Yablonsky v. California Department of Correction & Rehabilitation et al
Filing
185
ORDER Granting Defendants' Summary-Judgment 168 Motion and Granting in Part Plaintiff's 164 Motion for Judicial Notice. Signed by Magistrate Judge Andrew G. Schopler on 9/30/2022. (All non-registered users served via U.S. Mail Service)(exs)
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
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SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
John Henry YABLONSKY,
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Case No.: 18-cv-1122-AGS
Plaintiff,
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v.
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CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF
CORRECTIONS AND
REHABILITATION, et al.,
Defendants.
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ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANTS’
SUMMARY-JUDGMENT MOTION
(ECF 168) AND GRANTING IN PART
PLAINTIFF’S MOTION FOR
JUDICIAL NOTICE (ECF 164)
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“[B]road as the constitutional concept of liberty is, it does not include the right to
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xerox.” Jones v. Franzen, 697 F.2d 801, 803 (7th Cir. 1983). That aphorism largely
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disposes of this civil-rights lawsuit, in which an inmate accuses prison staff of
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unconstitutionally burdening his photocopying rights. The inmate also contends that prison
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officials repeatedly retaliated against him. But those allegations are either unfounded or the
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challenged actions were justified by legitimate penological interests. Thus, defendants are
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entitled to summary judgment.
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BACKGROUND
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Plaintiff John Yablonsky is incarcerated at Richard J. Donovan Correctional Facility,
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where he uses the law library. (ECF 168-5, at 22–23.) Library staff schedule library
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appointments in two- or four-hour blocks. (ECF 168-3, at 2.) But nonlibrary staff are
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responsible for providing the appointment slips and transporting inmates at the assigned
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time. (ECF 168-5, at 23–24.) Designated priority users are allowed at least four hours of
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library access per week. (ECF 168-3, at 2; ECF 177, at 119–20.)
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During these sessions, inmates may request copies of their legal documents
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“necessary for initiating or maintaining a court action.” (ECF 168-3, at 3–4.) Copying costs
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are ten cents per page. (Id.) But indigent inmates get photocopies of legal paperwork for
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free. (Id.) Before copying a document, library staff must scan it for contraband, such as
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“tattoo templates, gang insignia or logos, [non-legal] personal correspondence,” or
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“pornography.” (See id. at 3–4.) To conduct this inspection, library staff place the
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documents “face down on the counter . . . within the inmate’s view” and flip them over one
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by one for cursory review. (Id.)
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Yablonsky sued prison officials under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for civil-rights violations
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stemming from this document-scanning policy. First, he charges that the policy violates his
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First Amendment free-speech rights on its face. (ECF 62, at 39–40, 69–70, 84–85.) Second,
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he argues that the policy infringes his rights as applied. That is, he contends that before
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copying his confidential legal documents, the defendant librarians—Blahnik, Powell,
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Tiscornia, and Robles—actually read them, rather than just glancing over them for
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contraband. (ECF 62, at 84.) Finally, Yablonsky accuses the defendant librarians, litigation
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coordinator McGuire, and prison official Martinez of retaliating against him for filing
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grievances about these misdeeds. (ECF 62, at 79.)
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Defendants move for summary judgment on all claims.
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DISCUSSION
A.
Summary-Judgment Standard
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“The court shall grant summary judgment if the movant shows that there is no
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genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter
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of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). A dispute over a material fact is “genuine” when “the
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evidence is such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving party.”
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Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248 (1986). The party opposing summary
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judgment “may not rest upon the mere allegations or denials of his pleading” and instead
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“must set forth specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial.” Id. (citation
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omitted). There is “no genuine issue for trial” when “the record taken as a whole could not
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lead a rational trier of fact to find for the nonmoving party . . . .” Ricci v. DeStefano,
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557 U.S. 557, 586 (2009).
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B.
Facial Challenge to the Scanning Policy
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Yablonsky first attacks the facial validity of the prison’s scanning policy, arguing
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that it chills his protected speech by forcing him to share his confidential legal documents
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with his litigation opponents. (ECF 62, at 84–85.)
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“[A] prison inmate retains those First Amendment rights that are not inconsistent
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with his status as a prisoner or with the legitimate penological objectives of the corrections
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system.” Pell v. Procunier, 417 U.S. 817, 822 (1974). In determining whether a prison
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regulation is reasonably related to a legitimate penological interest, courts consider the
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following factors: (1) “whether there is a valid, rational connection between the regulation
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and the legitimate governmental interest” used to justify the regulation; (2) whether
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prisoners retain “alternative means of exercising the right” at issue; (3) the “impact
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accommodation of the asserted constitutional right will have on guards, inmates, and the
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allocation of prison resources generally”; and (4) whether the prisoner has identified
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“obvious, easy alternatives” to the regulation that could be implemented at a minimal cost
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to legitimate penological interests. Turner v. Safley, 482 U.S. 78, 89–90 (1987) (quotation
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marks omitted).
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1. Rational Relationship to a Legitimate Governmental Interest
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The first and most critical Turner factor is whether the action is rationally connected
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to a legitimate governmental goal. See Prison Legal News v. Cook, 238 F.3d 1145, 1151
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(9th Cir. 2001) (deeming this Turner factor the “sine qua non”). “This factor consists of
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three sub-requirements”: the rule must be (A) “legitimate,” (B) “neutral,” and
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(C) “rationally related to [the government’s] objective.” Prison Legal News v. Ryan,
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39 F.4th 1121, 1131 (9th Cir. 2022).
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a. Legitimate
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First, “the governmental objective underlying the policy [must be] legitimate.” Ryan,
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39 F.4th at 1131. The librarians claim that the scanning policy furthers three penological
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goals: “preventing . . . contraband,” “minimizing the coercion of indigent inmates,” and
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advancing “the efficient use of resources.” (ECF 168, at 20.) These are legitimate
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objectives. See Bell v. Wolfish, 441 U.S. 520, 551 (1979) (noting that deterring “smuggling
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contraband” was a legitimate prison goal justifying some limitations on inmates’ First
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Amendment rights); Rickman v. Avaniti, 854 F.2d 327, 328 (9th Cir. 1988) (listing
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“maintaining prison safety” and blocking “contraband” as “important objectives of penal
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institutions”); Cook, 238 F.3d at 1151 (considering how a prison regulation affected the
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legitimate government objective of “not substantially deplet[ing] prison resources”).
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b. Neutral
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The next question is whether the regulation “operate[s] in a neutral fashion, without
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regard to the content of the expression.” Thornburgh v. Abbott, 490 U.S. 401, 415 (1989).
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The scanning policy here applies evenly to all legal documents submitted for copying,
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regardless of content. Thus, it is neutral. See Ryan, 39 F.4th at 1132 (noting that a prison
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rule is neutral “as long as it applies to specific types of materials solely on the basis of the
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materials’ potential effect on the legitimate objectives” and is “unrelated to the suppression
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of expression” (citation and quotation marks omitted)).
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c. Rational Relationship
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Finally, the Court must determine whether there is a rational relationship between
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the neutral rule and the proffered objective. “The rational-relationship inquiry is highly
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deferential.” Ryan, 39 F.4th at 1132. A prison rule fails that inquiry if “the logical
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connection between the regulation and the asserted goal is so remote as to render the policy
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arbitrary or irrational.” Id. In fact, courts “may uphold a regulation even if prison officials
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are unable to prove” that “problems” occurred “in the past” or are “likely to” occur “in the
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future.” Id. (quotation marks omitted). “Nor must the officials be able to demonstrate that
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the policy in fact advances the jail’s interests.” Id. “It is enough that officials might
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reasonably have thought that the policy would do so.” Id. (cleaned up).
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The policy here comfortably clears that low bar. Although defendants need not prove
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past problems, they nonetheless offer evidence that “inmates have submitted tattoo
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templates, gang insignia or logos, personal correspondence, photographs, and pornography
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as legal documents for copying.” (ECF 168-3, at 4.) And “indigent inmates are sometimes
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coerced by non-indigent inmates to request copies on their behalf in an attempt to avoid
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copying fees.” (Id.) The scanning policy helps prevent the spread of contraband and
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discourages indigent victimization. (See id.) At least, an official could rationally think so.
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After all, as Yablonsky acknowledges, all legal-document copies are returned to the inmate,
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who takes them “back to [the] inmate[’]s yard.” (ECF 177, at 62.) Thus, any photocopied
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contraband—or permissible materials that an indigent inmate was coerced into copying—
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could easily be distributed to other prisoners.
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Yablonsky rejects this reasoning on two grounds. First, he argues that the scanning
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is unnecessary because inmates are already searched for contraband before entering the
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library. (ECF 177, at 16, 172; see also ECF 168-5, at 72.) But such entryway inspections
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won’t help coerced indigent inmates, nor prevent prisoners from creating banned content
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after entering the library. For instance, after being frisked at the entrance, an unscrupulous
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inmate could find a quiet spot in the library, write down elaborate violent plans (or sketch
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a pornographic drawing), and then present this contraband for copying as “legal
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documents.” A doorway search would not detect or deter such a ruse.
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Second, Yablonsky points out that the prison already permits certain erotica and
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tattoo magazines, so the scanning policy won’t stem the tide of body art and pornography.
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(ECF 177, at 42–43.) This argument is a straw man. The question is not whether the policy
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helps limit all pornography and tattoos, but whether it helps curb banned pornography and
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tattoos. Even if every inmate had prison-approved tattoos and pornography, officials would
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still have an interest in rooting out more dangerous categories, such as gang-related body
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art or child pornography. See Mauro v. Arpaio, 188 F.3d 1054, 1063 (9th Cir. 1999)
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(approving a prison’s total “prohibition on sexually explicit materials”).
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At any rate, the “fit” between the policy and the legitimate goal need not be “exact”;
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it must merely be “rational.” Mauro, 188 F.3d at 1060. Under this “highly deferential”
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standard, the Court concludes that the scanning policy is rationally related to a legitimate
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governmental interest. See Ryan, 39 F.4th at 1132. Thus, the most important Turner factor
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favors upholding the prison policy.
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2. Alternatives for Inmates
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Under the next Turner factor, the Court asks whether inmates retain “alternative
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means of exercising the right” to seek redress from the courts, that is, without library staff
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rummaging through their legal documents. Turner, 482 U.S. at 90. Yes, they do. Prisoners
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may bypass the photocopy process altogether and simply mail their original legal
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documents, without retaining copies. Even for pleadings service, at least in this district, the
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notice of electronic filing that is automatically sent to all attorneys “constitutes service of
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the filed document,” so no paper copies are required. See S.D. Cal. Civ. LR 5.4(c).
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Yablonsky concedes that if he mailed his original documents without copying them, prison
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staff would not be permitted to read them. (ECF 168-5, at 32–33; see also id. at 368–69
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(“Processing Outgoing Confidential Mail” policy).) He also admits that the confidential
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legal mail services were always available to him. (ECF 168-5, at 32–33.)
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Even so, Yablonsky maintains that this option is unreasonable because it means
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mailing his only copy, which may inhibit his ability to litigate. (ECF 177, at 69.) But
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inmates who want a record of their legal submissions may manually transcribe copies.
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Having filed hundreds of handwritten or hand-notated pages already in this matter,
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Yablonsky is undoubtedly capable of doing so. While this alternative is inconvenient,
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inmates need not keep paperwork duplicates to prosecute their cases. Thus, Yablonsky has
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alternatives available to exercise his rights.
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3. Impact of Accommodation
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Third, the Court considers “the impact accommodation of the asserted constitutional
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right will have on guards and other inmates, and on the allocation of prison resources
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generally.” Turner, 482 U.S. at 90. Yablonsky proposes that inmates be granted
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unrestricted photocopying rights for legal matters. But such a policy would inevitably spur
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the circulation of inflammatory materials, such as gang insignia and banned pornography,
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making the prison more dangerous for guards and prisoners alike. See Mauro, 188 F.3d
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at 1061 (holding that “unrestricted access to sexually explicit materials would expose the
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female detention officers . . . to sexual harassment” and “lead to fights between inmates,”
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jeopardizing “not only the safety of jail employees, but also other inmates”); Bruce v. Ylst,
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351 F.3d 1283, 1289 (9th Cir. 2003) (“[P]risons have a legitimate penological interest in
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stopping prison gang activity.”); Koutnik v. Brown, 351 F. Supp. 2d 871, 878 (W.D. Wis.
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2004) (“Prison officials have a strong interest in suppressing gang activity,” including
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“gang literature or symbols.”). As for the proposal’s financial impact, officials reasonably
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believe that prison resources of ink, paper, and staff would be in greater demand. See
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Harrell v. Keohane, 621 F.2d 1059, 1061 (10th Cir. 1980) (rejecting inmate’s claimed right
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to “free unlimited access to a photocopying machine” and noting that prison policies must
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account for “budgetary considerations”). That would place financial pressure on the
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institution and impair other inmates’ access to these resources. These burdens weigh
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against Yablonsky’s proposal.
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4. Prison’s Ready Alternatives
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The final Turner factor concerns whether “ready alternatives” exist to accommodate
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an inmate. Turner, 482 U.S. at 90. The policy need not be the “least restrictive
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alternative[,]” but “obvious, easy alternatives” may indicate “the regulation is not
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reasonable . . . .” Id.
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Yablonsky proposes several substitutes for the current policy: shaking the
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documents, fanning them out, scanning them upside down, reviewing the copy machine
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memory after photocopying, or immediately sealing the copies in envelopes to be mailed
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from the library. (ECF 177, at 73; ECF 168-5, at 37.) Yet these alternatives do not
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accomplish the identified goals of suppressing inflammatory materials, protecting indigent
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inmates, and preserving prison resources. Shaking and fanning papers does not allow
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librarians to intercept banned tattoo templates or pornography. Likewise, reviewing the
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photocopier’s memory is a feeble defense against written contraband, and it would not save
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paper and ink. It is merely a retroactive means to identify a wrongdoer, after the contraband
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has spread and the paper and ink are wasted. (See ECF 177, at 14; 464–81; 494–500; 501–
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02.) Plus, this proposal would allow librarians to read an inmate’s documents outside the
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inmate’s presence. That would only exacerbate Yablonsky’s privacy concerns. Finally,
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none of Yablonsky’s alternatives, including sealing the copies in the library, addresses the
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prison’s last goal: discouraging well-off inmates from bullying poor ones into making
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photocopies, to dodge copying fees.
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In short, Yablonsky’s failure to identify “ready alternatives” supports the scanning
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policy’s “reasonableness.” See Turner, 482 U.S. at 90. Because all four Turner factors
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favor the current policy, defendants are entitled to summary judgment on Yablonsky’s
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facial challenge.
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C.
As-Applied Challenge to the Scanning Policy
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Next, Yablonsky argues that even if the scanning policy is generally constitutional,
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the librarians are applying it in a way that violates his constitutional rights. He claims that,
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rather than simply scanning each page, they are “READING” his “protected papers” before
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copying them. (See, e.g., ECF 177, at 74.) Thus, he asserts that the policy, as applied,
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violates his free-speech rights.
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Assuming these allegations are true, Yablonsky must still overcome the librarians’
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qualified immunity. The qualified immunity doctrine shields government officials from
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civil liability so long as “their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or
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constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.” Pearson v.
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Callahan, 555 U.S. 223, 231 (2009) (citation omitted). “[P]laintiff bears the burden of
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proof that the right allegedly violated was clearly established.” Tarabochia v. Adkins,
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766 F.3d 1115, 1125 (9th Cir. 2014) (citation and bracketing omitted). Official actions only
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violate clearly established law “when, at the time of the challenged conduct, the contours
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of a right are sufficiently clear that every reasonable official would have understood that
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what he is doing violates that right.” Ashcroft v. al-Kidd, 563 U.S. 731, 741 (2011) (citation
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and internal punctuation omitted). Caselaw need not have addressed the precise factual
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scenario, “but existing precedent must have placed the statutory or constitutional question
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beyond debate.” Id. (citations omitted).
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In his hunt for a clearly established photocopying right, Yablonsky returns again and
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again to the well-worn rights regarding legal mail.1 (See, e.g., ECF 177, at 14–15
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(complaining that librarians “read ‘EVERY COPYING REQUEST PAGE,’” including
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“letters drafted to plaintiff[’s] lawyer, Courts, and other legal actions”); id. at 73 (“right to
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confidential correspondence”).) But his right to private legal correspondence isn’t at issue.
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After all, Yablonsky candidly admits that he freely sends confidential mail and has never
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witnessed “staff in the [mailroom in the] building read my legal mail.” (See ECF 168-5,
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at 33.) The issue here is quite different: Does Yablonsky have a constitutional right to use
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a copy machine—to memorialize his legal mailings—without close review by prison staff?
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On this point, the case law is deafeningly silent.
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Indeed, precedents cut against Yablonsky. Courts have rejected “any constitutional
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right to free and unlimited photocopying.” Sands v. Lewis, 886 F.2d 1166, 1169 (9th Cir.
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1989); see also Jones, 697 F.2d at 803 (“[B]road as the constitutional concept of liberty is,
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it does not include the right to xerox.”). Photocopying practices typically raise
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constitutional concerns only when they impede access to courts, which is a high bar. See,
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e.g., Johnson v. Moore, 948 F.2d 517, 521 (9th Cir. 1991) (“A denial of free photocopying
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does not amount to a [constitutional] denial of access to the courts,” absent “actual
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injury.”). As evidenced by Yablonsky’s thousands of pages of court filings here, he has
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ready access to the judicial system. At any rate, this Court has not found—nor has
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Yablonsky offered—any case holding that a prison librarian’s reading of legal papers, by
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itself, hinders court access. See Jones, 697 F.2d at 802–04 (reversing a preliminary
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Yablonsky also relies heavily on the governing California regulations for
photocopies and searches. (See ECF 177, at 53–63.) But “an official’s clear violation of a
state administrative regulation does not allow a § 1983 plaintiff to overcome the official’s
qualified immunity.” Elder v. Holloway, 510 U.S. 510, 515 (1994); see also Campbell v.
Burt, 141 F.3d 927, 930 (9th Cir. 1998) (“As a general rule, a violation of state law does
not lead to liability under § 1983.”).
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injunction that prevented prison librarians from photocopying legal documents “out of [the
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inmate’s] sight”).
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Perhaps future courts will divine a constitutional right to photocopy free from prying
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eyes. Or maybe future jurists will conclude that prison officials encroach on First
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Amendment correspondence rights when they read legal papers—ultimately bound for the
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post office—before photocopying them. But that day is not yet here. Or, to put it in legal
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terms, plaintiff has not shown that the constitutional question is “beyond debate.” See
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Ashcroft, 563 U.S. at 741. Thus, the librarians have qualified immunity on any claim that
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they improperly read legal files before copying them.
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D.
Retaliation Claim2
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Yablonsky’s last claim is that defendants retaliated against him for filing grievances
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against them. In the prison context, First Amendment retaliation requires: “(1) An assertion
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that a state actor took some adverse action against an inmate (2) because of (3) that
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prisoner’s protected conduct, and that such action (4) chilled the inmate’s exercise of his
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First Amendment rights, and (5) the action did not reasonably advance a legitimate
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correctional goal.” Rhodes v. Robinson, 408 F.3d 559, 567–68 (9th Cir. 2005) (citation and
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footnote omitted). Defendants need only negate one element to prevail. See Celotex Corp.
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v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 323 (1986) (“[C]omplete failure of proof concerning an essential
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element of [the] case necessarily renders all other facts immaterial.”). Yablonsky decries
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six varieties of retaliation, addressed below.
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2
Yablonsky asks the Court to take judicial notice of six other federal complaints
against defendants Blahnik, Tiscornia, and McGuire. (ECF 164, at 2–7.) A court may
judicially notice a fact that is not “subject to reasonable dispute.” Fed. R. Evid. 201(b); see
Lee v. City of Los Angeles, 250 F.3d 668, 689 (9th Cir. 2001). The existence of these six
complaints is not subject to dispute. So the motion is GRANTED, in that this Court notices
their existence. But those complaints’ unproven allegations are not themselves
indisputable. So, to the extent Yablonsky offers them as evidence for his own allegations
against defendants, the Court accords them no persuasive weight.
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1. Reading Plaintiff’s Legal Documents
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Yablonsky charges the defendant librarians—Blahnik, Powell, Robles, and
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Tiscornia—with reading his “legal mail” “to get even [with Yablonsky] for appealing their
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misconducts about reading legal mail and other requests for relief . . . .” (ECF 62, at 80;
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id. at 80–82.) In other words, after Yablonsky complained about the librarians reading his
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papers, he insists they “retaliated” against him by . . . reading his papers. This is
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continuation, not retaliation. Yablonsky must show that the librarians mistreated him
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“because of” his accusations against them. See Rhodes, 408 F.3d at 567. Yet he never
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suggests that the ongoing paper-reading became more frequent or obnoxious post-
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grievance. Nor does he offer any statements implying that their motivation for reading his
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papers changed after his complaints.
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Thus, no reasonable jury could surmise that the librarians continued reading
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Yablonsky’s papers—in the same manner as before his grievance—“because of” that
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grievance. See Patkins v. Lisk, No. 16-CV-04347-EMC, 2017 WL 4773372, at *2
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(N.D. Cal. Oct. 23, 2017) (ruling that when prison officials take “adverse action . . . before
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the protected conduct,” that action was not “in retaliation for the protected conduct”
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(cleaned up)).
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2. Limiting Library Access
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According to Yablonsky, the same defendant librarians also retaliated by restricting
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his library access. (ECF 62, at 80–82.) After filing grievances against them, Yablonsky
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claims they cut his library hours, violated prison regulations by denying him priority
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status—that is, at least four hours of weekly library time—and excluded him altogether for
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the week of October 16 to 22, 2016. (ECF 177, at 17, 142; see also ECF 168-5, at 183
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(prison operations manual: library priority status).)
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There is scant evidence to support Yablonsky’s allegation of a retaliatory reduction
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in library hours. The library’s highest priority status—“Priority Legal User (PLU)”—is
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entitled to “a minimum of 4 hours per calendar week of requested access, as resources are
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available.” (ECF 168-5, at 183.) In the two weeks immediately after Yablonsky’s
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October 13, 2016 grievance, he continued to be scheduled library time of at least four hours
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per week. (See ECF 168-5, at 343–45.) In fact, excluding major holidays, he only fell
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below a “priority” level of scheduled time in 5 of the 54 weeks following that grievance.
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(See ECF 168-5, at 195–345.) On the other hand, in 8 of those same 54 non-holiday weeks,
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he was slated for at least 10 hours of library access. (See ECF 168-5, at 195–97, 202–13,
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217–20, 226–29, 291–95, 299–302.) On four occasions, post-grievance, he was scheduled
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for 12 hours of weekly access—more than he ever got before the grievance. (Compare
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ECF 168-5, at 346–64 (pre-grievance; best week of 11 hours and 10 minutes) with id.
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at 202–13, 217–20 (post-grievance; 12 hours).) For reference, the attached appendix
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summarizes Yablonsky’s scheduled library time before and after his prison grievances.3 It
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is hard to discern any retaliation from this data.
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Regardless of the hours, though, Yablonsky complains that he was deprived of
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library priority. But throughout his incarceration at Donovan, Yablonsky’s status ping-
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ponged between “Preferred Legal User”4 and “General Legal User.” From August 2016
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until his October 13, 2016 grievance, he was granted Preferred status 55% of the time. (See
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ECF 168-5, at 346–64 (Preferred 12 times, General 10 times).) During his 153 library visits
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after that grievance, his Preferred rate improved to 77%. (See ECF 168-5, at 195–346
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(Preferred 118 times, General 35 times).)
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3
Arguably, Yablonsky’s protected activity began as early as September 29, 2016,
when he mailed Powell a prison Form 22, stating, “I witnessed you reading throu[]gh my
legal writings,” which “is illegal. . . . PLEASE STOP.” (See ECF 66, at 94.) But
Yablonsky’s retaliation case is even weaker with that starting point, as he got a whopping
eight hours of library access the very next week. (See ECF 168-5, at 348–51.) For
Yablonsky’s benefit, then, the Court presumes the protected activity started with the
October 13, 2016 filing of his Form 602 inmate appeal. (See ECF 66, at 117–18.)
4
Although prison regulations define a “Priority Legal User (PLU)” (see ECF 168-5,
at 176–77, 183), the prison library log uniformly uses the term “Preferred Legal User.”
(See, e.g., ECF 168-5, at 195–220.)
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Yablonsky might argue, however, that post-grievance, he was relegated to General
2
status for each of his next eight library trips (and 13 of his next 14). (See ECF 168-5,
3
at 325–46; see also appendix, below.) But this designation did not appreciably impair his
4
library use. From the filing of his grievance until the end of 2016, he was granted the
5
equivalent of a priority-level time allotment—that is, at least four hours—in seven of nine
6
weeks, excluding major holidays. (See ECF 168-5, at 323–46.) In any event, there is no
7
evidence that he was ever misclassified as a General Legal User. Under prison rules, an
8
inmate’s “Priority Legal User” status begins “no earlier than 30 calendar days before [an]
9
established court deadline,” unless the inmate demonstrates “extraordinary circumstances.”
10
(ECF 168-5, at 184; see also id. at 178 (limiting priority access to “no more than 30 days
11
prior to the expiration of their court deadline”).) And prisoners must specifically “apply for
12
PLU status.” (ECF 168-5, at 183.) Yablonsky has not pointed to any relevant court
13
deadlines, extraordinary circumstances, or other evidence showing a request for Preferred
14
status was improperly denied.
15
Yablonsky next contends that defendants excluded him from the library entirely for
16
the week of October 16, 2016. But the library log tells a different story. That week
17
Yablonsky was scheduled for four hours, with two-hour blocks on both October 20 and
18
October 21. (ECF 168-5, at 344–46.) Yablonsky insists, however, that he never made those
19
appointments and that “[s]ome weeks I didn’t get any [library time].” (See ECF 168-5,
20
at 57.) But there is no evidence that the defendant librarians were responsible for this.
21
Instead, Yablonsky offers substantial evidence that nonlibrary staff were to blame for not
22
escorting prisoners to the library. (See, e.g., ECF 177, at 494 (“[T]he library relies on
23
[nonlibrary] staff who regularly fail to honor the [appointment slips]” and “regularly refuse
24
escorts.”); id. at 495–500 (same); cf. ECF 168-5, at 27 (Question: “The librarian may grant
25
the [library] request but the [nonlibrary] officer doesn’t provide you with a ducat
26
[appointment slip]. Is that correct?” Answer: “Correct.”).) Other times, it seems Yablonsky
27
missed his library dates due to conflicting medical visits. (See, e.g., ECF 168-5, at 334–35
28
13
18-cv-1122-AGS
1
(December 2, 2016 library appointment “Bumped by another Appt” for “Health Services”);
2
id. at 307–08 (same on February 3, 2017).)
3
In short, there is no proof that the librarians ever thwarted Yablonsky’s library visits.
4
To the contrary, every time a named defendant scheduled Yablonsky’s library
5
appointments, he was booked for at least four hours. (See ECF 168-5, at 236–38 (Tiscornia
6
scheduled one week of 4 hours); id. at 286–87 (Powell scheduled one week of 6 hours); id.
7
at 195–217, 225–29, 283–85 (Robles scheduled ten separate weeks of 4, 6, 6, 8, 8, 10, 10,
8
12, 12, and 12 hours).) And every time he was allotted less than four hours, it was by
9
another librarian—not one of the named defendants. (See, e.g., ECF 168-5, at 241–47.)
10
Yablonsky dismisses all this evidence as a smoke screen. He accuses defendants of
11
fabricating records to hide their retaliatory scheduling. In particular, he notes that the
12
identification number for the September 1, 2016 entry is out of order for that week.
13
(ECF 177, at 163; ECF 168-5, at 362.) Also, this dubious entry’s number is only seven
14
digits, while the rest are eight. (ECF 177, at 163.) But this supposedly bogus entry is for a
15
date before Yablonsky’s grievances, so it is not clear how it would aid a cover-up of any
16
improper bookings. At any rate, Yablonsky offers no proof that the librarians are to blame
17
for any tampered records, nor any indication of what the true scheduling data should be.
18
With no evidence of defendants’ vindictive scheduling—and much evidence of their
19
generous scheduling—this retaliation theory is meritless.
20
3. Confiscation of Legal Paperwork
21
Yablonsky also accuses the litigation coordinator, defendant McGuire, of retaliating
22
against him by dispatching guards to his cell to confiscate legal papers. (See ECF 177,
23
at 20–22; ECF 168-5, at 127–28.) McGuire responds that there is no evidence she
24
participated in—or was even aware of—this cell search, and thus Yablonsky “cannot meet
25
the adverse action” element. (See ECF 168, at 29.)
26
Although Yablonsky has no direct proof that McGuire conspired to take his
27
paperwork, he points to four pieces of circumstantial evidence of her culpability. First, the
28
timing. According to Yablonsky, he used “secur[e] institutional mail” to send McGuire a
14
18-cv-1122-AGS
1
letter for “assistance in processing” a grievance “about misconduct by staff in[] the law
2
library.” (ECF 62, at 54; see also ECF 177, at 144.) He claims that “within an hour” of
3
McGuire receiving that letter, officers searched his cell and took some legal files. (ECF 62,
4
at 54; ECF 177, at 144.) Based on this sequence of events, Yablonsky presumes that
5
McGuire read his letter and swiftly ordered his legal papers seized.
6
This theory collapses due to a complete lack of proof. Yablonsky offers no evidence
7
that McGuire even read the letter “within an hour” of its delivery, nor that she had the
8
authority or wherewithal to direct a cell search. (See ECF 168-5, at 373 (McGuire emailing
9
that she was “not aware of what transpired” until Yablonsky’s family informed her that
10
“his property was taken from his cell”).) What’s more, Yablonsky hasn’t explained
11
McGuire’s retaliatory motive. The letter raised complaints against library staff—not
12
against McGuire. (See ECF 177, at 143–44.) And as litigation coordinator, McGuire
13
routinely processed such inmate grievances. (See ECF 168-5, at 371.) It is unclear why
14
criticism of an unrelated prison department would ignite her retaliatory wrath. Yablonsky’s
15
claim that he “did one thing [sending McGuire a letter], and subsequently the other thing
16
happened [cell search] . . . is, in the factual context of this case, insufficient” to infer
17
retaliation, let alone that McGuire retaliated. See Nelson v. Pima Cmty. Coll., 83 F.3d 1075,
18
1081 (9th Cir. 1996).
19
Yablonsky’s second argument is that the guard who searched his cell knew of his
20
prison grievance, presumably from McGuire. (See ECF 168-5, at 127–28.) There are
21
several problems with this point. Initially, it’s a strained reading of the record. When
22
Yablonsky asked why the guard was taking his legal files, the guard twice replied, “I don’t
23
know.” (ECF 168-5, at 128.) The guard then asked, “Did you write somebody up?” (Id.)
24
Yablonsky responded, “Yeah, I did[.] I filed several appeals.” (Id.) So the guard replied,
25
“Oh, that’s probably it.” (Id.) In other words, the guard seemed unaware of the grievances
26
until Yablonsky told him. But even if this colloquy could be read to suggest the guard
27
learned of them beforehand—and not from Yablonsky himself—it does not prove that
28
15
18-cv-1122-AGS
1
McGuire told him. In sum, even with generous leaps of faith and logic, the guard’s
2
statements do little to link McGuire to any adverse action.
3
Third, Yablonsky interprets McGuire’s post-search assurance that “‘she’ would have
4
[his papers] returned” as an implicit confession that she had them seized. (ECF 168-5,
5
at 128.) But that’s like saying: When a detective assures distraught parents that he will get
6
their missing child returned, it’s a tacit admission of kidnapping. These statements don’t
7
imply a guilty conscience when it’s their job to find and recover what was stolen. It was
8
McGuire’s duty to restore Yablonsky’s legal files if other prison staff improperly took
9
them. (See ECF 168-5, at 371 (litigation coordinator’s major duty is ensuring that litigation
10
“issues are adequately addressed”).)
11
Finally, Yablonsky emphasizes that McGuire worked in the prison system for over
12
“nine years” and “as litigation coordinator” for two years. (ECF 177, at 79.) But McGuire’s
13
nearly decade-long tenure doesn’t imply she’s prone to improper reprisals against inmates.
14
It suggests the opposite. And in her role as litigation coordinator, she has no apparent
15
authority to order cell searches. (See ECF 168-5, at 371.) Rather, she “advise[s]
16
management” on “Litigation issues,” so she would be especially attuned to avoiding new
17
legal trouble for the prison. (See id.)
18
Even taken together, these circumstances would not lead a reasonable juror to
19
believe McGuire ordered Yablonsky’s legal paperwork seized or that she was involved in
20
any other adverse action against him.
21
4. Withdrawn Grievance
22
Yablonsky alleges that a “senior educator” at the prison, defendant Martinez,
23
retaliated against him by tricking him into withdrawing a grievance.5 (ECF 62, at 82; see
24
also ECF 168-5, at 82–83.) On January 20, 2017, Yablonsky and Martinez had their first-
25
ever meeting, so that Martinez could interview Yablonsky about his “appeal against the
26
27
28
5
To the extent Yablonsky is trying to bring an access-to-courts claim against
Martinez, that claim was previously dismissed with prejudice. (See ECF 79, at 5.)
16
18-cv-1122-AGS
1
law library.” (See ECF 168-5, at 83, 112–13; ECF 177, at 123.) During that interview,
2
Martinez said that if this “staff complaint goes through there is some possibility that these
3
people [defendant librarians] are going to lose their jobs.” (ECF 168-5, at 84.) According
4
to Yablonsky, Martinez thus “manipulated” him into withdrawing his complaint. (Id.
5
at 89.) Yablonsky said, “I don’t want nobody to lose their jobs.” (Id. at 84–85.) He then
6
handwrote into the “request to withdraw” section of the prison appeal that he would
7
“waive” his grievance. (Id. at 85–86.) But Yablonsky claims this was all a “bait and
8
switch.” (ECF 177, at 123; ECF 168-5, at 83.) While he assumed Martinez held in his hand
9
the library-access complaint, it was in fact the grievance about defendant McGuire
10
confiscating his legal files. (ECF 168-5, at 89, 92.) So, Yablonsky unwittingly withdrew
11
the complaint against McGuire, not against the librarians.
12
The defense argues that Yablonsky has not proven Martinez’s “retaliatory motive.”
13
(ECF 168, at 30.) The closest Yablonsky comes to addressing this element is his assertion
14
that Martinez: (1) spoke to librarian Powell, (2) was “from[ ]the same union, attend[ed] the
15
[same] education meetings, and knew” Powell, and (3) wanted to “help his fellow union
16
member [Powell].” (ECF 177, at 123–24.) The problem is that Martinez didn’t help Powell.
17
He hurt Powell, in Yablonsky’s telling. After all, Yablonsky was ready to dismiss his
18
grievance against Powell and the other librarians. Martinez’s “bait and switch” diverted
19
that dismissal to McGuire, at Powell’s expense.
20
Because Yablonsky cannot prove Martinez’s retaliatory motive, Martinez is entitled
21
to summary judgment on any claim that Martinez duped him into withdrawing a grievance.
22
5. Tampered Outgoing Mail
23
After Yablonsky finally mailed his legal papers, they were returned with a label over
24
the address. (ECF 62, at 83.) He believes that McGuire “somehow influenced the
25
mishandling of the legal mail and placed labels over the numeric portion of the address to
26
prevent delivery.” (ECF 177, at 124–25.) She did so, he argues, because Yablonsky named
27
her as a defendant. (ECF 168-5, at 148.) McGuire deems all of this “too speculative to
28
proceed to trial.” (ECF 168, at 31.)
17
18-cv-1122-AGS
1
Although Yablonsky claims that “there is more than enough evidence to show
2
McGuire . . . had enough ‘FRIENDS’ at [the prison] to tamper with the mail,” (ECF 177,
3
at 50), he offers only conjecture, not proof. Yablonsky admits that he handed this legal
4
mail to “Correction staff in Housing Unit 18,” not McGuire. (ECF 168-5, at 152.) He is
5
simply “assuming” that because he sued McGuire, “she held some advanced
6
responsibility” for the tampering. (ECF 168-5, at 153.) At one point, he candidly conceded
7
that he did not “know exactly who the [tampering] parties are,” but that he believes “the
8
litigation coordinator plays a role in whether these mailings are being delivered.”
9
(ECF 168-5, at 145.) But there is no factual basis for these assumptions. McGuire did not
10
work in the mail room. (ECF 168-4, at 2.) Nor was she involved in “the processing of . . .
11
confidential legal mail.” (Id.; see ECF 168-5, at 371.) Nor is there evidence that she
12
spearheaded a mailroom conspiracy.
13
Even if McGuire knew she was named in this lawsuit, Yablonsky offers nothing but
14
guesswork for how she tampered with his mail. “[M]ere allegation and speculation do not
15
create a factual dispute for purposes of summary judgment.” Nelson, 83 F.3d at 1081–82.
16
McGuire is entitled to summary judgment on this ground, too.
17
6. Rules Violation Report
18
Finally, Yablonsky alleges that defendant Robles retaliated against him by issuing a
19
rules violation report for unused library sessions. (ECF 62, at 61–62, 80–81; ECF 66,
20
at 313; ECF 168-5, at 122.) Although Yablonsky admits missing library time, he explains
21
that on each occasion he “had already been there” for an earlier session or he had to leave
22
early because “I go as much as I can,” but “[m]y eyes can’t handle anymore.” (See
23
ECF 168-5, at 122.) The defense argues that Robles had no “retaliatory motive” and that
24
he issued the citation “for legitimate penol[o]gical reasons.” (ECF 168, at 31.)
25
By writing up Yablonsky for squandering library appointments, Robles in fact
26
“reasonably advance[d] a legitimate correctional goal.” See Rhodes, 408 F.3d at 567–68.
27
“[L]imiting law library access is inherent in managing a limited resource for a large group
28
of individuals who all want to use it . . . .” Halbert v. Herbert, No. C 03-0237 JF (PR),
18
18-cv-1122-AGS
1
2008 WL 4460213, at *5 (N.D. Cal. Sept. 30, 2008). Each law-library session at Donovan
2
prison is capped at “twelve (12) Law Library users.” (See ECF 168-5, at 176.) When
3
Yablonsky is repeatedly assigned time he doesn’t use, it could deprive other inmates of
4
library turns. To conserve library resources, prison staff may thus set and enforce rules to
5
ensure prisoners maximize their allotted time.
6
But Yablonsky also complains that this is a “fake rule” that “does not exist.”
7
(ECF 62, at 61, 81.) Not true. Section 101120.10 of the prison’s operations manual
8
supplement states that any inmate who “does not attend their [assigned library] session will
9
be subject to progressive discipline,” and that “the initial incident will result in a
10
Counseling Only Rules Violation Report.” (ECF 168-5, at 177.) Robles issued Yablonsky
11
a “Counseling Only” rules violation report, citing this exact rule. (ECF 66, at 313.) Thus,
12
even in the light most favorable to Yablonsky, any reasonable juror would find that
13
Robles’s actions “reasonably advance[d] a legitimate correctional goal.” Rhodes, 408 F.3d
14
at 567–68.
15
CONCLUSION
16
As there is no genuine issue for trial on any of Yablonsky’s claims and no reasonable
17
jury could find in his favor, defendants’ summary-judgment motion is GRANTED. The
18
Clerk of Court shall enter judgment in favor of defendants on all claims and close the case.
19
Dated: September 30, 2022
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
19
18-cv-1122-AGS
1
APPENDIX
Yablonsky’s Scheduled Library Hours
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
Week
Starting
Hours Scheduled
Under 4 Hours 4 Hours or More
Citation
Major Holidays
ECF 168-5,
at . . .
8/21/2016
11 hours, 10 mins. 363–64
8/28/2016
8 hours, 30 mins. 361–63
9/04/2016
8 hours
357–60
9/11/2016
4 hours
356
9/18/2016
4 hours
355–56
9/25/2016
4 hours
351–54
September 29, 2016: Yablonsky files Form 22 about librarians. (ECF 66, at 94.)
10/2/2016
8 hours
348–51
10/9/2016
4 hours
346–48
October 13, 2016: Yablonsky files Form 602 about librarians. (ECF 66, at 117–18.)
10/16/2016
4 hours
344–45
10/23/2016
4 hours
343–44
10/30/2016
2 hours
342
11/6/2016
2 hours
337–41
11/13/2016
4 hours
335–37
11/20/2016
0 hours
188
Thanksgiving week
11/27/2016
4 hours, 10 mins. 333–34
12/4/2016
4 hours
328–32
12/11/2016
4 hours
325–27
12/18/2016
4 hours
323–25
12/25/2016
0 hours
189
Christmas week
1/1/2017
2 hours
316–18
New Year’s week
1/8/2017
4 hours
314–15
1/15/2017
4 hours
312–13
1/22/2017
8 hours
308–11
1/29/2017
6 hours
305–07
2/5/2017
6 hours
302–05
2/12/2017
10 hours
299–302
2/19/2017
4 hours
298–99
2/26/2017
6 hours
295–97
3/5/2017
10 hours
291–95
3/12/2017
2 hours
290
3/19/2017
4 hours
288–89
3/26/2017
6 hours
286–87
20
18-cv-1122-AGS
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
4/2/2017
4/9/2017
4/16/2017
4/23/2017
4/30/2017
5/7/2017
5/14/2017
5/21/2017
5/28/2017
6/4/2017
6/11/2017
6/18/2017
6/25/2017
7/2/2017
7/9/2017
7/16/2017
7/23/2017
7/30/2017
8/6/2017
8/13/2017
8/20/2017
8/27/2017
9/3/2017
9/10/2017
9/17/2017
9/24/2017
10/1/2017
10/8/2017
10/15/2017
10/22/2017
10/29/2017
11/5/2017
11/12/2017
8 hours
6 hours
6 hours
4 hours
4 hours
4 hours
6 hours
8 hours
6 hours
4 hours
4 hours
4 hours
6 hours
6 hours
4 hours
4 hours
2 hours
2 hours
4 hours
4 hours
4 hours
4 hours
10 hours
4 hours
6 hours
12 hours
6 hours
12 hours
12 hours
12 hours
8 hours
6 hours
10 hours
283–85
281–83
279–81
277–78
275–76
272–74
270–71
263–69
261–62
258–60
257–58
254–56
251–53
250–51
248–49
247–48
245–47
241–44
239–41
236–38
233–35
230–32
226–29
225–26
221–24
217–20
213–17
210–13
206–09
202–05
200–02
198–99
195–97
24
25
26
27
28
21
18-cv-1122-AGS
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