’s classification
status, certain classification decisions are also reviewed by a Dual Treatment Team
made up of officials from both Red Onion and Wallens Ridge, by the wardens of
the two institutions, or by the VDOC regional operations chief. In addition to this
multi-level review scheme, according to OP 830.A(IV)(K)(1)(a), “[a] team
external to [Red Onion and Wallens Ridge] will perform an annual review of each
[Level S] offender’s case.” This review includes a reassessment of whether the
inmate continues to meet the criteria for the IM or SM path to which he has been
assigned.
According to OP 830.1(IV)(G), all classification decisions may be
appealed through the Offender Grievance Procedure, to which Level S inmates
have access.
The ICA recommended Canada for assignment to IM status on March 22,
2013, based on his incursion of twenty-eight disciplinary convictions in 2012.
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This recommendation was approved on March 28, 2013.
The ICA reviewed
Canada’s classification in June 2013 and again in August 2013, at which point it
recommended that he remain assigned to IM-1 because of a recent infraction.
For medical reasons, officials transferred Canada to Sussex I State Prison
(“Sussex I”) on September 18, 2013. He returned to Red Onion on May 2, 2014.
After reviewing Canada’s classification on May 6, 2014, the ICA recommended
assignment to IM-1, and this recommendation was approved. On July 28, 2014,
however, Canada’s status was reduced to IM-0 based on several institutional
infractions and his refusal to participate in the programs.
The ICA continued to conduct routine reviews of Canada’s classification.
He remained assigned to IM-0 for several months. On April 13, 2015, the ICA
recommended his advancement to IM-1; this recommendation was approved the
next day. After his review in July 2015, the ICA recommended that he continue in
IM-1. In April 2016, Canada was transferred to Wallens Ridge State Prison, and in
June 2016, he notified the court that he had been transferred to a prison in Rhode
Island, pursuant to an interstate agreement.
Liberally construed, Canada’s verified § 1983 Complaint asserts claims that
application of OP 830.A as to him, and particularly his classification to IM status,
unfairly prolonged his confinement under segregation conditions without federally
required procedural protections, in violation of the Due Process and Equal
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Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment, and that those conditions
themselves have violated the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition against cruel and
unusual punishment. Canada sues VDOC administrators for signing OP 830.A
into effect and failing to correct the alleged constitutional violations. He also sues
supervisory and treatment officials at Red Onion for the undesirable conditions and
for improperly making or failing to correct the allegedly unfair classification
decisions imposed on him under OP 830.A without sufficient due process. Canada
seeks monetary damages and injunctive relief ordering his transfer to a lower
security level and prison facility.
In Canada’s Complaint and other submissions, he contends that after he had
spent sixteen years in administrative segregation, officials arbitrarily assigned him
to IM-status in 2013 without allowing him to be present or to offer argument,
contradictory testimony, witnesses, or evidence, based on an incident that occurred
in 1998 at Southampton Correctional Center. He also complains that officials did
not provide him with a written explanation for his assignment to IM status or a
means to appeal it.
Canada asserts that as an IM-status inmate, he was “perman[e]ntly assigned
to a (supermax) prison no matter how [his] behavior might improve[ ] or [how long
he remained] infraction free which immensely effect[ed his] parole eligibility.”
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(Compl. ¶ 12, ECF No. 1.) He alleges that he was denied parole in 2015, partly
because of his IM status, and that he cannot earn good conduct time.
He also alleges that OP 830.A discriminates against IM inmates, who suffer
a much more restrictive environment than inmates in other forms of administrative
segregation, and that IM status prevents an inmate from working his way out of
segregated confinement at Red Onion by completing the Challenge Series. Canada
complains that SM inmates who complete this series are eligible to move to a
general population setting, whereas IM inmates who complete the same series are
moved to a “pseudo-population” pod. (Id. at ¶ 23.) He states that inmates in these
pods are confined to their cells except for showers and recreation alone; they have
no access to a gym, a normal recreation yard, a law library, or a dining hall; and
they cannot hold jobs outside the pod or have contact visits without being shackled
to a chair. (Id.) Canada also alleges that he completed the Challenge Series two
times before he incurred three minor infractions and was moved back to IM-0
without notice or a hearing.
Canada also claims that OP 830.A is clearly discriminatory, both because
not all inmates convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison are classified to
IM status and because some inmates with such convictions are confined at much
lower security prisons. Canada also disputes the defendants’ evidence that he was
assigned to IM status by the ICA, and he submits evidence that these decisions
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were made by the Dual Treatment Team without his participation or other
procedural protections required by VDOC policy.
The defendants have filed a Motion for Summary Judgment, supported by
copies of OP 830.A, its charts of IM and SM requirements, and its progress report
forms. They also present the affidavit of Red Onion Warden Earl Barksdale,
which describes these and other relevant procedures as well as Canada’s progress
through the step-down procedures. Canada has filed a Motion to Amend, which I
will grant, and a Motion for Summary Judgment.
II.
A. Standard of Review.
A court should grant summary judgment “if the movant shows that there is
no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as
a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). “As to materiality . . . [o]nly disputes over
facts that might affect the outcome of the suit under the governing law will
properly preclude the entry of summary judgment.” Anderson v. Liberty Lobby,
Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248 (1986). A dispute about a material fact is genuine “if the
evidence is such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving
party.” Id.
I must draw all reasonable inferences from the facts in favor of Canada, the
nonmoving party. Williams v. Staples, Inc., 372 F.3d 662, 667 (4th Cir. 2004).
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Detailed factual allegations in a verified, pro se complaint may be sufficient to
withstand a motion for summary judgment with supporting affidavits containing a
conflicting version of the facts. Williams v. Griffin, 952 F.2d 820, 823 (4th Cir.
1991).
However, Canada cannot defeat the defendants’ properly supported
summary judgment motion with mere groundless generalizations or speculation.
Glover v. Oppleman, 178 F. Supp. 2d 622, 631 (W.D. Va. 2001) (“Mere
speculation by the non-movant cannot create a genuine issue of material fact.”).
B. Due Process.
The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment prohibits a state from
depriving “any person of life, liberty, or property without due process of law.” U.S.
Const. amend. XIV, § 1. “To state a procedural due process violation,5 a plaintiff
must (1) identify a protected liberty or property interest and (2) demonstrate
deprivation of that interest without due process of law.” Prieto v. Clarke, 780 F.3d
245, 248 (4th Cir. 2015). “A liberty interest may arise from the Constitution itself,
by reason of guarantees implicit in the word ‘liberty,’ or it may arise from an
5
Canada may also be contending that OP 830.A violates his substantive due
process rights. Such a claim fails, however. It is well established that “the Due Process
Clause affords [the inmate] no greater protection than does the Cruel and Unusual
Punishment Clause.” Whitley v. Albers, 475 U.S. 312, 327 (1986). Thus, Canada’s
claims that living conditions in segregation constitute punishment without a legitimate
penological purpose and inflict physical harm on him “fall squarely within the ambit of
the Eighth Amendment — not the due process clause.” See Prieto v. Clarke, 780 F.3d
245, 251 (4th Cir. 2015). Therefore, I will address Canada’s complaints about the ill
effects of living conditions at Red Onion separately, under the applicable legal standard
for Eighth Amendment claims.
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expectation or interest created by state laws or policies.” Wilkinson v. Austin, 545
U.S. 209, 221 (2005) (citations omitted).
As a convicted prisoner, Canada does not have an inherent, constitutionally
protected liberty interest in release from a more restrictive security classification.
Id. at 221-22. A state-created liberty interest may exist, however, if Canada (a)
points to “a basis for an interest or expectation in state regulations” in avoiding the
conditions of his confinement under the segregation classification scheme at Red
Onion, Prieto, 780 F.3d at 250; and (b) shows that those conditions “impose[]
atypical and significant hardship . . . in relation to the ordinary incidents of prison
life.” Sandin v. Connor, 515 U.S. 472, 484 (1995). Only if Canada makes both
showings does the Due Process Clause require a particular measure of procedural
protection before he can be deprived of his liberty interest. Id.
Canada expressly states that he is challenging, not his classification to Level
S, but rather, his initial classification to IM status instead of SM status under OP
830.A and the subsequent classification adjustment decisions within that pathway.
He apparently believes that these procedures prevented him from being released
from segregation to general population conditions. The defendants agree that OP
830.A “creates an expectation that ‘S’ level offenders will receive reviews of their
classification status.”
(Defs.’ Mem. Supp. Summ. J. 22, ECF No. 57.)
Specifically, OP 830.A(IV)(K)(5) and Appendices F and G provide that the ICA
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will review inmates’ statuses every ninety days and decide whether to advance
them to the next status level in the step-down procedures. I conclude that this
periodic review policy creates a potential liberty interest for Canada in being
released from the restrictive conditions of his current security classification. See
Incumaa v. Stirling, 791 F.3d 517, 527 (4th Cir. 2016) (finding that state prison’s
policy requiring periodic classification reviews for segregation inmates created
potential liberty interest).
I must next determine if Canada’s continued confinement in the various
segregation classifications within the OP 830.A categories imposes “atypical and
significant hardship” compared to the “ordinary incidents of prison life.” Sandin,
515 U.S. at 484. The “conditions dictated by a prisoner’s conviction and sentence
are the conditions constituting the ‘ordinary incidents of prison life’ for that
prisoner.”
Prieto, 780 F.3d at 253.
Neither party has provided me specific
information about restrictive conditions dictated by Canada’s life sentence, and I
find no such sentence-related restrictions in the VDOC policies available to me.
Accordingly, I will use the general population status as the normative baseline for
his due process claim. See Incumaa, 791 F.3d at 527 (concluding “that the general
population is the baseline for atypicality for inmates who are sentenced to
confinement in the general prison population and have been transferred to security
detention while serving their sentence”).
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The atypical hardship requirement is difficult to satisfy. Mere limitations on
privileges, property, and activities for administratively segregated inmates, and
even disciplinary action “in response to . . . misconduct fall[ ] within the expected
perimeters of the sentence imposed by a court of law.” Sandin, 515 U.S. at 485;
Gaston v. Taylor, 946 F.2d 340, 343 (4th Cir. 1991) (holding that “changes in a
prisoners’ [sic] location, variations of daily routine, changes in conditions of
confinement (including administrative segregation), and the denial of privileges —
matters which every prisoner can anticipate are contemplated by his original
sentence to prison — are necessarily functions of prison management that must be
left to the broad discretion of prison administrators to enable them to manage the
prisons safely and efficiently”). It is well established that a temporary assignment
to segregated confinement — thirty days or even six months, with reduced
privileges, few out-of-cell activities or socialization opportunities, and heightened
security measures — is not atypical or significant hardship. See Sandin, 515 U.S.
at 485-86; Beverati v. Smith, 120 F.3d 500, 504 (4th Cir. 1997) (finding six months
under conditions dictated by administrative segregation policies was not atypical
under Sandin). Moreover, “[t]he State’s first obligation must be to ensure the
safety of guards and prison personnel, the public, and the prisoners themselves.”
Wilkinson, 545 U.S. at 227. Thus, “correctional officials . . . must have substantial
discretion to devise reasonable solutions to the problems they face” in maintaining
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prison security and safety. Florence v. Bd. of Chosen Freeholders, 132 S. Ct.
1510, 1515 (2012).
Most importantly, the Supreme Court has consistently employed a due
process analysis that encourages prisons to implement written management
policies while minimizing the involvement of the federal courts “in the day-to-day
management of prisons.” Wilkinson, 545 U.S. at 222 (citing Sandin, 515 U.S. at
482-83). “This approach . . . provides inmates and prison administrators with clear
notice of a prisoner’s rights, but it also permits a given state to codify procedures
establishing very restrictive confinement conditions.” Prieto, 780 F.3d at 255.
District courts must respect the Supreme Court’s “judgment that this trade-off
strikes the correct balance between the dictates of the Due Process Clause and the
pressures on state correctional systems.” Id.
In Wilkinson, without a point-by-point comparison of segregation and
general population conditions, the Supreme Court found that inmates had a
protected liberty interest in avoiding assignment to a particular state “supermax”
prison. In reaching this conclusion, the Court carefully distinguished the supermax
conditions from normal segregation unit conditions on three grounds.
First,
inmates in the supermax facility were “deprived of almost any environmental or
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sensory stimuli and of almost all human contact.”6 Wilkinson, 545 U.S. at 214.
Second, they were assigned for “an indefinite period of time, limited only by [the]
inmate’s sentence.” Id. Third, once assigned to supermax, “[i]nmates otherwise
eligible for parole lose their eligibility while incarcerated” at the facility.
Id. at
215. The Court stated: “While any of these conditions standing alone might not be
sufficient to create a liberty interest, taken together they impose an atypical and
significant hardship within the correctional context.” Id. at 224.
Similarly, in Incumaa, the Fourth Circuit found a protected liberty interest in
avoiding assignment to South Carolina’s supermax based on the isolating and
restrictive nature of the living conditions combined with the length and
indefiniteness of the plaintiff’s twenty-year confinement there. 791 F.3d at 53132. In addition to conditions similar to those at issue in Wilkinson, the plaintiff in
Incumaa was subjected to “a highly intrusive strip search every time he [left] his
cell.” Id. at 531.
Prison policies gave rise to the indefinite terms of supermax confinement
that concerned the courts in these cases. In Wilkinson, prison policies provided “no
6
The conditions at the supermax at issue in Wilkinson included the following:
“Almost all human contact is prohibited, even to the point that conversation is not
permitted from cell to cell; the light, though it may be dimmed, is on for 24 hours;
exercise is for 1 hour per day, but only in a small indoor room.” Id. at 223-24. The Court
noted, however, that the lack of human contact was the most distinctive of these living
conditions and that the conditions were atypical when combined with the additional
factors of indefinite duration and disqualification for parole. Id. at 224.
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indication how long [an inmate] may be incarcerated [at the supermax] once
assigned there.” 545 U.S. at 215. In addition, policy required infrequent review of
the continued appropriateness of an inmate’s specific segregation status: once
initially, thirty days after his arrival, and annually thereafter. Id. at 217. The
policy at issue in Incumaa required review of the plaintiff’s status every thirty days
by an institutional classification committee (“ICC”), but that review process
provided no clear criteria for him to become suitable for release from the
supermax. 791 F.3d at 522-23. Assigned to the supermax as a member of a
security threat group, policy provided that the plaintiff could nevertheless qualify
for reclassification and release from the supermax by achieving an “improvement
in behavior level.” Id. Policy further defined “behavior level” as including a clear
disciplinary record and the ICC’s evaluation of the plaintiff’s overall compliance
with “policies and procedures” of the institution. Id. at 522. In twenty years, the
plaintiff had never incurred a disciplinary infraction, but the ICC repeatedly
recommended his retention at the supermax without providing any behavioral basis
for doing so. Id. at 521-23.
Without question, VDOC inmates classified to Level S, particularly those
assigned IM status, are confined under highly restrictive conditions at Red Onion,
including single-cell assignment, limited out-of-cell activity and face-to-face
contact with other inmates, and movement outside the cell only in full restraints
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and with dual escorts. Out-of-cell movement may also involve a visual strip
search, although the parties do not present evidence on this issue. The mere
existence of these conditions at Red Onion, however, does not render confinement
there atypical or significantly harsh, because general population inmates can expect
temporary terms in segregated confinement under similar restrictions. See Sandin,
515 U.S. at 486 (thirty days); Beverati, 120 F.3d at 504 (six months).
Canada contends that the conditions imposed under OP 830.A are atypical
and significant, particularly IM status, because it is allegedly permanent.
However, Canada’s own classification history belies this claim. He was classified
to IM-0 status based on numerous disciplinary infractions, but he did not remain at
IM-0 status. By participating in the procedures of OP 830.A, Canada moved to the
less restrictive step of IM-1. In so doing, he earned additional privileges. Had he
avoided new disciplinary infractions and worked to change his thinking as well as
his behavior, over time, the step-down procedures would have allowed him to earn
eligibility for more privileges and out-of-cell activities, such as a job. Ultimately,
Canada was transferred to a prison in Rhode Island under an interstate compact and
is, therefore, no longer subject to the OP 830.A procedures or conditions.
After careful review of OP 830.A, I conclude that this step-down procedure
addresses and alleviates the isolating conditions and indefiniteness identified in
Wilkinson and Incumaa as distinguishing factors of “atypical and significant”
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hardships presented by a prison’s long-term segregation scheme. An IM-0 status
inmate is subject to long-term, restrictive conditions, but that status need not be
permanent or indefinite if the inmate chooses to participate in the step-down
procedures. OP 830.A provides behavioral criteria for the inmate to qualify for
incremental reductions of restrictions and increases in privileges. With concerted
effort to change his thinking and behavior, he can earn his way to enjoyment of
additional social interaction and activity while in segregated confinement. OP
830.A’s steps allow him to make measurable progress toward reclassification to
lower security statuses. If he achieves a status change to the SM pathway, he can
then step down to general population conditions and transfer to a lower security
facility. As such, under OP 830.A, an inmate’s confinement in segregation at Red
Onion is, for a likely majority of inmates, only as lengthy and restrictive as
dictated by his own effort and behavior.
Canada complains that any given official can purposely use OP 830.A to
prolong an inmate’s confinement in IM conditions. I conclude that the team
assessment approach and the multi-level classification review procedures built into
OP 830.A and the other VDOC policies protect against such willful action denying
any one inmate the ability to move through the steps.
Moreover, if Canada
believed that procedural errors or miscalculations occurred during a classification
proceeding, he had the option to challenge the decision through the Offender
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Grievance Procedure, OP 830.1(IV)(G), or file a request for an interim review of
his classification based on procedural or calculation errors. (See OP 830.1(IV)(E).)
Canada also fails to state facts showing that confinement at Red Onion made
him ineligible for parole, which was the case for the plaintiff in Wilkinson while he
was confined at the supermax.
Canada’s own allegations — that he was
considered for and denied discretionary parole while classified to IM status and
confined at Red Onion — reflect that he remained eligible for parole consideration
while participating in the step-down procedures he challenges. Moreover, I find no
provision in OP 830.A itself that revokes an inmate’s eligibility for discretionary
parole consideration. Parole board members could, legitimately, have considered
the disciplinary problems and other behavioral issues that led to Canada’s Level S
and IM-0 classification as a reflection of his unsuitability for parole release. I find
no evidence in the record, however, that IM or SM classification inevitably affects
the length of an inmate’s confinement so as to trigger a separate, constitutionally
protected liberty interest in avoiding that classification. 7 Sandin, 515 U.S. at 487.
For the reasons stated, I find no material fact in dispute on which Canada
can establish that his confinement at Red Onion under OP 830.A is atypical and
significantly harsh compared to conditions contemplated by his sentence.
7
Similarly, Canada has no due process claim related to OP 830.A and his lack of
good conduct time. Indeed, Canada does not allege that he was eligible to earn good
conduct time when OP 830.A took effect after he had been in administrative segregation
for sixteen years.
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Conditions there, while restrictive, can improve in defined stages based on the
inmate’s own efforts toward cognitive and behavioral changes. Indeed, the OP
830.A procedures themselves prevent confinement at Red Onion from falling into
the category of indefinite isolation identified in Wilkinson and Incumaa as
triggering constitutional due process protections. Thus, I conclude that Canada has
no constitutionally protected liberty interest in avoiding any particular security
classification or reclassification under OP 830.A.
Therefore, he also has no
actionable claim under § 1983 that any particular procedural protection is
constitutionally required during the OP 830.A classification proceedings. Sandin,
515 U.S. at 486-87.
Canada also has no claim under § 1983 that any of the defendants have
misapplied the OP 830.A procedures themselves.
Canada’s complaints about
whether the ICA or Dual Treatment Team reviewed or made changes to his IM
step assignment and whether reviews were formal or informal under ICA
procedures are, at most, alleged violations of the OP 830.A policies themselves.
State officials’ failure to abide by state procedural regulations is not a federal due
process issue, and is, therefore, not actionable under § 1983. Riccio v. Cty. of
Fairfax, 907 F.2d 1459, 1469 (4th Cir. 1990) (“If state law grants more procedural
rights than the Constitution would otherwise require, a state’s failure to abide by
that law is not a federal due process issue.”).
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For the stated reasons, the defendants are entitled to judgment as a matter of
law as to Canada’s claims that one or more of them violated his constitutional
rights by changing his classification under OP 830.A without due process. I will
grant the Motion for Summary Judgment on Canada’s due process claims
accordingly.
C. Equal Protection.
The Equal Protection Clause 8 generally requires the government to treat
similarly situated people alike. City of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Ctr., Inc., 473
U.S. 432, 439 (1985). It “does not take from the States all power of classification,
but keeps governmental decision makers from treating differently persons who are
in all relevant respects alike.” Veney v. Wyche, 293 F.3d 726, 730 (4th Cir. 2002)
(internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
Thus, to prove an equal
protection claim, an inmate “must first demonstrate ‘that he has been treated
differently from others with whom he is similarly situated and that the unequal
treatment was the result of intentional or purposeful discrimination.’” Id. (quoting
Morrison v. Garraghty, 239 F.3d 648, 654 (4th Cir. 2001)). He must next show
that the policy is not “reasonably related to [any] legitimate penological interests.”
Veney, 293 F.3d at 732 (quoting Shaw v. Murphy, 532 U.S. 223, 225 (2001)). This
“No State shall . . . deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection
of the laws.” U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 1.
8
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element requires the inmate to “allege facts sufficient to overcome the presumption
of reasonableness applied to prison policies.” Id. Canada does not state facts
supporting these necessary elements of his equal protection claim.
First, Canada has not demonstrated that he was similarly situated to inmates
in SM status when officials classified him to IM-0 status. Canada’s disciplinary
record in 2012 warranted different treatment, for security reasons, than he had
previously received at Red Onion.
Moreover, in light of his many recent
infractions, together with the violent nature of his crimes and his life sentence,
officials could lawfully treat Canada differently from other segregation inmates
with histories of fewer, less serious, or less recent disciplinary convictions who
were found qualified for SM status.
Second, Canada does not show that he was treated differently than any other
inmate during periodic reviews for step changes. Neither Canada nor any other
Level S inmate can change his step status under OP 830.A merely by avoiding
disciplinary convictions and completing the Challenge Series workbooks alone. A
step change requires not only progress on the Challenge Series curriculum but also
classification officers’ recognition that an inmate is working to make positive
changes in his thinking and behavior. The inmate must also remain infraction free,
which Canada did not always do during review periods.
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Third, while the OP 830.A step-down procedure purposefully treats SM and
IM status inmates differently, these differences are rationally related to legitimate
governmental purposes. Namely, this procedure reasonably uses the incentive of
earning increased privileges and lower restrictions to encourage improved offender
behavior and self-development “in a manner that maintains public, staff and
offender safety.” OP 830.A(I). The logical connections between the policy’s
provisions and the furtherance of its legitimate penological goals are self-evident.
See Overton v. Bazzetta, 539 U.S. 126, 133 (2003) (“[I]nternal [prison] security [is]
perhaps the most legitimate of penological goals.”).
For the stated reasons, I find no material dispute of fact on which Canada
could prove an equal protection violation here. Therefore, I conclude that the
defendants are entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law and will grant their
motion on this claim.
D. Eighth Amendment.
Canada’s final challenge to OP 830.A asserts that his status under OP 830.A
offends the prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment of the Eighth
Amendment, which “protects inmates from inhumane treatment and conditions
while imprisoned.” Williams v. Benjamin, 77 F.3d 756, 761 (4th Cir. 1996).
“[T]he Constitution does not mandate comfortable prisons,” however, and
conditions that are “restrictive and even harsh . . . are part of the penalty that
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criminal offenders pay for their offenses against society.” Rhodes v. Chapman,
452 U.S. 337, 347, 349 (1981). It is well established that “only the unnecessary
and wanton infliction of pain implicates the Eighth Amendment.” See Wilson v.
Seiter, 501 U.S. 294, 297 (1991) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
To sustain an unconstitutional conditions claim, a prisoner must show that:
(1) objectively, the deprivation was sufficiently serious, in that the challenged
official acts caused denial of “the minimal civilized measure of life’s necessities”;
and (2) subjectively, the defendant prison officials acted with “deliberate
indifference to inmate health or safety.” Farmer v. Brennan, 511 U.S. 825, 834
(1994) (internal quotation marks omitted). The prisoner must show “significant
physical or emotional harm, or a grave risk of such harm,” resulting from the
challenged conditions. Shakka v. Smith, 71 F.3d 162, 166 (4th Cir. 1995).
Canada’s allegations do not show that he suffered any Eighth Amendment
violation while subject to the living conditions under OP 830.A at Red Onion.
Canada does not allege that he was deprived of any necessity for life, such as food,
shelter, or medical care. Rather, he complains about higher levels of restraint and
fewer privileges. He fails to allege facts on which he could prove that these
restrictions caused him any serious or significant physical or emotional harm. For
the stated reasons, I find no material dispute of fact on which Canada could prove
his claim that he has been subjected to unconstitutional conditions. Accordingly, I
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will grant the defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment as to his Eighth
Amendment claim.
III.
For the reasons stated, I conclude that Canada’s constitutional challenges to
OP 830.A are without merit, and the defendants are entitled to summary judgment
as a matter of law. It is accordingly ORDERED that the plaintiff’s Motion to
Amend (ECF No. 60) is GRANTED; the defendants’ Motion for Summary
Judgment (ECF No. 56) as to the Complaint as amended is GRANTED, and the
plaintiff’s Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 63) is DENIED. 9
A separate judgment will be entered herewith.
ENTER: September 27, 2016
/s/ James P. Jones
United States District Judge
9
It is also ORDERED that all claims against the defendant identified as the Dual
Treatment Team are DISMISSED as legally frivolous, pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
§ 1915A(b)(1). This defendant is not a “person” subject to suit under § 1983. See Will v.
Mich. Dep’t of State Police, 491 U.S. 58, 70-71 (1989). In any event, for the reasons
stated, Canada has stated no actionable § 1983 claim against any of the individual
members of this team.
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