STEPHEN REINHARDT, Circuit Judge, LAWRENCE K. KARLTON and THELTON E. HENDERSON, Senior District Judges.
On January 7, 2013, defendants filed a Motion to Vacate or Modify Population Reduction Order. Defs.' Mot. to Vacate or Modify Population Reduction Order (ECF No. 2506/4280) ("Three-Judge Motion").
Given the lengthy history of this case, a brief (or not-so-brief) synopsis is in order. Defendants seek vacatur of a population reduction order that this Court issued in order to provide remedial relief for Eighth Amendment violations found in two independent legal proceedings. Aug. 4, 2009 Op. & Order, 922 F.Supp.2d 882, 919, 2009 WL 2430820 (ECF No. 2197/3641). The first, Coleman v. Brown, began in 1990 and concerns California's failure to provide constitutionally adequate mental health care to its mentally ill prison population. The second, Plata v. Brown, began in 2001 and concerns the state's failure to provide constitutionally adequate medical health care to its prison population. In both cases, the district courts found constitutional violations and ordered injunctive relief. As time passed, however, it became clear that no relief could be effective in
Congress restricted the ability of federal courts to enter a population reduction order in the Prison Litigation Reform Act of 1996 ("PLRA"), Pub. L. No. 104-134, 110 Stat. 1321 (codified in relevant parts at 18 U.S.C. § 3626); Aug. 4, 2009 Op. & Order, 922 F.Supp.2d at 917-18, (ECF No. 2197/3641) (explaining why a population reduction order is a "prisoner release order," as defined by the PLRA, 18 U.S.C. § 3626(g)(4)). Such relief can be provided only by a specially convened three-judge court after it has made specific findings. 18 U.S.C. § 3626(a).
In 2006, the plaintiffs in Coleman and Plata independently filed motions to convene a three-judge court to enter a population reduction order. Both courts granted plaintiffs' motions and recommended that the cases be assigned to the same three-judge court "[f]or purposes of judicial economy and avoiding the risk of inconsistent judgments." July 23, 2007 Order in Plata, 2007 WL 2122657, at *6; July 23, 2007 Order in Coleman, 2007 WL 2122636, at *8; see also Brown v. Plata, ___ U.S. ___, 131 S.Ct. 1910, 1922, 179 L.Ed.2d 969 (2011) ("Because the two cases are interrelated, their limited consolidation for this purpose has a certain utility in avoiding conflicting decrees and aiding judicial consideration and enforcement."). The Chief Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit agreed and, on July 26, 2007, convened the instant three-judge district court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2284.
In August 2009, after a fourteen-day trial, this Court issued an Opinion & Order designed to remedy the ongoing constitutional violations with respect to both medical and mental health care in the California prison system. The order directed defendants, including the Governor, then Arnold Schwarzenegger, and the Secretary of the California Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections ("CDCR"), then Matthew Cate, to reduce the institutional prison population to 137.5% design capacity within two years. This Court made extensive findings, as set forth in our 184-page opinion. We repeat here only those findings that are necessary or relevant to the determination of the motions pending before us.
First, based on the testimony of seven expert witnesses (including Jeffrey Beard
Second, after finding that "no other relief will remedy the violation of the Federal right," 18 U.S.C. § 3626(a)(3)(E)(ii), Aug. 4, 2009 Op. & Order, 922 F.Supp.2d at 918, (ECF No. 2197/3641), this Court faced the challenging question of designing an order that was "narrowly drawn, extends no further than necessary to correct the violation of the Federal right, and [was] the least intrusive means necessary to correct the violation of the Federal right." 18 U.S.C. § 3626(a)(1)(A). In this context, this meant determining the population level at which defendants could begin to provide constitutionally adequate medical and mental health care. It was a predictive judgment that, as we acknowledged, was "not an exact science." Aug. 4, 2009 Op. & Order, 922 F.Supp.2d at 965, (ECF No. 2197/3641) (quoting plaintiffs' expert, Dr. Craig Haney). Accordingly, this Court considered the testimony of various experts. Many of these experts believed that a prison population at 100% design capacity
Third, this Court gave "substantial weight to any adverse impact on public safety or the operation of a criminal justice system caused by the relief." 18 U.S.C. § 3626(a)(1)(A). In fact, we devoted 10 days out of the 14-day trial to the issue of public safety; we also devoted approximately 25% of our Opinion — 49 out of 184 pages — to it. We concluded that the evidence clearly established that "the state could comply with our population reduction order without a significant adverse impact upon public safety or the criminal justice system's operation." Aug. 4, 2009 Op. & Order, 922 F.Supp.2d at 969, (ECF No. 2197/3641). Specifically, we identified a variety of measures to reduce prison population: (1) early release through the expansion of good time credits; (2) diversion of technical parole violators; (3) diversion
Defendants timely appealed to the Supreme Court.
In June 2011, the Supreme Court affirmed this Court's order in full. Again, we repeat here only those portions of the Supreme Court opinion that are relevant to the motions pending before us. First, with respect to the question of whether overcrowding was the primary cause of ongoing constitutional violations, the Supreme Court noted with approval the extensive evidence presented in our Opinion & Order — specifically, the high rates of vacancy for medical professions, the lack of physical space, and the testimony from experts who testified that crowding was the primary cause of the failure to provide constitutionally adequate medical and mental health care. Plata, 131 S.Ct. at 1932-34. In light of this evidence, the Supreme Court deferred to this Court's factual determination that overcrowding was the primary cause of ongoing constitutional violations. Id. at 1932 ("With respect to the three-judge court's factual findings, this Court's review is necessarily deferential. It is not this Court's place to `duplicate the role' of the trial court. The ultimate issue of primary cause presents a mixed question of law and fact; but there, too, `the mix weighs heavily on the fact side.' Because the `district court is better positioned... to decide the issue,' our review of the three-judge court's primary cause determination is deferential." (internal citations omitted)).
Second, with respect to this Court's determination that a prison population of 137.5% design capacity was necessary in order to begin to solve the ongoing constitutional
Id. at 1944. The Supreme Court described the evidence before us, much of which supported "an even more drastic remedy," id. at 1945, i.e., a population cap lower than 137.5% design capacity. Because our Court had closely considered all the evidence, the Supreme Court affirmed our determination that 137.5% was the correct figure, stating that "[t]here are also no scientific tools available to determine the precise population reduction necessary to remedy a constitutional violation of this sort. The three-judge court made the most precise determination it could in light of the record before it." Id.
Third, the Supreme Court recognized that this Court had extensively considered the question of public safety. Id. at 1941 ("The court devoted nearly 10 days of trial to the issue of public safety, and it gave the question extensive attention in its opinion."). It expressly noted the evidence cited in our Opinion & Order that other jurisdictions had reduced prison population without adversely affecting public safety. Id. at 1942-43. It also listed the measures identified in our Opinion & Order as "various available methods of reducing overcrowding [that] would have little or no impact on public safety." Id. at 1943. Specifically, the Supreme Court stated that "[e]xpansion of good-time credits would allow the State to give early release to only those prisoners who pose the least risk of reoffending." Id. Again, the Supreme Court deferred to our Court's factual determination, especially as our finding was informed by many experts who "testified on the basis of empirical evidence and extensive experience in the field of prison administration." Id. at 1942.
Throughout its opinion, the Supreme Court expressly and repeatedly noted the flexibility of our order, which did not "limit[] the State's authority to run its prisons." Id. at 1941. By adopting a population percentage (not a strict number of prisoners to release), our order permits defendants to "choose whether to increase the prisons' capacity through construction or reduce the population." Id. at 1941; see also id. at 1937-38 (explaining that defendants can also comply through "new construction" and "out-of-state transfers"). Additionally, by identifying various measures by which defendants could reduce the prison population, our order "took account of public safety concerns by giving the State substantial flexibility to select among these and other means of reducing overcrowding." Id. at 1943. Furthermore, our order, by not selecting particular classes of prisoners to be released, "g[ave] the State substantial flexibility to determine who should be released." Id. at 1940. Finally, because our order is systemwide, "it affords the State flexibility to
Id. at 1923. In such an instance, this Court is empowered to order defendants to develop a plan for the release of prisoners who pose the lowest risk for public safety:
Id. at 1947. In short, our order — and the Supreme Court's affirmance of our order — left the question of how to comply in the discretion of defendants, but not the question of whether to comply.
In the final section of its opinion, the Supreme Court discussed the possibility of defendants seeking modification of our order. The Supreme Court was specifically addressing defendants' challenge to the portion of this Court's order requiring them to achieve a prison population of 137.5% design capacity within two years. Id. at 1945. The Supreme Court affirmed this aspect of our order principally because defendants had not requested — either at trial or on appeal — an extension of the two-year timeline. Id. at 1945 ("At trial and closing argument before the three-judge court, the State did not argue that reductions should occur over a longer period of time."); id. at 1946 ("Notably, the State has not asked this Court to extend the 2-year deadline at this time."). The Supreme Court also noted that, because our order was stayed pending appeal, defendants effectively will have had four years in which to comply. Id. at 1946 ("The 2-year deadline, however, will not begin to run until this Court issues its judgment. When that happens, the State will have already had over two years to begin complying with the order of the three-judge court."). Immediately after affirming this Court's two-year timeline, the Supreme Court discussed the possibility of modification:
Id. at 1946. If defendants believe that a change has occurred "regarding the time in which a reduction in the prison population can be achieved consistent with public safety," "[a]n extension of time may allow the State to consider changing political, economic, and other circumstances and to take advantage of opportunities for more effective remedies that arise as the Special Master, the Receiver, the prison system, and the three-judge court itself evaluate the progress being made to correct unconstitutional conditions." Id.; see also id. at 1947 ("An extension of time may provide the State a greater opportunity to refine and elaborate those [systems to select those prisoners least likely to jeopardize public safety]."). Public safety was not the only rationale mentioned by the Supreme Court as a basis for modification. The Supreme Court also stated:
Id. at 1947 (emphasis added). The Supreme Court concluded by reminding this Court that, if defendants request modification, we "should give any such requests serious consideration." Id.
Having been affirmed, our Court issued an order setting the following schedule by which defendants must reduce the prison population to 137.5% design capacity within two years:
June 30, 2011 Order Requiring Interim Reports at 1-2 (ECF No. 2374/4032). Defendants were also ordered to file detailed reports at the end of each of the six-month intervals, advising this Court whether they were able to achieve the required population reduction and, if not, why this was the case and what measures they have taken or propose to take to remedy the failure. Id. at 2. Defendants were also ordered to file monthly reports with "a discussion on whether defendants expect to meet the next six-month benchmark and, if not, what further actions are contemplated and the specific persons responsible for executing those actions." Id. at 3.
Defendants informed this Court that they would accomplish the population reduction primarily through Assembly Bill 109, often referred to as "Realignment." Defs.' Resp. to Jan. 12, 2010 Court Order (ECF No. 2365/4016).
It soon became equally apparent, however, that Realignment was not sufficient on its own to achieve the 137.5% benchmark by June 2013 or to meet the ultimate population cap at any time thereafter, in the absence of additional actions by defendants. In February 2012, plaintiffs filed a motion requesting this Court to order defendants to demonstrate how they intended to meet the 137.5% figure by June 2013. Pls.' Mot. for an Order Requiring Defs. to Demonstrate How They Will Achieve the Required Population Reduction by June 2013 (ECF No. 2420/4152). Plaintiffs argued that, based on CDCR's own population projections (as of Fall 2011), defendants would not achieve a prison population of 137.5% by June 2013. Id. at 2-3. Defendants responded that, because the Fall 2011 projections predated the implementation of Realignment, they were not reliable. Defs.' Opp'n to Pls.' Mot. for Increased Reporting in Excess of the Court's June 30, 2011 Order at 2-3 (ECF No. 2423/4162). They stated that the forthcoming Spring 2012 population projections would give a more accurate indication of whether defendants would meet the 137.5% figure by June 2013. Id. at 4. This Court accepted defendants' representations and denied plaintiffs' motion without prejudice to the filing of a new motion after CDCR published the Spring 2012 population projections. Mar. 22, 2012 Order Denying Pls.' Feb. 7, 2012 Mot. (ECF No. 2428/4169).
In May 2012, plaintiffs renewed their objection. Pls.' Renewed Mot. for an Order Requiring Defs. to Demonstrate How They Will Achieve the Required Population Reduction by June 2013 (ECF No. 2435/4180). Plaintiffs correctly observed that, despite defendants' assurances that the Fall 2011 projections were outdated and unreliable, the Spring 2012 population projections were not substantively different. Id. at 3-4.
Defendants' responsive filing confirmed their intent to seek modification of the Court's Order from 137.5% design capacity to 145% design capacity. Defs.' Opp'n to Pls.' Renewed Mot. for an Order Requiring Defs. to Demonstrate How They Will Achieve the Required Population Reduction by June 2013 at 2 (ECF No. 2442/4191). Defendants also stated that they did not believe it was appropriate for them to demonstrate how they will achieve 137.5% if they intended to seek modification of that requirement. Id. at 7-8. Defendants responded to the contempt allegation by stating that there is "no doctrine of `anticipatory contempt.'" Id. at 7 (quoting United States v. Bryan, 339 U.S. 323, 341, 70 S.Ct. 724, 94 L.Ed. 884 (1950)).
This Court ordered supplemental briefing on defendants' anticipated motion to modify. June 7, 2012 Order Requiring Further Briefing (ECF No. 2445/4193); Aug. 3, 2012 2d Order Requiring Further Briefing (ECF No. 2460/4220).
Defendants' responsive briefing identified Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b)(5) as the legal basis for their intended modification request. Defs.' Resp. to Aug. 3, 2012 2d Order Requiring Further Briefing at 1-3 (ECF No. 2463/4226). As their factual basis, defendants stated that they would seek to prove that Eighth Amendment compliance could be achieved with a prison population higher than 137.5% design capacity. Id. at 6 ("Defendants' motion will demonstrate that a population density of 145% does not prohibit Defendants from providing constitutionally adequate care."). Defendants defiantly refused to answer the final question as to when they would be able to comply with our June 30, 2011 Order,
In September 2012, this Court ruled on the pending motions. Sept. 7, 2012 Order Granting in Part & Denying in Part Pls.' May 9 and Aug. 22, 2012 Mots. (ECF No. 2473/4235), 2012 WL 3930635. We stated that the question whether Eighth Amendment compliance could be achieved with a prison population higher than 137.5% design capacity "has already been litigated and decided by this Court and affirmed by the Supreme Court, and this Court is not inclined to permit relitigation of the proper population cap at this time." Id. at 2-3. Accordingly, this Court stated that we were "not inclined to entertain a motion to modify the 137.5% population cap based on the factual circumstances identified by defendants." Id. at 2. This Court further stated that we will, "however, entertain a
Defendants filed a response in which they answered the aforementioned questions. Specifically, they stated that they would need six months to develop a program for releasing low-risk offenders. Defs.' Resp. to Sept. 7, 2012 Order at 5 (ECF No. 2479/4243). Additionally, they contended that the available options to achieve 137.5% prison population were limited, partly because they had implemented many of the methods identified in our prior opinion through Realignment
Plaintiffs filed a response in which they contended that compliance was far easier than defendants suggested. Pls.' Resp. to Defs.' Resp. to Sept. 7, 2012 Order (ECF No. 2481/4247). According to plaintiffs, it would not take six months "to identify low risk prisoners and develop a good-time credit program." Id. at 3. Plaintiffs contended that defendants already had risk instruments by which they could identify low risk prisoners for release and that implementing a good time credit program was quite straightforward. Id. Moreover, plaintiffs noted that defendants "made no effort to seek the needed legislation" on good time credits or sentencing reform. Id. at 2.
Nevertheless, it appeared, from the parties' filings, that resolution was not far off. Even defendants acknowledged that they could comply by December 2013. The parties disagreed, but perhaps not irreconcilably, over whether defendants could comply by the original date for compliance, June 2013. Accordingly, in October 2012, this Court ordered both parties to meet and confer, to develop, and to submit (preferably jointly) "plans to achieve the
In mid-November 2012, defendants advised this Court that they would miss the third benchmark, i.e., they would not achieve a prison population of 147% by December 2012. Accordingly, they sought modification of our June 30, 2011 Order by extending the 147% and the 137.5% requirement by six months each. Defs.' Nov. 2012 Status Report & Mot. to Modify June 30, 2011 Order (ECF No. 2494/4259). Plaintiffs opposed the modification, stating that "Defendants' defiant position is only the latest in a long string of filings in which they announce that they will maintain the prison population above the court-ordered cap." Pls.' Opp'n to Mot. to Modify & Order to Show Cause Re: Contempt at 1 (ECF No. 2497/4264). Plaintiffs again requested this Court to issue an order to show cause regarding contempt. Id. at 1-3.
This Court, being more interested in the January 7 filings, denied most of both parties' requests. Dec. 6, 2012 Order Denying Defs.' Mot. for Six-Month Extension & Pls.' Mot. for Order to Show Cause Re: Contempt (ECF No. 2499/4269). With regard to defendants' request for a six-month extension of the 137.5% benchmark, we denied the request as premature because the issue was to be addressed in the January 7 filings. Id. at 2. With regard to defendants' request for a six-month extension of the 147% benchmark, we granted defendants' request to be relieved of their obligation to file a report. As we stated:
Id. We then denied plaintiffs' contempt motion as premature. Id. In concluding, we stated:
Id. at 2-3.
On January 7, 2013, both parties filed plans to meet the 137.5% population cap. Defendants' plan suggested that, although compliance by June 2013 would require the outright release of thousands of prisoners, compliance by December 2013 would require virtually no release of prisoners. Defs.' Resp. to Oct. 11, 2012 Order (ECF No. 2511/4284).
This Court ordered supplemental briefing and amended our June 2011 Order. Jan. 29, 2013 Order Re: Three-Judge Mot. (ECF No. 2527/4317). Defendants were ordered to advise the Court whether they intended to file a motion to terminate in Plata. Id. at 1-2. In the meantime, this Court stayed consideration of the Three-Judge Motion. Id. at 2. Plaintiffs, who had failed to respond to the Three-Judge Motion, were ordered to file a response and provide good cause for their failure to do so by the applicable deadline. Id. Finally, defendants — who had stated in their January status report that, despite not being in compliance with this Court's order, they would take no further action to comply with it, Defs.' Jan. 2013 Status Report at 1 (ECF No. 2518/4292) ("Based on the evidence submitted in support of the State's motions, further population reductions are not needed....") — were specifically ordered once again to comply with their continuing obligation to follow this Court's Order. Jan. 29, 2013 Order at 2 (ECF No. 2527/4317) ("Neither defendants' filings of the papers filed thus far nor any motions, declarations, affidavits, or other papers filed subsequently shall serve as a justification for their failure to file and report or take any other actions required by this Court's Order."). This Court then granted defendants a six-month extension so that they could more easily comply with this Court's Order. Id. at 2-3. In both of defendants' subsequent status reports, however, they have repeated verbatim the statement from their January status report that they would not make any further attempts to comply with the Order. Defs.' Feb. 2013 Status Report at 1 (ECF No. 2538/4342) ("Based on the evidence submitted in support of the State's motions, further population reductions are not needed...."); Defs.' March 2013 Status Report at 1 (ECF No. 2569/4402) (same). Despite our specific reminders, at no point over the past several months have defendants indicated any willingness to comply, or made any attempt to comply, with the orders of this Court. In fact, they have blatantly defied them.
On February 12, 2013, plaintiffs filed a response to the Three-Judge Motion and requested additional relief, which we discuss in greater detail below. Pls.' Opp'n & Cross-Mot. (ECF No. 2528/4331). On the same day, defendants filed a response to our January 29, 2013 order, requesting this Court to lift the stay. Defs.' Resp. to Jan 29, 2013 Order (ECF No. 2529/4332) ("Defs.' Resp."). On February 14, 2013, plaintiffs filed a motion opposing defendants' request to lift the stay. Pls.' Opp'n to Defs.' Mot. to Lift Stay (ECF No. 2535/4338). On February 19, 2013, defendants filed a reply, in which they moved to strike various portions of plaintiffs' February 12, 2013 response and plaintiffs' February 14, 2013 opposition. Defs.' Reply Br. in Supp. of Three-Judge Mot. (ECF No. 2543/4345) ("Defs.' Reply"). On February 26, 2013, plaintiffs filed a reply. Pls.' Reply Br. in Supp. of Counter-Mot. (ECF No. 2551/4355).
On March 11, 2013, plaintiffs filed a request for leave to file a supplemental brief in opposition to defendants' Three-Judge Motion and in support of their
The pending matters before this Court are as follows:
We decide each of these matters in this Opinion, but withhold for now any order that may be warranted by defendants' contumacious conduct.
Defendants' Three-Judge Motion and plaintiffs' Cross-Motion are critical to the outcome of this litigation and we give special consideration to each below. Before doing so, this Court addresses the other pending matters. For the reasons discussed below, this Court first DISCHARGES the order to show cause against plaintiffs. Second, this Court GRANTS defendants' request to lift the stay on consideration of the Three-Judge Motion. Accordingly, this Court VACATES as moot defendants' motion to strike plaintiffs' opposition to defendants' request to lift the stay and DENIES both of plaintiffs' requests to supplement their opposition to defendants' Three-Judge Motion and in support of their Cross-Motion. Third, this Court DENIES defendants' motions to strike portions of Plaintiffs' Opposition.
On January 29, 2013, this Court ordered plaintiffs to show cause for their failure to file a timely reply to the Three-Judge Motion. Jan. 29, 2013 Order at 2 (ECF No. 2527/4317). Under our April 25, 2008 Order, plaintiffs were required to file a reply by January 21, 2013 but failed to do so. On February 12, 2013, plaintiffs explained their failure as follows:
Pls.' Opp'n at 27-28 (ECF No. 2528/4331). Defendants respond that this excuse is insufficient, and that we should deem the Three-Judge Motion unopposed and submitted. Defs.' Reply at 1 n. 1 (ECF No. 2543/4345).
Reviewing the matter, this Court elects not to exercise its discretion to find plaintiffs in contempt and DISCHARGES the January 29, 2013 order to show cause. Plaintiffs are reminded, however, to follow this Court's deadlines in the future.
On January 29, 2013, this Court issued an order staying consideration of the Three-Judge Motion. As we stated in that order, "one of defendants' principal contentions in the Three-Judge Motion is that there are no ongoing systemwide constitutional violations in medical and mental health care." Jan. 29, 2013 Order at 1 (ECF No. 2527/4317). Defendants made that same argument with respect to mental health care in the motion to terminate in Coleman. However, defendants had not made the same argument with respect to medical health care in Plata. As we stated in that order, "[i]t would be a waste of judicial resources for this Court to begin to determine any issue until it is made aware of defendants' filing plans regarding the constitutional question [in Plata.]" Id. at 2. This Court ordered defendants to advise us whether they intended to file a motion to terminate in Plata and, if so, when. Accordingly, we stayed our consideration of the Three-Judge Motion pending an answer as to defendants' intentions regarding the constitutional question in Plata.
On February 12, 2013, defendants requested that this Court lift the stay on the Three-Judge Motion. Defs.' Resp. at 1 (ECF No. 2529/4332). Specifically, defendants modified their Three-Judge Motion such that it is no longer based on the constitutional question but solely on the claim that "the greatly reduced prison population is [no longer] the primary barrier prohibiting the State from providing constitutionally adequate medical and mental health care." Id. at 4. Defendants also contend that they have provided sufficient evidence in the Three-Judge Motion to prevail on this claim. Id. at 1 ("It is unnecessary for the State to bring a motion to terminate Plata for this Court to decide the pending motion because more than enough evidence has already been presented."); id. at 5 ("[T]he State must show — as it has in the motion to vacate — that the greatly reduced current population levels do not prevent the State from providing constitutionally adequate medical and mental health care."); see generally Defs.' Reply at 2-10 (ECF No. 2543/4345) (contending that Defendants have "carried their burden" in the "motion to vacate and accompanying evidence"). In short, defendants assert that, regardless of the state of the health care that is currently being provided, the primary cause of any failure to provide better care is no longer overcrowding. Thus, defendants urge this Court not to delay our adjudication of the Three-Judge Motion and, on the record before us, to vacate the Population Reduction Order of June 30, 2011. Defs.' Resp. at 4, 6 (ECF No. 2529/4332); Defs.' Reply at 18-19 (ECF No. 2543/4345) (opposing plaintiffs' request for discovery as "futile" and urging this Court not to delay). Plaintiffs filed an opposition to lifting the stay on February 14, 2013, Pls.' Opp'n to Defs.' Mot. to Lift Stay (ECF No. 2535/4338), and defendants moved to strike this filing on February 19, 2013. Defs.' Reply at 18-19 (ECF No. 2543/4345). Additionally, defendants have opposed both attempts by plaintiffs to supplement their briefing. Pls.' Supp. Br. Re:
This Court agrees with defendants with regard to the procedural status of these matters. Defendants have modified the Three-Judge Motion such that it is based not on the constitutional question but solely on the crowding question. The substantive effect of this modification is discussed infra. The procedural effect is to provide a sufficient basis for lifting the stay of the Three-Judge Motion. This Court therefore GRANTS defendants' request to lift this Court's stay of our consideration of the Three-Judge Motion. Accordingly, this Court VACATES as moot defendants' motion to strike plaintiffs' opposition to lifting the stay. Additionally, because the burden of proof in justifying vacatur lies with defendants and because defendants have repeatedly contended that they have met that burden based on the evidence filed in conjunction with the Three-Judge Motion, this Court finds that there is no need for discovery. Any pending discovery requests are therefore dismissed, and this Court DENIES both of plaintiffs' requests to supplement their briefing.
Defendants also move to strike two portions of Plaintiffs' Opposition to the Three-Judge Motion. The first is the section of Plaintiffs' Opposition relying on the declaration by Steven Fama, who describes recent reports that defendants had filed with the Receiver in which defendants explain the need for further improvements to treatment space in the California prison system. Pls.' Opp'n at 12-14 (ECF No. 2528/4331); Exs. B to I to Fama Decl. in Supp. of Pls.' Opp'n (ECF No. 2528-2/4331-2). Defendants move to strike this evidence as "inadmissible hearsay and irrelevant." Defs.' Reply at 2, 5 n. 2 (ECF No. 2543/4345). The second is the section of Plaintiffs' Opposition in which plaintiffs argue that the declarations of Robert Barton and Jeffrey Beard are entitled to little weight. Pls.' Opp'n at 17-18 (ECF No. 2528/4331). Defendants moved to strike these arguments as "scurrilous attacks ... which are unsupported by any evidence." Defs.' Reply at 2, 6-7 (ECF No. 2543/4345).
Defendants' motions border on the frivolous. With regard to evidence in the Fama declaration, these reports consist of defendants' requests for additional funding to increase healthcare infrastructure. Any suggestion that these reports — which demonstrate that defendants themselves represented to other agencies that there is insufficient treatment space in the California prison system — are "irrelevant" to assessing the Three-Judge Motion is clearly meritless.
Nor is their admissibility controversial. To begin, defendants relegated this argument to a mere footnote and failed to provide any legal analysis in support of their contention regarding hearsay. It is thereby waived. See Hilao v. Estate of Marcos, 103 F.3d 767, 778 n. 4 (9th Cir. 1996) ("The summary mention of an issue in a footnote, without reasoning in support
With regard to the Barton and Beard declarations, plaintiffs have presented reasoned arguments why some of the statements in these declarations go beyond the expertise and the information available to Barton and Beard — and therefore why this Court should give little weight to those statements. These arguments require no evidence, just logic. We thus find unpersuasive defendants' contention that these arguments must be struck because they "present no competent evidence to rebut the factual statements in those declarations." Defs.' Reply at 7 (ECF No. 2543/4345).
Plaintiffs make arguments with which defendants may disagree, but there is simply no legal basis for striking any portion of Plaintiffs' Opposition. This Court therefore DENIES defendants' motions to strike, and defendants are advised not to again unnecessarily complicate an already complex case of the utmost public interest with arguments that are patently of little merit. Such arguments serve no purpose other than to consume the Court's time and further delay the ultimate resolution of the legitimate issues raised by the parties.
This Court now turns to defendants' Three-Judge Motion. In that motion, defendants move, under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b)(5), for vacatur of our Order. They contend that, due to "the greatly reduced prison population," overcrowding is no longer "the primary barrier prohibiting the State from providing constitutionally adequate medical and mental health care." Defs.' Resp. at 4 (ECF No. 2529/4332); see also Defs.' Reply at 11 (ECF No. 2543/4345). Moreover, Defendants contend that this Court can rely solely on the evidence filed in conjunction with the Three-Judge Motion. Defs.' Resp. at 1, 5 (ECF No. 2529/4332); see generally Defs.' Reply (ECF No. 2543/4345). Having reviewed the relevant evidence in support of the Three-Judge Motion, this Court DENIES that motion for the reasons discussed below.
The legal basis that defendants rely on for their Three-Judge Motion is Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b)(5).
In meeting the threshold inquiry, the moving party "may not ... challenge the legal conclusions on which a prior judgment or order rests." Id. Rather, it must point to "a significant change either in factual conditions or in law" that renders continued enforcement of a final judgment inequitable. Id. (quoting Rufo, 502 U.S. at 384, 112 S.Ct. 748). For a change in law, the moving party must generally demonstrate that "the statutory or decisional law has changed to make legal what the decree was designed to prevent." Rufo, 502 U.S. at 388, 112 S.Ct. 748.
A moving party alleging a "significant change in facts" faces an additional burden. Ordinarily, the party may not rely on "events that actually were anticipated at the time it entered into a decree." Id. at 385, 112 S.Ct. 748. Indeed, in Rufo, the Supreme Court remanded for the district court to "consider whether the [changed circumstance] was foreseen by petitioners." Id.; see also id. at 385-87, 112 S.Ct. 748 (explaining why, under the facts of the case, it was unlikely that petitioners anticipated the changed circumstances). Similarly, in Agostini v. Felton, the Supreme Court rejected a claim of changed factual circumstances based on the "exorbitant costs of complying," because both parties were "aware that additional costs would be incurred" due to the court's judgment. 521 U.S. at 215-16, 117 S.Ct. 1997. "That these predictions of additional costs turned out to be accurate does not constitute a change in factual conditions warranting relief under Rule 60(b)(5)." Id. at 216, 117 S.Ct. 1997. In short, the moving party must demonstrate a significant and unanticipated change in facts.
The touchstone of Rule 60(b)(5) analysis is that "a district court should exercise flexibility in considering requests for modification of an institutional reform consent decree." Rufo, 502 U.S. at 383, 112 S.Ct. 748. "A flexible approach allows courts to ensure that `responsibility for discharging the State's obligations is returned promptly to the State and its officials' when the circumstances warrant." Horne, 557 U.S. at 450, 129 S.Ct. 2579 (quoting Frew v. Hawkins, 540 U.S. 431, 442, 124 S.Ct. 899, 157 L.Ed.2d 855 (2004)). However, "it does not follow that a modification will be warranted in all circumstances. Rule 60(b)(5) provides that a party may obtain relief from a court order when `it is no longer equitable that the judgment should have prospective application,' not when it is no longer convenient to live with the terms of a consent decree." Rufo, 502 U.S. at 383, 112 S.Ct. 748.
Since the filing of the Three-Judge Motion, defendants have modified their argument. As explained above, one of defendants' principal contentions in the Three-Judge Motion as filed was the lack of ongoing constitutional violations. Jan. 29, 2013 Order at 1 (ECF No. 2527/4317) ("One of defendants' principal contentions in the Three-Judge Motion is that there are no ongoing systemwide constitutional violations in medical and mental health care."). Defendants have now represented
This modification is significant, in that defendants have effectively abandoned (at least for purposes of this proceeding) a significant portion of their Three-Judge Motion. For example, Part III of defendants' Three-Judge Motion was devoted to presenting evidence that "California's Prison Health Care System Exceeds the Level of Care Required By the Constitution." Three-Judge Mot. at 15-19 (ECF No. 2506/4280). As would be expected, the argument presented in Part III was that defendants have achieved constitutional compliance. Id. at 16 (contending that "the State is already providing" "effective mental health care"); id. at 17 (arguing that "the State provides quality prison medical care that `far exceeds' constitutional minima"); id. at 18 (citing the most recent statistics on "likely preventable deaths"); id. (citing a statement by Dr. Steven Tharratt as "[f]urther evidence of constitutionality"). Nor was this focus on constitutional compliance limited to Part III. In the introductory section, defendants authoritatively stated that California prisons have achieved constitutional compliance. E.g., id. at 1 ("California's vastly improved prison health care system now provides inmates with superior care that far exceeds the minimum requirements of the Constitution."). In Part IV, defendants contended that, because "adequate medical and mental health care is being provided to California's inmates," they have achieved a durable remedy with respect to the provision of care that complies with the Eighth Amendment. Id. at 19. Defendants concluded by stating:
Id. at 21. Defendants have abandoned these arguments before this Court, and this Court is not required to consider any evidence related solely to the constitutional question, i.e., whether prison conditions continue to remain unconstitutional.
The modification also renders inapplicable case law on which defendants relied in the Three-Judge Motion. Specifically, defendants repeatedly cited Horne v. Flores,
Additionally, in the Three-Judge Motion, defendants relied on a particular passage from the Supreme Court opinion in this case:
Plata, 131 S.Ct. at 1947 (emphasis added); Three-Judge Mot. at 3 (ECF No. 2506/4280); see also Defs.' Reply at 3 (ECF No. 2543/4345). In this passage, the Supreme Court suggested that defendants could seek modification if they had "remed[ied] the underlying constitutional violations." That contention, however, is no longer the basis for defendants' Three-Judge Motion, as per their own modification.
Plaintiffs object to defendants' modification of their motion. Plaintiffs devoted a substantial portion of their February 12, 2013 response to the question of constitutional compliance. Pls.' Opp'n at 1-2, 4-8, 15-17, 20-21 (ECF No. 2528/4331). After defendants modified their argument and disavowed any reliance on constitutional compliance in their February 12, 2013 filing, plaintiffs filed papers objecting to defendants' revised position. Pls.' Opp'n to Defs.' Mot. to Lift Stay (ECF No. 2535/4338). Specifically, plaintiffs assert that defendants are "attempt[ing] to shift the basis for their motion to vacate the Population Reduction Order." Id. at 2. They state that defendants' contention — that crowding is no longer the primary cause of any ongoing violations — "was not raised in the motion, nor did Defendants submit evidence to support it." Id. Accordingly, plaintiffs ask this Court to deny the Three-Judge Motion.
Although this Court is sympathetic to plaintiffs' objection, it does not establish a sufficient basis for denying the Three-Judge Motion for two reasons. First, defendants'
Before considering defendants' Three-Judge Motion, as modified, we make clear that we do not decide here whether the question of the continuing unconstitutionality of prison conditions should be presented to this Three-Judge Court, or to the underlying one-judge courts — in this case, the Plata and Coleman courts respectively — or whether it may be presented to either. Nor do we determine whether the Three-Judge Court may decide, within its discretion, on the basis of the particular circumstances of the litigation involved, which forum or fora are appropriate for making the determination of such claim or claims. Here, after vacillating between this Three-Judge Court and the respective Plata and Coleman one-judge courts, defendants decided to withdraw the question from this Three-Judge Court and have presented it thus far only to the Coleman court, which held on the merits that "ongoing constitutional violations remain" "in the delivery of adequate mental health care." Apr. 5, 2013 Order, ___ F.Supp.2d ___, ___, at 67, 2013 WL 1397335 (ECF No. 4539 Coleman). Plaintiffs protested the withdrawal of the question from the Three-Judge Court only on the ground that defendants were changing the basis of their motion, an argument that we reject supra. In this case, under all of the circumstances, this Court offers no objection to the withdrawal of the question whether medical and mental health care services are still provided at an unconstitutional level or the timely presentation of that question to the Coleman court.
In light of defendants' modification, this Court now turns to the only relevant portion of the Three-Judge Motion: Part II, in which defendants contend that "the Prison Population Does Not Prevent the State From Providing Constitutionally Adequate Care." Three-Judge Mot. at 7-15 (ECF No. 2506/4280). Having closely reviewed the arguments and evidence contained therein, this Court DENIES the Three-Judge Motion for three reasons. First, defendants have not identified a proper basis for modification or vacatur under Rule 60(b)(5) and are instead seeking to relitigate the 137.5% population cap. Second, defendants' evidence in support of their request for modification or vacatur fails to demonstrate a significant and unanticipated change in circumstances, as required under Rule 60(b)(5). Third, even if defendants had demonstrated that current conditions warranted modification, they
Defendants' characterization of their argument as relating to "primary cause" obscures their true basis for seeking modification or vacatur of this Court's order. Defendants state that they seek vacatur because "the greatly reduced prison population is [no longer] the primary barrier prohibiting the State from providing constitutionally adequate medical and mental health care." Defs.' Resp. at 4 (ECF No. 2529/4332); see also Defs.' Reply at 11 (ECF No. 2543/4345). In fact, however, defendants' challenge is to the 137.5% population cap. See, e.g., Three-Judge Mot. at 7 (ECF No. 2506/4280) (stating that the "evidence relied upon by this Court in reaching its 137.5% finding was presented at a trial that began over four years ago").
Defendants cannot seek modification or vacatur on this basis. In 2009, when the population level in California prisons was at 190% design capacity, this Court made a predictive judgment based on the overwhelming weight of expert testimony that Eighth Amendment compliance could not be achieved with a prison population above 137.5% design capacity. This was not a factual assessment based on current circumstances. Rather, it was a determination of what population level would be required in the future to allow defendants to be able to provide constitutional care. As the Supreme Court recognized, there are "no scientific tools available to determine the precise population reduction necessary to remedy a constitutional violation of this sort." Plata, 131 S.Ct. at 1944.
If defendants could challenge this Court's predictive judgment on the basis they have identified here, it would undo fundamental principles of res judicata. A losing party who disagrees with a predictive judgment need only allow some time to pass — thus constituting a "changed circumstance" — and then file a motion alleging that the court's judgment was proven to be wrong. In short, nothing would prevent continual relitigation of a court's predictive judgments. For example, although defendants filed this motion after the prison population reached 150% design capacity, nothing in their argument would have prevented them from filing a motion at 160% or 165%. Indeed, defendants could have immediately requested vacatur a mere month after this Court's Order became effective in June 2011. They could have argued then that "the evidence ... was presented at a trial that began over" two years ago. Cf. Three-Judge Mot. at 7 (ECF No. 2506/4280). We would, of course, have rejected any such requests on the merits. That point notwithstanding, permitting unbounded relitigation, based solely on a contention that some time has
This is not to say that parties may never seek modification of a court's predictive judgments. They certainly may do so; they must, however, identify a "changed circumstance" that is more than the mere passage of time and must point to evidence that actually supports invoking this Court's equitable power to modify final judgments. This would ordinarily involve defendants pointing to a change in background assumptions on which this Court relied in making its 137.5% determination. For example, if a new Supreme Court decision regarding the Eighth Amendment significantly changed the feasibility and implementation, or even the timeline, of Defendants' intended measures to achieve the 137.5% figure, a party could certainly seek modification on this basis. See Rufo, 502 U.S. at 386-87, 112 S.Ct. 748 (holding that defendants had identified a legitimate basis for modification in pointing to an acceleration in the incarceration rate, which may not have been anticipated by the district court at the time of the consent decree). Alternatively, if defendants found new remedies to the overcrowding problem that would permit resolution of the constitutional violations without reducing the prison population, that would justify modification as well. As the Supreme Court stated:
Plata, 131 S.Ct. at 1941. Here, however, defendants point to no new remedies. Nor do they identify any change in background assumptions on which this Court relied. Rather, all they point to — as is explained in detail infra — is that prison crowding has been reduced. This, however, was the intended effect of our Order, which required defendants to reduce the prison population over a period of time. Nothing could be more "anticipated" than the consequent decline in crowding to which defendants point. In short, defendants have failed to cite any "changed circumstance," as that term was intended to be understood in Rufo or, indeed, as it would be construed under any reasonable interpretation of the term.
Defendants are simply seeking to relitigate the 137.5% question. Defendants characterize their claim as one of "error," but they merely disagree with this Court's conclusion on a question that inherently involved uncertainty. Plata, 131 S.Ct. at
This Court's conclusion should come as no surprise to defendants. When defendants first advised this Court that they intended to file a motion to modify, this Court sought extensive briefing on the legal and factual basis for defendants' anticipated modification request. June 7, 2012 Order Requiring Further Briefing (ECF No. 2445/4193); Aug. 3, 2012 2d Order Requiring Further Briefing (ECF No. 2460/4220). This Court advised defendants that, "based on the factual circumstances identified" by defendants, the Court was "not inclined to entertain a motion to modify the 137.5% population cap." Sept. 7, 2012 Order at 2 (ECF No. 2473/4235). We explained:
Id. at 2-3. The Three-Judge Motion is, in all relevant ways, identical to what this Court has previously stated is not a proper basis for modification. If anything, defendants seek greater relief today, in that they seek complete vacatur of this Court's population reduction order, not a modification of the cap to 145%. Yet defendants have made no argument in their Three-Judge Motion to the effect that this Court erred in holding that defendants had failed to identify a proper basis for modification. This Court therefore finds that defendants are not permitted to seek modification or vacatur on the basis that they have identified in the Three-Judge Motion now before us.
Even if defendants were not seeking to relitigate the 137.5% figure or even if such a challenge would be permitted, this Court would nevertheless deny the Three-Judge Motion, as modified, because defendants have failed to meet their evidentiary burden in demonstrating that overcrowding is no longer the primary cause of ongoing constitutional violations in the provision of constitutionally adequate medical and mental health care.
In the Three-Judge Motion, defendants offer the following six items of evidence in support of their contention that overcrowding is no longer the primary cause of ongoing constitutional violations: (1) that Realignment has reduced the prison population by approximately 24,000 inmates; (2) that California has increased capacity in the prison system through new construction; (3) that California no longer uses gymnasiums and dayrooms to house
The burden falls on defendants to demonstrate a "significant and unanticipated change in factual conditions warranting modification." United States v. Asarco Inc., 430 F.3d 972, 979 (9th Cir.2005) (summarizing Rufo, 502 U.S. at 384-86, 112 S.Ct. 748). This standard imposes a high, but not impossible, bar for defendants to meet. Defendants must present persuasive evidence that the very aspects of overcrowding that this Court found pernicious in the past — the severe staff shortages, the complete lack of treatment space, etc. — have been remedied through measures that were not envisioned at the time of our Court's order. Additionally, defendants could — as they have in one instance — supplement this evidence with testimony from the numerous experts in the initial case who, having reviewed the prison system, have concluded that overcrowding is no longer a barrier. Were such credible evidence presented to this Court, we would, of course, consider modifying the Order.
Defendants, however, have fallen far short of this requirement. In the Three-Judge Motion, they have presented very little evidence. Most of this evidence is irrelevant, as it points to partial compliance with this Court's Order and not to a resolution of the problems of overcrowding. The remaining, relevant evidence is far too minimal to persuade this Court that overcrowding is no longer the primary cause of ongoing constitutional violations.
Defendants' first, second, and third items of evidence all suffer from the same fatal flaw: Defendants cannot simply point to a reduction in crowding that was contemplated to occur at the time it did and assert that this provides a sufficient basis for modification. Reduced crowding, after all, was the intended effect of our Order. The Supreme Court expressly stated that defendants "may choose whether to increase the prisons' capacity through construction or reduce the population." Plata, 131 S.Ct. at 1941. The evidence that defendants point to — the reduction in the prison population, the elimination of the use of gymnasiums and dayrooms as housing, and new prison construction — demonstrates that defendants have done both in their partial compliance thus far with our Order. Oddly, defendants appear to read the results of their partial compliance with the Order in a rather unusual manner. They argue that, because the Order thus far has been effective in making progress toward its ultimate objective, we should terminate it, call off the rest of the plan, and declare victory before defendants can meet the Order's most important objective — to reduce the population to 137.5% design capacity and eliminate overcrowding as the primary cause of unconstitutional medical and mental health conditions. That is not the way the judicial system, or any other national system, functions. Indeed, the effectiveness of the Order thus far is not an argument for vacating it, but rather an argument for keeping it in effect and continuing to make progress toward reaching its ultimate goal.
Of course, if defendants had demonstrated that the overcrowding problem has been solved, then vacatur might be appropriate. However, defendants' evidence merely demonstrates that defendants have eliminated, as one of the declarants represented,
Rather, in order to properly persuade this Court of a "change in circumstances," defendants would have to present compelling evidence that there has been a significant change in the barriers that prison crowding raised and that prevented the provision of constitutionally adequate medical and mental health care. As stated above, in our prior Opinion & Order, we focused on two particular barriers: inadequate treatment space and severe staff shortages. See also Plata, 131 S.Ct. at 1933-34 (focusing on staff and space). Here, we look to evidence of a change in circumstances, and we find none.
With regard to space, the record supports the conclusion that it continues to be a significant problem. For mentally ill patients, defendants lack sufficient bed space. See Apr. 5, 2013 Order, 922 F.Supp.2d at 918-19, (Coleman ECF No. 4539); see also Special Master's 25th Report at 38-44 (Coleman ECF No. 4298). Much of this can be explained by the fact that, although the prison population has declined overall, the mentally ill population is largely unchanged. Id. Defendants have not, however, made sufficient investments to provide more beds for these mentally ill individuals. As a result, the conditions described in our prior Opinion & Order continue to persist. Mentally ill individuals face extended delays in receiving treatment. In some cases, they are left in containment cells for extended periods of time. Id.; see also Apr. 5, 2013 Order (Coleman ECF No. 4539).
Defendants respond that "the State has invested in substantial construction and renovation projects to more than adequately meet both the present and future health care needs of the State's inmate-patients." Three-Judge Mot. at 8 (ECF No. 2506/4280); see id. at 8-10 (listing individual construction projects). It is true that there is more treatment space today than in 2008. Defendants, however, fail to demonstrate that there is enough treatment space today. Indeed, this was the "fatal flaw" in defendants' argument at trial. In our prior Opinion & Order, this Court rejected defendants' preferred percentage — 145% design capacity — because the underlying analysis had a "potentially fatal flaw." Aug. 4, 2009 Op. & Order, 922 F.Supp.2d at 968 (ECF No. 2197/3641). Based on the reports and testimony of at least three of plaintiffs' experts, this Court concluded:
Id. at 968. Defendants now point to renovation and upgrades, but offer no expert testimony that the renovations have overcome the previously identified "fatal flaw" or offer any conclusion as to the maximum population consistent with the provision of constitutional medical and mental health care. In the absence of such testimony, this Court will not simply credit defendants' assertion that there is adequate treatment space today.
Moreover, defendants' own reports contradict any conclusion that there is adequate treatment space today. In the Blueprint, defendants state that the prison infrastructure is "aging" and there is "inadequate treatment space" that "hinder[s] the department's ability to deliver care." CDCR Blueprint at 35. Moreover, the reports submitted by defendants, included in Steven Fama's declaration, provide direct evidence that defendants have represented to other agencies that there is inadequate treatment space in the California prison system today:
Ex. I to Fama Decl. at 3 (ECF No. 2528-2/4331-2). The evidence in these reports overwhelmingly supports the conclusion that defendants themselves recognize the current inadequacy of treatment space in California's prisons. See Exs. B to I to Fama Decl. (ECF No. 2528-2/4331-2).
Additionally, defendants' plan to construct the necessary treatment space — the Healthcare Facility Improvement Program ("HCFIP") — is in its early stages and thus continues to be at risk of non-completion. According to the Receiver, HCFIP "upgrade projects at several locations have now received initial approval from the Public Works Board (PWB)." Receiver's 22nd Report at 23 (Plata ECF No. 2525) (emphasis added). "The remaining HCFIP projects are being sequenced by CDCR for submittal to the PWB upon completion and review of site-specific plans." Id. Defendants state that the process for construction is streamlined, Three-Judge Mot. at 8 (ECF No. 2506/4280), but — even with such streamlining — the earliest and most optimistic estimate for completing HCFIP is 2017.
Receiver's 22nd Report at 23 (Plata ECF No. 2525). As the Receiver correctly
Finally, even if defendants could demonstrate with surety that their long-term plans will come to fruition, it would still not support vacatur of the population reduction order. As plaintiffs correctly note, this evidence would at best tend only to support a conclusion that our Order should be modified to a higher design capacity. Pls.' Opp'n at 19 (ECF No. 2528/4331). Defendants, however, no longer seek such a modification. They seek vacatur of the Order in its entirety, a conclusion that is not supported by the new construction and an action that would serve only to permit defendants to avoid any further obligation to complete the scheduled construction.
The burden falls on defendants to meet the threshold condition for modification or vacatur. The partial reduction in crowding and various renovations are, without a doubt, important. This Court will not, however, modify our Order in the absence of compelling evidence of a resolution to the barriers that overcrowding causes. Because defendants fail to present evidence on this critical issue, they have not presented evidence of a "significant change in circumstances." Rufo, 502 U.S. at 383, 112 S.Ct. 748 (emphasis added).
Turning to the fourth item of evidence, defendants state that, "according to Robert Barton, the Inspector General, population is no longer a factor affecting the State's ability to provide constitutionally adequate medical or mental health care in prison." Three-Judge Mot. at 13 (ECF No. 2506/4280). Barton explains that the Office of Inspector General ("OIG") has instituted a scoring system, by which it evaluates the provision of medical health care in California prisons. In his concluding paragraph, he states that "some high scoring prisons also have high population densities." He concludes that "[o]vercrowding is no longer a factor affecting CDCR's ability to provide effective medical care in its prisons." Barton Decl. in Supp. of Three-Judge Mot. ¶ 15 (ECF No. 2507/4282).
There are many problems with this conclusion. First, Barton's analysis relies exclusively on the OIG scores, which provide no statistical basis to draw inferences regarding constitutionally adequate care. In the Receiver's most recent report, he explains that
Receiver's 22nd Report at 30 (Plata ECF No. 2525). The Receiver's concerns with the OIG scores may well prove prescient. The Plata court has begun conducting a rigorous review of all prisons with high OIG scores.
Id. at 6. Thus, not only is the OIG scoring system unreliable as a general matter, it may be especially unreliable when the prison suffers from overcrowding. It is perforce not a reliable basis for drawing any conclusions regarding the relationship
Second, even if the OIG scoring system were reliable, Barton's inference would not be. Barton's claim is that the lack of a perfect correlation between prison crowding and OIG scores — because some prisons with high density have high scores — proves that overcrowding is no longer a factor in the provision of constitutional care. This conclusion in no way follows from the evidence. Were it so — i.e., were the lack of perfect correlation a barrier to drawing statistical inferences — all social science would be discredited. Moreover, the Receiver has explained why there will never be a perfect correlation:
Receiver's 22nd Report at 29 (Plata ECF No. 2525). For example, Avenal State Prison can achieve a high OIG score, despite a 184% population density, because:
Id. The Receiver concludes, "our experience at that type of prison does not mean that a constitutional level of care can be delivered system-wide at a higher system-wide population density given the differences among the prisons." Id. In short, the lack of a perfect correlation proves nothing. In light of the Receiver's most recent report, this Court finds defendants' fourth item of evidence to be unpersuasive.
Turning to the fifth item of evidence, defendants rely on Jeffrey Beard, the newly appointed Secretary of CDCR. Beard now testifies via declaration that, having visited a majority of California's 33 prisons, "prison population density is no longer a factor inhibiting California's ability to provide constitutionally adequate medical or mental health care in its prisons." Beard Decl. in Supp. of Three-Judge Mot. ¶¶ 9-10 (ECF No. 2508/4281).
Beard was one of seven experts for plaintiffs who testified that overcrowding was the primary cause of ongoing violations. Suffice it to say that Beard's position at the time of the trial was as an independent expert (who was uncompensated). Today, he is a party to the proceedings, and accordingly, his testimony must be regarded in that light. See United States v. Abel, 469 U.S. 45, 52, 105 S.Ct. 465, 83 L.Ed.2d 450 (1984) (stating that a "witness' self interest" "might lead the witness to slant, unconsciously or otherwise, his testimony in favor of or against a party").
Additionally, the substance of Secretary Beard's declaration is not persuasive in light of the record before this Court. Much of Beard's declaration repeats the points discussed above; he points to the numerical decline in prison population and the new construction. Beard Decl. ¶¶ 10-12. He makes no mention whatsoever of staff or treatment space, which — as explained above — are the two most important
Finally, Beard's testimony is not the only expert testimony available to this Court. The Receiver stated, in his most recent report, that:
Receiver's 22nd Report at 30 (Plata ECF No. 2525) (emphasis added). Reviewing the evidence presented by defendants in the Three-Judge Motion, he concludes:
Id. at 30-31. Moreover, in the Coleman termination proceedings, plaintiffs submitted declarations by Four experts, all of whom contend that overcrowding continues to be a serious problem.
Haney Decl. ¶ 35 (Coleman ECF No. 4378). Dr. Edward Kaufman found severe staffing shortages, insufficient treatment space, and a lack of beds. Kaufman Decl. ¶¶ 22-23 (Coleman ECF No. 4379). Dr. Pablo Stewart, describes these very problems as "endemic in overcrowded prison systems." Stewart Decl. ¶ 44 (Coleman ECF No. 4381). Stewart also explained why California's high rate of suicides (discussed in the recent Coleman order, see Apr. 5, 2013 Order, ___ F.Supp.2d at ___ - ___, at 32-43 (Coleman ECF No. 4539)) is related to current overcrowding.
Turning to the sixth item of evidence, Defendants state that "[t]he Plata receiver and Coleman special master no longer cite crowding as a factor inhibiting the State's ability to provide adequate medical and mental health care." Three-Judge Mot. at 14 (ECF No. 2506/4280). Defendants' suggestion is that these court-appointed representatives, by failing to discuss crowding, must believe that crowding is no longer a barrier to the provision of care. In the words of the Receiver, this claim "distorts the content of our reports and misrepresents the Receiver's position." Receiver's 22nd Report at 29 (Plata ECF No. 2525). In his most recent report, filed on January 25, 2013, the Receiver states:
Id. The Special Master's January 2013 report supports the same conclusion. Special Master's 25th Report at 38-44 (Coleman ECF No. 4298). Thus, there is no merit to defendants' sixth item of evidence.
Finally, although not explicitly listed as an item of evidence in their Three-Judge Motion, defendants repeatedly state that complying with the Order would harm public safety. Three-Judge Mot. at 2, 20 (ECF No. 2506/4280); Defs.' Resp. at 6 (ECF No. 2529/4332); Defs.' Reply at 20-22 (ECF No. 2543/4345). Modification, however, is not appropriate "where a party relies upon events that actually were anticipated at the time it entered into a decree." Rufo, 502 U.S. at 385, 112 S.Ct. 748. This Court anticipated the issue of public safety in our original Opinion & Order and, after considering extensive evidence, concluded that releasing comparatively low-risk inmates somewhat earlier than they would otherwise have been released has no adverse effects on public safety. Aug. 4, 2009 Op. & Order, 922 F.Supp.2d at 970-1002 (ECF No. 2197/3641). The Supreme Court affirmed that determination and stated the following:
Finally, even if defendants had demonstrated that overcrowding was not currently the primary cause of ongoing constitutional violations, their intention to eliminate the out-of-state prisoner program — and thus increase prison crowding by 9,500 prisoners or approximately 12% design capacity — demonstrates that this resolution would very quickly become outdated. In constitutionally relevant terms, it demonstrates that defendants have not achieved a "durable remedy" to the problem of overcrowding.
The responsibility to modify is one of equity. When a party has achieved a "durable remedy" and seeks modification on that basis, equity supports granting relief from a final judgment. Horne, 557 U.S. at 447, 129 S.Ct. 2579.
In sum, defendants' contention that the continued enforcement of the population reduction order would be inequitable fails on numerous levels. First, defendants' true claim — that the mere passage of time demonstrates the error in this Court's choice of a 137.5% figure for the population cap — does not provide a valid basis for modification or vacatur of a predictive judgment. The changes that have occurred thus far represent the intended effect of our Order, as contemplated by this Court and as affirmed by the Supreme Court. The success of our Order thus far therefore provides no basis whatsoever for its vacatur but rather constitutes a reason for its continuance until its goal is met.
Second, and more important, defendants have failed entirely to meet their evidentiary burden. There has, without a doubt, been no significant and unanticipated change in circumstances that warrants vacatur of our Order. Defendants have represented that we may rely solely on their written submissions to demonstrate that there has been a change in circumstances and that the overcrowding that constituted the primary cause of the unconstitutional medical and mental health care conditions no longer is responsible for those conditions. Having carefully reviewed the evidence contained in those submissions individually and collectively, this Court finds that defendants failed completely to support their contentions. Defendants point to some changes they have made (e.g., upgrades), but no credible evidence supports a conclusion that these changes have removed the principal barriers that prison crowding has raised and that have prevented the provision of constitutionally adequate medical and mental health care: inadequate treatment space and severe staff shortages. The burden falls on defendants to demonstrate the inequity of our Order, and they have failed to meet that burden here.
There are various interlocking relationships, including the elements of proof, between the issue whether crowding is still the primary cause of the constitutional violations in medical and mental health care and whether there are still constitutional violations regarding the failure to provide the requisite level of care. We have thus far bifurcated the Three-Judge Motion, pursuant to defendants' request, and have attempted to resolve only the former question — i.e., whether, regardless of the existence or non-existence of ongoing constitutional violations, defendants have met their burden of proving that prison crowding is no longer the primary cause.
To some extent, however, these questions are inseparable. For example, crowding could not be the primary cause of continuing constitutional violations if there were no longer such violations, and much of the evidence and argument advanced by defendants in the Three-Judge Motion necessarily addresses the latter question, as well as the former. See, e.g., Three-Judge Mot. at 21 (ECF No. 2506/4280) ("The evidence proves that there are no systemic, current, and ongoing federal law violations. All evidence indicates that at the current population density, inmates are receiving health care that exceeds constitutional standards."). Had defendants presented the contention of constitutional compliance to this Court (or rather, had they not abandoned that contention), we would, of course, be required to consider whether they had demonstrated that there was no longer a constitutional violation that warranted the continued imposition of a remedy, i.e., the reduction in the size of the California prison population to 137.5% design capacity. Horne, 557 U.S. at 447, 129 S.Ct. 2579.
It is necessary to first provide some context to this Court's population reduction order. The existence of an ongoing constitutional violation is required for a prisoner release order. Plata, 131 S.Ct. at 1929 ("Before a three-judge court may be convened, a district court first must have entered an order for less intrusive relief that failed to remedy the constitutional violation and must have given the defendant a reasonable time to comply with its prior orders."). Here, there had been numerous orders in both Plata and Coleman for less intrusive relief over a period of many years prior to the convening of the three-judge court, and those orders had failed to remedy the constitutional violations with respect to medical and mental health care. Aug. 4, 2009 Op. & Order, 922 F.Supp.2d at 919, (ECF No. 2197/3641) ("The Plata and Coleman courts years ago identified the constitutional deficiencies underlying this proceeding."). The three-judge court was thus convened to provide remedial relief for two distinct, separate, and independent constitutional violations in failing to provide essential care in the California prison system. Following fourteen days of hearings, this Court found that overcrowding was the primary cause of the ongoing constitutional violations with respect to both medical and mental health care. Most important, there was sufficient evidence in each case to support a population reduction order.
It has recently been determined that there are still ongoing constitutional violations with respect to the provision of mental health care in the California prison system. On April 5, 2013, the Coleman court found that "ongoing constitutional violations remain" "in the delivery of adequate mental health care." Apr. 5, 2013 Order, ___ F.Supp.2d at ___, at 67 (Coleman ECF No. 4539). We accept that holding. Additionally, nothing presented by defendants here would cause us to question the result found by the Coleman court. The Coleman court holding alone is sufficient for this Court to find a continuing constitutional violation, and that holding — together with our holding regarding crowding — requires us to conclude that the primary cause of the continuing constitutional violations in Coleman continues to be overcrowding.
The constitutional question is also resolved, at least for the purposes of this proceeding, with respect to the provision of medical health care in the California prison system. Defendants initially presented this Court with the contention that they have achieved Eighth Amendment compliance with respect to medical health care, Three-Judge Mot. at 16-17 (ECF No. 2506/4280), but later withdrew that contention from this Court's consideration. Defs.' Resp. at 1 (ECF No. 2529/4332). Unlike in Coleman, however, they have not filed a motion in Plata to terminate on the ground that there are no longer continuing constitutional violations with respect to medical health care.
On the basis of the above, we hold that not only must the Three-Judge Motion be dismissed because defendants have failed
On February 12, 2013, plaintiffs filed a cross-motion for additional relief. Plaintiffs contend that, even while overcrowding in the California prison system overall has lessened, overcrowding in certain California prisons has persisted or increased. Because the severe overcrowding at these prisons prevents compliance with the Eighth Amendment, plaintiffs request that this Court supplement the systemwide population cap and "order defendants to propose a plan for institution-specific population caps, based on the ability of each institution to provide constitutionally adequate care." Cross-Mot. at 23 (ECF No. 2528/4331).
There is some merit to plaintiffs' argument. As a preliminary matter, this Court observes that plaintiffs are not seeking a 137.5% population cap for each prison. Plaintiffs' requested order would require defendants to "develop a plan for prison-specific caps ... that includes a discussion of each prison's clinical and custody staffing levels, staffing vacancies, physical plant limitations, prisoner custody level and available programs." Cross-Mot. at 24 (ECF No. 2528/4331). This request finds some support in the Receiver's most recent report. He describes the differences among various prison institutions and writes that "care at some institutions may require a lower population density while care at other institutions may be constitutional even at higher population densities." Receiver's 22nd Report at 29 (Plata ECF No. 2525).
This Court, however, rejects plaintiffs' Cross-Motion for two reasons. First, plaintiffs' request is premature. This Court has previously stated, "[u]nless and until it is demonstrated that a single systemwide cap provides inadequate relief, we will limit the relief we order to that form of order." Aug. 4, 2009 Op. & Order, 922 F.Supp.2d at 963, (ECF No. 2197/3641). Because defendants have not yet met the systemwide cap of 137.5%, it is difficult to determine whether that cap provides inadequate relief. Indeed, as defendants reduce the prison population from 150% to 137.5% design capacity at a systemwide level, the population levels at specific institutions may decline in unexpected ways. Accordingly, it is best to wait and reassess the need for institution-specific caps, if they are needed, when defendants reduce the systemwide prison population to 137.5% design capacity, or at some other time deemed appropriate by the Receiver and Special Master.
Second, it undermines state flexibility at a time when the need for such flexibility is paramount. As this Court stated previously, "an institution-by-institution approach to population reduction would interfere with the state's management of its prisons more than a single systemwide cap, which permits the state to continue determining the proper population of individual institutions." Aug. 4, 2009 Op. & Order, 922 F.Supp.2d at 963 (ECF No. 2197/3641). The Supreme Court agreed, stating that our systemwide relief order leaves discretion to state officials to "to shift prisoners to facilities that are better able to accommodate overcrowding, or out of facilities where retaining sufficient medical staff has been difficult." Plata, 131 S.Ct. at 1941. The need for such flexibility has not abated. Defendants must reduce the institutional prison population by approximately 9,000 more prisoners to comply with this Court's order to reduce the prison population to 137.5% design capacity. Such a reduction, although certainly
Accordingly, this Court DENIES plaintiffs' Cross-Motion without prejudice to refiling when defendants reduce the systemwide prison population to 137.5% design capacity, or at such other time as this Court may deem appropriate.
Having denied the Three-Judge Motion to vacate this Court's population reduction order, we advise defendants once again that they must take all steps necessary to comply with this Court's June 30, 2011 Order, as amended by the January 29, 2013 Order, requiring defendants to reduce the overall prison population to 137.5% design capacity by December 31, 2013.
Defendants have thus far engaged in openly contumacious conduct by repeatedly ignoring both this Court's Order and at least three explicit admonitions to take all steps necessary to comply with that Order. Although our Order was delayed for two years pending review by the Supreme Court, and thus defendants were effectively afforded four years in which to achieve the reduction in prison population, defendants developed only one solution: Realignment, which became effective in October 2011. While Realignment was, to defendants' credit, a significant step forward in reducing the prison population, it became clear by early 2012 at the latest, on the basis of defendants' own Blueprint, that Realignment alone could not achieve the necessary reduction to 137.5% design capacity. Yet defendants took no further steps to achieve compliance. Defendants did subsequently report to this Court regarding various measures that could reduce the prison population to 137.5% design capacity by June 2013 or December 2013 but explicitly stated that these measures "do not comprise the State's plan because the State has already issued its plan for the future of the State's prison system, the Blueprint." Defs.' Resp. to Oct. 11, 2012 Order at 8 (ECF No. 2511/4284). Because the Blueprint will not reduce the prison population to 137.5% design capacity by June 2013, or December 2013, the Blueprint is not a plan for compliance; it is a plan for non-compliance. In other words, the Blueprint describes what defendants have done and what they will do with respect to complying with our Order. What they have done is make various changes to the state prison system with the expected outcome that California prisons will house 9,000 more inmates than our Order permits at the extended deadline of December 2013. What further steps they will take in order to comply is equally clear: None.
In August 2012, this Court advised defendants that their intention to file a modification motion provided no excuse for their failure to take steps to comply with this Court's Order in the meantime:
Aug. 3, 2012 Order at 4 (ECF No. 2460/4220). Defendants, however, took no such steps. As plaintiffs correctly observed, despite defendants' own acknowledgment that further steps to achieve the necessary population reduction — such as good time credits or sentencing reform — required legislative authorization, they "made no effort to seek the needed legislation." Pls.' Resp. to Defs.' Resp. to Sept. 7, 2012 Order at 2 (ECF No. 2481/4247). In December 2012, this Court again reminded defendants that they "must take further steps to achieve full compliance." Dec. 6, 2012 Order at 2-3 (ECF No. 2499/4269). Instead of doing so, defendants filed a motion to vacate our Order altogether and took no further action. Three-Judge Mot. (ECF No. 2506/4280). That same month, defendants filed a status report, in which they admitted non-compliance and made it clear that they had no intention of taking further steps to comply. Defs.' Jan. 2013 Status Report at 1 (ECF No. 2518/4292) ("Based on the evidence submitted in support of the State's motions, further population reductions are not needed...."). This Court then reiterated, for the third time, that such filings do not excuse defendants from taking steps toward compliance with our Order:
Jan. 29, 2013 Order at 2 (ECF No. 2527/4317). Defendants, instead of taking further steps to comply with our Order, submitted status reports for February and March 2013 that repeated the language of non-compliance verbatim from the January 2013 order. Defs.' Feb. 2013 Status Report at 1 (ECF No. 2538/4342); Defs.' March 2013 Status Report at 1 (ECF No. 2569/4402). In short, for approximately a year, defendants have acted in open defiance of this Court's Order.
Being more interested in achieving compliance with our Order than in holding contempt hearings, this Court has exercised exceptional restraint. Reserving its right to take whatever action may be appropriate with respect to defendants' past conduct, this Court now orders defendants once more to take steps beyond that of Realignment and to do so forthwith. Realignment has been a constructive measure, but its effects have reached their maximum, and it will not reduce the prison population to 137.5% design capacity. Defendants have been granted a six-month extension, and this Court expects them to use that time to institute additional measures that will serve to reduce the prison population by an additional 9,000 inmates by December 2013.
In a recent filing, defendants identified various measures by which they could achieve the necessary population reduction by December 2013. Defs.' Resp. to Oct. 11, 2012 Order (ECF No. 2511/4284). They state in that filing, however, that (1) they have "taken major action in all five of the[] areas" listed in our prior Opinion & Order and that therefore any "further actions in these areas could not be implemented without adversely impacting public
Although defendants may have taken some action in the five areas identified in our prior Opinion & Order, they have not taken the degree of action in any of them that this Court determined was necessary, and that could be taken without adversely impacting public safety. For example, with respect to the second and third areas — the diversion of technical parole violators and the diversion of low-risk offenders with short sentences — Realignment diverts only a small subset of low-risk prisoners and parolees to county jails. Significant opportunity for further diversion thus remains. See, e.g., Defs.' Resp. to Oct. 11, 2012 Order at 11-12 (ECF No. 2511/4284) (identifying a possible population reduction measure involving the diversion to the county jail system of inmates with "nine months or less" time to serve remaining). With respect to the fifth category — other reforms including changes to sentencing law — defendants have not pursued "release or diversion of certain [s]ub-populations, such as women, the elderly and the sick from prison to community-based facilities." Aug. 4, 2009 Op. & Order, 922 F.Supp.2d at 985, (ECF No. 2197/3641). In particular, despite the fact that 14% of California's misnamed "Lifer"
Perhaps defendants' greatest failure to act, however, is with respect to the first category identified in our prior Opinion & Order: the expansion of good time credits. Although defendants have expanded the good time credits program somewhat under Senate Bill 18, the current system falls far short of what this Court described as being a feasible means of reducing the prison population without having any adverse impact on public safety. Aug. 4, 2009 Op. & Order, 922 F.Supp.2d at 975-79, (ECF No. 2197/3641).
Contrary to Defendants' representations, not all measures identified in defendants' filing require the waiver of state laws. For example, the out-of-state prisoner program was initially enacted under the Governor's emergency powers. It therefore follows that it could be continued or reinstated under those powers.
Although they have done little if anything to obtain various state waivers, defendants have advised this Court that such waivers will be necessary if defendants are to implement some of the measures in question. Defs.' Resp. to Oct. 11, 2012 Order (ECF No. 2511/4284). This Court is empowered to override the applicable state provisions, if necessary, 18 U.S.C. § 3626(a)(1)(B),
We note that, although defendants have identified ten patchwork steps — steps that are neither retroactive nor sustained — that in combination would serve to reduce the prison population to the requisite number by December 31, 2013, some of the measures that we have discussed in this Section would be more effective and desirable if adopted as permanent, substantive changes in prison policy. In one case, the implementation of the measure in itself would enable defendants to achieve compliance; in another, the implementation of the measure, along with only one of a number of other measures, would enable defendants to reach that goal readily. See Pls.' Statement in Resp. to Oct. 11, 2012 Order Re: Population Reduction (ECF No. 2509/4283). Furthermore, adopting a number of the measures discussed in this Section as substantive changes would benefit the administration of the prison system over the long run. It is that long-term obligation that defendants must bear in mind in achieving a "durable remedy" to the problem of prison crowding. Accordingly, in responding to our concurrently filed order that directs defendants to provide us with a plan for compliance with our Order, defendants must provide assurances that those measures will remain in effect for an indefinite future period, and that the prison population will be maintained at 137.5% design capacity pending further order of this Court.
Finally, this Court observes that the prison overcrowding crisis has plagued
This Court reminds defendants yet again that they continue to be subject to the terms of this Court's order. As the Supreme Court explained in Maness v. Meyers, 419 U.S. 449, 458, 95 S.Ct. 584, 42 L.Ed.2d 574 (1975):
Id. at 458, 95 S.Ct. 584. The rule in Maness that parties must comply whether or not they believe a court's order is incorrect and must do so during any period that they may be contesting its validity is applicable to public and private parties alike. Specifically, the rule is applicable to Governor Brown, as well as the lowliest citizen. That Governor Brown may believe, contrary to the evidence before this Court, that "prison crowding [is] no longer ... inhibit[ing] the delivery of timely and effective health services to inmates,"
Concurrently with the filing of this order, this Court denies defendants' Motion to Vacate or Modify Population Reduction Order (Plata ECF No. 2506/Coleman ECF No. 4280). We reiterate that defendants must immediately take further steps to comply with this Court's June 30, 2011 Order, as amended on January 29, 2013 ("Order"), requiring defendants to reduce the overall prison population to 137.5% design capacity by December 31, 2013. To ensure that they do so, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that:
1. Within 21 days of the date of this order, defendants shall submit a list ("List") of all prison population reduction measures identified or discussed as possible remedies in this Court's August 2009 Opinion & Order, in the concurrently filed
2. Within 21 days of the date of this order, defendants shall submit a plan ("Plan") for compliance with the Order. This Plan shall identify measures from the List that defendants propose to implement, without regard to whether in defendants' view they possess the requisite authority to do so. The Plan shall include a number of additional measures (contingency measures) should any of these measures prove infeasible or fail to meet the anticipated numbers. Defendants shall also include the following information regarding the Plan:
3. All defendants, including the Governor, shall use their best efforts to implement the Plan.
4. Following the filing of the List and the Plan, defendants shall include in their monthly status reports the following information:
For the purposes of this order, the term "defendants" shall refer to each defendant, individually and collectively.
Moreover, even if defendants had invoked 18 U.S.C. § 3626(b), this would have had no bearing on our analysis of the Three-Judge Motion for two reasons. First, the operative provision of § 3626(b) comes into effect "2 years after the date the court granted or approved the prospective relief." 18 U.S.C. § 3626(b)(1)(A)(i). Because this Court's Order was issued in June 2011, those two years have not yet transpired. Moreover, even were that not the case, the circumstances in this case would not justify termination under 18 U.S.C. § 3626(b)(1). This provision was intended by Congress to enable defendants who have dutifully complied with a court order to obtain relief and thus "guard against court-ordered caps dragging on and on, with nothing but the whims of federal judges sustaining them." H.R.Rep. No. 104-21, at 8 (1995). Here, however, defendants are not in compliance and actually refuse to take appropriate action, as explained further infra. Permitting Defendants to seek termination when they have not achieved compliance would reward intransigence by Defendants, not police against overly intrusive federal courts. In sum, applying the termination provision in this case would contravene clear congressional intent.
Second, this Opinion would constitute the "written findings based on the record that prospective relief remains necessary" under 18 U.S.C. § 3626(b)(3). In Gilmore v. California, 220 F.3d 987 (9th Cir.2000), the Ninth Circuit held that, under 18 U.S.C. § 3626(b), a district court is "bound to maintain or modify any form of relief necessary to correct a current and ongoing violation of a federal right, so long as that relief is limited to enforcing the constitutional minimum," id. at 1000, and that "nothing in the termination provisions can be said to shift the burden of proof from the party seeking to terminate the prospective relief," id. at 1007. Accordingly, for the reasons explained infra, this Court finds that defendants have failed to demonstrate that our population reduction order to 137.5% design capacity no longer "remains necessary to correct a current and ongoing violation of the Federal right," "extends [] further than necessary to correct the violation of the Federal right," or "the prospective relief is [not] narrowly drawn [or is no longer] the least intrusive means to correct the violation." 18 U.S.C. § 3626(b)(3).
Not only have Defendants entirely failed to present any factual argument based on the judgment-satisfied provision of Rule 60(b)(5), this provision is wholly inapplicable. In no way has this Court's judgment been satisfied. Defendants have failed to prove that (1) there are no longer ongoing constitutional violations; (2) overcrowding has been eliminated; (3) overcrowding is no longer the primary cause of ongoing constitutional violations; or (4) 137.5% is not an appropriate population cap. For all the reasons explained herein, this Court finds that the judgment has not been satisfied under Rule 60(b)(5).
Although defendants object to the release of elderly Lifers on the ground of public safety, Defs.' Resp. to Oct. 11, 2012 Order at 19-20 (ECF No. 2511/4284), it appears that 75% of these Lifers have been placed in CDCR's lowest risk category, and the historical recidivism rate of Lifers is approximately 1% — in comparison to California's overall recidivism rate of 48%. See Weisberg, Life in Limbo, at 16-17. Moreover, elderly individuals are much less likely to recidivate as they are generally less likely to commit crimes. Id. at 17 ("For most offenses — and in most societies — crime rates rise in the early teenage years, peak during the mid-to-late teens, and subsequently decline dramatically. Not only are most violent crimes committed by people under 30, but even the criminality that continues after that declines drastically after age 40 and even more so after age 50.").