Reynolds v. Cook

CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedMarch 9, 2020
Docket3:13-cv-00388
StatusUnknown

This text of Reynolds v. Cook (Reynolds v. Cook) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reynolds v. Cook, (D. Conn. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF CONNECTICUT

RICHARD REYNOLDS, et al., Plaintiffs, No. 3:13-cv-388 (SRU)

v.

ROLLIN COOK, et al., Defendants.

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

Before 2012, inmates in Connecticut’s prisons could order sexually explicit publications, such as Playboy, and prisoners often ordered them. As a result, Connecticut’s prisons contained large amounts of sexually explicit pictorial depictions. In 2012, the Connecticut Department of Correction (“DOC”) implemented a revised version of Administrative Directive 10.7 (“A.D. 10.7”), which governed inmate communications, including incoming publications. The 2012 revision to A.D. 10.7 redefined pictorial sexually explicit material—to include both sexual activity and nudity—and banned that material unless it was “literary, artistic, educational, or scientific in nature.” I will refer to that revision as the “2012 ban.” Numerous prisoners challenged the constitutionality of the 2012 ban under both the United States and Connecticut Constitutions. Because the 2012 ban is constitutional under the United States Constitution, I shall enter judgment in favor of the Defendants. The Plaintiffs’ state law claims are not properly before me and so I dismiss those claims without prejudice; if the Plaintiffs wish to pursue those claims, the proper venue to do so would be in state court. The following constitutes my findings of fact and conclusions of law. I. Procedural Background I held a two-part bench trial in this matter. The first part was a two-day bench trial in January 2015 in Akov Ortiz v. Leo C. Arnone, No. 3:11-cv-1793 (SRU) (“Ortiz”). In Ortiz, four witnesses testified: Akov Ortiz, Eileen Redden, Robert Harnett, and Monica Rinaldi. The second part was a three-day bench trial in April 2019 in this case. In this case, thirteen witnesses

testified: Richard Reynolds, Dwight G. Pink, Andre R. Sosa, Eileen Redden, John Vivo III, Victor Smalls, Robert Selverstone, Robert Hartnett, Julie Kunkel, David McNeil, Anne Cournoyer, Jose Rivera, and Rollin Cook. This matter is the lead case into which five other matters have been consolidated. First, in May 2015, I consolidated three cases into this matter: (1) Kenya Brown v. Leo C. Arnone, No. 3:13-cv-902 (SRU); (2) Andres R. Sosa v. Leo C. Arnone, et al., No. 3:14-cv-318 (SRU); and (3) Dwight G. Pink v. Leo C. Arnone, et al., No. 3:14-cv-993 (SRU). In September 2015, I consolidated Ortiz into this case and ordered that the record from Ortiz would become part of the record in this case. See Ortiz, Conf. Mem. and Order, Doc. No. 93. And in June 2017, I consolidated another case—Victor Smalls v. Scott Simple, et al., No. 3:17-cv-119 (SRU)—into

this case. In this consolidated case, there are seven plaintiffs, all state prisoners in the custody of the DOC (the “Plaintiffs”): Ortiz, Brown, Sosa, Pink, Smalls, Reynolds, and Vivo. The Plaintiffs have been in DOC custody at all times relevant to this case; none was convicted of a sex offense.1

1 Ortiz has been incarcerated since 1999 and has resided at Hartford Correctional Center, MacDougall-Walker Correctional Institution (“MacDougall-Walker”), Northern Correctional Institution (“Northern”), Garner Correctional Institution, and Cheshire Correctional Institution (“Cheshire”). See Ortiz Trial Tr., Doc. No. 79, at 11:13–12:7. At the time of his trial, Ortiz was confined at Cheshire. See id. at 12:9. Reynolds, incarcerated since 1992, has spent 24 years at Northern and was confined there at the time of trial. Trial Tr., Doc. No. 154, at 6:10–13. Pink, who has been incarcerated for over 19 years, was confined at Cheshire at the time of trial and had been there since at least 2012. See id. at 76:16–21. Sosa has been incarcerated since November 1997; he was at MacDougall- Walker in 2012 and was at Cheshire at the time of trial. See id. at 106:13–20. Vivo, who has been incarcerated since around 1994, was confined at Cheshire both in 2012 and at the time of trial. Trial Tr., Doc. No. 155, at 275:11–17. Smalls, incarcerated around 2007, had been confined in Northern, MacDougall-Walker, Manson Youth Institution, Corrigan-Radgowski Correctional Center (“Corrigan”), and Bridgeport Correctional Center. See id. at The Plaintiffs allege violations of their rights under the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution, Art. 1, Sections 4 and 5 of the Constitution of the State of Connecticut, and unlawful application of an invalid regulation under Connecticut law. See Second Am. Compl., Doc. No. 110, at ¶¶ 48–60.

II. Facts A. Before 2012 Apparently, before 2002, DOC inmates could receive publications containing “hardcore” sexually explicit pictorial material. As Ortiz explained, “hardcore” refers to visible depictions of “penetration, secretion, [and sex acts with] multiple partners.” Ortiz Trial Tr., Doc. No. 79, 75:21–24; Trial Tr., Doc. No. 155, at 403:16–17 (Hartnett defining “hardcore” as depictions of “actual sexual penetration, ejaculation, contact between genital to genital, genital to oral”). In contrast, “softcore” refers to visible depictions of nudity—including breasts and genitalia— without secretions or penetration. See Ortiz Trial Tr., Doc. No. 79, at 76:8–77:13 (Ortiz). Ortiz reported that between 1999 and 2002, he subscribed to numerous “hardcore” pornographic

magazines. See id. at 15:3–22. Ortiz explained that “hardcore” pornographic material was “rampant” in his facility between 1999 and 2002. See id. at 14:19. Other witnesses confirmed that “hardcore” pornographic material was ubiquitous. See, e.g., Ortiz Trial Tr., Doc. No. 80, at 161:8–12 (Hartnett confirming that “like Mr. Ortiz said yesterday, it was everywhere”). In 2002, according to Ortiz, the DOC altered its regulations (or changed its enforcement strategy) so that inmates could no longer receive “hardcore” materials, but it did not proactively confiscate inmates’ existing “hardcore” materials. See Ortiz Trial Tr., Doc. No. 79, at 16:15–

302:11–16. In 2012, Smalls was confined at Northern; and at the time of trial, Smalls was confined at Corrigan. See id. at 302:17–20. Brown, who did not testify in either trial, was confined at Corrigan at the times relevant to this case and was confined at Cheshire at the time of trial. See Second Am. Compl., Doc. No. 110, at ¶ 9. 19.2 Still, the DOC allowed “softcore” pornographic materials, such as Playboy and Penthouse, into its facilities. See id. at 16:20–17:10; 35:13–25. As a result, even after 2002, both “hardcore” and “softcore” sexually explicit materials were still ubiquitous in DOC facilities. See, e.g., Trial Tr., Doc. No. 155, at 329:19–24 (Sosa acknowledging that at Northern from 2007

to 2010 some inmates ordered “hundreds, if not thousands, of pictures”); id. at 293:2–23 (Vivo testifying that, before 2012, he kept 2,500 nude photos in a manila envelope). Although administrative directives prohibited inmates from displaying in public view sexually explicit pictorial depictions, Commissioner Arnone wrote in 2011 that “sexually explicit pictures are still found inside inmate lockers and displayed in other areas of correctional facilities where staff is exposed to them.” See Arnone Mem., Defs.’ Ex. C, at 20 (citing Administrative Directive 6.10); see also Administrative Directive 2.2, Defs.’ Ex. S, at ¶ 5F (defining as sexual harassment the “[d]isplay in the workplace of sexually suggestive objects, pictures, or photographs”). Even though it was against prison rules for prisoners to display sexually explicit pictorial depictions on their wall space or to store it in their lockers, in practice, it happened all the time.

See, e.g., Ortiz Trial Tr., Doc. No. 79, at 16:1–7 (Ortiz explaining that even though “it’s not allowed,” prisoners posted sexually explicit materials on their cell walls); Trial Tr., Doc. No.

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