90 A.L.R.Fed. 631,
MONMOUTH COUNTY CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTIONAL INMATES, Kevin
Michael Fitzgerald, Joseph Ricciardi, Raymond Ciccone,
Michael A. Michael, Darrell Kelly, Edmund J. Spies, Jr.,
John Paul Clayton, John Joseph Wilburn, Louis D. Hughes,
Kenneth A. Van Note, Lawrence (Tony) Hester, Albert
Mаddocks, Tom Forsythe, Tom Visicaro, Robert Thacker, Robert
Thomas, and Leslie Greene, on behalf of themselves and all
others persons similarly situated
v.
William LANZARO, Monmouth County Sheriff; Nelson Stiles,
Warden, Monmouth County Correctional Inst.; Jacob Lewis,
Physician, Monmouth County Correctional Inst.; Harry
Larrison, Jr., Director, Monmouth County Board of Chosen
Freeholders; Clement V. Sommers, Frank A. Self, Thomas G.
Powers, and Ray Kramer, Members, Monmouth County Board of
Chosen Freeholders, and their successors in office, all in
their official capacities, and individually, and William H.
Fauver, Commissioner, New Jersey State Department of
Corrections, and his successor in office, in his official
capacity, and individually, Appellants.
No. 86-5527.
United States Court of Appeals,
Third Circuit.
Argued March 19, 1987.
Decided Nov. 25, 1987.
Malcolm V. Carton (argued), Carton and Faccone, Avon, N.J., for appellants.
Catherine A. Hanssens (argued), Audrey Bomse, Dept. of the Public Advocate, Office of Inmate Advocacy, Trenton, N.J., for appellees.
Charles H. Jones, Jr., Rutgers Law School Prison Law Clinic, Newark, N.J., for amicus New Jersey Ass'n on Correction.
Janet Benshoof, Reproductive Freedom Project, American Civil Liberties Union, New York City, for amici The American Civil Liberties Union and The American Public Health Ass'n.
Before HIGGINBOTHAM, MANSMANN and ROSENN, Circuit Judges.
A. LEON HIGGINBOTHAM, Jr., Circuit Judge.
OPINION OF THE COURT
This appeal arises from the order of the district court preliminarily enjoining appellants Monmouth County ("the County") from requiring women prisoners to secure court-ordered releases and their own financing in order to obtain an abortion while in the County's custody. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1292(a)(1) (1982). For the reasons set forth below, we will affirm in part and modify in part the judgment and order of the district court.
I.
Facts and Procedural History
The genesis of this appeal is a class action instituted by inmates of Monmouth County Correctional Institution ("MCCI" or "the Institution") against MCCI administrators and various county and state officials1 challenging overcrowding and other conditions and practices at the Institution, including the adequacy of health care services. On October 10, 1984, the district court issued its opinion and order granting constitutionally-mandated relief from the overcrowding and other conditions of confinement challenged by the inmates.2 Monmouth County Correctional Inst. Inmates v. Lanzaro,
On February 19, 1986, Jane Doe was incarcerated at MCCI. Seven days later, a pregnancy test was administered to Doe and returned positive. On or about March 3, 1986, Doe informed MCCI medical staff that she desired to terminate her pregnancy. Doe was advised by MCCI authorities, however, that, pursuant to the Institution's policy of providing abortions only where a medical emergency presents a life-threatening situation to the mother,4 the Institution would neither provide Doe with access to nor fund an abortion in the absence of a court order. See Appendix of Appellants ("App.") at A18, p 5; A20, p 3. Consequently, on or about April 4, 1986, MCCI inmates again applied for temporary and preliminary injunctive relief. Specifically, the inmates requested that the County be ordered to provide Doe, then approximately nine weeks pregnant, and other members of the class with certain medical care and services to facilitate their decisions to terminate their pregnancies.
The inmates' application for temporary restraints was accompanied by affidavits of two physicians supporting Doe's decision to terminate her pregnancy. Dr. John Josimovich concluded that "abortion [wa]s especially appropriate ... because Jane Doe [was] ... a chronic drug abuser." SA at 7. Dr. Susan Neshin maintained that Jane Doe was not emotionally equipped to carry a child to term, see SA at 10, and thus concluded "that the only medically sound and humane alternative [wa]s to grant Ms. Doe the therapeutic abortion she desires." SA at 11.
Pending resolution of the inmates' application for injunctive relief, Jane Doe was released to secure an abortion. Doe's release did not occur, however,--due to MCCI officials' insistence that she first obtain a court order--until more than a month after her initial request to terminate her pregnancy. Following Doe's release, the district court denied the inmates' application for a temporary restraining order and set a date for the preliminary injunctive hearing. Prior to that hearing, a second inmate, Mary Smith,5 requested and was denied access to and funding for an abortion by MCCI officials.
On April 8, 1986, the district court ordered the County to show cause why a preliminary injunction should not issue enjoining the County from refusing to provide necessary medical care to all pregnant inmates at MCCI, including (1) access to counseling, which would include discussion of the woman's option to terminate or continue her pregnancy; (2) access to medical facilities for the purpose of obtaining аn abortion; and (3) funding for abortions on the same basis as is provided for any other medically necessary procedure. MCCI inmates argued that the Institution's policy of requiring pregnant inmates who want an abortion to apply for court-ordered release constituted an unconstitutional infringement of their right to privacy under Roe v. Wade,
After the hearing, the district court on May 29, 1986, granted the inmates' application on the ground that the prerequisites for preliminary injunctive relief had been met. Monmouth County Correctional Inst. Inmates v. Lanzaro,
With respect to the challenge to the court-ordered release requirement, the district court held that the inmates had demonstrated a likelihood of success on the merits under both federal and state law. The district court observed that "regulations limiting [fundamental] rights may be justified only by a 'compelling state interest' " under federal law, MCCI Inmates II,
Next, focusing on the inmates' claim that the County's refusal to appropriate funds for non-life-threatening inmate abortions was unconstitutional, the district court held that, while valid under the fourteenth amendment to the federal Constitution, the County's policy was invalid under the New Jersey Constitution. MCCI Inmates II,
Finally, the district court concluded that the inmates had demonstrated a likelihood of success on their contention that the County's refusal to provide funding for all abortions, including those considered elective or nontherapeutic, was a breach of the County's affirmative duty to attend to the medical needs of prisoners in its custody, in contravention of the eighth amendment to the federal Constitution. MCCI Inmates II,
In considering the remaining preconditions to an award of injunctive relief, the district court found that the inmates had demonstrated that, absent the relief sought, they would suffer irreparable harm because the County's court-ordered release requirement "unquestionably imposes substantial delays on the procedure and may, in some instances, thus cause substantial injury to plaintiffs," MCCI Inmates II,
1. County defendants shall cease the practice of requiring pregnant inmates who seek to terminate pregnancy to obtain a court-ordered release in order to arrange personally for an abortion.
2. County defendants shall, upon receipt of the laboratory results of the pregnancy test administered to women admitted to MCCI, communicate the results to the woman and inform her, if she is pregnant, of her right either to continue the pregnancy or to have an abortion, with costs for all related medical care to be at the county's expense.
3. County defendants shall provide professional counseling services, including medical and social counseling, to aid the pregnant inmate in making her decision to terminate or to carry the fetus to term.
4. County defendants, through the MCCI medical department staff, shall complete all necessary arrangements at an appropriate medical facility for those inmates seeking an abortion, as soon as practicable following the inmate's decision to terminate the pregnancy.
5. County defendants shall assume the full cost of all inmate abortions.
6. County defendants, through their medical staff, shall provide all inmates who have a positive pregnancy test with a copy of this order as well as a copy of the March 8, 1985 consent judgment governing provision of prenatal care, in addition to verbally informing them of their rights related to their pregnancies.
Id. at 1229.
II.
Analyzing Prison Regulations
Following oral argument to this Court, the Supreme Court rendered two decisions directly relevant to this appeal. First, in Turner v. Safley, --- U.S. ----,
The Turner Court defined its task as "formulat[ing] a standard of review for prisoners' constitutional claims that is responsive both to the 'policy of judicial restraint regarding prisoner complaints and [to] the need to protect constitutional rights.' "
Relying on Turner 's reasonableness test, the Supreme Court reversed this Court's decision in Shabazz v. O'Lone,
This appeal arises from the district court's order granting preliminary injunctive relief to MCCI inmates. "[O]ur review of the grant or denial of preliminary injunctions is limited to determining whether there has been an abuse of discretion, an error of law, or a clear mistake in the consideration of the proof." Moteles v. University of Pa.,
III.
Accommodation of the Fundamental Rights of Inmates
We begin our analysis, as we must, with the basic proposition that "[p]rison walls do not form a barrier separating prison inmates from the protections of the Constitution." Turner,
To ensure that correctional facilities function appropriately, however, some limitation on very significant rights is justified in the prison context "both from the fact of incarceration and from valid penological objectives--including deterrence of crime, rehabilitation of prisoners, and institutional security." Estate of Shabazz,
MCCI inmates allege that the Institution's policies constitute an unconstitutional infringement upon their right to elect to terminate their pregnancies.11 In Roe v. Wade, the Supreme Court held that "[the] right of privacy ... is broad enough to encompass a woman's decision whether or not to terminate her pregnancy."
[f]ew decisions are more personal and intimate, more properly private, or more basic to individual dignity and autonomy, than a woman's decision--with the guidance of her physician and within the limits specified in Roe --whether to end her pregnancy. A woman's right to make that choice freely is fundamental.
Thornburgh v. American College of Obstetricians,
At the outset, it is necessary to articulate our understanding of the County's policy as reflected by the record, the district court's opinion, the County's brief and the arguments of the parties before this Court. Prior to the district court's challenged order, the County's policy with respect to certain inmate-requested abortions was to require court-ordered release on the inmate's own recognizance. Under the County's current view, there are essentially two categories of medical services relevant to this appeal. First, there are those procedures that may be classified as "medically necessary," which the County concedes its obligation to provide. All inmates--regardless of their security classification--who are in need of "medically necessary" services arе escorted by prison guard(s) to an appropriate medical facility for the required treatment. No court order is required for inmates to obtain "medically necessary" services. Second, there are those procedures that may be classified as "purely elective medical procedures," which the County maintains it has no obligation to insure or to provide.
With respect to inmate-requested abortions, the County asserts that "[i]t is and has been the policy in Monmouth County that if abortions are determined to be necessary, the jail physician will order that they be performed." Letter from Malcolm V. Carton, Esq. to The Hon. Harold A. Ackerman 2 (May 19, 1986), reprinted in App. at A29. Abortions not so characterized, however, are considered by the County as "purely elective and non-therapeutic," and hence beyond its obligation to provide. All inmates--again, regardless of their security status--requesting such abortions are required to submit to the court-ordered release procedure.12 There is no indication in the record, however, that other forms of "purely elective" surgery are subject to the court-order requirement; rather, it appears to be an option created solely to address inmate requests for elective, nontherapeutic abortions.13 In sum, then, under the County's policy, MCCI inmates' exercise of their constitutional right to elect to have an abortion is conditioned on (1) having the desired treatment characterized as medically necessary by the jail physician, or (2) obtaining a court order to be released on their own recognizance for the purpose of securing an abortion. Our task is to determine whether the district court properly concluded that these conditions impermissibly burden the inmates' exercise of their constitutional right to choose to terminate their pregnancies.14
Beginning with the proposition established in Roe, that a woman has a fundamental right to choose to terminate her pregnancy, the district court proceeded to determine whether the County had articulated a "compelling state interest" sufficient to justify limitation of that right in the prison context. MCCI Inmates II,
As noted above and following oral argument to this Court, the Supreme Court reversed our decision in Shabazz. Estate of Shabazz,
A. Legitimate Penological Interests
The sole governmental interest asserted by the County as justification for its policy is that unspecified,15 yet insurmountable, administrative and financial burdens will result if the County is required to provide access to and funding for elective, nontherapeutic abortions.16 We agree with the district court that, at the threshold, the County's articulated objection to the costs of providing MCCI inmates with abortion-related services independently fails to state a legitimate governmental interest sufficient to justify the County's policy.17 Without regard to the economic status of individual prisoners, where conditions within a prison facility are challenged as constitutionally inadequate, courts have been reluctant to consider costs tо the institution a major factor in determining whether a constitutional violation exist. See, e.g., Hamm v. DeKalb County,
"This is not to say that economic factors may not be considered ... in choosing the methods used to provide meaningful access [to constitutionally-mandated services]. But the cost of protecting a constitutional right cannot justify its total denial." Bounds v. Smith,
On the facts of this appeal, the County's policy of denying access to and funding for elective abortions cannot be justified by its asserted administrative and economic considerations. The County's court order requirement effectively deprives maximum security inmates who seek elective, nontherapeutic abortions of any opportunity to exercise their option of choosing to abort their pregnancies. This total deprivation occurs without regard to the economic status of the particular inmate desiring an elective abortion. Moreover, due to the inherent delays in the court-order procedure, which we discuss in greater detail in the "reasonableness" analysis that follows, the probability that low security risk offenders will also be effectively denied a reasonable opportunity safely to terminate their pregnancies far outweighs the County's asserted economic and administrative justifications for its policy.
B. The Turner Reasonableness Test
Even assuming, as did the district court, that the County's policy is supported by legitimate concerns for "internal security and the public safety," MCCI Inmates II,
1.
"First, there must be a 'valid, rational connection' between the prison regulation and the legitimate governmental interest put forward to justify it.... Moreover, the governmental objective must be a legitimate and neutral one." Turner,
We find that the County's policy is simply inexplicable in terms of legitimate security concerns. Minimum and maximum security inmates who need "medically necessary" services are not required to obtain court-ordered release in order to receivе treatment. By contrast, where the medical procedure is an abortion deemed to be "elective," all inmates, regardless of their security status, must apply for a court order releasing them to obtain the desired services. The court order requirement thus centers around the nature of the treatment; it in no way relates to the gravity of any perceived security risks. As the district court found, "[a]ll other things being equal, inmates who wish to have an abortion pose no greater security risk than any other inmate who requires outside medical attention." MCCI Inmates II,
2.
"A second factor relevant in determining the reasonableness of a prison restriction ... is whether there are alternative means of exercising the right that remain open to prison inmates." Turner,
Similarly, inmates imprisoned for less serious offenses are exposed to an unconstitutional risk of delay under the County's court-ordered release requirement and have no viable alternative available for the free and safe exercise of their choice to terminate their pregnancies. "[T]ime is likely to be of the essence in an abortion decision." H.L. v. Matheson,
it is uncontested that delays of a week or more do indeed increase the risk of abortion to a statistically significant degree.... Furthermore, a delay of even twenty-four hours may push a woman into the second trimester, thus requiring that the operation be performed in a hospital, and significantly increasing the procedure's cost, inconvenience, and, of course risk.
3.
A third consideration under Turner is "the impact accommodation of the asserted constitutional right will have on guards and other inmates, and on the allocation of prison resources generally."
Examining the Supreme Court's decisions in Maher v. Roe,
Whatever the government's constitutional obligations to the free world, those obligations often differ radically in the prison context. Cf. Southerland v. Thigpen,
Because of the very fact of incarceration, the Supreme Court has recognized that " '[i]t is but just that the public be required to care for the prisoner, who cannot by reason of the deprivation of liberty, care for himself [or herself].' " Estelle v. Gamble,
First, providing an inmate who elects to have a nontherapeutic abortion with both transportation to an appropriate medical facility and the necessary funding for the procedure will not burden "the use of the prison's limited resources." Turner,
Second, in Estate of Shabazz, the Supreme Court noted that "perceive[d] favoritism" may result where special arrangements are made to accommodate one group.
We simply perceive no "significant 'ripple effect' on fellow inmates or on prison staff," Turner,
Having said this much, we caution that our rejection of the district court's conclusion that the County is under no obligation to appropriate funds for elective abortions does not impose on the County an affirmative obligation to do so. Prison officials have broad discretion in fashioning appropriate responses to legitimate penological objectives consistent with the constitutional rights of its inmates. Where accommodation of constitutional rights is required, prison officials "bear the burden of demonstrating the adequacy of the means they choose." Campbell,
4.
The final aspect of the Turner reasonableness test advises that "the absence of ready alternatives is evidence of the reasonableness of a prison regulation. By the same token, the existence of obvious, easy alternatives may be evidence that the regulation is not reasonable, but is an 'exaggerated response' to prison concerns."
IV.
Eighth Amendment Obligation to Provide Adequate Medical Care
MCCI inmates also argue that, independent of the County's obligation to accommodate the retained fundamental rights of its prisoners, MCCI has an affirmative duty to attend to the serious medical needs of the wards in its сustody and that denial of elective abortions to its inmates constitutes a breach of that duty in contravention of the eighth amendment. Conversely, the County suggests that, even absent a court order requirement or any other regulation that allegedly burdens the inmate's right to choose freely to terminate her pregnancy, it bears no financial responsibility for provision of treatment that is not medically necessary.28 See Brief of Appellants at 8. By definition, then, the County claims that providing elective, nontherapeutic abortions is beyond the scope of its duty. The County likens its responsibility to an inmate who requests such an abortion to its responsibility to "an inmate who desires a facelift or the removal of varicose veins for purely cosmetic reasons...."29 Id. at 13.
Relying on Derrickson v. Keve,
Similarly, as to low security risk offenders, the district court found that these inmates, although eligible for release under the court order procedure, are totally dependent on prison authorities for the provision of needed medical care. By virtue of their incarceration, they are deprived of "outside resources, such as gainful employment and Medicaid coverage," to cover the costs of elective abortions even in the event of their release. MCCI Inmates II,
[p]ermitting pregnant inmates to exercise their right to choose [to terminate their pregnancies] and then to carry through with that decision is in no way inconsistent with their status as prisoners or with the goals of the correctional system. Additionally, the prisons should be and are constitutionally required to provide for [i.e., at the institution's expense,] all the serious medical needs of the inmates, whose imposed financial dependency is ... a result of their incarceration.
Id.
On appeal, the County challenges the district court's characterization of an elective, nontherapeutic abortion as a "serious medical need" and its conclusion that the eighth amendment, in conjunction with the fourteenth amendment, requires that the County assume the full costs of inmate-requested elective abortions. Because we believe that the district court properly concluded that MCCI inmates demonstrated a likelihood of success on their eighth amendment claim that denial of abortion-related services constitutes deliberate indifference to a serious medical need, we will affirm its judgment requiring the County to provide abortion services to all inmates requesting such service. Because we find, however, that substantial questions remain as to the proper allocation of the costs for the provision of such services, we will modify paragraph 5 of the district court's order requiring that the County assume the full cost of all inmate abortions, see MCCI Inmates II,
In Estelle v. Gamble,
Courts, determining what constitutes deliberate indifference, have consistently held that mere allegations of malpractice do not raise issues of constitutional import. See e.g., Estelle,
Where prison authorities deny reasonable requests for medical treatment, however, and such denial exposes the inmate "to undue suffering or the threat of tangible residual injury," Westlake v. Lucas,
A medical need is "serious," in satisfaction of the second prong of the Estelle test, if it is "one that has been diagnosed by a physician as requiring treatment or one that is so obvious that a lay person would easily recognize the necessity for a doctor's attention." Pace v. Fauver,
1.
In the instant appeal, we find that the MCCI inmates have met their burden of demonstrating a probability of ultimate success under Estelle. First, the deliberate indifference of MCCI officials toward the medical needs of inmates exercising their constitutionally protected right to choose abortion is evidenced by the burdensome court-ordered release procedure erected as a precondition to the exercise of that choice. Notwithstanding their period of gestation, pregnant inmates desiring elective abortions must submit to this process, which is burdened with delays. See supra Part III. The failure of MCCI officials even to attempt to minimize the delay in access to abortion services constitutes deliberate indifference to the medical needs of inmates electing to terminate their pregnancies. Indeed, by specifically categorizing elective abortions as beyond its duty to provide, the County denies to a class of inmates the type of individualized treatment normally associated with the provision of adequate medical care.322.
Of course, the deliberate indifference of prison officials under Estelle violates the eighth amendment only if it is directed toward a "serious medical need." The County, in effect, maintains that elective, nontherapeutic abortions do not fall within this category because denial of such care does not "deprive[ the inmate] of medical care [that] would relieve pain being suffered as a consequence of an abnormal medical condition." Brief of Appellants at 13. Similarly, Judge Mansmann suggests that denials of elective, nontherapeutic abortions does not "equate[ ] to painful disease or injury per se." Concurring op. at 354. The County and the concurrence misperceive both the nature of the underlying need and the anticipated harm required to meet the Estelle standard.
Pregnancy is unique. There is no other medical condition known to this Court that involves at the threshold an election of options that thereafter determines the nature of the necessary medical care. In other words, the condition of pregnancy, unlike cancer, a broken arm or a dental cavity, will require very separate and distinct medical treatment depending upon the option--childbirth or abortion--that the woman elects to pursue.33 The County's suggestion that, to come within the purview of Estelle, an inmate must suffer from "an abnormal medical condition,"34 is simply wrong. That pregnancy itself is not an "abnormal medical condition" requiring remedial, medical attention does not place it beyond the reach of Estelle. Nor does the fact that pregnancy presents a woman with the alternatives of childbirth or abortion affect the legal characterization of the nature of the medical treatment necessary to pursue either alternative.
Here, the relevant medical care is that necessary to effectuate the inmates' choices to terminate their pregnancies. We find that the MCCI inmates have firmly demonstrated the seriousness of the needed medical care. In Estelle, the Court recognized that an inmate need not suffer "physical 'torture or a lingering death,' "
The choice to terminate one's pregnancy is constitutionally protected. Roe,
The detriment that the State would impose upon the pregnant woman by denying her this choice altogether is apparent. Specific and direct harm medically diagnosable even in early pregnancy may be involved. Maternity, or additional offspring, may force upon the woman a distressful life and future. Psychological harm may be imminent. Mental and physical health may be taxed by child care. There is also the distress, for all concerned, associated with an unwanted child, and there is the problem of bringing a child into a family already unstable, psychologically and otherwise, to care for it. In other cases, ... the additional difficulties and continuing stigma of unwed motherhood may be involved.
Roe,
In sum, it is evident that a woman exercising her fundamental right to choose to terminate her pregnancy requires medical care to effectuate that choice. Denial of the required care will likely result in tangible harm to the inmate who wishes to terminate her pregnancy. Characterization of the treatment necessary for the safe termination of an inmate's pregnancy as "elective" is of little or no consequence in the context of the Estelle "serious medical needs" formulation. An elective, nontherapeutic abortion may nonetheless constitute a "serious medical need" where denial or undue delay in provision of the procedure will render the inmate's condition "irreparable." Recognition of elective nontherapeutic abortions as "serious medical needs" under Estelle in no way negates or obscures the ethical, moral and spiritual questions raised and considered by Roe and its progeny in recognizing and reaffirming the woman's constitutionally protected right to choose abortion. Unlike the concurrence, see Concurring op. at 354-55, we are unwilling to conclude as jurists that the unexplained denial of that right, or any other constitutionally protected right, is "[un]likely to offend societal standards of decency." Id. at 355. Moreover, notwithstanding the constitutional status of the right to choose abortion, we independently conclude that the inmates have carried their burden of establishing that the categorical denial of elective, nontherapeutic abortions constitutes deliberate indifference to serious medical needs under both prongs of Estelle.
B. Appropriation of Funds for Elective Abortions
The final question before us is whether the district court properly concluded that MCCI inmates demonstrated a likelihood of success on the merits of their claim that, under the eighth amendment, the County must assume the full costs of all inmate-requested abortions. The district court's judgment that the County is required to pay for all inmate abortions was based upon the "imposed financial dependency" of the inmаtes by virtue of their incarceration. MCCI Inmates II,
As to sentenced prisoners, MCCI inmates' argument is not without merit. As recognized by the Court in Estelle, "[a]n inmate must rely on prison authorities to treat his [or her] medical needs; if the authorities fail to do so, those needs will not be met."
In City of Revere v. Massachusetts Gen. Hosp.,
[A]s long as the governmental entity ensures that the medical care needed is in fact provided, the Constitution does not dictate how the cost of that care should be allocated as between the entity and the provider of the care. That is a matter of state law.
If of course, the governmental entity can obtain the medical cаre needed for a detainee only by paying for it, then it must pay.
Id. at 245,
In directing that the County assume the full costs of all inmate abortions, the district court implicitly concluded that the financial responsibility of providing adequate medical care to sentenced inmates constitutes a constitutional question under the eighth amendment. There is no indication in the record, however, that the district court considered or distinguished City of Revere. We decline MCCI inmates' invitation to consider this issue for the first time on appeal of the district court's grant of preliminary injunctive relief. Instead, we think it clear that MCCI may not condition the provision of those needed medical services that it has an affirmative duty to ensure and provide upon the inmates' ability and/or their willingness to pay. See City of Revere,
5. County defendants shall assume responsibility for insuring the availability of funding for all inmate abortions. If alternative means of funding are nonexistent, the County must assume the full cost of all inmate abortions.
V.
Summary
We find that the preliminary injunction, as modified by this opinion, was properly entered. Specifically, with regard to MCCI's obligation to accommodate the retained fundamental rights of its prisoners, we concur in the district court's conclusion that the County's policy of requiring court-ordered releases for inmates to obtain nontherapeutic, elective abortions impermissibly burdens the inmates' constitutionally protected right to choose to terminate their pregnancies. Under Turner v. Safley, the court-ordered release requirement (1) bears no logical connection to any legitimate penological interest; (2) deprives inmates electing to terminate their pregnancies of alternative means of exercising their right; and (3) constitutes an exaggerated response to the County's asserted financial and administrative concerns. In addition under Turner, the accommodation of the inmates' retained fundamental right to choose abortion will impose no additional burden on the use of the prison's limited resources. Thе determination in the first instance of the means to accommodate the inmates' retained right is, however, a matter for the prison authorities. The issue whether such accommodation requires the expenditure of public funds is not ripe or resolvable on this appeal.
With regard to MCCI's eighth amendment obligation to provide needed medical care for wards in its custody, we find that the County's policy constitutes a deliberate indifference to the serious medical needs of MCCI inmates who opt for abortion. That policy imposes impermissible barriers to access to needed medical care for inmates who choose to terminate their pregnancies. At a minimum, MCCI's affirmative duty requires that it insure that needed medical care is in fact obtained. Accordingly, MCCI may not condition the provision of services for an elective, nontherapeutic abortion upon burdensome procedures or upon the inmates' ability or willingness to pay. Moreover, in the absence of alternative methods of funding, the County must assume the cost of providing inmates with elective, nontherapeutic abortions. The question whether the eighth amendment imposes an affirmative separate or concomitant financial obligation on the County to pay for the serious medical needs of its sentenced inmates, including nontherapeutic, elective abortions, is left to the district court.
VI.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment and order of the district court granting appellees' motion for preliminary injunction will be affirmed in part and modified in part. Specifically, paragraph 1 of the district court will be affirmed. Paragraphs 4 and 5 will be modified to read as follows:
4. County defendants are not obligated to make arrangements for the abortion procedure, but they shall provide the necessary transportation to an appropriate medical facility for those inmates seeking an abortion, as soon as practicable following the inmate's decision to terminate the pregnancy.
5. County defendants shall assume responsibility for insuring the availability of funding for all inmate abortions. If alternative means of funding are nonexistent, the County must assume the full cost of all inmate abortions.
The remaining uncontested paragraphs of the district court's order will be affirmed.
Costs taxed against appellant.
MANSMANN, Circuit Judge, concurring.
I believe that the panel majority's opinion sweeps too broаdly in upholding the preliminary injunction under consideration here. Judge Higginbotham's fluent and forceful rhetoric tends to obscure the extreme difficulty of the substantial questions of law and policy posed by this case. Determining whether the appropriate preliminary relief has been ordered necessitates intricate distinctions in the balancing of legitimate concerns. I join the majority in holding that the plaintiffs are likely to succeed on their claim under the Fourteenth Amendment; however, I believe the majority goes too far in treating that likelihood as a virtual certainty based on the limited record compiled upon consideration of a preliminary injunction. I am also not prepared, based on the information now before us, to join the panel majority in extending the protection of the Eighth Amendment to elective, medically unnecessary abortions.
The Supreme Court has found in the Fourteenth Amendment a qualified right of women to choose to abort a pregnancy. Roe v. Wade,
I believe it is incorrect to characterize the regulation under consideration as one impinging upon the exercise of a constitutional right. The majority has reached the conclusion, based upon an asserted absence of evidence that court-ordered release is required for other forms of "purely elective" surgery, that the court-ordered release requirement was developed "solely to address inmate requests for elective, nontherapeutic abortions." I do not think such a conclusion is justified based upon the absence of evidence favorable to the defendants in a preliminary injunction proceeding where the plaintiffs have the burden of proof.
Moreоver, even if we assume that the regulation does single out elective abortion for treatment different from that afforded other forms of elective medical treatment, it does not follow from that assumption that the regulation is constitutionally infirm. It is incarceration that impinges upon the choice to abort a pregnancy, not a regulation providing for court-ordered release on one's own recognizance. There is no evidence whatsoever that prisoners are ever released on their own recognizance without a court order in order to obtain other forms of elective medical treatment or for any other purpose. Therefore, as the majority agrees, the regulation may fairly be seen as an affirmative attempt to accommodate the constitutionally protected choice.
The county asserts that security concerns underlie the challenged regulation. I do not think that, by enjoining enforcement of the regulation, the majority means to suggest that requiring a court order for release on the prisoner's own recognizance represents an irrational response to legitimate security concerns.
What is really at issue is whether, as the county argues, the regulation under consideration "afford[s] a reasonable opportunity" for inmates to exercise their fundamental right to choose abortion, Id. The inmates argue that a reasonable opportunity can only be afforded by imposing on the county an affirmative federal constitutional duty to expend resources to provide inmates with assistance in exercising that right. See e.g., Bounds v. Smith,
No argument has been made that retention of the right to choose abortion is inconsistent with the inmates' status as prisoners or with the legitimate penological objectives of the corrections system. Therefore, the right is presumptively retained by the inmates, and the Turner rationale is useful to assess the constitutionality of the absence or insufficiency of regulations providing for the exercise of that right. Turner v. Safley, --- U.S. ----,
The first Turner factor, that the regulations have a logical connection to legitimate governmental interests invoked to justify it, is satisfied by the county's assertion of security concerns. Under Turner it is also relevant in assessing the reasonableness of a regulation to determine whether "alternative methods of exercising the right ... remain open to prison inmates." Id. at 2262. The record suggests that release on one's own recognizance is the only method of obtaining an elective abortion. Therefore, there is apparently no opportunity for those who are not in a position to obtain a court-ordered release to exercise their right. In addition, there is apparently no procedure for expediting an application for court-ordered release in order to avoid increasing the risk of unavailability and danger from abortion.
Prison officials have no burden to disprove the availability of alternative methods of accommodating the claimant's constitutional complaint. O'Lone v. Estate of Shabazz, --- U.S. ----,
The evidence suggests that there is an "obvious, easy alternative[ ]" to the policy adopted by the county. Shabazz,
I agree with the majority that, in view of the fact that no alternative procedure currently is available to expedite the court-order process or to provide those who are unable to obtain court-ordered release with a meaningful opportunity to choose to abort a pregnancy, and that a less restrictive means of accommodating the security concerns exists, the plaintiffs are likely to succeed in a claim that the challenged regulation represents an exaggerated response to security concerns.
I also agree that an assertion that economic dependency imposed by incarceration may deprive an inmate of the ability to choose abortion finds no justification under current Supreme Court law or in legitimate penological concerns. Economic factors may be considered in choosing the methods used to provide a meaningful opportunity, but the cost of protecting a constitutional right cannot justify its total denial. Bounds v. Smith,
I agree that the inmates are likely to succeed on their claim that some affirmative assistance from the county is necessary to ensure a meaningful opportunity to obtain the medical assistance necessary to effectuate the choice protected by the Fourteenth Amendment. I stop short, however, of adopting the majority's blanket assumption that the Eighth Amendment is also implicated merely because abortion is a medical procedure. Specifically I am unwilling to join what amounts to a quantum leap to the conclusion that a state's refusal affirmatively to provide elective abortions to female prisoners constitutes cruel and unusual punishment. I believe the majority loses sight of the rationale supporting the Eighth Amendment right to medical treatment.
Certain conduct directed towards prisoners may be deemed cruel and unusual punishment because it involves the "unnecessary and wanton infliction of pain" or is "repugnant to the conscience of mankind" or can be said to offend "evolving standards of decency that mark the progress of a maturing society." Gregg v. Georgia,
A limited right of prisoners to medical treatment stems from an interpretation of the language of the Eighth Amendment "in light of the evolving standards of decency that mark the progress of a maturing society." Id. at 102,
We deal here with an asserted duty affirmatively to рrovide elective, medically unnecessary abortions. Although physical and psychological ills may accompany the condition of pregnancy, the record does not demonstrate that the desire of the plaintiffs to obtain an elective abortion necessarily equates to painful disease or injury per se.
Assessment of contemporary values concerning the challenged treatment of a prisoner is relevant to the application of the Eighth Amendment. Assessment of those standards with respect to the denial of elective abortions requires us to determine legislative facts concerning whether denial of elective abortions is likely to offend societal standards of decency. See In Re Asbestos Litigation,
We have nothing before us to inform our judgment in that regard. The parties have not taken the opportunity to comment on the implications from representative modern legislation, for example, nor has the issue been litigated in prior proceedings. See In re Asbestos, at 1248. In relying simply upon unsupported assumptions, the majority reasons more as advocates than as impartial judicial officers.
The right to elect to abort a pregnancy is one which the Supreme Court has acknowledged to be repugnant to the religious conscience of many. In Roe v. Wade the Supreme Court noted that "those trained in the respective disciplines of medicine, philosophy, and theology are unable to arrive at any consensus" as to a theory of life to support or contravene a woman's right to choose an abortion.
While such disagreements do not relieve us of our duty to apply the Constitution faithfully, id., certainly no record has been compiled which would justify this court in characterizing denial of an elective abortion as repugnant to the conscience of mankind. Nor does the denial of an elective abortion become the deliberate infliction of pain simply because medical attention is necessary to effectuation of a constitutionally protected choice. Unless we decide that the Eighth Amendment is an umbrella protecting inmates from deprivation of all rights which are guaranteed by other sections of the Constitution, as in other cases involving medical treatment, whether the abortion was a "serious medical need" would be determined by the facts of each case.
The Eighth Amendment must draw its meaning from the evolving standards of decency which mark the progress of a maturing society. We have nothing before us to inform our judgment that denial of elective abortions is likely to offend societal standards of decency. Without bootstrapping the liberty interest protected by the Fourteenth Amendment into the Eighth we have no reason to decide that prisoners would be entitled to elective abortions based upon an assumption of a commonly perceived inhumanity of refusing to provide elective abortions as a general matter. This is the rationale of the Eighth Amendment and we have been given no reason to believe that it is appropriately applied to the medical procedure of elective abortion.
I agree that under current law a Fourteenth Amendment right of access by prisoners to medical care for abortion as well as for prenatal care is necessitated for a meaningful opportunity to exercise choice. Therefore, I would affirm the grant of a preliminary injunction based on the likelihood of success on the Fourteenth Amendment claim. I would pass the Eighth Amendment claim without intimating an opinion on it so that essential facts may be determined before we pass upon this novel constitutional issue.
Notes
The defendants in the underlying actions will be collectively referred to as "the County" throughout this opinion
Speсifically, the district court ordered the Institution to make certain renovations to the jail, to provide a daily recreation program, to supply appropriate beds and bedding for all inmates, to develop and implement a meaningful classification system, to increase visiting hours, to hire an additional nurse, to perform medical examinations of all inmates prior to their release into the general population and to maintain a prison population of no more than 344 inmates. See Monmouth County Correctional Inst. Inmates v. Lanzaro,
Pursuant to the Consent Judgment, the County agreed (1) to establish and implement procedures for pregnancy testing of all female inmates upon admission to the Institution; (2) to ensure prenatal care at an appropriate maternity clinic outside the correctional facility; (3) to provide all treatment and medication prescribed by the treating clinic; (4) to provide all female inmates twenty-four hour access to toilet facilities; and (5) to provide prenatal vitamins, milk and juice to all pregnant inmates upon request. See SA at 2-3
On appeal, the County has modified its characterization of its policy to permit all "medically necessary" abortions, thereby including those that endanger the health as well as the life of the mother. See Brief of Appellant at 8 & n. 1
Jane Doe and Mary Smith are, of course, pseudonyms
In support of its position, the County relied upon N.J.Admin.Code tit. 10A, Sec. 31-3.15(a) (1979), quoted in Monmouth County Correctional Inst. Inmates v. Lanzaro,
[d]uring the period of confinement, the inmate is a ward of the county and concern shall be shown for both his [or her] physical and mental well-being. While it would be unrealistic to burden the county jail with responsibility for all the inmates' health needs, essential medical, dental, and health service care shall be provided.
N.J.Admin.Code tit. 10A, Sec. 31-3.15(a) (1979).
Those abortions deemed necessary to protect the life or health of the mother are classified as "medically necessary." In determining which abortions meet this classification, the district court instructed that the County be guided by the regulations of the New Jersey Department of Human Services, see MCCI Inmates II,
(b) A physician may take the following factors into consideration in determining whether an abortion is medically necessary:
Physical, emotional, and psychological factors;
Family reasons;
In Estelle, the Supreme Court held that, "[i]n order to statе a cognizable claim [under the eighth amendment], a prisoner must allege acts or omissions sufficiently harmful to evidence deliberate indifference to serious medical needs."
Applying this analysis to the regulation of inmate-to-inmate correspondence, the Turner Court concluded that that regulation was "reasonably related to legitimate security interests" and thus, was valid.
In its brief before this Court, the County maintained that its "appeal is focused exclusively upon the District Court's interpretation of the Eighth Amendment insofar as it applies to elective, nontherap[e]utic abortions." Brief of Appellant at 7. During oral argument, however, both parties argued the validity of the district court's elimination of the County's court-ordered release requirement, with the County urging the retention of a modified court-ordered release procedure. Specifically, we made the following inquiry to counsel for appellant:
THE COURT: ... As to [paragraph] number one, do you have any objection to number one as it is in [the district court's] order? Do you now have any objection to number one as it is?
MR. CARTON: I would not have an objection if there was a mechanism set up whereby [pregnant inmates seeking abortions] would be treated the same as other inmates seeking outside medical care.
* * *
THE COURT: You have no objection to a court-order process [that] can deal with the requests promptly?
MR. CARTON: I don't think that's a problem.... Promptness is not a problem.
Cassette Record of Oral Argument; accord infra note 12.
In addition, during oral argument the County objected to the breadth of paragraph 4, arguing that it could be construed to impose on prison officials the obligation to arrange for the actual abortion procedure. The following revision, suggested by this Court and accepted by the County during oral argument, will, pursuant to our supervisory powers, 28 U.S.C. Sec. 2106 (1982), thus constitute the scope of the County's obligation under paragraph 4.
County defendants are not obligated to make arrangements for the abortion procedure, but they shall provide the necessary transportation to an appropriate medical facility for those inmates seeking an abortion, as soon as practicable following the inmаte's decision to terminate the pregnancy
The County does not contest the remaining paragraphs of the district court's order.
The County does not contend that a woman's constitutional right to choose an abortion does not survive in the prison context due to the very fact of incarceration. Indeed, such an argument would be difficult to reconcile with the current policy in the federal prisons of providing inmates with abortions upon request. See 28 C.F.R. Sec. 551.23(d) (1986). Moreover, the Supreme Court has held that significant rights of privacy survive in the prison context. See Turner,
During oral argument, counsel for the County explained its policy as follows:
MR. CARTON: ... In this case the County does not preclude abortion but only requires an order for release and does not oppose such an order.... The constitutional right to an abortion is irrelevant to the issue at hand; the County does not interfere with the exercise of that right.
THE COURT: To sum up your position at this point, then, your only problem is that you believe that a woman who's confined and elects to have an abortion must get a court order?
MR. CARTON: Well, to be released she must, I mean
* * *
THE COURT: Well, she can't have the abortion unless she's released, and therefore has to get the court order?
MR. CARTON: That's correct.
* * *
THE COURT: Now, if you don't have a problem, concern with the safety of the ... inmate or the danger of escaping or violence, what is the purpose of the court-order? What ... purpose is served by the court-order from the County point of view?
MR. CARTON: I don't think I understand your question.
THE COURT: Well, why do you need a court order?
* * *
MR. CARTON: ... As a matter of course when anyone leaves the institution it's by writ or by some kind of order ... unless they go directly under the ... direction of the jail physician.
Cassette Record of Oral Argument.
The concurrence overstates our reliance on this fact in sustaining the district court's preliminary injunction. See Concurring op. at 352. As we make clear, and as the concurrence recognizes, see id. at 353, notwithstanding the County's treatment of other forms of "purely elective" surgery, the challenged regulation fails to provide inmates with a meaningful opportunity to exercise their constitutionally protected right to choose to abort their pregnancies and thus contravenes the fourteenth amendment. See infra note 20
We undertake this task with the recognition that "not all distinction between abortion and other procedures is forbidden. The constitutionality of such distinction will depend upon its degree and the justification for it." Bellotti v. Baird,
Contrary to Judge Mansmann's assertion, the County has never affirmatively maintained on this record "that security concerns underlie the challenged regulation." Concurring op. at 352. In a letter brief to the district court, the County maintained that "[it] cannot be burdened with purely elective medical procedures. The justifications for this policy are obvious.... Th[e court-ordered release] procedure insures that the County is not forced to pay for the elective procedure nor be burdened with the responsibility for arranging these procedures." Letter from Malcolm V. Carton, Esq. to The Hon. Harold A. Ackerman 2 (Apr. 25, 1986), reprinted in App. at A26-A27; accord supra note 12 (colloquy between Court and Mr. Carton)
We note also that, before the district court, the County advanced "the position that taxpayers dollars should not be used to fund abortions." Letter from Malcolm V. Carton, Esq. to The Hon. Harold A. Ackerman 2 (May 19, 1986), reprinted in App. at A29. Whatever the relevance of this position, it has no bearing on the County's duty to articulate a legitimate state interest in justification of its policy. In the course of discharging various penological responsibilities, whether or not they accommodate inmates' retained constitutional rights, prison officials will invariably expend state funds for purposes that are morally objectionable to some citizens. For instance, some citizens may consider morally offensive the expenditure of state funds to accommodate the religious practices of Jewish or Muslim inmates, to impose sentences of death or merely to provide three meals a day to convicted offenders. The moral objections of third party taxpayers, however, has never alone operated to relieve prison officials of affirmative obligations to prisoners in their custody where such obligations exist. To the extent that the County's position implies a legitimate state interest in accommodating the potential moral objections of taxpayers, it must be rejected
Indeed, were such an assertion to be accepted as a compelling state interest, most of the conditions challenged in MCCI Inmates I,
Judge Mansmann's concurrence mischaracterizes MCCI inmates' fourteenth amendment claim as one concerned solely with compelling the County "to expend resources to provide inmates with assistance in exercising" their retained constitutional right to choose abortion. Concurring op. at 353. To the contrary, MCCI inmates independently challenge the very existence of the court-ordered release requirement. The additional economic factors raised by both the inmates and the County are more appropriately considered under the third element of the reasonableness standard articulated by the Supreme Court in Turner. See infra Part III. B. 3
The legitimate penological interests in the rehabilitation of the prisoner and the deterrence of crime are not implicated in this appeal
We note here that, in our view, the court-ordered release requirement may fairly be characterized as either a regulation that infringes on an inmate's right to choose freely to terminate her pregnancy or as an attempted accommodation of that right. Although the County contends that "[t]he fact that there exists a constitutional right to an elective, non-therap[e]utic abortion is irrelevant" to this appeal, Brief of Appellant at 14, the very fact that the County created the court-ordered release option solely to accommodate the requests of pregnant inmates seeking elective abortions is testimony to the County's recognition of the significance of those requests. At any rate, whether viewed as a regulation or an accommodation, the court-ordered release requirement does not satisfy the standards employed to determine either the reasonableness of a prison regulation or the adequacy of a required accommodation of prisoners' retained constitutional rights. See infra. We emphasize that, although we find relevant the fact that the court-ordered release requirement applies solely to inmates requesting elective abortions, the absence of a similar requirement for other forms of elective medical procedures is in no way central to our determination that the challenged policy impermissibly burdens the inmates' fundamental right to choose freely to terminate their pregnancies
The County vehemently maintained at oral argument that promptness was not a problem in the court-ordered release process. The district court, however, specifically rejected this contention, see MCCI Inmates II,
The record reflects, for example, that Jane Doe, after being advised that to obtain an abortion she must secure court-ordered release, apparently contacted her attorney and sought to avail herself of the court order process. During a preliminary hearing on Doe's subsequent application for emergency relief, counsel for Monmouth County explained:
MR. CARTON: ... There was an application made apparently several weeks ago ... [regarding] why she should be released on her own recognizance. That application was turned down because she had criminal charges in addition to the parole detainer. I've been advised that she's been released on her own recognizance on the criminal charges but not the parole detainer.
THE COURT: She's being held as a parole violator?
MR. CARTON: Right, only.
THE COURT: So the reality is, she is still incarcerated, is that correct?
MR. CARTON: Yes.
SA at 28-29.
Aside from the time necessarily consumed by Doe in contacting her lawyer and thereafter gaining access to the court, consideration of the merits of an inmate's application may itself, as in the case of Doe, require additional legal action before the inmate's release is secured. This is so without regard to whether the County opposes the initial application for court-ordered release. When "time is likely to be of essence in an abortion decision," H.L. v. Matheson,
MCCI inmates persuasively argue that "the presence of pregnant inmates in the prison population, with the concomitant need for accommodation of unique security, housing, dietary and clothing needs, as well as the need to arrange placement for the child once it is born, places a greater burden on jail resources and administrative concerns than would a womаn who ends her pregnancy prior to full term." Brief of MCCI Inmates at 13 n. 9
We recognize that, ideally, under the court-ordered release requirement, prison officials need not expend any human or financial resources. We have held, however, that that requirement effectively denies to maximum security offenders the opportunity to exercise their choice to terminate their pregnancies and affirmatively interferes with the choice of low security risk offenders. Thus, the likely result of compelled full term pregnancies will require the identical expenditure of prison resources as would be necessary had the inmates initially elected childbirth
Similar economic arguments were made before the Supreme Court in Beal v. Doe,
In each of these decisions, the reasonableness of the state regulation was not assessed in terms of the relative costs of funding each procedure. Rather, because the state was entitled "to make a value judgment favoring childbirth over abortion, and to implement that judgment by the allocation of public funds," Maher,
Conversely, amici The American Civil Liberties Union ("ACLU") and The American Public Health Association ("APHA") argue that accommodation of an inmate's right to choose abortion "is consistent with the government's interest in inmate rehabilitation." Brief of Amici Curiae The American Civil Liberties Union and The American Public Health Association at 11 ("ACLU/APHA Brief"). Amicus New Jersey Association on Correction further suggests that the increased anxiety imposed by an unwanted pregnancy on a female offender will gravely affect the woman's reintegration into society. Brief of Amicus Curiae New Jersey Association on Correction at 1-3 ("N.J.A.C. Brief"). The Association on Correction implicitly contends that the goal of prisoner rehabilitation is undermined by the County's policy and that that policy may indeed foster recidivism whеre an inmate, upon release, is faced with the added burden of caring for a new child. See also Brief for Monmouth County Correctional Institution Inmates at 13 ("there are no conceivable penological purposes ... relevant to the restriction of a woman's ability to terminate pregnancy")
Amici ACLU and APHA argue that the County's policy, rather than rehabilitating, "compels women inmates to continue their pregnancies to term and imposes upon them the unwanted birth of a child ... [in] violat[ion of] the Eighth Amendment's prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment." ACLU/APHA Brief at 35 n. 19. In this regard, ACLU and APHA maintain that "enforced childbearing is never constitutionally appropriate punishment for criminal wrongdoing." Id. Assuming arguendo that enforced childbearing is an appropriate punishment in certain circumstances, however, ACLU and APHA contend that, as to pretrial detainees, the County's policy unconstitutionally imposes "punishment" upon those who have not been convicted of any crime, and that, with respect to sentenced inmates, the policy indiscriminately compels pregnancy on inmates regardless of the offense committed and thus "bears no relationship to the crime" as required by the eighth amendment. Id. at 36 n. 19
During oral argument, the availability of funding through Planned Parenthood was suggested as an option for indigent inmates desiring elective, nontherapeutic abortions. Following argument, we were advised by letter from counsel for MCCI inmates that Planned Parenthood of Monmouth County "has neither private nor public funds available to subsidize abortion services, and is equipped to provide abortions only through the twelfth (12th) week of pregnancy." Letter from Catherine A. Hanssens, Esq. (Mar. 23, 1987). The letter further stated "that abortions at the Planned Parenthood clinic are financed entirely through patient fees and Medicaid Funds (for which prisoners are ineligible)." Id
Whatever the actual funding and medical service possibilities available through Planned Parenthood, our decision today does not foreclose the possibility of such arrangements with philanthropic organizations as might adequately accommodate an inmate's right to choose abortion. Cf. City of Revere v. Massachusetts Gen. Hosp.,
Because a pregnant inmate has the fundamental right to choose abortion and a need for medical services, both the fourteenth and eighth amendments are implicated in our process of determining the parameters of the County's obligation with respect to inmate-requested abortions. Under fundamental rights analysis, the central inquiry is whether a prison regulation--here, the court-ordered release requirement--unreasonably burdens the exercise of the asserted right. In determining the reasonableness of the regulation, Turner instructs that the costs of accommodation is a relevant factor. See
We note again, however, that the County has not deemed requests for other elective medical procedures to be significant enough to warrant a court-ordered release requirement or any other procedure for release. See supra note 20
The likelihood that these maximum security offenders will be totally deprived of the opportunity to have a safe abortion, irrespective of their terms of incarceration, is enhanced by the failure of the County to consider anywhere in its policy towards inmate-requests for elective, nontherapeutic abortions the gestation period at the time of the initial request
The population at MCCI consists of both pretrial detainees and convicted and sentenced inmates. The constitutional standard governing conditions of confinement for detainees is whether the conditions amount to "punishment" without due process of the law, in violation of the fourteenth amendment. See Bell v. Wolfish,
We recognize that the preliminary determination by the jail physician whether an inmate-requested abortion is medically necessary or "purely elective" presumably affords a pregnant inmate with individualized care. We further recognize that categorization of a prison's medical obligations alone may be insufficient to establish the deliberate indifference contemplated by Estelle. On the facts presented to this Court, however, we think it clear that, by virtue of its categorization of elective abortions as beyond its duty to provide, the County has exhibited deliberate indifference to the medical needs of inmates electing abortion. Specifically, pursuant to its self-defined obligation, the County has adopted a policy that fails to consider for individual inmates (1) the gestation period at the time the request for an abortion is made, (2) the likely duration of incarceration and (3) the likelihоod of release under the uncontested court-ordered release procedure. Failure even to consider such factors, each of which is relevant to the safe termination of an inmate's pregnancy, evinces a deliberate indifference to the medical needs of inmates desiring abortions
Decisions holding that mere disagreement as to type and quality of treatment does not state a claim of constitutional deprivation, see, e.g., Bowring v. Godwin,
Under the County's view, medical care associated with full term pregnancy would not constitute a "serious medical need" under Estelle, "pregnancy, in and of itself, not being an 'abnormal medical condition.' " Brief of Appellants at 14
As one author has noted,
the inmate's employment opportunities are controlled by the state. If she is permitted to work at all, she works within the prison, for limited time periods, and at minimal prison wages. Thus, her ability to earn enough money to pay for an abortion is virtually nonexistent while she is incarcerated. Furthermore, outside sources of income most notably welfare payments and Medicaid services, are not available to the inmate. [See 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1396d(a)(18)(A) (1982) (inmates of public institutions ineligible to receive Medicaid and welfare funds).]
Vitale, Inmate Abortions--The Right to Government Funding Behind Prison Gates, 48 Fordham L.Rev. 550, 558 (1980).
Although we recognize that the due process rights of detainees are at least as great as the eighth amendment rights of convicted inmates, City of Revere,
