Tibеrius Mays, an Illinois inmate, appeals from the grant of summary judgment on his claims about prison food and clothing, and from the grant of judgment as a matter of law on his claims about retaliation, strip searches, and the censorship of pages from a magazine. We affirm the challenged rulings regarding food, clothing, and the magazine, but we vacate and remand the rulings on the strip search and retaliation claims.
Background
In 1998 and 1999, Mays was housed at Stateville Correctional Center. He and other prisoner-employees were strip searched daily going to and from their prison jobs. Mays testified at trial that the searches were performed in view of other prisoners, that they were sometimes accompanied by demeaning comments from guards, that they were sometimes done in a сold room, and that the guards did not change their latex gloves as they searched one inmate after another. He filed a grievance about the searches and was told that public searches were not allowed except in emergency situations. A memo from the prison’s chief of security was distributed to prison guards reminding them of this rule, but according to Mays, the searches continued to be performed publicly. At trial, Mays’s description of the public searches was corroborated by two fellow inmates but substantially contradicted by the prison guards who performed them. According to the guards, the searches were always performed out of view of other inmates and were necessary to ensure safety because prisoners had access to tools at their jobs that could be dangerous if successfully smuggled out of the work area.
Before one of the routine searches at Stateville, Mays showed one guard the memo from the prison’s chief of security reaffirming the prison’s rule against public searches. After leaving the area briefly, Mays returned and retrieved the memo before being directed to a different guard to be seаrched. Mays testified that he saw the guard to whom he showed the memo nod at the guard who was to search him. The searching guard began the search and said that he saw something in Mays’s anus. That guard called over the first guard and another guard to have them look as well, and those guards — one *646 of them smirking, according to Mays — also said that they saw something. As a result, Mays was subjected to a five-and-one-half hour ordeal in a strip cell. He was handcuffed behind his back and made to wear a too-short hospital gown while the guards waited for him to defecate. Guards had never found anything hidden on Mays’s person before and they ultimately found nothing hidden on him during this episode. At trial, the first guard said he did not recall Mays showing him the memo and the second guard said he did not recall a nod or anything else that preceded the search. Both guards testified that they did in fact see something in Mays’s anus.
Mays was transferred to Hill Correctional Center in 2000 and strip searched upon his arrival. Mays says that this search was also done in front of other inmates, though the guards who performed the search disagreed.
While at Hill, Mays raised two concerns about the food he was given. As a follower of the African Hebrew Isrаelites, Mays received a vegan diet, but the prison refused to provide him with certain dietary supplements he says his religion considers to be religious necessities: blackstrap molasses, sesame seeds, kelp, brewer’s yeast, parsley, fenugreek, wheat germ, and soybeans. In addition, Mays believed that the food he was given lacked adequate nutrition. He filed grievances about bоth issues and was told that the supplements could not be provided because each one either posed a security threat or was not part of the prison’s procurement program. In response to his other grievance, an administrator agreed that the vegan menu at Hill was deficient and promised to change it.
Mays also complained about the clothing Hill gave him. He stated that he was not issued winter underwear, boots, galoshes, a sweater, gloves, scarves, or wool socks and, as a result, he suffered from hurt ears, numb hands, and felt frostbite in his fingers and toes.
Finally, Mays complained about an instance of censorship in which prison officials at Hill removed pages from an issue of Vibe Magazine mailed to him. Prison officials testified that the prison’s publication review board was concerned about an article in the magazine that described a violent prison riot. The board sent the magazine to the review board in Springfield, which ordered the removal of the six-page article as well as three other pages containing pictures of people they believed were making gang signs.
The district court disposed of Mays’s diet and clоthing claims at summary judgment. First, the court ruled that Mays had failed to present evidence to rebut the valid penological purpose behind the denial of the dietary supplements. As for the claim of inadequate nutrition, the court found Mays’s evidence insufficient to show that he had been harmed or that the defendants disregarded his complaints. The court granted summary judgment on the clothing claim too, reasoning that the undisputed evidence showed Mays had been provided with sufficient clothes (a winter coat, boots, and a winter hat), that Mays was not claiming exposure to cold weather for extended periods of time, and that Mays could not show that the defendants were deliberately indifferent to his need for winter clothing.
Mays was allowed to proceed to trial on the rеmaining claims, but they never reached a jury because the district court granted judgment as a matter of law for the defendants on each one. The first claim that the district court resolved concerned the removal of pages from Mays’s magazine. The court interrupted Mays’s presentation of his case and directed the defendants to present witnesses on this *647 issue without the jury presеnt. The court gave Mays the opportunity to present his own evidence on this claim, but Mays submitted only his written grievance about the censorship. The court then asked the defendants’ lawyer, “Do you understand Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 50?” Counsel took the court’s cue and moved for judgment as a matter of law on Mays’s censorship claim. The court granted the motion because it cоncluded that the defendants had presented a legitimate penological reason for censoring the pages, had removed no more pages than necessary, and that Mays had failed to present any evidence to show that the censorship was an exaggerated response.
The trial continued on the remaining claims, but after Mays rested, the defendants made аnother motion for judgment as a matter of law. The court granted the motion on the claim about the searches at Stateville, reasoning that Mays had failed to present “any credible evidence that the searches were unrelated to prison needs and meant only to inflict psychological pain.” The court discounted the significance of the factual dispute ovеr the public nature of the searches, apparently reasoning that group searches are constitutional as a matter of law. The court did not mention the search at Hill in either its oral or written ruling. Finally, the court granted judgment as a matter of law to the defendants on the retaliation claim, ruling that Mays’s evidence consisted of only his own “unsupported conclusion that he felt hе was being retaliated against.”
Analysis
A. Dietary Supplements
First, Mays argues that the district court’s summary judgment ruling on the dietary supplements must be reversed because he presented enough evidence from which a jury could find the prison’s policy to be invalid. According to Mays, the prison failed to support its explanation that all of the supplements either posed security threats or were not part of the prison’s procurement program. He points to his own evidence showing that the supplements were available at other prisons, and thus urges that this claim should have gone to trial. He also argues that the district court erred by failing to explicitly consider all four factors outlined in
Turner v. Safley,
The district court рroperly granted summary judgment on Mays’s claim regarding the supplements. When a prison impedes an inmate’s religious exercise — the district court assumed that the denial of the supplements did — it must present a legitimate penological reason for doing so.
See Conyers v. Abitz,
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Mays’s argument that the district court did not properly apply
Turner
also fails.
Turner
describes four factors that are “relevant” to determining whether a prison regulation has a valid penological purpose. Turner;
B. Adequacy of Diet
Mays next argues that the district court should not have granted summary judgment on his claim about the adequacy of his diet because it misunderstood the supporting evidence. The court thought Mays had submitted no evidence of harm, but he points to medical records that show he had a low white blood cell count and to his own statements that he felt fatigue. Mays also criticizes the court’s failure to account for a prison official’s statement that his diet was “inadequate,” and he notes that the court repeatedly referred to that official by the wrong name.
We agree with Mays that the district court’s ruling on this issue is less than perfеct, but we affirm because Mays failed to show that prison officials were deliberately indifferent to a risk posed by his diet. Under the Eighth Amendment, a prisoner’s diet must provide adequate nutrition,
see Antonelli v. Sheahan,
Amendment unless the prisoner shows both an objectively serious risk of harm and that the officials knew about it and could have prevented it but did not.
See Townsend v. Fuchs,
C. Winter Clothing
Mays also contends that he produced enough evidence for a trial on his claim that Hill provided him with clothing inadequate to protect against cold wintеr weather. That evidence included his statements that because he was never issued certain clothing items, he suffered from hurt ears and numb hands, felt frostbite, and caught colds. But this evidence does not rise to the level of the objectively serious harm necessary to show an Eighth Amendment violation.
See Townsend,
D. Magazine Pages
Next, Mays argues that the district court should not have granted judgment as a matter of law on his censorship claim because a jury could have found that the prison’s reasons for censoring the pages were not reasonable. He notes that other sources — books and television shows — describing prison riots were available to him. He also contends that the district court showed a disposition against him when it interrupted his presentation of evidence, and that the court altered the burden of proof when it directed the defendants to рresent their evidence outside the presence of the jury.
Mays fails to show that the district court erred. Prisons have great latitude in limiting the reading material of prisoners, see
Thornburgh v. Abbott,
Nor do we see error in the manner in which the district court handled this claim. A district court has the power to “exercise reasonable control over the mode and order of interrogating witnesses and presenting evidence.” Fed. R. Evid. 611(a);
see also Johnson v. Doughty,
E. Strip Searches
Regarding the Stateville strip search claim, Mays argues that he presented enough evidence to reach the jury. That evidence was that Mays was subjected to daily strip searches in view of other inmates, that the searches were sometimes done in a cold room, that guards did not regularly change their latex gloves, that guards sometimes made demeaning comments as they searched the naked prisoners, and that the searches were done in knowing violation of the prison’s regulations.
Mays is correct that the district court should have let this claim go to the jury. The district court seemed to rely heavily on the valid penological reason justifying the searches, but still, the manner in which the searсhes were conducted must itself pass constitutional muster.
See Bell v. Wolfish,
*650
See Whitman v. Nesic,
Next, Mays argues that the district court failed to consider his claim regarding the strip search at Hill. He is correct. We remand this claim so that the court can consider it in the first instance.
F. Retaliation
Mays’s аrgument about his retaliation claim is again that he presented enough evidence to reach the jury. He argues that he presented substantially more than — as the district court put it — an “unsupported conclusion that he felt he was being retaliated against.” Mays testified that in retaliation for his complaint about routine searches, guards subjected him to a non-routine search that was very humiliating.
Mays’s retaliation claim raises another factual question that should have gone to the jury. To establish a prima facie case of retaliation, a prisoner must
show that a protected activity — appellees concede that his complaint about the searches qualifies — was “at least a motivating factor” in retaliatory action taken against him, i.e., аction that would likely deter protected activity in the future.
See Bridges v. Gilbert, 557
F.3d 541, 546 (7th Cir.2009). The burden then shifts to the defendants to show that they would have taken the action despite the bad motive.
See Hasan v. U.S. Dep’t of Labor,
G. Recruitment of Counsel
Finally, Mays challenges the district court’s repeated refusal to recruit counsel for him. When an indigent plaintiff seeks pro bono cоunsel, the district
*651
court must consider both the difficulty of the case and the plaintiffs competence to litigate it without counsel.
See Pruitt v. Mote,
H. Other Issues
Mays has challenged various other aspects of the district court’s rulings. We have considered his arguments and reject them without further comment.
Conclusion
Accordingly, we Affirm the district court’s summary judgment rulings, we Affirm the court’s grant of judgment as a matter of law on the censorship claim, and we Vacate the court’s grant of judgment as a matter of law on the strip search and retaliation claims. We Remand for proceedings consistent with this order.
