ON PETITION FOR REHEARING
The appellants’ petition for rehearing obviously failed to understand that this appeal does not solely address “prisoners’ rights.” Consequently,
Turner v. Safley,
— U.S. -,
Martinez
expressly reserved the proper standard of review to apply in cases involving questions of “prisoners’ rights.” In
Turner,
the Supreme Court definitively provided the proper standard of review: “[W]hen a prison regulation impinges on
inmates’
constitutional rights, the regulation is valid if it is
reasonably related to legitimate penological interests.”
This more lenient standard of review does not apply to the present appeal because the constitutional rights of nonpris-oners are at issue. Post-Martinez Supreme Court precedent does not suggest otherwise. Indeed, even Turner recognized the dichotomy in standards of review depending upon whose rights are at issue:
[W]e note initially that the regulation prohibits marriages between inmates and civilians, as well as marriages between inmates. Although not urged by respondents, this implication of the interests of nonprisoners may support application of the Martinez standard, because the regulation may entail a “consequential restriction on the [constitutional] rights of those who are not prisoners.”
In addition, the D.C. Circuit’s
post-Turner
decision in
Abbott v. Meese,
In conclusion, we properly selected Martinez as the controlling standard and properly applied the Martinez standard in the present case. Consequently, the appellants’ petition for rehearing is DENIED. We DIRECT the Clerk of the Court to incorporate our explanation associated with this denial of the appellants’ petition for rehearing as part of the panel opinion in this case.
