Koch v. Lewis.

PositionSolitary confinement and right to due process - Brief Article

U.S. District Court

GANGS

SEGREGATION

Koch v. Lewis, 216 F.Supp.2d 994 (D.Ariz. 2001). An inmate brought an action against a state corrections department alleging that his indefinite detention in near solitary confinement, based on his alleged gang membership, violated his right to due process. The inmate moved for injunctive relief and the court granted the motion. The district court held that the department's policies and procedures regarding acceptable evidence and procedure at a gang validation hearing were insufficient to form a basis for a liberty interest. But the court found that the inmate's five and one-half years in solitary confinement, with no end in sight, gave rise to a protected due process liberty interest. The court ruled that the inmate could not be indefinitely detained in a special management unit based solely on his status as a gang member, absent evidence of overt misconduct. The court noted that the "extreme conditions" of his confinement...

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