DiRose v. McClennan

26 F. Supp. 2d 550, 1998 WL 770475
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. New York
DecidedOctober 29, 1998
Docket6:94-cv-07688
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 26 F. Supp. 2d 550 (DiRose v. McClennan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DiRose v. McClennan, 26 F. Supp. 2d 550, 1998 WL 770475 (W.D.N.Y. 1998).

Opinion

DECISION and ORDER

SIRAGUSA, District Judge.

INTRODUCTION

This is a prisoner civil rights action, brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983. *551 Plaintiff is an inmate at Southport Correctional Facility, Pine City, New York, and claims defendants, individually and collectively, violated his First, Fourth, Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendment rights with regard to processing incoming and outgoing correspondence. The case is before the Court on defendants’ motion for summary judgment filed May 1, 1996 [document # 17]. For the reasons stated below, the motion is granted.

FACTS

Plaintiff was incarcerated as a result of five felony convictions in Broome, Onondaga, and Albany Counties in 1985 and 1992. In December of 1993, plaintiff was imprisoned at Clinton Correctional Facility. A search of plaintiffs cell at Clinton turned up two typewritten letters: one, a nine page letter dated September 21, 1993, addressed to “Dee,” the other, a three page letter dated September 18, 1993, addressed to, “Hi Love.” Both letters were allegedly written by plaintiff. In the longer letter, plaintiff detailed plans for his escape from Clinton Correctional Facility by having an outside accomplice arrange for a phony funeral visit, at which time plaintiffs friends would ambush plaintiff and the two guards assigned to escort him to the funeral, kidnap plaintiff, and tie-up, or shoot, the guards. In the shorter letter, plaintiff asked his correspondent about arranging a memorial service for an apparently hypothetical sister in the Peace Corps or Red Cross, who was killed in Afghanistan. As a result of the letters, plaintiff was found guilty of violating Rule 108.10, Escape, at a disciplinary hearing held on December 24, 1993, at which he admitted writing the longer of the two letters. He was transferred to South-port Correctional Facility, a prison where 641 disciplinary case management inmates, transferred from other New York State correctional facilities, were housed.

Because of the charges that brought him to Southport, corrections officers instituted a mail watch on all of plaintiffs incoming and outgoing mail, commencing March 8, 1994. The mail watch order, signed by then Deputy Superintendent McGinnis and approved by Superintendent McClennan, required plaintiffs mail to be forwarded from the mailroom to administrative offices, where it was searched by either First Deputy Superintendent McGinnis or Captain Morse. Mail defined as “legal mail” was not opened. Following the search, the letters were returned to the mailroom for delivery to plaintiff. The mail watch operated under the authority of Department of Correctional Services (D.O.C.S.) directives 4422(III)(B)(8) and 4422(III)(G)(4) and (5). A copy of the directive is attached as Exhibit I to Defendant McGinnis’s Affirmation [document # 23] filed in this case.

The mail watch was renewed periodically from March 8, 1994 until October 28, 1998. During the mail watch, the facility intercepted a letter dated Thursday, May 26, written by plaintiff and addressed to Carol Rowe, in which he proposed to escape with the assistance of a fellow inmate who was due to be released shortly.

Although plaintiff refers in his complaint to Carol Rowe as his wife, there is no evidence of such a relationship. On the contrary, First Deputy Superintendent McGinnis affirms, in paragraph 14 of his Affirmation, that Carol Rowe was not married to the plaintiff and instead resided with her husband in Syracuse, New York. He further alleges that she sent plaintiff money, purchased items for him, and sent packages to other inmates and friends of plaintiff, acting as a go-between for correspondence between plaintiff and other inmates. Attached to First Deputy Superintendent McGinnis’ Affirmation as Exhibit D, are copies of letters between Carol Rowe and plaintiff, demonstrating plaintiffs alleged attempts to circumvent correspondence procedures in effect at Southport Correctional Facility.

On March 14, 1994, the facility intercepted catalogs which had been sent to plaintiff by Carol Rowe. Inmates in Special Housing Unit Southport were not permitted at that time to receive catalogs. The catalogs were returned to Ms. Rowe by the facility. On March 16, 1994, blank legal forms (a felony complaint form and a blank arrest warrant) were received by the facility mail room addressed to plaintiff. The forms were sent to the Department of Corrections counsel by *552 defendant McGinnis. D.O.C.S. counsel advised that the materials should be delivered to plaintiff and they eventually were.

On March 24, 1994, two letters from plaintiff written to Carol Rowe were returned by the United States Postal Service, opened by the mailroom staff, and returned to plaintiff. The letters were opened due to insufficient postage pursuant to New York State Department of Corrections Services Directives # 4422 (III)(B)(10), (19), and (20). The facility opened the returned mail to prevent contraband from entering the prison and to prevent the practice of “kiting,” where a letter is deliberately provided with insufficient postage and the return address is not that of the actual sender of the letter, but another inmate. Since inmates at Southport and other special housing units are segregated and kept incommunicado, an inmate may attempt to communicate with another inmate through “kiting.” In addition, defendant McGinnis, in his Affirmation, cites other reasons supporting the policy of opening mail which is returned for insufficient postage. Those include preventing the promotion of crime and disorder within the facility, preventing inmates from informing fellow inmates how to testify at disciplinary hearings, preventing the revelation of the identification of a confidential informant, and insuring that contraband is not transferred between inmates.

On April 4,1994, a letter from the Department of Motor Vehicles addressed to plaintiff was opened and the contents confiscated. The letter arrived at Southport and was handled as general correspondence, not privileged correspondence. 1 Although the letter ■ was improperly processed under Directive # 4422, it was nevertheless found to contain non-privileged contraband: the driving record and abstract of a Department of Correctional Services employee.

On April 11, 1994, plaintiff filed a grievance alleging he had been improperly denied the receipt of catalogs. Plaintiff was eventually successful in changing the institution’s policy prohibiting the receipt of catalogs by inmates. On July 12, 1994, defendant McGinnis issued a memorandum stating that catalogs would be allowed and would count as part of the allowable publications per departmental directive # 4933 for S.H.U. inmates. Affirmation of M.P. McGinnis [document #23], Exhibit P.

Plaintiffs April 20,1994 memorandum concerning the unreceived magazines was fully investigated and following that investigation, plaintiff made no further complaint on the issue.

On July 11, 1994, plaintiff was found to have violated D.O.C.S. Directive 4421(III)(E)(3), of having received on June 23, 1994 a magazine on credit (inmates are only allowed to obligate their funds for onetime purchases, not purchases on credit). Plaintiff was eventually found not guilty of this alleged violation.

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Bluebook (online)
26 F. Supp. 2d 550, 1998 WL 770475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dirose-v-mcclennan-nywd-1998.