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            Title Banks v. Beard

 

            Date 2005

            By

            Subject Other\Dissenting

                

 Contents

 

 

Page 1





7 of 79 DOCUMENTS


RONALD BANKS, for himself and on behalf of all similarly situated prisoners who are confined or will be confined in Long Term Segregation Units of State Prisons located in the Western Judicial District of Pennsylvania, Appellant v. JEFFREY BEARD, in his official capacity as Secretary of the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections


No. 03-1245


UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT



399 F.3d 134; 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 3287


October 22, 2003, Argued

February 25, 2005, Opinion Filed


PRIOR   HISTORY:             **1        On   Appeal   from   the United  States  District  Court  for  the  Western  District of  Pennsylvania.  District  Court  Judge:   The  Honorable Terrence F. McVerry. (D.C. No. 01-cv--1956).


DISPOSITION: Reversed and remanded.


CASE SUMMARY:



PROCEDURAL POSTURE: Appellant inmate, on be- half of himself and others similarly situated, challenged the constitutionality of the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections' (DOC) policy banning access to newspapers, magazines and photographs for Level 2 inmates. Appellee was the Secretary of the DOC. The U.S. District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania granted summary judgment to the Secretary. The inmate appealed.


OVERVIEW: The inmate was a Level 2 prisoner con- fined  in  the  Long  Term  Segregation  Unit  (LTSU)  of  a state correctional  institution.  He claimed  that the DOC policy  violated  prisoners'  free  speech  rights  under  the First  Amendment.  The  district  court  upheld  the  policy as reasonably related to legitimate penological interests. The  instant  court  concluded,  applying  the  Turner  stan- dard, that the policy could not be supported as a matter of law by the record. In Turner, the U.S. Supreme Court acknowledged that inmates' constitutional rights could in some cases be limited, and held that a prison regulation that impinged on inmates' constitutional rights was valid if reasonably related to legitimate penological interests. The reasonableness of such a regulation was assessed by weighing four factors:  (a) rational relationship to legit- imate penological interest;  (b) means for exercising the burdened right; (c) the impact accommodation of the as- serted constitutional right would have on guards and other inmates and prison resources generally, and (d) whether


there were ready alternatives to the regulation that fully accommodated the prisoners' rights at de minimis cost to valid penological interests.


OUTCOME: The summary judgment of the district court was reversed and the case was remanded for further pro- ceedings.


LexisNexis(R) Headnotes


Civil Procedure > Summary Judgment > Standards of

Review

HN1  An appellate court reviews de novo a district court's decision to grant a motion for summary judgment. In re- viewing the record, it views the evidence and any infer- ences therefrom in the light most favorable to the non- moving party, and resolves all factual conflicts in its fa- vor. It reverses the district court's decision where there are genuine issues of material fact precluding judgment as a matter of law.


Criminal                Law         &             Procedure              >              Postconviction

Proceedings > Imprisonment & Prisoner Rights

HN2  Prison walls do not form a barrier separating prison inmates  from  the  protections  of  the  U.S.  Constitution. However,  inmates'  constitutional  rights  may  in  some cases be limited,  and a prison regulation that impinges on inmates' constitutional rights is valid if it is reason- ably related to legitimate penological interests. The U.S. Supreme Court has articulated an analytical framework within which the reasonableness of such a regulation is assessed by weighing four factors. First,  there must be a  valid,  rational  connection  between  the  prison  regula- tion and the legitimate governmental interest put forward to justify it. Second,  the court must determine whether there  are  alternative  means  of  exercising  the  right  that remain  open  to  prison  inmates.  Third,  the  court  must assess  the  impact  accommodation  of  the  asserted  con-


399 F.3d 134, *; 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 3287, **1

Page 2



stitutional  right  will  have  on  guards  and  other  inmates and  prison  resources  generally.  Finally,  the  court  must consider whether there are ready alternatives to the regu- lation that fully accommodate the prisoners' rights at de minimis cost to valid penological interests. The existence of such alternatives is evidence that the regulation is an exaggerated response to prison concerns.


Criminal                Law         &             Procedure              >              Postconviction

Proceedings > Imprisonment & Prisoner Rights

HN3  Although the U.S. Supreme Court has emphasized that the judiciary is often ill equipped to deal with the in- creasingly urgent problems of prison administration and reform,  and should therefore  give significant deference to prison officials in interpreting and implementing reg- ulations,  the Court has not relinquished the policing of prison policy to prison administrators.


Criminal                Law         &             Procedure              >              Postconviction

Proceedings > Imprisonment & Prisoner Rights

HN4  Traditional deference does not mean that courts have abdicated their duty to protect those constitutional rights that a prisoner retains. If Turner is to be a meaning- ful limit on the discretion of prison administrators, its four factors must be diligently weighed by reviewing courts. Criminal          Law         &             Procedure              >              Postconviction Proceedings > Imprisonment & Prisoner Rights

HN5  Regarding the first Turner factor, unlike the gov- ernment's interest in security, the rehabilitation objective has never been defined by the U.S. Supreme Court, and its contours remain quite amorphous and ill-defined. Clearly, however, restrictive prison policies can be designed to tar- get particular behaviors for which prisoners were incar- cerated, or those that arose and presented security risks during incarceration.


Criminal                Law         &             Procedure              >              Postconviction

Proceedings > Imprisonment & Prisoner Rights

HN6  Deterrence of future infractions of prison rules is a legitimate penological interest.


Criminal                Law         &             Procedure              >              Postconviction

Proceedings > Imprisonment & Prisoner Rights

HN7  In the Fifth and Eighth Circuits, temporary restric- tions on prisoners' receipt of certain mail and subscription publications in disciplinary segregation have been upheld. Those courts held that such restrictions made disciplinary segregation less endurable and therefore discouraged in- mates from the rule infractions that would lead to such segregation.


Criminal                Law         &             Procedure              >              Postconviction

Proceedings > Imprisonment & Prisoner Rights

HN8  Deterrence of future infractions of prison rules can be an appropriate justification for temporarily restricting the rights of inmates.




Criminal                Law         &             Procedure              >              Postconviction

Proceedings > Imprisonment & Prisoner Rights

HN9  Under the second Turner factor, courts are asked to focus on the burden that the regulation imposes on an inmate's ability to engage in constitutionally protected ac- tivity.  If other avenues are open for the inmate to exercise the right in question, courts should exhibit deference to the  judgment  of  corrections  officials,  while  if  no  other avenues are available, the inmate's right is given greater weight in the Turner balancing process.


Criminal                Law         &             Procedure              >              Postconviction

Proceedings > Imprisonment & Prisoner Rights

HN10  Under the third and fourth Turner factors, courts must determine whether the right in question can be ac- commodated without significant negative consequences in terms of efficiency and security, and whether the prison can easily serve its interests with alternative means with- out  infringing  upon  the  rights  of  prisoners.  The  U.S. Supreme Court has suggested that the existence of obvi- ous, easy alternatives may be evidence that the regulation is not reasonable, but is an exaggerated response to prison concerns.


Criminal                Law         &             Procedure              >              Postconviction

Proceedings > Imprisonment & Prisoner Rights

HN11  When accommodation of an asserted right will have a significant "ripple effect" on fellow inmates or on prison staff,  courts should be particularly deferential to the informed discretion of corrections officials. Constitutional   Law   >   Fundamental   Freedoms   > Freedom of Speech > Scope of Freedom

Criminal                Law         &             Procedure              >              Postconviction

Proceedings > Imprisonment & Prisoner Rights

HN12  Volume control is a well-recognized alternative to the blanket exclusion of items protected by the First Amendment.


Criminal                Law         &             Procedure              >              Postconviction

Proceedings > Imprisonment & Prisoner Rights

HN13  The Turner factors are evaluated independently. COUNSEL: JERE KRAKOFF (Argued), Pittsburgh, PA, Counsel for Appellants.


D.  MICHAEL  FISHER,  Attorney  General,   KEMAL ALEXANDER   MERICLI   (Argued),   Senior   Deputy Attorney General, CALVIN R. KOONS, Senior Deputy Attorney General, JOHN G. KNORR III, Chief Deputy Attorney General, Appellate Litigation Section, Office of Attorney General, Pittsburgh, PA, Counsel for Appellee.


JUDGES: Before:  ALITO, FUENTES, and ROSENN, Circuit Judges. ALITO, Circuit Judge, dissenting.


399 F.3d 134, *; 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 3287, **1

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OPINIONBY: FUENTES


OPINION:


*136   OPINION OF THE COURT


FUENTES, Circuit Judge


Ronald  Banks,  on  behalf  of  himself  and  all  other Level 2 prisoners confined in the Long Term Segregation Unit  ("LTSU")  of  the  State  Correctional  Institution  at Pittsburgh  ("SCI  Pittsburgh"),  challenges  the  constitu- tionality of the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections'



("DOC") policy banning access to newspapers, magazines and photographs for Level 2 inmates, arguing that the pol- icy violates the prisoners' free **2   speech rights under the First Amendment.


The District Court granted summary judgment to the defendant and upheld the policy as reasonably related to legitimate penological interests. We disagree and there- fore will reverse.


I. Factual and Procedural Background


The LTSU was established at SCI Pittsburgh in April

2000 as a place to confine a


399 F.3d 134, *137; 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 3287, **2

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*137    small population of inmates n1 which the DOC views, because of their history of behavior in prison, as too disruptive, violent or problematic to house elsewhere. n2 Inmates are classified at "Level 2" when admitted to the Unit, must remain there a minimum of 90 days, and may remain at Level 2 indefinitely. The length of time a  prisoner  may  spend  in  the  LTSU  is  open-ended  and subject to the discretion of prison personnel.


n1 The maximum population in the LTSU is 40.

(App.  92)  Deposition  testimony  in  this  case  dis- closes that,  during the relevant period,  the LTSU population was comprised of 36 Level 2 and three Level 1 inmates. (App. 93)


n2 The relevant DOC regulations state:  "Any inmate who is, has or may be planning to engage in the following activities may be appropriate for assignment in the LTSU: (1) inmates who fail to complete  SMU   Special  Management  Unit ;  (2) serious escape history; (3) assaultive behavior with the intent to cause death or serious bodily injury; (4) injury to staff and/or inmates; (5) engaging in facil- ity disturbance(s); (6) recorded history of exerting negative influence in facility activities; (7) Security Threat  Group  (STG)  member  or  other  unautho- rized organization(s); (8) Perpetuated criminal ac- tivity that threatens the community;  (9) a history of  being  a  sexual  predator;  and/or  (10)  possess- ing weapons and/or implements of escape." 6.5.1

Administration of Security Level 5 Housing Units

Procedure Manual at 1-16.


**3


Department policy prohibits Level 2 prisoners from receiving newspapers or magazines directly from the pub- lisher, from the prison library, or from any other source for the duration of their confinement at Level 2 status unless the publication is religious or legal in nature. Individual articles clipped from publications are prohibited, unless they relate to the inmate or his family. Also prohibited is



the possession or receipt of photographs of spouses, other family members, or friends.


Other DOC rules which govern life at LTSU Level 2 prohibit inmates from having radios or televisions, per- mit phone calls only in emergencies or when related to inmates' legal representation,  limit inmates to one visit with  an  immediate  family  member  per  month,  and  re- quire inmates to remain in their cells 23 hours a day, one inmate to a cell. Inmates are permitted, however, religious or legal publications and paperback books that can be or- dered from the prison library. To review legal materials, one LTSU inmate at a time may be let out of his cell and is escorted from it to a "mini law library" in hand and leg irons by two corrections officers. (App. 11)


The  policy  challenged  here  is  unique  in  the   **4  state prison system, even among other segregated inmates. Level  1  LTSU  inmates  are  permitted  one  subscription newspaper  in  their  cells  which  can  be  exchanged  on  a one-for--one basis and are also permitted five subscrip- tion magazines at any given time. n3 Department policy also  authorizes  Special  Management  Unit  ("SMU")  in- mates (another class of segregated inmates identified as being among the most difficult inmates in the system) to have various numbers of subscription newspapers, mag- azines and photographs in their cells, depending on their classification  level.  (App.  77)  Similarly,  dangerous  in- mates  who  are  segregated  in  the  Department's  regular Restrictive Housing Unit on Administrative Custody sta- tus  for  security  reasons  are  permitted  one  subscription newspaper  in  their  cells  which  can  be  exchanged  on  a one-for--one basis, as well as subscription magazines and up to 10 photographs.


n3  The  photograph  prohibition,  however,  re- mains unchanged.



Deputy Superintendent Joel Dickson, who supervises the LTSU, testified **5   in his deposition that the pro- hibition serves several penological purposes, which were reiterated


399 F.3d 134, *138; 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 3287, **5

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*138   by the defendant in its briefs. First, and empha- sized by Dickson as most important, is behavior modifi- cation and rehabilitation. Dickson explained that in Level

2,  inmates  are  deprived  of  certain  privileges  to  create an incentive to comply with prison rules and thereby be removed to Level 1 and eventually to the general  pop- ulation.  Among  Level  1  inmates,  the  prospect  of  hav- ing the privileges denied discourages backsliding. Also, Dickson explained that as inmates improve their behavior to earn privileges,  they become better integrated mem- bers of prison society or, if released, better members of free society and "more productive citizen s ." (App. 111) Second, the less material Level 2 prisoners have in their cells, the easier it is for correctional offices to detect con- cealed contraband and provide security. Third, newspa- pers and magazines can be rolled up and used as blow guns or spears, can fuel cell fires, or can be used as crude tools to catapult feces at the guards.


Plaintiff Ronald Banks filed the Complaint in this ac- tion on October 18, 2001. Seeking equitable and declara- tory relief,   **6   the Complaint challenged the constitu- tionality of the DOC policy that denies Level 2 inmates access to newspapers, magazines and photographs of fam- ily members and friends. The inmates argued that, under Turner v. Safley, 482 U.S. 78, 96 L. Ed. 2d 64, 107 S. Ct.

2254 (1987), the policy offends their right to free speech either because it bears no rational connection to any legit- imate penological interest or because it is an exaggerated response to such an interest. A motion for class certifi- cation was filed and granted on March 22,  2002. After discovery was completed, the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment in September of 2002.


On  November  15,  2002,  Magistrate  Judge  Robert Mitchell  recommended  granting  summary  judgment  to the DOC. The recommendation reasoned that the Turner



factors weighed in the DOC's favor and that the policy was  rationally  related  to,  and  furthered  the  legitimate penological  interests  of,  institutional  security  and  pris- oner rehabilitation. Despite Banks' objections, on January

10, 2003 the magistrate's recommendation and reasoning were adopted by order of the District Court.


The  District  Court  reasoned  first  that  the  policy  is

**7    not an impermissible First Amendment violation because it is rationally related to the legitimate and inter- related penological interests in rehabilitation and security. It encourages compliance with prison rules and deprives especially incorrigible prisoners of material from which they can fashion crude weapons or feed cell fires.


Second, the District Court held that the policy is not an exaggerated response to the stated penological concerns. The court agreed with the DOC that inmates can mean- ingfully exercise the burdened First Amendment rights by qualifying with good


behavior for promotion to Level 1 or by corresponding with family and friends. Furthermore, given the particular intractability of Level 2 inmates, any further accommo- dation of their rights would impose costs that cannot be characterized as only de minimus. n4 Banks timely ap- pealed the District Court's grant of summary judgment.


n4 Here, the DOC asserts the existence of the

"ripple effect," cited in Turner,  as a magnifier of cost in the prison environment.  482 U.S. at 90.


**8


II. Jurisdiction and Standard of Review


The District Court had original jurisdiction over the action pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1343 because the claim asserts a violation


399 F.3d 134, *139; 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 3287, **8

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*139   of the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. This Court has appellate jurisdiction over the order of the District  Court  granting  summary  judgment  pursuant  to

28 U.S.C. § 1291. HN1  We review de novo the District Court's decision to grant the DOC's motion for summary judgment. See  Sutton v. Rasheed, 323 F.3d 236, 248 (3d Cir. 2003). In reviewing the record, we view the evidence and any inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, and resolve all factual conflicts in its favor. We reverse the District Court's decision where there are genuine issues of material fact precluding judg- ment as a matter of law. See  Suders v. Easton, 325 F.3d

432, 440 (3d Cir. 2003).


III. Discussion


A. The Turner Standard


We have repeatedly echoed the Supreme Court's ad- monition  that   HN2   "prison  walls  do  not  form  a  bar- rier separating prison inmates from the protections of the Constitution."   **9   Ramirez v. Pugh, 379 F.3d 122, 126

(3d Cir. 2004);  Fraise v. Terhune, 283 F.3d 506, 515 (3d Cir. 2002) (quoting   Turner, 482 U.S. at 84). In Turner, the Supreme Court acknowledged, however, that inmates' constitutional rights may in some cases be limited, and held  that  a  prison  regulation  that  impinges  on  inmates' constitutional rights "is valid if it is reasonably related to legitimate penological interests."  482 U.S. at 89. n5


N5  Neither  party  contests  that  inmates  have a  First  Amendment  right  to  receive  magazines and  newspapers  through  the  mail.  See    Allen  v. Coughlin, 64 F.3d 77, 79 (2d Cir. 1995);  Sizemore




v. Williford, 829 F.2d 608, 610 (7th Cir.1987).



The Supreme Court articulated an analytical frame- work  within  which  the  reasonableness  of  such  a  regu- lation is assessed by weighing four factors. First,  there must be a "valid, rational connection between the prison regulation  and  the  legitimate  governmental   **10    in- terest put forward to justify it."   Turner, 482 U.S. at 89

(quotations omitted). Second,  the court must determine

"whether  there  are  alternative  means  of  exercising  the right that remain open to prison inmates." Id. at 90. Third, the court must assess "the impact accommodation of the asserted constitutional right will have on guards and other inmates" and prison resources generally. Id. Finally, the court must consider whether there are "ready alternatives" to the regulation that "fully accommodate the prisoners' rights at de minimus cost to valid penological interests." Id.  at  90-91.  The  existence  of  such  alternatives  is  evi- dence that the regulation is an "exaggerated response to prison concerns."  Id. at 90 (quotations omitted).


HN3  Although the Supreme Court emphasized that the judiciary is often "ill equipped to deal with the in- creasingly urgent problems of prison administration and reform," and should therefore give significant deference to prison officials in interpreting and implementing reg- ulations, n6 the Court was not relinquishing the policing of prison policy to prison administrators.   **11    Id. at

84 (quoting   Procunier v. Martinez, 416 U.S. 396, 405,

40 L. Ed. 2d 224, 94 S. Ct. 1800 (1974)). To the contrary, in Turner, while the Supreme Court upheld a rule barring inmate-to--inmate correspondence as reasonably related to legitimate security interests, it


399 F.3d 134, *140; 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 3287, **11

Page 7



*140    also struck down an inmate marriage restriction as an "exaggerated response to petitioners' rehabilitation and security concerns."  Turner, 482 U.S. at 91. The Court held that the rule "sweeps much more broadly" than can be explained by the stated objectives and therefore failed the reasonable relationship test.  Turner, 482 U.S. at 98.


n6 As the District Court correctly pointed out, Fraise  also  asserted  that  particular  deference  to prison  authorities  is  especially  appropriate  when a regulation implicates prison security.  283 F.3d at

516.



As the Eleventh Circuit has aptly noted, HN4  "tradi- tional deference does not mean that courts have abdicated their duty to **12  protect those constitutional rights that a prisoner retains."   Fortner v. Thomas, 983 F.2d 1024,

1029 (11th Cir. 1993) (citations omitted). If Turner is to be a meaningful limit on the discretion of prison admin- istrators, its four factors must be diligently weighed by reviewing courts.



B. Factor One: Rational relationship to legit- imate penological interest


Banks argues that the connection between the policy and the valid penological objectives cited as its justifica- tion is too attenuated to be rational.


1. Rehabilitation


HN5   Unlike  the  government's  interest  in  security, the rehabilitation objective has never been defined by the Supreme Court, and its contours remain "quite amorphous and ill-defined." Ramirez, 379 F.3d at 128 (citing Amatel v. Reno, 332 U.S. App. D.C. 191, 156 F.3d 192, 209 (D.C. Cir. 1998) (Wald, J., dissenting)). Clearly, however, re- strictive prison policies can be designed to target partic- ular behaviors for which prisoners were incarcerated, or those that arose and presented security risks during incar- ceration. n7 Id.



n7  In  Waterman  v.  Farmer,  for  example,  this Court upheld a prison regulation, justified as reha- bilitative, which restricted sex offenders' access to pornographic materials.  183 F.3d 208, 215 (3d Cir.

1999). Prison authorities submitted affidavits from two psychologists who testified that pornographic materials threatened to thwart the effectiveness of the treatment given to sex offenders, and therefore that limiting access to such material was a sensible rehabilitation strategy.


**13


The  District  Court  essentially  determined  that  (1) withholding  privileges  to  get  compliance  is  a  sensible policy,  and (2) denying all other privileges short of ac- cess to publications and photographs had proven in the past not to be a sufficient incentive for behavior modi- fication because, if it had been, inmates would not have been transferred to LTSU Level 2. Therefore, the District Court found that denying publications and photographs was a rational next step.


Certainly, HN6  "deterrence of future infractions of prison  rules"  is  a  legitimate  penological  interest.  See Gregory  v.  Auger,  768  F.2d  287,  290  (8th  Cir.  1985); Daigre v. Maggio, 719 F.2d 1310, 1313 (5th Cir. 1983).

HN7  In the Fifth and Eighth Circuits, temporary restric- tions on prisoners' receipt of certain mail and subscription publications in disciplinary segregation have been upheld following exactly the logic advanced by the DOC here. Those courts held that such restrictions made disciplinary segregation less endurable and therefore discouraged in- mates from the rule infractions that would lead to such segregation. See also   **14              Guajardo v. Estelle, 568

F. Supp. 1354, 1366 (D.C. Tex. 1983) (permitting inmates in solitary confinement access to books, magazines and newspapers may "water down the conditions in solitary and would make the threat of solitary confinement mean- ingless") (internal quotations omitted).


Although we agree that HN8  deterrence of future in- fractions of prison rules can be an appropriate justification for temporarily


399 F.3d 134, *141; 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 3287, **14

Page 8



*141    restricting the rights of inmates, we cannot say that the DOC has shown how the regulations in this case serve such a purpose. We recognize how such a rule could be reasonably related to a penological interest in rehabil- itation  in  "disciplinary  segregation"  where  inmates  are placed for "specific rule infraction s " and for limited and specific periods, but this is not such a case.  Spellman v. Hopper, 95 F. Supp. 2d 1267, 1281 (M.D. Ala. 1999). Although  the  DOC  asserts  that  LTSU  is  a  "disci- plinary"  status,  the  LTSU  Level  2  is  a  unique  kind  of segregation with characteristics of both disciplinary and administrative  segregation.  Inmates  come  to  LTSU  be- cause of "unacceptable behaviors" in other institutions, but they have not all been adjudicated **15   by a hear- ing officer to have violated the DOC's rules. (App. 95) The  LTSU  is  not  a  place  where  inmates  are  sent  for  a discrete period of punishment, pursuant to a specific in- fraction, but is a place for "Long Term segregation of the most incorrigible and difficult prisoners as long as they

fall under that umbrella.


All LTSU inmates must spend 90 days at Level 2 sta- tus  when  they  first  arrive,  and  although  their  behavior will be reviewed every 30 days to determine whether they deserve promotion to Level 1, that determination is en- tirely within the discretion of prison administrators and is not linked to any particular infraction or compliance. While disciplinary segregation ordinarily has a specified duration, inmates may remain in Level 2 and under the publication ban indefinitely. n8 In fact,  several inmates have remained in Level 2 since the LTSU's inception two years  ago.  As  administered,  it  is  unclear  how  the  pol- icy  would  achieve  the  deterrence  it  seeks.  Not  only  is the rehabilitation justification illogical given the nature of LTSU confinement, but LTSU Level 2 is a far cry from the disciplinary contexts in which such bans have been deemed constitutional.



n8 In fact,  disciplinary  segregation is usually quite short in duration. In Daigre, after addressing a guard profanely, Daigre was put in "administra- tive and punitive lockdown" for "a maximum of 10 days' isolation" pursuant to a finding of "defiance."

719 F.2d at 1311. In Gregory, the challenged policy was in place for inmates on Disciplinary Detention Status,  which carried with it a 60-day maximum duration.  768 F.2d at 290. In Guajardo, the court was evaluating a publication ban in place in solitary confinement, a type of punitive segregation used as a  sanction  for  violation  of  Texas  Department  of Corrections rules and regulations. An inmate could be confined in solitary for a maximum of 15 days, and an interval of at least three days was required between terms in solitary,  during which time the inmate could have access to any publications with- held during the term.  568 F. Supp. at 1366.


**16


Furthermore, the DOC has offered no evidence that the rule achieves or could achieve its stated rehabilitative purpose. In Waterman, the DOC submitted affidavits from two psychologists who testified that pornographic materi- als threatened to thwart the effectiveness of the treatment given to sex offenders and who agreed that limiting access to such material was a sensible rehabilitation strategy. 183

F.3d at 215. In Guajardo, the defendants offered evidence as  to the  frequency and  percentage  of  solitary  confine- ments in the Texas Department of Corrections ("TDC") which showed that the negative perception of solitary con- finement had a deterrent effect.  568 F. Supp. at 1368 ("a significant majority of TDC inmates have never experi- enced  solitary  confinement  and  less  than  half  of  those who are confined in solitary return a second time"). Here, there are no such supporting affidavits. The District Court presumably relied on Superintendent Dickson's testimony that the prohibition


399 F.3d 134, *142; 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 3287, **16

Page 9



*142  in question "gives us a means or method to say you comply, you modify your behavior, and you can obtain these things,  these privileges," and his explanation that

"we're very **17   limited . . . in what we can and can- not deny or give to an inmate, and these are some of the items that we feel are legitimate as incentives for inmate growth."  (App.  110)  The  District  Court  did  not  exam- ine the fit between the policy and its rehabilitative goals, whether  the  ban  was  implemented  in  a  way  that  could modify behavior, or inquire into whether the DOC's de- privation theory of behavior modification had any basis in real human psychology, or had proven effective with LTSU inmates. At oral argument, counsel for the DOC said it was a "hope." In fact, Banks argues that contrary to the assertions of the prison authorities and the District Court, isolating prisoners from the goings-on in the out- side world tends to undercut any genuine rehabilitation. There is, again, no evidence in the record on this point, but Banks cites to language in several cases to support this assertion. n9 It certainly seems relevant to the above inquiry, as well as likely, that the ban may produce less rather than more compliance in at least some inmates. n10


n9  Rehabilitative  goals  are  "furthered  by  ef- forts  to  inform  and  educate  inmates,  and  foster their involvement in the world outside the prison gates."   Abdul  Wali  v.  Coughlin,  754  F.2d  1015,

1034 (2d Cir. 1985). In Spellman v. Hopper, there was testimony that deprivation of reading materials in  segregation  can  cause  "psychological  deterio- ration" which in turn can cause inmates either to be "very withdrawn and curl up in infancy, or to  become acting out and aggressive people."   95 F. Supp. 2d at 1281; see also  Morrison v. Hall, 261

F.3d  896,  904  n.7  (9th  Cir.  2001)  (citing  studies and articles noting the "correlation between read- ing, writing and inmate rehabilitation").

**18



n10 Our dissenting colleague contends that we misapply  the  first  Turner  factor  by  requiring  the DOC  to  show  some  evidence  to  support  its  con- tention that the rule achieves or could achieve its stated  rehabilitative  purpose.  However,  our  insis- tence that the DOC offer some evidence is not, in our view, at odds with Turner but rather a comple- mentary part of the analysis in determining whether an asserted goal is logically connected to the prison regulation.  See    Turner,  482  U.S.  at  89  (requir- ing prison authorities to put forward a legitimate governmental  interest  justifying  the  regulation). Indeed, in Turner, the Supreme Court evaluated the evidence in determining whether the prison rules in question served -  in theory or in practice -  the alleged penological goals. See   id. at 91-93,  98-

99. In our view, the paucity of any such evidence in this matter reinforces the conclusion that there is no valid, rational connection between the DOC rule and its stated rehabilitative purpose.



2. Security


With respect to security, the District Court held **19  that there was a valid rational connection between the ban on periodicals and photographs in LTSU Level 2 and the constellation of security concerns put forth by the DOC. We cannot conclude from the record that such a connec- tion exists. This is so for two reasons.


First, there is no evidence in the record of the misuse of periodicals or photographs in any of the ways described by the DOC. In fact, matches are not allowed in the LTSU. See also  Gregory, 768 F.2d at 289 ("cellblock fires have been eliminated entirely . . . by new regulations prohibit- ing  inmates  from  possessing  matches").  There  was  no testimony as to the frequency of fires in the LTSU, nor testimony about any particular fires,  in or out of LTSU segregation, and how and with what materials they were set and fueled. n11 The


399 F.3d 134, *143; 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 3287, **19

Page 10



*143    same  is  true  for  the  materials'  potential  use  as weapons.


n11 Superintendent Dickson testified only that within the last six months there were "no more than two or three" cell fires in the entirety of the LTSU, and "paper products generally are the way it's first ignited." He also testified that he did not know of any instance where a LTSU Level 1 inmate used a newspaper or magazine to start or fuel a fire. (App.

112)


**20


Furthermore, there was no testimony as to the effect such  a  ban  has  had  on  the  frequency  of  fires,  be  it  in the  LTSU  or  elsewhere.  In  fact,  Banks  points  out  that inmates on Death Row, in Administrative Custody, and in the Special Management Unit are routinely permitted to have these items, and the DOC presented no evidence that the security or operations of these units are negatively affected to any palpable degree by the presence of these items.


The District Court dismissed this argument, agreeing with the DOC that a comparison to other forms of segre- gation within the Pennsylvania DOC is irrelevant because LTSU inmates are the "worst of the worst." However, there is no evidence before us to indicate that what sets these inmates apart from the rest is their misuse of non-legal or non-religious periodicals. The District Court's conclu- sion that "the fact that other segregated inmates have not created the same security concerns while in possession of newspapers and magazines is one reason they are in those units and not in the LTSU" is an inference that finds no support in the record. In fact, there is no indication in the record that any LTSU inmates were transferred there because **21   they had created a security risk with pe- riodicals or photographs. The LTSU inmates are certainly and unquestionably incorrigible, but whether their incor- rigibility takes the form described by the District Court is an open question which cannot be resolved at the sum-




mary judgment stage by making inferences in favor of the

DOC and without support in the record.


Second, we agree with Banks that given the materials Level 2 inmates are permitted in their cells, prohibiting a single newspaper or magazine has no significant relation- ship to the stated security objectives. There are many other non-prohibited means for the inmates to fuel fires, hurl waste,  conceal  contraband  and  create  weapons.  Under current  regulations,  each  inmate  is  given  a  jumpsuit,  a blanket, two bedsheets, a pillow case, a roll of toilet paper, a copy of a prison handbook, ten sheets of writing paper, several envelopes, carbon paper, three pairs of socks, three undershorts and three undershirts, and may at any point also have religious newspapers, legal periodicals, a prison library book, Bibles, and a lunch tray with a plate and a cup. Many of these items are flammable, could be used for the above purposes as effectively **22   as a newspaper, magazine or photograph, and have been so used by LTSU Level 2 inmates. n12 The District Court again agreed with the DOC that the prohibition may not eliminate but cer- tainly reduces the security risks with which the DOC is concerned, and that it is irrelevant that the policy does not absolutely prevent the harms it addresses because Turner is  not  a  "least-restrictive-alternative"  test.   Fraise,  283

F.3d at 520;  Waterman, 183 F.3d at 219.


n12 In his deposition, Superintendent Dickson testified not only that under the challenged policy there have still been cell fires and rashes of feces- flinging in LTSU level 2, but also that inmates can and do use other permitted materials to create these disturbances:   "Oftentimes  it's  with  the  cups  that they're given for their drinks, things like that . . . a piece of paper or whatever . . . that they can use to give a little leverage and fling the materials." (App.

112)



**23   Although the District Court is correct that the policy need not be narrowly tailored to the harm it ad- dresses to pass constitutional muster, its conclusion here


399 F.3d 134, *144; 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 3287, **23

Page 11




*144    has some flaws. Even if the policy need not be

"narrowly tailored" to the stated interests, if the prohibi- tion of newspapers, magazines and photographs has only a minimal effect on security in the LTSU because of the other materials that they are permitted in the cells, the re- lationship between the policy and the penological interest may be too attenuated to be reasonable. n13 It is important to note here that the inmates are not requesting unlimited access  to  innumerable  periodicals  but for  the  ability  to have one newspaper or magazine and some small num- ber of photographs in their cells at one time. We fail to see how the DOC could have reasonably thought that the challenged  policy,  which  permits  an  inmate  to  have  in his cell 10 sheets of writing paper and one records center box full of legal or religious periodicals or texts, would meaningfully improve prison security by forbidding him one copy of the Graterfriends prison newsletter. n14


n13  See   Spellman,  95  F.  Supp.  2d  at  1278;

Jackson v. Elrod, 671 F. Supp. 1508, 1511 (N.D. Ill.

1987) aff'd,  881 F.2d 441 (7th Cir. 1989) (admis- sion that hardcover books are no greater a risk to conceal contraband than, for example, clothing, pa- perbacks, mattresses and light fixtures, "disproves defendant's assertion of a rational connection be- tween their hardcover book ban and a governmental interest");  Mann v. Smith, 796 F.2d 79, 82-83 (5th Cir. 1986) (ban on newspapers and magazines rep- resents exaggerated response to legitimate need to preserve discipline and maintain security); Kincaid v. Rusk, 670 F.2d 737, 744 (7th Cir. 1982) (total ban on newspapers unjustifiable when hazards of news- paper possession could as well be caused by reading material detainees were permitted to have);  Payne v. Whitmore, 325 F. Supp. 1191, 1193 (N.D. Cal.

1971) ("Jail cells are already filled with an abun- dance of materials quite suitable for fire starting . .

.; yet no one suggests that cells ought to be stripped of bedding, clothing, toilet paper, writing materials, and so on.").

**24



n14   In   a   memo   dated   February   8,   2001, and distributed to LTSU inmates,  Superintendent



Dickson stated that the publication Graterfriends is a newsletter, not legal mail, and therefore denied to Level 2 inmates. Graterfriends is a Pennsylvania- based newsletter published under the auspices of The Pennsylvania Prison Society to which prison- ers contribute and which is distributed to prisoners and other members of the corrections community.



The District Court asserted that the prohibited materi- als are "more likely" to be used to create a security concern and are "most easily and commonly used as weapons or to set fires and fling feces" than religious or legal mate- rials,  and therefore the link between the policy and the stated interest is more than tenuous. (App. 125) However, nowhere in Dickson's affidavit does he describe specific incidents where the prohibited materials were used in any manner posing a security risk by LTSU inmates before or after they were transferred to LTSU. He articulates his belief that periodicals are more well-suited to create par- ticular weapons, but admits that **25   the items already in inmates' cells certainly could and have been used to fuel fires, hid contraband, fling feces and create weapons.

(App. 112)


C.  Factor  two:   Means  for  exercising  the  burdened right


HN9  Under this factor, we are asked to "focus on the burden that the regulation imposes on an inmate's ability to engage in constitutionally protected activity."  DeHart v. Horn, 227 F.3d 47, 53 (3d Cir. 2000) (en banc). If other avenues are open for the inmate to exercise the right in question, the court should exhibit deference to the judg- ment of corrections officials,  while if no other avenues are available, the inmate's right is given greater weight in the Turner balancing process. Id. n15


n15 Although this inquiry depends in part on how the scope of the constitutional right is defined, neither the parties nor the District Court define the right in question, nor does the District Court's anal- ysis  depend  on  a  particular  understanding  of  the rights in question.


399 F.3d 134, *145; 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 3287, **25

Page 12



*145   Banks argues that while **26   Level 2 inmates can read leisure books, they have no meaningful access to current news accounts or published information about cur- rent political, social, or other public events and activities occurring outside the prison walls, and they have no way to look at images of loved ones and friends apart from the possibility of infrequent visits. The District Court, how- ever, disagreeing with Banks, found that inmates had suf- ficient means to engage in the constitutionally-protected activities.


The District Court characterized the periodicals ban as "not a blanket prohibition" because Level 2 inmates can qualify by good conduct to be promoted to LTSU Level

1. The District Court's justification for this determination is  its  explanation  that  "each  of  these  prisoners  has  the option of modifying his behavior and being promoted to a less restricted environment where access to newspapers magazines and photographs may be enjoyed." (App. 126) As the DOC elaborated in its brief, "there is no reason to suppose that a prison administration would not respond favorably to a prisoner's initiative to qualify for relief from the ban on periodicals or photos through exhibiting good behavior."


The District **27   Court and the DOC are correct in noting that inmates can be promoted from Level 2 to Level

1 and, if they are, they will gain access to the prohibited materials. However, that does not change the fact that the prohibition is indeed a "blanket" one, and that as long as an inmate is at Level 2 status and is subject to the policy in question, he has no alternative means to exercise his First Amendment right of access to a reasonable amount of newspapers, magazines, and photographs.


Moreover, there is no reason to infer that the process



of "promotion" from Level 2 to Level 1 is as much under the inmates' control as the DOC and the District Court characterize it. As noted above, segregation in Level 2 is not linked to a particular infraction, and is of potentially unlimited duration. Any inmate who enters LTSU will re- main at Level 2 for 90 days no matter how he modifies his behavior. Furthermore, the only information in the record as to how the process works is the following explanation from Dickson's deposition:


You know, you have the ability through your own actions to be promoted, if you will, from a level 2 inmate to a level 1 inmate, and we do that every day. We have a system **28  where  the  unit  management  team  reviews each inmate's progress every thirty days. The unit management team is made up of the unit manager, custody staff, psych staff, nursing staff. And we try to give and provide every in- mate every opportunity to progress through this  system  and  to  be  able  to  obtain  these privileges. (App. 110)


There  are  no  affidavits  in  the  record  from  any  of those decision-makers mentioned by Dickson, nor is there any  documentation  of  the  review  process.  Although  at Dickson's deposition, Banks' attorney apparently exam- ined and requested some documents which indicated, with respect to current LTSU inmates, how long they had been at  the  facility  and  how  long  they  had  been  at  Level  2, those documents are also not in the record. Again,  un- like the policies in solitary and disciplinary confinement examined in Daigre,  Gregory,  and Guajarde,  the LTSU prohibition  cannot  be  characterized  as  merely  a  "time, place or manner"


399 F.3d 134, *146; 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 3287, **28

Page 13




*146    restriction. See, e.g.,   Gregory, 768 F.2d at 290

(" the policy is  not directed at what mail an inmate could receive, but only at when he could receive it").


D. Factors Three and Four: Accommodation


**29   We now consider the District Court's analysis of Turner's third and fourth factors. HN10  Under these factors, we must determine whether the right in question can be accommodated without significant negative conse- quences in terms of efficiency and security,  DeHart, 227

F.3d at 58, and "whether the prison can easily serve its interests with alternative means without infringing upon the rights of prisoners,"   Crofton v. Roe, 170 F.3d 957,

959 (9th Cir. 1999). The Supreme Court has suggested that the "existence of obvious, easy alternatives may be evidence that the regulation is not reasonable, but is an exaggerated response to prison concerns."  Thornburgh v. Abbott, 490 U.S. 401, 418, 104 L. Ed. 2d 459, 109 S. Ct.

1874 (1989) (citation and quotations omitted).


In Fraise, inmates challenged a policy which autho- rized  prison  authorities  to  designate  and  transfer  core members  of  "Security  Threat  Groups"  as  violative  of the First Amendment's Free Exercise Clause, as well as the Equal Protection and Due Process Clauses. n16 The Court determined that the third prong weighed in favor of the DOC and, quoting Turner, stated that   **30   HN11

"when  accommodation  of an asserted  right  will  have a significant 'ripple effect' on fellow inmates or on prison staff, courts should be particularly deferential to the in- formed discretion of corrections officials."   Fraise, 283

F.3d at 520 (quoting Turner, 482 U.S. at 90). It is certainly supported by the record, as the District Court repeatedly asserted, that the LTSU Level 2 inmates are some of the most "intractable" in the Pennsylvania prison system. We



cannot agree, however, on the record before us, that ac- commodation of those prisoners' rights by giving them reasonable access to a limited number of periodicals and photographs would have such a "ripple effect."


N16  A  Security  Threat  Group  ("STG")  is  a group of inmates, designated by the Commissioner, which "poses a threat to the safety of staff, other inmates, the community, and/or damages to, or de- struction of property,  and/or interrupting the safe secure and orderly operation of the correctional fa- cility(ies)."  Fraise, 283 F.3d at 509.


**31


At no point does Banks propose that Level 2 inmates be allowed unmitigated and unregulated access to all pe- riodicals. Rather, Banks proposes, and the District Court discussed, two alternative policies which would accom- modate the prisoners' rights. First, the DOC could estab- lish a specific reading period, or several different reading periods,  in which guards deliver a single newspaper or magazine to an inmate's cell,  if requested,  and retrieve it at the close of the period. The DOC could easily con- trol the number of periodicals in his cell at one time, the frequency  of  the  distributions,  the  amount  of  time  any inmate would be in possession of the materials, as well as  the  number  of  inmates  who  would  have  periodicals in their cells at any one time. n17 The DOC could also limit the total number of photographs a Level 2 inmate could have in his cell at one time to what they consider a reasonable number. In conjunction with this policy, ac- cess to periodicals could be entirely withheld from those individual prisoners who, in the judgment


399 F.3d 134, *147; 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 3287, **31

Page 14



*147    of prison officials, would pose a particular risk given  their  records,  or  those  inmates  who  have  abused their use of periodicals or photographs. **32   The DOC asserts that such a limited restriction would not prevent Level  2  inmates  from  using  the  materials  to  start  fires, fling feces and create weapons and therefore, during the reading  period,  extra  monitoring  of  cells  would  be  re- quired, thus affecting the prison's resources and possibly the safety of other inmates.


n17   HN12    Volume   control   is   a   well- recognized  alternative  to  the  blanket  exclusion of  items  protected  by  the  First  Amendment.  See Clement  v.  Cal.  Dep't  of  Corr.,  220  F.  Supp.  2d

1098,  1113  (N.D.  Cal.  2002);       Spellman,  95  F. Supp. 2d at 1286.



We  fail  to  see,  however,  as  discussed  above  under factor  one,  how  an  inmate's  hour-long  possession  of Graterfriends would require further monitoring when at any time that inmate may be in possession of 10 sheets of writing paper, and as many copies of the Watchtower, the Jewish Daily Forward, and the Christian Science Monitor Magazine as can fit in a records center box. As discussed above, the District Court's **33   assumption that pris- oners would be more reluctant to use religious materials for such nefarious purposes is unsupported by the record. Furthermore, at any point, the entire LTSU can house no more than 40 inmates,  one-tenth of one percent of the state's prison population. (App. 95) Even if limited dis- tribution of periodicals were to require additional moni- toring, such an a accommodation would have a minimal impact on prison sources.


Alternatively, individual prisoners could be escorted to the secure mini-law library to read a periodical of their choosing.  Again,  the  District  Court  found  that  such  an accommodation would intensify security concerns by in- creasing  the  amount  of  inmate  movement  and  thereby placing a formidable burden on LTSU staff. n18 Inmates are already permitted to leave their cells under guard es- cort to use the library to view legal materials, so individual inmate escort has not been deemed prohibitively burden-



some  or  dangerous  by  prison  administrators.  Although it is possible that the demand for mini-law library ses- sions may increase if the policy were changed, the DOC has not shown how this would significantly increase the burden on prison staff. Superintendent **34    Dickson explained in his deposition that under current LTSU pol- icy, one inmate is allowed out of his cell at a time to visit the law library for one two-hour session. A roster of re- quests, like a waiting-list, is maintained and fulfilled on a first-come first-serve basis. The amount or frequency of inmate movement is already regulated. If the inmates' rights to read other periodicals were accommodated, that would not change. We fail to see how the mere addition of non-legal and non-religious periodicals to the materials already available to the inmates in the library would create the "ripple effect" cited by the DOC. In short, the DOC has not shown that a change in the publication ban would mean "significantly less liberty and safety for everyone else, guards and other prisoners alike."  Abbott, 490 U.S. at 418 (quoting  Turner, 482 U.S. at 92).


n18  Here,  the  District  Court  relies  on   Allah v. Al-Hafeez, 208 F. Supp. 2d 520, 530 (E.D. Pa.

2002), in which the court found that the third Turner factor weighed in the prison authorities' favor be- cause the inmate was particularly ill-behaved and accommodating his presence at religious services would require more monitoring of those services, thereby straining prison resources and affecting the prison staff and other inmates. Although HN13  the Turner factors are evaluated independently,  it is important to note with respect to this decision that the prison policy was much narrower and the court's analysis was informed by the fact that the inmate had many meaningful ways to practice his religion without attending services. He could med- itate, pray and study his religion, as well as discuss it with other inmates outside his cell. Id.


**35


Finally, the District Court asserted that the alternatives proposed come at more


399 F.3d 134, *148; 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 3287, **35

Page 15



*148    than  a  de  minimus  cost  to  the  DOC's  behavior modification goals because the accessibility of periodicals would render the threat of Level 2 segregation toothless as a deterrent. However, the District Court overlooked the extent to which, even without the challenged restriction, Level 2 LTSU segregation is more restrictive than Level 1 in significant respects. For example, Level 1 inmates are permitted two family visits and one fifteen minute tele- phone call per month. They are also permitted to spend

$5.00 per week at the commissary on items defined by the Unit Team. Additionally, while inmates at both levels receive in-cell counseling and visits from chaplains, and can be employed as Unit Janitor, only Level 1 inmates re- ceive compensation as per DC-816 Inmate Compensation System, and only Level 1 inmates are permitted GED and Special Education in-cell study. (App. 32)


IV. Conclusion


For  the  reasons  stated  above,  we  believe  that  the DOC's policy that prohibits inmates confined in the LTSU at Level 2 status access to photographs, and all newspa- pers  and  magazines which  are  neither  legal nor   **36  religious  in  nature,  cannot  be  supported  as  a  matter  of law by the record in this case. Accordingly, the summary judgment of the District Court will be reversed and the case  remanded  for  further  proceedings  consistent  with this opinion.


DISSENTBY: ALITO


DISSENT: ALITO, Circuit Judge, dissenting:


At   issue   in   this   case   are   restrictions   that   the



Pennsylvania  Department  of  Corrections  imposes  as  a last resort on the most disruptive and dangerous .1% of its prison population. These restrictions apply only as long as an inmate remains in Level 2 of the LTSU, an assignment that may terminate after as little as 90 days. The question before us is whether these temporary, last-resort restric- tions are facially unconstitutional under the standard set out in   Turner v. Safley,  482 U.S. 78,  96 L. Ed. 2d 64,

107 S. Ct. 2254 (1987), a standard that instructs courts to extend considerable deference to judgments of


Under Turner, prison regulations that restrict consti- tutional rights must be sustained if they are "reasonably related to legitimate penological interests."   **37    482

U.S. at 89. Turner noted four factors to be considered in determining whether the requisite reasonable relationship exists:  (1) whether there is "a 'valid, rational connection' between the prison regulation and the legitimate govern- mental  interest  put  forward  to  justify  it";  (2)  "whether there  are  alternative  means  of  exercising  the  right  that remain open to prison inmates"; (3) "the impact accom- modation  of  the  asserted  constitutional  right  will  have on guards and other inmates"; and (4) whether there are

"ready alternatives" to the challenged regulation."  Id. at

89-90 (citation omitted). I will address each factor.


First factor:  Rational relationship between regu- lation and legitimate penological interests. I agree with the District Court that this factor weighs in favor of the constitutionality  of  the  challenged  regulations  because there is a "rational" relationship between that restriction and the legitimate penological objective of deterring mis- conduct. It is "rational" for corrections officials


399 F.3d 134, *149; 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 3287, **37

Page 16



*149   to think that inmates who are not in Level 2 will be deterred from engaging in serious misconduct because they do not want to be transferred **38   to that unit and thus to be subjected to the restrictions that accompany that assignment. It is also "rational" for corrections officials to think that inmates who are in Level 2 will be deterred from engaging in serious misconduct while in that unit because they wish to be transferred out and thus to escape such restrictions.


The majority disagrees with these conclusions for two reasons. First, the majority apparently believes that a sanc- tion cannot deter unless a potential violator knows with some specificity the type misconduct that will result in the imposition of the sanction and the length of time that the sanction will last. The majority concedes that "deterrence of future infractions of prison rules can be an appropri- ate justification for temporarily restricting the rights of inmates" and that other courts of appeals have sustained rules restricting the receipt of newspapers by prisoners in disciplinary segregation. See Maj. at 9 (citing   Gregory v. Auger, 768 F.2d 287, 290 (8th Cir. 1985);   Daigre v. Maggio, 719 F.2d 1310, 1313 (5th Cir. 1983)). The major- ity finds these precedents inapplicable because the "LTSU is not a place where inmates **39   are sent for a discrete period of punishment,  pursuant to a specific infraction, but a place for 'Long Term' segregation of the most in- corrigible and difficult prisoners for as long as they fall under that umbrella." Id.


The majority's reasoning is unsound. The uncertain- ties  noted  by  the  majority  may  diminish  the  deterrent effect  of  the  regulations  on  some  inmates  who  are  not yet in Level 2, but there is no reason to think that these uncertainties entirely eliminate the deterrent effect of the regulations on the general prison population. Similarly, it is rational to believe that the challenged restrictions pro- vide an incentive for those inmates who are already in



Level 2 to refrain from disruptive behavior in the hope of obtaining a transfer out of the unit. Again, uncertainty about what must be done to obtain such a transfer or about when such a transfer may be available may have an im- pact on the degree of the incentive, but there is no reason to suppose that the incentive is wholly destroyed.


Second,  the majority concludes that the regulations are not rationally related to the goal of deterring miscon- duct because "the DOC has offered no evidence that the rule achieves or could **40   achieve its stated rehabil- itative purpose." Maj. Op. at 10. In taking this approach, the majority misconstrues the nature of the first Turner factor. This factor requires us to determine whether there is a "logical connection between the regulation and the asserted goal," see  482 U.S. at 89 (emphasis added), not whether there is empirical evidence that the regulation in fact serves that goal. The entire system of prison discipline might be imperilled if each sanction for prison miscon- duct could not be sustained without empirical evidence that the sanction provided some incremental deterrent. Second factor: alternative means of exercising the right. This is the most troubling of the four factors, but I do not think that it is sufficient to support the major- ity's conclusion that the regulations are facially uncon- stitutional. The regulations impinge upon the right to re- ceive information about current events and communica- tions (in the form of photographs) from family members and friends, but the restrictions are not absolute. Inmates in Level 2 may still read books from the prison library and may receive letters. Moreover, as the District Court noted, inmates **41    in Level 2 have the "option of modify- ing their behavior and being promoted to a less restricted environment." Report & Recommendation at 8. An as- applied challenge by an inmate subjected to lengthy con- finement in Level 2 despite a record of reformed behavior

would present different


399 F.3d 134, *150; 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 3287, **41

Page 17



*150    considerations, but the majority's opinion is not limited to such a case.


Third and fourth factors:  Availability and impact of accommodation. The majority proposes modifications in prison policies that would almost certainly have an im- pact on prison resources. The majority first suggests that guards could deliver requested newspapers and magazines to inmates' cells and then retrieve these materials after the expiration of a specified "reading period." Maj. Op. at 18. Providing this service for each of the 40 inmates in Level

2 would be time consuming. "Alternatively," the major- ity states, "individual prisoners could be escorted to the  secure mini-law library to read a periodical of their choos- ing." Maj. Op. at 19. This service, however, would un-



doubtedly impose a significant burden, particularly since the inmates in question are those whom the Department of Corrections has classified as the most **42   violent and disruptive. It is Department policy that Level 2 in- mates may not be transported from their cells unless they are placed in hand and leg irons and are escorted by two officers.


Taking into account all four of the Turner factors, I conclude that the challenged regulations are not facially unconstitutional. On their face, these regulations are rea- sonably related to the legitimate penological goal of curb- ing prison misconduct, and I would therefore affirm the decision of the District Court.



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