NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION
No. 124,541
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS
FREDERICK W. FRITZ IV,
Appellant,
v.
SAM CLINE, Warden,
Appellee.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Appeal from Butler District Court; JOHN E. SANDERS, judge. Opinion filed January 20, 2023.
Reversed and remanded with directions.
Kristen B. Patty, of Wichita, for appellant.
Jocilyn B. Oyler, legal counsel, of Kansas Department of Corrections, for appellee.
Before ARNOLD-BURGER, C.J., GARDNER and CLINE, JJ.
PER CURIAM: Frederick W. Fritz IV appeals from the district court's denial of his
K.S.A. 60-1501 petition challenging his confinement in administrative segregation. The
district court held that Fritz failed to properly exhaust his administrative remedies before
filing the petition because he did not appeal the administrative segregation classification
within 72 hours of the decision per Kansas Department of Corrections (KDOC) rules.
Fritz' petition, however, goes beyond challenging the initial decision to place him in
administrative segregation. He also challenges the duration of the administrative
segregation, which has been ongoing since 2017. The Kansas Supreme Court has held
that duration is a factor that courts must consider in determining whether a K.S.A. 60-
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1501 petition demonstrates a liberty interest infraction. For this reason, we must reverse
and remand the case to the district court to consider the duration of Fritz' segregation and
whether such a lengthy segregation violates his liberty interest.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Fritz filed a K.S.A. 60-1501 petition with the Butler County District Court in
October 2020. In it he challenged the decision of prison officials at El Dorado
Correctional Facility (EDCF) to place him in administrative segregation, asserting that
his transfer resulted from a vague other security risk (OSR) report that was essentially
unchallengeable because it did not specify the allegations against him. He also challenged
the duration of the segregation as excessive.
In July 2017, Fritz was ordered to spend 15 days in disciplinary segregation at
EDCF after stabbing another inmate. When he completed disciplinary segregation in
August 2017, he was served with an OSR report and placed on long-term administrative
segregation. The OSR report, included as an exhibit with Fritz' petition, stated that Fritz
was a validated member of a security threat group (STG) called the Country White Boys.
It recommended administrative segregation because of the serious nature of the battery
Fritz committed against the other inmate, the suspected STG involvement, and Fritz' use
of weapons. The report also recommended transferring Fritz to Hutchinson Correctional
Facility for long-term restrictive housing placement.
Fritz does not mention in his petition whether he took any action in the following
year to challenge the administrative segregation decision. The next exhibit in the record is
an administrative segregation review report from June 2018, which reveals that Fritz
chose not to attend any reviews between August 2017 and June 2018. Fritz claimed in his
petition that at the June 2018 hearing his unit team manager promised that he would be
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transferred back to general population if he did not incur any disciplinary reports the next
month.
Although he did not receive any disciplinary reports the next month, he was not
transferred back into the general population. Instead, at the review hearing in July 2018,
Randolph told Fritz that he would be placed in holdover and transferred to general
population at a different prison. He said Fritz could not enter general population at EDCF
because there was "a central monitor between him and an unnamed staff member
preventing him from being released at EDCF." The administrative segregation review
from July 2018 also states that Fritz needed to be transferred because he had "a staff CM
issue at EDCF." Fritz was placed on holdover status in September 2018.
Prison officials served Fritz with a new OSR report in May 2019. Fritz was still on
holdover status. Fritz also believed this OSR report was deliberately unspecific. The
report, included as an exhibit with Fritz' petition, stated that the prison's investigation
division was gathering intelligence which not only confirmed that Fritz was a member of
an STG group, but that he was directly involved in the execution and orchestration of
several acts of violence on behalf of the group. The most effective strategy for dealing
with Fritz' violence and influence, the report said, was to keep him in long-term
restrictive housing.
Fritz explained in his petition that he was dissatisfied with the OSR report because
he believed he had completed his punishment for the battery he committed. So, he began
"to regularly question his placement and the validity of the report." He raised his
concerns during segregation reviews, during "rounds," and via request forms. Despite his
attempts to get a more definite answer, Fritz remained in holdover.
In June 2020, still confined in holdover, Fritz filed a grievance with the prison
asking for clarification on why he was placed in administrative segregation. The
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grievance was denied because it raised a classification issue. He filed a separate
grievance challenging the excessive length of his holdover stay. It was denied on the
same grounds.
In his petition, Fritz argued that the vague nature of the OSR reports violated his
right to due process because he was not afforded meaningful review of his administrative
segregation status. He also argued that the vagueness of the allegations against him
violated his due process right to notice and impaired his ability to defend against the
allegations. He also asserted that the OSR reports failed to satisfy prison regulations
which required prison officials to specifically state the reason an offender is placed in
administrative segregation. Finally, Fritz asserted that the time he spent in holdover also
violated prison regulations which provided that a prisoner should not be on holdover
status for longer than reasonably necessary to accomplish a transfer to another facility.
Fritz claimed that he exhausted his administrative remedies by appealing his
grievances and the denial of a transfer request to the Secretary of Corrections. He
attached exhibits detailing his attempts to appeal to his petition.
Fritz concluded by accusing prison officials of engaging in "a disturbing level of
deliberate conniving and a concerted effort by staff at EDCF to keep [Fritz] in
segregation at all costs," even if it meant violating their own policies and Fritz'
constitutional rights. At the time he filed his petition, he claimed he had been in
administrative segregation for 784 days.
The district court summarily denied Fritz' motion in April 2021. The court held
that under KDOC's Internal Management Policy and Procedure (IMPP) 11-106A, inmates
must appeal classification decisions to the warden within 72 hours. Rather than utilize
this process, Fritz delayed nearly three years before challenging the classification. He
also improperly used the grievance procedure to appeal the classification. Under K.A.R.
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44-15-101a(d)(2), the grievance procedure may not be used to appeal a classification
decision. Accordingly, because Fritz failed to properly exhaust his administrative
remedies, the district court found it was without jurisdiction to consider Fritz' petition.
Fritz appealed and moved for reconsideration the same day. His appeal was
docketed with this court before the district court ruled on the motion for reconsideration,
which resulted in this court remanding the case for a decision on the outstanding motion.
On remand, the district court denied the motion. Now that the district court has issued a
final decision, this court can consider the merits of Fritz' appeal.
Fritz was transferred to Lansing Correctional Facility (LCF) sometime in 2021. In
his reply brief, Fritz clarified that he remains in administrative segregation at LCF, so the
appeal is not moot. See Jamerson v. Heimgartner, 304 Kan. 678, 686, 372 P.3d 1236
(2016) (noting that appeal was moot where inmate challenging confinement in
administrative segregation was no longer in administrative segregation). At the time he
filed his reply brief, he had been in administrative segregation for 1,858 days.
ANALYSIS
Fritz argues that the district court erred in summarily dismissing his petition. He
asserts that the district court construed his claim too narrowly. His appeal goes beyond a
challenge to transfer him to administrative segregation—a decision he concedes would
have needed to be appealed in 72 hours. Fritz acknowledges that no constitutionally
protected liberty interest is implicated when an inmate is transferred to a more adverse
condition of confinement. See Jamerson, 304 Kan. 678, Syl. ¶ 2 ("A mere change in the
level of an inmate's security classification within a prison does not constitute such a
deprivation of a liberty interest that it will support a legal challenge by a prisoner.").
Rather, Fritz is arguing that the duration of his confinement in administrative segregation
has infringed on his due process liberty interests.
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A prisoner may attack the terms and conditions of his or her confinement as being
unconstitutional through a petition filed under K.S.A. 60-1501. To state a claim for relief
under K.S.A. 60-1501 and avoid summary dismissal, a petition must allege "shocking
and intolerable conduct or continuing mistreatment of a constitutional stature." Johnson
v. State, 289 Kan. 642, 648, 215 P.3d 575 (2009). The petition must also show that the
inmate timely exhausted any available administrative remedies. K.S.A. 75-52,138. This
court exercises unlimited review over summary dismissals of K.S.A. 60-1501 petitions.
Johnson, 289 Kan. at 649.
Before bringing an action against the State, an inmate must exhaust his or her
administrative remedies and file proof with the K.S.A. 60-1501 petition that the
administrative remedies have been exhausted. K.S.A. 75-52,138. The KDOC regulations
set forth a grievance procedure under which inmates first raise a grievance to their unit
team, then submit the grievance to the warden, and finally appeal to the Secretary of
Corrections. K.A.R. 44-15-102. The grievance procedure cannot be used "as a substitute
for . . . the classification decision-making process." K.A.R. 44-15-101a(d)(2). The
KDOC's IMPP governs custody classification. IMPP 11-106A provides that appeal from
a custody classification can be accomplished by submitting an appeal to the warden
through the inmate's team unit counselor within 72 hours of receiving the decision.
The district court held that Fritz should have appealed the classification within 72
hours. This is accurate to the extent that Fritz is challenging the initial classification
decision. But Fritz' challenge goes beyond the initial classification decision and includes
the conditions caused by his extended confinement in administrative segregation. While
an initial classification does not implicate due process concerns, "duration of segregated
placement is a factor that courts must consider in determining whether an inmate has . . .
demonstrate[ed] a liberty interest infraction." Jamerson, 304 Kan. at 685. The Kansas
Supreme Court discussed the distinction between an initial classification and the duration
of the classification and how it implicates due process in Jamerson. Though the relevant
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portion of the Jamerson opinion is judicial dictum, it provides important guidance on the
issue and should be afforded considerable weight. 304 Kan. at 686. So we will compare
that case to the one before us.
After more than three years in administrative segregation, James Jamerson filed a
K.S.A. 60-1501 petition challenging the basis for his confinement in administrative
segregation. The district court summarily denied his petition after finding: (1) Jamerson
failed to timely exhaust his administrative remedies, (2) placement in administrative
segregation did not implicate constitutionally protected liberty interests, and (3)
classification issues were best left to prison authorities.
A panel of this court found that the district court erred in holding that Jamerson
failed to timely exhaust his administrative remedies. Jamerson followed the procedure in
K.A.R. 44-15-102 for filing inmate grievances. Jamerson v. Heimgartner, No. 110,977,
2014 WL 2871439, at *2-3 (Kan. App. 2014) (unpublished opinion), rev. granted 301
Kan. 1046 (2015). But this court affirmed the district court on other grounds, agreeing
that placement in administrative segregation alone did not implicate due process because
it did not "amount to an 'atypical and significant hardship . . . in relation to the ordinary
incidents of prison life.'" 2014 WL 2871439, at *3 (quoting Sandin v. Conner, 515 U.S.
472, 484, 115 S. Ct. 2293, 132 L. Ed. 2d 418 [1995]). The court explained that Jamerson
had "not outlined in his petition any substantially different restrictions placed on him in
segregation, let alone the deprivation of essentials for a civilized existence. Jamerson
argues only the duration of his placement—in excess of 1,000 days—as warranting
habeas corpus relief." 2014 WL 2871439, at *3. Accordingly, the court found Jamerson
failed to establish that a protected liberty interest was at stake and so no due process
violation had occurred. 2014 WL 2871439, at *3.
The Kansas Supreme Court granted Jamerson's petition for review on the sole
issue "of whether the duration of administrative segregation alone implicates an inmate's
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due process liberty interest." Jamerson, 304 Kan. at 680. The court began by
acknowledging that the issue was moot because Jamerson was no longer in administrative
segregation. It found that exceptions to the mootness rule applied because the issue was
one of statewide interest that was likely to arise again. 304 Kan. at 680. The court then
"elect[ed] to set out certain contours for evaluating claims of constitutional liberty
interests in the context of extended administrative segregation." 304 Kan. at 680.
The court began by noting that, although inmates are confined to prison, they
"retain certain constitutionally protected liberty interests whose deprivation implicates the
right to due process." 304 Kan. at 681. Though the range of protected liberty interests is
narrow, one may "arise when prison authorities impose a restraint on a prisoner's already
quite-limited freedom and the restraint is atypical and a significant hardship on the
inmate in relation to the ordinary incidents of prison life." 304 Kan. at 681 (citing Sandin,
515 U.S. 472). The court reaffirmed its previous holdings that an initial classification
decision alone does not support a claim for relief. Jamerson, 304 Kan. at 682-83. The
court clarified, however, that an inmate could still challenge the placement in
administrative segregation when the placement "encroach[ed] on protected liberty
interests." 304 Kan. at 682.
The court cited Wilkinson v. Austin, 545 U.S. 209, 125 S. Ct. 2384, 162 L. Ed. 2d
174 (2005), for its guidance on the issue of when placement in administrative segregation
may implicate a protected liberty interest. 304 Kan. at 683. The Wilkinson Court
identified three factors to consider in answering the question of "whether an institutional
assignment infringes on a protected liberty interest: the harshness of the conditions, such
as deprivation of human contact and environmental and sensory stimuli; the duration of
the confinement; and disqualification for parole consideration." 304 Kan. at 683. Based
on this case, the Jamerson court concluded that "duration is a factor to be considered in
assessing the hardship that segregated custody places on an inmate" and "an inmate may
proffer a lengthy term of segregation as evidence of hardship." 304 Kan. at 683-84.
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The court moved on to discussing federal cases that had considered claims that the
duration of administrative segregation created an unconstitutional hardship for the
inmate. 304 Kan. at 684-85. Some of those cases involved time periods even shorter than
the one in this case. In Trujillo v. Williams, 465 F.3d 1210, 1225 (10th Cir. 2006), the
court reversed the summary dismissal of a petition alleging that an inmate had been in
administrative segregation for 750 days while other inmates were placed in
administrative segregation for the most serious offenses for only 180 days. In Marion v.
Columbia Correction Institution, 559 F.3d 693, 698-99 (7th Cir. 2009), the court held
that the mere fact the inmate spent 240 days in disciplinary segregation warranted an
evidentiary hearing to determine the actual conditions of segregation and remanded the
case to the district court for further fact-finding. In Harden-Bey v. Rutter, 524 F.3d 789,
792-93 (6th Cir. 2008), the court found that a prisoner's allegation that he spent more than
three years in administrative segregation stated a cognizable due process claim and
remanded the case for the district court to assess whether the nature and duration of the
prisoner's segregation made the conditions atypical and a significant hardship on the
prisoner in relation to the ordinary incidents of prison life. These federal cases contain
several citations to other cases in which appellate courts remanded cases to the district
court for additional factual development on similar claims.
Following its review of the caselaw, the Jamerson court found that courts must
consider duration of segregated placement in determining whether an inmate has
demonstrated a liberty interest infraction. 304 Kan. at 685. This determination could not
be made on the face of Jamerson's petition alone because determining the point at which
duration is extreme enough to encroach upon a protected liberty interest "requires
specific inquiry and fact-finding by a district court to determine the specific conditions of
the administrative segregation." 304 Kan. at 685. The court identified several relevant
questions, including "the frequency of visitation, access to exercise or work programs, the
degree of supervision, and how those conditions compare with the conditions of inmates
in the general prison population." 304 Kan. at 685. When such facts are not developed
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below, the remedy is "to remand for factual findings and corrected application of the law
to those findings." 304 Kan. at 686. Had Jamerson's appeal not been mooted by his
release from administrative segregation, the court believed that additional fact-finding
"would be particularly important . . . because the record simply does not contain a factual
basis for evaluating whether the conditions of Jamerson's placement were 'atypical' and
constituted a 'significant hardship in relation to the ordinary incidents of prison life.'" 304
Kan. at 686.
The allegations here are similar to those in Jamerson. As in Jamerson, the record
is scarce and insufficient to determine whether Fritz' confinement has reached the point
where it constitutes a significant hardship relative to ordinary prison life. The Kansas
Supreme Court has said how it would rule in a case like this—it would find that summary
dismissal of the petition was erroneous and remand the case for additional fact-finding.
304 Kan. at 686. This court has followed that guidance in other cases. See Astorga v.
Leavenworth County Sheriff, No. 122,387, 2020 WL 6533282, at *7 (Kan. App. 2020)
(unpublished opinion) ("[W]e will remand to the district court for an evidentiary hearing
to develop the facts and apply the Sandin and Jamerson factors to determine whether
Astorga's administrative segregation infringes on a protected liberty interest."); Bohanon
v. Cline, No. 114,302, 2016 WL 4585091, at *3 (Kan. App. 2016) (unpublished opinion)
(same). Jamerson also aligns with federal caselaw on the subject. See Harden-Bey, 524
F.3d at 793 ("[M]ost (if not all) of our sister circuits have considered the nature of the
more-restrictive confinement and its duration in determining whether it imposes an
'atypical and significant hardship.'"); Marion, 559 F.3d at 698-99 (noting that this
proposition was "consistent with the decisions of our sister courts" and "[i]ndeed, other
courts of appeals have held that periods of confinement that approach or exceed one year
may trigger a cognizable liberty interest without any reference to conditions"). This court
should also follow Jamerson's guidance.
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Jamerson demonstrates the flaw in the district court's holding here. It distinguishes
between an initial administrative segregation classification, which must be appealed
within 72 hours and does not implicate a liberty interest, with an administrative
segregation so excessive in duration that it imposes an atypical and significant hardship
on the inmate in relation to the ordinary incidents of prison life. Fritz' challenge falls into
the latter category. Requiring such claims to be appealed to prison authorities within 72
hours of the initial classification would be unreasonable because after only 72 hours the
infringement on the inmate's liberty rights would not likely be apparent. "Exhaustion of
administrative remedies is not required when administrative remedies are inadequate or
would serve no purpose." In re Habeas Corpus Application of Pierpoint, 271 Kan. 620,
Syl. ¶ 2, 24 P.3d 128 (2001).
Fritz used the administrative remedy available to him—the grievance process. He
adhered to the procedures set forth in K.A.R. 44-15-102 by filing a grievance with his
unit team, timely appealing that grievance to the warden when he received an
unsatisfactory answer, and finally timely appealing to the Secretary of Corrections as a
final resort. It was error for the district court to dismiss Fritz' petition because he could
only challenge the duration of his administrative segregation if he had appealed the
classification within 72 hours of receiving it.
If, after examining the K.S.A. 60-1501 petition, the district court finds that the
petitioner "may be entitled to relief," the court must issue a writ of habeas corpus and
order the person to whom the writ is directed to file an answer. K.S.A. 2021 Supp. 60-
1503(a). Fritz' allegation that he has been in administrative segregation since 2017 may
entitle him to relief. Further, his period of segregation appears to be indefinite as nothing
in the record suggests when he may be released. Accordingly, the case is reversed and
remanded to the district court to issue the writ, consider the Jamerson factors, and
determine whether Fritz can establish that the State has impaired his liberty interest
without affording him due process.
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Reversed and remanded with directions.
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