[00:00:01] Speaker 02: All right, thank you. [00:00:01] Speaker 02: I think we're ready to proceed with argument. [00:00:05] Speaker 02: Counsel for appellant, please approach. [00:00:09] Speaker 02: And counsel, we'd like to thank you on behalf of the court for accepting this case pro bono. [00:00:13] Speaker 02: We appreciate it. [00:00:15] Speaker 03: Of course. [00:00:16] Speaker 03: It's been my pleasure, Your Honor, and I thank the court for the opportunity. [00:00:20] Speaker 02: All right, if you can introduce yourself and proceed. [00:00:22] Speaker 03: My name is Joel Wax on behalf of plaintiff appellant Sean Charles Gough. [00:00:27] Speaker 03: With the court's permission, I'd like to reserve three minutes of my time for rebuttal. [00:00:33] Speaker 02: All right. [00:00:35] Speaker 03: The district court granted summary judgment for all five defendants on Mr. Goff's free exercise claim based on multiple errors of law. [00:00:44] Speaker 03: Starting with the tactical support unit officer defendants, the district court correctly assumed at summary judgment [00:00:53] Speaker 03: that those officers were responsible for confiscating Mr. Goff's religious items from his cell, but it wrongly concluded that that was insufficient to show their liability under Section 1983. [00:01:05] Speaker 03: That applied too high a standard for personal participation in the constitutional violation. [00:01:14] Speaker 03: The standard is integral participation, and if, as a reasonable juror, could infer from the evidence in the record, these [00:01:23] Speaker 03: defendants were responsible for confiscating Mr. Goff's religious items, and they were integral participants in depriving him of those items. [00:01:32] Speaker 03: The district court also relied on Connell versus Leitner for the proposition that a temporary interruption of religious practice cannot violate the Constitution. [00:01:44] Speaker 03: Connell is no longer good law, and more recent decisions of this court [00:01:49] Speaker 03: confirmed that such an interruption may substantially burden religious exercise. [00:01:55] Speaker 02: So counsel, in this case, your argument is that the taking of these items substantially burden his free exercise of his religion? [00:02:05] Speaker 03: Yes, that's correct. [00:02:07] Speaker 02: So tell us how. [00:02:09] Speaker 02: there was a substantial burden on his free exercise through the taking of these two items, the altar and the medallion, correct? [00:02:20] Speaker 03: That's correct, a pentacle medallion and an altar cloth. [00:02:22] Speaker 03: Mr. Gough needs both items for religious practices that he partakes in daily as part of his Wiccan faith. [00:02:30] Speaker 03: Both this court and numerous other circuits have recognized that depriving a prisoner of religious objects necessary [00:02:38] Speaker 03: to religious practice constitutes a substantial burden for purposes of our LUPA and free exercise clause claims. [00:02:47] Speaker 02: The reason I'm a little bit curious about that is that he had the opportunity to replace those and elected not to do so. [00:02:58] Speaker 02: And so it kind of implies that those weren't [00:03:04] Speaker 02: really necessary to his, to the exercise of his religion because he opted not to replace them. [00:03:11] Speaker 02: What do you, what's your response to that? [00:03:12] Speaker 03: Well, I have two responses, Judge Rollinson. [00:03:15] Speaker 03: First of all, the sincerity of Mr. Goff's religious releases. [00:03:18] Speaker 02: That's not, that's not about sincerity. [00:03:20] Speaker 02: It's about if you say that it's necessary to practice your religion, but you opt to continue to exercise your religion without those items. [00:03:31] Speaker 02: then is it necessary to your religion? [00:03:34] Speaker 03: Well, two points, Judge Rollins said. [00:03:36] Speaker 03: First of all, it does not have to be necessary to Mr. Goff's religion. [00:03:40] Speaker 02: I thought that's what you said, that it was necessary for him to practice his religion. [00:03:44] Speaker 03: Excuse me. [00:03:45] Speaker 03: It's necessary to the religious practice that he uses the altar cloth and the medallion for. [00:03:50] Speaker 03: So I direct the Court's attention to Jones versus Slade. [00:03:54] Speaker 02: What's the difference? [00:03:55] Speaker 02: I don't understand the point you're making then. [00:04:00] Speaker 02: if it's necessary for him to exercise his religion, then it's something that's required for him to exercise his religion, correct? [00:04:12] Speaker 03: Yes, I guess Judge Robinson, let me be clear. [00:04:14] Speaker 03: He is still able to exercise Wicca in other ways, but he cannot practice Wicca in the specific ways that require the altar cloth and the medallion. [00:04:23] Speaker 03: Does that address your question? [00:04:25] Speaker 04: Let me ask you in maybe a different way, which is what is the relief that your client wants in the case? [00:04:30] Speaker 03: Uh, well, certainly he would accept an injunction that led to the return of the medallion and the altar cloth. [00:04:36] Speaker 03: That would be very meaningful relief. [00:04:37] Speaker 04: I mean, I think the other side, if they had it, would presumably give it back at this point. [00:04:41] Speaker 04: I don't know if that's going to be possible, whether it exists or not. [00:04:44] Speaker 04: So what, what do you otherwise want? [00:04:46] Speaker 04: I believe otherwise he would accept monetary damages. [00:04:49] Speaker 03: What are the monetary damages? [00:04:51] Speaker 03: That issue has not been litigated before the district court. [00:04:54] Speaker 03: What could they be? [00:04:55] Speaker 03: The value of the items? [00:04:57] Speaker 03: I suppose that would be one. [00:04:58] Speaker 03: I think he would also seek additional compensatory damages reflecting the years in which he was not able to use these items for his religious practice. [00:05:08] Speaker 03: Judge Bress, if there's nothing further on that, I'd like to go back to your question, Judge Rawlinson, about his supposed ability to replace the medallion and altar cloth. [00:05:18] Speaker 03: because there is a material dispute of fact about whether that's possible. [00:05:23] Speaker 03: Mr. Goff's testimony is that according to his sincere religious beliefs, the specific items that were taken, the medallion and altar cloth that he practiced Wicca with for 14 years, had a particular spiritual and religious significance that a new medallion and altar cloth would not. [00:05:41] Speaker 03: Now there's also a factual dispute about whether he is indeed able to obtain new items. [00:05:46] Speaker 03: His testimony is that there are [00:05:48] Speaker 03: substantial burdens to him doing so, both financial and non-financial. [00:05:52] Speaker 04: So what was the reason the items were taken? [00:05:55] Speaker 03: Well, that's a very important point in this case, Judge Bress, that defendants have never identified a legitimate, penological interest that would justify confiscating these items. [00:06:06] Speaker 03: Mr. Goff was approved to have them. [00:06:10] Speaker 04: What if the deprivation here had just been an hour? [00:06:15] Speaker 04: They took them, maybe they shouldn't have taken them, but they realized that and they returned them an hour later. [00:06:19] Speaker 04: Would that be a substantial burden? [00:06:22] Speaker 03: That would present a much closer case, obviously, Judge Bress. [00:06:26] Speaker 03: Now, at least a panel of this court in Neely v. Shin did recognize that even a momentary interruption of religious practice could be a substantial burden. [00:06:35] Speaker 03: It really depends on the nature of the religious practice that the plaintiff claims. [00:06:41] Speaker 03: You know, there was uninterrupted Jumu'a prayer, so even a momentary interruption was a burden. [00:06:47] Speaker 03: You know, here at a minimum, Mr. Goff uses these items for daily religious practices. [00:06:52] Speaker 03: And, of course, he's been permanently deprived of the items, so the question of a temporary deprivation is sort of theoretical. [00:07:00] Speaker 04: What is the basis for, I mean, we have four officers who are alleged to be involved in the taking of the items. [00:07:08] Speaker 04: What is the basis for thinking that they were, [00:07:11] Speaker 04: intending to deprive him of the items for some material period of time? [00:07:18] Speaker 03: Yes, I think that follows from a couple of pieces of evidence in the record. [00:07:21] Speaker 03: I mean, this was a search of his cell for dangerous contraband. [00:07:24] Speaker 03: That's from the defendant's declarations. [00:07:27] Speaker 03: Why do you take a prisoner's items from his cell during a search for contraband? [00:07:32] Speaker 03: You're treating them as contraband. [00:07:34] Speaker 03: Presumably, that's to deprive the prisoner of access [00:07:37] Speaker 03: to those items. [00:07:39] Speaker 03: Then I'm not sure if this is exactly what you were asking, but you know that Mr. Goff witnessed two TSU officers emerging from the cell after the search. [00:07:47] Speaker 03: They had a bag of items. [00:07:48] Speaker 03: They were referring to its contents as satanic and devil's stuff. [00:07:52] Speaker 03: Supports the inference that the items were common. [00:07:55] Speaker 04: I mean, there's some suggestion maybe in the district court opinion that Mr. Goff pursued the wrong people in this case. [00:08:03] Speaker 04: I don't know if you have a response to that. [00:08:06] Speaker 03: I would disagree with that, Judge Bress. [00:08:09] Speaker 03: The people who were integrally . [00:08:11] Speaker 03: . [00:08:11] Speaker 03: . [00:08:12] Speaker 03: The constitutional violation, of course, is confiscating Mr. Goff's religious items and not returning them. [00:08:18] Speaker 03: The integral participants in that constitutional violation are the officers who were involved with confiscating the items initially from Mr. Goff's cell. [00:08:28] Speaker 03: These TSU officer defendants were identified by the prison as those officers. [00:08:34] Speaker 03: And the person who made the decision not to return the items to Mr. Goff and Mr. Goff's testimony supports the inference that that person was complex major standridge. [00:08:48] Speaker 03: The court has no additional questions about the free exercise clause claim. [00:08:52] Speaker 03: I'd like to talk a little bit about the Arlupa claim. [00:08:56] Speaker 03: The error here is quite straightforward. [00:08:58] Speaker 03: The district court refused to consider Mr. Goff's well-pled Arlupa claim [00:09:03] Speaker 03: on the merits at all, only because Mr. Goff had not cited ARLUPA in his... What would that claim, if it's in the case, what would that get you? [00:09:10] Speaker 04: The ARLUPA claim? [00:09:13] Speaker 04: Yeah, what does it add to your relief or to anything else you would be seeking here? [00:09:18] Speaker 03: Well, you're probably right that it largely tracks the Free Exercise Clause claim, but plaintiffs routinely bring Free Exercise Clause and ARLUPA claims together. [00:09:28] Speaker 03: Under the current law of the circuit, Mr. Goff could obtain [00:09:31] Speaker 03: injunctive relief under Arluba. [00:09:33] Speaker 03: He did name all of the defendants in their official capacities. [00:09:39] Speaker 04: I mean, is that not relief he could obtain just under, you know, the free exercise clause itself? [00:09:48] Speaker 03: That's probably right, Judge Bress, but, you know, if he adequately pled both claims, he's entitled to have... There's a serious question whether he adequately pled the [00:09:58] Speaker 03: There is no, excuse me Judge Rollison, I didn't mean to cut you off. [00:10:02] Speaker 02: I was going to say, I think there is an issue regarding whether he adequately pled the Arlupa claim. [00:10:08] Speaker 02: Where in the record are you relying on to say that he adequately pled the Arlupa claim? [00:10:14] Speaker 03: So he first cited, well- He mentioned the phrase. [00:10:20] Speaker 03: He first cited Arlupa in his opposition to summary judgment. [00:10:24] Speaker 03: He not only cited it and mentioned the phrase. [00:10:27] Speaker 03: I mean, he described the standard and argued that it was, argued that it was. [00:10:33] Speaker 02: But is that, is that, if he didn't put it in his complaint and first raised it in his opposition, is that adequately raised for purposes of the case? [00:10:44] Speaker 03: It absolutely is under this court's decision in Alvarez versus Hill. [00:10:49] Speaker 03: Alvarez is directly on point here. [00:10:51] Speaker 03: It says that you, [00:10:52] Speaker 03: do not need to cite Arlupa in your complaint to adequately allege the claim. [00:10:57] Speaker 03: What you have to do is you have to make out the factual allegations that support the Arlupa claim, which he did. [00:11:02] Speaker 03: They're the same ones that support the pre-exercise claim. [00:11:04] Speaker 02: Okay, let's look at the record where he, what page of the record are you relying upon to say he adequately played the Arlupa claim? [00:11:13] Speaker 02: Even though I agree with Judge Brest that I'm not sure that it makes a difference to the outcome of this case. [00:11:21] Speaker 02: But I'm just curious what language you're looking at. [00:11:26] Speaker 03: This is a 2SER98. [00:11:50] Speaker 04: The defendants did address it in their reply in summary judgment, so I take it your point is at that point it's kind of in the case. [00:11:59] Speaker 03: That's correct, and that's exactly what Alvarez said. [00:12:01] Speaker 03: It said you just have to cite ARLUPA at some point before summary judgment, put defendants on adequate notice that you're proceeding under that legal theory. [00:12:12] Speaker 03: It relied on the fact that the defendants in Alvarez had responded to the ARLUPA claim. [00:12:16] Speaker 03: to show that they had such notice. [00:12:18] Speaker 03: And that's exactly what we have here. [00:12:20] Speaker 02: And so what would you have us do, remand it for the district court to address it? [00:12:24] Speaker 03: Yes, exactly. [00:12:25] Speaker 03: Remand for the district court to address the Arlupa claim on the merits in the first instance. [00:12:29] Speaker 02: Yeah. [00:12:29] Speaker 02: Even if it's largely duplicative of the free exercise claim? [00:12:34] Speaker 03: Yes. [00:12:35] Speaker 03: Yes, Judge Rollins. [00:12:36] Speaker 02: What would be the point to have the district court address it if it's largely duplicative of the free exercise claim? [00:12:44] Speaker 03: Well, I guess Judge Rawlinson, this assumes that you agree with me on the free exercise claim. [00:12:48] Speaker 02: Well, whether we agree or disagree, however we resolve the free exercise claim would probably have the same outcome for the Arlupa claim. [00:12:57] Speaker 02: Wouldn't you agree? [00:12:59] Speaker 03: I think that's basically right in this case, largely because, you know, Arlupa is more generous to the religiously observant than the free exercise clause claim is, but mostly at the second step about a legitimate penological interest, which is [00:13:13] Speaker 03: not an issue here. [00:13:14] Speaker 03: Defendants have never raised it. [00:13:17] Speaker 03: But ultimately, I just return to the point that I made to Judge Bress. [00:13:22] Speaker 03: Plaintiffs routinely bring these two claims together, even though true, they largely track each other, and Mr. Goff is entitled to have his well-plagued claims considered on the merits. [00:13:34] Speaker 03: I see I'm into my rebuttal time. [00:13:35] Speaker 02: Thank you, counsel. [00:13:38] Speaker 02: We'll hear from the government. [00:14:11] Speaker 01: May it please the court, I am Suzanne Reed from the Winnke Law Group, representing Appellee's Major Standridge, Sergeant Rep. [00:14:18] Speaker 01: Willett, Forrest, and Jones. [00:14:21] Speaker 01: We know that on January 15th, 2019, an incident command system was initiated, and that cell units were searched, including Mr. Goff's. [00:14:31] Speaker 01: What we don't know is how that search happened, what happened during the search, and who actually did the search and confiscated the items. [00:14:39] Speaker 02: Counsel, opposing counsel said the defendants were the ones who were identified by the institution as having conducted the search. [00:14:47] Speaker 01: And your honor, it is correct based on the record that there was a subpoena for Deuces Tecum that asked to identify who was involved in the search. [00:14:57] Speaker 01: It was a compound sentence, but who was involved in the search, who was involved in the conversation, and who did not return. [00:15:03] Speaker 01: And the custodian of records, a non-party, just sent a list of names. [00:15:08] Speaker 01: That itself is not proof that these actual defendants, one, were actually involved in searching the cell, and two, that they confiscated his items. [00:15:18] Speaker 01: Mr. Goff had a burden to show which individuals did what, and at the summary judgment stage, he failed to do so. [00:15:25] Speaker 04: So why doesn't it create at least a dispute of fact when there's a response to a subpoena that identifies the people who are defendants here? [00:15:34] Speaker 01: That's an identifying list of potential defendants by a non-party. [00:15:39] Speaker 01: What happened at this stage with this particular case is that discovery was completed by the time the motion for summary judgment was done. [00:15:45] Speaker 01: Mr. Goff had an opportunity to find out who did what and didn't meet that burden. [00:15:51] Speaker 01: Instead, he said throughout his pleading, even in his opposition for his motion for summary judgment, I saw two unknown male officers coming out. [00:16:00] Speaker 01: He has nothing else. [00:16:01] Speaker 01: And so to say it's maybe one of these because a subpoena that I sent for records gave me a list, that simply is not enough to survive the motion for summary judgment. [00:16:11] Speaker 01: And in this particular case for a 1983 claim, which he did mark in his second amendment complaint if that's what he was pleading, he has to show that the actual defendants were involved of his First Amendment violation. [00:16:25] Speaker 01: So a subpoena response is not enough to survive the motion for summary judgment. [00:16:31] Speaker 01: in this particular instance. [00:16:35] Speaker 04: I mean this was not really the basis for the district court's decision that they just were not involved at all. [00:16:40] Speaker 04: The district court seemed to assume that they were involved and then held that the actions didn't rise to a level of a substantial burden. [00:16:47] Speaker 04: Or do you disagree? [00:16:48] Speaker 01: I'm going to push back a little bit there. [00:16:49] Speaker 01: I know that counsel said that the district court found that, but I believe the wording of the district court was even assuming these defendants were involved, a fact that both parties seem to not be sure about. [00:17:00] Speaker 04: No, that's fair, and I'm looking at the same language, but I guess where I'm going with this is that if the argument is they weren't involved at all, or there's just not enough evidence that they were even there on that date and time and place, that doesn't seem to be the ground for the district court's decision. [00:17:14] Speaker 04: The district court ruled on a different basis. [00:17:17] Speaker 01: I disagree, based on my reading, the district court began the analysis of he had to show which defendants were involved and did not, and then changed the analysis, even assuming there wasn't a substantial burden. [00:17:29] Speaker 01: And so we are agreeing with the analysis of you did not identify that these particular defendants were involved in that First Amendment violation. [00:17:37] Speaker 04: Are you including Standridge in this too, or just the four who are alleged to have searched the cell? [00:17:43] Speaker 01: I would like to talk about Standridge. [00:17:45] Speaker 01: The court also found that he was not involved and that there was hearsay statements made to Goff from a non-party officer. [00:17:53] Speaker 01: Now, a review of the record indicates that in this particular case, Goff made different statements as to what happened with that third-party officer, what she told him, and what she said Standridge said. [00:18:08] Speaker 01: If you look at the actual record, he cites to his interactions with Standridge. [00:18:13] Speaker 01: But none of that indicates that he actually discussed with Standridge his specific items. [00:18:18] Speaker 01: Not at all. [00:18:19] Speaker 04: So it's based on- I thought he says he told Standridge, you're not allowed to take my religious items. [00:18:25] Speaker 01: In the multiple filings, he says that Standridge came and said basically what's going on. [00:18:31] Speaker 01: And the conversation is not, I don't take my items. [00:18:36] Speaker 01: The conversation is, you don't get to tell us what we do or not to do. [00:18:41] Speaker 01: We're going to send you the detention unit. [00:18:42] Speaker 04: So what is your contention with standards, that he just did not know what was taken at all? [00:18:49] Speaker 01: Well, our contention is based on what he has specifically said in his declarations, is that he did not order the confiscation of the altar cloth or medallion. [00:19:00] Speaker 01: It was not shown the altar cloth or medallion by COO Truman or Truman, spelled different ways in different parts of the record, or any other department officer. [00:19:09] Speaker 01: I did not order Truman or any department officer to withhold the altar cloth or medallion. [00:19:14] Speaker 01: I did not make any statements that plaintiff attributes to me. [00:19:18] Speaker 01: With him, he is an after-effect person. [00:19:24] Speaker 01: that was not part of the cell search. [00:19:26] Speaker 01: He's not part of the TSU unit. [00:19:29] Speaker 01: He is someone that after the defendant or after Mr. Goff in this case was banging on a cell, came down to address that issue. [00:19:41] Speaker 04: And so the... Well, why isn't this... I mean, I see his declaration. [00:19:44] Speaker 04: You know, he clearly had some interaction with Goff on that day. [00:19:50] Speaker 01: Interaction doesn't mean compensation or withholding. [00:19:53] Speaker 04: Well, I mean, Goff has come forward and said he knew that these were my items. [00:19:58] Speaker 04: I told him I had religious items. [00:20:01] Speaker 04: And there's a difference of recollection on that interaction. [00:20:05] Speaker 04: That's even separate from the trauma. [00:20:07] Speaker 04: But why isn't that genuinely disputed? [00:20:09] Speaker 01: And again, I would like to know where on the record he said that he specifically told, he assumed the standard is acting [00:20:17] Speaker 01: based on retaliation. [00:20:19] Speaker 01: That's part of his due process claim. [00:20:21] Speaker 01: But I don't know on the record, and it could be that I have not seen it work, he specifically says to Standridge, my religious items are missing, I want them back. [00:20:33] Speaker 01: That is missing from the record. [00:20:34] Speaker 01: It's the conversation with Truman who is outside. [00:20:38] Speaker 01: But let's talk about that conversation with Truman, because I think [00:20:41] Speaker 01: The issue here is that for the summary judgment, the lower court looked at the entire record, which is permissible under the rules for summary judgment. [00:20:49] Speaker 01: So what happened? [00:20:50] Speaker 01: What are we talking about? [00:20:52] Speaker 01: So the grievance complaint is about these missing items, including non-religious items. [00:20:58] Speaker 01: The Second Amendment complaint, he says, came back. [00:21:02] Speaker 01: There's these two missing items. [00:21:04] Speaker 01: And then Truman returned 15 minutes later. [00:21:07] Speaker 01: and was told she was able to locate the cloth and could not give it back to me in order to the complex major. [00:21:12] Speaker 01: When asked, she shrugged and re-entered on orders. [00:21:16] Speaker 01: It's not a direct conversation with the complex major. [00:21:20] Speaker 01: When I arrived at the Buckley unit, I discovered then I was missing these items. [00:21:25] Speaker 01: He also indicates the fact that, well. [00:21:29] Speaker 04: So I mean, what is your, I'm just having trouble with the position here in the sense that is your, I mean, we know items were taken from him. [00:21:37] Speaker 04: But the argument is that nobody at the time appreciated that, even though that's what the whole case is about. [00:21:44] Speaker 04: That's what I'm trying to, I don't follow. [00:21:46] Speaker 04: I mean, I'm looking at his deposition testimony where he says, in reference to standards, the discussion, that he says, you don't tell, he says the major starts walking back and forth, like he's a drill sergeant in boot camp saying, you don't tell us what we're allowed to take, we tell you. [00:22:01] Speaker 04: And I tell him that you're not allowed to take my religious items, I've shown you my approval forms, and he says, [00:22:07] Speaker 04: You don't get to tell us what we take, we tell you. [00:22:09] Speaker 04: So that's his testimony. [00:22:11] Speaker 04: I have no idea if it's correct or not. [00:22:13] Speaker 04: And the standard seems to dispute that. [00:22:15] Speaker 04: But why is this point not genuinely disputed? [00:22:20] Speaker 01: Because the lower court looked at the other times that he referenced his conversation with that major, which was in the second minute complaint in the response to the opposition in his statement of facts where he does not mention that he told that to the major. [00:22:34] Speaker 01: So he's allowed to look at that. [00:22:36] Speaker 01: Additionally, [00:22:38] Speaker 01: based on his own statements, he makes conflicting statements as to what actually happened with the cloth and medallion. [00:22:45] Speaker 01: So at one point, in Plato's response objecting to the motion for the stay of discovery, which is in Document 62, which when I looked, it was not part of what was sent out to the court, which can be supplemented. [00:22:58] Speaker 01: He mentions that Officer Truman, [00:23:02] Speaker 01: told me that she gave it the property to Officer B. Rodriguez to put in my excessive property and contraband box, which is something that he admits in other places where he's talking about that. [00:23:13] Speaker 01: So that's Officer Truman, Officer Rodriguez, not Standridge withholding the items. [00:23:21] Speaker 01: And then additionally, he mentions again in his declaration against the summary judgment, [00:23:30] Speaker 01: Defendants did unlawfully take and never return my religious items, nor did the religious items ever make it to my contraband box, the property officer B. Rodriguez, as Truman said. [00:23:40] Speaker 01: That's on 2SER 251. [00:23:43] Speaker 01: So there's conflicting statements as to who had what and when. [00:23:47] Speaker 01: These defendants, though, their statement is, we don't know what happened. [00:23:52] Speaker 01: We know a search occurred. [00:23:52] Speaker 01: We don't know what happened. [00:23:54] Speaker 01: So as the district court said, even assuming [00:24:00] Speaker 01: the conversation occurred in this particular case. [00:24:03] Speaker 04: Is there any doubt that the confiscation occurred? [00:24:05] Speaker 04: I mean, we're questioning the very basic premises of this whole case, which is something was taken from him. [00:24:12] Speaker 04: Do you dispute that? [00:24:13] Speaker 01: No, the record shows that these items are lost. [00:24:17] Speaker 01: They weren't in his room. [00:24:19] Speaker 04: I take it if your client had them or if the prison had them, they would have been returned? [00:24:25] Speaker 01: I cannot avow, but based on the affirmations of what are [00:24:30] Speaker 01: by the officers in this case, they have no knowledge of it, they don't have possession of it. [00:24:35] Speaker 04: But why were they taken if he had the ability to possess them? [00:24:41] Speaker 01: That would be pure speculation. [00:24:43] Speaker 01: At this point, there is reference in the record that he says that his medallion was taken along with a two-pronged plug for being altered. [00:24:54] Speaker 01: There is protocol as if there's things taken as part of [00:24:58] Speaker 01: if they found during the search that wasn't filed. [00:25:01] Speaker 01: That's completely negligent if that's what occurred in this case. [00:25:03] Speaker 01: Does that arise to a First Amendment violation? [00:25:06] Speaker 01: No, not according to the case law in the Ninth Circuit. [00:25:09] Speaker 01: I do want to point out that as far as the burden aspect of this that opposing counsel mentioned, the lower court got it correct that there wasn't a substantial burden by these defendants in this case with the loss of these items. [00:25:25] Speaker 01: Mr. Goff fully admits that he's able to continue practicing his religion in this since then. [00:25:32] Speaker 01: Yes, there are sentimental values to these two items. [00:25:36] Speaker 04: I think it's more than that. [00:25:37] Speaker 04: I mean, you know, it's a religious value. [00:25:41] Speaker 04: So I don't know that it's just sentimental. [00:25:43] Speaker 01: The way that he described it, I think it was [00:25:46] Speaker 01: spiritual, magical, there's value to him. [00:25:51] Speaker 01: But can he continue still practicing? [00:25:53] Speaker 01: Are they forcing him to do something that's against his religion or not? [00:25:57] Speaker 01: They're absolutely not, especially not these defendants. [00:26:01] Speaker 01: Mr. Goff even mentions that after this incident, he did not have contact with them. [00:26:07] Speaker 01: And again, he mentions that he thought that it was part of the property that was lost. [00:26:11] Speaker 01: when his other property was lost. [00:26:14] Speaker 01: So for these particular defendants, they did not substantially burden this defendant regarding the loss of the property. [00:26:22] Speaker 01: I also want to point out that as far as the Arlupa claim that was brought up by counsel, Alvarez is different. [00:26:31] Speaker 01: Alvarez, that particular case, the court found that the opposing party admitted that this was a Arlupa case. [00:26:40] Speaker 01: and that there was the reference of something being substantially burdened to his religion, and that he pled it even greater than necessary. [00:26:48] Speaker 01: But how those officials were doing that, that was not pled here. [00:26:54] Speaker 01: And the only time it's brought up is in the response to the motion for summary judgment. [00:27:00] Speaker 01: But if you actually look at what he says, citing to the statute, it's not enough, saying that he had to modify. [00:27:09] Speaker 01: OK. [00:27:10] Speaker 01: you had to modify and that there's 14 years of stored magical protective wording in your laws. [00:27:16] Speaker 01: And that so you had to regulate his practice. [00:27:18] Speaker 04: The question on this, you know, under Alvarez basically at summary judgment, is there enough notice given? [00:27:23] Speaker 04: And when the defendants here responded to the RLUPA claim in the summary judgment reply, why are we faulting him for not including it in the complaints? [00:27:33] Speaker 04: I mean, I could, Alvarez would seem to govern that. [00:27:37] Speaker 01: I don't believe so, Your Honor, because this particular record in front of us, the defendants throughout all of their filings have said, even in their answer, this is not a RLUPA claim. [00:27:49] Speaker 04: Well, what prejudice is it? [00:27:50] Speaker 04: I mean, it's not clear what it even adds to the case. [00:27:53] Speaker 04: So what difference would it have made if the district court had, I mean, presumably the district court would have looked at this RLUPA claim, and based on what he said already, would have ruled in your favor. [00:28:03] Speaker 01: That's true. [00:28:05] Speaker 01: If there's going to be a fine of substantial burden underneath, that there's going to be a finding of substantial burden. [00:28:12] Speaker 01: We, of course, contest that there's not. [00:28:15] Speaker 01: But then the outcome of if it's a Rulupa claim that's statutory versus a constitutional outcome, and who actually has the ability to provide an injunction relief, that's a whole other ball game. [00:28:25] Speaker 01: So that's how it changes. [00:28:27] Speaker 01: But whether or not there's a substantial burden, Your Honor, you're correct. [00:28:30] Speaker 01: That part is still there. [00:28:32] Speaker 01: And as far as this actual record, [00:28:35] Speaker 01: Council's right that we did not even get to the, um, ideological issues of this case, because as the lower court found, even assuming it's these defendants, which Goff had the burden, did not prove throughout his time before the motion for summary judgment, there was no substantial burden because he was still able to practice. [00:28:55] Speaker 01: And these defendants did not cause him not to practice after this event. [00:29:00] Speaker 01: What happened here, unfortunately, was the loss. [00:29:01] Speaker 04: Is this the right place for this part of the analysis? [00:29:03] Speaker 04: I mean, you know, the, [00:29:06] Speaker 04: The idea that you would take that somebody could still practice their religion in other ways or at least sufficiently, is that really part of the substantial burden question or is it really more part of a defense to say what we did had a legitimate penological justification and it would maybe go into that as part of that argument? [00:29:25] Speaker 01: I think I might be misunderstanding your question, so let me know. [00:29:30] Speaker 04: Well, let me restate it. [00:29:31] Speaker 04: I mean, I guess the question to me is at the substantial burden stage, are we really to evaluate [00:29:36] Speaker 04: the case in the way that you're asking, whereas does this issue about whether he could still practice his religion come in more as part of defending the action based on the prison, the need for the prison to have done what it did? [00:29:47] Speaker 01: And I'm not trying to split the answer, but I think it actually comes under both, because if there's a substantial burden, you have to see what these actual defendants did regarding this defendant [00:29:57] Speaker 01: and his religious rights? [00:30:00] Speaker 01: And did they cause him to not practice his religion in a certain way, based on their actions, or cause him to engage in something he was forbidden to? [00:30:09] Speaker 04: Are we just making a judgment about his religion? [00:30:11] Speaker 04: I mean, he says these items are sacred to him. [00:30:15] Speaker 04: And lots of people have items that are sacred to them in their own religions. [00:30:20] Speaker 04: And it's a tough thing to have to go and say, well, it's actually not as important to you as you claim. [00:30:27] Speaker 01: I agree, Your Honor, but there's at least a threshold issue that he has to make a showing of the substantial burden regarding these particular defendants, which he failed to do. [00:30:35] Speaker 02: What does substantial burden mean in terms of free exercise jurisprudence? [00:30:40] Speaker 02: It has to mean something. [00:30:42] Speaker 02: So how does one establish that there's a substantial burden? [00:30:46] Speaker 02: What does that mean in terms of free exercise? [00:30:48] Speaker 02: What do the cases say? [00:30:50] Speaker 02: What is the substantial burden? [00:30:52] Speaker 02: For instance, I mean, if someone has a Bible and they've put [00:30:57] Speaker 02: notes in the Bible and it's something that they use to study and to perform their religious exercises or their religious study and that Bible is taken. [00:31:12] Speaker 02: Would that be a substantial burden on the free exercise of that person's religion? [00:31:19] Speaker 01: I think it depends on the facts of the case and I'm not trying to not answer your question. [00:31:23] Speaker 01: It depends on what [00:31:26] Speaker 01: has occurred. [00:31:27] Speaker 01: So did this course the individual to act contrary to their beliefs or exert substantial pressure to modify the behavior and violate the beliefs. [00:31:38] Speaker 01: So not having a specific item that is important to you, that you prayed to, that you've meditated to, losing that, especially through negligence, is not a substantial burden created on that defendant in this particular case. [00:31:56] Speaker 01: There are obviously sentimental value tests. [00:32:00] Speaker 01: It's more than that. [00:32:01] Speaker 01: It's religious value. [00:32:02] Speaker 01: It's his religious value. [00:32:04] Speaker 01: But as far as the facts of this case and the cases that say that there's not a substantial burden, the defendant's actions, regulations, policies did not cause that substantial burden causing that modification. [00:32:19] Speaker 00: There is a loss here. [00:32:21] Speaker 00: We really don't know from this record, do we, whether the government [00:32:25] Speaker 00: is claiming there was a penological reason for doing what was done here. [00:32:30] Speaker 00: Is that right? [00:32:32] Speaker 01: That is correct, Your Honor. [00:32:33] Speaker 01: They did not get to the second portion because the district court found, even assuming it's the defendant, there wasn't a substantial burden. [00:32:41] Speaker 01: So under the First Amendment cases, it is whether or not there's the substantial burden, if that's found, then whether or not there was the penological interest and you apply the Turner [00:32:54] Speaker 01: factors. [00:32:55] Speaker 01: We didn't get that far in this case, based on Goff not meeting his burden. [00:32:59] Speaker 01: And so we respectfully request that the court affirm the motion for summary judgment, unless the court has any other questions for me. [00:33:08] Speaker 02: It appears not. [00:33:09] Speaker 01: Thank you, counsel. [00:33:10] Speaker 01: Thank you, Your Honor. [00:33:20] Speaker 03: of the legitimate penological interest question. [00:33:22] Speaker 03: It's not just that the district court did not reach that step in the analysis. [00:33:26] Speaker 03: There's never been an assertion by these defendants that there was one not before this court, and I don't believe before the district court either. [00:33:35] Speaker 03: This opposing counsel mentioned something about the medallion being altered. [00:33:40] Speaker 03: This is the first time I've heard that argument made, and there's at least a dispute of fact. [00:33:44] Speaker 03: Mr. Goff's testimony is that it was not altered. [00:33:48] Speaker 03: I'd like to talk about the substantial [00:33:50] Speaker 03: burden questions that came up at the end just now. [00:33:54] Speaker 03: Mr. Goff's ability to practice WICA in other ways is not relevant to that step of the analysis. [00:34:00] Speaker 02: So what do the cases say about what constitutes a substantial burden? [00:34:04] Speaker 02: What's your strongest case authority that you're relying upon? [00:34:08] Speaker 03: I was just about to get there, Judge Rawlinson. [00:34:10] Speaker 03: It's Jones versus Slade. [00:34:12] Speaker 03: So Jones explains how this first step of the analysis is supposed to go. [00:34:17] Speaker 03: It says that the first [00:34:19] Speaker 03: The first thing the court has to determine, the crucial question, is how to conceive of the religious practice at issue. [00:34:27] Speaker 03: And what Jones says is that it should be conceived of essentially as the plaintiff claims it. [00:34:32] Speaker 03: So in Jones, the plaintiff claims that being denied two books by Elijah Muhammad substantially burdened his ability to partake in his religious practice of reading a central nation of Islam texts during Ramadan. [00:34:48] Speaker 03: The district court had conceived of it more broadly. [00:34:50] Speaker 03: It said the religious practice is just observing Ramadan. [00:34:53] Speaker 03: And this court held that that was reversible error. [00:34:56] Speaker 03: The religious practice in question was the more narrow one identified by the plaintiff. [00:35:04] Speaker 03: I see that I'm out of time. [00:35:05] Speaker 04: Just before you sit down, your opposing counsel, at least on the four officer defendants, [00:35:12] Speaker 04: So basically, the subpoena is not sufficient to create a dispute of fact. [00:35:17] Speaker 04: What's your response to that? [00:35:18] Speaker 03: So I'd like to make two points about that. [00:35:21] Speaker 03: First, this is the first time that defendants have argued, to my knowledge, that the subpoena is somehow not competent evidence. [00:35:29] Speaker 03: Mr. Goff asked the prison specifically for the names of the officers involved with searching his cell, with confiscating his religious items. [00:35:38] Speaker 03: The prison responded without qualification that it was [00:35:41] Speaker 03: these defendants, plus another one, CO2, Castro Hermeseo. [00:35:45] Speaker 03: There were ways the prison could have determined that. [00:35:48] Speaker 03: There is normally surveillance video of the housing units, normally a report about search and confiscation of items. [00:35:56] Speaker 03: And then one other thing opposing counsel said was that it was Mr. Goff's burden to show which individuals did what at summary judgment. [00:36:04] Speaker 03: That's not actually the law in this circuit. [00:36:06] Speaker 03: Rutherford and Liston recognized that [00:36:09] Speaker 03: Even absent that kind of definitive evidence, there may be a jury question about each defendant's participation. [00:36:15] Speaker 02: Counsel, in Jones, it says that a substantial burden exists when the state places substantial pressure on an adherent to modify his behavior and to violate his beliefs. [00:36:30] Speaker 03: Agree. [00:36:30] Speaker 02: How is that standard met here? [00:36:32] Speaker 02: How are his beliefs violated? [00:36:34] Speaker 03: It's the behavior, I think, Judge Rollins. [00:36:37] Speaker 02: But it's an and. [00:36:38] Speaker 02: substantial pressure on an adherent to modify his behavior and to violate his beliefs. [00:36:45] Speaker 02: So how was he pressured to violate his beliefs? [00:36:50] Speaker 03: Mr. Goff believes that he needs to partake in religious practices and rituals, that he needs these two items to partake in. [00:36:58] Speaker 03: Without the items, he cannot partake in the religious rituals that this wicked thing requires. [00:37:04] Speaker 03: Does that violate his beliefs? [00:37:05] Speaker 03: Yes, because he believes that he needs to partake in the rituals and he cannot. [00:37:08] Speaker 02: All right. [00:37:08] Speaker 02: Thank you, counsel. [00:37:10] Speaker 02: Thank you to both counsel for your helpful arguments. [00:37:12] Speaker 02: The case is submitted for decision by the court. [00:37:14] Speaker 02: The final case on calendar, Hassan versus Wingfield, has been submitted on the briefs. [00:37:19] Speaker 02: And again, counsel, we thank you for accepting this case pro bono. [00:37:23] Speaker 03: It's truly my pleasure, Judge Robinson. [00:37:25] Speaker 02: Thank you. [00:37:25] Speaker 02: That completes our calendar for the morning. [00:37:27] Speaker 02: We are on recess until 9.30 a.m. [00:37:29] Speaker 02: tomorrow morning.