In Re Parmelee

63 P.3d 800
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedFebruary 3, 2003
Docket47231-3-I
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 63 P.3d 800 (In Re Parmelee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Parmelee, 63 P.3d 800 (Wash. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

63 P.3d 800 (2003)
115 Wash.App. 273

In re the Personal Restraint Petition of Allan PARMELEE, Petitioner.

No. 47231-3-I.

Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 1.

February 3, 2003.

*801 Alan Parmelee, Pro se, Thomas Kummerow, Washington Appellate Project Seattle, for Appellants.

David Eldred, Seattle, for Respondents.

*802 KENNEDY, J.

Allan Parmelee was twice sanctioned for insolence while he was incarcerated for stalking at the King County Correctional Facility in Seattle. In this personal restraint petition, Parmelee argues that the sanctions were based solely on the language he used in two written grievances that he filed, and that such language in written grievances is protected from infringement by the First Amendment. Applying the test articulated in Turner v. Safley, 482 U.S. 78, 89-91, 107 S.Ct. 2254, 96 L.Ed.2d 64 (1987), we conclude that Parmelee's First Amendment rights were not impermissibly infringed. Moreover, Parmelee was properly sanctioned for making a threat in his second written grievance. Threats are not protected by the First Amendment. Accordingly, we deny Parmelee's petition.[1]

FACTS

Allan Parmelee was sentenced to serve four consecutive one-year sentences in the King County jail for four misdemeanor stalking convictions. He was released from custody on August 11, 2001.

Before his release, Parmelee was twice sanctioned with ten days of disciplinary segregation and loss of ten days of good time for violation of jail rules.

The August 9, 2000 Incident

On August 9, 2000, Corrections Officer Bonilla provided Parmelee with access into an additional cell where he was permitted to maintain his collection of legal papers. Bonilla was stationed in a control booth from which he was able to close the door behind Parmelee. As the door was closing, Parmelee slammed it back open, talking loudly in Bonilla's direction. Bonilla was unable to understand what Parmelee said to him, but asked whether Parmelee would like to see the Sergeant. Parmelee asked who the Sergeant was and was informed that it was Acting Sergeant Naud. Bonilla stated in a subsequent rule infraction report that Parmelee responded, "she's a bitch and it would be a waste of time." Budhram Affidavit, Ex. 1-A. Parmelee subsequently denied calling Acting Sergeant Naud a bitch.

Shortly thereafter, Parmelee handed Bonilla a written grievance, which stated in pertinent part:

My grievance is about the piss-ant officer slaming [sic] the door ... on me and will not let me move legal papers between cells since I have two cells for legal papers. He says only one cell can be open at a time, per movement/period.
I tried to solve this problem with staff member c/o Bonella [at] 4:30 p.m. The officer was being an asshole and appeared to be intentionally trying to give me a hard time for no reason, and would not open both my cell doors at the same time.
I request the following resolution to my grievance. Fire this asshole before someone reacts to his attempt to provoke violently, correct this door problem immediately.

Exhibit 1-A to King County's Response.

Later that night, in response to the incident, Bonilla wrote up and submitted a rule infraction report to his supervisor. He also provided a copy of the report to Parmelee. The report charged Parmelee with one infraction for G-301-Defiance/Insolence/Abuse (hereinafter referred to as "insolence"). G-301 is defined in the Inmate Information Handbook as, "Making flagrant, public statements which are degrading, ridiculing, abusive, insolent, defiant, obscene, and/or which promote disorder." The report stated:

I/M Parmelee ... handed me an I/M Grievance Form in which he stated I was a *803 pissant officer and an asshole, because I was closing the door behind him when he entered LA02 (I/M Law office) to conduct legal work, as I was instructed to do so by A/Sgt. Naud, so as to keep other I/M's away from his stuff. While the door was closing he slammed it back open, talking loudly in my direction, but I was unable to understand what he said. I also spoke to I/M Parmelee to see if he wanted to talk to the tower Sgt. about his two cell situation. He asked who it was and I told him A/Sgt. Naud, in which the I/M stated she's a bitch and it would be a waste of time.

Attachment A to Parmelee's Petition.

At the subsequent disciplinary hearing, Parmelee pleaded not guilty. The hearing officer found Parmelee guilty of the 301 infraction, and sanctioned him with ten days of disciplinary segregation and with loss of ten days of good time. In support of the sanction the hearing officer wrote:

Again, the grievance procedure needs to be clarified[;] it is a procedure available to you to bring issues to the attention of this department. The grievance procedure is not a forum to make disparaging, degrading, abusive comments about staff.
I find you guilty of G-301 Defiance/Insolence/Abuse. You stated, "Fire this asshole before someone reacts to his attem[pt] to provoke violently." You also refer to the staff person as, a "piss-ant officer." Also, the infracting officer reported he could not hear what you [were] saying clearly while the door was closing, but spoke with you to see if you wanted to talk to the tower Sgt., and it was then that you stated she was a bitch. Again, you demonstrated you were making degrading, ridiculing, and abusive comments, which is unacceptable behavior.

Ex. 2-B to King County's Response.

Parmelee appealed this decision. The administrative appeal officer ruled in pertinent part:

You are not being punished or sanctioned for using the grievance process. You will however be held accountable for the language you choose to use, despite being directed not to use degrading language. Since you choose to deliberately use degrading language in your grievances I find it credible that you referred to Sgt. Naud in similar fashion and your claim that it was not so, less credible. I see no indication sanctions were changed as you claim. My review shows no bias on the part of staff. The hearing was initiated within the prescribed time frame[;] it is no longer 72 hours. Your disciplinary hearing is recorded in writing.

Exhibit 1-C to King County's Response.

Parmelee remained in disciplinary segregation while he completed his sentence of ten days. He served the ten days of lost good time prior to his release from incarceration.

The August 15, 2000 Incident

On August 15, 2000, Parmelee was again charged with an infraction, this time after Corrections Officer Lewis, who was distributing mail to inmates, opened a piece of Parmelee's legal mail, in Parmelee's presence, and removed a staple from a document. Parmelee was angered by this. Lewis stated in his subsequent rule infraction report that Parmelee told him he was "stupid" and did not know what he was doing. Parmelee requested and received a grievance form from Lewis.

A little over an hour later, Parmelee submitted a written grievance while Lewis was making his rounds retrieving inmate service requests and grievances. The grievance included a statement that the jail should "fire this prick [Officer Lewis] because shitheads like him shouldn't be around prisoners" and that the officer should be fired "before his attitude gets him fucked up." Attachment B to Parmelee's Petition.

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Bluebook (online)
63 P.3d 800, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-parmelee-washctapp-2003.