Norberto Torres v. Kent Brookman

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 17, 2025
Docket22-2830
StatusPublished

This text of Norberto Torres v. Kent Brookman (Norberto Torres v. Kent Brookman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Norberto Torres v. Kent Brookman, (7th Cir. 2025).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ No. 22-2830 NORBERTO TORRES, Plaintiff-Appellant, v.

KENT BROOKMAN and JASON HART, Defendants-Appellees. ____________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Illinois. No. 3:19-cv-00248 — Stephen P. McGlynn, Judge. ____________________

ARGUED OCTOBER 28, 2024 — DECIDED OCTOBER 17, 2025 ____________________

Before BRENNAN, Chief Judge, ROVNER, and KOLAR, Circuit Judges. KOLAR, Circuit Judge. Prison officials at Menard Correction Center believed that Norberto Torres had engaged in gang- related activity by filling out a gang questionnaire. They gave him a disciplinary ticket and, after a hearing, sentenced him to three months in segregation. Torres argues that his due process rights were violated because the disciplinary hearing did not provide constitutionally required procedural 2 No. 22-2830

safeguards. Since our precedent requires only informal due process for prisoners who, like Torres, did not face the loss of good-time credits or other punishment that could lengthen their sentence, we affirm.

I. Facts

Norberto Torres is a prisoner in the Illinois Department of Corrections (IDOC). In March 2017, while Torres was incar- cerated at Menard Correctional Center, he was given two dis- ciplinary tickets for being affiliated with a gang. The first disciplinary ticket alleged that on March 9, 2017, correctional officers at the Pontiac Correctional Center had found a “Latin Folk questionnaire” in the belongings of a dif- ferent prisoner transferring in from Menard. The Latin Folk Union is a gang, and according to the ticket, the gang requires members to fill out questionnaires identifying themselves, their offense, affiliation and other information. The ticket al- leged that Torres had filled out the questionnaire, which is gang-related activity in violation of prison rules. Menard officers served Torres the first ticket on March 13, 2017. Two days later, Torres went to an administrative hear- ing in front of defendants Hart and Brookman, who dismissed the ticket. Approximately one and half hours after the hearing and dismissal, the IDOC issued another ticket with nearly identical allegations. This time Torres was immediately taken to segregation. After two days in segregation, he was served with the second ticket. The second ticket had more infor- mation than the first, including allegations that officers had compared the questionnaire to handwriting samples from Torres’s master file and determined they were a match. Addi- tionally, the ticket alleged that Torres was a “self-admitted No. 22-2830 3

member of the Maniac Latin Disciples,” a group that falls un- der the Latin Folk umbrella of gangs. Torres remained in segregation for a week until the hear- ing on the second ticket. The parties dispute whether Torres requested a witness for the hearings. Torres stated that he had requested a witness for the first hearing by sending the wit- ness’s information along with his statement to the adjustment committee through the institutional mail. Torres said he men- tioned his request to Brookman and Hart during his second hearing. The ticket form has a detachable portion where an inmate can submit a request for a witness. That portion re- mains unfilled on both of the tickets. At the hearing, no witnesses testified and IDOC presented no evidence aside from the ticket itself. Torres was not, de- spite his request, shown the paperwork that IDOC staff relied upon to find that he had completed the Latin Folk question- naire. Torres pleaded not guilty to the second ticket and stated that he had not filled out the questionnaire. Torres pointed out that the ticket did not make sense because it was exactly the same as the prior ticket, which had been expunged. At the end of the hearing, Hart and Brookman recommended a guilty finding and a series of punishments, including three months in segregation. Menard’s warden approved the rec- ommendation. Torres filed a grievance about the second ticket and sub- sequent hearing. He argued that the IDOC did not follow its own rules when it deprived him of a) an investigator to inves- tigate the charge, b) the opportunity to properly prepare for the hearing, c) witnesses, d) the opportunity to be heard, and e) the ability to see the questionnaire or handwriting samples. Torres also disputed that he was a member of the Latin Folk 4 No. 22-2830

Union. He noted that a prior ticket for affiliation with the Latin Folk Union was ”expunged due to inaccurate/insuffi- cient information.” Torres also pointed to his response to an- other ticket for affiliation with the Latin Folk Union, which pled not guilty because he was affiliated with a different gang. The grievance officer found that Torres was guilty of the infraction, but recommended that the ticket be expunged be- cause the hearing was not in accordance with IDOC’s regula- tions. The warden agreed with the recommendation and the ticket was expunged in mid-June 2017, after Torres had served three months in segregation. Torres says that the conditions in segregation were “inhu- mane.” His toilet “leak[ed] underneath with toilet backflush, there were signs of mold and mildew everywhere.” He also did not receive a bed or his property for three to four days. In segregation Torres could only leave his cell one or twice a week and he did not have phone privileges. He testified at his deposition that “all the toilets and all that in segregation are polluted with insects, infected, mildew, rust” forcing him to “breath[e] in rust.” Torres also described the conditions in his complaint, in- cluding allegations he had shown the warden that “smelly water” would come out of the toilet when flushed and that “a small amount of feces” would come out of the bottom of the toilet when he or his cellmate had a bowel movement. He stated that neither he nor his cellmate were given cleaning supplies to remediate the mold. Torres attached to his com- plaint a letter that he had sent to the warden about the “leak- ing, smelly toilet.” No. 22-2830 5

Torres filed this suit pro se in early 2019. After the comple- tion of discovery, defendants moved for summary judgment, which the district court granted. The district court held that even if Torres had raised an issue of fact about whether he was given witnesses as requested, he had not shown that the conditions in segregation constituted an “atypical and signif- icant hardship,” meaning he was not deprived of a liberty in- terest. Torres now appeals, arguing there are issues of mate- rial fact as to the conditions of his confinement that should defeat summary judgment.

II. Discussion

We chart a different course than the district court. We as- sume, without deciding, that Torres suffered an atypical and significant hardship, establishing a liberty interest that trig- gered due process protections. But because Adams v. Reagle, a case we decided after the district court’s ruling, held that pris- oners in Torres’s position are only entitled to informal, non- adversarial due process, we affirm the judgment for defend- ants. Summary judgment is reviewed de novo, taking all reason- able factual inferences from the record in favor of the non- movant. Adams v. Reagle, 91 F.4th 880, 887 (7th Cir. 2024), cert. denied No. 25-31, 2025 WL 2906509 (Oct. 14, 2025). Summary judgment is appropriate when “there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56; Tackett v. Dauss, 132 F.4th 1026, 1030 (7th Cir. 2025). “Prisoners may [] claim the protections of the Due Process Clause.

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