Billy Jоe Brooks is a prison inmate who wanted to use the prison law library. Because he was a threat to others, prison officials gave him only indirect access to the library. Brooks sued, claiming the limitations on access to the library violated his right of access to the courts. The district court entered judgment in his favor; we reverse.
I. Background
Billy Joe Broоks is a “circuit rider” in the Illinois prison system.
Prison officials placed Brooks in the segregation unit at the Vandalia Correctional Center (VCC) from May 18, 1988, to June 8, 1988, exactly three weeks. VCC is a medium security prison; only those prisoners in the segregation unit are considered maximum security inmates. Prisoners in the segregation unit are allowed one hour of exercise and one shower per week and may possess very few items. Brooks amply repaid prison officials’ lack of confidence in him. While at VCC, he “was disciplined on a regular basis for throwing food and urine at correctional officers.” He also threw a liquid, perhaps urine, on the prison librarian (the person who, as we shall see, was his link to the prison library). He threw food trays and his shoes at the guards. Moreover, Brooks stopped up his toilet and flooded the gallery, so prison officials cut water flow to his cell and restored it only for short periods to allow him to flush and use the wash basin.
After Brooks had thrown urine several times on guards, prison officials decided to remove from his cell the containers he was using to hold the urine. Prison guards put togеther an extraction team, a group of several shielded and padded guards who wrestle belligerent and uncooperative inmates such as Brooks to the ground and handcuff them. Brooks was extracted from his cell and im
Brooks, a frequent and accomplished litigatоr, nearly immediately filed suit against a battery of defendants.
II. Analysis
We review the district court’s findings of fact for clear error. Shango v. Jurich,
Prisoners have a constitutional right to “meaningful” access to the courts. Bounds v. Smith,
This Circuit uses a two-part test to decide if prison officials violated the right of access to the courts. Jenkins v. Lane,
Prison officials have two basic options for satisfying a prisoner’s right of access. They must provide a prisoner either with access to persons trained in the law (which would include persons such as paralegals and law students), or provide him with adequate access to law libraries. Bounds,
Providing inmates with services from persons trained in the law carries inherent prob
To allow access for prisoners who cannot be allowеd to use the library directly, prisons frequently set up systems of indirect access for inmates. See Jenkins,
Attuned to these principles, prison officials at VCC set up a system of indirect access for circuit riders in the segregation unit. VCC maintained a law library for all prisoners to use that stocked a full range of legal materials. The law library was run by the law librarian, Garey Ahler, who was trained in library science, but not at all in law. Ahler suрervised the inmate law clerks who assisted him. He wrote a forty-page manual to help train them; the manual concentrated on the structure of the law library and use of the facilities, not on giving the inmate clerks a legal education in a nutshell. Basically the inmate law clerks were gofers untutored in the law.
Ahler, a law clerk, and a guard visited Brоoks every day he was held at VCC. Prison policy required that Ahler consult every day with each circuit rider who needed help preparing legal materials. The prison refused to allow the law clerks alone to serve the circuit rider inmates, to prevent, as the district court phrased it, “medium security inmates from being placed in a positiоn where they would have to comply with the orders of a more predatory inmate.” Ahler therefore served as a buffer and an additional aid to Brooks’ research.
The prison, unsurprisingly, forbade Brooks from possessing any books in his cell. Instead, Ahler and the law clerks provided Brooks with photocopies of relevant material upоn request. Brooks could request sections of digests or treatises, or of specific eases. The only limitation was that he could not get photocopies of more than 17% of any one book, because of copyright restrictions. Brooks almost always received the photocopies the next day. Before Ahler and the law clerk would deliver the photocopies, a correctional lieutenant would examine it “to determine whether it is suitable for dissemination to the gallery.” Additionally, Brooks was not automatically granted whatever he asked for, but Ahler or an inmate law clerk would check it to determine if the request was germane to the topic Brooks was researching. Brooks does not complain that this review led to any instance of his actually being denied relevant material.
The district court’s conclusion rested primarily on its finding that neither Ahler nor the inmate law clerks, the only people to whom Brooks had access, had any significant legal training. The district court examined Seventh Circuit precedent bearing on the “precise definition of persons trаined in the law as required by Bounds," and concluded that, however defined, Ahler and the law clerks were not trained in the law, so “ ‘circuit riders’ at Vandalia were required to rely on persons untrained in the law to provide assistance in preparing legal papers.”
The district court further supported its conclusion by noting that “It is unquestioned that [circuit rider] inmates did not have direct access to the law library at Vandalia.... In addition, [Brooks’] ability to obtain legal materials was extremely limited. Books, digests and treatises were not allowed directly in the segregation unit. Photocopies were allowed, but again the ability of an inmate to obtain the necessary materials under this system seems quite limited.” Thus, the district court concluded that the main constitutional failure of VCC’s system was not providing persons trained in law, and inadequate access by prisoners themselves to library material exacerbated that failure.
What the district court did not take into account is that access to persons trained in the law and providing access to libraries are each fully independent and sufficient methods of satisfying the right of access to the courts. Shango,
We emphasize that if a prison does choose to provide a law library, the function of library assistants is not to act as paralеgals or quasi-counsel, as they might have to if the prison provided no law library and instead provided assistants as the requisite “persons trained in law.” See Campbell,
In light of a correct understanding of the right, we must consider whether the district court’s decision that Brooks lacked meaningful access was erroneous. The system of intermediaries that VCC set up obviously obliged Brooks to conduct research
Furthermore, the district court gave insufficient weight to legitimate security considerations that helped justify the restrictions. It stated that it did “not understand the requirement that a correctional lieutenant review copies of legal materials before an inmate may receive the requested photocopies.” The requirement was clearly designed to prevent the transfer to a dangеrous inmate of contraband such as weapons or drugs. See Caldwell,
Brooks was an extreme threat to prison safety and оrder; that is why prison officials could not give him direct access to the prison library. Instead they gave him access to the library while placing reasonable limitations on his access. The district court erred by concluding that Brooks was further entitled to aid from persons trained in the law, beyond the meaningful access provided through the indirect use of the law library. Therefore, we REVERSE the district court’s judgment in favor of Brooks; and Brooks’ appeal of the nominal damages award is rendered moot.
Notes
. We take our facts from the district court’s findings of fact.
. A cursory computer research check turned up 11 documents in which Brooks was the named plaintiff; in one, Brooks won a jury verdict. At trial Brooks testified he had eight civil cases pending.
. We note that Brooks is indisputably able to research on his own. His complaint is that the prison makes his doing so overly difficult, thus constricting his access to the courts. However, not all prisoners are as skilled as Brooks. Where unskilled prisoners are concerned, Bounds may require more than simple physicаl access to legal materials. Instead, prisons may have to provide some minimal aid to prisoners to make their access "meaningful.” Prison officials could, for example, provide self-help manuals, designed to aid prisoners in obtaining a basic grasp of legal research. Brooks, in fact, used just such a self-help manual provided by VCC, as well as prepared forms for § 1983 complaints. Prisons may also rely on inmate writ-writers, to the extent they are able to fill the gap between simple physical access and meaningful access. Or prisons could provide librarians or law clerks who are familiar with the setup of the library and with basic concepts such as the existеnce of case reporters, digests, and treatises. See Knop,
. Brooks complains the library failed to stock a copy of the Seventh Circuit Rules. However, he does not claim he needed those Rules for any litigation, merely for his "general education," because he was "trying to get [] to know more about the law.” There is no right to legal material for general education, only to that necessary to have meaningful access to the courts for specific claims. Furthermore, it is an open question whether once a prisoner has been able to make his voice heard in the court of first instance, the right of access extends still further to include library materials for the filing of appeals.
