In this civil rights action, Juan Valdez alleges that his constitutional rights were violated during his pretrial detention in the Alaska Cook Inlet Pretrial Facility (“CIPT”). Valdez was a federal detainee who was held in CIPT pursuant to an agreement between the state of Alaska and the U.S. Marshal Service. After he was convicted in federal court, Valdez filed this suit against Assistant U.S. Attorney Mark A. Rosenbaum (“Rosenbaum”) and various Alaska state officials and CIPT administrators (“state officials”), alleging that they had imposed unlawful restrictions on his telephone access during four- and-a-half months of his pretrial detention. Valdez invokes the Fust, Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. We hold that there was no deprivation of Valdez’s constitutional rights and, therefore, affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment in the defendants’ favor.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
Valdez was the leader of a drug smuggling conspiracy that brought large amounts of cocaine into Alaska. He was tried and convicted in federal court of various drug trafficking charges and sentenced to thirty years in prison. This court affirmed his conviction on May 7, 2001.
United States v. Marin,
This lawsuit arises from the conditions of Valdez’s pretrial detention in CIPT which began on or about September 23, 1998. While in detention, Valdez was initially placed in the jail’s general population where he shared access to four telephones. However, on October 20, 1998, Rosen-baum, the federal prosecutor on the case, sent a letter to the U.S. Marshal requesting that Valdez’s telephone access be suspended. The letter stated in pertinent part:
Tomorrow, it is anticipated that the present indictment will be superceded to add five new defendants, none of whom are presently in custody. In order to further insure the safety of law enforcement personnel who will be seeking to serve arrest warrants on the new code-fendants, we are requesting that Mr. [Valdez’s] telephone privileges be suspended until all have been apprehended. Since Mr. [Valdez] will know about the superceding indictments before the warrants can be served, I am sure you can readily see how telephone notice to these other individuals in advance could present a potentially dangerous situation to those seeking to execute the warrants.
In response to this request, the state officials placed Valdez in administrative segregation. While in administrative segregation, Valdez was not permitted to make or receive any telephone calls, save a daily telephone call with his attorney. In order to call his attorney, Valdez had to submit a written request. Notwithstanding these restrictions, Valdez was still permitted to confer with his attorney in per *1043 son at the jail and receive in-person visits by friends and family.
The day after the telephone restriction was imposed, two of Valdez’s five co-defendants were arrested. A third co-defendant was arrested approximately two months later in December, 1998. The other two remained fugitives during the relevant times of this case. Valdez’s telephone restriction continued for approximately four- and-a-half months until about a week after one of the captured co-conspirators, Susana Cruz, was released on bail on February 24, 1999. On March 1, 1999 Rosenbaum mailed a letter to the U.S. Marshal requesting that the telephone restriction be lifted. In the letter, Rosenbaum stated that: “although two co-defendants remain in a fugitive status, the fact that another has been released on bail renders the restriction of Mr. [Valdez’s] telephone privileges moot.” Valdez’s telephone privileges were restored on March 4, 1999.
After he was convicted, Valdez filed this
pro se
civil rights action against Rosen-baum and the state officials. His claims against the state officials were brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, and his claims against Rosenbaum were brought pursuant to
Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of Federal Bureau of Narcotics,
The district court, adopting the recommendations of the magistrate judge, determined there was no genuine issue of material fact in dispute and concluded that, although Valdez’s constitutional rights had been violated, the defendants were entitled to qualified immunity. The court entered judgment in favor of the defendants and Valdez filed this timely appeal. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We affirm on the ground that Valdez’s constitutional rights were not violated.
II. Standard of Review
We review de novo the district court’s grant of summary judgment.
Delta Sav. Bank v. United States,
III. Discussion
A. The Sequence of Analysis
Our discussion begins with the two-step sequence of analysis set forth by the Supreme Court in
Saucier v. Katz,
Valdez attempts to short-circuit this analysis by arguing that the only issue on appeal is whether the defendants are entitled to qualified immunity. He contends the defendants’ failure to cross-appeal precludes them from challenging the district court’s conclusion that they violated his constitutional rights. That is incorrect. As the prevailing parties, the defendants need not have filed cross-appeals in order to correct errors in the district court’s reasoning nor to preserve alternative grounds for affirming the judgment.
Lee v. Burlington N. Santa Fe Ry. Co.,
B. Procedural Due Process
Valdez contends that the telephone restriction violated his constitutional right to procedural due process because Alaska law creates a constitutionally-protected liberty interest in a prisoner’s access to a telephone. 2 We disagree.
A state law must satisfy two requirements in order to create a liberty interest protected by the Constitution. First, the law must set forth “ ‘substantive predicates’ to govern official decision making” and, second, it must contain “explicitly mandatory language,”
i.e.,
a specific directive to the decisionmaker that mandates a particular outcome if the substantive predicates have been met.
Kentucky Dep’t of Corrections v. Thompson,
*1045 The applicable Alaska statute provides:
A prisoner shall have reasonable access to a telephone except when access is suspended as punishment for conviction of a rule infraction or pending a hearing for a rule infraction involving telephone abuse. A suspension under this subsection must be reasonable in length and may not prohibit telephone communication between the prisoner and an attorney or between the prisoner and the office of the ombudsman.
Alaska Stat. § 33.30.231(a) (2000). This statute does not mandate a particular' outcome. It merely entitles a prisoner to “reasonable access” to a telephone, and provides prison officials with discretion to determine
what
is reasonable access under the circumstances. Accordingly, an inmate is not entitled “to form an objective expectation” of entitlement to telephone usage such that he could “reasonably expect to enforce [the statute] against the prison officials.”
Thompson,
Our construction of the statute is consistent with its accompanying administrative regulation, which is also couched in discretionary terms. The regulation provides that the prison superintendent “may limit a prisoner’s access to a telephone, except to call an attorney, if reasonable grounds exist to believe that the prisoner’s use of a telephone threatens ... the protection of the public.” ALASKA ADMIN. CODE tit.22, § 05.530 (2002). Here, the defendants exercised the discretion provided by this regulation and determined that reasonable grounds existed to restrict Valdez’s telephone access.
We conclude that Valdez did not have a state-created liberty interest in using a telephone during his pretrial confinement. Accordingly, his procedural due process claims fail.
C. Substantive Due Process
Valdez next asserts that the restriction on his use of a telephone amounted to the denial of substantive due process because it constituted punishment.
Pretrial detainees have a substantive due process right against restrictions that amount to punishment.
United States v. Salerno,
In distinguishing between a permissible restriction and impermissible punishment, we first examine whether the restriction is based upon an express intent to inflict punishment. Id. Here, there is no indication of such an express intent.
We next consider whether punitive intent can be inferred from the nature of the restriction. This determination 13160 will generally turn upon “ ‘whether an alternative purpose to which [the restriction] may rationally be connected is assignable for it, and whether [the resfrie
*1046
tion] appeal's excessive in relation to the alternative purpose assigned [to it].’ ”
Bell,
Applying this test, we first look to the governmental interest in restricting Valdez’s telephone access. The telephone restriction was imposed to prevent Valdez from tipping off his co-conspirators about the recently-issued indictments and, thereby, to ensure their capture with minimal danger to the arresting officers. The government has a legitimate interest in ensuring the safety of police officers when executing arrests and in preventing a detainee from helping his co-conspirators elude arrest.
See Jackson v. City of Bremerton,
We next consider whether the restriction was reasonably related to this interest, or whether, as Valdez argues, the restriction constituted an “exaggerated response.” A reasonable relationship between the governmental interest and the challenged restriction does not require an “exact fit,”
Mauro v. Arpaio,
The defendants have met this standard. Valdez was suspected of being the organizer of a large-scale drug-smuggling conspiracy that employed people throughout the country. His co-conspirators were still at large and had recently been indicted when the restriction was put in place. Restricting Valdez’s telephone access prevented him from calling his co-conspirators to warn them of their impending arrests. The telephone restriction was reasonably related to the government’s legitimate interest.
We are further persuaded that the defendants acted without punitive intent because the restriction was only in place for a short time and only for as long as it served its stated purpose.
See Salerno,
Valdez contends the initial 36 days of unrestricted telephone access is evidence of punitive intent in thereafter restricting his telephone usage. According to Valdez, *1047 this 36 days of unrestricted access shows that the subsequent restriction did not bear a reasonable relationship to the government’s purported objective because he had had plenty of time to contact his cohorts if he had wanted to do so. We are unpersuaded by this argument because it actually supports the defendants’ position — the fact that the restriction was not imposed until Valdez’s co-conspirators were about to be indicted shows an absence of punitive intent.
Valdez also points out that the defendants did not impose similar telephone restrictions on his three co-conspirators when they were arrested. He argues that if the justification for his restriction was to prevent other members of the conspiracy from learning of pending arrests, then restricting only him from using the telephone, except to talk with his attorney, was an unreasonable method of accomplishing this goal. Valdez, however, was the suspected leader of the drug-smuggling conspiracy. As such, it was reasonable to assume that he was more likely than the others to warn his cohorts of their impending arrests.
Valdez further contends we should infer that Rosenbaum acted with punitive intent because of the manner in which he authorized the restoration of Valdez’s telephone access. After co-conspirator Cruz was released on bail on February 24, 1999, Rosenbaum mailed a letter to the U.S. Marshal requesting that Vasquez’s telephone restriction be rescinded. The letter was dated March 1, and Valdez’s telephone access was restored on March 4. According to Valdez, Rosenbaum acted with punitive intent because he rescinded the restriction via U.S. mail, the “slowest method possible,” rather than sending a fax or telephoning the Marshal. We disagree. Failure to use the fastest, or even a faster, means of communication provides no evidence of punitive intent when the method used was not unusual — here, the U.S. mail.
Finally, Valdez relies upon
Hallstrom v. City of Garden City,
We conclude that the restriction on Valdez’s telephone access did not constitute punishment. There was no substantive due process violation.
D. Freedom of Speech
Valdez next contends that the restriction on his telephone usage violated his right to freedom of speech under the First Amendment. We have previously “stated in dicta that ‘prisoners have a First Amendment right to telephone access, subject to reasonable security limitations.’ ”
Halvorsen v. Baird,
While it is clear that the First Amendment right of free speech applies within prison walls,
see, e.g., Thornburgh,
The Eleventh Circuit followed this approach in a case involving prisoners’ access to telephones. In
Pope v. Hightower,
We find Pope’s reasoning persuasive. We “sensibly and expansively” define the First Amendment right at issue in this case as the right to communicate with persons outside prison walls. Use of a telephone provides a means of exercising this right.
Having defined the constitutional right at issue, we next consider whether the restriction on Valdez’s telephone usage violated this right. A prison regulation that impinges on an inmate’s constitutional right “is valid if it is reasonably related to legitimate penological interests.”
Turner,
We address these factors in turn. First, we have already determined in connection with Valdez’s substantive due process claim that the telephone restriction was rationally related to a legitimate governmental interest. Second, Valdez had alternative means of exercising his right to communicate with persons outside the prison walls. He could receive visitors at the jail and could send and receive mail. He could also communicate daily with his attorney by telephone and in person. Third, allowing Valdez telephone access would have required the defendants to allocate additional resources to monitor his telephone conversations to ensure that he did not try to tip off his cohorts. Finally, there were no obvious, easy alternatives to the telephone restriction which would indicate that the restriction was an exaggerated response. We conclude the telephone restriction did not violate the First Amendment.
E. Additional Claims
In the district court, Valdez asserted a violation of the Equal Protection Clause. He has not raised that claim on appeal and has, therefore, waived it.
See Paciulan v. George,
Valdez also raises a Sixth Amendment claim, asserting that the requirement that he obtain permission to telephone his attorney made it practically impossible to have a telephone conversation with his attorney. We do not reach the merits of this claim because it is not cognizable under
Heck v. Humphrey,
IV. Conclusion
Valdez’s constitutional rights were not violated; thus, we need not address whether the defendants were entitled to qualified immunity. The district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the defendants is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. During his criminal proceedings, Valdez was known as Indalecio Marin, one of his many aliases.
. We reject the defendants' assertion that Valdez waived this issue by failing to raise it in the district court. In fact, Valdez raised the issue and cited the relevant Alaska statute at virtually every stage in this litigation. While Valdez did not frame the issue precisely as he has done in this appeal, we liberally construe pleadings in civil rights cases.
Buckey v. County of Los Angeles,
We also consider Valdez's due process claims as being asserted against the state defendants under the Fourteenth Amendment and against the federal defendant, Rosen-baum, under the Fifth Amendment.
. The Supreme Court criticized and curtailed this methodology in
Sandin v. Conner,
