*419 OPINION
In this Civil Rights action, the plaintiffs having been granted the right to proceed in forma pauperis, the immediate matter before the Court is a Motion to Dismiss. Jurisdiction has been invoked pursuant to 28 U.S.C.A. §§ 1343 and 2201 and 42 U.S.C.A. §§ 1983 and 1985. The view of this Court, as more fully developed below, is that this action, though it poses most serious problems and underscores the need for deep thought about the penal system in Pennsylvania, and indeed in the United States, should be dismissed.
The test of whether or not dismissal of the Complaint is proper is whether it can be said that such claims as made in the Complaint are on their face so utterly without legal merit that the Complaint must be condemned as frivolous under 28 U.S.C. § 1915. Lawson v. Prasse,
This Court is well aware of the principle that a person does not lose all of his constitutional rights upon entering the gates of prison. Certainly the guarantees of the due process and equal protection clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment remain as rights to be afforded prisoners. Jackson v. Godwin,
“ * * * (w) e must also recognize that even those rights which survive penal confinement may be diluted by peculiar institutional requirements of discipline, safety, and security.
To determine, with precision, those rights which follow an inmate into prison involves a process of weighing and balancing conflicting interests. * * * The task of striking the proper balance between these conflicting interests is generally within the competence of the prison authorities.” (Emphasis added.) Gittlemacker v. Prasse, supra,428 F.2d 1 at 4.
Indeed, were the rule otherwise, it would mean that every complaint or difference which develops between a penal inmate and any person in authority in the institution would require a member of the federal judiciary to supervise the daily internal administration of state prisons on the pretext of a violation of the Civil Rights Statutes.
This potentiality is perplexing, not because the Court shrinks from a duty rightfully its own, but because the opportunity for continued vigilance and observation, and the human and monetary resources that would be required rest not with the judiciary but with the legisla
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tive and executive branches of state government. Moreover, the federal judiciary lacks the knowledge and expertise of men in such fields as penology, psychology, and psychiatry who through their training and experience are far better equipped to evaluate and remedy the underlying, and perhaps real, problem posed by this Complaint, that of reform of the penal system as a whole. Long v. Parker,
“It would be mere speculation for us to decree that the effect of equipping prisoners with more elaborate constitutional weapons against the adminis-tration of discipline by prison authorities would be more soothing to the prison atmosphere and rehabilitation of the prisoner or, on the other hand, more disquieting and destructive of remedial ends. This is a judgment entrusted to state officials, not federal judges.” Sostre v. McGinnis,442 F.2d 178 , 197, (2nd Cir. 1971).
It is against this backdrop that the problems posed by the Complaint must be analyzed. As a general proposition, I believe the overriding principle to be that a federal court must and should abstain from interjecting itself into the day-to-day operation of a state penal institution. Certainly prison officials have wide discretion in matters of prison operation and discipline. Neg-rich v. Hohn,
The Complaint asserts that the plaintiffs’ constitutional rights have been abridged because their mail has been censored. However, the right to censor incoming or outgoing mail is a concomitant to reasonably maintaining prison discipline. I believe that prison officials have this right and that it enables them to maintain necessary control over the operation of their prisons. United States ex rel. Oakes v. Taylor,
“ * * * this court cannot conclude that the transfer of an inmate from one wing to another * * * involved any federally protected rights. Discipline reasonably maintained in state prisons is not under the supervision of federal courts unless such actions are so severe as to require constitutional protections.” Hanvey v. Pinto, Superintendent,441 F.2d 1154 (3d Cir. 1971).
I believe the same principle applies to transfers from one prison to another, especially since there is no constitutionally vested right to serve one’s sentence in any given institution. Siegel v. Ragen,
The question presented to this Court by the shutting down of VIBRATIONS, a weekly newsletter staffed, edited, and produced through the co-operative efforts of “outsiders” and penal inmates, plaintiffs herein, is disconcerting. The newsletter, as set forth in the Complaint, offered a glimmer of hope that some rehabilitative and purposeful function could be performed within the confines of a state penal institution. But this Court can no more command state prison administrators to allow a reward than it can forbid punitive action where no consitutional infringement exists. Aside from the rewarding, rehabilitative, and worthwhile effects that VIBRATIONS is asserted to have had, taking away-the equipment, or access to such equipment, used in connection with the publication would not appear to have infringed any freedom of the press, even though a doubtful property right may have been invaded. But as noted above, taking away property does not give rise to a Civil Rights action.
Urbano, supra.
And see Eisen v. Eastman,
“The requirement that a state interpose no unreasonable barriers to the free exercise of an inmate’s religion can not be equated with the suggestion that the state has an affirmative duty to provide, furnish, or supply every inmate with a clergyman or religious services of his choice.”
Exercise of religion is no less fundamental than freedom of the press, and thus I do not believe that the state is under a duty to supply or provide every convict who chooses to engage in newspaper publication with a printing press or the space and equipment required therefor, any more than it must supply each inmate with a clergyman. Such a requirement is ludicrous and incredible to contemplate.
The right to curtail or foreclose publication of the newsletter seems to be a matter within the sound discretion of prison administrators. Especially is this so when one considers the vast amount of paper which accumulates before, during, and after publication of such a pe *422 riodical. The threat of fire is itself a sufficient ground for terminating the newsletter. But I do not base any determination on such a possibility. Rather, as indicated above, the determination to allow or disallow the prisoners to maintain a newsletter is solely within the sound discretion of prison officials charged with the duty to maintain discipline and order in the institution and should not be disturbed by a federal court.
There remain for disposition allegations asserting that the defendants have infringed plaintiffs’ constitutional rights by unlawfully engaging in physical and verbal harassment and intimidation and promulgating unduly restrictive prison regulations and practices limiting freedom of assembly. These allegations are conelusory in nature and are unsupported by any specific factual detail in the Complaint. No facts set forth any specific actions on the part of the named defendants which would substantiate either of these claims. Accordingly, dismissal is proper as to these allegations because the Complaint is insufficient and conelusory. Negrich v. Hohn,
supra,.
As in
Negrich,
the charges are made generally against all defendants, not against any particular defendant. But as pointed out in
Negrich,
all the defendants could not have engaged, for example, in physical or verbal harassment and intimidation. There is absolutely no assertion that any of the named defendants engaged in such activity; at best the facts assert that some prison guards were involved in taunts, threats, or rumors. No facts set forth the use of physical force by anyone. There are no facts substantiating the claim that regulations were unduly restrictive. Such a broad statement, without more, is insufficient to state a claim for relief under the Civil Rights Act. If these were allegations propounded by the plaintiffs themselves, perhaps more liberality could be afforded. The complainants here are not proceeding pro se and it cannot be said that they are “untutored in legal niceties.” Kelly v. Butler County Board of Commissioners,
In view of the foregoing, this Court takes the position that the Motion to Dismiss should and must be granted.
