Aikens v. Lash

371 F. Supp. 482, 1974 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12631
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Indiana
DecidedJanuary 23, 1974
DocketCiv. A. 72 S 129
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 371 F. Supp. 482 (Aikens v. Lash) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aikens v. Lash, 371 F. Supp. 482, 1974 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12631 (N.D. Ind. 1974).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM and OPINION

GRANT, District Judge.

This civil rights action, seeking injunctive and declaratory relief, was brought in forma pauperis under Title 42, § 1983 et seq., by nine (9) plaintiffs, all of whom were then inmates of the Indiana State Prison who had been transferred to that Prison from the Indiana Reformatory. Defendants Lash, Moore and Devero are the Warden, the Assistant Warden and the Director of Classification, respectively, of the Indiana State Prison at Michigan City, Indiana. Defendant Phend is the Superintendent, and Defendant Schroeder, the Assistant Superintendent of the Indiana Reformatory at Pendleton. Defendant Heyne is the Commissioner of the Department of Corrections of the State of Indiana.

The Court ordered that the action should be maintained as a Rule 23(a) (1) class action and appropriate notices were posted throughout the prison and provision made for adequate communication thereof to all inmates who were separately segregated from the general prison population.

The members of the classes similarly situated are the inmates of the Indiana State Prison who have been transferred for disciplinary reasons from the Indiana Reformatory and who were incarcerated in I.D.U. or another seclusion unit upon and after their arrival; the inmates of the Indiana State Prison who have been in the past, are in the present, or may be in the future, incarcerated in I.D.U. or D.O. Seclusion within the Indiana State Prison; and all the inmates of the Indiana State Prison who have or will communicate by mail with their attorneys.

As the date for the trial of this case approached, this Court was presented by plaintiffs with a Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus Ad Testificandum to produce the incarcerated plaintiffs together with some twenty-two other incarcerated State Prison inmates, all of whom plaintiffs planned to call as necessary witnesses “during the course of the trial”. Plaintiffs requested that each and all of the above should be transported here to the St. Joseph County (Indiana) jail (which has been duly approved for use by the U. S. Marshal) to remain here in the proximity of the South Bend Federal Courtroom (some 35 miles distant from the State Prison) for the duration of the trial. Confronted with the demands of security and countless other problems that came to mind as we contemplated this mass movement of prisoners, we concluded that we must move the site of the trial to the area where all the parties and witnesses were incarcerated (which is within the South Bend Division).

An exploratory trip to the State Prison revealed the existence of a Visitors’ Lounge in the Administration Building at the entrance to the Prison, a room sufficiently large to adapt itself to conversion into a courtroom, and arrangements for the changeover immediately began. Thereupon, for the convenience of parties and witnesses, and in the interest of justice, and pursuant to the provisions of Title 28, § 1404(c), the Court entered an Order transferring the site of the trial to “the Visitors Lounge located on the main floor in the Admin *485 istration Building at the Indiana State Prison, Michigan City, Indiana”. That Order then continued:

The Court has on this date made personal examination of the aforesaid premises and is fully satisfied that they will be converted into an adequate and appropriate courtroom where this cause can be tried at greater convenience to the parties and the witnesses and, further, will make possible any court inspection of any such facilities or proceedings within the Prison that the Court may hereafter deem appropriate.

The announcement of the Court’s Order moving the site of this trial inside the Prison’s walls was timely released to the news media and received wide circulation in this Division and over the State.

This cause, originally thought to require five days, did, in fact, require ten long days and, we are satisfied, was tried with greater convenience to all concerned than could possibly have been done in our regular courtroom.

This temporary courtroom was inside the first set of electronically-controlled, locked doors that serve the main entrance to the Prison. All attorneys, all witnesses (from outside the Prison), all newsmen and the public who attended, were required to go through the Prison’s frisk procedures before being admitted through this set of locked doors.

The plaintiffs, as well as the many other witnesses from within the prison, were escorted to the courtroom from their respective areas of confinement within the prison. All of this was accomplished very smoothly through the cooperation of prison officials who also made available three of their small counsellors’ offices for the use of counsel on each side and as a makeshift chambers for the Judge. The change of place of the trial of this cause proceeded without the objection of any counsel or any party.

It is unusual, to say the least, for a United States District Court to move its deliberations inside a State Prison wall and there to inquire into the practices and proceedings of the institution. In addition to the considerable convenience to the parties and the witnesses, it also served to underscore the very important fact that every citizen— including the incarcerated felon — has an unfettered access to the courts.

Mention should also be made of the fact that our presence there made possible an unannounced inspection trip through the two segregation units involved in this controversy. With the prior knowledge and approval of all counsel and flanked only by a law clerk and one prison guide, it was possible for the Judge to walk the “range” on both floors of both units, located in separate buildings a short walk from the courtroom.

These two segregation units are commonly referred to as I.D.U. and D.O. I.D.U. is “I” Cellhouse Detention Unit. It is located on the second and third floors of a building which is actually a wing of the Administration Building and was intended for use as a “punitive” segregation unit. However, since N.S.B. (New Cellhouse Unit) was damaged in a Labor Day disturbance at the Prison, prisoners in “administrative” segregation who were formerly detained in N.S.B. are now detained in I.D.U. along with those who are in punitive segregation.

D.O. is Deputy’s Office Segregation Unit. It is located in a separate building, perhaps 200 yards inside the prison walls, and gets its name from the fact that the office of the Deputy Warden is located at its front entrance. Confinement in D.O. seclusion is the most severe and harshest type of confinement at the State Prison. This two-story building is the maximum security unit of all the areas within the prison and, on its second floor, contains the solitary detention cells that were long used as “death row” for prisoners who, in earlier years, were awaiting death by electrocution.

*486 N.S.B., referred to above, is New Cell House Detention Unit and, unlike both I.D.U. and D.O., is connected to a secure exercise area for the recreation of those detained therein. As noted above, N.S. B. has remained empty for the past four months. N.S.B. is not the basis of any challenge in this proceeding.

The amended complaint, upon which this cause proceeded to trial, raised four issues :

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Bluebook (online)
371 F. Supp. 482, 1974 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12631, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aikens-v-lash-innd-1974.