Greenhill v. Clarke et al
Filing
60
ORDER granting 54 Motion for Summary Judgment (Opinion and Order mailed to Pro Se Party). Signed by Judge James P. Jones on 9/19/2018. (slt)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA
ROANOKE DIVISION
ALFONZA HARDY GREENHILL,
Plaintiff,
v.
HAROLD W. CLARKE, ET AL.,
Defendants.
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Case No. 7:16CV00068
OPINION AND ORDER
By: James P. Jones
United States District Judge
Alfonza Hardy Greenhill, Pro Se Plaintiff; Laura H. Cahill, Assistant
Attorney General, Office of the Attorney General of Virginia, Richmond, Virginia,
for Defendants.
The plaintiff, Alfonza Hardy Greenhill, a Virginia inmate proceeding pro se,
filed this civil rights action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and the Religious Land Use
and Institutionalized Persons Act (“RLUIPA”), 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000cc to 2000cc-5.
By Opinion and Order entered in this case on December 15, 2017, ECF No. 53, I
granted summary judgment for the defendant prison officials as to certain of
Greenhill’s claims. The matter is now before me on the defendants’ Supplemental
Motion for Summary Judgment on Greenhill’s remaining claims for injunctive
relief under RLUIPA regarding his Muslim religious practices of participating in
weekly group Jum’ah services and wearing a four-inch beard.1 After review of the
1
The defendants are Harold Clarke, Director, A. David Robinson, Chief of
Operations, and Earl Barksdale, former warden. In support of their motion, they offer
record, I conclude that the defendants’ are entitled to summary judgment as a
matter of law.
I. BACKGROUND.
Greenhill is in the custody of the Virginia Department of Corrections
(“VDOC”), serving a prison term of fifteen years and forty days. 2 He states that he
has been a Muslim since 2000. He asserts that his Muslim faith requires him to
participate in a weekly Jum’ah group religious service with at least three other
Muslims. Greenhill also states that his religious beliefs require him to grow and
keep his beard trimmed to the length of his fist, or about four inches long. He has
claimed that he is confined in an administrative segregation unit where policies
prevent him from participating in Jum’ah services, in person or via television. He
also alleges that wearing a four-inch beard, in violation of prison grooming
policies, will prevent him from moving to less restrictive conditions and from
obtaining a job so he could purchase a television for Jum’ah participation. He
claims that the defendants’ policies and actions under those policies have
substantially burdened his religious practices, and he seeks injunctive relief under
RLUIPA.
affidavits from Unit Manager Larry Collins and former Unit Manager A. Duncan, with
supporting documentation.
2
This summary of facts is taken from the parties’ submissions as a whole and is
undisputed, except where otherwise noted.
-2-
A. Participation in Group Religious Services.
VDOC policies have established “protocols to provide reasonable
opportunities for offenders incarcerated in [VDOC] facilities to voluntarily pursue
religious beliefs and practices subject to concerns regarding facility security,
safety, order, space, and resources.” Mem. Supp. Mot. Summ. J. Ex. 2, Operating
Procedure (“OP”) 841.3(I), ECF No. 26-2. Inmates in Security Levels 1 through 5
(with Level 1 depicting the lowest measure of security) may attend group religious
worship services with other inmates, subject to varying degrees of staff monitoring
based on inmates’ security levels; time, space, and staffing constraints; and other
needs of orderly prison operations. OP 841.3(IV)(A)(7). After Greenhill entered
VDOC custody in 2007, he was assigned to Deep Meadows Correctional Center, a
Security Level 2 facility, and then to Sussex II State Prison, a Level 4 facility.
Because Greenhill was found guilty of a series of institutional disciplinary
infractions in 2008, however, he was transferred to Red Onion State Prison (“Red
Onion”) and was reclassified as a Security Level S. Level S is a security status
reserved for inmates who must be managed in a segregation setting, apart from
other inmates, for reasons of security and order.3 To earn eligibility for less
3
According to the VDOC operating procedure for security level classification,
inmates are classified to Level S based on “segregation qualifiers,” including gang
activity or leadership, manipulating staff or displaying predatory behavior, or acts posing
a “threat level too great for the safety and security of a lower level institution.” See OP
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restrictive classifications, a Level S inmate must complete the various requirements
of the Segregation Reduction Step-Down Program (“Step-Down”) set out in
VDOC Operating Procedure (“OP”) 830.A. 4
In February 2013, when the current Step-Down Program policy took effect,
the Institutional Classification Authority (“ICA”) at Red Onion recommended
Greenhill for assignment to the Structured Living Phase 1 pod, a general
population setting rather than segregation. In this status under OP 830.A, inmates
can have jobs and use a television in their cells, among other privileges. Greenhill
refused this general population assignment and remained in segregation, awaiting
reclassification. In March 2013, the ICA again reviewed his housing status and
noted that he had “advised staff that he would prefer to remain in segregation
rather than go into a Phase 1 housing assignment.” Mem. Supp. Mot. Summ. J.
Ex. 1, Duncan Aff. ¶ 10, ECF No. 26-1.
Ultimately, Greenhill was assigned to SM-0 status, the most restrictive step
of the program’s Special Management pathway of the program. SM status is
reserved for inmates with a history of disruptive behavior, fighting, and/or violence
toward staff or other inmates for whom reasonable interventions at lower security
830.2(IV)(G)(2), VDOC Procedures (Apr. 1, 2018) https://vadoc.virginia.gov/about/
procedures/ documents/ 800/830-2.pdf.
4
My previous Opinion described Level S and the Step-Down procedures in detail
and need not be repeated.
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level facilities have not been successful in eliminating such disruptive and
dangerous behaviors. An SM-0 inmate cannot participate in group activities with
other inmates, possess a personal television in his cell, or hold a job. In May 2014,
Greenhill was assigned to the Secure Integration Pod Phase 1, where the privileges
again included job possibilities and possessing a television in one’s cell.
In
September 2015, after Greenhill had incurred ten institutional disciplinary charges
in two years, officials reassigned him SM-0 status.
The Step-Down Program requires inmates to learn and display new thought
patterns and social skills. As they do so, they earn advancement to lower, less
restrictive housing assignments and greater privileges, in a manner that maintains
public, staff, and inmate safety. To progress in the program and attain SM-1
status, Greenhill must complete designated portions of the seven workbooks in the
Challenge Series, which teach positive thinking patterns. He must also remain free
of disciplinary charges and earn good weekly behavior ratings in cell maintenance,
personal hygiene, standing for count, and respect. When an inmate incurs new
disciplinary charges or continually fails to meet positive behavior goals, evaluators
may find that he has not learned the intended lessons and require him to remain in
his current step or start the program anew.
Since his assignment to SM-0 in September 2015, Greenhill has incurred
nine additional institutional disciplinary charges. He has, at times, participated in
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Step-Down programming, and he completed the Orientation Book of the Challenge
Series on November 15, 2017. A month later, however, Greenhill incurred another
disciplinary charge for tampering with a security device. At the time the parties
filed the pleadings currently before me for review, in January and February 2018,
Greenhill remained at SM-0 status.
Like all segregation status inmates, Level S inmates cannot congregate with
other inmates, even for religious services. A Level S inmate who has progressed
beyond SM-0 status to SM-1 or SM-2, however, can participate in the weekly
Jum’ah group religious service via a closed circuit television broadcast. Greenhill
does not own a personal television, and the Step-Down pods are not equipped with
closed circuit televisions for inmates’ use. Greenhill has asked prison officials to
provide him with a television for Jum’ah purposes only — in his cell, in the pod, or
in a nearby classroom.
Although the defendants admit that officials could
physically provide any of these accommodations to Greenhill, they have denied his
requests because of his security level and housing assignment to SM-0.
Instead, officials have advised Greenhill to remain infraction free and
participate consistently in the Step-Down requirements to earn eligibility for
advancement past SM-0. When he achieves SM-1 or SM-2, he can be considered
for a paid job and save money toward purchasing a personal television set from the
commissary for $212. According to the unit managers, the Step-Down procedures
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use television access as a motivational tool. Only inmates in SM-0 or IM-0 (the
lowest step in the Intensive Management pathway of the Step-Down Program) are
denied television access. “There are incentives built into the Step-Down Program
which we hope will motivate the offenders to participate and work toward longterm behavioral changes, new thought patterns and social skills.” Duncan Aff. ¶
13, ECF No. 26-1. “An offender’s ability to possess a television inside his cell is a
privilege that most inmates covet, and it is one of the biggest motivators for
encouraging offenders to participate in the Step-Down program.” Collins Aff. ¶
10, ECF No. 55-1.
B. Beard Length Policies.
The VDOC grooming policy, OP 864.1(I), establishes uniform personal
grooming standards for inmates “to facilitate the identification of offenders and to
promote safety, security, and sanitation.” Id. at Enclosure D. “Hair styles and
beards that could conceal contraband, promote identification with gangs, create a
health, hygiene, or sanitation hazard, or that could significantly compromise the
ability to identify an offender are not allowed.” Id. at ¶ 13. The policy now
requires inmates to keep their beards trimmed to no longer than half an inch.
When an inmate becomes noncompliant with the OP 864.1 grooming
requirements, he will be ordered to comply. If he refuses, he will be charged with
a policy offense, and receive disciplinary procedural protections required by the
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VDOC’s disciplinary policy. No inmate will receive more than one grooming
charge for each separate violation incident, and all inmates who remain
noncompliant with grooming standards will stay in segregated housing until they
do comply. As of November 6, 2017, a Level S inmate participating in the StepDown Program who refuses to comply with VDOC grooming standards on the
basis of religious principles will receive only one charge and “will not receive a
‘poor’ in the personal hygiene category” of the weekly behavior ratings. Id. at ¶
16.
As OP 864.1 now stands, an inmate “is not prevented from progressing
through the Step-Down Program for refusing to comply with the grooming policy
due to his religious beliefs.” Id. If he participates in that program and earns
assignment to a less restrictive step, he can be considered for a pod job without
shaving his beard. He “is not required to shave his beard in order to obtain a pod
job.” Id. at ¶ 12.
Furthermore, inmates who are noncompliant with OP 864.1 hair and beard
restrictions for religious reasons may qualify for assignment to the Grooming
Policy Violators Housing Unit (“VHU”).5 The VHU is a special management
housing unit, but allows its inmates privileges that Level S inmates do not have.
Among other benefits, the VHU housing areas are equipped with communal
5
The VHU is actually located at the nearby Wallens Ridge State Prison, a similar
high security prison.
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televisions with in-cell volume controls to allow for inmates’ visual participation in
weekly Jum’ah services via a closed circuit television broadcast.
To be found eligible for the VHU, Greenhill must meet the following
criteria: (a) be convicted of a grooming policy violation and (b) have “[n]o past
history of disruptive or assaultive behavior as determined by review team.” Id. at
Enclosure D, OP 864.1(V)(C)(1). A recommendation for assignment to the VHU
must be reviewed by the ICA at Red Onion and the VDOC Central Classification
Services (“CCS”), with final decisions or exceptions approved by Facility Unit
Head and the Regional Operations Chief.
C. Greenhill’s Allegations and Claims.
Greenhill claims that “since the defendants have made [his] visual access to
Jum’ah contingent upon ownership of a personal television [he does] not own and
cannot afford to purchase, they have substantially burdened [his] religious exercise
of Jum’ah” in SM-0. Greenhill Decl. ¶ 5, ECF No. 57. He states that even if he
can move to a status allowing employment, this burden on his religious practice
will continue. According to Greenhill, the pay rate for pod jobs is 20 to 35 cents
per hour. With other necessary expenses including hygiene and stationery items
and medical expenses, it may be years before he could save $212 to buy a
television. He states that “Jum’ah is a central tenet of Islam; any adult Muslim
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male who is absent therefore incurs a terrible sin and is deprived of the opportunity
to acquire many blessings.” Compl. ¶ 9, ECF No. 1.
Greenhill also claims that because his religion requires him to maintain a
beard that exceeds the length requirements of OP 864.1, he will be maintained
indefinitely in segregated confinement. This housing status deprives him of many
activities available to VDOC inmates in a general population setting, including:
Jum’ah participation, institutional employment, recreational activities like soccer
and basketball, and earning good conduct time to shorten his term of confinement.
Greenhill contends that factors beyond his control prevent his qualification
to enter the VHU, where he could wear his beard and participate in the televised
Jum’ah.
First, his assaultive disciplinary history precludes him from VHU
eligibility unless three levels of administrative reviewers make an exception and
approve him for VHU admittance. Second, he has not yet received a grooming
charge, another prerequisite for VHU consideration.6
To address these alleged violation of his rights under RLUIPA, Greenhill
asserts that I should order prison officials to “accommodate [him] with the means
6
In his responsive pleadings, Greenhill complains that Unit Manager Collins,
who is not a defendant in this case, has refused to charge him with a disciplinary offense
for failing to comply with grooming policy requirement for religious reasons. Collins
allegedly believes that the VHU is reserved for Rastafarian inmates and, on that basis,
such charges are reserved for Rastafarian inmates. Greenhill also claims that his religion
forbids charging a fee for Jum’ah participation, but that VDOC regulations essentially
require a fee (the cost of a personal television set) for Greenhill to participate in Jum’ah.
I find these allegations to be new claims, not properly presented in the Complaint or by
timely amendment. Therefore, I do not consider these issues to be part of this case.
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to visually access Jum’ah or allow him bodily access thereto.” Id. at ¶ 46. He also
asks for an order allowing him to maintain a four-inch beard “without incurring
disciplinary measures as a result.” Id.
II. DISCUSSION.
A. Summary Judgment Standard of Review.
A court should grant summary judgment “if the movant shows that there is
no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as
a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). “As to materiality, . . . [o]nly disputes over
facts that might affect the outcome of the suit under the governing law will
properly preclude the entry of summary judgment.” Anderson v. Liberty Lobby,
Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248 (1986). A dispute about a material fact is genuine “if the
evidence is such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving
party.” Id. I must draw all reasonable inferences from the facts in favor of
Greenhill, the nonmoving party. Williams v. Staples, Inc., 372 F.3d 662, 667 (4th
Cir. 2004). To survive the defendants’ motion, however, Greenhill must present
sufficient evidence that could carry the burden of proof of his claims at trial. Id.
He “may not rest upon the mere allegations or denials of his pleading, but must set
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forth specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial.” Anderson, 477
U.S. at 248.7
B. RLUIPA.
RLUIPA provides that
No government shall impose a substantial burden on the
religious exercise of a person residing in or confined to an institution,
. . . even if the burden results from a rule of general applicability,
unless the government demonstrates that imposition of the burden on
that person —
(1) is in furtherance of a compelling governmental interest; and
(2) is the least restrictive means of furthering that compelling
governmental interest.”
§ 2000cc-1(a). Congress enacted RLUIPA with the express intention to provide
greater protections for inmates’ religious exercise than does the First Amendment
as interpreted by the Supreme Court. Holt v. Hobbs, 135 S. Ct. 853, 860 (2015).
Nevertheless, context matters. An inmate’s right to religious exercise under
RLUIPA must be balanced against the VDOC’s institutional needs of security,
discipline, and general administration. Cutter v. Wilkinson, 544 U.S. 709, 722
(2005). RLUIPA cannot be applied so as “to elevate accommodation of religious
observances over an institution’s need to maintain order and safety.” Id. Thus,
any religious “accommodation must be measured so that it does not override other
7
I have omitted internal quotation marks, alterations, and citations here and
throughout this Opinion, unless otherwise noted.
-12-
significant interests,” with “particular sensitivity to security concerns.” Id. at 722;
Lovelace v. Lee, 472 F.3d 174, 190 (4th Cir. 2006).
1. Substantial Burden.
Under the first facet of the RLUIPA analysis, the inmate “bears the initial
burden to demonstrate that the prison’s policy exacts a substantial burden on [his]
religious exercise.” Incumaa v. Stirling, 791 F.3d 517, 525 (4th Cir. 2015). For
purposes of a RLUIPA claim, “a substantial burden on religious exercise occurs
when a state or local government, through act or omission, puts substantial
pressure on an adherent to modify his behavior and to violate his beliefs.”
Lovelace, 472 F.3d at 187.
The defendants argue that Greenhill has not met his initial burden to show
that his inability to attend or view group religious services in SM-0 status has
substantially burdened his religious practice, since that status is temporary. I find
otherwise. Greenhill contends that even a temporary inability to participate in
group Jum’ah services, in person or via the broadcast, deprives him of a central
practice of his Muslim beliefs and, thereby, causes him to sin and deprives him of
blessings. He presents evidence that it will take him many months to advance past
SM-0, secure a prison job, and save enough from his meager wages to purchase a
personal television to permit his Jum’ah participation while in Level S status. He
also points out that his disciplinary history includes assaultive behavior, making
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him ineligible for transfer to the VHU (with access to a communal television for
Jum’ah) unless prison administrators grant him an exception. Nothing in the
record suggests that such exceptions are common or that Greenhill has any chance
of quickly obtaining one. Taking all of this evidence in the light most favorable to
Greenhill, I find that he has presented material disputes of fact by which he could
show that SM-0 regulations place a substantial burden on his Jum’ah practice. See
Obataiye-Allah v. Va. Dep’t of Corr., No. 7:15CV00230, 2016 WL 5415906, at
*14 (W.D. Va. Sept. 28, 2016) (finding denial of televised Jum’ah at lowest OP
830.A step placed substantial burden on Nation of Islam inmate’s practice), aff’d,
688 F. App’x 211 (4th Cir. 2017) (unpublished).8
I cannot find, however, that Greenhill has met his threshold showing that the
VDOC grooming policy is placing a substantial burden on his religious practice to
wear a four-inch beard. It is undisputed that Greenhill is currently in segregated
confinement because of his many disciplinary infractions and his failure to meet
the goals of the Step-Down Program for advancement to less restrictive housing
statuses. His beard now exceeds the half-inch beard length limit in OP 864.1, and
he can grow and maintain it at a four-inch length, consistent with his beliefs. It is
undisputed, however, that his noncompliance with the beard length provision will
8
The plaintiff in the Obataiye-Allah case withdrew this RLUIPA claim
before appealing the disposition of his unrelated due process claims.
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not prevent his progress to less restrictive steps in the Step-Down Program and will
not result in more restrictive living conditions than those to which he is already
subjected because of his SM-0 status. Thus, Greenhill has presented no disputed
fact on which he could show that OP 864.1 is placing “substantial pressure” on him
to violate his belief of wearing a four-inch beard. Lovelace, 472 F.3d at 187.
Accordingly, the defendants are entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law,
and I will grant their motion, as to Greenhill’s RLUIPA challenge to the VDOC
beard grooming requirements.
2. Compelling Interest and Least Restrictive Means.
Only if the inmate proves that there is a substantial burden on his religious
practice does “the burden shift[ ] to the government to prove its policy furthers a
compelling governmental interest by the least restrictive means.” Incumaa, 791
F.3d at 525.
RLUIPA . . . contemplates a more focused inquiry and requires the
Government to demonstrate that the compelling interest test is
satisfied through application of the challenged law to the person —
the particular claimant whose sincere exercise of religion is being
substantially burdened.
Holt, 135 S. Ct. at 863.
The defendants argue that the VDOC has a compelling interest in the
success of Step-Down to motivate inmates to improve attitudes and behaviors —
thereby, to maintain order, reduce disruptive and dangerous behaviors, and to
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promote inmates’ successful re-entry of society after incarceration. I agree that the
VDOC has a compelling interest in rehabilitating its prisoners — to further internal
safety and security, but particularly to prepare an inmate like Greenhill, who is
nearing the end of his prison term, for life outside segregated confinement.9 Now,
I must determine whether the defendants have demonstrated that the Step-Down
television restriction in SM-0 is the least restrictive means by which they could
further the policy’s motivational goals.
RLUIPA’s “least-restrictive-means standard is exceptionally demanding.”
Id. at 864. “The least-restrictive-means standard . . . requires the government to
show that it lacks other means of achieving its desired goal without imposing a
substantial burden on the exercise of religion by the objecting party.” Jehovah v.
Clarke, 798 F.3d 169, 177 (4th Cir. 2015).
Courts should not “mechanically accept” prison administrators’ rationale for
restricting religious exercise.” Lovelace, 472 F.3d at 190. However, courts must
apply RLUIPA standards with “due deference to the experience and expertise of
prison and jail administrators in establishing necessary regulations and procedures
to maintain good order, security and discipline, consistent with consideration of
9
According to the VDOC website, Greenhill’s projected release date is January
25, 2022.
Offender Locator Search Results, https://vadoc.virginia.gov/offenders/
locator/results.aspx (last visited Sept. 18, 2018).
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costs and limited resources.” Wright v. Lassiter, 633 F. App’x 150, 151 (4th Cir.
2016) (unpublished) (quoting Cutter, 544 U.S. at 723).
In this context, I find it appropriate to view VDOC religious accommodation
policies as a whole, as Greenhill has encountered them throughout his term of
confinement. He started his VDOC prison term in institutional settings where
VDOC policies allowed him to gather with fellow believers for group religious
services. Greenhill squandered that opportunity and committed numerous rule
violations and threatening actions that caused officials to reclassify him as a
greater security risk. Eventually, his actions resulted in his placement in Level S,
where policies bar him from group gatherings with other inmates for security
reasons.
Even since moving to Level S, Greenhill has had opportunities (in the
Structured Living Phase 1 pod and in the Secure Integration Pod Phase 1) to take
actions toward reclaiming the opportunity for group Jum’ah participation. By
avoiding
disciplinary
infractions
and
participating
fully
in
Step-Down
requirements, he might have earned reclassification to a lower security
classification where group religious services were available to him.
In both
circumstances, however, Greenhill’s choices (to refuse Step-Down participation
and to commit multiple, serious disciplinary infractions) led to his demotion to
SM-0. In that status, too, his own actions or inactions have blocked his progress
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toward a less restrictive housing situation, including the possibility for a job and
other privileges, such as transfer to the VHU.
The defendants have demonstrated that Step-Down procedures in OP 830.A
use incentive-based pathways specifically designed for inmates with particular
issues that may derail their successful transition after release from prison. The SM
pathway is focused to assist those inmates, like Greenhill, with a history of
disruptive behavior, fighting, or violence, and a past demonstration of
unwillingness or inability to improve their behavior under less restrictive
conditions. Such inmates need strong motivational factors to convince them to
change, for the improvement of prison order and safety and for their own future
success after prison. The defendants argue that since television access is one of the
best motivations for inmates to work toward advancement in the Step-Down
program, its restrictions, including the television ban in SM-0, “are the least
restrictive means of furthering” the state’s compelling interest in Step-Down’s
success in maintaining order, reducing inmates’ disruptive and dangerous actions,
and promoting successful re-entry to society. Mem. Supp. Suppl. Mot. Summ. J.
14, ECF No. 55. They also contend that “[r]emoving the escalating privilege
levels would render the entire incentive-based Step-Down Program ineffective.”
Id. at 15.
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Greenhill does not offer evidence in contradiction of the defendants’
contention that the television ban is the least restrictive means of furthering the
state’s compelling interest in motivating him to make positive changes in his
thinking and conduct. The Supreme Court has instructed courts to defer to the
professional judgment and experience of prison administrators in developing and
enforcing effective procedures for inmate management. Cutter, 544 U.S. at 723. I
am also instructed not to measure any religious accommodation under the RLUIPA
standard in such a way as to “override other significant interests.” Cutter, 544 U.S.
at 722. Inmates’ rehabilitation and successful re-entry must be counted as such an
interest. I conclude that although the television restriction for SM-0 inmates may
substantially burden Greenhill’s Jum’ah practice, that restriction furthers
compelling penological interests by the least restrictive means. Accordingly, I will
grant the defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment on Greenhill’s RLUIPA
claim concerning his Jum’ah participation.
III. CONCLUSION.
For the stated reasons, it is ORDERED that the defendants’ Supplemental
Motion for Summary Judgment, ECF No. 54, is GRANTED.
A separate Judgment will be entered herewith.
ENTER: September 19, 2018
/s/ James P. Jones
United States District
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