ELIZABETH K. DILLON, District Judge.
This case involves constitutional challenges brought by publisher Prison Legal News (PLN) after materials it sent to prisoners at the Northwestern Regional Adult Detention Center (NRADC) were sent back to it with a notation that they had been refused, per jail policy. The remaining named defendants are the Northwestern Regional Jail Authority (NRJA), which operates NRADC, and jail superintendent James F. Whitley.
Both parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment, raising a host of issues. In ruling on those motions, the court found NRJA liable as a matter of law on PLN's due process claim, but found that disputes of fact precluded summary judgment on PLN's First Amendment claim. As the court explained, its ruling left only a few issues for trial: (1) whether PLN can prevail on its First Amendment claim against NRJA; and (2) the compensatory damages, if any, that PLN is entitled to on its First Amendment claim in Count I and its due process claim in Count II.
The court's opinion also discussed PLN's Fourteenth Amendment equal protection claim and denied PLN's motion for summary judgment on this claim. However, because defendants' motion for summary judgment did not expressly ask for judgment in its favor on the equal protection claim, the court could not grant judgment in defendants' favor on that claim. (Mem. Op. 7 n.2, 26-Dkt. No. 89.) Rather, by separate order (Dkt. No 91), the court gave notice of its intent to grant summary judgment in defendants' favor as to the equal protection claim for the same reasons it denied PLN's motion (Mem. Op. 26-29) and gave PLN a reasonable opportunity to respond. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(f).
Both parties filed timely responses concerning PLN's equal protection claim. (Dkt. Nos. 92, 93.) For the reasons discussed below, the court concludes that summary judgment in defendants' favor as to PLN's equal protection claim is required.
In PLN's operative complaint, the second amended complaint, its equal protection claim is based only on the following allegations:
(Second Am. Compl. ¶¶ 58-59, Dkt. No. 25.)
Understandably in light of these allegations, the court's analysis in its prior opinion was based on a discussion of PLN's assertion that it was treated differently than religious publishers. Moreover, that was the only issue briefed in the first round of summary judgment briefing. In its supplemental briefing, however, PLN argues for the first time that defendants violated its equal protection rights when they intentionally and purposefully discriminated against PLN's written speech by censoring its educational books and magazines, while allowing similarly situated senders of other educational material to communicate with prisoners at the jail. (Pl.'s Supp. Br. 2-3, Dkt. No. 92.) That is, PLN argues that defendants clearly intended to treat educational books differently from other written speech, and by excluding PLN's educational publications defendants intentionally and purposefully discriminated against PLN. (Id. at 3-4.)
PLN's supplemental briefing focuses entirely on a new theory and basis for its equal protection claim, one that was not pled in its complaint nor previously argued before the court.
Accordingly, the court will grant summary judgment in defendants' favor as to PLN's equal protection claim for the reasons set forth in the court's prior opinion and for the reasons set forth herein.
It is hereby ORDERED that summary judgment is GRANTED in defendants' favor on PLN's equal protection claim.