Stanley v. Hejirika , 134 F.3d 629 ( 1998 )


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  • PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    STEVEN C. STANLEY,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    LIEUTENANT HEJIRIKA; CORRECTIONAL
    OFFICER JOHNSON; CORRECTIONAL
    OFFICER MCMILLEN; SERGEANT
    KEENAN; CORRECTIONAL OFFICER
    DEMBY,
    Defendants-Appellants,                                              No. 97-6214
    and
    A. ROBINSON, Sergeant; LIEUTENANT
    FREEMAN; CORRECTIONAL OFFICER
    BELLEMY; CORRECTIONAL OFFICER
    GUY; CORRECTIONAL OFFICER JANAES;
    CORRECTIONAL OFFICER JENNIFER;
    VICTOR JARAMILLO,
    Defendants.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Maryland, at Baltimore.
    James E. Kenkel, Magistrate Judge.
    (CA-94-1454-S)
    Argued: October 27, 1997
    Decided: January 21, 1998
    Before WILKINS, NIEMEYER, and WILLIAMS, Circuit Judges.
    _________________________________________________________________
    Reversed by published opinion. Judge Niemeyer wrote the opinion,
    in which Judge Wilkins and Judge Williams joined.
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Glenn William Bell, Assistant Attorney General, Balti-
    more, Maryland, for Appellants. Timothy Joseph Sullivan, SULLI-
    VAN & SULLIVAN, College Park, Maryland, for Appellee. ON
    BRIEF: J. Joseph Curran, Jr., Attorney General of Maryland, Balti-
    more, Maryland, for Appellants.
    _________________________________________________________________
    OPINION
    NIEMEYER, Circuit Judge:
    The magistrate judge in this case found that correctional officers
    had used unconstitutionally excessive force in subduing the leader of
    a group of rebellious prisoners in the context of a prison disturbance
    and, under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, awarded the prisoner $1,000 in compen-
    satory damages and $2,000 in punitive damages. On the officers'
    appeal, we reverse, concluding as a matter of law that in the context
    of quelling a prison disturbance or rebellion, (1) the evidence was
    insufficient to establish the requisite subjective culpability of the cor-
    rectional officers, and (2) the correctional officers' conduct, taken in
    context, did not exceed an objectively de minimis threshold for exces-
    sive force.
    I
    On January 6, 1994, the inmates in the A-Wing Segregation Tier
    of the Maryland House of Correction-Annex in Jessup, Maryland,
    rebelled after a correctional officer refused an inmate request for rec-
    reation. The A-Wing Segregation Tier is a special tier reserved for
    inmates who have committed disciplinary violations. The inmates
    began setting fires by dropping burning papers outside their cells.
    They set off the sprinkler systems and stopped up their toilets in order
    to flood the tier, and they threw objects from their cells. It took cor-
    rectional officers five hours to restore order.
    To quell the disturbance, Lt. Hejirika, the building shift supervisor,
    assembled an "extraction team" of eight correctional officers. The
    2
    team planned to remove the ringleaders of the disturbance from their
    cells one at a time, search them, remove all their personal property
    from the cells, and then return them to their cells. The activities of the
    extraction team were to be, and in fact were, videotaped.
    The officers compiled a list identifying seven inmates as the ring-
    leaders or "primary troublemakers" of the disturbance. Steven Stanley
    was first on the list. He was also the oldest inmate in the tier and was
    looked up to by the others. Stanley has been an inmate at the Mary-
    land House of Correction since 1979, serving a 20-year sentence for
    armed robbery. During the period of his incarceration, Stanley has
    had a history of unruly behavior as an inmate, having been cited on
    various occasions for setting fires, creating floods, throwing objects,
    and threatening inmates and correctional officers. He has also been
    involved in at least one "takeover" of the tier. Indeed, during the
    events involved in this case, Stanley was housed in the A-Wing
    because of a disciplinary infraction.
    As planned, the extraction team removed all seven"primary trou-
    blemakers" from their cells, searched the cells, removed all personal
    belongings, and then returned the inmates to their cells. During the
    process, the officers discovered at least one "shank," a homemade
    knife. Two of the ringleaders were particularly uncooperative, and the
    officers found it necessary to use pepper spray to subdue them.
    Although Stanley's extraction proceeded without physical incident, he
    was uncooperative and expressed anger toward the officers, warning
    them, "Don't be grabbing on me," and threatening to "stab one of
    these dumb bitches." According to the officers, when Stanley contin-
    ued to encourage inmates to set fires and began"forcefully hitting"
    his cell door, Major Waverly Ray, the shift commander, ordered that
    Stanley be removed from his cell a second time and be placed in an
    isolation cell. Before moving Stanley, the officers placed steel hand-
    cuffs on him. They then escorted him to the isolation cell where they
    intended to remove the steel handcuffs and replace them with flexible
    plastic handcuffs which were more secure. Stanley continued his ver-
    bal abuse, stating that he would "f--k this whole goddamn jail up" and
    telling the officers that he would "f--k one of you bitches up."
    The videotape shows two officers escorting Stanley to the bottom
    tier where the isolation cell is located, but loses sight of him as they
    3
    turn into the cell. Stanley testified that during this brief instant when
    he was not on camera,
    [Officer] Johnson took and mashed my head on the side of
    the door. . . . I was telling [the officers] that I don't care
    nothing about them grabbing on me, and he pushed me in
    the back of the head, and my face hit the side of the wall
    going in to the door.
    The officers testified that after Stanley was taken into the cell and
    braced against the wall to change his cuffs, he began to resist. At that
    point, the tape shows an officer pushing Stanley firmly against the
    wall with his forearm at the back of Stanley's neck. It shows other
    officers then taking Stanley down to the ground, face down, and lean-
    ing on top of him to subdue him, while one of the officers ties the
    "flexicuffs" around Stanley's wrists behind his back. Stanley is heard
    complaining that he is being squashed and that he feels as if his arm
    is being broken. The tape shows the other officers standing around
    without much activity and Lt. Hejirika taking notes. Once the flex-
    icuffs were in place and leg irons were placed on Stanley, he was
    taken for medical treatment. The videotape shows Stanley complain-
    ing of pain about his mouth and arm, but it also shows his refusal to
    accept any medical treatment. After that visit Stanley was returned to
    the isolation cell.
    It was during the period depicted in the videotape-- i.e., when
    Stanley was first being taken to the isolation cell and having his cuffs
    changed -- that Stanley claims the correctional officers used exces-
    sive force. In addition to what the videotape showed, Stanley
    explained how he was being hurt. The magistrate judge characterized
    Stanley's testimony as follows:
    The plaintiff testified that at this point in the isolation con-
    finement cell, his head was forcefully held against the wall
    by defendant Johnson. He testified that defendant Johnson
    hit him in the base of the skull, punched him in the face,
    kneed him repeatedly while he was on the ground and also
    choked him. He further testified that defendant McMill[e]n
    twisted his arm while holding him.
    4
    Plaintiff also testified that defendant Demby twisted his
    fingers back in order to obtain a reflex of resistance; pushed
    his legs to cause him to hit the cell floor; that defendant
    Keenan kicked him in the face; that unidentified members
    of the extraction team were choking him and kicking his
    side, legs, and ankles.
    All parties agree that Stanley suffered injuries as a result of the
    incident, which the magistrate judge found to be"bruising of his right
    arm, left jaw, left and right wrists and back, and a tooth which was
    loosened."
    On May 31, 1994, Stanley filed the complaint in this case, and it
    was assigned, by consent of the parties, to a magistrate judge for trial.
    Following trial, the magistrate judge found for Stanley, awarding him
    $1,000 in compensatory damages for pain and suffering and $2,000
    in punitive damages. In reaching this conclusion, the judge found that
    the defendants were motivated by malice and acted in concert to
    administer a beating to Stanley. The judge relied on the videotape
    which he found "clearly shows all of the members of the team acting
    in concert in surrounding plaintiff and positioning themselves in such
    a way as to allow a controlled beating to be inflicted with minimal
    visual exposure." He concluded that Stanley's injuries, "while not
    severe," were not de minimis for Eighth Amendment purposes, basing
    that conclusion on a comparison of Stanley's injuries with those sus-
    tained by the prisoner in Hudson v. McMillian , 
    503 U.S. 1
    (1992).
    This appeal followed.
    II
    The correctional officers contend that, as a matter of law, the force
    that they used and the injuries that Stanley sustained in the circum-
    stances of this case did not cross the de minimis threshold for exces-
    sive force under the Eighth Amendment. They suggest that "in an
    apparent philosophical disagreement with the day-to-day management
    of maximum security prisons, the court, in finding these officers lia-
    ble, wrongfully substituted its judgment for that of State correctional
    officials." They argue that in the context of a"major disturbance . . .
    on the segregation tier, including fires and flooding," it is reasonable
    5
    to assume that correctional officers must use some force. They also
    argue that the officers used only justifiable force to handcuff a resist-
    ing and kicking inmate. Indeed, they contend that"these injuries,
    mostly bruises . . . corroborate the version of the occurrence testified
    to by the correctional officers."
    In addition to the officers' argument that their use of force was
    objectively reasonable, the officers also contend that "there was not
    a scintilla of evidence" submitted to support subjective bad faith that
    they acted with malice and ill will for the purpose of causing harm.
    They argue that the only evidence on which the magistrate judge
    relied to make a finding of malice was the videotape, which they
    claim shows the contrary.
    Stanley accepts the statement of historical facts made by the offi-
    cers in their brief but contends that the conclusions to be drawn from
    them must be what the magistrate judge found because he was in the
    best position to review the facts during the two-day hearing and that
    his findings were supported by substantial evidence. Stanley's argu-
    ment on appeal rests squarely on the magistrate judge's factual find-
    ings and legal conclusions, and he urges that they be affirmed for the
    reasons given by the magistrate judge.
    While we review the magistrate judge's application of law to the
    facts de novo, we review his findings of fact for clear error. In review-
    ing for clear error, we do not substitute our own judgment for that of
    the trial court unless we are "left with the definite and firm conviction
    that a mistake has been committed." Miller v. Mercy Hosp., Inc., 
    720 F.2d 356
    , 361 (4th Cir. 1983); see also Anderson v. City of Bessemer
    City, 
    470 U.S. 564
    , 573 (1985). We have also noted, however, that
    "the conviction of mistake may properly be based upon a conclusion
    that, without regard to what the actual facts may be, the findings
    under review were induced by an erroneous view of the controlling
    legal standard or are not supported by substantial evidence." Brice v.
    Virginia Beach Correctional Ctr., 
    58 F.3d 101
    , 106 (4th Cir. 1995)
    (internal quotation marks omitted).
    The Eighth Amendment protects against the infliction of "cruel and
    unusual punishments." U.S. Const. amend. VIII. This protection,
    enforced against the states through the Fourteenth Amendment, pro-
    6
    tects inmates against the application of excessive force by correc-
    tional officers. See Whitley v. Albers, 
    475 U.S. 312
    , 318-19 (1986).
    Not every unpleasant action taken by prison officials against inmates,
    however, violates the Eighth Amendment. "After incarceration, only
    the unnecessary and wanton infliction of pain constitutes . . . cruel
    and unusual punishment forbidden by the Eighth Amendment." 
    Id. at 319
    (internal quotation marks omitted).
    To prove a claim that prison officials violated his constitutional
    rights through the excessive use of force, an inmate must satisfy two
    requirements. First, he must satisfy a subjective requirement that the
    force used by the corrections officers "inflicted unnecessary and wan-
    ton pain and suffering." Hudson v. McMillian , 
    503 U.S. 1
    , 6 (1993).
    In the context of a prison disturbance, this question "ultimately turns
    on `whether force was applied in a good faith effort to maintain or
    restore discipline or maliciously and sadistically for the very purpose
    of causing harm.'" 
    Id. (quoting Whitley,
    475 U.S. at 320-21). When
    evaluating evidence to determine whether it is legally sufficient to sat-
    isfy the subjective component, a court may allow an inmate's claim
    to go to the jury only if it concludes that the evidence, viewed in a
    light most favorable to the claimant, "will support a reliable inference
    of wantonness in the infliction of pain." 
    Id. at 322.
    In addition to satisfying the subjective requirement, the inmate
    must also satisfy an objective requirement; he must show that correc-
    tional officers' actions, taken contextually, were"objectively harmful
    enough" to offend "contemporary standards of decency." 
    Hudson, 503 U.S. at 8
    (internal quotation marks omitted). In determining whether
    the objective component is satisfied, the factfinder must evaluate the
    force applied and the seriousness of the resulting injury against the
    need for the use of force and the context in which that need arose.
    Thus, in Whitley, the Court found that in the context of quelling a
    major prison disturbance, a correctional officer's use of force in
    shooting an inmate in the leg was "part and parcel of a good-faith
    effort to restore prison security" and did not violate the inmate's
    Eighth Amendment 
    rights. 475 U.S. at 326
    . On the other hand in
    Hudson, in the context of a verbal argument, the Court found that
    blows deliberately directed to the inmate to punish him, causing
    bruises, swelling, loosened teeth, and a cracked dental plate, were suf-
    7
    ficient to support an excessive force claim in violation of the Eighth
    Amendment. 
    See 503 U.S. at 10
    .
    In recognition that the prison environment is a dangerous one for
    correctional officers, prison administrators must be accorded "wide-
    ranging deference" to design and implement policies and practices
    that in their judgment are necessary for the preservation of order and
    security. 
    Whitley, 475 U.S. at 321-22
    . Thus, when prison security
    measures are taken in response to an uprising or prison disturbance,
    the courts cannot always expect a perfectly measured response. "The
    infliction of pain in the course of a prison security measure, therefore,
    does not amount to cruel and unusual punishment simply because it
    may appear in retrospect that the degree of force authorized or
    applied for security purposes was unreasonable, and hence unneces-
    sary in the strict sense." 
    Id. at 319
    (emphasis added). On the other
    hand, when a prisoner is held and calmly beaten by two guards in
    response to a verbal argument, the de minimis level is more easily
    reached.
    In short, for an inmate to prove an excessive force claim, he must
    satisfy not only the subjective component that the correctional offi-
    cers acted with a sufficiently culpable state of mind, but also the
    objective component that his alleged injury was sufficiently serious
    in relation to the need for force to establish constitutionally excessive
    force. See Williams v. Benjamin, 
    77 F.3d 756
    , 761 (4th Cir. 1996).
    III
    We now turn to the question of whether the magistrate judge cor-
    rectly addressed the subjective component of the Hudson test. In
    assessing this component, the magistrate judge found:
    [I]t is clear that the defendants were motivated by malice
    and ill will in the application of force against plaintiff, either
    in retaliation for plaintiff's participation in the disturbance
    or his continued abusive and hostile language and verbal
    provocations. The court does not substitute its judgment for
    that of the prison officials the decision to move plaintiff to
    the isolation cell, nor does the court question the decision to
    replace the steel handcuffs with the flex-cuffs. The critical
    8
    question is whether in effectuating those two decisions the
    defendants intentionally hit, kicked, twisted fingers and
    slammed plaintiff's head into the wall. The videotape does
    not show plaintiff resisting and clearly shows some"blows"
    being administered. The videotape alone fails to match the
    identity of a particular officer to a particular"blow"; how-
    ever, the videotape clearly shows all of the members of the
    team acting in concert in surrounding plaintiff and position-
    ing themselves in such a way as to allow a controlled beat-
    ing to be inflicted with minimal visual exposure. Further,
    the medical records corroborate the types of blows plaintiff
    alleges were inflicted. On these facts plaintiff has met his
    burden of proof on the subjective test of Whitley and
    Hudson.
    On this basis, the magistrate judge concluded that the extraction team
    acted "maliciously and sadistically for the very purpose of causing
    harm." 
    Whitley, 475 U.S. at 320-21
    . In arriving at this conclusion, the
    magistrate judge relied primarily on the videotape, which, we agree,
    is sensible because it covers the entire incident in question.
    We too have viewed the tape and thus have had the same opportu-
    nity as the magistrate judge had to evaluate this non-testimonial evi-
    dence. From our review, however, we find that the tape reveals no
    evidence of malicious or sadistic conduct. To the contrary, we are
    struck by the rational reaction and measured response of the correc-
    tional officers to Stanley's resistance and threats. We ordinarily show
    substantial deference to the factfinder in evaluating testimony because
    the factfinder has the opportunity to observe the demeanor of wit-
    nesses and make credibility judgments that we cannot make. But in
    this case we are viewing the same evidence that was viewed by the
    magistrate judge and have the same opportunity to evaluate what was
    seen. If such a review is not de novo, as is the case when we review
    a summary judgment record, then at the least we are in a better posi-
    tion to conclude that substantial evidence does not support the magis-
    trate judge's finding. See 
    Brice, 58 F.3d at 106
    .
    The videotape shows a group of officers escorting Stanley into the
    isolation cell and, as he resists, pushing him up against the wall. One
    officer has his forearm up against the back of Stanley's neck and is
    9
    obviously applying force. In an effort to remove the metal handcuffs
    and apply flexible ones, the officers then take Stanley to the ground
    and place him face down. The tape shows several of the officers hold-
    ing Stanley on the floor, lying or sitting on him to immobilize him
    while one officer is attempting to tie his hands behind his back with
    the flexible handcuffs. In attempting to tie the handcuffs, the officer
    is obviously moving his hand, wrapping the flexible plastic strips
    around Stanley's wrists. The other officers are merely standing
    around observing while one officer is taking notes.
    In viewing this same scene, the magistrate judge found that the vid-
    eotape shows a number of blows being inflicted upon Stanley. We
    could not find that evidence. While the tape displays a pulling motion
    which seems more like the action required to wrap and tighten a plas-
    tic flexicuff than a punch, we saw only one possible stomping motion
    by one of the officers. But the evidence was by no means clear and
    is certainly not sufficient evidence to conclude that Stanley was
    repeatedly beaten with blows that were sadistically and maliciously
    inflicted for the purpose of causing harm. While it is apparent that
    Stanley was being treated roughly, we simply could not see any evi-
    dence of wanton sadism. The officers used significant physical force
    in subduing Stanley, but they also had objectively reasonable grounds
    to believe that such force was necessary. They were quelling a distur-
    bance and seeking to retain control of the prison and not punishing
    an inmate for verbal abuse.
    Our review of the evidence leaves us with the "definite and firm
    conviction that a mistake has been committed" in finding that the offi-
    cers acted sadistically and maliciously for the sole purpose of causing
    harm. Because the evidence is insufficient to leave us with "a reliable
    inference of wantonness in the infliction of pain," we must rule as a
    matter of law that the subjective component has not been satisfied.
    
    Whitley, 475 U.S. at 322
    .
    IV
    We are likewise persuaded that Stanley's claim fails as a matter of
    law under the objective component of the Hudson test. Our inquiry
    is whether the injury of which Stanley complains is significant
    enough, when viewed in its factual context, to amount to a violation
    10
    of his right to be free of cruel and unusual punishment, a right which
    "draw[s] its meaning from the evolving standards of decency that
    mark the progress of a maturing society." Rhodes v. Chapman, 
    452 U.S. 337
    , 346 (1981) (quoting Trop v. Dulles, 
    356 U.S. 86
    , 101
    (1958) (plurality opinion)). It is established, however, that prison offi-
    cials do not violate the Eighth Amendment whenever it appears in
    retrospect that the infliction of pain during a security measure could
    theoretically have been avoided. See 
    Whitley, 475 U.S. at 319
    .
    In this case, the correctional officers were in the process of quelling
    a disturbance in a section of the prison which housed inmates with
    disciplinary problems. Inmates had been lighting fires, flooding the
    halls, and throwing objects across the tier. The tension within the
    prison was understandably high. In removing the ringleaders from
    their cells, correctional officers had to use pepper spray to subdue
    two. Stanley himself stated several times that he was going to "f--k
    the whole goddamn jail up" and "f--k this jail up," statements which
    he explained later were threats to set more fires. The evidence sup-
    ports no suggestion that the correctional officers responded to this
    uprising for any reason other than to bring order. And Stanley could
    not reasonably have expected treatment on the same level as if he
    were in a civilized conference with the warden. He was angry, highly
    charged, threatening, resisting, and kicking. Furthermore, he threat-
    ened to stab a prison guard -- a threat that is not hollow in a prison
    environment. Indeed, the extraction procedure followed in this case
    recovered at least one shank.
    In this context, we take care not to impose our own judgment as
    to what might be necessary for that of prison officials. When the cor-
    rectional officers were removing Stanley from his cell to an isolation
    cell, they found it necessary to act cautiously and with force. Several
    officers held him firmly against the wall, and one officer put his fore-
    arm behind Stanley's neck. In taking Stanley to the ground to change
    his handcuffs, force was again necessary and was applied, both to
    take him down and to hold him in place to overcome his kicking and
    resistance. If a punch or a kick did occur during these events, we can-
    not conclude "in retrospect that the degree of force authorized or
    applied for security purposes was unreasonable, and hence unneces-
    sary in the strict sense." 
    Whitley, 475 U.S. at 319
    . The Supreme Court
    has instructed that "not every push or shove, even if it may later seem
    11
    unnecessary in the peace of a judge's chambers, violates a prisoner's
    constitutional rights." 
    Hudson, 503 U.S. at 9
    (quoting Johnson v.
    Glick, 
    481 F.2d 1028
    , 1033 (2d Cir. 1973)).
    The magistrate judge found that Stanley sustained bruising, swell-
    ing, and a loosened tooth. While he acknowledged that the injuries
    were not severe, he found them constitutionally significant when he
    compared them to the injuries that were evaluated in Hudson, con-
    cluding on that basis that the injuries presented to him were not de
    minimis. In Hudson, however, not only were the injuries more severe,
    but they were inflicted in a context totally different from that pres-
    ented in this case. The Supreme Court noted that after Hudson and a
    prison guard had argued, the guard
    placed Hudson in handcuffs and shackles, took the prisoner
    out of his cell, and walked him toward the penitentiary's
    "administrative lockdown" area. Hudson testified that, on
    the way there, [the guard] punched Hudson in the mouth,
    eyes, chest, and stomach while [another guard] held the
    inmate in place and kicked and punched him from behind.
    He further testified that Mezo, the supervisor on duty,
    watched the beating but merely told the officers"not to have
    too much 
    fun." 503 U.S. at 4
    . Prior to this beating, there was no evidence that the
    guard had been threatened with any physical injury. Indeed, while the
    state took the position that the guard's actions were not only unautho-
    rized but also isolated, the Court noted that the two guards who pun-
    ished Hudson also "beat another prisoner shortly after they finished
    with Hudson." 
    Id. at 12.
    The injuries sustained by Hudson were
    bruises, swelling, loosened teeth, and a cracked dental plate which
    was rendered unusable for several months. 
    Id. at 4.
    In urging us to find the force excessive in the case before us, Stan-
    ley argues that his injuries were similar to those presented in Hudson.
    In doing so, he overlooks the fact that the injuries in Hudson were
    inflicted deliberately to hurt, without justification, and as punishment
    for a personal disagreement between a guard and a prisoner. That con-
    text is important, indeed essential, to determining whether force is
    excessive. This becomes readily apparent when we compare the con-
    12
    text in Hudson with that in Whitley. In Whitley, the inmate was shot
    in the leg while officers were attempting to quell a major disturbance.
    While the uprising was a serious one, the Court nonetheless held that
    because the officers were seeking in good faith to establish order, the
    evidence did not support a "reliable inference of wantonness in the
    infliction of 
    pain." 475 U.S. at 322
    . Recognizing the importance of
    context, the Whitley Court explained that the shooting was part of a
    good faith effort to restore order to the prison. It therefore found the
    shooting not to violate the prohibition against cruel and unusual pun-
    ishment. 
    Id. at 326.
    For the same reasons expressed in Whitley, we hold that the force
    that the correctional officers used in this case to quell the disturbance
    in the A-Wing Segregation Tier was reasonably necessary to restore
    order and that the injury resulting from that force was not excessive.
    As an additional reason for reaching our conclusion, we hold that
    the finding that Stanley sustained a loosened tooth during the distur-
    bance is unsupported by the record. While Stanley's loosened tooth
    was a reasonably foreseeable consequence of the force necessarily
    used, that finding of injury was nevertheless inadequately supported.
    The magistrate judge found that Stanley sustained bruises of his right
    arm, left jaw, left and right wrists and back, and a loosened tooth. The
    bruises are supported by the evidence admitted at trial, including
    Stanley's medical records. When Stanley was taken for medical treat-
    ment immediately after the incident, he complained of pain about his
    mouth and arms. Moreover, the day after the disturbance, Stanley was
    seen twice, first for similar complaints plus a complaint that his flexi-
    ble handcuffs had been attached too tightly. And when a nurse visited
    Stanley later that same day, Stanley complained of pain in his leg,
    back, wrists, and right arm. But during none of these medical consul-
    tations did Stanley complain about a loosened tooth. Moreover, both
    when he filed a complaint with prison officials and when he filed his
    complaint in this case, he described events of the disturbance in sig-
    nificant detail, including the nature of his injuries, but at neither time
    did he mention a loosened tooth.
    Stanley's medical records do reveal that he had a bad tooth, about
    which he complained several months before the prison disturbance.
    Also, almost two weeks after the disturbance, he complained again
    13
    about the tooth hurting "while he is eating." The doctor found that
    Stanley had a cyst or a cystic mass in his gum, but he indicated that
    none of Stanley's teeth were loose. Finally, in April 1994, three
    months after the disturbance, Stanley had the bad tooth extracted.
    Nevertheless, at trial, Stanley attributed a loose tooth to the force
    applied at the prison disturbance. When Stanley's counsel asked
    whether Stanley had required "any other medical care or treatment as
    a direct result of what happened to you on January 6, 1994 at some
    later point on January 19, 1994," Stanley testified that he "put in for
    a dental appointment" because his teeth were"messed up" during the
    January 6 disturbance. His counsel then led Stanley with the follow-
    ing two questions, "Was the tooth loose?" and"Did it have to be
    removed?", to which Stanley replied, "Yes." None of the contempo-
    rary data nor the medical records, however, link Stanley's bad tooth
    to the incident on January 6, and we believe that the magistrate
    judge's factual finding that a tooth was loosened is inadequately sup-
    ported.
    Even with the finding of a loosened tooth, however, we find that
    bruises, swelling, and a loosened tooth sustained in a fracas that
    occurred while prison guards were trying to quell a disturbance are
    constitutionally insignificant and distinct from a loosened tooth and
    a cracked dental plate sustained in the context of punishment deliber-
    ately inflicted by guards because of a verbal argument. Cf. 
    Hudson, 503 U.S. at 4
    .
    V
    Because we find that the correctional officers did not use constitu-
    tionally excessive force in subduing Stanley and removing him from
    a prison disturbance, we do not need to consider the officers' alterna-
    tive argument that they are entitled to qualified immunity.
    For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the judgment of the district
    court.
    REVERSED
    14