Plaintiff-appellant Trapnell, an inmate at the federal prison in Marion, Illinois filed this suit seeking both injunctive and monetary relief for infringement of his rights under the First Amendment. The defendants-appellees are officials and employees at the prison. The district court submitted the matter to a magistrate for evidentiary hearings and proposed findings, and subsequently adopted the magistrate’s recommendation that Trapnell’s requests for relief be denied. Trapnell appeals the decision of the district court. There are two issues presented for review: (1) whether the current prison regulations governing prisoner receipt of photographs of nude and semi-nude women are constitutionally valid; and (2) whether Trapnell is entitled to damages for official acts taken pursuant to earlier guidelines governing the receipt of photographs. We hold that the current standards are valid and that Trapnell is not entitled to any monetary relief. Accordingly, we affirm the decision of the district court.
I.
Trapnell currently is an inmate at Marion and has been there since 1975. He has studied art during his imprisonment and spends part of his free “cell” time painting. The inmates at Marion are, generally, sentenced to long terms of imprisonment and are considered assaultive in nature. During the period prior to January 18, 1978 the prison’s mail regulations stated that “[p]hotographs should meet the standard of decency and must include the individual’s name on the back of the photograph.” Policy Statement MI 7300.1, dated April 1, 1976, Part 3(e); Policy Statement MI 7300.-1A, dated February 1, 1977, Part 3(e). Trapnell’s claims for monetary relief are based on the rejection, under this regulation, of three sets of photographs. Two of these sets, rejected by officials in October and November of 1976, depicted female acquaintances of Trapnell. The subjects in the rejected photos were nude and semi-nude. The final group of photographs upon which this suit is based, the only commercially released photos rejected by Marion officials, were ordered by Trapnell from Peter Gowland. All of the photographs ordered from Gowland, who is a commercial photographer, were contained in catalogues which Trapnell received from Gowland. The catalogues included photos of nude and semi-nude women and were sent to Trapnell pursuant to an inquiry about “figure *292 studies.” Trapnell was allowed to receive the catalogues; the regulation in question was limited to photographs. Trapnell selected and ordered thirty-six photographs from the catalogues, sending $88.80 with the order. In November, 1976 the photos were sent to the prison and rejected. There were no marks or stamps affixed to the Gowland photos to demonstrate that they indeed had been commercially published and distributed. Trapnell filed this suit in May, 1977 following denial of his requests for administrative relief.
During the course of this litigation the prison has promulgated new guidelines governing the receipt of the photographs. The parties have agreed that the claims for injunctive and declaratory relief contained in Trapnell’s complaint will apply to the new guidelines, which are still in effect. We will review the earlier regulations only as they relate to Trapnell’s claims for damages.
II.
We will first review the validity of the standards now in use at Marion. The current standards, in contrast to the regulations under which the photographs were initially rejected, set out carefully written and objective guidelines governing the receipt of photographs. The new regulation, MI 7300.1B(f) provides:
f. Nude and Pornographic Photographs.
(1) Nude photographs are defined as any photograph exposing the nipples of the breasts, buttocks, pubic hair and genitalia of a female and buttocks, pubic hair and genitalia of a male. This includes exposure through “see through” materials.
(2) Pornographic photographs are defined as photographs depicting acts of fornication, felattio [sic] and/or sodomy.
Inmates will not be allowed to receive or have in their possession photographs as described above unless the photographs are received as a part of a publication approved under the provisions of Bureau of Prisons Policy Statement 7300.42D, and/or the photographs have been published for commercial use (postcards, etc.). Such photographs must have some identifying marking or publication label to distinguish them as published for commercial use.
The distinction between photographs published for commercial use and original photographs intended for individual viewing must be made to maintain the security and orderly running of the institution consistent with the Bureau of Prisons mandate to provide for the safekeeping of the inmate population. Those persons who pose for photographs to be published for commercial use are aware that viewing of such photographs will be widespread; whereas persons who pose for original photographs may be doing so only for select viewers, such as inmate wives and girlfriends posing for one particular inmate. These types of intimate photographs are considered highly emotionally charged items for an inmate to have in his possession. If such photographs were viewed by other inmates, conflicts or assaults are likely to result. Unfortunately, even in the most secure prison setting, intentional or inadvertent viewing of such photographs cannot be prevented. Since this population is primarily long-term offenders with assaultive patterns of behavior and considered to have a high propensity toward violence, regulations must be established in this area for the safekeeping of both staff and inmates.
Inmates will not be able to receive or have in their possession photographs which depict sadistic acts, homosexual acts, beastiality, [sic] and sexual acts with children, regardless if the photograph has been published for commercial use or not. This regulation is needed as these types of photographs tend to increase anxiety, aggression and sexual arousal, thus threatening the orderly running of the institution. 1
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We hold that the current regulations of Marion are constitutionally acceptable. The policy “furthers one or more of the substantial governmental interests of security, order, and rehabilitation.”
Procunier v. Martinez,
Moreover, the governmental interest furthered here is not an attempt “to eliminate unflattering or unwelcome opinions.”
Procunier v. Martinez,
Finally, the regulation is sufficiently narrow in scope and is “no greater than is necessary or essential to the protection of the particular governmental interest involved.”
Procunier v. Martinez,
III.
Trapnell also challenges the conclusion, reached by both the magistrate and the district court, that he is not entitled to damages for the defendants’ actions under the earlier standard. Trapnell seeks $1,000,000. in compensatory damages; this amount includes the $88.80 paid for the rejected Gowland photographs. The magistrate determined that although the prior policy was overly broad, it was implemented in good faith and that under
Scheuer v. Rhodes,
An initial question involves the basis of Trapnell’s claim for damages. The
pro se
complaint based this claim upon both the First Amendment and the Civil Rights Acts, 42 U.S.C. § 1981
et seq.
However, Trapnell has neither alleged nor proved any facts that would bring this suit within the scope of the Civil Rights Act: there have been no claims that Trapnell was discriminated against due to his race, that any of the defendants have acted under color of state law, or that there has been a conspiracy within the meaning of 42 U.S.C. § 1985 against Trapnell. Accordingly, Trapnell cannot bring his suit under the Civil Rights Acts.
Walker v. Blackwell,
This is not to say that Trapnell is without a cause of action. The Supreme Court, in
Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of Federal Bureau of Narcotics,
IV.
Trapnell’s initial argument on the issue of immunity is that the defendants failed to plead official immunity as a defense and cannot now raise the issue. However, there was evidence presented before the magistrate which went to the defendants’ good faith and to the issue of official immunity. Additionally, Trapnell’s objection to the magistrate’s report discussed the magistrate’s finding of immunity. We will therefore consider the issue of immunity as having been tried by the implied consent of the parties. F.R.Civ.P. 15(b);
Bradford Audio Corp. v. Pious,
Trapnell’s next claim is that the defendants lacked the good faith necessary for official immunity to be granted. The
*295
standard to determine whether a government official is entitled to a limited good-faith immunity is the same for both federal and state officials,
Butz v. Economou,
a school board member is not immune from liability for damages under § 1983 if he knew or reasonably should have known that the action he took within his sphere of official responsibility would violate the constitutional rights of the student affected, or if he took the action with malicious intention to cause a deprivation of constitutional rights or other injury to the student.
Id.
at 322,
This rationale was applied to prison officials in
Procunier v. Navarette,
Under the first part of the Wood v. Strickland rule, the immunity defense would be unavailing to petitioners if the constitutional right allegedly infringed by them was clearly established at the time of their challenged conduct, if they knew or should have known of that right, and if they knew or should have known that their conduct violated the constitutional norm.
Id.
at 562,
Trapnell contends that under
Aikens
v.
Jenkins,
The regulation reviewed in Aikens provided, inter alia, that:
Periodicals of a sexual nature or which contain sexually-oriented material which, when taken as a whole, appear to be designed primarily to arouse sexual drives, cultivate sensual perception to sell or gain reader interest, or otherwise tend to appeal to the effective [sic] prurient interest in sex, are not approved. Photographs or paintings of nudes in a publication do not, per se, preclude the publication from being permitted in the institution, if the photos or paintings are supportive or incidental to a theme not designed primarily to arouse sexual drives.
Aikens
does not demonstrate that Trapnell had a “clearly established” right to the photos involved in this case. The
Ai
*296
kens
court’s willingness to allow prison officials to prohibit non-obscene materials demonstrates that a regulation comparable to the earlier Marion guidelines could, under certain circumstances, be constitutionally acceptable.
See
Part II,
supra.
Although Marion’s earlier guidelines were inartfully drawn, Trapnell has not demonstrated that the rejection of the photographs violated any of his clearly established constitutional rights. Nor does the fact that the defendants acted pursuant to the regulations’ broad grant of discretion alter this conclusion. The unchallenged portion of the guidelines in
Aikens
endowed officials with discretion to decide whether materials appeared to have been “designed primarily to arouse sexual drives” or tended “to appeal to the effective [sic] prurient interest in sex.”
We are aware of, and repeat, the admonition set forth in
Little v. Walker,
For these reasons, the decision of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Of additional assistance in evaluating the validity of these guidelines is the Government’s explanation of what sort of “identifying mark *293 or publication label” is required. During oral arguments before this Court, counsel for the Government maintained that the current policy did not require a particular type of stamp or label. Instead, the regulations merely seek to have photographs “stamped to somehow differentiate . . . [between photographs of] the people that didn’t want [the photos] disseminated . [from] those that didn’t care.”
. Trapnell also relies on
Procunier v. Martinez,
. In an affidavit given by defendant Williford soon after the filing of this lawsuit (while the earlier guidelines were still in effect), Williford considered the guidelines to be limitations on the receipt of photos of nude and semi-nude friends and wives. Additionally, Trapnell testified before the magistrate that after the Gowland photographs were rejected, he complained to defendant Thompson and to a Lt. Shields. The reply from both officials was that they were unable to determine if the women depicted in the photos were personal friends of Trapnell and, accordingly, the photos were rejected. Transcript of Hearing at 13. Indeed, Trapnell’s complaint anticipated that the defendants would raise this narrowing interpretation of the regulations as a defense. Paragraph 14 of Trapnell’s complaint stated that the regulations under attack “do not prohibit specifically or by inference the mailing and receiving of semi-nude photographs from family and friends.”
