The plaintiff, an Illinois state prisoner, brought this civil rights suit against prison officials who forbade him to correspond v/ith his “common law” wife, an inmate of another Illinois prison, in reliance on a rule of the Illinois Department of Corrections that — the plaintiff argues — violates the First Amendment. The rule provides that “permission for committed persons to correspond between intra-state and inter-state correctional facilities shall require the approval of the Chief Administrative Officers of both facilities and shall be based on safety and security concerns.” Ill.Admin.Code § 525.120(b).
The constitutionality of the rule cannot be doubted after
Gometz v. Henman,
We need not decide what if any limits on prison officials’ discretion to forbid two inmates to correspond might be imposed by the “right to marry” cases, held applicable to prisoners in
Turner v. Safley,
Affirmed.
