Arruda v. Fair

547 F. Supp. 1324, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15005
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedSeptember 29, 1982
DocketCiv. A. 80-2124-C
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 547 F. Supp. 1324 (Arruda v. Fair) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arruda v. Fair, 547 F. Supp. 1324, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15005 (D. Mass. 1982).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

CAFFREY, Chief Judge.

This civil rights action has been brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 by Paulo Arruda (“Arruda”), who currently is incarcerated at the Massachusetts Correctional Institution at Walpole (MCI-Walpole). The defendants are Michael Y. Fair (“Fair”), the Commissioner of the Massachusetts Department of Corrections, and Joseph H. Ponte, the Superintendent of MCI-Walpole. Plaintiff challenges as violative of no less than four of his constitutional rights the search policy at MCI-Walpole as it has been applied to the inmates of Walpole’s Departmental Segregation Unit (“DSU”), in which Arruda until recently was imprisoned, and to which he is scheduled to return in the near future. The relief sought by plaintiff includes (1) a declaratory judgment to the effect that the strip search practice violates his rights under the Constitution and laws of the United States; (2) a permanent injunction enjoining the defendants and their successors, employees, or agents, from engaging in acts which violate Arruda’s rights as announced by the declaratory judgment; and (3) attorneys fees and costs.

Plaintiff’s claim was tried to the Court sitting without jury. Fifty-three plaintiff’s and five defendants’ exhibits were introduced. The parties called six witnesses, and submitted pretrial briefs and post-trial requests for findings of fact and rulings of law.

After considering all of the evidence introduced at trial as well as all the written submissions of the parties, I find and rule as follows:

Findings of Fact:

The Plaintiff

1. Arruda, who is currently 23 years old, was first arrested at the age of nine for stabbing a child. He testified that he had a lengthy juvenile record and in fact does not remember the number of incarcerations he had before he was 17, although he said that number is greater than 15. One of those incarcerations was for a heroin-related offense. Arruda testified that he used drugs prior to his present incarceration. He also testified that he has experimented with heroin on the street, and has used marijuana (which he bought from another inmate) while incarcerated at MCI-Walpole.

*1326 2. The plaintiff attended school only as far as the ninth grade. He could recall holding only two jobs prior to his 1976 conviction. He worked as a dish washer at Harvard University for two weeks before leaving of his own accord because he “didn’t feel comfortable” with the job. He also quit a job at a shoe-making factory after one day because he “didn’t like the atmosphere at work.” This was the last job he held prior to his conviction in 1976.

3. Arruda’s 1976 sentence was for armed robbery. Although he was first assigned to MCI-Concord, he was transferred to MCI-Walpole following an assault in which he allegedly was involved. The plaintiff found adjustment to this transfer to Walpole to be “difficult.” He was subsequently assigned to the DSU as a result of an assault in which he was involved. Arruda testified that while he was in the “general population” at Walpole (i.e., while he was housed outside of the DSU), he possessed at some point a weapon for the purpose of protecting himself from other inmates. Arruda denied possessing either drugs or weapons while housed in the DSU.

4. Arruda compiled a lengthy disciplinary record subsequent to his confinement in the DSU. He was accused of various charges, including creating a health hazard by failing to clean his cell area, verbally abusing corrections officers, throwing garbage and various liquids outside his cell, and refusing to follow DSU rules and regulations. Additionally, Arruda generally refused to comply with the visual rectal search aspect of the strip search procedure discussed below.

MCI Walpole

5. MCI-Walpole is a maximum security facility in Walpole, Massachusetts. It is the only maximum security institution in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, and it contains about 600 individual cells. As of January 1, 1982, MCI-Walpole housed 679 inmates.

6. A pamphlet entitled “A Statistical Description of Residents of the Massachusetts Correctional Institutions,” which was prepared earlier this year by the state Department of Corrections and whose contents were stipulated to by the parties, reveals the following facts about the inmates of MCI-Walpole:

—Eighty-three percent of the population at MCI-Walpole on January 1, 1982 were serving a maximum sentence of 10 years or more. Twenty-two percent were serving a sentence of life imprisonment.

—Seventy-six percent are serving a sentence for a crime against the person.

—Ten percent are serving a sentence for murder in the first degree. Nine percent are serving a sentence for murder in the second degree. Six percent are serving a sentence for a crime of manslaughter.

—Forty-eight percent never have held a job longer than six months.

—Sixty-two percent never have held a job longer than one year.

—Only two percent have ever had any college training or college education. Sixty percent went no farther than the 10th grade in school.

—Twenty-five percent are known to have used heroin at one time or another prior to their incarceration. Fifty-three percent have used drugs at one time or another prior to incarceration at Walpole.

—Twenty-seven percent have a total of more than 20 prior court appearances. Sixty-two percent have in excess of 12 court appearances.

—Thirty-four percent have more than 8 prior charges for crimes against the person. Fifty-five percent have had more than 6 prior charges for crimes against the person. Thirty-seven percent had prior commitments to the Department of Youth Services while they were juveniles. Forty-eight percent had at least one prior charge for a drug offense. Fifty-two percent have at least one prior House of Correction incarceration.

—Sixty-six percent have at least one pri- or adult incarceration.

—Nineteen percent made their first court appearance at age 12 or younger. Fifty-seven percent made their first court appear *1327 anee by the time they were 15 years of age. Seventy-eight percent made their first court appearance by the time they were 17 years of age.

I take note of these statistical facts about the residents of MCI-Walpole solely for the purpose of determining the type of individual with whom correctional officers charged with operating and maintaining safety and order at MCI-Walpole must come in contact.

7. Defendant Ponte testified that when he first assumed the job as superintendent of Walpole in February of 1980, a National Corrections Institute Report had stated that the situation at MCI-Walpole was “out of control,” and that the facility was a “jungle.”

The DSU

8. The DSU — which also is known as Block 10 — is a two-story cell block segregated from the main part of MCI-Walpole and connected to the institution on one of its four sides. The DSU was established pursuant to M.G.L. c.

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Related

Fernandez v. Rapone
926 F. Supp. 255 (D. Massachusetts, 1996)
Langton v. Commissioner of Correction
533 N.E.2d 1375 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1989)
Paulo Arruda v. Michael v. Fair, Etc.
710 F.2d 886 (First Circuit, 1983)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
547 F. Supp. 1324, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15005, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arruda-v-fair-mad-1982.