Madden v. Kemna

739 F. Supp. 1358, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5791, 1990 WL 68812
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedMay 11, 1990
DocketNos. 89-6092-CV-SJ-6, 89-6099-CV-SJ-6
StatusPublished

This text of 739 F. Supp. 1358 (Madden v. Kemna) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Madden v. Kemna, 739 F. Supp. 1358, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5791, 1990 WL 68812 (W.D. Mo. 1990).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

SACHS, District Judge.

These consolidated cases were brought by some twenty-five prisoners from Colorado who have been transferred to Western Missouri Correctional Center (Cameron) from their home state, pursuant to a contract for imprisonment here. Plaintiffs are before the court on motions for a preliminary injunction. They contend they have been deprived of liberty interests without due process of law in that they are being held in a protective custody segregation unit as requested by them, but without being afforded the same general privileges provided inmates in the general prison population as generally mandated by Missouri prison regulations. It is contended that prison authorities have neither asserted nor shown any security needs for such inequality of privileges or any lack of available resources which would provide a regulatory justification for the conduct of such officials.

[1359]*1359Defendants are Mike Kemna, superintendent of the Cameron facility, and the Missouri Department of Corrections and Human Resources, which is charged with the responsibility for the administration of all correctional institutions within the state.1 Defendants’ brief, filed May 9, 1990, contains some useful factual and procedural statements and arguments, and quotations used in this memorandum without attribution are taken from that brief.

“These cases were originally filed by plaintiffs pro se. However, the court appointed counsel for plaintiffs in December of 1989. The first matter taken up by plaintiffs’ counsel after his appointment concerned plaintiffs’ request for preliminary injunctive relief. At that time, the court requested that plaintiffs’ counsel inform the court whether there was a necessity to have a hearing on plaintiffs’ initial request for emergency injunctive relief. Following discussions between counsel, defendants’ counsel informed plaintiffs’ counsel that the present available resources and ability to address plaintiffs’ security concerns allowed defendants to provide some additional privileges defendants were previously unable to provide. Specifically, defendants determined that protective custody inmates were numerous enough to be placed in a unit of their own with open movement (Housing Unit 2), and protective custody inmates could be escorted to the gym, the law library and food service. However, defendants were unable to provide organized religious services or more than two hours per week of phone access. Following these discussions, plaintiffs’ counsel informed defendants’ counsel and the court that a hearing on plaintiffs’ request for emergency relief was not necessary.

“Thereafter, although plaintiffs’ counsel indicated a desire to further discuss a final resolution of this case, except for one or two requests to check into a specific complaint by an individual plaintiff, no further discussions were initiated by plaintiffs’ counsel until April 26, 1990, when defendants’ counsel met with plaintiffs’ counsel to review plaintiffs’ [new] complaints.

“While these discussions were occurring, [allegedly] because of a change in resources available at Western Missouri Correctional Center, and because of the security needs of the plaintiffs, they were transferred to Housing Unit 1 which houses disciplinary segregation inmates and inmates being received into the prison prior to their classification in general population. This transfer, which was occasioned by the transfer of Missouri protective custody inmates to another institution at Farmington and the receipt of additional Missouri general population inmates was [allegedly] necessary because of the need for space in Housing Unit 2 and the continuing protective custody needs asserted by the plaintiffs.

“Plaintiffs argue that they have certain fundamental rights in certain privileges guaranteed by the Constitution and that they should receive the same privileges and/or treatment as general population inmates. Further, they argue that the Department regulations, in specific and mandatory language, require more privileges than they receive, and that these regulations afford plaintiffs a liberty interest protected by the Fourteenth Amendment which requires that defendants provide them the same privileges as they have received in the past or have been provided to general population inmates.

[1360]*1360“Defendants have argued ... that plaintiffs have neither a constitutional right nor a liberty interest in the privileges they seek to have mandated by this court. This is because they have no constitutional right to such privileges and, even if a liberty interest has been created by the regulations of the Department of Corrections, plaintiffs have failed to prove that the defendants have failed to follow their own regulations to the extent that the plaintiffs have been denied due process.”

When the lawsuit was filed, plaintiffs were in Housing Unit 1, sometimes referred to as “the hole,” and were locked down virtually all of each twenty-four hour day, including meal times and times when general population prisoners were free to use library facilities, recreational facilities, and to engage in normal social interaction. Plaintiffs were thereafter moved to a protective custody wing of Housing Unit 2, and while some ongoing complaints may have been unresolved, the totality of circumstances did not call for prompt judicial intervention, and none was sought. Plaintiffs were returned to Unit 1 on April 25, 1990, and counsel sought emergency relief on April 27, 1990. After consolidation of the cases a preliminary injunction hearing was scheduled and conducted on May 3, 1990. Further filings have been permitted, received and considered.

Plaintiff Smith, a representative plaintiff, testified at the hearing. Among other things he testified to conditions in Colorado that caused him to seek protective custody, and testified that one or more dangerous enemies of his is in the general population at Cameron. His complaints about conditions at Unit 1 are many. The cell in which he is housed is essentially stripped of furnishings other than a bunk and mattress and toilet facilities and a sink. There are no electrical outlets permitting use of television sets, which severely restricts communication from the outside.world. Telephone facilities are restricted. Smith has pro se litigation in progress in Colorado but is unable to visit the law library or to obtain legal material other than by restricted, highly limited contacts with a visiting paralegal assistant. Recreational use of a gymnasium has been terminated. Smith believes the loss of educational, rehabilitative or vocational training time will prevent accrual of time counted in determining his parole date. Food is provided on trays slipped through the door to the cell. The method of supplying food carried by members of the general prison population allows intentional contamination by enemies, including spitting into the trays. Smith complains that a recommended operation for a possible or potential cancerous rectal condition has been denied. Showers are allowed from 1:00 a.m. to 4:00 a.m., apparently not the hours allocated to protective custody prisoners prior to the retransfer to Unit 1. One or more guards has reportedly used threatening language. Communion has been unavailable.2

Superintendent Kemna, called as an adverse witness, testified that the current lockdown is complete on two days during the week, and lasts for approximately 23 hours daily during the remaining five days. Unit 1 is used for the most severe disciplinary punishment at Cameron.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
739 F. Supp. 1358, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5791, 1990 WL 68812, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/madden-v-kemna-mowd-1990.