CATHERINE D. PERRY, District Judge.
Plaintiff, a prisoner, filed this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging that defendants monitored his telephone conversations with his attorneys in violation of the First Amendment; retaliated against him for participating in three-way telephone calls with counsel by placing him in administrative segregation; improperly restrained him during a personal visit with his attorneys; and improperly read his privileged mail. Defendants move to dismiss the case under Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, arguing that plaintiff's allegations fail to demonstrate a constitutional violation. After carefully reviewing the pleadings and other papers filed in this action, I find that plaintiff states a plausible claim of retaliation but that plaintiff's other claims fail as a matter of law.
In reviewing a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted, the Court must take all facts alleged in the complaint to be true and must construe the pleadings in the light most favorable to plaintiff.
The complaint is also subject to dismissal under 28 U.S.C. § 1915A. Section 1915A permits the Court to dismiss sua sponte any portion of the complaint that is frivolous, malicious, or fails to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.
For the purpose of deciding the motion to dismiss, I accept as true the nonconclusory allegations in the complaint, which I must. And because plaintiff is pro se, I will liberally construe the allegations in the complaint.
Plaintiff is a death-sentenced prisoner at Potosi Correctional Center ("PCC"). Plaintiff's conviction is final, and I denied his federal petition for writ of habeas corpus as directed by the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals.
Plaintiff communicates with New York counsel primarily by phone. Plaintiff alleges that defendants monitor and record those phone calls in violation of his right to communicate privately with counsel. Plaintiff says he and his attorneys are chilled from discussing sensitive matters over the phone as a result.
The Missouri Department of Corrections ("MoDOC") prohibits prisoners from engaging in third-party or three-way telephone calls. According to plaintiff's exhibits, MoDOC uses a phone monitoring system called Securus to detect three-way calls. On March 12, 2012, defendant Steele, who is Warden of PCC, sent a letter to one of plaintiff's attorneys, notifying her "that on numerous occasions during legal calls which you have requested with Reginald Clemons . . . Securus has detected a three-way call." Steele further advised counsel that such calls were not allowed under MoDOC policy and that "future abuse of privileged calls will not be tolerated."
Plaintiff asserts that his attorneys spoke with someone at Securus, who told them that Securus had not alerted Steele about the three-way calls. Plaintiff believes this is evidence that defendants are listening in on his privileged communications and not relying on Securus to monitor phone calls.
Defendants issued several conduct violations to plaintiff for participating in three-way calls. Plaintiff spent twenty-three days in administrative segregation as a result of the violations. Plaintiff claims he was put in a strip cell for four hours, and he believes this is a violation of the Eighth Amendment.
Plaintiff's attorneys visited him at PCC. Plaintiff says he was placed in fourpoint restraints for the meeting and that the restraints were not taken off until after the meeting was over. Plaintiff also claims that the meeting was cut short by two hours because Steele directed his employees to work in the visiting room. Plaintiff states he was unable to effectively communicate with his attorneys because of the restraints. Plaintiff claims this is a violation of the First, Sixth, and Eighth Amendments.
Plaintiff also communicates with his attorneys by mail. Plaintiff maintains that prison staff read his mail "to prove it is legal mail." And plaintiff says that his attorneys are uncomfortable mailing privileged communications to him as a result. Plaintiff argues that defendants John/Jane Doe (General Counsel) and Brenda Ross should be liable as supervisors of said staff because they have not "taken the necessary step or measures to ensure that Plaintiff's attorney client communication has been confidently secured without disruption."
Plaintiff contends that the monitoring and recording of his privileged telephone conversations infringes upon his First Amendment right of access to the courts because his and his attorneys' speech regarding his case has been chilled. Defendants argue that plaintiff's telephone monitoring and recording claims should be dismissed because plaintiff has alternative means of communicating with his attorneys, i.e., by mail or in person.
"[T]he extent of inmates' First Amendment right to communicate with the outside world is a fact-intensive universe."
The confidentiality of the attorney-client relationship is entitled to protection even where the client is a prisoner.
A violation of the attorney-client privilege can implicate the Sixth Amendment right to counsel, but only when "the government interferes with the relationship between a criminal defendant and his attorney."
Plaintiff's First Amendment claim fails to state a cause of action because plaintiff has not alleged that he has suffered prejudice or actual injury in his pending state habeas case as a result of his privileged telephone calls being monitored and recorded. Plaintiff's only allegation regarding prejudice is that he and his attorneys have been chilled from discussing sensitive matters over the phone. However, a claim of a chilling effect, in and of itself, is not sufficient to establish actual injury.
Defendants ask me to consider this claim under the four-part test announced in
Plaintiff's claim under the First Amendment regarding the application of four point restraints during a visit with his attorneys also fails as a matter of law because plaintiff has not alleged that his case suffered an actual injury as a result.
Plaintiff maintains that he was placed in administrative segregation for twentythree days in retaliation for participating in privileged telephone conferences with more than one attorney by defendants Thomas Collins, Jeff Harper, and Daniel Dicus. Defendants argue that plaintiff's retaliation claim fails as a matter of law because he was placed in administrative segregation for committing an actual rule violation. Defendants further argue that plaintiff admitted to engaging in three-way calls in his complaint.
To succeed on his § 1983 retaliation claim, plaintiff must prove that he engaged in protected activity and that defendants, to retaliate for the protected activity, took adverse action against plaintiff that would chill a person of ordinary firmness from engaging in that activity.
It is clear that engaging in three-way calls violates MoDOC's rules. However, plaintiff does not actually admit to engaging in three-way calls in the complaint. He states that he was punished for doing so, but he does not say, one way or the other, whether hid did. I find that plaintiff has sufficiently pleaded a retaliation claim against defendants Collins, Harper, and Dicus such that dismissal of this claim is improper at this time.
Plaintiff argues that the assignment to administrative segregation for twentythree days violated the Eighth Amendment. Plaintiff further argues that the application of four-point restraints during a visitation from his attorneys also constituted cruel and unusual punishment.
To prove an Eighth Amendment violation, a prisoner must satisfy two requirements, one objective and one subjective. The first requirement tests whether, viewed objectively, the deprivation of rights was sufficiently serious.
Plaintiff has not alleged that either his placement in administrative segregation or the application of four-point restraints subjected him to an objective deprivation of his rights. And he does not allege that defendants were deliberately indifferent to his nutritional or medical needs while he was in administrative segregation. As a result, plaintiff's Eighth Amendment claims fails to state a claim.
Plaintiff argues that defendants John/Jane Doe (General Counsel) and Brenda Ross are liable as supervisors over prison staff who read his mail "to prove it is legal mail."
Prison supervisors cannot be held liable under § 1983 on a theory of respondeat superior.
For each of these reasons, defendants' motion to dismiss will be granted in part and denied in part. Only defendants Collins, Harper, and Dicus are alleged to be directly involved in plaintiff's viable retaliation claim. Therefore, the remainder of the defendants will be dismissed.
Accordingly,
An Order of Partial Dismissal will be filed with this Memorandum and Order.