Jordan v. R. Wiley

411 F. App'x 201
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 9, 2011
Docket09-1355
StatusUnpublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 411 F. App'x 201 (Jordan v. R. Wiley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jordan v. R. Wiley, 411 F. App'x 201 (10th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

ORDER AND JUDGMENT *

JEROME A. HOLMES, Circuit Judge. Petitioner-Appellant Mark Jordan appeals from the district court’s order denying his 28 U.S.C. § 2241 petition. Proceeding pro se, 1 Mr. Jordan brings three claims on appeal arising from a Bureau of Prisons (“BOP”) disciplinary action against him. Specifically, Mr. Jordan contends that the district court erred in concluding: (1) that BOP Code 203, which prohibits “threatening another with bodily harm,” is not impermissibly vague as applied; (2) that his procedural due process rights were not violated by the disciplinary proceedings against him; and (3) that the BOP did not violate the Administrative Procedures Act (“APA”), 5 U.S.C. §§ 701-06. Exercising our jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1291 and 2253, we reject all three claims and affirm the district court’s denial of Mr. Jordan’s habeas petition.

I. Background

When he commenced this action, Mr. Jordan was imprisoned at the United States Penitentiary Administrative Maximum Facility in Florence, Colorado, 2 hav *204 ing been convicted in 1995 of armed bank robbery and in 2005 of murder and other related offenses stemming from his fatal stabbing of a fellow inmate while imprisoned. The disciplinary proceedings that Mr. Jordan challenges arose from an incident that occurred on October 3, 2005, while Mr. Jordan was housed in the Special Housing Unit in solitary confinement. On that date, Mr. Jordan asked Officer Shawn P. Quenelle if he could make a telephone call. Officer Quenelle did not permit Mr. Jordan to do so because he had not submitted a written request and too many calls had already been scheduled. According to Officer Quenelle, who was standing in close proximity to Mr. Jordan’s cell at the time, Mr. Jordan then stated, “this is the kind of stuff that makes me want to stab someone.” R., Vol. I, at 44 (Incident Report, dated Oct. 4, 2005).

On October 4, 2005, Officer Quenelle filed an incident report against Mr. Jordan, charging him with “threatening another with bodily harm” in violation of BOP Code 203. After an investigation, the incident report was referred to the Unit Disciplinary Committee (“UDC”), which held a hearing on October 6, 2005. Mr. Jordan provided a written statement to the UDC, in which he asserted that the incident report should be referred to a Disciplinary Hearing Officer (“DHO”). He also requested a particular staff representative and asked that Officer Quenelle and other prison officials appear before the DHO as witnesses. The UDC determined that Mr. Jordan had threatened another with bodily harm, referred the charges to the DHO for further hearing, and recommended that the DHO impose a sanction of disciplinary segregation if it found that Mr. Jordan was guilty of the charge. The UDC provided Mr. Jordan with written notice of the DHO hearing and an explanation of his rights.

The DHO held a hearing on December 21, 2005, which Mr. Jordan attended. Mr. Jordan submitted a written statement to the DHO along with the written statement of fellow inmate George Scalf, who was housed next to Mr. Jordan at the time of the incident. Mr. Jordan alleged that Mr. Scalf had made the statement at issue 3 and Mr. Scalf s written statement to the DHO corroborated Mr. Jordan’s version of the events. The DHO did not allow Mr. Jordan to call the witnesses that he had requested because he determined that those witnesses had not directly observed the incident. The DHO concluded that Mr. Jordan had made the statement and was guilty of violating Code 203. He imposed a sanction of thirty days of disciplinary segregation and a reduction of twenty-seven days of good-time credit.

After Mr. Jordan was given a copy of the DHO’s report on April 28, 2006, he appealed to the North Central Regional Office, arguing that his disciplinary conviction was obtained in violation of both his Fifth Amendment right to due process and *205 the APA. The Regional Director rejected his appeal on June 9, 2006, and Mr. Jordan appealed to the Central Office. That appeal was denied on September 9, 2006.

Mr. Jordan filed a § 2241 petition with the United States District Court for the District of Colorado on October 20, 2006, challenging the BOP’s disciplinary proceedings against him. In his petition, Mr. Jordan argued that: (1) the prison regulation at issue, Code 203, was impermissibly vague as applied, in violation of his due process rights under the Fifth Amendment; (2) the disciplinary proceedings against him violated his procedural due process rights under the Fifth Amendment; and (3) the disciplinary proceedings violated the APA. Respondent argued that Mr. Jordan had failed to exhaust his administrative remedies with respect to his vagueness challenge and his APA claim, and challenged the merits of Mr. Jordan’s claims.

The district court determined that Mr. Jordan had properly exhausted all of his administrative remedies. The court then addressed Mr. Jordan’s claims on their merits, and ultimately denied his habeas petition. First, the court held that Code 203 provided fair warning of the prohibited conduct and that Mr. Jordan “should have realized that his statement to a prison official standing directly outside of his cell door that, ‘[tjhis is the kind of stuff that makes me want to stab someone,’ could constitute a violation of Code 203.” R., Vol. II, at 139. The court also determined that the disciplinary proceedings did not violate Mr. Jordan’s Fifth Amendment due process rights because: Mr. Jordan had the opportunity to present all relevant evidence; the DHO’s decision was supported by written statements from two BOP officers; Mr. Jordan’s rights were not violated by the quality of representation provided by the staff representative because he did not have a constitutional right to assistance during the disciplinary process; assuming, arguendo, that Mr. Jordan was denied access to an officer’s investigatory memorandum, any such denial had no impact on Mr. Jordan’s ability to defend himself; and Mr. Jordan did not present a meritorious retaliation claim because he “d[id] not have a protected interest in ‘jailhouse lawyering,’ ” and thus could not assert a due process/retaliation claim on that basis. Id. at 150. Finally, the court held that Mr. Jordan’s disciplinary conviction did not violate the APA because it was supported by “some evidence” and, therefore, was not arbitrary and capricious. The district court accordingly entered judgment denying Mr. Jordan’s petition on June 18, 2009.

On June 26, 2009, Mr. Jordan filed a Motion to Alter or Amend Judgment, in which he argued that the district court had misconstrued his statutory claim because he had not brought it under the APA. Consequently, he contended that his statutory claim should have been reviewed “independent of the APA ” rather than under the arbitrary and capricious standard. R., Vol.

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411 F. App'x 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jordan-v-r-wiley-ca10-2011.