Matthews v. Rakiey ( 1992 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion




    December 30, 1992 [NOT FOR PUBLICATION]


    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

    ____________________


    No. 92-1429

    LLOYD MATTHEWS,

    Plaintiff-Appellant,

    v.

    PAUL RAKIEY, ET AL.,

    Defendants-Appellees.


    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. A. David Mazzone, U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Torruella, Cyr and Stahl,
    Circuit Judges.
    ______________

    ____________________

    Lloyd Matthews on brief pro se.
    ______________
    Nancy Ankers White, Special Assistant Attorney General, and
    ____________________
    Robert G. Brown, Counsel, Department of Correction, on Memorandum of
    _______________
    Law in Support of Their Motion for Summary Disposition, for appellees.


    ____________________


    ____________________

























    Per Curiam. In 1989, Lloyd Matthews, an inmate at
    ___________

    Massachusetts Correctional Institution - Cedar Junction,

    filed a complaint, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. 1983 and state

    law, followed by two amendments to the complaint, against

    numerous prison officials, alleging, inter alia, due process

    violations with respect to several separate prison

    disciplinary proceedings. The district court granted summary

    judgment in the defendants' favor on these claims on May 29,

    1990.1 We affirm, in part, and vacate and remand, in part.

    The district court wrote a 16 page memorandum and order,

    in which it detailed the factual underpinnings of the various

    disciplinary charges against Matthews and the rationale for

    its ruling. Except for its grant of summary judgment as a

    matter of law to the prison disciplinary board with respect

    to the board's refusal to grant Matthews access to a

    videotape of events of November 3, 1989, or to view it

    itself, we affirm the court's ruling of May 29th. We see no

    need to replicate the expressed rationale with which we

    agree. We write only to explain our disagreement with this

    one aspect of the court's ruling and to elaborate on some


    ____________________

    1. At the same time, the court denied summary judgment on
    other claims of excessive force and inadequate medical
    treatment, related to the episodes giving rise to, but
    distinct from, the claims anent the procedures used in the
    disciplinary proceedings. These related claims were later
    tried to a jury and returned in Matthews' favor. As such,
    they form no part of Matthews' present appeal. Our review is
    solely focused on the court's ruling vis-a-vis the conduct of
    the disciplinary proceedings.

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    other aspects, which, his brief reveals, Matthews has not

    understood. We recite here only the facts necessary to give

    context to those claims we have felt required further

    comment.

    Disciplinary Report No. 89-2221
    Disciplinary Report No. 89-2221
    _______________________________

    In Matthews' view, he should not have been placed in the

    Awaiting Action Unit (AAU) on August 16, 1989, while his

    rehearing on Disciplinary Report No. 89-2221 (possession of

    marijuana and a weapon) was pending. He suggests this

    violates Mass. Regs. Code tit. 103, 421.07(2) (1986), which

    says that an inmate shall not be transferred to the

    Departmental Segregation Unit (DSU) for committing a specific

    punishable offense unless a disciplinary board has first

    found him guilty of that offense and imposed a sanction and

    the commissioner has found that the inmate poses a

    substantial threat (a) to the safety of others or (b) of

    damaging or destroying property or (c) of interrupting the

    operation of the prison if he is confined in the prison's

    general population. See also Parenti v. Ponte, 727 F.2d 21,
    ________ _______ _____

    24-25 (1st Cir. 1984) (holding that this regulation creates a

    liberty interest). He says that, because his rehearing on

    Disciplinary Report No. 89-2221 was still pending in August

    (and, therefore, the commissioner had not made the necessary

    finding), he could not be transferred to the DSU on the basis

    of that pending report.



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    The short answer is that Matthews was not transferred to
    ___

    the DSU prior to the rehearing of Disciplinary Report No. 89-
    ___

    2221. He was not returned to the DSU until September 15,

    1989, after the rehearing took place. Between August 16th
    _____

    and September 15th, he was held in the AAU, which is "[a]n

    area ... designated by a superintendent in which a resident

    may be confined pending a hearing to determine whether such

    resident shall be transferred to a departmental segregation

    unit." Mass. Reg. Code tit. 103, 421.06(1) (1986). And,

    430.21(1) (1987) provided:

    At the discretion of the Superintendent
    or his/her designee, and subject to any
    applicable review requirements, an inmate
    who is under investigation for a possible
    disciplinary offense, or who has been
    charged with or found guilty of a
    disciplinary offense, may be placed on
    awaiting action status at the institution
    where he/she is then confined. Such
    status may include more restrictive
    confinement as deemed appropriate by the
    Superintendent or his/her designee.

    Furthermore, Matthews had been mistakenly released

    prematurely from the DSU on August 11, 1989, when, in fact,

    his placement in the DSU as a result of an attempted assault

    on the prison law librarian (Disciplinary Report No. 88-4510)

    had been extended to January 1990.2 Granted, the


    ____________________

    2. Matthews was mistakenly released from the DSU on August
    11th, before the proper officials were aware of the
    commissioner's decision to extend Matthews' DSU placement an
    additional 6 months because of Disciplinary Report No. 89-
    2221. The commissioner may reject the recommendation of the
    department review board and set a proposed release date

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    commissioner had extended Matthews' expected release date
    ________

    from his DSU placement for the attempted assault for an

    additional 6 months because of the marijuana and weapon

    incident. But, the DSU placement did not occur because of
    _________ _______

    that later incident. And, as noted, a release date from the

    DSU is a projection only, which the commissioner may

    condition on, for example, the absence of disciplinary

    reports. Mass. Regs. Code tit. 103, 421.08(2) (1986).3

    Matthews' rehearing on Disciplinary Report No. 89-2221

    was held on September 13, 1989. Matthews alleged that the

    124 days between the May 12th marijuana and weapon incident

    and the September 13th rehearing violated the requirement of

    Mass. Regs. Code tit. 103, 430.11(2) (1987) that "a hearing

    before the disciplinary board" be scheduled "within a

    reasonable time."

    Again, the short answer reveals the fallacy of Matthews'

    premise. Matthews received his hearing regarding the May


    ____________________

    dependent on conditions of his own, such as the absence of
    disciplinary reports. Mass. Regs. Code tit. 103, 421.08(2)
    (1986).

    3. We also note that on August 12th, the day after Matthews'
    mistaken release from the DSU, he was involved in a fight.
    This fact may also have played a part in his placement on AA
    status on August 16th. See Smith v. Massachusetts Dep't of
    ___ _____ _______________________
    Correction, 936 F.2d 1390, 1397 (1st Cir. 1991) (where one of
    __________
    the requisite substantive predicates for placing an inmate on
    AA status was present, there was no due process violation);
    Mass. Regs. Code tit. 103, 430.21(1) (1987) (prison
    official has discretion to place an inmate, who is under
    investigation for a possible disciplinary offense, on AA
    status).

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    12th incident on May 18th, certainly "within a reasonable

    time" as contemplated by 430.11(2). On September 13th, he

    received a "rehearing" pursuant to his administrative appeal

    and the administrative regulations do not provide for any

    time constraints within which a rehearing must be held.4


    ____________________

    4. Moreover, 430.23 (1987) provided that "[a]ll procedural
    time limits set forth in these rules and regulations are
    directory and may be waived by the Superintendent or the
    Commissioner or their designees."
    In any event, according to Matthews, the request for a
    rehearing was granted on June 24th and, according to the
    rehearing report, the rehearing was delayed until September
    13th because of three continuances: the first, because
    Matthews had requested legal representation, the second,
    because the reporting officer was on vacation, and the third,
    because of "rescheduling." "The Disciplinary Officer may
    continue a hearing at his/her discretion." Mass. Reg. Code
    tit. 103, 430.11(2) (1987). The continuances appear to
    have been both authorized and legitimate. Even were a
    rehearing required to be heard "within a reasonable time," no
    _________
    flagrant violation is apparent.
    And, in any event, we are unpersuaded by Matthews' claim
    of prejudice from the delay due to the unavailability of
    witnesses. In particular, with respect to Officer Bruce,
    Matthews suggests that his field drug analysis report should
    not have been accepted. Matthews cites Wightman v.
    ________
    Superintendent, Massachusetts Correctional Inst., 19 Mass.
    __________________________________________________
    App. Ct. 442 (1985), in which the court ruled that the
    unsworn statement of the reporting officer that he found in
    the inmate's possession an "unknown" substance which the
    officer "believed" to be angel dust was an insufficient
    ground for the board's finding of guilt. By contrast, in the
    present case, Officer Bruce provided a report which stated:

    On May 12, 1989 this Reporting Officer
    conducted a drug field test on four (4)
    rolled cigarettes confiscated from inmate
    Lloyd Matthews.

    The cigarettes were found to contain
    Marijuana and its Resin - a Class D
    Controlled Substance under 94C Sec. 31
    MGL.


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    Disciplinary Reports Nos. 90-192, 90-206, 90-208, 90-233
    Disciplinary Reports Nos. 90-192, 90-206, 90-208, 90-233
    ________________________________________________________

    Contrary to Matthews' contention, the board's findings

    of guilt on these reports were not constitutionally defective

    because, in each case, the board relied on the report of the

    reporting officer without other corroborating evidence. Most

    of the cases cited by Matthews involve instances where a

    disciplinary board merely incorporated a reporting officer's

    report, and instances where, in addition to mere

    incorporation, the report, in turn, contained a mere recital

    of the reporting officer's conclusion that an unidentified

    informant was reliable. Some courts have determined that a

    board's finding of guilt is defective in these instances on

    two grounds: a) because a statement such as - "Based on the

    reporting officer's report, we find the inmate guilty" - does

    not specify the evidence upon which the board relied in

    finding guilt5 and b) there is no indication that the board









    ____________________

    The board is not bound by courtroom rules of evidence, Mass.
    Regs. Code tit. 103, 430.13(3) (1987), and the instant case
    is distinguishable from Wightman such that the board's
    ________
    acceptance of Bruce's report despite his unavailability for
    questioning by Matthews was permissible.

    5. Courts rely on the teaching of Wolff v. McDonnell, 418
    _____ _________
    U.S. 539, 563 (1974), that due process requires, inter alia,
    "a written statement of the factfinders as to the evidence
    relied upon."

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    made its own independent determination of the informant's

    credibility.6

    By contrast, the board's findings in each instance in

    this case reflected no such shortcomings. First of all, no

    informant information was involved in any of the incidents.

    Each disciplinary report reflected an eyewitness account of

    the reporting officer. Second, although the board's report

    of the disciplinary hearing indicated, in each instance, that

    the "Board based guilt on the eyewitness testimony as

    recorded in the officer[']s report," that "STATEMENT OF

    EVIDENCE RELIED UPON TO SUPPORT FINDING, also specified, in

    each instance, the evidence in each report that, in the

    board's view, sufficed for a guilty finding.7


    ____________________

    6. See, e.g., Nelson v. Commissioner of Correction, 390
    __________ ______ ___________________________
    Mass. 379, 393 (1983)
    The reliance by a disciplinary board on
    the secondary information of a reporting
    officer without any primary evidence of
    guilt being presented to the board, is to
    compound the prospect for abuse. To rely
    on such secondary information is simply
    to "rubberstamp" the disciplinary report
    and to delegate the decisionmaking to the
    reporting or investigating officer.
    (Citation omitted).

    7. The findings of the board, in each instance, complied
    with regulatory, as well as constitutional, requirements.

    "If a guilty finding is reached, the disciplinary
    board shall prepare a written decision containing
    the following:
    (a) A description of the evidence relied upon
    in reaching the guilty finding;"

    Mass. Regs. Code tit. 103, 430.17(1) (1987).

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    Disciplinary Report No. 90-206: "Report clearly
    indicates that R/O [reporting officer] observed
    subject throw the meal tray against the unit wall."

    Disciplinary Report No. 90-192: "Report clearly
    indicates that R/O positively identified subject as
    the one who was encouraging a work stoppage and
    unauthorized group demonstration."

    Disciplinary Report No. 90-208: "Report clearly
    indicates that subject was insolent to R/O,
    disruptive in the unit, and verbally abusive and
    threatening to the R/O."

    Disciplinary Report No. 90-233: "Report clearly
    indicates that R/O observed subject threaten the
    block workers, encourage other inmates to follow
    his lead, resulting in Inmate Matthews assaulting a
    block worker, by throwing human feces on him."

    Matthews has also cited and attached, as an addendum to

    his brief, three unpublished memoranda and orders of

    Massachusetts superior court judges - Stokes v. Ponte, No.
    ______ _____

    90-463 (Mar. 21, 1990) (Zobel, J.); Greenwood v. Rakiey, No.
    _________ ______

    90-4154 (Jul. 17, 1990) (Bohn, J.); and Colantonio v. Vose,
    __________ ____

    No. 90-4684 (Jul. 30, 1991) (White, J.). These decisions

    held that, when an inmate disputes the reporting officer's

    account of events, a disciplinary board cannot find a

    reporting officer's written report more credible than an

    inmate's live testimony, in the absence of the reporting

    officer's own live testimony. They conclude that, in sifting



    ____________________


    "The evidence relied upon for the guilty finding
    and the reasons for the sanction shall be set out
    in specific terms."

    Mass. Regs. Code tit. 103, 430.17(2) (1987).

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    through contradictory testimony, a factfinder must assess the

    credibility of the witnesses, which it cannot do without the

    live presence of the witness.

    We pass the question of the persuasive weight accorded

    unpublished superior court memoranda and orders. In any

    event, in these decisions the inmates had testified and the

    board had to weigh the credibility of the reporting officers'

    written statements versus the inmates' live testimony.

    In Matthews' case, however, he pled not guilty, then

    expressly declined to provide any statement in his behalf.

    Each of the relevant hearing reports states in the section

    for SUMMARY OF INMATE TESTIMONY:

    States to prior experience with the D-
    Board - and he feels that his testimony
    is not always recorded properly - and for
    that reason he has no statement.

    In view of his failure to testify, this is not a situation

    where the board then had to assess the credibility of live

    testimony versus written statements. His apparent distrust

    of the accuracy of the recordation of his testimony does not

    alter that.

    Matthews would have it that in instances where the

    evidence consists of an accusation by a correctional officer

    based on personal observation and a bare "not guilty" plea by

    an inmate, the board could not find guilt, based on the

    written eyewitness account, in the absence of independent

    corroborating evidence. That is not the holding of the


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    caselaw he has cited and not the holding of the caselaw we

    have found. See, e.g., McLellan v. Acting Superintendent,
    __________ ________ ______________________

    M.C.I., Cedar Junction, 29 Mass. App. Ct. 122, 125 (1990)
    _______________________

    ("[T]he disciplinary report of Officer Belisle recounted his

    direct observation of the plaintiff passing a telephone to an

    inmate on disciplinary isolation, an action which, without

    any additional validation, may be deemed a violation of the

    rules."); see also Stokes v. Commissioner of Correction, 26
    _________ ______ ___________________________

    Mass. App. Ct. 585, 589 ("[T]he board refers in its decision

    to the officer's incident report, and a copy of the full

    report is appended to the decision. All of the officers'

    reports appear to be self-validating. Thus, although more

    explanation might have been preferable, in each such decision

    the board's rationale is revealed, and there is at least a

    basis for a reviewing court or agency administrator to

    understand how the prison board reached the decision."),

    further appellate review denied, 403 Mass. 1106 (1988).8 9
    _______________________________


    ____________________

    8. Again arguing that the board may not properly rely on the
    written statement of the reporting officer, Matthews argues
    on appeal that there was insufficient evidence to support the
    guilty finding on Disciplinary Report No. 88-4510 (the
    precipitating event for his initial placement in the DSU,
    i.e., the attempted assault on the prison librarian). That
    claim of insufficiency of evidence, however, was never made
    either in his original complaint, or in the later-allowed two
    amendments to the complaint. It was first raised in his
    opposition to defendants' motion for summary judgment and the
    district court did not address it in granting summary
    judgment. Thus, it was not properly presented to the
    district court and, concomitantly, not preserved for review
    on appeal.


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    Incident of November 3, 1989
    Incident of November 3, 1989
    ____________________________

    We now turn to the only argument offered by Matthews

    which we find has merit.10 Late on the day of Friday,

    November 3rd, Matthews was notified of the commissioner's

    approval of the recommendation that he be released to the

    general population. He was transferred from the Segregation

    Unit to the Orientation Unit. There he was told that the 3

    to 11 p.m. shift commander had not received his name as an

    inmate to be released, so he would not be released to the

    general population, but rather, confined to his cell until

    the following Monday. He then allegedly threw a cup of urine



    ____________________

    9. Finally, Matthews' contention that Disciplinary Report
    No. 90-283 should have been dismissed because it was not
    written within 24 hours of the incident, as per 430.08(2),
    is refuted by Smith v. Massachusetts Dep't of Correction, 936
    _____ _________________________________
    F.2d 1390 (1st Cir. 1991). "As these regulations [including
    430.08(2)] embody only procedural time limits, they do not
    create the necessary liberty interest." Id. at 1397 n.11;
    ___
    see also Mass. Regs. Code tit. 103, 430.23 (1987) ("All
    ________
    procedural time limits set forth in these rules and
    regulations are directory and may be waived by the
    Superintendent or the Commissioner or their designees.").

    10. Although Matthews filed an amended complaint relating to
    the events of November 3rd, he did not submit copies of any
    of the relevant disciplinary reports or a copy of the report
    of the disciplinary hearing to the district court. The
    following recital of facts is taken from copies of the
    relevant disciplinary reports submitted by the defendants in
    connection with a motion, filed on July 31, 1990, for summary
    judgment on the claims remaining after the ruling presently
    at issue. The district court, therefore, did not have copies
    of the relevant documents before it when it granted summary
    judgment on May 29, 1990. The description of events in the
    reports is in general agreement with, but is more detailed
    than, the description provided by Matthews in his complaint
    and related filings.

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    at a correctional officer. Thereafter, he refused to submit

    to being handcuffed and removed from his cell. Matthews tied

    bed sheets across the floor from his desk to his bedframe,

    apparently to trip anyone entering the cell. He also

    suspended a bed sheet, as a curtain, from floor to ceiling

    with bandaids and remained behind this curtain during much of

    the time attempts were being made to get him to step to the

    bars to be cuffed.

    A "move team" of officers sprayed mace and/or gas into

    Matthews' cell and then entered the cell. Matthews, still

    behind the sheet, allegedly "lunged" toward the door with a

    radio in his hand, which struck the shield carried by the

    first officer to enter ("the shield man"). Matthews was

    forcibly shackled and removed. Subsequently, a pen wrapped

    in gauze and tape at one end was found on the floor of

    Matthews' cell.

    In December 1989, Matthews filed an amended complaint

    which, inter alia, alleged that he had been charged with

    assault, attempted assault, and possession of a weapon.11

    He added, as defendants, the members of the disciplinary


    ____________________

    11. According to the later-submitted disciplinary reports,
    he was charged with, inter alia, assault in connection with
    the precipitating incident, i.e., allegedly throwing urine at
    the officer, assaulting or threatening the shield man with
    the radio, and possession of a weapon, i.e., the pen, which
    the reporting officer concluded was a weapon because the
    gauze and tape on the end was a handle. This officer also
    stated that the pen had been in Matthews' hand as the move
    team entered the cell.

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    board that considered these charges. He said that the forced

    extraction had been videotaped by the prison officials (as is

    apparently the norm), that he had never assaulted or

    attempted to assault the officers and that the video would

    show what happened, but that the disciplinary board refused

    to view the video or allow his legal representative or

    himself to view the video. He said that he was sanctioned 15

    days' isolation for each disciplinary report written by the

    prison officers.

    The members of the disciplinary board moved to dismiss

    or, in the alternative, for summary judgment. As noted,

    supra, footnote 10, they, too, failed to submit the
    _____

    underlying disciplinary reports or the record of the

    disciplinary hearing to the district court. They merely

    contended, without supporting documents, that the evidence

    presented at the disciplinary hearing satisfied both federal

    and state constitutional standards, that, unlike a criminal

    prosecution, an inmate is not entitled to a full panoply of

    rights, and "[a]s a result, the plaintiff had no right to

    exculpatory evidence, liberal discovery, etc...."

    In opposing the defendants' motion for summary judgment,

    Matthews said that the board, in denying his request to

    produce the tape, indicated that it would not use the tape

    against him. His claim, however, was that the tape was

    exculpatory in that it would show that he was not violent and



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    never assaulted or attempted to assault the "move team." He

    cited Mass. Regs. Code tit. 103, 430.14(4) (1987), (which

    gives discretion to the chairperson to deny an offer of

    evidence in the interests of, inter alia, personal safety,

    institutional security, relevance, cumulativeness and

    repetitiveness) and said that the board's denial was based on

    other than personal or institutional safety.

    The district court granted summary judgment, as a matter

    of law, to the defendant board members with respect to

    Matthews' claim about the board's refusal to grant Matthews

    access to the videotape or to view it at the hearing, on the

    ground that the discipline review board is not required to

    accept or grant access to any evidence at a disciplinary

    hearing. This statement is erroneous,12 since an inmate

    facing a disciplinary hearing that may result in the loss of

    a liberty interest must receive, inter alia, "an opportunity,

    when consistent with institutional safety and correctional

    goals, to call witnesses and to present documentary evidence

    in his defense." Smith v. Massachusetts Dep't of Correction,
    _____ _________________________________

    936 F.2d at 1398-99 (quoting Superintendent, Massachusetts
    _____________________________

    Correctional Inst. v. Hill, 472 U.S. 445, 454 (1985)).
    ___________________ ____

    Moreover, "'the burden of persuasion as to the existence and

    sufficiency of such institutional concerns [justifying the


    ____________________

    12. We review the grant of summary judgment de novo. See,
    ____
    e.g., Rodriques v. Furtado, 950 F.2d 805, 808 (1st Cir.
    ____ _________ _______
    1991).

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    denial of an inmate's request to call witnesses] is borne by

    the prison officials, not by the prisoners.'" Id. at 1399-
    ___

    1400 (quoting Grandison v. Cuyler, 774 F.2d 598, 604 (3d Cir.
    _________ ______

    1985)). And, in Smith, we found that a request for discovery
    _____

    of an item that appeared particularly important to, indeed

    may have been dispositive of, a defense "stands on the same

    footing as a request to call witnesses." Id. at 1401
    ___

    (footnote omitted).

    We conclude, therefore, that the district court's grant

    of summary judgment in favor of the defendant/disciplinary

    board members was, at best, premature. The defendants' flat-

    out contention, endorsed by the district court, that Matthews

    was not entitled to exculpatory evidence is wrong as a matter

    of law. The board may decline to accept evidence in the

    interests of institutional security and correctional goals or

    for other reasons set forth in 430.14(4), such as relevance

    or cumulativeness. Wolff v. McDonnell, 418 U.S. at 566-67.
    _____ _________

    And, it may be that the board would have been within its

    discretion to do so here. But, we just do not know.13 In


    ____________________

    13. It does not appear from the record before us that the
    precipitating event, i.e., the alleged assault on an officer
    by throwing urine at him, was recorded on the videotape.
    Rather, the tape reveals what occurred once the prison
    officials made the subsequent decision to extract Matthews
    from his cell. Matthews suggests, nonetheless, that it shows
    officers in close proximity to his cell after this alleged
    assault and before his extraction and that they would not
    have positioned themselves so if he, in fact, had thrown
    urine. We leave to the district court for further
    consideration what relevance, if any, the tape had to events

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    failing to even argue that the board denied Matthews' request

    for a legitimate reason, much less provide supporting

    documentation, the board members failed to show that they

    were entitled to judgment as a matter of law. See Ponte v.
    ___ _____

    Real, 471 U.S. 491, 496-97 (1985) (due process may require
    ____

    prison officials to explain, in a limited manner, either at

    the disciplinary hearing, or in a later court challenge, the

    reason why witnesses were not allowed to testify).

    We, therefore, vacate the district court's order of May
    ______

    29, 1990, insofar as it granted summary judgment in favor of

    the defendant members of the disciplinary review board on

    Matthews' claim that he was unlawfully deprived of access to

    potentially exculpatory evidence before the board, i.e., the

    videotape depicting events of November 3, 1989. We remand
    ______

    for further proceedings, in which the defendants may again

    move for summary judgment if, in their view, they are able to

    carry their burden on this issue. In all other respects, we

    affirm the district court order of May 29, 1990.
    ______

    Affirmed, in part, and vacated and remanded, in
    ________________________________________________________

    part.14
    _____






    ____________________

    not recorded therein.

    14. In view of our disposition of this appeal, Matthews'
    "motion to allow affidavit in support of arguments in lieu of
    oral arguments" is denied as moot.

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