Tyler Keup v. F. X. Hopkins

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMarch 4, 2010
Docket09-1079
StatusPublished

This text of Tyler Keup v. F. X. Hopkins (Tyler Keup v. F. X. Hopkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tyler Keup v. F. X. Hopkins, (8th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT ___________

No. 09-1079 ___________

Tyler J. Keup, * * Appellee, * * Appeal from the United States v. * District Court for the * District of Nebraska. F.X. Hopkins; Dennis Bakewell; * all being sued in their individual * capacities, * * Appellants. * __________

Submitted: October 22, 2009 Filed: March 4, 2010 ___________

Before RILEY, SMITH, and GRUENDER, Circuit Judges. ___________

RILEY, Circuit Judge.

Tyler Keup, an artist in the custody of the Nebraska Department of Correctional Services (NDCS), tried to send drawings of a marijuana leaf and a bare-breasted woman to his mother and the Maoist Internationalist Movement (Maoists). When NDCS rebuffed Keup’s efforts, Keup sued various NDCS officials under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for violating his First Amendment rights. The district court directed a verdict in Keup’s favor against F.X. Hopkins and Dennis Bakewell, awarded Keup nominal damages, and ordered Hopkins and Bakewell to pay approximately $25,000 in attorney fees and costs. Hopkins and Bakewell appeal. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

I. BACKGROUND A. Parties Keup is a prisoner in the custody of NDCS at the Lincoln Correctional Center (LCC). At all relevant times, Hopkins was one of NDCS’s directors. Bakewell was LCC’s warden. Salvador Cruz, Ty DeKoenig,1 and Diane Sabatka-Rine were lower- level NDCS employees at LCC.

B. Keup’s Grievances While incarcerated, Keup challenged various restrictions upon his ability to send and receive mail. Keup availed himself of NDCS’s three-level grievance procedure. To exhaust administrative remedies, a prisoner must file (1) an informal grievance, (2) a step-one grievance, and (3) a step-two grievance. 68 Neb. Admin. Code, ch. 2 § 004. See also 42 U.S.C. § 1997e; Neb. Rev. Stat. §§ 83-4,111 & 83-4,135-139.

Time limits apply at each level of the NDCS grievance process. A complaining inmate must file an informal grievance within three days of the “incident of concern.” If the inmate is dissatisfied with NDCS’s response, the inmate must file a step-one grievance within fifteen days. If the inmate remains dissatisfied, the inmate must file a step-two grievance within ten days of NDCS’s response to the step-one grievance.

1 The spelling of DeKoenig’s name is unclear. We adopt the spelling in Keup’s amended complaint.

-2- Four incidents are relevant to this appeal:

1. March 2005—Attempt to Mail Drawings to Mother In March 2005, Keup tried to send his mother two drawings, one of a cross containing a small marijuana leaf and the other a bare-breasted woman. At the time, § 207.1.1 of LCC’s Operational Memorandum (OM) forbade inmates from manufacturing, possessing, or distributing drawings of “[u]ncovered female breasts,” “illegal drugs,” and any other “obscene, nude, lewd, lascivious, . . . or filthy” material. LCC personnel accordingly refused to let Keup mail the drawings.

Keup timely grieved NDCS’s refusal, alleging a violation of his free speech rights. Keup reasoned “it seems illogical that I can receive explicit porn magazines [and] books containing images of drugs but I can’t use my artistic abilities to create certain drawings for a good cause!” Cruz denied Keup’s informal grievance, Bakewell denied Keup’s step-one grievance, and Hopkins denied Keup’s step-two grievance.

2. September 2005—Attempt to Mail Photocopies to the Maoists In September 2005, Keup tried to send photocopies of his drawings of the marijuana leaf and the bare-breasted woman to the Maoists. Apparently, Keup was asking the Maoists for legal help.2 DeKoenig intercepted the photocopies.

Keup immediately grieved DeKoenig’s seizure of the photocopies, asserting a violation of his right to send legal mail. On September 16, 2005, Cruz denied Keup’s informal grievance. On November 3, 2005, Keup filed a step-one grievance, reasserting his right to “unrestricted/uncensored access for the conduction of legal affairs.” On December 22, 2005, Bakewell denied the step-one grievance as untimely.

2 According to its now-defunct website, the Maoists were a “collection of existing or emerging Maoist internationalist parties” dedicated to “uphold[ing] the revolutionary communist ideology of Marxism-Leninism-Maoism.”

-3- On July 6, 2006, Keup filed a step-two grievance, in which he repeated the claims in his step-one and informal grievances. Keup alleged he was unable to file his step-one grievance in a timely manner because LCC personnel segregated him from the general prison population on September 24, 2005. On August 10, 2006, Hopkins denied Keup’s step-two grievance as untimely and pointed out segregated prisoners have unfettered access to NDCS’s grievance procedure.

3. December 2006—Attempt to Receive Pastor Sukraw’s Card In late December 2006, Pastor Joe Sukraw, a religious cleric from North Platte, Nebraska, purchased a religious book and a greeting card for Keup. The bookstore sent Keup the book and the card in a single mailing, and LCC personnel intercepted the shipment. Section 205.1.1 of the OM provided that “[a]ll publications . . . must be prepaid and sent to the inmate directly from the publisher” but “cards . . . can not be included in mailings from the bookstore/publisher.” LCC personnel returned the card to the sender, stapled a return notice to the book, and delivered the book to Keup.

Keup timely grieved the return of the card, claiming LCC personnel violated the OM. Keup complained the stapling of the return notice to the book was “highly disrespectful,” “degrading,” and “equivical [sic] to leaving shoe prints all over ones [sic] mail before delivery.” Keup asked for a new book, because the first fourteen pages of his book had staple holes in them. Cruz denied Keup’s informal grievance, Sabatka-Rine denied Keup’s step-one grievance, and Hopkins denied Keup’s step-two grievance.

4. February 2007—Attempt to Receive a Bondage Sketchbook In February 2007, LCC personnel intercepted a bondage sketchbook in Keup’s mail, because the OM forbade prisoners from possessing depictions of violent sexual acts. Keup timely grieved the interception of the bondage sketchbook, opining that “bondage is a sexual fetish and is not of a violent nature or an illegal nature” and querying “how an art book containing various sketches of nude women could pose a

-4- threat?” Cruz denied Keup’s informal grievance, Sabatka-Rine denied Keup’s step- one grievance, and Hopkins denied Keup’s step-two grievance.

C. Prior Proceedings 1. Complaint In August 2005, Keup filed a complaint against Hopkins, Bakewell, and Cruz under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Keup claimed Hopkins, Bakewell, and Cruz violated Keup’s First and Fourteenth Amendment rights when they prohibited Keup from sending his drawings of marijuana and the bare-breasted woman to his mother. Keup requested compensatory and punitive damages, as well as declaratory and injunctive relief.

In May 2006, Hopkins, Bakewell, and Cruz answered the complaint. They denied the complaint’s substance and asserted Keup’s request for an “injunction is moot since changes have been made in the [OM] that allow the Plaintiff to do what he seeks the injunction to do.” In September 2005, NDCS amended the OM to ban only drawings that “advocate or are likely to incite violent or illegal activity.”

2. Amended Complaint In August 2007, Keup amended his complaint with leave of court.

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