Plaintiff Russell M. Boles is an Orthodox Jew serving time at the Freemont Correctional Facility in Cañón City, Colorado. He sued the warden, Gary D. Neet, under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and the First Amendment after Warden Neet denied his request to wear certain religious garments
I.
The relevant facts are not disputed. In March 2001, while he was incarcerated at FCF, Boles was scheduled to have eye surgery at an off-site hospital. On the day of his scheduled surgery, however, prison officials told him that prison regulations prohibited him from leaving the facility wearing his yarmulke and tallit katan. 2 He refused to remove the garments and forwent having the surgery. On April 17, 2001, Boles sent a letter to Warden Neet requesting permission to wear his religious garments during transport to the hospital. Warden Neet responded by letter dated April 30, 2001, denying Boles’s request based on the prison’s transport regulation, AR 300-37 RD. That regulation provides that inmates classified “medium custody and above are [to be] transported in orange jumpsuits and transport shoes when being transported to a non-secure area, i.e. hospital.” Aplt.App. at 179. Referring to this regulation, Warden Neet told Boles, “[a]lthough your religion may require you to wear certain items, those items will not be allowed during transport out of this facility.” Id. at 163. Nonetheless, Boles remained steadfast in refusing to take off his yarmulke and tallit katan. As a result, his eye surgery was delayed until November 2002, by which point the prison regulations had been amended specifically to allow Jewish inmates to wear those items during transport.
Proceeding pro se in the district court, Boles sued Warden Neet under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claiming that his actions violated Boles’s First Amendment right to freely exercise his religion. 3 Warden Neet filed a motion to dismiss followed by a motion for summary judgment, arguing that Boles’s First Amendment claim was barred by Warden Neet’s qualified immunity from civil damages liability. By order dated November 30, 2005, the district court denied both motions, concluding that there was a material issue of fact concerning whether Warden Neet’s conduct “was a reasonable restriction on plaintiffs free exercise of his religious practices.” Aplt. App. at 248. More specifically, the court held that regulation AR 300-37 RD did not justify Warden Neet’s actions.
[NJothing in the policy prohibits the inmate from also wearing a head covering, such as a yarmulke, or an undergarment, such as a tallit katan. If there is a security issue associated with suchgarments, it is not apparent from the regulations.
Id. Also central to the court’s decision was its broad interpretation of the constitutional right involved, which the court framed as the free exercise of religion. The court concluded that whether Warden Neet violated that right could not be decided on summary judgment.
While a defendant charged with a constitutional violation receives qualified immunity when the right asserted is not clearly established, the right that has been established does not have to [be] so fact specific that it is identical to what is alleged in the case at issue, as defendant appears to argue here. To overcome a motion to dismiss the plaintiff must articulate a constitutional right which the defendant violated. To unreasonably limit plaintiffs free exercise of religion is a violation.
Id. at 245 (quotation omitted). On appeal, Warden Neet argues that in framing the constitutional right so broadly, the district court impermissibly removed the defense of qualified immunity. He also argues that prison inmates like plaintiff enjoy no clearly established constitutional right to wear religious garments either on the prison grounds or in transport outside of the facility. Accordingly, he contends that he is entitled to qualified immunity with respect to plaintiffs First Amendment claim.
II.
The doctrine of qualified immunity shields government officials performing discretionary functions from liability for damages “insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.”
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
A. Did Boles Allege a Constitutional Violation?
In taking the first step of the
Saucier
analysis, we are mindful of the delicate balance that has been recognized between prisoners’ constitutional guarantees and the legitimate concerns of prison administrators. In
O’Lone v. Estate of Shabazz,
The same year it decided O’Lone, the Court decided Turner, which, in part, struck down as unreasonable a prison regulation banning inmate marriages. It was clear after Turner that the question of whether a prison regulation reasonably curtails constitutional rights requires close examination of the facts of each case, the specific regulation under review, and the alleged justifications for it. To assist the lower courts in making the reasonableness determination, the Court identified the following factors: 4
(1) whether a rational connection exists between the prison policy regulation and a legitimate governmental interest advanced as its justification; (2) whether alternative means of exercising the right are available notwithstanding the policy or regulation; (3) what effect accommodating the exercise of the right would have on guards, other prisoners, and prison resources generally; and (4) whether ready, easy-to-implement alternatives exist that would accommodate the prisoner’s rights..
Beerheide v. Suthers,
This framework established in
Turner
and
O’Lone,
which seeks to balance prisoners’ constitutional rights against the valid concerns of prison ■ administrators, is sharply at odds with the test formulated three years later in
Employment Division, Department of Human Resources v. Smith,
With this backdrop we return to the first
Saucier
question: has plaintiff alleged facts showing the violation of a constitutional right? To meet his burden at this stage, Boles had to show that Warden Neet’s conduct substantially burdened his sincerely-held religious beliefs.
Salahuddin,
Therefore, the burden shifted to Warden Neet to identify the legitimate penological interests served by his decision to forbid Boles from wearing his religious garments. Warden Neet has identified nothing, however, and we could find no evidence in the record of any penological objectives served by his actions.
5
On appeal, Warden Neet cites several cases upholding against constitutional challenges prison regulations restricting the use of religious clothing out of concern that the clothing could be used to smuggle contraband.
See Muhammad v. Lynaugh,
Warden Neet cannot base his entitlement to qualified immunity purely on the outcome of these other cases. While his actions may have been motivated by a legitimate concern that Boles’s religious garments could be used to smuggle contraband into and out of the prison, he points to nothing in the record to that effect, and our own review of the record failed to reveal such evidence. As the
Salahuddin
court noted when faced with similar circumstances, “[n]either the district court nor this court can manufacture facts out of thin air.”
B. Was the Constitutional Right Clearly Established?
Turning to step two, Warden Neet argues that even if Boles alleged a constitutional violation, he is entitled to qualified immunity because an inmate’s unrestricted right to wear religious garments was not clearly established at the time of the alleged violation. Boles counters that the proper focus should be on whether it was clearly established that inmates retain the constitutional right of free exercise, not on the right’s narrow application to religious garments.
The parties’ disagreement about how broadly to define the constitutional right is understandable. As we have previously noted, striking the right balance is crucial to the qualified immunity analysis.
See Melton v. City of Okla. City,
Our task is to evaluate Warden Neet’s assertion of qualified immunity in the context of the circumstances that he faced without being too constrained by the particular facts of the case.
See Melton,
21.... I uniformly applied the religion and transport regulations as they existed at the time.
22. I did not discriminate against inmate Russell Boles based on his religion. I applied existing regulations to Boles and all offenders uniformly.
Neet Aff., Aplt.App. at 159. We appreciate Warden Neet’s position that he did not intend to violate Boles’s constitutional rights, but he is not immune from liability simply because he acted in accordance with prison regulations.
6
The Supreme Court clearly established in
Turner
that prison regulations cannot arbitrarily and capriciously impinge on inmates’ constitutional rights. To be valid, a regulation must be “reasonably related to legitimate penological interests.”
The district court’s order is AFFIRMED.
Notes
.
Cohen v. Beneficial Indus. Loan Corp.,
. Tallit katan, a hebrew expression referring to an undergarment bearing fringes or "tzit-zit,” is worn by some of the Jewish faith to fulfill the commandment appearing in the Bible at the book of Numbers, ch. 15, verse 37. Boles alleges that under the Kitzer Shulchan Arukh, a code of Jewish law, he is forbidden to walk a distance of four cubits (between 12 and 16 feet) during daylight hours with his head uncovered and not wearing tzitzit.
.Boles also brought claims under the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act and the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments, but those claims have been dismissed, and the propriety of their dismissal is not before us.
. Although plaintiff is not challenging a prison regulation per se, but rather Warden Neet’s individual actions,
Turner
is no less applicable. As the Second Circuit usefully recognized in
Salahuddin v. Goord,
. Although Warden Neet submitted an unre-dacted version of regulation AR 300-37RD to the district court, all but a sliver of it was returned in response to his motion to seal the document and was not included in the record on appeal. Perhaps the full regulation sets forth legitimate security or other concerns underlying the prison’s religious garment and transport regulations. Since Warden Neet did not include it in the appellate record, however, we have no way of knowing.
. We recognize that one of the relevant factors in evaluating the reasonableness of Warden Neet’s actions is whether he relied on a regulation or official policy that explicitly sanctioned his conduct.
See Roska v. Peterson,
