Aiello v. Litscher

104 F. Supp. 2d 1068, 2000 WL 963502
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Wisconsin
DecidedJune 7, 2000
Docket98-C-0791-C
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 104 F. Supp. 2d 1068 (Aiello v. Litscher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aiello v. Litscher, 104 F. Supp. 2d 1068, 2000 WL 963502 (W.D. Wis. 2000).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

CRABB, District Judge.

In this civil action for injunctive relief, plaintiff prisoners Louie E. Aiello, Brian Huisman, Demian McDermott, Corey Keller, Dean Sabin, Cody Vandenberg and Casey Fisher, on behalf of themselves and as representatives of a class of similarly-situated Wisconsin prisoners, contend that a policy enacted by defendants Jon E. Litscher and Richard Verhagan of the Wisconsin Department of Corrections prohibiting access to allegedly sexually explicit materials violates their rights to freedom of speech protected by the First Amendment and due process of law protected by the Fourteenth Amendment. Subject matter jurisdiction is present. See 28 U.S.C. § 1331. The case is before the court on defendants’ motion for summary judgment and plaintiffs’ motion to correct two citation errors. Because I find that there are material disputes of fact regarding whether the challenged regulation serves legitimate penological interests and provides fair notice of what it prohibits, defendants’ motion for summary judgment will be denied. Plaintiffs’ motion to correct two citation errors will be granted.

I. MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

A word is required regarding defendants’ proposed findings of fact. Defendants cite the affidavit testimony of their witnesses for record support of their proposed facts, but the credibility of that testimony is in grave doubt. An example from the affidavit of Sergeant Marcia L. Byers illustrates the problem. Byers was a guard at least two prisons in Wisconsin. In her sworn affidavit, Byers stated,

Prisoners often deal in materials prohibited by the rule because it has value inside the prison. Prisoners will sell or rent such materials to other prisoners for profit or to pay off debts. Such materials can include publications such as Playboy magazine, Penthouse magazine, Hustler magazine, Gallery magazine, the Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue, Victoria’s Secret catalogs, Vanity Fair magazine, Cosmopolitan magazine, Maxim magazine, National Geographic magazine and medical, scientific and artistic publications.

The same paragraph, with minor variations, appears in many if not most of the sworn affidavits defendants submitted. However, when deposed, Byers testified she had never even heard of Maxim or Vanity Fair magazines before her deposi *1071 tion, had never seen a Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue and had never seen inmates selling or renting Penthouse, Cosmopolitan or the Victoria’s Secret catalog. In fact, Byers could recall only one incident in which there was a problem related to a magazine, Hustler, and that occurred only at the women’s prison where she was formerly a guard. This is significant because Byers also stated in her affidavit (in another paragraph that reappears repeatedly in other affiants’ testimony) that one problem with the presence of such magazines and “medical, scientific and artistic publications” is that male prisoners use them to masturbate in front of female guards or otherwise expose themselves to the female guards.

In short, Byers’s sworn affidavit was untrue and possibly perjurious. And hers is only one example; several of defendants’ deposed affiants contradicted their own sworn affidavits or revealed that their “personal knowledge” was based on many, many layers of hearsay. For example, defendants’ expert Dr. Hands admitted in deposition testimony that he did not know whether any incidents of inappropriate touching of staff by inmates had anything to do with materials banned by the regulation, despite his affidavit averment that they did. Defendants’ rather cavalier response is that even if some of the sworn testimony they submitted is untrue, plaintiffs have not proven that all of it is. It is true that plaintiffs’ pro bono counsel did not depose every one of defendants’ affi-ants and not all of those who were deposed contradicted their affidavit testimony, but those who did cast a pall on the credibility of the rest. See Colosi v. Electri-Flex Co., 965 F.2d 500, 503 (7th Cir.1992) (“If a party presents multiple affidavits on summary judgment, covering the same ground, and some are shown to be unworthy of belief and others are not, do those others entitle the party to summary judgment or can the falsity of some support a negative inference about the others? We should think the latter, at least in extreme cases.”). It is not the court’s responsibility to compare each affidavit with the deposition testimony of the affiant; it is defendants’ responsibility to insure that each affidavit they submit to the court is based upon the affiant’s personal knowledge. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 11. This is particularly so because the same boilerplate language, obviously drafted by defendants’ counsel, appears again and again as .the affiants’ own sworn testimony, and it is this language in particular that several affiants admitted was not derived from their personal knowledge. Not only is this practice potentially sanctionable, see Rule 11(b)(3), it is an unwise litigation strategy. The credibility of all of defendants’ affidavit testimony has been compromised by their carelessness (at best) in submitting some that is untrue.

In addition, both parties ignored the requirement of this court’s Procedure to be Followed on a Motion for Summary Judgment at I.C.2. that “to the extent practicable, each paragraph shall state only one factual proposition.” Instead, the parties often included dozens of factual proposition within a single paragraph, followed by string citations to deposition or affidavit testimony that does not explain which part of the record supports which proposition. With the credibility of defendants’ proposed facts already in doubt, and with the parties’ failure to identify specific facts and support them with citations to the record, the court is left with an almost insurmountable burden in attempting to cull a body of undisputed facts in order to decide defendants’ motion for summary judgment.

Because it is defendants’ motion for summary judgment, there is a heightened burden on defendants to assist the court in creating a body of undisputed facts. In submitting affidavit evidence not based on the personal knowledge of the affiants, defendants do not carry out that responsibility. The court simply does not have the resources to sort through each affidavit and deposition to discover which are trustworthy and therefore which facts are truly undisputed for the purpose of deciding defendants’ motion. The “sanction” defen *1072 dants will suffer for submitting false affidavits is not a punishment but rather is the inevitable consequence of submitting such affidavits: most of their proposed facts cannot be credited and thus cannot form a basis for deciding their motion in their favor.

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Bluebook (online)
104 F. Supp. 2d 1068, 2000 WL 963502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aiello-v-litscher-wiwd-2000.