Corrections agency did not violate inmate’s due process rights in
prison riot case
Under rules promulgated by the Wisconsin Department of Corrections,
prisoners who are subject to disciplinary hearings have certain due
process rights. But the disciplinary agency did not violate them when it
concluded that Darnell Jackson helped incite a prison riot, the
Wisconsin Supreme Court recently concluded.
By Joe Forward, Legal Writer,
State Bar of Wisconsin
Dec. 21, 2010
– The Wisconsin Supreme Court says that Darnell Jackson must stay
in prison for six extra months based on an agency decision that he
incited a riot at the New Lisbon Correctional Institution in November
2004.
After several security guards were attacked by three inmates at the
correctional facility, an adjustment committee conducted an
investigation. A conduct report cited Jackson for inciting a riot based
on the statements of two informants, who said Jackson was a known gang
leader and was seen speaking with the three inmates moments before they
assaulted the guards.
Upon a disciplinary hearing, the adjustment committee found Jackson
guilty and increased his original sentence by 179 days. The committee
cited confidential witness statements, other testimony, and a
“video” tape as evidence for its decision.
Under relevant procedures, Jackson filed a complaint with the
institutional examiner, but the examiner dismissed Jackson’s
complaints. The Secretary of the Department of Corrections upheld the
examiner’s decision.
Jackson filed a petition for circuit court review, triggering the
respondents’ obligation to transmit the record to the circuit
court. But before transmitting the record, the prison warden instructed
the committee to remove reference to a “video” as evidence
for its decision.
Jackson argued that the video footage of the incident would have shown
he did not converse with or signal participants before the riot. The
respondent’s argued that the video was not relied on to convict
Jackson but was erroneously identified as a factor in the report.
The circuit court ruled that the evidence was sufficient to convict
Jackson without the video, based on the confidential informants’
statements. The appeals court agreed.
The case went to the supreme court, which voiced concern about the
state of the record and remanded the case to “receive the video in
question and perform in camera review to determine whether it is
exculpatory and material.” After in camera review, the circuit
court concluded the video was neither material nor exculpatory.
The case went back to the supreme court to decide whether the
correctional agency’s disciplinary procedures satisfied due
process. In Jackson
v. Buchler, 2010 WI 135 (Dec. 14, 2010), the majority ruled
that the adjustment committee did not violate Jackson’s due
process rights.
Fundamental fairness
The supreme court – in an opinion written by Justice Ann Walsh
Bradley – examined whether the procedures employed by the
committee were fundamentally fair. In light of the video evidence,
Jackson argued the evidence was insufficient to find him guilty of
inciting a riot.
But the supreme court, which viewed portions of the video footage,
disagreed that the video undermined the testimony of the informants.
The video panned across the scene in front of the prison barbershop
where Jackson was working around the time of the riot. But the supreme
court could not find conclusive evidence to contradicted the
informants’ statements about Jackson’s involvement.
“With or without the video evidence, reasonable minds could
arrive at the same conclusion reached by the adjustment
committee,” Justice Bradley wrote. “Accordingly, we conclude
that the evidence of Jackson’s guilt was sufficient to satisfy due
process.”
In addition, the majority concluded that failing to provide the video
footage to Jackson did not infringe on his due process right to a
fundamentally fair hearing.
In her dissent, Chief Justice Shirley Abrahamson argued that
“sufficiency of the evidence is not the proper analysis when the
focus or touchstone of the court’s inquiry … is whether
Jackson got a due process hearing before the Adjustment
Committee.”
Chief Justice Abrahamson asserted that the record before the court was
not the record of evidence upon which the adjustment committee relied.
That violated Jackson’s due process rights, according to
Abrahamson, and Jackson is entitled to a new hearing.
Substantial involvement
Jackson also argued that his due process rights were violated because a
member of the adjustment committee had “substantial
involvement” in the incident. The adjustment committee member
interviewed Jackson after the riot and allegedly asked Jackson to waive
his due process rights.
Wis. Admin. Code DOC section 303.82(2) prevents a person who has
substantial involvement in an incident, which is the subject of a
hearing, from serving on a committee for that hearing.
The circuit court concluded that substantial involvement refers to
involvement in the incident, not an investigation of the incident, and
the adjustment committee member was not involved in the incident, only
the investigation.
The supreme court did not rule on whether substantial involvement
refers to involvement in the incident only, or whether that includes
involvement in the investigation process. The court concluded that
whatever involvement there was, it was not substantial based on the
record.
“Under either interpretation, the question is whether the
committee member’s involvement was
‘substantial,’” Justice Bradley wrote. “Based on
this sparse record, we cannot conclude as a matter of law that the
[committee member’s] involvement in the incident was
‘substantial.’”
Chief Justice Abrahamson disagreed, arguing that even on the basis of a
limited record, “the aura and aroma of substantial involvement in
the investigation are present and raise due process concerns.
…”
Attorneys
Thomas Shriner, G. Michael Halfenger, and Katherine Spitz of Foley
& Lardner LLP, Milwaukee, represented Darnell Jackson. Assistant
Attorney General Abigail C.S. Potts represented the state.