LeMaire v. Maass

745 F. Supp. 623, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11841, 1990 WL 128372
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedAugust 31, 1990
DocketCV 89-382-PA
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 745 F. Supp. 623 (LeMaire v. Maass) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
LeMaire v. Maass, 745 F. Supp. 623, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11841, 1990 WL 128372 (D. Or. 1990).

Opinion

OPINION

PANNER, Chief Judge.

Plaintiff, Samuel LeMaire, an inmate at Oregon State Penitentiary (OSP), brings this civil rights action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, against defendant Manfred Maass, the OSP Superintendent. He seeks injunc-tive relief from allegedly unconstitutional conditions of his imprisonment in the Disciplinary Segregation Unit (DSU) at OSP. I toured the DSU and conducted a court trial at OSP. These are my findings of fact and conclusions of law under Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a).

Plaintiff brings two claims, an eighth amendment claim for cruel and unusual punishment, and a fourteenth amendment due process claim for deprivation of due process. I find for plaintiff on both claims.

ISSUES

Plaintiff’s claims concern a number of specific conditions of his confinement.

I. Use of In-cell Restraints

Plaintiff contends that keeping him in full mechanical restraints for extended periods while he is in his cell is unconstitutionally cruel and unusual punishment because it inflicts pain without a legitimate penological justification.

II. Use of Restraints in the Shower

Plaintiff contends that requiring him to shower in full mechanical restraints is an unconstitutionally deliberate disregard for his personal safety and lacks penological justification.

III. Controlled Feeding Status and Nutra-loaf

Plaintiff contends that DSU guards place him on a controlled diet of “Nutraloaf” for punitive purposes, without due process and without legitimate penological justification.

IV. Use of Quiet Cells

Plaintiff contends that isolating him in a quiet cell, which is illuminated 24 hours per day, is an unconstitutionally deliberate disregard for his serious medical needs because he is unable to summon guards for assistance. He also contends that continuous illumination causes him physical and psychological harm and lacks legitimate pe-nological justification.

*626 V. Strip Status

Plaintiff contends that leaving him unclothed in his cell for extended periods causes him pain and suffering and lacks legitimate penological justification.

VI. Exercise and Opportunity for Exposure to the Outdoors

Plaintiff contends that the long-term denial of out-of-cell exercise and the opportunity to go outdoors is a deliberate disregard for his serious medical needs.

FACTS

I. Plaintiff

Plaintiff is serving a life sentence at OSP. He has been confined at OSP since December, 1985. He has been in the DSU since November 28, 1986. At the time of trial, his scheduled release date from the DSU into the general prison population was February, 1993. Plaintiff has committed numerous disciplinary violations at OSP, including assaults and destruction of property.

Plaintiff is 5'9 " tall. He weighed 225 pounds when he entered the prison. At the time of trial he weighed approximately 285 pounds. He has a medical history of hypertension, epilepsy, and vertigo. He is under medical treatment for anxiety and depression with Triavil, a tranquilizer.

II. The DSU

The DSU is a building separate from the main OSP building. Its purpose is to segregate disruptive and dangerous inmates from the general prison population. The DSU has ninety cells on three tiers. Forty-four are double-bunked.

The DSU cells are eight feet high, six feet wide, and eight feet, four inches deep. In this space is a bed, single or bunked, a toilet, and a sink. The floors are concrete. Three walls of the cells are concrete and the fourth is bars, facing the tier. The showers in the DSU have concrete floors and are open on one side. They are raised above the floor level so it is necessary to step up into them.

One part of the DSU is known as the close supervision tier (CST). CST cells are single bunked. Six CST cells, known as “quiet cells” or “close supervision cells with outer door construction” are closed to the tier with solid steel doors. The quiet cell area is separated from the rest of the CST and from the DSU staff office by a second solid steel door, which is normally kept closed. The quiet cells are lighted 24 hours per day.

III. The Exercise Yard

Outside the DSU is a fenced concrete yard. Until recently, the yard was used for DSU inmate outdoor exercise. In October 1988, OSP built fifteen “exercise cubicles.” The cubicles line two sides of the yard. Since the cubicles were built, the inmates no longer use the yard.

The cubicles are fenced with heavy wire mesh on all sides and the top. They are bare and exposed to the elements. The cubicles measure ten feet wide, eight feet five inches wide, and eight feet two inches high. The floors are concrete.

IV. Strip Status

Plaintiff and other DSU inmates have been subjected to a practice in the DSU known as “strip status”. Strip status occurs when DSU staff strip DSU inmates of clothing, bedding, and personal possessions. 1 Once stripped, plaintiff has been left unclothed and without bedding until he “earns” the items back piece-by-piece with good behavior.

V. In-cell and Shower Restraints

OSP regulations permit DSU staff to place an inmate in full mechanical restraints in his cell, under certain conditions. Full mechanical restraints means leg irons *627 and bellychains. The use of full mechanical restraints in the cell must be done “with the express approval of the superintendent or designee”. OAR 291-13-035(2). The practice is permitted when the inmate is out of control and could cause major destruction of property, a serious hazard to himself or others, or a serious escalation, and no other form of control would be effective. Id. In full restraints, an inmate cannot raise his hands to his face.

VI. Nutraloaf

DSU inmates can be placed on a controlled diet of a substance called Nutraloaf. Nutraloaf is made from blending, freezing and later baking foods used in meals. It is designed to be eaten without utensils to “reduce the use of food, eating utensils and human waste as weapons.” Exh. 18; OAR 291-83-005.

Under the OSP regulations, “[f]ood is never to be used as a reward or as a disciplinary sanction.” Exh. 5 at 8; OAR 291-ll-060(2)(c). DSU inmates may be put on “controlled feeding status”, i.e. Nutra-loaf, without a prior hearing, when they throw or misuse food or human waste, or misuse or fail to return trays or utensils. Exh. 18 at 1; OAR 291-83-010(1). A DSU inmate may be placed immediately on controlled feeding status, with the approval of the Security Manager or designee. Id.; OAR 291-83-015(1).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
745 F. Supp. 623, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11841, 1990 WL 128372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lemaire-v-maass-ord-1990.