Plаintiffs Larry Kemp and Brian Woodring were Jewish inmates at prisons operated by the Indiana Department of Corrections (“DOC”).
I. Background
The factual background is mostly undisputed. Plaintiffs Kemp and Woodring were prisoners at Pendleton Correctional Facility (“Pendleton”) until April 2014, when they were transferred to Wabash Valley Correctional Facility (“Wabash Valley”) in order to maintain a kosher diet. Defendant Liebel is the DOC Director of Religious and Volunteer Services. In thаt role, he is responsible for establishing religious programming, managing religious services, setting guidelines for religious group meetings, and maintaining the DOC Handbook of Religious Belief and Practices.
The DOC maintains a general policy regarding religious services and study: recognized religious groups are permitted to participate in one hour of group worship and one hour of group study each week. The DOC mandates that group worship and study be supervised by chaplains, religious specialists, or qualified volunteers in order to maintain the “integrity and authenticity of beliefs and practice.” If an outside leader is unavailable, inmates are permitted. to lead group services only if certain conditions are met. First, an outside religious authority must explain to a DOC chaplain how the service is run and certify that the inmate-leader has requisite knowledge to lead the service. Second, the inmate-leader must be qualified by the DOC facility. Finally, a DOC chaplain must supervise the meeting.
While the DOC.employs chaplains at its ■facilities to lead Christian services, it does not employ leaders of other religions, including Judaism. Instead, the DOC contracts with Lubavitch of Indiana, an Orthodox Jewish group. Lubаvitch rabbis visit some DOC facilities—including Pen-dleton but not Wabash Valley—once a month to lead services and study and to certify inmate leaders. Thus, while at Pen-dleton, Kemp and Woodring attended group services and study each week. However, Wabash Valley could not offer any group services, including inmate-led services, because no volunteers were available.
Inmates at DOC facilities can also keep a kosher diet, both for religious and nonreligious rеasons. Until 2013, kosher meals were provided exclusively in pre-packaged form, and were about four times more
In late 2013, the DOC determined that all inmates who kept kosher would be housed at facilities with the new kitchens. Kosher inmates at Pendleton received a notice from Liebel informing them they would be transferred to accommodate their diet. They were given the option, however, of forgoing kosher food in order to remain at Pendleton. Some inmates took that option, while others, including Kemp and Woodring, accepted the transfer. Liebel provided Jack Hendrix, the DOC’s executive director of classification, with a list of inmates to be moved. Hendrix, and not Liebel, chose which kosher kitchen facility inmates would be transferred to; the decision was based on a variety of factors, including security, medical and mental health, programming, and other prisoner needs. Liebel did, however, have the ability to request that an inmate’s transfer be delayed, and he was aware Wabash Valley did not offer congregate Jewish services or study at the time of the proposed transfer.
Eventually, a rabbi certified the new kitchens as kosher, and in April 2014, the DOC transferred about twenty kosher inmates from Pendleton to facilities with kosher kitchens. Kemp and Woodring were moved to Wabash Valley. At least three inmates remained at Pendleton and continued to receive pre-packaged kosher meals. The transfer of these individuals was postponed because at that time, they lived in special housing for non-religious reasons. For example, they had restrictive housing status, required mental health treatment, or lived in special housing for disciplinary reasons. Eventually, these inmates were also moved, though at least one inmate resided at Pendleton and receive pre-pack-aged kosher meals until December 2014.
At the time of the transfer, the DOC was unable to recruit Jewish volunteers to Wabash Valley to lead worship or train inmate leaders; therefore, no Jewish services or group study were available. Liebel was aware that inmates, including Kemp and Woodring, made requests for worship and study. He made a concerted effort to locate Jewish volunteers to set up services and certify inmates. The DOC called Jewish synagogues in the area, and Liebel met personally with a rabbi. However, these efforts were unsuccessful until January
On October 22, 2014, after exhaústing all administrative remedies, Kemp and Woodring filed a complaint seeking declaratory relief, injunctive relief, and damages against the Commissioner of the DOC in his official capacity, the Chаplain of Wabash Valley in his official capacity, and Liebel, in both his official and individual capacity; They asserted claims pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for an alleged violation of the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment; and 42 U.S.C. § 2000cc, et seq., the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act. On October 20, 2015, plaintiffs moved for partial summary judgment on the issue of liability and conceded that their claims for declaratory and injunctive relief were moot because Wabash Valley started offering congregate Jewish services and study. On December 18, 2015, Liebel filed a cross-motion for summary judgment. One week later, plaintiffs dismissed their official capacity claims against the DOC Commissioner, the War bash Valley Chaplain, and Liebel. On January 20, 2017, the district court granted Liebel’s motion for summary judgment, holding that Liebel was entitled to quali-. fied immunity. This appeal followed/
II. Discussion
“We review de novo a' district court’s decision bn cross-motions for summary judgment, construing all facts and drаwing all reasonable inferences in favor of the party against whom the motion under consideration was filed.” Hess v. Bd. Of Trs. Of S. Ill. Univ.,
A. The Doctrine of Qualified Immunity
“The doctrine of qualified immunity protects government officials ‘from liability for civil damages insofar as their conduct dоes not violate.clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would-have known,’” Pearson v. Callahan,
A state official is protected by qualified immunity unless the plaintiff shows: “(1) that the official violated a statutory or constitutional right, and (2) that the right was ‘clearly established’ at the time of the challenged conduct.’’ Ashcroft v. al-Kidd,
B. The Relevant “Clearly Established Law” Inquiry
To defeat Liebel’s qualified immunity defense, the burden is on plaintiffs to demonstrate that the- alleged violation, of their Free Exercise Clause right was “clearly established.” See Green,
Plaintiffs need not point to an identical case finding the alleged violation unlawful, “but existing precedent must have placed the statutory or constitutional question beyond debate.” Mullenix v. Luna, — U.S. —,
Before we can determine if the law was clearly established, “the right allegedly violated must be defined at the appropriate level of specificity.” Wilson v. Layne,
The Supreme Court has expressly rejected over-general formulations of clearly established law in the Fourth Amendment context. In Graham v. Connor,
Here, plaintiffs ask us to define the relevant clearly established law as “the right of prisoners not to have their religious practices interfered with and prevented absent a legitimate penological basis.” This formulation is too broad. In fact, it simply restates the standard for analyzing prisoners’ constitutional claims created by the Court in Turner v. Safley,
C. Liebel Did Not Violate Clearly Established Law
Under this framework, it is clear that Liebel is protected by qualified immunity. Plaintiffs cite no case where we held that the Free Exercise Clause provides prisoners the right to group worship when outside volunteers were unavailable to lead or train inmates. Likewise, they cite no case where we held that a prison official violates the Free Exercise Clause by transferring inmates to a facility that does not рrovide congregate worship and study, or by failing to delay a transfer until the new facility provides congregate worship and study.
Indeed, our precedent suggests that prison officials “need not ... allow inmates to conduct their own religious services” so long as the delay in offering services by qualified leaders is reasonable. Johnson-Bey v. Lane,
Finally, this is not the “rare- case” where Liebel’s conduct was “so egregious and unreasonable” that the constitutional violation was “patently obvious” to any reasonable official. See Jacobs,
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we Affirm the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. Kemp was released from the DOC on June 15, 2016.
. The DOC Handbook of Religious Beliefs and Practices recognizes that group worship is an important facet of Judaism, especially on Shabbat, a weekly holy day observed from sunset Friday until simset Saturday.
. In their briefing, plaintiffs introduced a publicly available contract addendum between the DOC and Aramark. See Amendment #16, EDS #D 12-6-02 (2013), at 149, https:// fs.gmis.in.gov/IDOAcontracts/public/451-020. pdf. According to that document, Aramark agreed to prepare kosher meals for the DOC at the same cost as regular meals. Id. This document suggests that all kosher meals— whether pre-packaged or made in a kosher kitchen—cost the same. However, the addendum, with an effective date of December 1, 2013, was specificаlly agreed to in contemplation of opening the new kosher kitchens. It was based on the assumption that nearly all kosher meals would be made in the kosher kitchens at a lower cost.
. Wabash Valley did permit an inmate tolead a Passover gathering in April 2014. And in December 2014, a Messianic Jewish rabbi visited Wabash Valley, led a service, and qualified two inmates to lead Messianic Jewish services. Messianic Jewish services, however, . are not traditional services, аnd Messianic Judaism is generally considered to be a variant of Christianity, separate from Judaism.
. This determination depends on four factors:
(j) whether a valid, rational connection exists between tire regulation and a legitimate government interest behind the rule; (2) whether there are alternative means of exercising the right in question; (3) what impact accommodation of the asserted constitutional right would have on guards, other inmates, and on the allocation of prison resources; and (4) what easy alternatives exist to the regulation because, although the regulation need not satisfy a least restrictive alternative test, the existence of obvious alternatives may be evidence that the regulation is not reasonable.
Shimer v. Washington,
. Plaintiffs point to several cases where they contend we used a more general clearly established law inquiry. These cases are distinguishable. First, in Conyers v. Abitz, an inmate was denied late dinners during Ramadan, when Muslims cannot eat from dawn to dusk.
. Plaintiffs cite only to Thompson v. Holm,
. In Hadi, we applied the Turner factors and determined that each favored the defendant: (1) barring unsupervised services furthered legitimate interests in ensuring adequate prison security, avoiding inmate conflict, and preventing the formation or recognition of a leadership hierarchy; (2) рlaintiffs had alternative means of exercising the right, as the prison- employed a full-time Muslim chaplain and- prisoners could attend weekly study classes; (3) allowing unsupervised religious services would mandate unsupervised services for other religious groups, compounding the security concerns; and (4) no alternative outside a ban on unsupervised services would dispel the security concerns underlying the policy.
