Charles Joseph Wirsching appeals the district court’s order granting summary judgment against him and in favor of the defendants on his 42 U.S.C. § 1983 civil rights claim. Mr. Wirsching, who until April 25, 2003 was incarcerated by the Colorado Department of Corrections (CDOC) on a conviction for sexual assault of a minor, alleges that CDOC officials violated his constitutional rights by directing him to participate in a sexual offender treatment program requiring him to admit that he had committed the assault and by imposing certain adverse consequences upon him when he refused to participate. In particular, Mr. Wirsching contends that the CDOC officials’ refusal to allow visitation with his minor child violated the First and Fourteenth Amendments. He further contends that, by depriving him of opportunity to earn good time credits at the higher rate available to prisoners who participated in the treatment program, CDOC officials violated the Fifth Amendment’s prohibition against compelling self-incriminating testimony. Mr. Wirsching also asserts that CDOC officials violated the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment as well as the Eighth Amendment, Ninth Amendment, and the Due Process and Equal Protection clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment.
We begin our analysis by considering two threshold issues: (1) whether Mr. Wirsching’s release from prison renders his claims moot; and (2) whether Mr. Wirsching has waived the right to appeal by failing to object to the magistrate’s recommendation to enter summary judgment against him. As to the first issue, we conclude that Mr. Wirsching’s release from prison moots his claims for declaratory and injunctive relief but not his claims for damages. As to the second issue, we conclude that in spite of Mr. Wirsching’s failure to object to the magistrate’s report and recommendation, the interests of justice warrant our consideration of the merits of this appeal.
On the merits of Mr. Wirsching’s damages claims, we conclude that the district court properly granted summary judgment to the defendant CDOC officials. In particular, with regard to Mr. Wirsching’s challenge to the denial of visitation with his minor child, we hold that Mr. Wirsch-ing has failed to establish that prison officials violated his rights under the First and Fourteenth Amendments. We base that conclusion primarily upon the deference we afford to prison administrators in these matters,
see Turner v. Safley,
*1194 /. BACKGROUND
The relevant facts are not in dispute. In 1997, Mr. Wirsching pleaded guilty in the District Court of El Paso County, Colorado to a charge of attempted sexual assault of a child. The court sentenced Mr. Wirsching to eight years’ incarceration. Mr. Wirsching had previously been convicted of second-degree assault.
The Colorado Department of Corrections has a treatment program for sex offenders. Following Mr. Wirsching’s incarceration, prison staff recommended that he participate in the program. One of the requirements for participation is that the inmate admit that he has engaged in the conduct that led to his classification as a sex offender. 2 Mr. Wirsching refused to admit that he had engaged in the sexual assault of which he had been convicted. As a result, prison officials did not admit him into the treatment program.
CDOC regulations provide that inmates who refuse to participate in labor, educational, or work programs, or who refuse to undergo recommended treatment programs are placed on Restricted Privileges Status. Here, that status affected Mr. Wirsching as follows: (1) he could not have a television or a radio in his cell; (2) he could not use tobacco; (3) he had no canteen privileges; (4) certain personal property was removed from his cell; (5) he could not engage in recreation with other prisoners; and (6) he was required to wear orange pants.
Mr. Wirsching’s refusal to participate in the treatment program also affected his opportunity to earn good time credits. Under a Colorado statute, inmates are entitled to earn these credits at the highest rate (ten days for each month of incarceration) only if they “progress towards the goals and programs established by the Colorado diagnostic program.” Col.Rev. Stat. § 17-22.5-405. Under this provision, it appears that Mr. Wirsching’s refusal would constitute a lack of progress in the view of CDOC officials.
Finally, Mr. Wirsching’s Restricted Privileges Status also limited his visitation with family members. When Mr. Wirsch-ing asked that his three-year old daughter be allowed to visit him in prison, CDOC officials denied his request. They invoked the following regulation:
Visitors will be excluded from the visiting list with authorization from the Administrative Head if they:
a. Are the victim of the sex offender they are attempting to visit, except under circumstances approved in advance and in writing by the sex offender treatment staff;
b. Are under the age of eighteen (18) visiting an offender who has been convicted at any time of sexual assault on a child, incest, or aggravated incest unless approved in advance and in writing by the sex offender treatment staff;
c. Are victims of the offender or are children under the age of eighteen (18) years of age, if such visits would be contrary to the rehabilitation of the offender as documented by mental health staff who will evaluate the offender and make recommendations regarding visits which may be detrimental to the offender’s rehabilitation.
d. Sex offenders who have perpetrated against children shall not loiter near children in the visiting room or *1195 participate in any volunteer activity that involves contact with children except under circumstances approved in advance and in writing by the sex offender treatment staff.
Rec. doc. 28, attach. 3 (Admin.Reg.300-01) ¶ (IV)(A)(8). According to the CDOC officials, Mr. Wirsching’s refusal to participate in the treatment program for sex offenders meant that they could not properly evaluate him to determine if his daughter’s visits would be “detrimental to [his] rehabilitation.” Id. (Admin.Reg.300-01 (IV)(A)(8)(c)). They denied his continuing requests for visitation privileges with his daughter.
Proceeding pro se, Mr. Wirsching filed this civil rights action alleging that the CDOC’s refusal to allow visitation with his children violated his right to familial association under the First Amendment, his Fifth Amendment right against double jeopardy, his Eighth Amendment right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment, his Ninth Amendment rights, and his right to due process and equal protection under the Fourteenth Amendment. He also asserted that the denial of visitation privileges and the denial of the opportunity to earn good time credits at the higher rate available to other prisoners constituted an impermissible punishment for his refusal to incriminate himself. According to Mr. Wirsching, this punishment violated the Fifth Amendment’s Self-Incrimination Clause.
In his request for relief, Mr. Wirsching asked the court “to issue an Order granting him and all future prisoners equal rights and privileges as ... afforded to other inmates.” Rec. doc. 3, at 6 (Complaint filed Aug. 26, 1998). He also requested an “Order granting him relief from Sentence and Judgment of Conviction, and such other relief as this Court may deem appropriate.” Id. In a subsequent pleading, Mr. Wirsching requested damages. See Rec. doc 40, at 14.
The defendant CDOC officials filed a motion for summary judgment on all of Mr. Wirsching’s claims. A magistrate judge issued a recommendation concluding that summary judgment to the defendants was warranted. Mr. Wirsching did not file an objection to the recommendation, and the district court then adopted the recommendation and entered judgment for the defendants.
Proceeding pro se, Mr. Wirsching appealed the grant of summary judgment against him. This Court appointed counsel for Mr. Wirsching and then asked for supplemental briefing regarding the Supreme Court’s decision in
McKune v. Lile,
II. DISCUSSION
On appeal, Mr. Wirsching challenges the district court’s grant of summary judgment as to all of his claims. We review the grant of summary judgment de novo, applying the same standard as the district court pursuant to Rule 56(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
See United States v. AMR Corp.,
However, before we may proceed to the merits, we must address two threshold *1196 issues: (1) whether Mr. Wirsching’s release from prison renders his claims moot; and (2) whether Mr. Wirsching has waived the right to appeal by failing to object to the magistrate judge’s recommendation.
A. Mootness
Under Article III of the United States Constitution, federal courts may adjudicate only “cases or controversies.” As a result, we must “decline to exercise jurisdiction where the award of any requested relief would be moot — i.e. where the controversy is no longer live and ongoing.”
Cox v. Phelps Dodge Corp.,
Here, following the parties and the district court, we read Mr. Wirsching’s complaint as asserting a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action for (1) declaratory and injunctive relief and (2) damages. As to the former, there is no indication in the record that the remedies that Mr. Wirsching has sought— an order allowing visitation with his children and the opportunity to earn good time credits at a higher rate — would have any effect on the defendant CDOC officials’ behavior. Following Mr. Wirsching’s release from prison, “the entry of a declaratory judgment [and injunctive relief] in [Mr. Wirsching’s] favor would amount to nothing more than a declaration that he was wronged.”
Green v. Branson,
In contrast, Mr. Wirsching’s damages claims are not moot. Despite Mr. Wirsch-ing’s release from prison, those claims “remain viable because a judgment for damages in his favor would alter the defendants’ behavior by forcing them to pay an amount of money they otherwise would not have paid.” Id. Because we read Mr. Wirsching’s complaint as seeking damages for all of the constitutional violations he has alleged, there is a case or controversy regarding all of those alleged violations.
B. Failure to Object to the Magistrate Judge’s Recommendation
The magistrate judge’s recommendation contained a section stating that the parties had ten days from the date of service to file written objections. The recommendation further stated that “[fjailure to file written objections to the proposed findings and recommendations ... may bar the aggrieved party from appealing the factual findings ... that are accepted or adopted by the District Judge” and that “failure to file written objections concerning legal questions addressed in the recommendation generally operates as a waiver of appellate review of those legal questions.” Rec. doc. 61 attach. (Recommendation of United States Magistrate Judge, filed Aug. 16, 2000). The recommendation included a certificate of mailing indicating that it was *1197 sent to the prison address provided by Mr. Wirsching — the same address at which he had received prior pleadings and orders.
In
Moore v. United States,
Our decisions have not defined the “interests, of justice” exception with much specificity. In some instances, we have considered whether the party seeking to invoke the exception himself bore some responsibility for the failure to receive the magistrate’s report and recommendation.
See Theede v. United States Dep’t of Labor,
Other circuits have adopted a similarly flexible approach.
See United States v. Brown,
Here, several factors persuade us that the interests of justice warrant consideration of Mr. Wirsching’s appeal. First, there is no indication of delay on Mr. Wirsching’s part in seeking to obtain the report and recommendation. The record indicates that after filing a timely notice of appeal referring to the district court’s two-page order adopting the magistrate’s report and recommendation, the court informed Mr. Wirsching that it was considering summary dismissal of the appeal. Mr Wirsching responded to the court that he “would love to file a brief on the recommendations [;] the only problem is that I don’t know what those recommendations were.” Letter, dated Nov. 15, 2000. Mr. Wirsching then requested a copy of the report and recommendations. In his opening brief, Mr. Wirsching stated “I received only a two (2) page Order from the Court stating that I was denied. There was no *1198 paperwork showing any finding of fact of conclusion of law attached.” Aplt’s Pro se Opening Br. at 3, filed Jan. 31, 2001.
Moreover, in light of all the circumstances of this case, we find Mr. Wirsch-ing’s allegation that he did not receive the magistrate’s report and recommendation to be facially plausible. Throughout the proceedings, Mr. Wirsehing has been a fairly tenacious litigant, filing a pro se complaint, requesting on several occasions that the district-court appoint counsel for him, responding to the defendants’ motions to dismiss and for summary judgment, and filing a supplemental brief. Failing to object to a report and recommendation that warned him that he could lose his right to appeal is inconsistent with that conduct. Accordingly, in light of Mr. Wirsching’s plausible contention, and the “issues of considerable import” involved here, see
Kent,
C. First Amendment and Due Process Claims Involving Denial of Visitation
Mr. Wirsehing argues that the district court erred in granting summary judgment against him on his claims challenging the denial of visitation with his child. He maintains that the CDOC’s no-visitation policy violated his First Amendment rights of familial association as well as his due process rights under the Fourteenth Amendment.
We acknowledge at the outset that the interests Mr. Wirsehing asserts are important ones. The Supreme Court has held that “parents have a liberty interest, protected by the Constitution, in having a reasonable opportunity to develop close relations with their children.”
Hodgson v. Minnesota,
Nevertheless, “[tjhe very object of imprisonment is confinement,” and “[m]any of the liberties and privileges enjoyed by other citizens must be surrendered by the prisoner.”
Overton v. Bazzetta,
In assessing the CDOC visitation restriction, we apply the standard set forth in
Turner v. Safley,
Accordingly, we must “balance the guarantees of the Constitution with the legitimate concerns of prison administrators,”
Beerheide v. Suthers,
We begin our analysis with the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Overton. There, the Supreme Court applied the four-part Turner inquiry to Michigan’s policy banning visits between prisoners and (a) children as to whom the prisoner’s parental rights had been terminated and (b) minors who were not the prisoner’s children, stepchildren, grandchildren, or siblings. 3 The Court overturned the Sixth Circuit’s decision — which had held that the policy violated the prisoners’ First Amendment rights.
We emphasize that the policy at issue in Ovetion did not bar visits with the prisoner’s own children, as does the CDOC policy challenged here by Mr. Wirsching. Moreover, some of the institutional concerns noted by the Overton Court are not as apparent here. Nevertheless, the Court’s application of the Turner inquiry offers useful guidance.
The Court concluded that “the [Michigan] regulations bear a rational relation to [the Department of Corrections] valid interests in maintaining internal security and protecting child visitors from exposure to sexual or other misconduct or from accidental injury.”
Overton,
The Court then noted that prisoners had alternative means of remaining in contact with family members: they could communicate by letter and telephone with those with whom they could not visit. Finally, the Court observed' that accommodating the Michigan prisoners’ demands for visitation would cause a significant reallocation of the prison system’s resources. Moreover, the plaintiff prisoners were unable to “point[ ] to some obvious regulatory alternative that fully accommodates the asserted right while not imposing more than a de minimis cost to the valid penological goal.” Id. at 2169.
As to the CDOC regulation at issue here, we begin with the first
Turner
inquiry — whether a rational connection exists between the prison regulation and a legitimate governmental interest advanced as its justification.
See Turner,
That conclusion is supported by an affidavit from a CDOC social worker (who is also a licensed professional counselor) offered by the defendants in support of their motion for summary judgment. The social worker stated that “[t]he rationale for disallowing visits with children is the potential risk for harm to the child. Risk factors for sex offending behavior should be considered higher if these individuals are allowed visits with children.” Rec. doc. 28, at 2 (Aff. of Glynette Smith, filed Jan. 15, 1999). She added that the Colorado Sex Offender Management Board Standards and Guidelines recommended that “[s]ex offenders should have no contact with children, including their own children, unless approved in advance and in writing by the prison treatment provider.” Id. at 3 (quoting Colorado Sex Offender Treatment Board Standards § 3.511(B)).
In response, Mr. Wirsching contends that the ban on visitation is rationally related to neither the protection of children nor his own rehabilitation. He notes that the record contains no evidence that he has ever harmed or attempted to harm his young daughter and that his alleged victims “were not of a similar age or situation as his daughter.” Aplt’s Opening Br. at. 17. As to rehabilitation, Mr. Wirsching cites decisions acknowledging the rehabilitative effect of prisoners’ visits with family members.
See id.
at 18-19 (citing,
inter alia, Ramos v. Lamm,
Mr. Wirsching’s arguments ignore the substantial deference we must accord “to the professional judgment of prison administrators, who bear a significant responsibility for defining the legitimate goals of a corrections system and for determining the most appropriate means to accomplish them.”
Overton,
As to the second
Turner
inquiry— whether alternative means of exercising the right are available notwithstanding the policy — Mr. Wirsching acknowledges that prison officials have allowed him to contact his children by letter and telephone.
See
Aplt’s Opening Br. at 19-20. However, he contends that “visitation offers the best method for exercising even a limited right to raising his child while in prison.”
Id.
at 20. Even so, we note, alternatives “need not be ideal ... they need only be available.”
Overton,
As to the third and fourth
Turner
inquiries — the effect within the prison of accommodating the asserted right and the availability of alternatives that would accommodate the prisoner,
see Turner,
Again Mr. Wirsching’s arguments are insufficient to overcome the deference we afford prison officials in these matters. In support of their motion for summary judgment, the defendants offered the prison social worker’s affidavit, which stated that visitation may be harmful to the child and may undermine the rehabilitation of the offender and that any such visitation should be assessed by the treatment staff before it is authorized. See Rec. doc. 28, at 2-3 (Aff. of Glynette Smith, filed Jan. 15, 1999). Mr. Wirsehing offered neither any evidence to rebut that statement nor any evidence suggesting biased or unprofessional conduct by the treatment staff. As a result, his assertions as to the minimal effect of allowing visitation and the de minimis cost of monitored, non-contact visits are of little weight.
In assessing Mr. Wirsching’s arguments, we do not discount the importance of his relationship with his children. Even inside the prison walls, that relationship is generally deserving of some form of protection. The complete ban upon Mr. Wirsching’s visits with his children is indeed a harsh restriction, significantly more severe than the ban on family visits upheld in Overton. 4 Prison officials should be careful to ensure that restrictions upon visitation with a prisoner’s children are justified by the circumstances, and they should seriously consider less draconian restrictions — such as closely monitored, noncontact visitation. Had Mr. Wirsehing offered evidence as to the feasibility and minimum institutional effect of a less restrictive visitation policy, this would be a closer case.
Nevertheless, we are aware that the treatment of sex offenders, like many other aspects of prison administration, presents substantial difficulties.
See McKune v. Lile,
D. Fifth Amendment Compulsion Claim
Mr. Wirsehing also contends that CDOC officials violated his Fifth Amendment *1202 rights by punishing him for refusing to comply with one of the requirements of the treatment program — that he admit that he committed a sex offense. He points to the denial of visitation privileges and the denial of the opportunity to earn good time credits at the higher rate available to other prisoners. He maintains that these actions constituted coercion in response to his refusal to incriminate himself.
In
McKune,
Applying the
Sandin
standard to the facts before it, the plurality concluded that the penalties imposed against the prisoner were significantly less than potential penalties other inmates faced in cases where the Supreme Court ruled that there was no Fifth Amendment violation.
See McKune,
Because she disagreed with the plurality’s application of
Sandin’s
“atypical and significant hardship” standard, Justice O’Connor did not
join
in the plurality opinion in McKune. However, she did agree that the consequences of the plaintiff prisoner’s refusal to incriminate himself were not “so great as to constitute compulsion for the- purposes of the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination.” Id. at 49-50,
As we noted in
Searcy v. Simmons,
In this regard, we note that the consequences suffered by the plaintiff prisoner in
McKune
— reduction in privileges and a transfer to a maximum security prison— resemble most of the consequences faced by Mr. Wirsching here.
Compare McKune,
Nevertheless, Mr. Wirsching’s refusal to participate in the treatment program did result in two additional consequences not suffered by the plaintiff prisoner in
McKune:
(1) the loss of opportunity to accrue good time credits at an increased rate, and (2) the prohibition of visitation with his
own
children.
See id.
at 51-52,
This circuit’s opinion in
Searcy
resolves the question as to good time credits. There, we held that the withholding of those credits to a Kansas prisoner who refused to participate in a treatment program did not constitute compulsion.
See Searcy,
Searcy
is controlling here.
As
in Kansas, the Department of Corrections in Colorado retains discretion in awarding good time credits.
See
Col.Rev.Stat. § 17-22.5-405 (stating that “[e]arned time, not to exceed ten days for each month of incarceration or parole,
may
be deducted from the inmate’s sentence”) (emphasis added);
Duncan v. Gunter,
As to denial of visitation privileges with his children, we note that we have already concluded that the CDOC’s policy did not violate Mr. Wirsching’s rights under the First Amendment and the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. For similar reasons, we conclude that the CDOC’s ban on visits between Mr. Wirsch-ing and his children did not constitute compulsion in violation of the Fifth Amendment.
We are not persuaded by Mr. Wirsch-ing’s contention that the fact that he entered an Alford plea to sex offense for which he was incarcerated indicates that the CDOC has compelled self-incriminating testimony. In our view, the Alford plea does not affect the Fifth Amendment compulsion analysis.
An
Alford
plea is one in which a defendant may maintain his innocence while agreeing to forego his right to a trial.
See North Carolina v. Alford,
From our reading of Justice O’Connor’s concurring opinion in McKune, we see no indication that whether the defendant has previously admitted or failed to admit the sexual misconduct at issue is a factor in the compulsion analysis. Instead, what matters are the consequences of the prisoner’s failure to admit to the offense while he is incarcerated, and the analysis turns on the severity of those consequences.
That reading of
McKune
is borne out by our approach in
Searcy.
There, the defendant had pleaded nolo contendere to a charge of sexual exploitation of a child.
See Searcy,
That Mr. Wirsching’s
Alford
plea is not relevant to the Fifth Amendment analysis here is also supported by the way in which those pleas are treated in other contexts. For example, in
Blohm v. C.I.R.,
F. Mr. Wirsching’s Other Claims
Mr. Wirsching raises several other claims that do not require extensive discussion. In particular, he maintains that: the CDOC’s visitation policy (1) imposes an additional punishment for his 1982 sexual assault conviction, thereby violating the Fifth Amendment’s Double Jeopardy Clause; (2) constitutes cruel and unusual punishment under the Eighth Amendment; and (3) the policy violates his equal protection rights under the Fourteenth Amendment.
For substantially the same reasons set forth by the magistrate judge, we conclude that these arguments lack merit: As to double jeopardy, it is well established that prison disciplinary sanctions do not implicate that Fifth Amendment right.
See Lucero v. Gunter,
III. CONCLUSION.
Accordingly, for the reasons set forth above, we DISMISS Mr. Wirsching’s claims for declaratory and injunctive relief as moot. As to Mr. Wirsching’s claims for damages, we AFFIRM the district court’s grant of summary judgment against Mr. Wirsching and in favor of the CDOC.
Notes
. See Rec. doc. 28, attach. 2 (CDOC Reg. No. 700-19 ¶ IV(F)(3)(4)) (requiring prisoner’s participating in the treatment program to "admit to sexually abusive behavior and be willing to discuss it" and "acknowledge that she/he has a current problem in the area of sexual abuse.)”
. Other Michigan visitation policies were also at issue in Overton, but, as those other policies did not address limitations on visits with children, we do not discuss them here.
. As noted above, the restriction upon family visits upheld in Overton concerned (a) children as to whom the prisoner's parental rights had been terminated and (b) minors who were not the prisoner’s children, stepchildren, grandchildren, or siblings.
. "[I]n most jurisdictions ... a nolo plea is not a factual admission that the pleader committed a crime. Rather, it is a statement of unwillingness to contest the government’s charges and an acceptance of the punishment that would be meted out to a guilty person.”
Olsen v. Correiro, 189
F.3d 52, 59
(1st Cir.
1999). As the Supreme Court noted in
Alford,
"Throughout its history ... the plea of nolo contendere has been viewed not as an express admission of guilt but as a consent by the defendant that he may he punished as if he were guilty and a prayer for leniency.”
