Lumumba Incumaa v. Bryan Stirling

791 F.3d 517, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 11321, 2015 WL 3973822
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJuly 1, 2015
Docket14-6411
StatusPublished
Cited by140 cases

This text of 791 F.3d 517 (Lumumba Incumaa v. Bryan Stirling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lumumba Incumaa v. Bryan Stirling, 791 F.3d 517, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 11321, 2015 WL 3973822 (4th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded by published opinion. Judge THACKER wrote the opinion, in which Judge MOTZ and Judge KEENAN joined.

THACKER, Circuit Judge:

Lumumba Kenyatta Incumaa (“Appellant”) is a member of the Nation of Gods and Earths (“NOGE”), a group whose adherents are also known as “Five Percen-ters.” In 1988, Appellant began serving a sentence of life imprisonment without the possibility of parole in a prison operated by the South Carolina Department of Corrections (the “Department” or “Appellee”). 1 Following his participation in a 1995 prison riot with other Five Percen-ters, he was placed in solitary confinement security detention. He has remained in solitary confinement for 20 years, despite not having committed a single disciplinary infraction diming that time.

With this suit, Appellant challenges his confinement on two grounds. Appellant’s first cause of action arises under the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act (“RLUIPA”), 42 U.S.C. § 2000cc-1, which prohibits a state from imposing a substantial burden on an inmate’s religious exercise unless it proves that the restriction furthers compelling interests by the least restrictive means. In this regard, Appellant argues that Department policy required him to renounce his affiliation with the NOGE, which he alleges is a religion, before the Department will release him from solitary confinement. On *520 the second ground, Appellant claims that Appellee violated his right to procedural due process.

The district court granted Appellee’s motion for summary judgment. We affirm the portion of the district court order discarding Appellant’s RLUIPA claim, which, we agree, was not sufficient to go before a jury. However, we reverse the grant of summary judgment as it relates to Appellant’s due process claim. Appellant’s 20-year period of solitary confinement, we hold, amounts to atypical and significant hardship in relation to the general population and implicates a liberty interest in avoiding security detention. Furthermore, there is a triable dispute as to whether the Department’s process for determining, which inmates are fit for release from security detention meets the minimum requirements of procedural due process.

I.

A.

The Five Percenters and Appellant’s Violent History

The NOGE is an “offshoot” of the Nation of Islam and other religious groups “in the Islamic sphere” that “preach[] a message of black empowerment.” J.A. 91, 92. 2 The Five Percenters also have a history of violence in South Carolina prisons. 3 As a result, the parties maintain differing views of the Five Percenters. Appellant maintains the NOGE is a religious group. Although Appellee does not contest Appellant’s claim that the NOGE meets the legal definition of a religion, the Department’s regulations treat the Five Percen-ters like a violent gang. Of note, at times, the Five Percenters have themselves denied that their organization is a religion. See id. at 131 (stating, on the cover of “The Five Percenter” newsletter, “WE ARE NOT A RELIGION” (emphasis in original)).

In April 1995, a group of Five Percen-ters — including Appellant — organized a prison riot. The assailants took three Department employees hostage and held them for 11 hours during an intense standoff with police. 4 Four law enforcement officers were hospitalized. Following this violent uprising, on June 16, 1995, Appellee designated the Five Percenters as a Security Threat Group (“STG”). 5

B.

Prison Regulation of STGs and their Members

1.

Assignment of STG Members to Special Management Unit

When the Department’s Special Investigations Unit suspects that an inmate is a *521 member of an STG, the unit conducts a “rigorous investigation” to confirm the inmate’s association. J.A. 126. If the investigators validate the inmate’s STG membership, the Department’s Institutional Classification Committee (“ICC”) either recommends labeling the inmate as Validated-GP, which allows him to reside in the general population, or designates him as Validated-SD, which entails placement in security detention. According to Department Investigator Elbert Pearson,

If an individual has been validated as an STG member, but has not committed or been implicated in any disciplinary infractions or STG activities, that individual would typically, although not always, receive a classification of Validated-GP....
If an individual has been validated as an STG member, and has committed disciplinary infractions ... that individual would typically receive a classification of Validated-SD....

Id. at 126-27. Security detention, in contrast to disciplinary detention, is not a punishment for disciplinary infractions but is used to protect inmates and staff and to maintain prison order.

If the ICC classifies an STG inmate as Validated-SD, it then determines where to place the inmate and what restrictions to impose upon him. The Department maintains two security detention units. A Validated-SD inmate can be assigned either to the Special Management Unit (“SMU”) or the more restrictive Maximum Security Unit, which houses inmates who have engaged in violent behavior or have committed serious rules infractions. The ICC also determines the inmate’s “behavior level,” which dictates the inmate’s restrictions ánd- privileges while in his respective unit. J.A. 137. “Inmates who have been assigned to [sjecurity [detention without serving [disciplinary [detention” are designated as Level II, and “inmates charged with ... assault On a staff member and/or inmate” are “automatically ... assigned to Level I.” 6 Id. Level I inmates are held in the “strictest degree of custody and control” available in their unit. Id. at 149.

Due to his role in the 1995 riot, Appellant was validated as a Five Percenter, designated Validated-SD, and placed in the Maximum Security Unit. His assignment to security detention was not a punishment for participating in the riot but was generally intended “to maintain and control the inmate and to provide safety and security for the staff and other inmates.” J.A. 284. Appellant was transferred to the SMU in 2005, and he has remained in the SMU as a Level II inmate since that time. He is currently one of only two Five Percenters housed in the SMU — other validated Five Percenters are permitted to reside in the general population and openly maintain their affiliation with the group. During the decades Appellant has spent in security detention, he has not committed a single disciplinary infraction.

2.

Conditions in SMU versus General Population

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Bluebook (online)
791 F.3d 517, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 11321, 2015 WL 3973822, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lumumba-incumaa-v-bryan-stirling-ca4-2015.