Plaintiff/Appellee Frank Clement, an inmate at Pelican Bay State Prison (“Pelican Bay”), alleges in this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action that his First Amendment rights were violated by Pelican Bay’s enforcement of its policy prohibiting inmates from receiving mail containing material downloaded from the internet. The district court denied the motion for summary judgment by the defendants/appellants, the California Department of Corrections and the individual corrections officials (collectively, “CDC”). The district court then sua sponte granted summary judgment for Clement and issued a permanent, statewide injunction against the enforcement of the internet mail policy. CDC appeals. We affirm the district court’s judgment and uphold the injunction.
I.
In 2001, Pelican Bay adopted an internet-generated mail policy that provided: “No Internet Mail. After reviewing staffing levels and security issues internet mail will not be allowed. To do so would jeopardize the safety and security of the institution.” The policy prohibits only mail containing material that has been downloaded from the internet but is not violated
At least eight other California prisons have adopted similar policies. Prisoners are not allowed to access the internet directly, so Clement asserts that the policies effectively prevent inmates from accessing information that is available only on the internet, or is prohibitively expensive and time-consuming to obtain through other methods. For example, there is record evidence that several non-profit groups, such as Stop Prisoner Rape, publish information only on the internet, and that many legal materials are readily accessible only on the internet.
The district court denied CDC’s motion for summary judgment. Although Clement had not moved for summary judgment, the district court sua sponte held that the Pelican Bay internet mail policy violated his First Amendment rights and entered judgment for Clement.
Clement v. California Dep’t of Corrections,
II.
The First Amendment “embraces the right to distribute literature, and necessarily protects the right to receive it.”
Martin v. City of Struthers, Ohio,
Prisoners retain their First Amendment right to receive information while incarcerated.
Turner v. Safley,
The Supreme Court in Turner established a four factor test to determine whether a prison policy serves legitimate penological objectives:
(1) whether the regulation is rationally related to a legitimate and neutral governmental objective; (2) whether there are alternative avenues that remain open to the inmates to exercise the right; (3) the impact that accommodating the asserted right will have on other guards and prisoners, and on the allocation of prison resources; and (4) whether the existence of easy and obvious alternatives indicates that the regulation is an exaggerated response by prison officials.
Prison Legal News,
CDC argues that the internet policy serves at least two legitimate penological interests under the
Turner
test. First, it contends that permitting prisoners to receive material downloaded from the internet would drastically increase the volume of mail that the prison had to process. Second, it asserts that internet-generated mail creates security concerns because it is easier to insert coded messages into internet material than into photocopied or handwritten material and because internet communications are harder to trace than other, permitted communications. However, as the district court explained in a detailed and persuasive analysis that we adopt, CDC failed to meet the
Turner
test because it did not articulate a rational or logical connection between its policy and these interests.
Clement,
III.
We turn to CDC’s contention that the injunction entered by the district court is too broad because it enjoins the enforcement of the internet mail policy in all California prisons. Because the injunction is no broader than the constitutional violation, the district court properly entered a statewide injunction. 1
The Prison Litigation Reform Act (“PLRA”) sets forth several requirements limiting the breadth of injunctive relief:
Prospective relief in any civil action with respect to prison conditions shall extend no further than necessary to correct the violation of the Federal right of a particular plaintiff or plaintiffs. The court shall not grant or approve any prospective relief unless the court finds that such relief is narrowly drawn, extends no further than necessary to correct the violation of the Federal right, and is the least intrusive means necessary to correct the violation of the Federal right.
An injunction employs the “least intrusive means necessary” when it “ ‘heel[s] close to the identified violation,’ and is not overly ‘intrusive and unworkable’ ... [and] would [not] require for its enforcement the continuous supervision by the federal court over the conduct of [state officers].”
Id.
at 872 (quoting
Gilmore v. California,
The district court properly addressed the injunction to all prisons under CDC control. “The scope of injunctive relief is dictated by the extent of the violation established.”
Armstrong,
The injunction here is no broader than necessary to remedy the First Amendment violation. The injunction prohibits banning internet materials simply because their source is the internet. It does not prohibit restrictions for any legitimate pe-nological'or-security reason. Without violating the injunction,- legitimate restrictions could be adopted by any prison to meet its individual needs, for example page limitations, or a ban on recipes for pipe-bombs.
The state offers no argument that a total internet mail ban might be constitutional if implemented at a different prison. In such circumstances, it.would be inefficient and unnecessary for prisoners in each California state prison to separately challenge the same internet mail policy; it would simply force CDC to face repetitive litigation. Moreover, if the policy is invalid at Pelican Bay, we can conceive of no reason'why it would be valid elsewhere. It is well known that Pelican Bay houses maximum-security prisoners under the most restrictive* conditions of any California prison.
The. district court’s injunction is also sufficiently narrow to “avoid unnecessary disruption to the state agency’s ‘normal course of-proceeding.’ ”
Ashker v. California Dep’t of Corrections,
The district court considered the PLRA requirements and found that the injunction it issued' was properly tailored to'the constitutional violation.
See Armstrong,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. At oral argument, counsel for CDC also contended that the district court's order was broader than its judgment and the injunction. This argument is specious in that the judgment and the injunction control.
