Michael Jon Herlein, formerly an inmate at the Mount Pleasant Correctional Facility (MPCF), sued three MPCF officials, challenging on First Amendment grounds the prison’s ban on the possession of music cassettes bearing the warning “parental advisory—explicit lyrics.” The trial court denied an injunction but granted declaratory relief and awarded nominal damages to Mr. Herlein. The defendants appeal, and we reverse.
I.
Prison regulations survive a constitutional challenge if they are “reasonably related to legitimate penological interests.”
Turner v. Safley,
The MPCF officials assert that security in prisons is a legitimate government interest, and note specifically the threat to security that can arise from exposing the gang members and sex offenders detained at MPCF to music with explicit lyrics. Security, of course, is a valid penological objective.
See, e.g., O’Lone v. Estate of Shabazz,
Mr. Herlein further argues, however, that the overbreadth of the policy is demonstrated by the lack of evidence of security difficulties caused by the censored material prior to the ban, and notes the lack of trial evidence of any such difficulties. There is nothing in our cases, though, that requires actual proof that a legitimate interest will be furthered by the challenged policy. The connection between the two need be only objectively rational. In fact, the Supreme Court held in
Turner,
II.
The trial court found that Mr. Herlein had only “limited and random” means of obtaining the banned music over the radio. The Supreme Court has taken a broad view, however, of what can constitute alternative avenues for the exercise of a right, and has pointed out, for instance, that a ban on inmate-to-inmate correspondence “does not deprive prisoners of all means of expression” but bars communication only with a limited class of prisoners who give particular cause for concern.
Turner,
Mr. Herlein cites two possible alternative policies that he claims will entail at most only
de minimis
costs: Limiting an inmate to the possession of 20 tapes, whether or not they have a warning label, and individually reviewing all tapes to determine if they present a risk. The defendants contend that the first alternative not only does not accommodate their asserted penological objective but in fact undermines it. We agree. If the problem is exposure to explicit lyrics,.then allowing each inmate to have up to 20 tapes with such lyrics accomplishes very little. The defendants further contend that the second alternative would require significant resources, and thus involve more than
de minimis
cost. We agree again: Individual review would require a significant amount of staff time for listening to tapes and would still present a substantial risk that harmful material would escape review.
See Turner,
Finally, it is clear to us that the accommodation of Mr. Herlein’s asserted right might have a significant “ripple effect,”
see id.
at 90,
III.
In sum, we believe that the ban on the possession of tapes with labels that warn of explicit lyrics is reasonably related to the legitimate penological objective of maintaining prison security. There is a rational connection between the policy and the government interest, Mr. Herlein has significant alternative means of exercising his asserted right, there are no alternative policies to accommodate Mr. Herlein that
Furthermore, we believe that the Supreme Court’s holding in Turner requires the result that we reach. The alleged constitutional infirmity of the ban on tapes with warning labels is its overbreadth, but we believe that the scope of the ban on inmate-to-inmate correspondence that was upheld in Turner was far more pronounced than the one here. The letters between inmates might have concerned any number of harmless topics, while tapes with warning labels have at least been previously judged to have potentially disruptive content. The challenged policy therefore does not violate the First Amendment.
IV.
For the reasons stated, we reverse the judgment of the trial court.
