State v. McCoy

527 P.2d 725, 270 Or. 340, 1974 Ore. LEXIS 307
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 5, 1974
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 527 P.2d 725 (State v. McCoy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. McCoy, 527 P.2d 725, 270 Or. 340, 1974 Ore. LEXIS 307 (Or. 1974).

Opinion

TONGUE, J.

Defendant appealed from a conviction for murder, contending that it was error to receive in evidence letters written by him while awaiting trial in the Klamath County jail, which were delivered unsealed by him to the sheriff for mailing. The sheriff apparently read them and made copies, which were delivered to the state’s attorney. The Court of Appeals affirmed. 17 Or App 155, 521 P2d 1074 (1974). We granted defendant’s petition for review because the case presents serious questions concerning censorship of mail of persons in jail, including the question whether the constitutional rights of this defendant were violated.

Defendant was accused of the murder of a man found by the defendant in a vehicle with defendant’s estranged wife. After shooting the man defendant turned himself in to the police. His defense was that he was acting under “extreme emotional disturbance” as defined in OB.S 163.125 (1) (b). He testified on trial that he had no memory of shooting the decedent. Two psychiatrists corroborated defendant’s testimony that he had “flipped out.”

*342 During the cross-examination of the defendant the two letters in question were received in evidence and were identified hy the defendant as being written hy him while in jail pending trial. One was written to his estranged wife. In that letter defendant said, among other things, that he “never regretted killing” the decedent ; that he would he out of prison in seven years “at the very most” and would “hunt [her] down like a animal” to get his daughter; that “no son of a hitch is going to raise my kid”; and that “I’ll he 36 when I get out if I get life and if I have to do it again I’ll he 49 when I get out again.” The other letter, to defendant’s. father-in-law, stated, among other things, that he didn’t blame his wife for “not wanting to he married to a murderer”; and that “I know that I have to do some time in prison now for what I done. But I still feel I was right in doing what I did.”

According to regulations then in effect at the Klamath County jail, as stated on the hack of the paper on which these letters were written, “* * * outgoing letters must not be sealed.” When asked on cross-examination whether he was “aware that these were going to be copied” defendant answered: “No, they said to leave them open so they can read these * * hut that he was not aware that the letters would he copied or that the state would “use them here.”

Defendant contends that his “right to privacy under the Fourth and Fifth Amendments and his privilege against self-incrimination under the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution [were] clearly violated.” He also contends that “communication hy mail is a right protected under the First Amendment” and is “not lost hy virtue of imprisonment.” In *343 addition, defendant contends that defendant’s threats were not relevant to any issue arising under the indictment.

At the time of oral argument defendant conceded that outgoing mail from persons in prison may be read for reasons of security, among other reasons, and that for such a purpose no distinction can be drawn between persons, in jail awaiting trial prior to conviction and persons in jail after conviction.

In Brooks v. Cupp, 6 Or App 539, 488 P2d 804 (1971), S Ct rev denied, the Court of Appeals sustained the validity of censorship regulations of the Oregon State Penitentiary. In doing so the court quoted with approval from Sostre v. McGinnis, 442 F2d 178, 199 (2d Cir 1971), cert denied, 404 US 1049, in which it was recognized that:

“The distaste with which some observers view prolonged segregated confinement attaches as well to that kind of isolation flowing from restrictions on and censorship of prisoners’ correspondence: yp tp
“The values commonly associated with free expression — an open, democratic marketplace of ideas, the self-development of individuals through self-expression, the alleviation of tensions by their release in harsh words rather than hurled objects— these values that we esteem in a free society do not turn to dross in an unfree one. * * *”

That court went on to say, however, that:

“Whatever wisdom there might be in such reflection, we cannot say with requisite certitude that the traditional and common practice of prisons in *344 imposing many kinds of controls on the correspondence of inmates, lacks support in any rational and constitutionally acceptable concept of a prison system. * * *”

After considering the question whether prison officials could properly delete material from or refuse to mail outgoing letters from a prisoner to his attorney and after holding such acts of censorship to be improper, the court went on to state (at 201) that:

“* * * We leave a more precise delineation of the boundaries of this protection for future cases. We need only add that when we say there may be cases which will present special circumstances that would justify deleting material from, withholding, or refusing to mail communications with courts, attorneys, and public officials, we necessarily rule that prison officials may open and read all outgoing and incoming correspondence to and from prisoners.”

To the same effect, it was held in Denson v. United States, 424 F2d 329, 331 (10th Cir 1970), cert denied, 400 US 844 (1970), as follows:

“* * * That prison officials may inspect or examine the effects and communications of prison inmates without depriving the inmates of their constitutional rights is well established. [Citing cases] This case is clearly within the ambit of the rules laid down by the Supreme Court of the United States in Stroud v. United States, 251 U.S. 15, 40 S.Ct. 50, 64 L.Ed. 103. * * *”

See also United States v. Wilson, 447 F2d 1, 8, n.4 (9th Cir 1971), cert denied, 404 US 1053, holding the same rule to be applicable, particularly where, as in this case, the prisoner knew that Ms letters would be “subjected to official scrutiny before reaching the intended recipient.”

*345 Although the Supreme Court of the United States in Procunier v. Martines, 416 US 396, 94 S Ct 1800, 40 L ed 2d 224 (1974), recently established criteria which must be satisfied by prison censorship regulations, it has not overruled its previous decision in Stroud v. United States, 251 US 15, 40 S Ct 50, 64 L ed 103 (1919). Indeed, in Procunier (416 US at 412, 94 S Ct at 1811, 40 L ed 2d at 240), the court again recognized that “the legitimate governmental interest in the order and security of penal institutions justifies the imposition of certain restraints on inmate correspondence.”

More recently, in Wolff v. McDonnell,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
527 P.2d 725, 270 Or. 340, 1974 Ore. LEXIS 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mccoy-or-1974.