Battle v. Anderson

457 F. Supp. 719
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 11, 1978
DocketCiv. A. 72-95
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 457 F. Supp. 719 (Battle v. Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Battle v. Anderson, 457 F. Supp. 719 (E.D. Okla. 1978).

Opinion

*721 MEMORANDUM OPINION

BOHANON, District Judge.

“Persons are sent to prison as punishment, not for punishment. It is incumbent on the incarcerating body to provide the individual with a healthy habitative environment. Anything less would be to subject the individual to further punishment than was given by the sentencing trial court. With habilitation assured, then possibly or probably the inmate can decide to rehabilitate himself.
But if the basic habilitative needs of the individual are not met then rehabilitation, reformation or redemption are not possible. Water, fire protection, air and food are necessities of life. Minimum space to call one’s own is a primary psychological necessity. Without the basic minimums, prisons are doomed to failure, with both society and the inmate incarcerated therein the losers.” Battle v. Anderson, 447 F.Supp. 516 at 525 (E.D.Okl.)

The Court on February 7, 1978, ordered plaintiffs and plaintiff-intervenors to report on the level of defendants’ compliance with its prior orders in this cause, Battle I, 376 F.Supp. 402 (D.C.1974) and Battle II, 447 F.Supp. 516, aff’d, 564 F.2d 388 (10th Cir. 1977).

Battle I found constitutional violations in the following areas: racial segregation and discrimination; disciplinary procedures and punishments; health care delivery system, use of chemical agents and force; access to the courts, public officials and attorneys; mail and publication rules; staffing and security; conditions of confinement; and religious freedom.

The Court held several compliance hearings on the Battle I issues at approximately 6 month intervals and found that while defendants were making progress, they still were not in compliance with constitutional mandates.

Battle II (July, 1977) found that the conditions of confinement within the Department of Corrections did not pass constitutional muster. The Court specifically focused on the levels of crowding, physical conditions of the facilities, fire protection, ventilation, water and sewage facilities and general levels of sanitation.

The Court, in July, 1977, then ordered the defendants to reduce the population of the .Oklahoma State Penitentiary at McAlester from 1,550 to 800 at the rate of 100 inmates a month and to reduce the population of the Oklahoma State Reformatory at Granite from 690 to 450 at the rate of 50 inmates a month.

The State complied with the Court’s order until late December, 1977, when they moved the District Court for stay. The Court granted defendants’ request for a stay, pending presentation of a compliance report from the plaintiff and plaintiff-intervenor.

In the Joint Compliance Report, the plaintiff and plaintiff-intervenor reported to the Court that defendants were in substantive compliance in the areas of religious freedom, mail and publication rules and disciplinary rules. In the areas of administrative/disciplinary due process, racial segregation and discrimination, use of chemical agents and force, access to courts, public officials and attorneys, health care delivery systems, crowding and conditions of confinement, the Report stated that the defendants were in noncompliance with the Court’s orders.

Pursuant to the Court’s instruction, the plaintiffs and plaintiff-intervenor conducted extensive discovery into the current operations of the Oklahoma Department. The matter came on for evidentiary hearing on August 14 and 15, 1978.

The plaintiff-intervenor and plaintiff called as witnesses representatives of the State Fire Marshal’s office and the State Department of Health; the wardens of the Oklahoma State Penitentiary (McAlester) and Oklahoma State Reformatory (Granite); State Senator A1 Terrill, who chaired the Oklahoma Legislature Special Committee on Criminal Justice System; Thomas Flesher, an Oklahoma City architect who is part of a joint venture architectural consortium retained by the Department of Corrections to evaluate McAlester and Granite; *722 Charles Robert Sarver, a former correctional administrator for two states and presently a professor of law and social work and Dr. Frank Rundle, a medical doctor and psychiatrist who is an expert in the field of health care delivery services in prisons.

The plaintiffs and plaintiff-intervenor also introduced the depositions of seven Department of Corrections employees, of the New York City architect who conducted the architectural feasibility study and of Dr. Frank Rundle.

The defendants presented five witnesses: Charles Campbell, a correctional consultant from Dallas; Dr. F. Warren Bentor, Director of Corrections; Armand Start, the Department’s Medical Director; David Bickham, Executive Director of the Oklahoma Medical Association; and Dr. Donald Cooper, Medical Director of Student Health Services, Oklahoma State University, Still-water, Oklahoma.

FINDINGS OF FACT

I. Overcrowding

1. The following chart sets out the capacities of the Department of Corrections in May, 1977 and August, 1978. It also shows the actual population at the time of the May 23, 1977 hearing, the February 7, 1978 hearing during which the stay was granted, and the population in the system as of May 1, 1978 and July 31, 1978.

Institution Design Capacity Actual Population

5/77 8/78 5/23/77 2/7/78 5/1/78 7/31/78

OSP 874 874 1,918 1,597 1,555 1,523

Inside 655 655 1,551 1,227 1,209 1,195

Farm 159 159 248 269 255 254

Women’s 60 60 119 101 91 74

OSR 321 321 684 482 499 498

Lexington 296 400 485 526 688 633

Hodgens 163 163 215 222 224 243

McLeod 156 206 279 297 311 321

Stringtown 246 296 395 410 445 453

WTF 29 29 73 66 29 36

CTC 317 487 439 486 522 533

Totals 2,402 2,868 4,463 4,132 4,252 4,250

2. Defendants presently are constructing and plan to have operational before the end of 1978 a new 400 bed institution at Lexington (Joe Harp), 50 more beds at McLeod and 50 more beds at Hodgens, for a capacity of about 3,400. Approximately 700 more beds are also planned for operational use during 1979.

3. In the 14 months since Battle II, defendants have reduced the system’s population by 213 inmates, reduced McAlester by 356 inmates, Granite by 186 inmates, and added about 540 beds. Since the stay was granted, the population at McAlester has been reduced by 32 inmates and the population at Granite has risen by 16. During this interim, the reception and classification area has been shifted from McAlester to the new 400 man Lexington A & R unit.

4. As of the date of the August, 1978 hearing, over 60% of the inmates at McAlester were housed in 33 square feet or less. No inmate was housed in more than 40 square feet and many inmates were housed in 20 square feet. At McAlester, the cells in the East and West Cell Houses contain 312 cells of approximately 40 square feet. The East Cell House has 273 cells available for use.

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Bluebook (online)
457 F. Supp. 719, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/battle-v-anderson-oked-1978.