Sisney v. Kaemingk et al
Filing
165
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER. Signed by U.S. District Judge Lawrence L. Piersol on 6/24/2020. (CLR)
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
DISTRICT OF SOUTH DAKOTA
SOUTHERN DIVISION
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CHARLES E. SISNEY,
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CIV 15-4069
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Plaintiff,
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vs.
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MEMORANDUM OPINION
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AND ORDER
DENNY KAEMINGK, in his official
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capacity as the South Dakota
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Secretary of Corrections;
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DARIN YOUNG, in his official
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capacity as the Warden of the
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South Dakota State Penitentiary;
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SHARON REIMANN, in her official
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capacity as an SDSP designated
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Mailroom Officer; and
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CRAIG MOUSEL, in his official
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capacity as an SDSP designated
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Property Officer,
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Defendants.
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This case is upon remand from Sisney v. Kaemingk, 886 F.3d 692 (2018). Subsequently the
case has been briefed and argued to the Court. Sisney makes both as applied and facial challenges
to the current South Dakota Department of Corrections (DOC) pornography policy. Count V deals
with Defendants’ rejection of seven specific publications which were to be delivered to Mr. Sisney,
those being: Pretty Face Manga Comics, Volumes 3, 4, 5, 6, a book entitled Thrones of Desire, and
another book, Pride and Prejudice: The Wild and Wanton Edition, and an art book entitled Matisse,
Picasso and Modern Art in Paris. Count VI deals with Defendants’ rejection of nine pictures:
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Paradise by Michelangelo
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The Expulsion from the Garden by Michelangelo (Sistine Chapel ceiling
painting, bay 4)
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Statute of David by Michelangelo
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Bronze The Creation of Adam and Eve by Lorenzo Ghiberti
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The Fall and Expulsion from the Garden of Eden by Michelangelo (Sistine
Chapel ceiling painting)
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Study of the Resurrection of the Dead by Michelangelo
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Paradise Bronze by Michelangelo
The Report and Recommendation details the factual history of the case and those factual
findings are adopted unless stated otherwise.
The 2014 DOC “Pornography” policy in question “prohibits the purchase, possession and
attempted possession and manufacturing of pornographic material by offenders in its institutions.”
The definitions are:
Pornographic Material:
Includes books, articles, pamphlets, magazines, periodicals, or any other publications
or materials that feature nudity or "sexually explicit" conduct. Pornographic material
may also include books, pamphlets, magazines, periodicals or other publications or
material that features, or includes photographs, drawings, etchings, paintings, or
other graphic depictions of nudity or sexually explicit material.
Nudity:
"Nudity" means a pictorial or other graphic depiction where male or female genitalia,
pubic area, buttocks or female breasts are exposed. Published material containing
nudity illustrative of medical, educational or anthropological content may be
excluded from this definition.
Sexually Explicit:
"Sexually Explicit" includes written and/or pictorial, graphic depiction of actual or
simulated sexual acts, including but not limited to sexual intercourse, oral sex or
masturbation. Sexually explicit material also includes individual pictures,
photographs, drawings, etchings, writings or paintings of nudity or sexually explicit
conduct that are not part of a book, pamphlet, magazine, periodical or other
publication.
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DISCUSSION
In reviewing the 2014 DOC Policy, the policy as applied is what must be considered. Even
though the current policy does still contain the word “feature,” the policy as applied is that one word
or one image is enough to get a book or other publication banned even though nudity or pornography
is not “featured” in the publication or the image.
This Court previously approved another prison publication review policy in 2003. King v.
Dooley, 4:00-cv-04052-LLP, Docket No. 34 (D.S.D. June 16, 2003). How the King policy would
apply to the publications in question is dicta. The only consideration of the King policy is to dismiss
the Defendants’ claim that the King policy is essentially the same as the 2014 policy now under
consideration and as an alternative policy. See Report and Recommendation detailing the
differences, pp 36-41 (Doc. 105). In brief, the King policy did not apply to written materials nor to
the manufacturing of images or objects. The King policy under its definition of “features” looked
at the item in question in its entirety rather than, for example, censoring an entire book because of
one page in the book even if that page was present not for its prurient interest but instead was a part
of the narrative in the theme of the book. An example is the book Some Luck by Pulitzer prize
winning author Jane Smiley. The book is a 395 page novel published in 2014 as the first of a trilogy
dealing with the life of an Iowa farm family starting in 1920. The book was selected by the South
Dakota Humanities Council for the One Book South Dakota program and thus read by a variety of
reading groups. A couple of short scenes in the narrative theme of the maturation of Frank, one of
the principal characters. The scenes would get the book banned under the current policy as it is
applied. Those scenes are an integral, albeit brief part of the book and a part of Frank’s early
experiences and not presented for any prurient interest.
An as applied as well as a facial challenge is being analyzed where there has been no
separate justification for the 2014 policy put forth by the Defendants other than broad general
arguments. Court approval of the King policy is no basis for the approval of the present policy as
they differ significantly. In addition, Defendants have not shown another approved policy in another
jurisdiction that is as restrictive as this policy as it is applied. Turner analysis is applicable to both
as applied and facial challenges. Thornburgh v. Abbott, 490 U.S. 401, 403, 109 S.Ct. 1874 (1989)
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(considering both a facial and as applied challenge); Bahrampour v. Lampert, 356 F.3d 969, 975 (9th
Cir. 2004). The ultimate Turner reasonable relation to legitimate penological interests test will be
applied to each item. Turner provides four factors for the reasonable relations test. The factors have
the same analysis for each of the items except as otherwise noted. The four factors need not be each
given the same weight in each analysis.
Under the first Turner factor, the governmental objective underlying the regulations is
legitimate and neutral. The pornography policy is related to a governmental objective, but not
reasonably so except in the instances of Manga Comics and Coppertone®.
As for the second factor, there is no alternate means by which prisoners can exercise their
First Amendment rights unless prisoners were evaluated individually and provided access according
to their profile. For example, prisoners inclined to violence would get no violence related materials.
See Murchison v. Rogers, 779 F.3d 682 (8th Cir. 2015) (single issue of Newsweek magazine banned
to all the prison population for its strong depiction of gang violence). Child sex offenders would not
get Coppertone® type ads or other similar materials. Although such specific limitations are
possible, it is not reasonable for the courts to require that level of specificity from prison
administrators. As a result, there are no reasonable alternate means by which prisoners could
exercise their First Amendment rights.
Third, what impact would the accommodation of Mr. Sisney’s asserted constitutional right
have on others (guards and inmates) inside the prison. Given the dearth of evidence in the record,
it is difficult to envision any impact upon others except for the Manga Comics and the Coppertone®
ad. Each could be trading stock to some. The Manga Comics could be bartered for their sexual
themes and could give rise to new ideas with which to taunt female employees.
Fourth, whether there are obvious, easy alternatives whose existence show that the regulation
in question is not reasonable, but is an “exaggerated response” to prison concerns. An easy
alternative, by no means the only one, is the King policy that this Court approved of in 2003. No
reasons have been shown for this strict departure from that policy. No showing has been made that
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the King policy caused problems in the penitentiaries. The banning, for example, of the Matisse
Picasso and Modern Art in Paris book is a clear example of an exaggerated response as is the
banning of the paintings and sculpture of Michelangelo. By contrast, the banning of Manga Comics
and the Coppertone® ad are not exaggerated responses.
MANGA COMICS
The comic books are not good literature or even close to it, but that is not the question. The
comic books have sophomoric situations which do have a sexual tone. The third comic book is
mainly about a teenage boy who gets a female face transplant after a motor vehicle accident and is
living life as a teenage girl at a girl’s high school. Book 3 contains approximately 200 pages,
dealing mostly with situations where the boy is nearly found out to be a boy or gets to hug girls. On
page 142 a man tries to sell the boy a pair of fake silicone breasts he can affix to his person. The
fake breasts are depicted bare with exposed nipples, but they are torso only. On page 155, the boy
is trying out an all body female suit covered with a skimpy one-piece bathing suit when a snake
attacks him, crawling between the covered breasts of the suit. The snake is drawn to look like a
penis. The female body suit is subsequently pictured holding a limp snake dripping some liquid.
Books 4, 5 and 6 are similar to Book 3. Pornographic images do not preponderate in the books but
the ongoing sexual tone does preponderate. The voyeurism, other sexual content, and the continued
sexual tone which are the feature of these juvenile books do warrant granting Defendants’ Motion
for Summary Judgment as to the Pretty Face manga comics. Pursuant to Turner the Court is to
conduct an “independent review of the evidence.” Murphy v. Missouri Dep’t of Corr., 372 F.3d
979-986 (8th Cir. 2004). The evidence consists of the books themselves. That review leads the
Court to the conclusion that the banning of the Manga Books is not an exaggerated response by
Defendants but instead is within their discretion in determining what is sexually explicit. This
banning does appear to be reasonably related to legitimate penological interests. Turner at 89;
Murchison v. Rogers, 779 F.3d 882, 885 (8th Cir. 2015).
THE COPPERTONE® ADVERTISEMENT
The ad is at Docket No. 40-10. It is a Coppertone® advertisement for suntan lotion. It
features a little girl in pigtails, probably between three to six years of age. She is deeply tanned and
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wears a brief bottom but no top (her chest faces away from the viewer and is not visible). A little
black dog has her briefs between his teeth and is pulling on them, revealing the upper globes of her
pale buttocks. Two ad slogans are visible, one stating “Tan . . . Don’t Burn . . . Use Coppertone®.”
The other slogan says “Don’t be a Paleface.” Id. Coppertone® introduced the ad in 1959. See
http://www.tvacres.com/admascots.coppertone.htm. Coppertone® changed its ad to be more modest
at the turn of the 21st Century. Id.
In this instance the Defendants did raise the specific concern of the attraction of this ad to
child sexual offenders. Even without a definition of “feature,” this ad does not feature nudity.
Instead it features the “cuteness” of the scene of a little girl and her puppy as it would appeal to most
people. Despite that, the attraction of this ad to the prurient interests of some child sex offenders,
be they hands-on or viewers, is obvious. Even though child sexual offenders make up only a portion
of the prison population, this is an instance where penological objectives concerning the minority,
child sex offenders, must override the position of the majority of prisoners that not being child sex
offenders they should be able to view this and other ads that would be neutral to other observers.
The current policy ban on this seemingly innocuous ad is, however, reasonably related to a
legitimate penological objective.
Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment as to the
Coppertone® advertisement is granted.
THRONES OF DESIRE
This book contains fourteen short stories by different authors. The “forward” to the
collection correctly explains that the stories have plot and sex, but that the sex in the stories moves
the plot along, it is not just a side attraction. Defendants have not addressed how the banning of this
written material meets their penological goals. There is only one image, that being a photograph of
a scantily-clad woman on the cover of the book. Her genitals, buttocks and nipples are fully
covered. If that is the reason for the banning, no rationale is given for how this meets any
penological goals. Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment as to this publication is denied.
PRIDE AND PREJUDICE: THE WILD & WANTON EDITION
This book combines the complete original Pride and Prejudice novel by Jane Austen with
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titillating additions by Annabella Bloom. The additions to the original text are printed in bold,
helping the reader identify the next addition. There are no visual images. Even though titillating
to some persons, Defendants have not shown how the banning of this book is reasonably related to
a legitimate penological objective. Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment as to this book is
denied.
MATISSE, PICASSO AND MODERN ARTS IN PARIS
This is simply an art book. There are not any sexual innuendos or sexual themes to it. The
book is a companion to the T. Catesby Jones Collections of Art at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
and the University of Virginia Art Museum. The book contains pages and pages of text, explaining
the art and the artists in the collection. The text is interspersed with numerous depictions of various
artworks in the Jones Collections. Of these depictions, a very tiny handful have the odd bare breast
or exposed buttocks. The nudes, few in number, are like still life paintings. They do not contain
any sexually explicit content. None of the paintings depict their subject lewdly or as engaged in any
actual or simulated sexual acts, nor is there any suggestion of S&M or other violent acts.
The first sentence of the rejection form states:
The item depicts pornographic materials or encourages sexual behavior,
pornography, nudity or sexually explicit conduct which is criminal in nature and/or
may be detrimental to your rehabilitation.
Docket No. 69-13.
Nothing in the book encourages sexual behavior, criminal pornography, criminal nudity or
criminal sexually explicit conduct. Thus the denial had to be on the basis that the nudes are
considered pornographic. On appeal, Defendant Warden Young rejected the grievance, stating: “All
three (3) books you ordered were rejected for sexually explicit content. Two (2) of the books also
have nudity in them.” Docket 69-17. There is no sexually explicit content in the Matisse book.
Sexually explicit is defined under the DOC Policy as “depiction of actual or simulated sexual acts,
including but not limited to sexual intercourse, oral sex or masturbation.” None of the nudes are
shown engaging in such acts, although they are nudes as defined in DOC Policy.
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No evidence has been put forward to establish that the ban on this art book is reasonably
related to a legitimate penological objective. Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment in support
of their banning the Matisse art book is denied.
This is not to say that all art books that are truly art books are as a group entitled to a free
pass to be made available to all prisoners. The Court has visited many art galleries and art museums
throughout the country and has probably the most comprehensive collection of modern fine art
books in South Dakota. There are very few of those gallery and museum images and books where
a case could be made for a banning based on the work being sexually explicit and the banning being
reasonably related to a legitimate penological objective. But all of those images and books are not
before the Court in this as applied analysis. This book and the Michelangelo Pictures and Sculpture
are before the Court and no showing has been made that banning any of them is reasonably related
to a legitimate penological objective.
THE MICHELANGELO PICTURES AND SCULPTURES
The reproductions of Michelangelo’s works depict portions of various scenes painted by
Michelangelo in the Sistine Chapel, drawings for later paintings, or sculptures. One picture is of the
sculpture of David from the Old Testament of the Bible. A life size reproduction of the sculpture
is in a park in downtown Sioux Falls. Bare buttocks and bare unerect genitalia are visible in the
picture. Not everyone gets to see what the genius Michelangelo painted in the Sistine Chapel even
though the Court has. Everyone should have that opportunity at least through images. Defendants
have denied any inquiry into their application of the stated exception for educational, medical, or
anthropological purposes. As a result, in an as applied application, those exceptions do not in reality
exist. No basis has been shown that the banning of the Michelangelo Pictures and Sculptures and
the bronze by Ghiberti is reasonably related to a legitimate penological objective. The Defendants’
Motion for Summary Judgment in support of banning Michelangelo is denied in support of this as
applied analysis.
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THE EXCEPTIONS TO THE POLICY
There is an exception to the ban on publications containing nudity for nude material that is
“illustrative of medical, educational or anthropological content.” The exception is permissive, not
mandatory, as it contains the word “may.” That permissive element could be used where some art
should nonetheless be kept out of prison. In briefing, Defendants claimed that the exception cannot
apply to nudes that constitute art unless the inmate requesting the nudes is a “serious student of the
arts.” They urge that the exception is inapplicable to Plaintiff because Mr. Sisney is not in any art
classes at SDSP.
With that position there would have to be medical, educational, and
anthropological classes available to inmates at the various prisons for inmates to take to possibly be
awarded the exception. Defendants did not respond as to what, if any, instances there are where any
of the exceptions were allowed. The three exceptions are illusory and are of no support to the
defense of the DOC Policy.
MISCELLANEOUS MATTERS
Mr. Sisney’s due process arguments were previously dismissed by this Court and not pursued
on appeal. Accordingly, they will not be dealt with again.
This Court reaches the same conclusions as the Report and Recommendation but cannot
adopt the approach of the Report and Recommendation as it first determined that the DOC Policy
was constitutionally deficient from a facial analysis. That facial analysis was then used in the as
applied analysis. In this opinion on remand, the as applied analysis is the first analysis and stands
on its own without regard to any conclusions from an application of a facial challenge. Also, the
King policy is not relied upon other than to show how it differs from the 2014 DOC Policy in
question and as one reasonable alternative.
Mr. Sisney urges that the DOC Policy is unconstitutionally vague. As the policy is in fact
applied, it is not vague. The Court does adopt the discussion of vagueness at pages 91 through 93
of the Report and Recommendation (Doc. 105). The short answer is that the application of the DOC
Policy in practice is that “feature” now means a one-time appearance of a single nude picture or a
single sexually oriented passage in a publication, either of which will result in a banning of that
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item. Previously, “feature” was defined to mean a publication which routinely and regularly
featured pornography or, in the case of one-time issues, promoted itself based on pornographic
content. Although the word “feature” remains in the current DOC Policy, there now is no definition
of “feature.” Without any definition of “feature” or “features” it can be argued that the policy as
stated is vague. However, when considering the policy as applied, there is no vagueness to the
current DOC Policy.
Defendants have argued that they need not show any basis for the much more stringent 2014
Policy as compared to the Policy approved by King in 2003, nor that they must separately show in
this how the 2014 Policy meets the four Turner factors. Defendants claim there the King decision
allows Defendants to simply rely upon other cases and general statements. King does not do so, as
King was a situation where the Defendants moved for summary judgment and the pro se Plaintiff
did not respond so the representations of the Defendants for summary judgment were admitted.
THE FACIAL CHALLENGE
The Court has now ruled upon the as applied challenges. Plaintiff also raised a facial
challenge. There is some question from the Complaint as to whether the facial challenge was a
limited challenge or a challenge to all the pornography regulations. Plaintiff was pro se until the
appeal was taken so the Plaintiff’s pleadings must be broadly construed. In addition, throughout the
proceedings before this Court the facial challenge has been to all of the pornographic regulation.
The courts can simultaneously consider an as applied as well as a facial challenge as was
done in Thornburgh. There the prison regulations for prisoner receipt of publications was found to
be facially valid but the case was remanded for an individual determination of whether the regulation
as applied in banning each of 46 publications was unconstitutional.
The first question is whether the facial challenge should be reviewed now that the as applied
challenge has been ruled upon. Footnote 5 of the Eighth Circuit Opinion in Sisney noted “See
Richard H. Falcon, Jr., Fact and Fiction about Facial Challenges, 99 Cal. L. Rev. 915, 925 (2011)
(noting that “the Supreme Court routinely speaks of facial attacks on particular provisions . . . . even
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when the success of those attacks could have other aspects of multi part enactments [or rules]
intact”). This was in support of the Court’s observation: “Moreover, even if the as applied analyses
did not fully resolve the case, the Fox approach might facilitate the severing of constitutionally
suspect provisions instead of invalidating the entire policy.” Sisney at 698.1
With those observations in mind, the pornography policy presents two different worlds. One
is the prohibition of “sexually-explicit” conduct in the paragraph with the heading “Pornographic
materials:” and the paragraph banning “Sexually Explicit:” with deletion of the words “nudity or.”
Sexually explicit conduct is far removed from simple nudity.
As for sexually explicit materials with the removal of nudity from the definition of sexually
explicit, it is clear that such a banning has a reasonable relation to legitimate penological interests.
As for the factors underlying that ultimate Turner test, the government objective underlying that
portion of the regulations is legitimate and neutral, and that portion of the regulations is rationally
related to that government objective only with the removal of nudity from the definitions of
pornographic material and what is sexually explicit. Without those deletions, the policy is overly
broad and in violation of the First Amendment. The same is true for a banning of a written
publication that has a single sexual reference.
Secondly, there are no real alternate means of exercising the right to view simple nudity or
to read literature that did not feature sexual presentations. There could be monitored reading rooms
for such material but to provide that option is within the judgment and discretion of prison
administrators and not to be mandated by the courts.
1
Sisney at 698 referred to Jacobsen v. Howard, 109 F.3d 1268 (8th Cir. 1997). That commercial
case involved the removal of Mr. Jacobsen’s newspaper vending machines at highway rest areas.
The as applied analysis found the statutes prohibiting this commercial activity at highway rest stops
to violate the First Amendment so no review of facial challenge was necessary. In the present case,
some of the bannings were on as applied analysis found to be constitutionally prohibited but other
bannings were found to withstand First Amendment challenge. Those various findings warrant a
Fox facial review which results in portions of the policy being upheld and portions stricken.
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Thirdly, accommodating all prisoners to view and possess sexually explicit materials would
appear to be detrimental to the order desirable for prison employees and other inmates. But once
again, to ban simple nudity, or a single sexual reference in a publication is overly broad and contrary
to the First Amendment.
Finally, a limitation upon viewing and possessing sexually explicit materials by inmates is
not an exaggerated response to prison concerns. But the policy, both as stated and as applied, is far
broader than that and is overly broad and in violation of the First Amendment.
What then about depictions of simple nudity that is not sexually explicit? The regulations
banning simple nudity which has no component of being sexually explicit as defined by the policy,
has no reasonable relation to any legitimate penological interests. A caveat is demonstrated by the
Coppertone® ad. A limitation on nudity of minors would have a reasonable relation to legitimate
penological interests.
Secondly, there is no reasonable alternative means of exercising the right to view simple
nudity.
Thirdly, the impact of the accommodation of Plaintiff to view simple nudity would have no
discernable impact upon others inside the prison such as guards and inmates.
Finally, the banning of simple nudity, nudity which has no component of being sexually
explicit, is an exaggerated response to prison concerns.
But what about the written word? The King policy did not ban written material. It is a huge
leap for the current policy to ban written material with sexual content where the sexual content is
a natural part of the written work as opposed to sexual material being the feature of the publication.
The present policy bans written material with any sexual content. That means the potential of
banning the Bible and much of Shakespeare, not to mention all of the fiction of John Updike, Phillip
Roth, Earnest Hemingway, and Gabriel Garcia Marquez, to name a few.
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A ban this sweeping has no rational relation to legitimate penological interests. The
prisoners have no alternate reasonable means of access to such literature.
The accommodation of the prisoners having access to these written materials would have
little impact on others inside the prison. A more nuanced ban on some types of reading material is
an easy alternative. A ban this sweeping is an exaggerated response to prison concerns.
Accordingly, that portion of the policy that includes in the definition of “Pornographic
Material” the words “nudity or” is overly broad and in violation of the First Amendment. The
sentence that remains which does not violate the First Amendment would read:
Pornographic Material:
Includes books, articles, pamphlets, magazines, periodicals, or any other publications
or materials that feature "sexually explicit" conduct. Pornographic material may also
include books, pamphlets, magazines, periodicals or other publications or material
that features photographs, drawings, etchings, paintings, or other graphic depictions
of sexually explicit material. “Feature” means a publication which routinely and
regularly featured pornography, or in the case of one-time issues, promoted itself
based on pornographic content. Graphic depictions of nudity of minors is prohibited.
The words “nudity or” would also be removed from the definition of “Sexually Explicit” as
being overly broad and not reasonably related to legitimate penological interests.
One person cannot normally sue on behalf of others. An exception to the rule is a challenge
to a statute as overbroad under the First Amendment. LAPD v. United Reporting Pub. Corp., 528
U.S. 32, 38 (1999). “Litigants, therefore, are permitted to challenge a statute not because their own
rights of free expression are violated, but because of a judicial jurisdiction or assumption that the
statute’s very existence may cause others not before the court to refrain from constitutionally
protected speech or expression.” Broadrick v. Oklahoma, 413 U.S. 601, 612 (1973). Here there is
no assumption necessary as the record contains numerous examples of banning materials of inmates
other than Mr. Sisney.
Facial challenges have been found to be appropriate where, as here, the challenge provides
actual instances of overbroad application of a policy, and not just speculation about hypothetical or
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imaginary cases. Washington State Grange v. Washington State Republican Party, 552 U.S. 442,
449-450 (2008).
If a facial analysis of the pornography policy is not allowed, then that leaves the policy as
virtually unreviewable. Griffin v. Sec’y of Veterans Affairs, 288 F.3d 1309, 1320 (Fed Cir. 2002).
Few inmates can navigate the rigors of federal litigation pro se, and Mr. Sisney has had able courtappointed counsel starting with his appeal.
The above alteration of the current policy allows that which should remain to be in place
until the DOC creates whatever in its discretion it chooses, subject to the requirements of the First
Amendment and the anticipated appeal.
The failure of the Defendants to support or justify the 2014 Policy should not be a basis for
the courts refusing to do a facial review of the policy. If a refusal to justify a policy prevents facial
review of claimed First Amendment violations, then there is a new and unbeatable defense to any
facial review of a policy no matter how overbroad.
Unconstitutional applications of the current policy do overwhelm legitimate applications.
By upholding the legitimate portions of the policy, the balancing of improper banning versus proper
need not be made prospectively.
It should also be noted what this facial review does not do. It does not consider the instances
of banning for violence which was approved in Murchison v. Rogers, 779 F.3d 882 (8th Cir. 2015)
“... an overbreadth claim is unique from traditional facial challenges in that it does not require a
plaintiff to plead or prove that the law is unconstitutional in every application.” Bell v. Keating, 697
F.3d 445, 453 (7th Cir. 2012) (citing United States v. Stevens, 559 U.S. 460, 130 S.Ct. 1577, 1587
(2020). Instead, Sisney needs to show that the policy’s overbreadth is “real [and] substantial ...
judged in relation to the [policy’s] plainly legitimate sweep.” Broadrick v. Oklahoma, 413 U.S. at
615. The Penthouse type magazines are clearly to be banned in prison, but the potential banning of
much of contemporary fiction is an overbreadth reach of the policy, for beyond its legitimate sweep.
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Sisney has shown “‘From the test of [the policy] and from actual fact,’ that substantial
overbreadth exists.” Virginia v. Hicks, 539 U.S. 113, 122 (2003). “[T]here must be a realistic
danger that the statute itself will significantly compromise recognized First Amendment protections
of parties not before the Court for it to be facially challenged on overbreath grounds.” Members of
City Counsel v. Taxpayers for Vincent, 466 U.S. 789, 801 (1984). Sisney has shown actual and
substantial overbroad application of the current policy occurring on a regular basis before and during
this lawsuit (and continuing, see Bell v. Young, 2018 WL 314385 (2018)). The policy is overbroad
and goes far beyond what is necessary. There were no “limiting constructions” offered by the
Defendants for the Court to consider. See Kolender v. Lawson, 461 U.S. 352, 355 (1983).
In addition, this Court should, if possible, interpret the statute to preserve its
constitutionality. Ayotte v. Planned Parenthood, 546 U.S. 320, 329 (“‘ partial, rather than facial,
invalidation is the required course,’ such that a ‘statute may ... be declared invalid to the extent that
it reaches too far, but otherwise left intact’”). It should do so if the policy is “readily susceptible”
to such interpretation. If it is not, the court should “not rewrite [the policy] to conform to the
constitutional requirements. Virginia v. Am. Booksellers Ass’n, 484 U.S. 383, 397 (1988).
Sisney urges that the entire policy should be invalidated. The first basis is the policy would
not have been passed without the unconstitutional portions. Given that the previous King policy did
not have the present unconstitutional portions, it seems likely the DOC would have passed
something similar to the current policy without the unconstitutional portions as that policy is still
more restrictive than King. Sisney also relies upon the fact that in its previous opinion, this Court
declined to separate out or provide an alternative other than noting the existence of the previous
King policy which had met constitutional challenge. Upon consideration of the Eighth Circuit
Opinion, it appears that a couple of simple excisions and a provision regarding minors saved the
policy by it now having a reasonable relation to legitimate penological interests and still being more
restrictive in some aspects than the previous King policy.
IT IS ORDERED:
1.
That Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment, Doc. 67, is granted in part
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and denied in part as follows:
a.
b.
Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment on Mr. Sisney's
as applied challenge is denied as to the Thrones of Desire
book, the Pride and Prejudice: The Wild and Wanton Edition
book, the Michelangelo pictures, and Matisse Picasso and
Modern Art in Paris; and
c.
2.
Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment on Mr. Sisney's
as applied challenge is granted as to the Manga Comics Pretty
Face books and granted as to the Coppertone® advertisement.
Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment on Mr. Sisney's
facial challenge is denied in part and granted in part.
“Pornographic Material:” is found to withstand facial
challenge with the removal of “nudity or” from the definition
and “Sexually Explicit” withstands facial challenge with the
removal of “nudity or”. “Nudity:” as defined as a basis for
banning is unconstitutional as being too broad as is the ban
upon all written material that has any sexual content. The
following is added to save the policy: “Featured: is defined as
a publication which routinely and regularly featured
pornography, or in the case of one-time issues, promoted
itself based on pornographic content. The depiction of nudity
of minors is prohibited.”
That Plaintiff Charles Sisney's Motion for Summary Judgment, Doc. 92, is
granted in part and denied in part as follows:
a.
Mr. Sisney’s Motion for Summary Judgment on his as
applied challenge is denied as to the Coppertone®
advertisement and denied as to the Pretty Face Manga comic
books.
b.
Mr. Sisney’s Motion for Summary Judgment on his as
applied challenge is granted as to the Thrones of Desire book,
the Pride and Prejudice: The Wild and Wanton Edition book;
the Michelangelo pictures, and Matisse, Picasso and Modern
Art in Paris book.
c.
Mr. Sisney's Motion for Summary Judgment on his facial
challenge is granted in part and denied in part as is stated in
1.a. above. No opinion is stated as to the effect of the current
policy on outgoing mail as that question is not now properly
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Case 4:15-cv-04069-LLP Document 165 Filed 06/24/20 Page 17 of 17 PageID #: 1595
before the Court.
Dated this 24th day of June, 2020.
BY THE COURT:
______________________________
Lawrence L. Piersol
United States District Judge
ATTEST:
MATTHEW W. THELEN, CLERK
_____________________________
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