Human Rights Defense Center v. Winn

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedJuly 9, 2021
Docket1:19-cv-12470
StatusUnknown

This text of Human Rights Defense Center v. Winn (Human Rights Defense Center v. Winn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Human Rights Defense Center v. Winn, (E.D. Mich. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN NORTHERN DIVISION

HUMAN RIGHTS DEFENSE CENTER,

Plaintiff, Case No. 1:19-cv-12470 Honorable Thomas L. Ludington v.

HEIDI WASHINGTON,

Defendant. ________________________________________/

ORDER DENYING PLAINTIFF’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT AND GRANTING IN PART AND DENYING IN PART DEFENDANT’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

On August 22, 2019, Plaintiff Human Rights Defense Center (“HRDC”) filed a complaint against Defendants Prison Wardens O’Bell Winn, Bonita Hoffner, Willie Smith, and Carmen Palmer, 30 unnamed prison employee Does, and Michigan Department of Corrections (“MDOC”) Director Heidi Washington. ECF No. 1. Plaintiff is a publisher of magazines and materials, such as Prison Legal News for inmates about “prisons, jails, and other detention facilities, prisoners’ rights, court rulings, management of prison facilities, prison conditions, and other matters pertaining to the rights and/or interests of incarcerated individuals.” Id. at PageID.6. Plaintiff alleges that Defendants censored and withheld its publications to prisoners in Michigan, violating the First Amendment (Count I) and the due process clause from the Fourteenth Amendment (Count II). Id. at PageID.32–34; ECF No. 24 at PageID. 242–44. Plaintiff sought monetary damages against all Defendants in their individual capacities on the First Amendment and due process claims. Plaintiff also sought injunctive relief against Director Washington in her official capacity on both claims and a declaratory judgment that MDOC violated the Constitution. On January 6, 2020, Defendants’ motion to dismiss was granted in part and denied in part. ECF No. 32. The sole remaining claims are the First and Fourteenth Amendment claims for injunctive relief against Defendant Heidi Washington. ECF No. 32. After discovery, the parties filled cross-motions for summary judgment. Response and reply briefs were timely filed. ECF Nos. 57, 58, 62, 63, 64, 65.

I.

A. HRDC Executive Director Paul Wright describes HRDC as “a nonprofit organization that advocates for progressive criminal justice reform and [] primarily focus[es] on prisoner rights advocacy, [] on conditions of confinement and how people are treated in prisons and jails, as well as the negative impacts of incarceration.” ECF No. 58-2 at PageID.923. Its “main forms of advocacy are . . . two magazines, . . . media work, litigation, and . . . public speaking and media appearances.” Id. at PageID.923. The Criminal Legal News (“CLN”) magazine focuses on criminal law and procedure while the Prison Legal News (“PLN”) magazine emphasizes civil litigation. Id. at PageID.928. HRDC has 15 to 17 employees. Id. at PageID.949. About 7,000 people subscribe to PLN and 2,000 people subscribe to CLN. Id. About 70% of PLN subscribers are incarcerated. Id. at PageID.950. The four main topics covered by PLN are medical care, mental health, excessive force, and sexual assault complaints by prisoners. Id. PageID.954. Paul Wright testified that PLN “give[s] people information that they can use to advocate for themselves and to help themselves. It’s also a means of letting people know what’s happening.” Id. at PageID.971. Inmates frequently write articles for the magazines and are considered “contributing writers.” Id. at PageID.928. PLN authors are compensated, $10 per article under 1500 words, $50 per article over 1500 words, and a sliding payment scale for special projects. Id. at PageID.931. Starting in 2016, HRDC noticed that MDOC was censoring more articles and publications than before. Id. at PageID.962–63. The instant lawsuit was filed in August 2019. B. Generally, the individual MDOC facilities train mailroom clerks. ECF No. 58-6 at PageID.1026–27, 1047–48. However, MDOC provides periodic training for mailroom clerks when

large policy changes occur. Id. at PageID.1025. The relevant section of MDOC’s mail policy provides, NN. Prisoners are prohibited from receiving mail that may pose a threat to the security, good order, or discipline of the facility, facilitate or encourage criminal activity, or interfere with the rehabilitation of the prisoner. The following pose such risks under all circumstances and therefore shall be rejected: 1. Mail containing specific information regarding the manufacture, or operation of electronic security systems, weapons, explosives, ammunition, or incendiary devices. 2. Mail depicting or describing procedures for manufacturing poisons, alcohol, or controlled substances. 3. Mail violating, advocating, or promoting the violation of state or federal laws. This includes mail advocating or promoting the filing of a false or fraudulent Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) financing statement in violation of MCL 440.9501. 4. Mail advocating or promoting violence, group disruption, or insurrection. 5. Mail describing or depicting acts of sadism, masochism, bondage, necrophilia, or bestiality, or describing, depicting, or appearing to promote sexual acts involving children. This does not include small advertisements in a publication sent directly from the publisher or an authorized vendor except if the advertisement depicts or appears to promote sexual acts involving children. 6. Mail advocating racial supremacy or ethnic purity or attacking a racial or ethnic group, which is reasonably likely to promote or cause violence or group disruption in the facility. 7. Mail providing detailed instruction in the martial arts, such as judo, karate, aikido, kendu, kung fu, and similar techniques. 8. Subject to Paragraph Z, a book, magazine, newspaper, or other publication that is not received directly from the publisher, an Internet vendor identified on Attachment A, a vendor identified on Attachment B, or, if the prisoner is approved to take a correspondence course pursuant to PD 05.02.119 “Correspondence Courses,” directly from the approved correspondence school. This does not apply to an article or a few pages, or copies of a few pages, from a publication that may be included with a letter or other mail, unless it is reasonably believed to be an attempt to circumvent this restriction. Retail and wholesale catalogs are specifically addressed in Paragraph AA. 9. A used publication. 10. A publication received on a credit basis (e.g., from a book club). This does not apply If the publication is completely pre-paid and receipt does not obligate the prisoner to make future credit purchases. 11. Mail containing, or encouraging or providing instruction in, the commission of criminal activity. This includes mail encouraging or providing instruction in the filing of a false or fraudulent UCC lien. 12. Mail containing a provocative or scurrilous attack on any religion or religious group. This does not include a thoughtful and rational discussion of religious beliefs or differences between religions. 13. Nude photographs, except if included in a publication sent directly from the publisher or an authorized vendor. Nude photographs are defined as any photograph exposing the buttocks (including photographs of an individual wearing a thong with the buttocks visible), pubic area or genitalia, or, except if a baby or infant, the female breast below the top of the areola. This includes exposure through “see through” materials. 14. Photographs depicting actual or simulated sexual acts by one or more persons. This includes photographs in a publication sent directly from the publisher or a vendor authorized by the facility. 15. Non-commercially produced greeting cards; commercially produced greeting cards made of non-standard card stock paper or which have embellishments, are multi-fold, or exceed 6”x8” in size. 16. Official photographs of a victim at a crime scene or depicting injuries to a victim sustained as a result of a crime that were taken for purposes of criminal investigation or prosecution. This includes photographs of the autopsy of a victim. 17.

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Human Rights Defense Center v. Winn, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/human-rights-defense-center-v-winn-mied-2021.