Downes v. Department of Corrections et al (INMATE 1)
Filing
133
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER: it is hereby ORDERED as follows: 1) The Plf's 123 objections are OVERRULED. 2) The Defs' 125 objections are SUSTAINED to the extent that the Recommendation required proof of a past security breach under the first Turner factor and is OVERRULED in all other respects. 3) The Court adopts the 122 Recommendation of the Magistrate Judge, and the Defs' 113 supplemental motion for summary judgment is DENIED. 4) This case is set before the undersig ned for an evidentiary hearing on Downes's claim for injunctive relief on 8/4/2020 at 10:00 a.m., in Courtroom 2-A, at the FMJ Federal Building and United States Courthouse Complex, Montgomery, AL. 5) Officials at the ALDOC or the persons havin g custody of the plf shall produce him for the hearing. The Clerk of the Court is DIRECTED to serve a copy of this order on the General Counsel for the Department of Corrections. Signed by Chief Judge Emily C. Marks on 5/28/2020. (furn: calendar, ws, ALDOC transport agent, US Marshal) (mailed CMRRR to GC for ALDOC)(cwl, )
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF ALABAMA
NORTHERN DIVISION
JAMES R. DOWNES,
Plaintiff,
v.
CARTER DAVENPORT, et al.,
Defendants.
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) CIVIL ACT. NO. 2:15-cv-437-ECM
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(WO)
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MEMORANDUM OPINION and ORDER
Now pending before the Court is the Recommendation of the Magistrate Judge that
summary judgment be denied and that the case be referred for an evidentiary hearing on
Plaintiff John Downes’ claim for injunctive relief. (Doc. 122). The Plaintiff has filed
objections to the Recommendation, (doc. 123), as have Carter Davenport, Warden Carter,
Lt. Woods, Mrs. Blakely, Jefferson S. Dunn, Walter Myers, Capt. Cargill and Capt.
Lawson (“Defendants”) (doc. 125).
The Court has carefully reviewed the entire record in this case, including the
Magistrate Judge’s Recommendation and the objections, and upon an independent and de
novo review pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 636(b), the Plaintiff’s objections are due to be
overruled, the Defendants’ objections are due to be overruled in part and sustained in part,
and the Magistrate Judge’s Recommendation that the motion for summary judgment be
denied is due to be adopted.
The relevant facts are more fully set out in the Recommendation, but in summary,
the Plaintiff, an inmate of Easterling Correctional Facility, ordered a hardcover book,
Packing the Court, directly from Edward R. Hamilton Bookseller Company, but was not
allowed to receive it. Packing the Court also is available as a soft-bound book. (Doc. 113–
3). The regulations which govern inmate mail do not specifically forbid hardcover books,
but Defendant Sharon Blakely, the Mail Clerk at Easterling, has presented evidence that
that inmates cannot receive hardcover books there. (Doc. 109–1 at 1).
In his objections to the Recommendation of the Magistrate Judge, the Plaintiff states
that while Packing the Court may be available in softcover, is not available to him in
softcover from the only book seller available to him, but that statement is unsworn, and
therefore cannot create a question of fact. The Plaintiff further asserts that he has ordered
a second book which arrived at the prison in hardback and which the prison will not allow
him to access, but that statement also is unsworn. The Plaintiff also states that he was not
informed that he could not have hardcover books, but that statement is not a part of the
applicable analysis discussed below. Finally, the Plaintiff refers to other items he cannot
receive at the prison, but that objection is not relevant to the claim in the case. Upon review
of the entire record, this Court cannot conclude that any of Downes’ objections are
meritorious. All of his objections, therefore, are due to be overruled.
The Defendants also raise multiple objections, most of which stem from the
Defendants’ characterization of the Plaintiff’s claim, which is inconsistent with this Court’s
interpretation of that claim as announced in a previous Order. The Defendants object that
the Plaintiff’s First Amendment rights have not been impinged because he was free to read
Packing the Court in a soft-bound version. In a previous Order largely adopting a
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Recommendation in this case, however, in addressing a contention that the Plaintiff’s
hardcover book was lost at the prison, this Court ruled that Downes’ “complaint, liberally
construed, requests that incoming mail, including hardcover books, be delivered to him.
(See Doc. # 4, at 4–5). Should the Magistrate Judge find that the ban on hardcover books—
if such a ban is in place—is unconstitutional, Downes may be entitled to prospective
injunctive relief, and such a claim does not appear to be moot as a matter of law." (Doc.
106 at 3). Therefore, the mere fact that one hardback book is also available in soft-cover
is not dispositive of Downes’ claim which includes all hardcover books mailed to him.
Accordingly, the Court turns to the Defendants’ objections as to the analysis which applies
when a First Amendment right is infringed.
Under the applicable analysis, to balance judicial deference with the need to protect
constitutional rights, a court will find that a prison regulation affecting constitutional rights
is valid as long as it is content neutral and “reasonably related to legitimate penological
interests.” Prison Legal News v. Sec'y, Fla. Dep't of Corr., 890 F.3d 954, 967 (11th Cir.
2018). There are four factors to determine the reasonableness of prison regulations: (1)
whether there is a valid, rational connection between the prison regulation and the
legitimate governmental interest put forward to justify it; (2) whether there are alternative
means to exercise the First Amendment right; (3) what impact accommodation of the
asserted constitutional right will have on guards and other inmates, and on the allocation
of prison resources generally; and (4) whether the Defendants can point to alternatives that
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fully accommodate rights at de minimis cost to valid penological interests. Id. (citing
Turner v. Safley, 482 U.S. 78 (1987)).
As to factor one, one objection by the Defendants has some merit. The Defendants
object that the Recommendation relied on analysis in Daker v. Warren, 660 F. App’x 737
(11th Cir. 2016), and required proof of a past security breach, but that Prison Legal News,
890 F.3d at 965, made it clear that such proof is not required. The Turner standard does
not require the Defendants to present evidence of an actual security breach to satisfy the
first factor. See Prison Legal News, 890 F.3d at 972. Therefore, to the extent that the
Recommendation required proof of a security breach, the objection to that analysis is due
to be sustained. The Court notes, however, that the Recommendation also applied Prison
Legal News in its application of Turner, which this Court also will do. (Doc. 122 at 11).
The Defendants have presented evidence that hardback books can used as weapons
and to conceal contraband. (Doc. 113-1). Upon consideration of the applicable law and
the record, this Court finds that the Defendants’ ban is not “so remote’’ from security and
safety interests as to render the ban “arbitrary or irrational.” Prison Legal News, 890 F.3d
at 972. The Court, therefore, finds that the first Turner factor weighs in favor of the
Defendants.
The Defendants object under the second Turner factor that the book in question is
available in soft cover, so Downes had an alternative method to exercise his First
Amendment rights, and that the Recommendation goes beyond the record to discuss all
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hardback books. As noted, however, a ban as to all hardcover books mailed to the Plaintiff
is at issue in this case.
The Recommendation pointed to alternatives to a complete hardcover book ban such
as taking the covers off the hardcover books or keeping the Plaintiff’s hardback books in
the prison library. Other decisions have approved restrictions on books where alternatives
are provided. See, e.g., Bell v. Wolfish, 441 U.S. 520, 552 (1979) (approving a hardback
book restriction where the restriction allows soft-bound books and magazines to be
received from any source and hardback books to be received from publishers, bookstores,
and book clubs and there is a “relatively large” library for use by inmates); Kramer v.
Conway, 962 F. Supp. 2d 1333, 1346–47 (N.D. Ga. 2013) (considering access to books in
the library in Turner analysis of limitation on the number of books that plaintiff can have
in his cell).
The Defendants also object that the Recommendation improperly relied on a fact
not in the record; namely, that there are hardback books which are not available in soft
cover. In connection with other Turner factor analysis, however, the Defendants also point
to the costs of removing the covers of “hundreds, if not thousands,” of hardback books for
which there is no softback alternative. (Doc. 125 at 10).
Because, contrary to the Defendants’ position, a complete hardcover book ban is at
issue, and there is no apparent alternative method of exercising First Amendment rights
when no softcover version is available, this Court concludes that at this point in the
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proceedings, the second Turner factor does not weigh in the Defendants’ favor. See Prison
Legal News, 890 F.3d at 967.
With respect to the third Turner factor, which is the impact accommodation of the
asserted constitutional right will have on guards and other inmates and on the allocation of
prison resources generally, the Defendants argue that the alternative of ordering a softcover
book "is far more accommodating than" making a hardcover book available in the library
because it allows the inmate to have the softcover book in his cell and not have to wait to
use it in the library. (Doc. 125 at 8). This argument does not address the application of the
complete ban of hardcover books for which there is not soft-cover alternative, however.
The third Turner factor will weigh in favor of prison officials if accommodating the right
has "a significant ripple effect" on staff and other inmates. Turner, 482 U.S. at 90. On this
record, however, this Court finds that it does not have sufficient evidence before it of the
effect of accommodating the Plaintiff’s right when the complete ban on hardcover books
is considered.
As to the fourth Turner factor, the Defendants argue that maintaining a library of
every single hardcover book for which there is no soft-cover version or removing the
covers from hundreds of hardback books would be cost-prohibitive. The Defendants’
argument goes too far, however, because the Recommendation does not suggest as an
alternative a prison-purchased collection of every hardcover book for which there is no
soft-bound version. (Doc. 122 at 10).
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The existence of hardback-only books, and the costs of providing access to them,
are issues in this case as to which this Court has not been provided sufficient information
to appropriately weigh the Turner factors. Therefore, the Court will follow the
Recommendation of the Magistrate Judge and deny summary judgment to the Defendants
and will conduct an evidentiary hearing so that the Turner factors can appropriately be
applied.
Accordingly, for the reasons stated, it is hereby ORDERED as follows:
1. The Plaintiff’s objections are OVERRULED.
2. The Defendants’ objections are SUSTAINED to the extent that the
Recommendation required proof of a past security breach under the first Turner
factor and is OVERRULED in all other respects.
3. The Court adopts the Recommendation of the Magistrate Judge, and the
Defendants’ supplemental motion for summary judgment is DENIED.
4. This case is set before the undersigned for an evidentiary hearing on Downes’s
claim for injunctive relief on August 4, 2020 at 10:00 a.m., in Courtroom 2-A,
at the Frank M. Johnson, Jr. Federal Building and United States Courthouse
Complex, Montgomery, Alabama.
5. Officials at the Alabama Department of Corrections or the persons having
custody of the plaintiff shall produce him for the hearing. The Clerk of the Court
is DIRECTED to serve a copy of this order on the General Counsel for the
Department of Corrections.
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DONE this 28th day of May, 2020.
/s/ Emily C. Marks
EMILY C. MARKS
CHIEF UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
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