Traditional BOP Complaints

Complete guide to filing disciplinary, living conditions, property, and program access complaints through the BOP Administrative Remedy Process.

What Type of Complaint Do You Have?

All of these complaints follow the same 4-step process from BP-8 to BP-11. The complaint type affects what evidence you need to gather.

Living Conditions

Overcrowding, sanitation, temperature, pest infestations, broken plumbing, mold, inadequate bedding or clothing.

Disciplinary Actions

Unfair incident reports, improper hearings, loss of good-time credits, solitary confinement, sanctions.

Property & Mail

Lost or damaged property, unauthorized confiscation, mail tampering, interference with legal mail.

Program Access

Denial of education, vocational training, religious programs, work assignments, or reentry preparation.

Documenting Living Conditions Complaints

Living conditions complaints have unique documentation requirements. The evidence you gather before filing the BP-8 can determine whether your case ever reaches federal court.

Photograph Everything

If you have access to a camera (or a family member can get photos during a visit), document the condition visually. Dated photos are powerful evidence.

Witness Statements

Ask cellmates or unit neighbors to sign written statements describing the condition. Multiple witnesses strengthen your case significantly.

Maintenance Records

Request maintenance work order records through a records request. If the institution knew about the problem and didn't fix it, that is evidence of deliberate indifference.

Medical Records

If the condition caused illness or injury, get medical records from the infirmary. Connecting the condition to a health harm greatly strengthens your complaint.

Document the Duration

Note exactly when you first noticed the condition and who you told. Duration matters — a condition that has existed for months is more serious than a recent one.

Cite BOP Standards

The BOP has specific standards for temperature, sanitation, and habitability. Citing the specific standard being violated makes your complaint harder to ignore.

Legal Standard for Living Conditions

For a living conditions complaint to reach federal court, you generally must show the condition violates the Eighth Amendment — that BOP staff knew about the condition and were deliberately indifferent to it. Documenting that you reported the problem (and it was ignored) is essential to establishing the 'deliberate indifference' element.

From BP-8 to BP-11: Step by Step

Every step must be completed in order. You cannot skip any of them, and each has its own deadline.

BP-8Step 1 — The Required First Contact

Informal Resolution — Talk to Your Counselor

1

No fixed deadline — but complete ASAP so you can file BP-9 within 20 days of the incident

Staff should respond within a few days (but often don't)

Most BP-8s are ignored entirely. Counselors are understaffed and under no real pressure to respond. Do not wait — if you hear nothing, move to BP-9 before the 20-day deadline from the incident passes. The point of this step is not to get a resolution; it is to create a documented record that you tried.

What You Need to Know

  • This is an informal verbal or written request to your unit counselor
  • No official form is required — a written note creates a better paper trail
  • Describe the problem clearly: dates, locations, people involved, what you want done
  • Keep a copy of everything you submit — counselors lose paperwork
  • If your counselor is unavailable, document that you attempted to reach them
  • For living conditions: describe the specific issue (e.g., 'mold in cell 204-B since Jan 5')

Watch Out For

  • Do NOT skip this step — courts require proof you attempted informal resolution
  • Do not assume a verbal conversation counts — get something in writing
  • The 20-day clock for the BP-9 starts from the incident, not from the BP-8 response
  • If your counselor refuses to accept the BP-8, document the refusal in writing

Helpful Tips

  1. 1Write your BP-8 the same day the incident happens — memory fades and details matter
  2. 2Use specific language: 'On January 5, 2025, at approximately 2:00 PM, in Unit C...'
  3. 3For living conditions complaints: note how long the condition has existed and who you told
  4. 4Ask for a written acknowledgment that your BP-8 was received
BP-9Step 2 — The Official Record Begins

Formal Complaint to the Warden

2

Must be filed within 20 calendar days of the incident

The Warden has 20 days to respond (can be extended by 20 more days)

Most BP-9s are denied without explanation, or never responded to at all. A non-response by the deadline is treated as a denial under BOP regulations — your clock to file the BP-10 starts the moment the Warden's response window closes. Do not wait for a response that may never come.

What You Need to Know

  • Use the official BP-9 form (BP-S229.013) — available from your counselor
  • Attach a copy of your BP-8 and any response you received
  • Submit to your unit counselor for forwarding to the Warden's office
  • You will receive a receipt with a case tracking number — keep it
  • The Warden's office logs this in SENTRY — it becomes an official BOP record
  • If no response within 20 days (+ 20-day extension), treat it as a denial and file BP-10

Watch Out For

  • The 20-day deadline from the incident is strictly enforced — missing it can end your case
  • Do NOT raise new issues in the BP-9 that weren't in the BP-8 — courts will reject them
  • Submit only one issue per BP-9 form — multiple issues on one form can be rejected
  • Keep a certified mail receipt or delivery confirmation if mailing from outside

Helpful Tips

  1. 1Reference your BP-8 case number (if you received one) in the BP-9 to link the records
  2. 2For living conditions: attach photos if possible, or describe the condition in precise detail
  3. 3State clearly what remedy you are requesting (repair, transfer, compensation, etc.)
  4. 4If the Warden doesn't respond, note the exact date the response window closed
BP-10Step 3 — Escalating Outside the Institution

Appeal to the Regional Director

3

File within 20 days of receiving the Warden's response (or after the deadline passes)

The Regional Director has 30 days to respond (can be extended by 30 more days)

Regional offices routinely take the full 60-day extended window and still deny without substantive review. Appeals are frequently returned for technical defects — missing a copy, wrong envelope size — which do not pause your deadline. If your appeal is returned, you must correct and refile immediately.

What You Need to Know

  • Use the official BP-10 form (BP-S230.013) — available from your counselor
  • Attach copies of: BP-8, BP-9, Warden's response (or proof of non-response)
  • Mail directly to the Regional Director's office — NOT through your institution
  • Use certified mail with return receipt — the BOP will claim they never received it
  • You must send the original plus one copy to the Regional office
  • Regional offices are located in Atlanta, Dallas, Kansas City, Philadelphia, and Stockton

Watch Out For

  • Do NOT mail the BP-10 through the institution's mail system — it may be intercepted or delayed
  • Technical defects (missing copies, wrong form) will get your appeal rejected — recheck everything
  • The deadline does NOT pause if your appeal is returned for a technical defect
  • Keep the certified mail tracking number — you will need it to prove timely filing

Helpful Tips

  1. 1Make 3 copies of everything before mailing — one for you, one for the Regional office, one backup
  2. 2Note the exact date you mailed the BP-10 and the certified mail tracking number in your records
  3. 3For living conditions: if the condition worsened since the BP-9, note that in the BP-10
  4. 4If the Regional office doesn't respond, calculate the exact date the 60-day window closes
BP-11Step 4 — The Last Step Before Court

Final Appeal to the Central Office

4

File within 30 days of receiving the Regional response (or after the deadline passes)

The Central Office has 40 days to respond (can be extended by 20 more days)

The Central Office denies the vast majority of BP-11 appeals. However, completing this step is not about winning here — it is about exhausting your administrative remedies so you can take your case to federal court. Once you receive a denial (or the response window closes), you have completed the process.

What You Need to Know

  • Use the official BP-11 form (BP-S231.013) — available from your counselor
  • Attach copies of ALL prior submissions and responses: BP-8, BP-9, BP-10, and all responses
  • Mail directly to: BOP Central Office, 320 First St NW, Washington DC 20534
  • Use certified mail — this is your final documented step before court
  • Once the Central Office responds (or the window closes), you have exhausted administrative remedies
  • You may now file a federal civil rights lawsuit (Bivens, § 1983, or habeas corpus)

Watch Out For

  • Do NOT skip any prior step — courts will dismiss your case if the record shows a gap
  • Keep every piece of paper from every step — you will need it all for federal court
  • The 30-day deadline from the Regional response is strictly enforced
  • A non-response from the Central Office after 40 days (+ 20 extension) counts as exhaustion

Helpful Tips

  1. 1Create a complete case file with every document in chronological order before mailing
  2. 2Include a cover letter summarizing the issue, the steps taken, and the relief requested
  3. 3For living conditions: note whether the condition was ever corrected (even partially) during the process
  4. 4After exhaustion, consult an attorney or legal aid organization about your federal court options

Ready to File Your Complaint?

Our team handles every step — from BP-8 to BP-11 — ensuring every deadline is met and every form is correct.

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