Porter v. Clarke
Opinion of the Court
Before the Court are plaintiffs' and defendants' renewed cross-motions for summary judgment. Plaintiffs argue that the conditions of confinement that existed on Virginia's death row at the initiation of this litigation violated the Eighth Amendment of the United States Constitution and that they are entitled to an injunction preventing defendants from returning to those conditions. Defendants argue that those conditions of confinement were constitutional and that this Court should decline to issue injunctive relief even if it finds a constitutional violation. For the reasons that follow, the Court will grant summary judgment for plaintiffs and issue an injunction preventing defendants from returning to the unconstitutional conditions of confinement.
I. BACKGROUND
All of the plaintiffs in this civil action have been convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death and remain confined in a single unit ("death row") at Virginia's *522Sussex I State Prison ("SISP") while their sentences are litigated. Plaintiffs Thomas Porter ("Porter"), Anthony Juniper ("Juniper"), and Mark Lawlor ("Lawlor") have respectively spent over ten, twelve, and six years on death row, and former plaintiff Ricky Gray ("Gray") had spent more than ten years on death row before being executed in January 2017. Compl. [Dkt. No. 1] ¶ 2; Answer [Dkt. No. 49] ¶ 2. Plaintiffs filed this civil action against defendants Harold Clarke ("Clarke"), the director of the Virginia Department of Corrections ("VDOC"), and Keith W. Davis, the former warden of SISP,
This litigation is related to an earlier civil action brought by a former death row inmate, Alfred Prieto, who claimed that his automatic placement onto death row, combined with the severe conditions death row inmates faced, violated the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The Court found that the placement procedure violated the Fourteenth Amendment and granted Prieto summary judgment. Prieto v. Clarke, No. 1:12-cv-1199,
When this civil action began, the conditions on death row were identical to those described in Prieto. Death row inmates were housed in a separate "pod" from the ones housing the general population of the prison. This pod consisted of two tiers, each holding 22 cells and three showers. Orig. Def. Mem.
*523¶ 14. Each cell door had a rectangular in-set window that allowed inmates to look outside of their cell into the pod. Id. ¶ 15. The doors were not soundproof, and inmates did attempt to communicate to other inmates while in their cells, but there is disagreement over how effectively they could do so. See id. ¶ 15; Orig. Pl. Mem. [Dkt. No. 115] Ex. 7 ("Hendricks Report") 11. While in their cells, inmates were permitted to have a television and a compact disc player, and they could request books from the law library.
VDOC Operating Procedure 460A ("OP 460A"), effective March 1, 2010, governed the daily lives of death row inmates, as did the SISP Institutional Rules and Regulations for Offenders, effective February 3, 2010. Clarke Aff. ¶¶ 21-22. Under these regulations, death row inmates were allowed one hour of outdoor recreation five days per week, but such recreation was confined to individual enclosures that measured 7.9 feet by 20 feet and lacked any exercise equipment. Id. ¶ 23. During that outdoor recreation time, some plaintiffs coordinated exercises with one another, despite not being permitted to use adjacent enclosures. Plaintiffs were also permitted to leave their cells to shower at least three times each week, and two inmates, Porter and Gray, were allowed out of their cells to perform their institutional jobs as houseman and barber, respectively. Id. ¶¶ 25-28. Visitation was limited to noncontact visitation on weekends and approved holidays; however, an inmate could request contact visitation, which the warden had the discretion to grant or deny. Id. ¶ 51.
Plaintiffs had interaction with prison staff, including mental health counselors, and could have essentially unlimited contact visitation with their attorneys. Corrections officers made rounds through the unit every 30 minutes and were allowed to converse with the inmates, medical personnel came through the pod twice each day, nurses came through the pod twice each day to perform a "pill pass," the mental health practitioner visited once each week, each inmate's case counselor visited the pod daily, and inmates could request medical or mental health care at any point as well as meet with the chaplain as frequently as they wanted. Clarke Aff. ¶¶ 30-38. Each inmate was screened for mental health problems upon entering the facility for the first time and received a mental health code that was reviewed at least annually. Orig. Def. Mem. Ex. 4 ¶¶ 7-8. According to the results of this screening, Porter and Juniper were (as of 2015) classified as MH-0, meaning they had no mental health issues or need for treatment in the preceding year, and Lawlor was classified as MH-2, meaning he had mild to moderate, but stable, mental health issues. Id. ¶ 10.
According to Clarke, he began considering changes to some of these policies as *524early as 2011 but decided not to move forward with any changes after the Prieto litigation began in 2012; however, in mid-2014, he began solidifying plans to implement changes and decided to move forward with those changes even after this civil action began. Clarke Aff. ¶¶ 57-58. On August 6, 2015, Zook approved a number of interim rules and regulations for death row. Id. ¶ 59. In light of these changes, the Court granted the parties' motion to stay the litigation and to refer the matter to mediation should any disagreements remain after the changes were implemented. See Order [Dkt. No. 88].
Some of the changes took effect immediately. By the initial round of summary judgment briefing, inmates were permitted to have contact visitation with immediate family members one day per week for one and a half hours at a time, while still being permitted to have non-contact visitation on weekends and holidays with immediate family members and one approved non-family member. Outdoor recreation time was increased to 90 minutes five days each week; showers became daily; and plaintiffs were allowed to congregate indoors for one hour each day, without restraints and in groups of up to four inmates at a time. This indoor congregation occurred in a newly screened off area of the death row pod that contained a television, two tables with seating, a bench, various games, and a JPAY kiosk that enabled inmates to download music, purchase books and movies, and send e-mails. The interim regulations anticipated that the day room would be used "for congregate religious services, behavioral programming, and additional employment opportunities for Death Row Offenders," and at least one additional job for inmates was created with at least one more anticipated. See Stay Def. Mem. [Dkt. No. 85] Ex. 1.
In addition to the immediate changes, the interim regulations called for the construction of a covered outdoor recreation yard that would include two sections, each equipped with a basketball court and stationary exercise equipment, in which groups of up to four death row inmates could congregate. Clarke Aff. ¶ 57-60. Although the interim regulations anticipated that construction of the recreation yard would be completed by October 1, 2015, it had not been completed by the time the original summary judgment motions were filed. See Orig. Pl. Mem. Ex. 3 ¶ 23. Since then, the construction has been completed and death row inmates may now use the outdoor recreation yard; in addition, the interim regulations have been adopted into final regulations, which took effect in June 2016. See Dkt. No. 161-1 ¶¶ 12-13; id. Ex. 8 (Operating Procedure 425. A).
After failing to resolve the litigation, the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment, primarily focusing on whether the prior conditions of confinement violated the Eighth Amendment. Based on the improvements made by defendants to the death row conditions, which satisfied plaintiffs' demands, the Court issued an Order and Memorandum Opinion, in which it found that the adoption of the interim regulations and the physical improvements had rendered plaintiffs' action moot. See Order & Mem. Op. [Dkt. Nos. 166 & 167]. As such, the Court denied plaintiffs' motion for summary judgment, granted defendants' motion, and ordered that judgment be entered in favor of defendants. Id.
Plaintiffs appealed to the Fourth Circuit, see Dkt. No. 171, which reversed that decision and remanded, holding that under the voluntary cessation doctrine, plaintiffs' action was not constitutionally moot, see Dkt. No. 174; Porter v. Clarke,
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
A party is entitled to summary judgment if the party can show "that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). A genuine dispute of material fact exists "if the evidence is such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving party." Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
In determining whether to grant or deny injunctive relief, the district court must exercise its equitable discretion. eBay Inc. v. MercExchange, LLC,
III. PLAINTIFFS' EIGHTH AMENDMENT CLAIM
Before determining whether injunctive relief is available to plaintiffs, the Court must first determine whether plaintiffs have proven their substantive Eighth Amendment claim: that the conditions of confinement on death row before 2015 violated the Eighth Amendment's cruel and unusual punishment clause.
A. Eighth Amendment Standard
The Eighth Amendment's prohibition of "cruel and unusual punishments" applies to the treatment of prisoners and the conditions of their confinement. Williams v. Benjamin,
The objective prong is "contextual and responsive to 'contemporary standards of decency.' " Hudson v. McMillian,
With respect to the subjective prong, plaintiffs must show that defendants acted with "deliberate indifference," a standard that "requires proof of more than mere negligence but less than malice." Williams,
*527B. Objective Prong: Substantial Risk of Harm
With respect to the first, objective prong of their Eighth Amendment claim, plaintiffs argue that the pre-2015 death row conditions deprived them of the fundamental human needs of environmental stimulation and social interaction, which caused them serious emotional, psychological, and physical harm. Orig. Pl. Mem. 1-2. Defendants respond that the conditions of confinement were not objectively intolerable and did not subject plaintiffs to any harm or risk of harm. Orig. Def. Mem. 24-30. The question for the Court is whether the deprivation of human contact and stimulation was an "extreme" deprivation-that is, whether it caused a "serious or significant physical or emotional injury" or the "substantial risk" of such an injury.
Preliminarily, the parties dispute whether the pre-2015 conditions constituted "solitary confinement" in "the legal sense." Id. at 25-26. Defendants argue that the Supreme Court has "interpreted" the phrase "solitary confinement" to mean the "complete isolation of the prisoner from all human society, and his confinement in a cell of considerable size, so arranged that he had no direct intercourse with or sight of any human being, and no employment or instruction." Id. (quoting In re Medley,
This Court previously found that the 71 square foot cells measure less than half the size of a parking space, that the window is a "window in name only," and that the "rudimentary privileges" provided to death row inmates did not "mitigate the overwhelming fact of isolation." Prieto,
*528Different sources provide different definitions for "solitary confinement" and associated terms. For example, when describing particularly restrictive prison conditions, the United States Department of Justice's Report and Recommendations Concerning the Use of Restrictive Housing (Jan. 2016) ("DOJ Report") declines to use the term "solitary confinement" because it can be misleading and instead refers to segregated housing as "restrictive housing" and "segregation." DOJ Report 3. The Report defines restrictive housing as "any type of detention that involves three basic elements:" "[r]emoval from the general inmate population," "[p]lacement in a locked room or cell," and "[i]nability to leave the room or cell for the vast majority of the day, typically 22 hours or more."
Therefore, plaintiffs have sufficiently shown that the pre-2015 conditions of confinement constituted "solitary confinement" or "segregated" or "restricted" housing, as those terms are understood by contemporary observers. But in any event, whether the conditions at issue here meet Justice Kennedy's (or any specific court's or expert's) description of "solitary confinement" is irrelevant. To the extent plaintiffs can show that they were sufficiently deprived of a basic human need such as human interaction and that the deprivation caused a significant harm or risk of harm, they have made out at least the objective prong of an Eighth Amendment claim. Trying to determine whether these conditions are, under any given metric, worse or better than the conditions discussed in Ayala or in In re Medley is missing the forest for the trees.
Moving to the substantive objective inquiry, defendants argue that Fourth Circuit precedent establishes that "the isolation inherent in administrative segregation or maximum custody is not itself constitutionally objectionable," even when it lasts for an "indefinite duration." Orig. Def. Mem. 25 (citing Mickle v. Moore (In re Long Term Admin. Segregation of Inmates Designated as Five Percenters),
In addition, defendants argue that the plaintiffs have objected only to "amorphous ... overall conditions"-rather than the "deprivation of a single, identifiable human need such a[s] food, warmth, or exercise"-and therefore their claim fails. Orig. Def. Reply 4 (quoting Wilson v. Seiter,
In response, plaintiffs argue that defendants rely on "stale Eighth Amendment *529jurisprudence" and that the Court must instead evaluate the pre-2015 conditions according to the "evolving standards of decency that mark the progress of a maturing society." Orig. Pl. Opp. [Dkt. No. 124] 8 (formatting and capitalization altered) (quoting Hall v. Florida, --- U.S. ----,
Given the rapidly evolving information available about the potential harmful effects of solitary confinement-and the explicit incorporation of contemporary standards of decency into the Eighth Amendment standard-it is clear that this Court is not bound by the decades-old determinations made by the Fourth Circuit and the Supreme Court on which defendants rely. Instead, as the following discussion makes clear, there is a substantial quantity of relatively recent information demonstrating the harms of extended solitary confinement that was not available to the Fourth Circuit in 1999-or, of course, to the Supreme Court in 1890.
To demonstrate the significant psychological and emotional harm that their solitary confinement has caused, plaintiffs rely primarily on a group of expert reports. First, plaintiffs submitted an expert report from Dr. Michael Hendricks, a clinical psychologist who evaluated each of the four plaintiffs and reviewed numerous records to assess whether plaintiffs have experienced any mental health consequences from the conditions of their confinement. See Hendricks Report 1. Dr. Hendricks found that "each plaintiff has developed serious psychological and/or physical distress and impairment in functioning" that "exceeds any distress and impairment that was evident prior to each man's arrival on death row." Id. at 19. In particular, prolonged isolation has "led to clinical levels of depression that include dysphoric mood, constricted affect, hopelessness, feelings of worthlessness, anhedonia (loss of enjoyment in even basic pleasures), anergia (a low level or lack of energy), and suicidal ideation." Id. at 20. Moreover, the restrictive confinement has caused a substantial reduction in plaintiffs' "initiative and motivation to maintain contact with family members and other loved ones"; reduced plaintiffs' "initiative and motivation to maintain a healthy physical condition"; and "created a profound disturbance in sleep patterns and" quantities. Id. In addition, the conditions have caused plaintiffs to develop a variety of "coping strategies for dealing with the effects of isolation over a long period of time." Id. at 19. For example, plaintiffs have found "creative use[s] of the limited items available to them" and have devised "ways of distracting themselves from boredom by relying on forms *530of self-entertainment." Id. Although these coping mechanisms allow plaintiffs to deal with the negative effects of their restrictive confinement on a day-to-day basis, the cruel irony is that, over time, they "thwart basic desire for human interaction" by making plaintiffs reliant on "internal resources that have no connection with meaningful social interaction with others." Id. As a result, the coping mechanisms "have ultimately deprived [plaintiffs] of a core element of what it means to be human" in a "lasting" way that Dr. Hendricks compared to the effects of war on soldiers' mental health. Id.
In addition to his personal evaluations of the plaintiffs and the conditions on death row, Dr. Hendricks also discussed the scientific findings relating to the effects of isolation, although most of the scientific literature examines "the effects of isolation for a period of a few days up to a month," and not the results of years-long isolation, which "far exceeds the duration of isolation examined under typical experimental procedures." Id. at 18. Even so, the scientific literature has shown that "[e]xtended periods of isolation lead to adverse mental health, and sometimes physical health, consequences in even previously healthy individuals." Id. Given plaintiffs' extremely long period of isolation, Dr. Hendricks found that it is to be expected that they would experience similar consequences "but with a greater magnitude of symptomatology." Id. Dr. Hendricks's summary of the relevant scientific literature is bolstered by an expert declaration submitted by Dr. Mark Cunningham, a certified forensic and clinical psychologist. Orig. Pl. Mem. Ex. 10, at 1. Drawing on a comprehensive review of the relevant literature, Dr. Cunningham found that empirical research on isolating conditions like those experienced by plaintiffs has "consistently and unequivocally" demonstrated that these conditions lead to psychological harm-and that "as isolation and stimulus deprivation increase, psychological deterioration and disorders correspondingly increase." See id. at 20-26 (internal quotation marks omitted).
To counter the conclusions presented by Dr. Hendricks, defendants introduce an expert report from Dr. Gregory Saathoff, a licensed psychiatrist who has provided "regular weekly consultation services within" VDOC since 1991. Orig. Def. Mem. Ex. 9, at 1-2.
The parties engage in extensive debate about the methodologies used by Drs. Hendricks and Saathoff as well as the accuracy of each expert's conclusions. See, e.g., id. at 25-28; Orig. Pl. Opp. Ex. 1. Based on these dueling experts, there is a genuine dispute of fact about the actual effects the death row housing conditions have had on plaintiffs' emotional and psychological health. But there is no genuine dispute about the significant risk that these conditions created. As Dr. Cunningham's report as well as the scientific evidence discussed in Dr. Hendricks's report make clear, prolonged isolation and lack *531of stimulation can have devastating psychological and emotional consequences. And although defendants dispute Dr. Hendricks's conclusions about the mental health of plaintiffs, his interviews and report provide at least a concrete contextualization of the harm that solitary confinement can wreak. Therefore, because the objective prong of the Eighth Amendment standard does not require the actual infliction of a "serious or significant physical or emotional injury," but only conditions producing a "substantial risk" of such an injury, Johnson,
This commonsense conclusion is not only supported by scientific research and the expert reports submitted in this case but has also begun to achieve recognition in legal circles. For example, the Fourth Circuit and at least one Supreme Court justice have recognized the impact that solitary or segregated confinement exerts on an inmate.
In Incumaa v. Stirling,
As the undisputed evidence in this record makes clear, and as courts and corrections officers across the country have begun to recognize, the years-long isolation that the pre-2015 conditions of confinement forced on plaintiffs created, at the least, a significant risk of substantial psychological and emotional harm. Therefore, plaintiffs have met the objective prong of the Eighth Amendment test.
C. Subjective Prong: Deliberate Indifference
With respect to the subjective prong of the Eighth Amendment standard, plaintiffs must show that defendants acted with "deliberate indifference," a standard that "requires proof of more than mere negligence but less than malice." Williams,
Plaintiffs have the better argument. First, as discussed above, there is a large and growing body of literature-both academic and legal-discussing the potentially devastating effects of prolonged periods of isolation. As one district court put it nearly two decades ago: "A conclusion ... that prolonged isolation from social and environmental stimulation increases the risk of developing mental illness does not strike this Court as rocket science." McClary v. Kelly,
Therefore, plaintiffs have demonstrated that defendants acted with deliberate indifference to a substantial risk of harm when imposing the pre-2015 conditions of confinement. As such, given that plaintiffs have already met the objective prong of the test, plaintiffs have shown that those conditions violated the Eighth Amendment.
IV. PLAINTIFFS' ENTITLEMENT TO INJUNCTIVE RELIEF
Although plaintiffs have demonstrated that the pre-2015 conditions of confinement violated the Eighth Amendment, they must also show that they are entitled to injunctive relief. To demonstrate the appropriateness of an injunction, plaintiffs must show that they suffered an irreparable injury, for which remedies at law cannot adequately compensate them, that balancing the hardships between the parties inclines in favor of an equitable remedy, and that the public interest is not disserved by an injunction. eBay,
A. Irreparable Harm and Adequate Remedies at Law
To satisfy the first two elements of the permanent injunction analysis, plaintiffs must demonstrate that they have suffered irreparable harm and that there are not adequate remedies available at law to compensate them. As a general rule, "the denial of a constitutional right ... constitutes irreparable harm for purposes of equitable jurisdiction." Ross v. Meese,
In response, defendants do not contend that the violation of plaintiffs' Eighth Amendment rights is not an irreparable *534injury. Instead, they argue that, particularly given their status as state officials, the Court should hesitate before granting an injunction based on the mere possibility of future irreparable injury. Ren. Def. Opp. [Dkt. No. 199] 18-19. As discussed above, this contention is addressed by the W.T. Grant line of cases and, as will be explained below, plaintiffs have met their burden by showing a cognizable danger of a recurrent violation. Nothing defendants argue in this section alters that analysis. As such, plaintiffs have met the first two prongs of the injunction analysis.
B. Balancing the Hardships and the Public Interest
To obtain an injunction, plaintiffs must also show that the balance of the hardships weighs in favor of injunctive relief and that the public interest would not be disserved by an injunction. Plaintiffs argue here that an injunction will impose practically no burden on defendants, who have already made the requested changes. Instead, what the injunction would accomplish would be to prevent defendants from returning to the pre-2015 conditions, as opposed to being forced to take some affirmative action. Ren. Pl. Mem. [Dkt. No. 192] 20. In addition, they argue that the public interest is served by an injunction because there is a strong public interest in upholding constitutional rights.
Although defendants' arguments have some merit, they cannot overcome plaintiffs' strong showing. Given the minimally intrusive nature of the requested injunction, and even considering traditional principles of federalism and comity, the negligible hardship state officials might have to endure in complying with the injunction cannot outweigh the hardships plaintiffs would suffer if forced to endure unconstitutional conditions of confinement. Moreover, although the citizens of Virginia certainly have an interest in their prison officials being able to exercise their professional discretion in setting policies, the injunction requested here barely intrudes on that discretion and barely offends the public interest. When this intrusion is considered against the strong public interest in vindicating constitutional rights and preventing future violations, it is clear that an injunction would not disserve the public interest. Therefore, plaintiffs have made the requisite showing and are entitled to an injunction.
C. Prison Litigation Reform Act Requirements
Under the PLRA, "[p]rospective relief in any civil action with respect to prison conditions shall extend no further than necessary to correct the violation of the Federal right of a particular plaintiff or plaintiffs" and a court may not grant or approve any prospective relief unless it "finds that such relief is narrowly drawn, extends no further than necessary to correct the violation of the Federal right, and is the least intrusive means necessary to correct the violation of the Federal right."
1. Ongoing Violation
Defendants argue that, as a matter of law, in "situations where the alleged constitutional violation no longer exists," prospective relief would "violate the express terms of the PLRA" because, absent an ongoing violation, prospective relief cannot be necessary to "correct the violation of the Federal right." Ren. Def. Mem. 18-20, 22-23. In support of this proposition, defendants turn primarily to three sources. First, they focus on the plain language of the PLRA, which they describe as foreclosing injunctive relief when it is not necessary to correct the violation of a federal right. Defendants argue that logic dictates that relief cannot be necessary to correct a violation if there is in fact no ongoing violation.
In response, plaintiffs offer three basic arguments. First, a "bedrock principle of equity" is that "where a defendant has voluntarily discontinued conduct that caused irreparable harm, an injunction remains appropriate where 'there exists some cognizable danger of recurrent violation.' " Ren. Pl. Opp. 14-15 (quoting W.T. Grant Co.,
Plaintiffs' view is correct. As an initial matter, the case law cited by both parties is not particularly helpful. There are cases going both ways and none of the cited cases is binding on this court. The better approach is first to recognize the background equitable rule that courts have the authority to issue prospective relief even in the absence of an ongoing violation, see W.T. Grant,
In the PLRA context, Congress has demonstrated that it knows how to give courts a "clear command" not to grant equitable relief except in cases of an ongoing violation because it did exactly that in the termination provision. In the termination section of the PLRA, Congress provided that defendants can move to terminate an injunction related to prison conditions after two years and a court must grant such a termination motion unless "the court makes written findings based on the record" that, among other things, "prospective relief remains necessary to correct a current and ongoing violation of the Federal right."
Neither of defendants' remaining arguments is persuasive. As discussed above, the "plain language" of the PLRA does not in fact indicate that an ongoing violation is necessary to support the initial entry of an injunction, and although the context of the enactment of the PLRA is relevant and does incline toward a more onerous standard for the entry of injunctive relief, this context can neither provide the "clearest command" necessary to overcome the background legal rule that vests courts with the ability to issue prospective relief even in the absence of an ongoing violation nor overcome the implication from the language of the PLRA that different standards apply in the initial entry and termination contexts.
As such, the Court finds that an ongoing violation of a constitutional right is not a prerequisite for the initial entry of injunctive relief under the PLRA.
2. Need-Narrowness-Intrusiveness Requirement
Defendants also argue that plaintiffs' requested injunction does not meet the need-narrowness-intrusiveness requirement because it is not "sufficiently narrow" and "would not be the least intrusive means" to correct the violation. Ren. Def. Opp. 17. Although plaintiffs request only an injunction prohibiting VDOC from reinstating the pre-2015 conditions of confinement, defendants have a host of questions: "But what conditions? And as to which inmates? And for what duration? Would the injunction just require occasional contact visitation? More recreation time? Group recreation? Or just recreation in a gymnasium, as was afforded Mr. Prieto during the pendency of his appeal? ... [And h]ow would VDOC comply with any command for congregate recreation if the number of death row inmates dwindled-as it may soon-to a single inmate?"
As plaintiffs have explained, they "seek to enjoin a specific set of conditions on Death Row-namely, their solitary confinement, as characterized by the combination of: (1) twenty-three hours per day alone in cells; (2) no contact visitation; (3) no congregate recreation or programming; [and] (4) only five hours per week of outdoor recreation in separate cages." Orig. Pl. Reply [Dkt. No. 126] 19 (emphasis added). This explanation answers the bulk of defendants' rhetorical questions, as it specifically delineates the combination of conditions that plaintiffs want an injunction to prohibit. Moreover, by focusing on a prohibition of this combination of conditions, plaintiffs' request is both narrow and minimally intrusive: rather than ordering specific affirmative steps, it leaves defendants free to craft any other set of policies relating to cell time, visitation, and recreation that defendants, in their professional expertise, believe satisfy both the Eighth Amendment and the prison's need for security.
D. Equitable Mootness
Defendants also raise an argument grounded in "prudential" or "equitable" mootness, in which they argue that various prudential considerations-including the inability to fashion effective relief given the intervening change in policy, the "difficult and sensitive" legal issues involved in the case, and the "deference traditionally afforded the administrative and security judgments of prison officials"-should persuade the Court to, "in the exercise of its discretion, stay its hand and decline to consider an award of equitable relief." Ren. Def. Mem. 20-24 (internal quotation marks omitted). In response, plaintiffs argue that the continued vitality of equitable mootness has been placed in question by recent Supreme Court decisions, Ren. Pl. Opp. 11-12, and that the request for injunctive relief is not equitably moot because there is a significant possibility of reversion,
Unfortunately, defendants have pushed together two distinct inquiries that are better left apart. First, as all parties agree, plaintiffs must make a threshold showing that "there exists some cognizable danger of recurrent violation," W.T. Grant,
1. Possibility of Recurrent Violation
All parties agree that W.T. Grant establishes the appropriate preliminary test: plaintiffs cannot obtain an injunction unless they can demonstrate that "there exists some cognizable danger of recurrent violation, something more than the mere possibility which serves to keep the case alive." W.T. Grant,
Although the parties agree on the legal standard,
In response, defendants largely contend that there is no cognizable danger of recurrent violation, because Clarke, Zook, and Chief of Corrections Operations A. David Robinson ("Robinson") "have all stated, under oath, that they do not intend to return to the prior policies" and there is no evidence suggesting that these statements are false. Ren. Def. Reply 6. Moreover, defendants contest plaintiffs' characterization of the timeline of change, pointing to deposition testimony from Clarke and Robinson indicating that they had begun conversations about changing death row conditions as early as 2011, well before this civil action was filed, even though those changes were not implemented until 2015. See Ren. Pl. Mem. Ex. 1, at 139-42; id. Ex. 2, at 42-51.
The undisputed facts partially support both parties' version of events. On the one hand, plaintiffs are unable to produce any evidence to suggest that Clarke and Robinson did not begin engaging in conversations about death row conditions soon after Clarke was hired in 2010, and Clarke and Robinson have given sworn testimony consistent with each other that those conversations did take place. At the same time, those conversations were described only as preliminary and there is no documentary evidence indicating their content nor was the VDOC Executive Team looped in until 2015, after the litigation was started. Moreover, it is clear that there was at least some pressure put on VDOC by the pending litigation. For example, the record includes a variety of emails from Kimberly Lipp, Chief of VDOC's Architectural and Engineering Services Department, that discuss the death row project being particularly time-sensitive in reference to pending litigation. See id. Ex. 8 (discussing how the death row construction project had previously "avoided a major legal issue" for VDOC and informing a colleague that VDOC was "again under serious threat of being sued" for issues relating to the project). Defendants do not dispute that there is no legal barrier to a future Director reinstating the pre-2015 policies nor do defendants dispute that the Director serves at the pleasure of the governor. The most persuasive evidence in this record, as recognized by the Fourth Circuit, is the *540"significant[ ]" fact that "throughout the course of this litigation, Defendants have refused to commit to keep the revised policies in place and not revert to the challenged practices." Fourth Circuit Op. 13-14.
Taken together, these facts are sufficient to establish that (1) defendants' change from the pre-2015 conditions of confinement to the current conditions was influenced, although not entirely dependent on, the current litigation; (2) there is no legal barrier to defendants' returning to the pre-2015 conditions nor is there any pre-implementation mechanism for plaintiffs to challenge such a return; and (3) although defendants individually state they do not currently intend to return to the pre-2015 conditions, they have declined to commit VDOC to this nonreversion promise. Given these facts, plaintiffs have met their burden of showing a "cognizable danger of recurrent violation" in the absence of injunctive relief because many different changed circumstances could lead VDOC to revert to the pre-2015 conditions. In particular, VDOC's consistent refusal to represent to the Court that it will not revert to the pre-2015 conditions and there being no way for plaintiffs to adequately and timely challenge a future reversal support the need for an injunction.
2. Prudential Concerns
The various "prudential considerations" cited by defendants do not convince this Court to forgo the exercise of its equitable discretion and decline to issue an injunction. The Fourth Circuit has, in the past, recognized the existence of a "prudential" or "equitable" mootness doctrine that is separate from constitutional mootness. See, e.g., S-1 & S-2 v. Spangler,
To support their position that this action is equitably moot, defendants primarily argue that there is no immediate need for relief because the challenged conduct will likely not reoccur, as discussed above, and that the constitutional issues here are "difficult and sensitive from [a] legal perspective, and a practical one." Ren. Def. Mem. 20-24. Plaintiffs respond that there is a legitimate risk of reversion to the unconstitutional conditions, Ren. Pl. Opp. 12-14,
In addition, amici curiae the American Civil Liberties Union Foundation of Virginia and the Rutherford Institute have filed a Statement of Position focused on the equitable mootness question. They argue that the use of equitable mootness to avoid reaching the merits of plaintiffs' claim would "undermine the system established by Congress and the Supreme Court to ensure that important civil rights are properly vindicated." Statement of Position [Dkt. No. 207] 1. As amici explain, Congress has passed a number of fee-shifting statutes, including
As amici explain, dismissing plaintiffs' claims on equitable mootness grounds would undercut this logic, as it would lower the bar for mootness and allow both the specific defendants in this action and future potential defendants to moot a case to avoid having to pay attorney's fees. This outcome would undermine the structure of private civil rights enforcement that Congress has established, which is predicated on the ability of private litigants to recover their attorney's fees.
Taken together, these prudential considerations do not convince the Court to stay its hand. Although the constitutional issues here are relatively sensitive and prison administrators typically receive broad deference from the courts in making security determinations, the particular circumstances of this action demonstrate that a ruling for plaintiffs on the merits would not overly intrude on defendants' ability to manage the prison system safely. At this point, discovery is complete, the constitutional issues are fully framed for the Court, the legal standard is clear, and the injunction plaintiffs request would require extremely little affirmative action from defendants. Moreover, as discussed above, *542plaintiffs have shown at least a cognizable danger that VDOC administrators, present or future, may revert to the pre-2015 conditions, and defendants refuse to allay this concern by representing to the court that reversion will not occur. Finally, the concerns expressed by amici about the danger that a broad application of equitable mootness poses to the carefully structured federal civil rights regime are well-taken and counsel against dismissing plaintiffs' claims on prudential grounds. Therefore, the Court rejects defendants' argument that this action should be dismissed on prudential mootness grounds.
V. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, plaintiffs' Motion for Summary Judgment will be GRANTED and defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment will be DENIED by an appropriate Order to be issued with this Memorandum Opinion.
In March 2016, the Court substituted David Zook, the current warden, for Keith Davis, the former warden, under Fed. R. Civ. P. 25(d).
An additional death row inmate, Ivan Teleguz, had originally joined the action, but was voluntarily dismissed on April 1, 2015. Notice of Dismissal of Pl. Ivan Teleguz [Dkt. No. 34]. Last year, Teleguz's sentence was commuted to life in prison without the possibility of parole, removing him from death row.
Prieto filed a petition for a writ of certiorari, but while that petition was pending before the Supreme Court, Prieto's execution date was set, leading Lawlor to seek leave to intervene in the Prieto action to prevent it from becoming moot. On October 2, 2015, Prieto was executed, and on October 13, 2015, the Supreme Court denied Lawlor's motion for leave to intervene and dismissed Prieto's petition for writ of certiorari as moot. Prieto v. Clarke, --- U.S. ----,
Due to the history of this case, there are two full sets of briefing: the parties' original (2015) summary judgment briefs, which mainly address the substantive Eighth Amendment question, and the parties' renewed (2017) summary judgment briefs, which mainly address whether plaintiffs are entitled to injunctive relief if they can demonstrate an Eighth Amendment violation. For purposes of clarity, the 2015 briefs will be denoted as "Orig." and the 2017 briefs will be denoted as "Ren."
In practice, the SISP warden at the time, Keith Davis, only approved contact visits when an inmate was about to be executed or was otherwise "on his deathbed." Orig. Pl. Mem. Ex. 8, at 100, 119.
Defendants argue that because plaintiffs' suit is against defendants in their official capacities, plaintiffs must show not that defendants themselves personally knew of and disregarded a risk of harm, but that VDOC's policies and regulations demonstrated deliberate indifference. Orig. Def. Mem. 21-22. Although defendants appear to misread the applicable Eighth Amendment authority, see Farmer,
Defendants argue that plaintiffs and the Court should not rely on the Court's findings in Prieto because it was a separate case based on different claims and a different record. Orig. Def. Opp. 16. Although Prieto did not implicate the Eighth Amendment, it did involve identical physical conditions to the ones at issue in this litigation (i.e., the cells have gotten no bigger and the windows have not changed) and therefore the Court's findings are informative in this action, if not determinative. Moreover, defendants do not contest the truth of the facts underlying the Court's findings in Prieto.
Because the parties have not engaged in substantial additional briefing after this action was remanded by the Fourth Circuit, the bulk of the cited "contemporary" understanding is from 2015 or early 2016. If anything, plaintiffs' claim has only become stronger in the last two years, as recognition of the harms of solitary confinement has become more widespread. See, e.g., Ruiz v. Texas, --- U.S. ----,
Defendants do not rebut Dr. Cunningham's review of the scientific literature in a substantive way; instead, they "dispute the applicability of this research to the" plaintiffs, because Dr. Cunningham's "report does not review the actual conditions of Virginia's death row inmates." Orig. Def. Opp. 7.
In addition, the Court observes that because plaintiffs are only requesting declaratory and injunctive relief, rather than damages, there is no right to a jury trial in this civil action. Accordingly, at trial, the task of evaluating the competing experts' opinions would be left to the Court, and both experts' reports and various supporting materials have been entered into the summary judgment record. Based on a review of the experts' reports, the Court finds Dr. Hendricks's methodology is more sound than Dr. Saathoff's, and his conclusions are likewise more persuasive. Therefore, to the extent that the harm actually experienced by plaintiffs is material, the Court credits Dr. Hendricks's report rather than Dr. Saathoff's.
Plaintiffs contend that there is less case law on this question than would be expected because many solitary confinement cases end in settlement. Orig. Pl. Mem. 12 n.2. Since the original briefing, Justice Breyer has joined Justice Kennedy in commenting on the potential constitutional infirmity of extended solitary confinement, as noted above.
Since the parties originally briefed the issue, the Seventh and Ninth Circuits have echoed Justice Kennedy's concerns. See Isby v. Brown,
Defendants contend that this is misleading because offenders housed in administrative, rather than disciplinary, segregation are continuously confined in segregated housing without the thirty-day limit. Orig. Def. Opp. 9-10. This statement is a red herring: defendants' use of a "rest period" with respect to some offenders placed in segregation indicates their awareness that isolation can be harmful, and their decision to forgo the rest period for a different category of offenders does not change that awareness.
As discussed above, the parties also disagree about whether these conditions of confinement had a legitimate penological objective. Given the degree of evidence marshalled by both sides, this issue would not be amenable to resolution at the summary judgment stage; in any event, it is unnecessary to resolve the issue given the variety of other evidence that defendants knew of the potentially harmful effects of the pre-2015 conditions.
Neither party makes a specific argument addressing the "adequate remedies available at law" prong of the analysis, but the very nature of irreparable harm is that there is no adequate remedy for it. In any event, it is clear that money damages cannot adequately compensate plaintiffs for either the deprivation of their constitutional rights or the potential risk of psychological and emotional harm that the pre-2015 conditions of confinement present.
The need-narrowness-intrusiveness argument appears more clearly in defendants' brief in opposition to plaintiffs' motion for summary judgment than in defendants' brief in support of their own motion for summary judgment. Given that the need-narrowness-intrusiveness requirement has been thoroughly briefed (both at the renewed motions stage and at the original motions stage) and that the PLRA appears to require a court to satisfy itself (even in the absence of argument) that the requested injunction complies with the requirement, the Court will fully consider defendants' argument, regardless of where it was most clearly raised.
Plaintiffs argue that this case is inapposite because it was about the extension of a consent decree rather than the initial entry of injunctive relief and, as such, "does not address the issue here: whether the PLRA eliminates the Court's equitable authority to grant an injunction in the first instance." Ren. Pl. Opp. [Dkt. No. 198] 17. Although plaintiffs correctly describe the factual circumstances in Hallett, the Ninth Circuit made clear that it was interpreting § 3626(a)(1)(A) -the provision at issue here.
This case, Thomas v. Bryant,
In this case, Prison Legal News v. Stolle, No. 2:13-cv-424,
And, indeed, defendants appear to have already crafted a set of policies that both parties agree are constitutional and practically workable. Therefore, at this point, complying with the injunction will require no affirmative steps at all on the part of defendants, much less any substantial financial outlay.
There is some ambiguity about whether the Fourth Circuit has decided this issue. Compare Fourth Circuit Op. 13 ("[I]t is more than a 'mere possibility' that Defendants will alter Plaintiffs' current conditions of confinement." (citing W.T. Grant,
In their reply brief, defendants jump on a purported "concession" by plaintiffs that they have to show a "substantial risk" of future harm. Ren. Def. Reply 6. Although plaintiffs do say at one point in their response brief that "an injunction is appropriate where substantial risk of future irreparable harm is shown," Ren. Pl. Opp. 16, this appears to be a loose bit of drafting. Reading the briefing as a whole, it is clear that plaintiffs and defendants correctly agree that the W.T. Grant standard is the appropriate standard.
Plaintiffs' argument that even if the current officials in charge of VDOC are committed to the changes, it is likely that one or more of these officials will soon be replaced, Ren. Pl. Mem. 19-20, has been rendered moot because the recently elected governor reappointed Clarke to remain the Director of VDOC, Def. Mot. to Supp. the Record [Dkt. No. 214] Ex. 1.
Plaintiffs also argue that recent Supreme Court decisions "call into question the continued vitality of the equitable mootness doctrine." Ren. Pl. Opp. 11 (formatting altered). In the decisions they identify, Lexmark International, Inc. v. Static Control Components, Inc., --- U.S. ----,
Although neither party discusses the attorney's fees issues, it was addressed by the Spangler court in a footnote. In that pre-Buckhannon case, the Fourth Circuit observed that "a determination of mootness of the action on the merits [does not] preclude an award of attorney's fees on remand." Spangler,
Reference
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- Thomas PORTER v. Harold W. CLARKE
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