Randall Bills brought this § 1983 action against officials of the Lincoln Correctional Center (“the LCC”) and the Nebraska Department of Correctional Services for alleged violations of his Fourteenth Amendment right to equаl protection because he was denied overnight visitation from his infant son during his term of incarceration while some female inmates of the Nebraska Center for Women were permitted such visits. The defendant corrections officials moved for summary judgment, and the district court denied the motion. This appeal followed.
I.
The Appellants’ contentions can be reduced to one argument on appeal, namely, whether they are entitled to qualified immunity in this action. A prison official is entitled to qualified immunity from suit unless the official’s conduct violates a clearly-established statutory or constitutional right.
Anderson v. Creighton,
The right that Mr. Bills alleges was violatеd was his right to equal protection of the laws, as guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment. He claims that while he was incarcerated at the Lincoln Correctional Center that he was denied overnight visitation with his infant son, Lathan Bills, in a manner similar to that allowed inmates at the Nebraska Center for Women. The DCS conducts a program at the NCW called Mother/Offspring Life Development (MOLD), which permits overnight visitation with preteen children for women who qualify for the program. Inmates may qualify on the basis of disciplinary records and the completion of parenting classes conducted by the program. No similar program was available to inmates of the LCC. It is from the denial of access to this type of program that Mr. Bills asserts his § 1983 action for violation of his right to equal protection.
A.
While the general principle of the right to equal protection has been clearly established, the Supreme Court has instructed us to make a more specific inquiry in qualified immunity cases. In
Anderson v. Creighton,
the Court upheld a district court’s grant of summary judgment for a federal agent who had conducted a warrantless search of a home in pursuit of a bank robbery suspect.
Id,
at 637,
To determine whether Mr. Bills’s constitutional right to equаl protection was violated, therefore, we cannot begin with the generalized inquiry into whether the right to equal protection is clearly established. Instead, we must ask “a more particularized” question,
Id.
at 640,
The Equal Protection Clause keeps governmental decisionmakers from treating disparately persons who are in all relevant respects similarly situated.
Nordlinger v. Hahn,
— U.S.-,-,
B.
A rational prison official would have been confronted with the following uncontroverted facts. Mr. Bills, at all times relevant to this action, wаs an inmate confined to the Lincoln Correctional Center. The Nebraska Department of Correctional Services classifies the LCC as a “level 2” security institution, having a double perimeter security fеnce and towers with armed correctional officers. All inmates within the Nebraska Center for Women, however, are within an institution *336 which the DCS classifies as a level 4 security institution, having only a single perimeter fence and no towers or armed correctional officers. Both prisons hold a significant number of maximum security offenders.
While the make-up of the inmate population at each of the prisons arе not markedly dissimilar, it is objectively reasonable for a prison official to believe that the security concerns at the two prisons are distinguishable on the basis of the security level designations and the concomitant physical security structures in place. It is also, therefore, objectively reasonable for a prison official to believe that an inmate at the LCC is not similarly situated to an inmate at the NCW for purposes of overnight child visitation.
C.
Although Mr. Bills may not be similarly situated to the inmates of the NCW, he is entitled to a determination of whether the regulation complained of is arbitrary. Where men and women are found not to be similarly situated, the court must still determine whether it would have been reasonable for a prison official to believe that the denial of overnight child visitation to Mr. Bills, in light of the program at the NCW, wаs rationally related to a permissible state objective.
See Parham v. Hughes,
For purposes of qualified immunity analysis, however, we again need not show that the official action in the case before us is lawful. All we need determine is whether a reasonable prison official could have believed the denial of overnight child visitation to be lawful under the circumstances with which the defendants were confronted. For purposes of this § 1983 action fоr the denial of equal protection, therefore, we need only show that a reasonable prison official could have found the denial to have been rationally related to a legitimatе penological interest.
Internal security is well recognized as a legitimate penological objective.
Timm v. Gunter,
Accordingly, since a reasonable prison official could believe that Mr. Bills was not similarly situated to an inmate granted overnight child visitation at the NCW, and since such an official could also find the denial of such privileges to Mr. Bills rationally related to a legitimate penological objective, it was not clearly established that Mr. Bills had a right to equal treatment in this ease. The defendant prison officials, therefore, did not violate a clearly established right, аnd thus are entitled to qualified immunity in this action.
II.
We find it necessary, however, to caution the defendants in this case against the use of demographic data to justify a regulation that potentially might effect the violation of a constitutional right. “The great object of our Constitution is to preserve individual rights.... ”
Satterlee v. Matthewson,
Stereotypes, regardless of how aсcurate they purport to be, cannot justify the abridgement of an individual’s constitutional rights. They tell us nothing about the individual parties before us. If the overnight visitation program at the NCW was in fact the product of prison officials’ attempts to structure a program on the basis of a stereotype, to the detriment of a similarly situated male inmate, then they may not fare very well under the rational basis scrutiny of Turner.
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the decision of the District Court and remand this cause for entry of summary judgment in favor of the defendants.
