Josselyn v. Poirier, et al.

Case Date: 07/27/1992
Docket No: 92-1014



July 27, 1992 [NOT FOR PUBLICATION]











___________________


No. 92-1014




DAVID A. JOSSELYN,
Plaintiff, Appellant,

v.

PHILIP POIRIER, ET AL.,
Defendants, Appellees.


__________________

APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

[Hon. William G. Young, U.S. District Judge]
___________________

___________________

Before

Selya, Circuit Judge,
_____________
Campbell, Senior Circuit Judge,
____________________
and Boudin, Circuit Judge.
_____________

___________________

David A. Josselyn on brief pro se.
_________________
Nancy Ankers White, Special Assistant Attorney General and
__________________
Charles M. Wyzanski, Senior Litigation Counsel, Department of
____________________
Correction, on Memorandum of Law in Support of Summary
Disposition.



__________________

__________________




































































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Per Curiam. Plaintiff/appellant, David A. Josselyn,
___________

appeals the grant of summary judgment in favor of the prison

officials against whom he brought an action, pursuant to 42

U.S.C. 1983. We affirm.

Josselyn, a prisoner at the Massachusetts Correctional

Institution (MCI) at Norfolk, was suspected of attempting to

escape in the early morning hours of September 15, 1989.

That evening he was transferred to MCI at Cedar Junction.

In March 1990, he filed suit with claims stemming from

the investigation of the escape attempt and his transfer.

Eventually, the parties cross-moved for summary judgment with

the prison officials prevailing.

I.

Before turning to the underlying merits, we dispose of

some preliminary complaints appellant raises on appeal.

First, Josselyn contends that he did not have adequate notice

that defendants' motion would be treated as one seeking

summary judgment. This argument is specious. Defendants'

motion was permissibly phrased in the alternative, as a

motion to dismiss or for summary judgment.1 The motion


____________________

1. There were actually two such motions. The first was
filed in February 1991 with an accompanying memorandum. This
motion recited that it was filed on behalf of 13 named
defendants. There were, however, 16 named defendants and the
omission of 3 names appears to have been inadvertent.
Josselyn filed his opposition and cross-motion in March 1991.
In October 1991, the defendants filed a second motion,
this one reciting all 16 names. This subsequent addition of
earlier-omitted names did not prejudice Josselyn, as this

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itself gave notice to Josselyn and he was given a reasonable

opportunity to respond, which he did, with an opposition, a

cross-motion for summary judgment, and accompanying

memorandum.

Second, Josselyn argues that the district court erred in

failing to hold a hearing before granting summary judgment.

The court properly may grant summary judgment, without an

evidentiary hearing or oral argument, "if no dispute over

material fact exists and a trial or hearing would not enhance

its ability to decide the [remaining legal] issue." Posadas
_______

de Puerto Rico, Inc. v. Radin, 856 F.2d 399, 401 (1st Cir.
_____________________ _____

1988); see also Fed. R. Civ. P. 43(e) (court may "hear"
_________

motion on affidavits). As discussed infra, contrary to
_____

Josselyn's contention, there is no genuine issues of material

fact and no necessity for a hearing.

Third, Josselyn complains that the court's grant of

summary judgment was not accompanied by any supporting

memorandum. Findings of fact and conclusions of law are

unnecessary on decisions of summary judgment motions. Fed.

R. Civ. P. 52(a). The court endorsed, as "allowed," the

defendants' motion, which sought summary judgment based on


____________________

second motion relied on the previously filed memorandum. In
any event, Josselyn had an opportunity to file a further
response, if it was warranted, but did not do so. The
district court granted summary judgment in defendants' favor
on November 26, 1991, with judgment entering on December 20,
1991.


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the reasoning set forth in their memorandum. The basis for

the court's ruling, therefore, is apparent from the record.

While a supporting memorandum is useful to a reviewing court,

the absence of such is not fatal in this case. Domegan v.
_______

Fair, 859 F.2d 1059, 1065-66 (1st Cir. 1988).
____

II.

We turn to the merits of this appeal. We review the

grant of summary judgment de novo. See, e.g., Rodriques v.
_________ _________

Furtado, 950 F.2d 805, 808 (1st Cir. 1991). "Summary
_______

Judgement is appropriate only if there is no genuine dispute

as to material fact and the moving party is entitled to

judgment as a matter of law." Id. at 809. We "review the
___

record, together with all reasonable inferences therefrom, in

the light most favorable to the non-moving party, here

appellant." Id.
___

Unless otherwise indicated, these facts are essentially

undisputed. On September 15, 1989, at approximately 8:45

a.m., after a night of heavy rain, prison officials found a

rope made of prison bedsheets hanging from a wall at Norfolk,

a hole, approximately 2 feet by 1 feet, cut in an adjacent

inner perimeter chain-link fence, and, close by, a pair of

needle nose pliers. The pliers had pieces of conduit pipe

attached to the ends with blue electrical tape. The

bedsheets had Josselyn's laundry identification number on

them. Josselyn's room was searched that afternoon and



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several articles of his clothing, including sneakers, were

found to be soaking wet. The sneakers had scuff marks on the

inner foot area. Defendants contend, although Josselyn now

denies, that Josselyn's hot pot had blue electrical tape on

it, identical to the tape used to connect the pliers and

pipe.2

Josselyn was placed in Norfolk's segregation unit and a

visual body cavity search was done. At approximately 9:30

p.m., he was transferred to Cedar Junction, where he was

placed in Awaiting Action (AA) status in that prison's

segregation unit. On October 25, 1989, a classification

meeting was held. The classification board recommended that

Josselyn remain in AA status pending the results of the

investigation into the attempted escape and related

disciplinary action.

On November 10, 1989, Josselyn received a copy of the

disciplinary report. This report related the facts

previously noted regarding the homemade rope, hole in the

perimeter fence, pliers, and pipe. The report also stated

that interviews were conducted, at which Josselyn was

identified as the inmate who had attempted the escape.

Although the attempted escape occurred between 2 and 3 a.m.,



____________________

2. Josselyn did not contest the existence of the blue
electrical tape on his hot pot at the disciplinary hearing
and a photograph showing the hot pot with blue tape attached
to its cord was admitted into evidence at the hearing.

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the inner perimeter fence and the wall were lit. According

to the report, some of the inmates who were interviewed

recited that Josselyn climbed out the fire escape window in

his room, crawled along the fence, cut through the inner

perimeter fence, and crawled across the "dead zone." These

interviewees further recited that, with the assistance of

broomsticks with blocks attached, Josselyn placed a hook,

with a sheet attached, to the top of the wall and attempted

to climb the wall. According to the report, when the attempt

failed, Josselyn moved the hook and sheet down to a different

area, tried and again failed to climb the wall, then crawled

back through the "dead zone" and returned to his unit. The

report recited that every article of evidence was either

directly tied to Josselyn or he had access to that material

and was seen with it.

After two continuances at Josselyn's request so that

counsel could be present and one continuance due to the

reporting officer's illness, the disciplinary hearing was

held on February 2, 1990. The investigating officer

testified. Because the escape incident had been referred to

the district attorney's office for possible prosecution,

Josselyn invoked his fifth amendment right to remain silent

and did not testify in his own behalf. Josselyn was

represented by a law student, who argued that, on the morning

after escape attempt, it was damp outside and that Josselyn



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had been out jogging and had made no attempt to hide his wet

clothes, which were laying around his room.

On February 12, 1990, Josselyn was found guilty of

attempted escape. He was given 15 days in isolation and the

disciplinary board recommended that Josselyn be reclassified

to higher security, placed in the departmental segregation

unit (DSU), and lose 1000 days of good time credit. Josselyn

appealed the recommended loss of good time credit. The

superintendent recommended, and the commissioner ordered,

that 500, rather than 1000, good time days be forfeited.

An initial DSU review was held on April 20, 1990. The

DSU board recommended a 2 year placement in DSU. Josselyn

was ultimately released to the Cedar Junction general

population on July 9, 1991.

III.

On appeal, Josselyn argues that there exist 5 genuine

issues of material fact, which preclude entry of summary

judgment in the defendants' behalf.

A.
__

Josselyn claims that when he was taken to Norfolk's

segregation unit, prior to his transfer to Cedar Junction, he

had to remove all of his own clothes, underwent a visual body

cavity search, and was left naked for several hours. He

claims that these actions amounted to punishment and an

unreasonable search and seizure.



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Contrary to Josselyn's contention, this claim does not

present any genuine issue of material fact, for even
________

accepting these assertions as true, they would not affect the

outcome of the case under the applicable law. See Anderson
___ ________

v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248 (1986) (reciting
____________________

that only disputes over facts that might affect the outcome

of the suit under the governing law will properly preclude

the entry of summary judgment). Balancing the significant

and legitimate security interests of the prison against the

privacy interest of the inmate, a visual body cavity search

conducted of an inmate suspected of an attempted escape does

not constitute punishment nor an unreasonable search and

seizure in violation of the Constitution. Bell v. Wolfish,
____ _______

441 U.S. 520, 558-60 (1979) (holding that probable cause is

not necessary to conduct a visual body cavity search of an

inmate after a contact visit with a person from outside the

institution); Cookish v. Powell, 945 F.2d 441, 446 n.7 (1st
_______ ______

Cir. 1991) (concluding that a visual body cavity search

conducted when transferring inmates after a prison

disturbance is not an unreasonable search); Arruda v. Fair,
______ ____

710 F.2d 886, 886-88 (1st Cir.) (holding that a visual body

cavity search conducted when an inmate enters or leaves his

unit on his way to or from the prison law library and

infirmary, and after he receives visitors in the unit's

visiting rooms does not violate the Fourth or Eighth



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Amendments), cert. denied, 464 U.S. 999 (1983). The fact
____________

that, according to Josselyn, after the search was completed,

he spent several hours, naked in a cell in Norfolk's

segregation unit, before he was given a jumpsuit and slippers

for his transfer to Cedar Junction, in our view, does not

elevate this claim into a constitutional violation.

B.
__

Josselyn claims that the defendants negligently lost

some of the property that he was forced to leave behind,

including the clothing he had been wearing just before his

transfer to Cedar Junction. Again, as with the claim just

discussed, this claim does not present any genuine issue of

material fact, precluding entry of summary judgment in

defendants' favor. "[T]he Due Process Clause is simply not

implicated by a negligent act of an official causing
_________

unintended loss of or injury to life, liberty, or property."

Daniels v. Williams, 474 U.S. 327, 328 (1986) (emphasis in
_______ ________

the original). Josselyn's contention that the defendants'

refusal to reimburse him for the replacement cost of the lost

property is punishment for his attempted escape does not

advance his claim of a federal constitutional violation. We

express no view as to the existence of any state remedy.

C.
__

Josselyn complains of his transfer to AA status at Cedar

Junction without a hearing and of the 7 month delay before a



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DSU review occurred. Again, this contention presents no

factual dispute and, accepting these facts as asserted by

Josselyn, we conclude defendants are entitled to judgment as

a matter of law.

The transfer of an inmate to more restrictive quarters

pending investigation of misconduct charges does not impinge

on any liberty interest protected by the Due Process Clause

in and of itself. Hewitt v. Helms, 459 U.S. 460, 468 (1983).
______ _____

A state, however, may create a substantive liberty interest

protected by the Due Process Clause through statutory or

regulatory law. Id. at 469. Josselyn argues that
___

Massachusetts has done so here via the department of

correction's regulations related to the use of segregation

and that the defendants' alleged failure to comply with those

regulations violated his due process rights.

"[A] State creates a protected liberty interest by

placing substantive limitations on official discretion."

Olim v. Wakinekona, 461 U.S. 238, 249 (1983). "[O]ur method
____ __________

of inquiry" is "to examine closely the language of the

relevant statutes and regulations." Kentucky Dep't of
___________________

Corrections v. Thompson, 490 U.S. 454, 461 (1989). If the
___________ ________

relevant regulations give the defendant prison officials

essentially unfettered discretion to place an inmate in AA

status, no liberty interest has been created.





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We reviewed the Massachusetts Department of Corrections

"awaiting action status" detention regulations in Stokes v.
______

Fair, 795 F.2d 235 (1st Cir. 1986). In Stokes, we concluded
____ ______

that the regulations did create a liberty interest protected

by the Due Process Clause because, as then written, they

permitted prison officials to place an inmate in AA status

only upon occurrence of certain conditions, i.e., pending

(a) a hearing on a disciplinary offense
by the inmate

(b) an investigation of a possible
disciplinary offense by the inmate

(c) a transfer or a reclassification of
the inmate to a higher custody status, or

(d) imposition of isolation time
sanction on the inmate when the inmates's
continued presence in the general
population poses a serious threat to
persons, property, or the security of the
institution.

Id. at 237.
___

Subsequent to our decision in Stokes, the relevant
______

regulations were revised and, at the time of appellant's

transfer to Cedar Junction and placement in AA status, the

relevant regulation, Mass. Regs. Code tit. 103, 430.21

(1987), read:

(1) At the discretion of the
Superintendent or his/her designee, and
subject to any applicable review
requirements, an inmate who is under
investigation for a possible disciplinary
offense, or who has been charged with or
found guilty of a disciplinary offense,
may be placed on awaiting action status


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at the institution where he/she is then
confined. Such status may include more
restrictive confinement as deemed
appropriate by the Superintendent or
his/her designee.

(2) An inmate who is under investigation
for a possible disciplinary offense, or
who has been charged with or found guilty
of a disciplinary offense, may be
transferred to another Massachusetts
institution, or an out of state
institution prior to a classification
hearing. An inmate so transferred may,
at the discretion of the Superintendent
or his/her designee at the receiving
institution, and subject to any
applicable review requirements, be placed
on awaiting action status. Such status
may include more restrictive confinement
as deemed appropriate by the
Superintendent or his/her designee.

We interpreted the pre-1987 regulations as limiting the

prison officials' discretion to place an inmate in AA status

to those instances expressly set out in the regulations, one

of which was pending investigation of a possible disciplinary

offense. We note that the 1987 regulation permitted the

prison officials to transfer an inmate, who is under

investigation for a possible disciplinary offense, prior to a

classification hearing and to place that transferred inmate

in AA status "at the discretion of the Superintendent or

his/her designee." We need not, and do not, determine

whether this revision worked a substantive change in an

inmate's liberty interest in remaining in the general prison

population. We will assume, consistent with our Stokes
______

analysis, that an inmate has a reasonable expectation that he


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will be placed in AA status only if he is (a) under
____

investigation for, (b) has been charged with, or (c) found

guilty of a disciplinary offense. In other words, we will

assume that (a) (b) and (c) is an exhaustive list of the
__________

conditions permitting placement in AA status. But cf.
________

Berrier v. Allen, 951 F.2d 622, 625 (4th Cir. 1991) (finding
_______ _____

no liberty interest created where language of regulations did
___

not explicitly prohibit prison officials from confining
_________________________

inmate in administrative segregation unless one of the four
______

enumerated situations existed).

Assuming that the department of corrections' regulations

created a liberty interest, there was, nonetheless, no due

process violation. One of the expressed substantive

predicates required for placing an inmate in AA status was

present in Josselyn's case; he, in fact, was under

investigation for a possible disciplinary offense when he was

placed in AA status. See Smith v. Massachusetts Dep't of
___ _____ _______________________

Correction, 936 F.2d 1390, 1397 (1st Cir. 1991) (where one of
__________

the requisite substantive predicates for placing an inmate on

AA status was present, there was no due process violation).

That he was transferred to Cedar Junction and placed in AA

status prior to a hearing, likewise, raises no due process

concern, either as a matter of the Due Process Clause itself,

Hewitt v. Helms, 459 U.S. at 472 (due process is satisfied by
______ _____

an informal, non-adversary review within a reasonable time



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after confinement to administrative segregation), or as a

matter of any state-created liberty interest as 430.21(2)

permitted the transfer and placement in AA status prior to a

classification hearing.

It appears that Josselyn's real complaint is his

suggestion that the 7 month delay, between his transfer to

Cedar Junction and his DSU review and reclassification,

during which time he remained in AA status, was an

impermissible attempt by the defendants to use AA status as a

substitute for a formal DSU classification. The Court, in

Hewitt v. Helms, 459 U.S. at 477 n.9, noted:
______ _____

administrative segregation may not be
used as a pretext for indefinite
confinement of an inmate. Prison
officials must engage in some sort of
periodic review of the confinement of
such inmates.

As in Hewitt, the record in this case "is sufficient to
______

dispel any notions that the confinement was a pretext." Id.
___

Josselyn was transferred on September 15, 1989. The

regulations provided that when a disciplinary investigation

is pending, an initial classification hearing, consisting

"only of an evaluation of the inmate's security requirements

and programmatic needs," shall be held within 20 working days

of the transfer. Mass. Regs. Code tit. 103, 420.09(3)(b)

(1987). The regulations also provided, however, that "[a]ll

procedural time limits set forth in these rules and

regulations are directory and may be waived by the


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Superintendent or the Commissioner or their designees."

Mass. Regs. Code tit. 103, 420.12, 430.23 (1987). On

September 18, 1989, Josselyn was notified that the

Superintendent had ordered an investigation and was waiving

all procedural time limits. Josselyn's status was reviewed

thereafter every 7 days and Josselyn was notified that the

investigation was continuing.

On October 25, 1989, the initial hearing referred to in

420.09(b)(3) was held, with the board recommending that

Josselyn remain in AA status pending the disciplinary

investigation.3 Thereafter, and in conformity with

regulations which became effective while he was in AA status,



____________________

3. That this initial classification hearing apparently was
held on the 27th working day after Josselyn's transfer,
rather than within 20 working days as specified in
420.09(3)(b), does not implicate the Due Process Clause.
Regulations which embody only procedural time limits do not
create a liberty interest. Smith v. Massachusetts Dep't of
_____ ______________________
Correction, 936 F.2d at 1397 n.11; see also Hewitt v. Helms,
__________ ________ ______ _____
459 U.S. at 471 (the mere creation of a procedural structure
to regulate the use of segregation does not indicate the
existence of a protected liberty interest); id. at 472 (due
___
process satisfied by informal, non-adversary review within a
________
reasonable time after confinement to administrative
_________________
segregation) (emphasis added).
And, we note, despite the regulation's phrasing that the
hearing "shall be held within twenty (20) working days of
such a transfer," the regulation itself cannot be read as
creating some enforceable constitutional due process
entitlement to a hearing within that time, as the regulations
expressly provided that the procedural time limits were
directory and waivable, 420.12, and, were, in fact, waived
in Josselyn's case. Cf. Maldonado Santiago v. Velazquez
___ ___________________ _________
Garcia, 821 F.2d 822, 827-28 (1st Cir. 1987) (due process
______
rights were violated by 2-day delay in post-transfer
hearing).

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Josselyn's status was reviewed every 15 days. Mass. Regs.

Code tit. 103, 421.08(3) (1989).

The disciplinary investigation was completed on November

10, 1989. After two continuances at Josselyn's request and

one due to the reporting officer's illness, the disciplinary

hearing was held on February 2, 1990. Josselyn was found

guilty on February 12, 1990. He appealed the board's

recommended recapture of good time. On March 22, 1990, the

Commissioner approved the recommendation of the

Superintendent that 500 days of good time be forfeited.

Thereafter, Josselyn's DSU review occurred on April 20, 1990.

This chronology suggests a steadily progressive

disposition of Josselyn's classification status and not an

impermissible attempt by the defendants to use Josselyn's AA

status as a substitute for a formal DSU classification, in

violation of any due process right.

D.
__

Josselyn complains that the disciplinary board relied on

information from confidential informants without assessing

the informants' reliability or the credibility of the

information.

Because the disciplinary hearing subjected him to the

loss of a state-created liberty interest in good time

credits, Josselyn was entitled to "those minimum procedures

appropriate under the circumstances and required by the Due



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Process Clause to insure that the state-created [liberty]

right is not arbitrarily abrogated." Wolff v. McDonnell, 418
_____ _________

U.S. 539, 557 (1974); see also Langton v. Berman, 667 F.2d
_________ _______ ______

231, 233 (1st Cir. 1981) (same). The issue, therefore, is

whether due process requires, at a minimum, an independent

assessment by the disciplinary board of the reliability of

confidentialinformants andthe credibilityof thatinformation.4

Among the minimum requirements of due process, as

established by Wolff, is a written statement of the
_____

factfinders as to the evidence relied upon and the reasons

for the disciplinary action taken. Wolff v. McDonnell, 418
_____ _________

U.S. at 564.

[T]he provision for a written record
helps to insure that administrators,
faced with possible scrutiny by state
officials and the public, and perhaps
even the courts, where fundamental
constitutional rights may have been
abridged, will act fairly. Without
written records, the inmate will be at a
severe disadvantage in propounding his
own cause to or defending himself from
others. It may be that there will be
occasions when personal or institutional
safety is so implicated that the
statement may properly exclude certain
items of evidence, but in that event the
statement should indicate the fact of the
omission.



____________________

4. Some of the cases in this area freely interchange
reliability and credibility and so may refer to the
assessment as one of the credibility (rather than
reliability) of the informant and the reliability (rather
than credibility) of the evidence. We infer no meaningful
difference in the interchange.

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Id. at 565.
___

Although the Supreme Court has not spoken specifically

on the issue of the required procedures when confidential

informants are used, some courts have interpreted this

requirement of a written statement by the factfinders as to

the evidence relied upon as thereby encompassing a

requirement that a disciplinary committee have some

evidentiary basis upon which to determine for itself that an
______

informant's story is probably credible. See, e.g., Hensley
_________ _______

v. Wilson, 850 F.2d 269, 277 (6th Cir. 1988).
______

[U]nless the committee makes an
independent determination about what the
facts of the alleged misconduct are by
deciding, minimally, that the hearsay
information has been supplied by a
reliable informant, it is merely
recording the findings made by the
investigating officer who has made a
determination about the informant's
reliability, without making any
determination for itself about the
informant's reliability or even the basis
for the investigator's opinion that
informant is reliable. To proceed in
that fashion is not fact finding. It is
recordkeeping.

Id. at 276; see also Kyle v. Hanberry, 677 F.2d 1386, 1389-90
___ ________ ____ ________

(11th Cir. 1982) (same); Helms v. Hewitt, 655 F.2d 487, 502
_____ ______

(3d Cir. 1981) (same), rev'd on other grounds, 459 U.S. 460
______________________

(1983). But see Sanchez v. Miller, 792 F.2d 694, 702 (7th
________ _______ ______

Cir. 1986) (while requiring an indicia of reliability is not

inconsistent with Wolff, it is not compelled by it), cert.
_____ _____

denied, 479 U.S. 1056 (1987).
______


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Three times in the past, we have visited the issue of

the procedures required when confidential informants are

used. In Gomes v. Travisono, 510 F.2d 537, 540 (1st Cir.
_____ _________

1974), we reviewed rules governing disciplinary hearings

devised under a consent decree and adopted as law by the

state of Rhode Island - the so-called Morris rules. The
______

Morris rules required that any decision arrived at must be
______

based on substantial evidence manifested in the record of the

disciplinary proceeding and that

if any of the facts establishing a Board
determination are derived from an
unidentified informant: (1) the record
must contain some underlying factual
information from which the Board can
reasonably conclude that the informant
was credible or his information reliable;
(2) the record must contain the
informant's statement in language that is
factual rather than conclusionary [sic]
and must establish by its specifity [sic]
that the informant spoke with personal
knowledge of the matters contained in
such statement.

Id.
___

We stated in Gomes that this requirement was
_____

aimed at preventing arbitrary
determinations, which is the major thrust
of Wolff, which commands "a written
_____
statement by the factfinders as to the
evidence relied on and reasons" for the
disciplinary action. If the written
statement is intended to withstand
scrutiny and guard against
misunderstanding, it cannot indicate
reliance on speculation or on facts not
in the record.




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Id. Some circuit courts have used this language from Gomes
___ _____

to support a determination that federal constitutional due

process, irrespective of any state law, is the source of a

requirement that a disciplinary board independently determine

the reliability of a confidential informant and the

credibility of the informant's information. See, e.g., Kyle
_________ ____

v. Hanberry, 677 F.2d at 1390; Helms v. Hewitt, 655 F.2d at
________ _____ ______

502. But see Sanchez v. Miller, 792 F.2d at 702 n.12
________ _______ ______

(expressing doubt that Gomes had concluded that an
_____

independent reliability/credibility determination was

required as a matter of federal constitutional law).

Our own post-Gomes opinions visiting this issue,
_____

however, reveal a less certain conclusion. In Langton v.
_______

Berman, 667 F.2d at 235, and McLaughlin v. Hall, 520 F.2d
______ __________ ____

382, 384-85 (1st Cir. 1975), we declined to decide whether

and how, as a constitutional requirement, a board must make

an independent inquiry into the reliability of an informant

and the credibility of its information. Our last word on

this subject reiterated our preference, as voiced in Wolff,
_____

that the development of specific procedural requirements

beyond those enumerated in Wolff be left in the first
_____

instance to the sound discretion of corrections authorities.

Langton v. Berman, 667 F.2d at 235. At the same time,
_______ ______

however,

[w]e continue to advise them to follow
Wolff's mandate to devise regulations to
_____


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assure that the disciplinary board's
procedure is adequate to enable it
reasonably to conclude that any
confidential information upon which it
acted was reliable. We say this,
however, without committing ourselves as
to what must be open for our review.

Id.
___

While we remain cognizant of the "need to afford some

protection against arbitrary or vindictive actions by prison

officials stemming from unreliable unidentified or even

nonexistent informants," id., this case does not require
___

resolution of the underlying constitutional premise. We

conclude in any event that no due process violation occurred.

That is because those courts which have accepted this

independent assessment as a minimum due process requirement

conclude that due process is violated when the only evidence
____

offered against an inmate in a disciplinary hearing and

relied upon by the board is a hearsay recital by an

investigating officer of an uncorroborated report of an

unidentified informant. See, e.g., McCollum v. Miller, 695
_________ ________ ______

F.2d 1044, 1049 (7th Cir. 1982); Kyle v. Hanberry, 677 F.2d
____ ________

at 1390-91; Helms v. Hewitt, 655 F.2d at 501-03; see also
_____ ______ _________

Baker v. Lyles, 904 F.2d 925, 933 (4th Cir. 1990) ("[t]his is
_____ _____

not a case where the only evidence before the prison tribunal

was the hearsay statement of an unidentified informant"); cf.
___

Hensley v. Wilson, 850 F.2d at 276-77 (due process requires
_______ ______

an independent determination by a disciplinary committee of a



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confidential informant's reliability where prisoner

misconduct is found upon evidence consisting entirely, or
_____________

even substantially, of the statement of an investigating
___________________

officer that he has been told by confidential informants that

the misconduct occurred); McCollum v. Williford, 793 F.2d
________ _________

903, 905 (7th Cir. 1986) (a finding of reliability must

clearly be made in any disciplinary proceeding that relies

primarily, but not necessarily exclusively, on confidential
____________________________________________

informants).

Accepting as true, as we must in reviewing this grant of

summary judgment in defendants' favor, Josselyn's contention

that the disciplinary board in this case did not make an

independent assessment of the reliability of the confidential

informants or the credibility of their information, it is,

nonetheless, equally true, contrary to Josselyn's attempt to

portray it otherwise, that the board's determination of his

guilt was not based solely, or even substantially, on that
___

information.

The investigating officer, Philip Poirier, did testify

that approximately 40 inmates were interviewed and that none

had been informants in the past. Poirier also testified that

of these 40 inmates, approximately 8 implicated Josselyn in

the escape attempt and, of these 8 inmates, several were

eyewitnesses who saw Josselyn attempt to climb the wall. In





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addition to these informant statements, however, there was

much physical evidence -

conduit pipe attached with blue electrical tape to
pliers and recovered just short of the inner
perimeter fence;

the nose of the pliers containing a galvanized
material, which matched the chain link fence;

poles, fashioned out of broomsticks and blocks,
connected by blue electrical tape, found at the
base of the wall in the inner perimeter area, where
the rope was attached;

the escape rope fashioned from prison bedsheets and
stamped with Josselyn's laundry identification
number 533;

Josselyn's laundry bag and pillowcase stamped with
his ID number 533, retrieved from his room;

saturated sneakers with scuff marks on the inner
foot area and a saturated sweatshirt found in
Josselyn's room and identified by Josselyn as
belonging to him; and

a hot pot with blue electrical tape on the cord and
Josselyn's name printed on the pot and identified
by Josselyn as his.

The disciplinary board found "[t]he information gathered

from inmate interviews, coupled with the physical evidence

confiscated and the oral testimony obtained from the

reporting officer shows the board an overwhelming pattern,

clearly indicative of the fact that [Josselyn] was directly

involved with an attempted escape."

This case is unlike, for example, McCollum v. Miller,
________ ______

695 F.2d 1004, in which four inmates were charged with

extortion and pressuring other inmates to perform homosexual



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acts and the only evidence was an unsworn report of an

investigating officer, not called as a witness, which

detailed statements of unidentified confidential informants.

There was no question in the present case, with the gaping

hole in the fence and the rope, pipe, pliers and poles found

nearby, that an escape had been attempted.

This case is also unlike Helms v. Hewitt, 655 F.2d 487,
_____ ______

in which an inmate was found guilty of striking an officer

during a prison melee solely on the basis of a hearsay

account of an unidentified informant's uncorroborated story.

Putting aside the investigating officer's testimony that 8

inmates implicated Josselyn, including several who claimed to

have witnessed his attempt to scale the wall, there was

physical evidence linking Josselyn to the attempted escape -

the rope stamped with his laundry ID number, his saturated

clothing, including sneakers with scuff marks on the inside

foot area, and blue electrical tape, found on an item in his

room, that was the same type as used on the escape tools.

Despite the absence of any reference by the disciplinary

board in its report that it had independently determined that

the confidential informants were reliable and their

information credible in identifying Josselyn as the

perpetrator, the physical evidence recovered obviously

provided some corroboration. Kyle v. Hanberry, 677 F.2d at
____ ________

1391 (the inquiry by the disciplinary board into the



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reliability of informants may be diminished or even satisfied

where there is corroborating physical evidence of the

information provided). In any event, because the

disciplinary board did not rely solely, or even

substantially, on any informant's identification of Josselyn

as perpetrator of the attempted escape, we conclude that no

due process violation occurred by the board's alleged failure

to make an independent assessment of the reliability of the

confidential informants or the credibility of their

information.

To be sure, Josselyn downplays the significance of the

physical evidence. He suggests that his bedsheets were

stolen; his clothing was wet because, he claims, he was out

jogging that morning; his sneakers were worn from playing

handball; his hot pot had no blue electrical tape on it; and

that the entire general prison population had access to items

such as the pipe, poles, and tape. But a court does not

review de novo a disciplinary board's finding of guilt. Due

process is satisfied if "some evidence" supports the decision

by the board to revoke good time credits. Superintendent,
_______________

Massachusetts Correctional Inst. v. Hill, 472 U.S. 445, 455
_________________________________ ____

(1985) (declining to decide whether due process requires

judicial review of prison disciplinary proceedings, but

finding that state statutory law provided such review).

"Ascertaining whether this standard is satisfied does not



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require examination of the entire record, independent

assessment of the credibility of witnesses, or weighing of

the evidence." Id. There certainly was some evidence in the
___

record, apart from any informant statements, that supported

the board's conclusion and we are not required to set aside

decisions of prison administrators that have some basis in

fact. Id. at 455-56. "The Federal Constitution does not
___

require evidence that logically precludes any conclusion but

the one reached by the disciplinary board." Id. at 457.
___

E.
__

Finally, Josselyn argues that the prison policy which

requires DSU inmates to wear handcuffs and leg shackles when

moving to one location to another is an arbitrary and

unconstitutional form of punishment because, according to

Josselyn, he has no prison record of violence. Even

accepting as true Josselyn's contention as to his prison

record, the restraint policy is reasonably related to a

legitimate government purpose of prison security. There is

no constitutional deprivation.

IV.

For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the grant of

summary judgment in defendants' favor.

Affirmed.
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