AMENDED MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Plaintiff William Gerber, a state prisoner, brings this civil rights action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging that defendant Rodney Hickman, Acting Warden of Mule Creek State Prison, violated his constitutional right to procreate by refusing to allow him to artificially inseminate his wife. Plaintiff also contends that defendant’s refusal violated his rights under CaLPenal Code §§ 2600 and 2601. Defendant moves to dismiss, or in the alternative for summary judgment of, plaintiffs claims.
This matter was referred to a United States Magistrate Judge pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1)(B) and Local General Order No. 262. On March 7, 2000, the magistrate judge filed findings and recommendations which were served on all parties and which contained notice to all parties that any objections to the findings and recommendations were to be filed within ten days. Defendant has filed objections, and plaintiff has filed a response thereto.
*1216 In accordance with the provisions of 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1)(C) and Local Rule 72-304, this court has conducted a de novo review of this case. Having carefully reviewed the entire file, the court rejects the findings and recommendations of the magistrate judge, and grants defendant’s motion to dismiss.
STANDARD
A complaint will not be dismissed under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) “unless it appears beyond doubt that plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of his claim that would entitle him to relief.”
Yamaguchi v. U.S. Department of Air Force,
BACKGROUND
Plaintiff, a forty-one year old man, is an inmate at Mule Creek State Prison serving a sentence of 100 years to life plus eleven years. Plaintiffs wife, Evelyn Gerber, is forty-four years old. Plaintiff and his wife want to have a baby. The California Department of Corrections (“CDC”) prohibits family visits for inmates “sentenced to life without the possibility of parole [or] sentenced to life, without a parole date established by the Board of Prison Terms.” Cal.Code Regs. tit. 15 § 3174(e)(2). No parole date has been set for plaintiff, and according to plaintiff, due to the length of his sentence, no parole date seems likely. Accordingly, he wishes to artificially inseminate his wife. To accomplish this, plaintiff requests that (1) a laboratory be permitted to mail him a plastic collection container at the prison along with a prepaid return mailer, (2) he be permitted to ejaculate into the container, and (3) the filled container be returned to the laboratory in the prepaid mailer by overnight mail. Alternatively, plaintiff requests that his counsel be permitted to personally pick up the container for transfer to the laboratory or health care provider. Plaintiff represents that he and his wife will bear all of the costs associated therewith, including any costs incurred by the CDC. Defendant refuses to accommodate plaintiffs request.
ANALYSIS
Plaintiff contends that defendant violated his constitutional and statutory right to procreate by refusing to allow him to artificially inseminate his wife. The right to procreate is a fundamental right.
Planned Parenthood v. Casey,
A “prison inmate ‘retains those [constitutional] rights that are not inconsistent with his status as a prisoner or with the legitimate penological objectives of the corrections system.’ ”
Id.
at 95,
In
Anderson v. Vasquez,
plaintiff asserted a right to artificial insemination while in prison. The district court rejected plaintiffs assertion, holding that there is “no
*1217
constitutional right to have an inmate’s sperm preserved for artificial insemination [ ].”
Similarly, in
Goodwin,
the district court found that “regardless of the right petitioner has asserted, whether a right to privacy, a right to be free of cruel and unusual punishment, or a due process right, he does not have a fundamental constitutional right to father a child through artificial insemination.”
[A]ny privacy interest petitioner might allege in becoming a parent through artificial insemination is necessarily infringed upon by the nature of incarceration, and must be circumscribed.... Whatever privacy interest an inmate might have, nowhere does it appear that such interest imposes an affirmative duty on the government, whether it be to provide facilities for conjugal visits or the means to assist in artificial insemination.
Id. at 1455. 2
The court finds the reasoning of the district courts in Goodwin and
Anderson
*1218
compelling. Whatever right plaintiff has to artificial insemination, it does not survive incarceration. As the Second Circuit observed in
Hernandez,
“inmates possess the right to maintain their procreative abilities for later use once released from custody, even though this right is restricted.”
Plaintiff argues that due to the length of his sentence and his wife’s age, he will be unable to utilize his procreative abilities once released. Thus, according to plaintiff, defendant’s refusal to accommodate his request is tantamount to forced sterilization. As the
Goodwin
court recognized, “[t]he [Bureau of Prisons] neither is nor should be responsible for guaranteeing a procreative opportunity.”
Id.
(citing generally
Poe v. Gerstein,
In addition to the above, plaintiff argues that defendant’s refusal to accommodate his request violates his equal protection rights. First, plaintiff contends that the CDC routinely treats male and female defendants differently with respect to their procreative rights. Plaintiff argues that because the CDC does not require female inmates to have an abortion if they are or become pregnant during incarceration, female inmates, unlike male inmates, have both the right to procreate and the right to make decisions about the same. Plaintiffs argument fails for two reasons. First, with respect to the decision as to whether to terminate a pregnancy, male and female inmates are not similarly situated because male inmates cannot become pregnant. To the extent male and female inmates are similarly-situated (sentenced to life without the possibility of parole or sentenced to life without a parole date), neither are permitted conjugal visits nor a means to procreate in prison. Thus, they are treated the same. 3
Second, plaintiff argues that defendant’s refusal to accommodate his request violates his equal protection rights because it treats two classes of male offenders differently — those convicted before and those convicted after the “three strikes” law. According to plaintiff, an individual with an identical record but whose offense predated the “three strikes” law would have received only a five year enhancement, and thus, would have been afforded conjugal visits and/or would have been released in time to procreate outside of prison. Plaintiff is not similarly situated to those defendants whose crimes predate the “three-strikes” law.
See People v. Spears,
It is perfectly proper for the Legislature to create a new sentencing procedure which operates prospectively only. Despite the disparity created by rendering different sentences after an admittedly arbitrarily chosen date, prospective application of such a statute does not violate equal protection principles, because of the legitimate public purpose of assuring that penal laws will maintain their desired deterrent effect by carrying out the original prescribed punishment as written.
Id.
(internal quotations and citation omitted) (quoting
People v. Gilchrist,
*1219 Fixing the day the offense was committed as the watershed results in an entirely reasonable classification and does not deny equal protection to those whose offenses predate [the legislative change],
Spears,
For the reasons set forth above, the court holds that during incarceration a prisoner loses his or her right to access to a means of procreation, be it conjugal visits, artificial insemination, in vitro fertilization, etc. 4 Accordingly, plaintiffs claims brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 are dismissed.
Plaintiff also claims that defendant’s failure to accommodate his request to artificially inseminate violated his rights guaranteed by CaLPenal Code §§ 2600 and 2601. Section 2600 provides that “persons sentenced to imprisonment in state prison may during that period of confinement be deprived of such rights ... as is reasonably related to legitimate penological interests.” “Reviewing a claim under section 2600 requires a three-step inquiry: (1) Are any ‘rights’ implicated? (2) If they are, does a ‘reasonable security’ problem exist which might permit a deprivation of rights under the statute? (3) If so, to what extent are deprivations of those rights ‘necessary’ to satisfy reasonable security interests.”
In re Roark,
CONCLUSION
Defendant’s motion to dismiss is GRANTED. The clerk is hereby directed to close the file.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. On review, the Ninth Circuit found that this issue was not ripe because plaintiffs complaint failed to allege that a specific request for artificial insemination had been made. Accordingly, the Ninth Circuit reversed that portion of the district court’s decision dismissing plaintiff's claim with prejudice, and instructed the court to dismiss it without prejudice. See
Anderson v. Vasquez,
. On appeal, the Eighth Circuit held that it need not reach this issue, because "[e]ven assuming, without deciding, that the exercise of [the] right to procreate is not fundamentally inconsistent with [the petitioner’s] status as a prisoner, the restriction imposed [on that right] is reasonably related to achieving its legitimate penological interest.”
Goodwin v. Turner,
. A more troubling and colorable equal protection argument would arise if the court were to recognize a constitutional right to procreate while incarcerated. Female inmates would then arguably have a corollary right to be inseminated. The court hastens to speculate as to the institutional and societal chaos which would result.
. Because the court finds that there is no right to artificial insemination in prison, the court need not determine whether defendant's refusal to accommodate plaintiffs request is reasonably related to legitimate penological interests.
