Crime Justice & America, Inc. v. Kory Honea , 876 F.3d 966 ( 2017 )


Menu:
  •                      FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    CRIME JUSTICE & AMERICA, INC.,                  Nos. 15-16119
    Plaintiff-Appellant,                 16-17195
    v.                             D.C. No.
    2:08-cv-00343-
    KORY HONEA, in his official capacity                TLN-EFB
    as Sheriff of the County of Butte,
    Defendant-Appellee.               OPINION
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of California
    Troy L. Nunley, District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted October 19, 2017
    San Francisco, California
    Filed November 29, 2017
    Before: William A. Fletcher and Richard C. Tallman,
    Circuit Judges, and Kenneth M. Hoyt, * District Judge.
    Opinion by Judge Tallman
    *
    The Honorable Kenneth M. Hoyt, United States District Judge for
    the Southern District of Texas, sitting by designation.
    2            CRIME & JUSTICE AMERICA V. HONEA
    SUMMARY **
    Prisoner Civil Rights
    The panel affirmed the district court’s bench trial
    judgment in favor of defendants and affirmed the denial of
    plaintiff’s motion to re-open discovery and for relief from
    judgment in a 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
     action challenging Butte
    County Jail’s policy prohibiting the delivery of unsolicited
    commercial mail to inmates.
    Plaintiff, a publisher of a magazine aimed at county jail
    inmates, argued that the jail’s mail policy violated the First
    Amendment. The panel held that each of the four factors set
    forth in Turner v. Safley, 
    482 U.S. 78
     (1987) favored
    defendant and therefore that Butte County’s ban on inmates’
    receipt of unsolicited commercial mail was reasonably
    related to a legitimate penological objective. The panel held
    that: (1) the ban was intended to limit inmates’ access to the
    type of paper most likely used to compromise jail security;
    (2) electronic kiosks where inmates could access an
    electronic version of the magazine were an adequate
    alternative; (3) defendant established that distributing the
    magazine would have a significant impact on the allocation
    of jail resources; and (4) paper had created serious problems
    at the jail, and the mail policy was not an exaggerated
    response to those problems.
    The panel held that plaintiff abandoned its arguments
    related to the post-trial admission of a declaration and its
    appeal of the district court’s denial of its motion for relief
    **
    This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It
    has been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
    CRIME & JUSTICE AMERICA V. HONEA                  3
    from judgment and its motion to re-open discovery. The
    panel noted that plaintiff failed to explain why it objected to
    the admission of the declaration or what new evidence
    pertaining to the electronic kiosks it could have discovered.
    COUNSEL
    Spencer D. Freeman (argued), Freeman Law Group Inc.,
    Tacoma, Washington; Savannah R. Blackwell, San
    Francisco, California; Andrew Sosa, Alameda, California;
    for Plaintiff-Appellant.
    John R. Whitefleet (argued) and Thomas L. Riordan, Porter
    Scott APC, Sacramento, California; Bruce S. Alpert, County
    Counsel, Office of the County Counsel, County of Butte,
    Oroville, California; for Defendant-Appellee.
    OPINION
    TALLMAN, Circuit Judge:
    Crime, Justice & America, Inc. (“CJ&A”) appeals the
    entry of judgment in favor of Butte County Sheriff Kory
    Honea following a bench trial in CJ&A’s 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    action against the Sheriff. The Sheriff oversees operation of
    the Butte County Jail, which prohibits delivery of unsolicited
    commercial mail to inmates. CJ&A publishes a magazine
    aimed at county jail inmates and argues that the jail’s mail
    policy violates the First Amendment.
    Based on the evidence presented at trial, the district court
    found the policy justified by legitimate penological interests.
    It also determined that electronic distribution of the
    4          CRIME & JUSTICE AMERICA V. HONEA
    magazine at recently installed kiosks was an adequate
    substitute for regular distribution of paper copies, which
    would have introduced thousands of pages of unsolicited
    paper into a facility where inmates habitually misuse paper
    in ways that threaten institutional security. Because the
    policy is reasonably related to a valid penological interest,
    the district court held the policy does not violate the First
    Amendment and granted judgment for the Sheriff.
    I
    A
    Crime, Justice & America (“the magazine”) contains
    articles intended to help inmates navigate the criminal justice
    system, as well as advertisements for attorneys and bail
    bondsmen. CJ&A provides the magazine to inmates for free;
    it does not offer subscriptions. Its only source of revenue is
    the advertising it sells.
    CJ&A distributes its magazine in one of two ways. In
    jails that allow “general distribution,” stacks of the magazine
    are left in common areas each week. In other jails, copies of
    the magazine are individually addressed and mailed to one
    out of every ten inmates, using publicly available inmate
    roster information.
    B
    The Butte County Jail in Oroville, California, houses an
    average of 580–590 inmates each day. Due to staffing
    constraints, inmates are not directly supervised by a
    correctional officer for significant portions of the day. The
    jail instead employs “remote surveillance, direct
    observation” and “linear” models of supervision, so
    corrections officers spend just a few minutes of every hour
    CRIME & JUSTICE AMERICA V. HONEA                   5
    in each housing area, or briefly observe inmates from
    hallways without even entering housing areas. That means
    corrections officers are not physically present in all areas of
    the jail to continually monitor inmate behavior.
    Abuse of paper is a persistent problem at the Butte
    County Jail. Inmates use paper to cover windows, speakers,
    and lights; to clog toilets and block air vents; to start fires;
    and to conceal contraband. Jail officials report that paper-
    related violations occur “every day.” These violations are
    almost always committed using paper with which inmates do
    not have a personal connection, such as pages torn out of
    phone books or donated paperbacks.                Correctional
    supervisors testified that “personally owned papers” such as
    letters, photographs, and legal mail are almost never used for
    such purposes.
    In an effort to combat paper-related violations, thirty-one
    electronic kiosks were installed throughout the jail in 2014,
    along with two portable kiosks. The kiosks allow inmates to
    access electronic versions of the jail handbook,
    administrative forms, and reading material. The kiosks can
    easily accommodate reading material uploaded in portable
    document format (“PDF”).
    C
    In 2004, CJ&A requested permission to distribute 50–55
    paper copies of its magazine at Butte County Jail every
    week. Each issue of the magazine has 36–40 pages, so
    granting CJ&A’s request would have resulted in the
    introduction to the facility of at least 1,800 pages’ worth of
    material every week. Butte County officials refused CJ&A’s
    request, citing a longstanding but unpublished policy
    forbidding the delivery of unsolicited commercial mail to
    inmates. The month after CJ&A made its request, Butte
    6          CRIME & JUSTICE AMERICA V. HONEA
    County issued a departmental order that put this policy into
    writing.
    CJ&A corresponded with Butte County officials for
    several years, trying unsuccessfully to convince them to
    distribute the magazine. In 2008, CJ&A filed a civil rights
    suit against the Butte County Sheriff in the Eastern District
    of California, arguing that the jail’s ban on unsolicited
    commercial mail violates the First Amendment. The district
    court entered summary judgment for the Sheriff. CJ&A
    appealed and a prior panel of our Court reversed and
    remanded, holding that questions of material fact precluded
    summary judgment. Hrdlicka v. Reniff, 
    631 F.3d 1044
    , 1046
    (9th Cir. 2011), reh’g en banc denied, 
    656 F.3d 942
     (9th Cir.
    2011), cert. denied sub nom. Reniff v. Hrdlicka, 
    565 U.S. 1197
     (2012).
    The district court conducted a four-day bench trial in
    November 2014. During the trial, jail officials testified that
    they would permit PDF versions of the magazine to be made
    available on the electronic kiosks they had recently installed,
    but the kiosks were not properly working at the time. In
    February 2015, while the case was still under submission
    awaiting the court’s decision, the Sheriff moved to reopen
    the case and proffered Jail Operations Commander Captain
    Jerry Jones’s declaration that “the kiosks/monitors . . .
    [were] now fully operational.” CJ&A objected, but the
    district court granted the motion and admitted the Jones
    declaration into evidence.
    In May 2015, the district court rendered its judgment in
    favor of the Sheriff, holding that the jail’s mail policy did
    not violate the First Amendment and denying CJ&A’s
    claims for declaratory and injunctive relief. CJ&A appealed.
    It also filed a motion for an Order Indicating Willingness to
    Entertain a Motion to Re-Open Discovery, or in the
    CRIME & JUSTICE AMERICA V. HONEA               7
    alternative a Motion for Relief from Judgment and to Re-
    Open Discovery, arguing that it should be permitted to
    conduct discovery regarding the kiosks. The district court
    denied the motion, and CJ&A appealed that ruling.
    We consolidated both appeals and we have jurisdiction
    pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    . We affirm.
    II
    We review de novo the constitutionality of Butte
    County’s mail policy, “the district court’s conclusions of
    law, and its determinations on mixed questions of law and
    fact.” Cal. First Amendment Coal. v. Woodford, 
    299 F.3d 868
    , 872–73 (9th Cir. 2002). The district court’s underlying
    factual findings are reviewed for clear error, and we “will
    not disturb those findings without a ‘definite and firm
    conviction that a mistake has been committed.’” 
    Id. at 873
    (quoting Jones v. United States, 
    127 F.3d 1154
    , 1156 (9th
    Cir. 1997)).
    III
    The Sheriff initially argued that Butte County’s mail
    policy does not impinge on inmates’ constitutional rights at
    all because “the First Amendment does not protect
    distribution of a publication to inmates who have not
    requested it.” Hrdlicka, 631 F.3d at 1048. We rejected that
    argument in Hrdlicka, holding that “publishers and inmates
    have a First Amendment interest in communicating with
    each other,” whether that communication is solicited or not.
    Id. at 1049. Therefore, Butte County’s mail policy should
    be evaluated under the test established for reviewing
    constitutional challenges to prison regulations in Turner v.
    Safley, 
    482 U.S. 78
     (1987). 
    Id.
    8          CRIME & JUSTICE AMERICA V. HONEA
    In Turner, the Supreme Court acknowledged that
    “[r]unning a prison is an inordinately difficult undertaking
    that requires expertise, planning, and the commitment of
    resources, all of which are peculiarly within the province of
    the legislative and executive branches of government.”
    
    482 U.S. at
    84–85. It sought “to formulate 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.”
    
    Id. at 85
     (quoting Procunier v. Martinez, 
    416 U.S. 396
    , 406
    (1974), rev’d on other grounds, Thornburgh v. Abbott,
    
    490 U.S. 401
    , 413–14 (1989)).
    The Court concluded that “when a prison regulation
    impinges on inmates’ constitutional rights, the regulation is
    valid if it is reasonably related to legitimate penological
    interests.” 
    Id.
     at 89–90. It laid out a four-factor test for
    evaluating the reasonableness of regulations, which requires
    courts to consider (1) whether there is a “rational
    connection” between the regulation and a “legitimate and
    neutral” government objective; (2) whether “alternative
    means of exercising the right” remain available to inmates;
    (3) “the impact accommodation of the asserted constitutional
    right will have on guards and other inmates, and on the
    allocation of prison resources;” and (4) whether “the
    existence of obvious, easy alternatives” to the regulation
    indicate that it “is an ‘exaggerated response’ to prison
    concerns.” 
    Id.
     (citation omitted).
    For the reasons explained below, we conclude that the
    evidence supports the district court’s conclusion that the
    Turner factors favor the Sheriff, and that Butte County’s ban
    on unsolicited commercial mail therefore does not violate
    the First Amendment. The trial court faithfully adhered to
    the Turner analysis in evaluating the record before it.
    CRIME & JUSTICE AMERICA V. HONEA                            9
    A
    Under Turner, the first question we ask is whether there
    is a “‘valid, rational connection’ between the prison
    regulation and the legitimate governmental interest put
    forward to justify it.” Id. at 89 (quoting Block v. Rutherford,
    
    468 U.S. 576
    , 586 (1984)). A policy “cannot be sustained
    where the logical connection between the regulation and the
    asserted goal is so remote as to render the policy arbitrary or
    irrational.” 
    Id.
     at 89–90. The government’s objective must
    be “legitimate and neutral,” id. at 90, meaning it “must
    further an important or substantial governmental interest
    unrelated to the suppression of expression,” Thornburgh,
    
    490 U.S. at 415
    . The first factor “is a sine qua non: ‘[I]f the
    prison fails to show that the regulation is rationally related
    to a legitimate penological objective, we do not consider the
    other factors.’” Hrdlicka, 631 F.3d at 1051 (quoting Ashker
    v. Cal. Dep’t of Corr., 
    350 F.3d 917
    , 922 (9th Cir. 2003)).
    The Sheriff’s primary justification for the Butte County
    Jail mail policy is that it promotes jail security by reducing
    access to the type of paper that inmates are most likely to
    misuse. Relatedly, he argues that the policy conserves staff
    resources and prevents a flood of other unsolicited mail from
    entering the jail. 1
    CJ&A does not argue that jail security and conservation
    of staff resources are not legitimate penological objectives;
    it argues that there is no rational relationship between those
    1
    The Sheriff also argued at trial that distributing the magazine
    would violate California advertising statutes, but the district court found
    this justification “disingenuous in light of [CJ&A’s] persistent
    willingness to rectify any such violations.” It declined to decide the
    advertising issue, so we do not address it here.
    10           CRIME & JUSTICE AMERICA V. HONEA
    objectives and Butte County’s ban on unsolicited
    commercial mail. 2 It also contends that upholding the policy
    would contravene our jurisprudence regarding prisoners’
    rights. CJ&A is mistaken for several reasons.
    1
    CJ&A argues that “[t]here is no obvious, intuitive
    connection between banning delivery of unsolicited
    publications, or [the] magazine, and promoting jail security.”
    But even if the connection between the mail policy and jail
    security is not immediately obvious, the Sheriff presented
    evidence that made the connection clear.
    The district court found that inmates in the Butte County
    Jail use paper for a variety of “nefarious acts,” including
    covering windows and lights, blocking air vents and
    speakers, clogging toilets, passing notes, obstructing
    security cameras, and hiding contraband.             Covering
    windows and lights makes it difficult for corrections officers
    to perform required safety checks, and it allows inmates to
    conceal their activities.      Blocking speakers prevents
    corrections officers and inmates from communicating with
    each other. The dangers associated with inmates using paper
    2
    It also argues that the policy is not neutral. But where “prison
    administrators draw distinctions between publications solely on the basis
    of their potential implications for prison security, the regulations are
    ‘neutral’ in the technical sense in which [the Supreme Court] meant and
    used that term in Turner.” Thornburgh, 
    490 U.S. at
    415–16. Here, Butte
    County distinguishes between solicited and unsolicited mail because
    unsolicited mail is far more likely to be used to undermine institutional
    security than solicited mail. Thus, the regulation is neutral in the Turner
    sense.
    CRIME & JUSTICE AMERICA V. HONEA                 11
    to obstruct security cameras and conceal contraband are self-
    evident.
    The district court also found that inmates are far more
    likely to misuse paper with which they do not have a
    personal connection, such as pages torn from phone books
    or donated books, than paper that belongs to them, such as
    legal mail, personal letters, and photographs. Thus, the ban
    on unsolicited commercial mail is intended to limit inmates’
    access to the type of paper they are most likely to use
    improperly to compromise jail security.
    2
    CJ&A argues that because we reversed summary
    judgment for the Sheriff in Hrdlicka, we cannot conclude
    now that he has established a rational relationship between
    the mail policy and jail security. But we did not hold that
    the Sheriff could not possibly establish that there was a
    rational relationship, only that on the record before us then,
    “the degree to which allowing distribution of [the magazine]
    in the jails would . . . affect jail security” was “unclear.”
    Hrdlicka, 631 F.3d at 1052. Therefore, the Sheriff was not
    entitled to judgment as a matter of law at that time. Id. at
    1055. This holding did not preclude the Sheriff from
    ultimately prevailing through supporting evidence adduced
    at trial.
    The district court carefully considered trial evidence that
    was not before us in Hrdlicka. In Hrdlicka, Lieutenant
    Bryan Flicker and Capt. Jones, both Butte County
    corrections officers, only submitted declarations. At trial,
    the district court heard live testimony from Lt. Flicker and
    Capt. Jones, who provided more detailed information about
    the jail’s supervision models and the security problems
    posed by excess paper in the jail. Lt. Flicker explained that
    12         CRIME & JUSTICE AMERICA V. HONEA
    “remote surveillance, direct observation” and linear models
    of supervision give corrections officials less control over
    inmates’ behavior than other supervision models. Capt.
    Jones explained how covering lights, windows, and speakers
    creates security hazards. Lt. Flicker testified that from 2010
    to 2014, “about 3,400 rule violations involving paper
    products occurred,” and he estimated that “99.9” percent of
    those violations involved generally available paper rather
    than “personally owned papers.” This evidence establishes
    that there is a rational relationship between banning
    unsolicited commercial mail and jail security.
    3
    CJ&A asserts that upholding Butte County’s mail policy
    “would be out of sync with the court’s most applicable
    cases.” And it’s true that on several occasions, applying
    Turner, we have struck down prison regulations limiting the
    types of mail inmates could receive. The crucial distinction
    is that in each of those cases, the defendants’ mail policies
    were arbitrary or insufficiently related to the asserted
    government interest.
    In Prison Legal News v. Cook, inmates and the publisher
    of a non-profit prison newsletter challenged an Oregon
    policy that prohibited the delivery of standard-rate mail to
    inmates, as it applied to “subscription non-profit
    organization mail.” 
    238 F.3d 1145
    , 1146 (9th Cir. 2001)
    (PLN I). State officials argued that the policy was intended
    to prevent contraband from entering the jail, minimize fire
    hazards, promote efficient cell searches, and improve prison
    security. 
    Id.
     at 1150–51. We held that none of these interests
    justified “tying the receipt of subscription non-profit
    newsletters to postal service rate classifications.” 
    Id.
     at
    1149–50.
    CRIME & JUSTICE AMERICA V. HONEA                13
    Later that year, we struck down a similar regulation “as
    applied to pre-paid, for-profit, subscription publications.”
    Morrison v. Hall, 
    261 F.3d 896
    , 898 (9th Cir. 2001). The
    defendants in Morrison offered similar justifications for
    their rule as the defendants in PLN I, and we rejected them
    for similar reasons, holding that “prohibiting inmates from
    receiving mail based on the postage rate at which the mail
    was sent is an arbitrary means of achieving the goal of
    volume control.” 
    Id.
     at 902–04.
    The regulation at issue in Morrison was deemed an
    “exaggerated response” because it “fail[ed] to distinguish
    between true ‘junk mail’ and subscriptions that have been
    both paid for and solicited by the inmates.” 
    Id. at 905
    . But
    we noted that “prisons can and have adopted policies
    permitting prisoners to receive for-profit, commercial
    publications, while at the same time, prohibiting prisoners
    from receiving unsolicited junk mail.” 
    Id.
     (emphasis added).
    In Prison Legal News v. Lehman, we struck down a
    Washington regulation that prohibited receipt of “non-
    subscription bulk mail and catalogs” that had been requested
    by inmates. 
    397 F.3d 692
    , 695–96 (9th Cir. 2005) (PLN II).
    We agreed with the district court that “the ban on non-
    subscription bulk mail was not rationally related to a neutral
    government objective.” 
    Id. at 699, 701
    . And we emphasized
    that we were not dealing with “a scenario in which a
    publisher has attempted to flood a facility with publications
    sent to all inmates, regardless of whether they requested the
    publication.” 
    Id. at 701
    .
    In each of these cases, there was an insufficient
    connection between the mail policy at issue and the asserted
    justification for it. But the Butte County Jail’s ban on
    unsolicited commercial mail is not an arbitrary form of
    volume control; it is a rational response to the fact that its
    14          CRIME & JUSTICE AMERICA V. HONEA
    inmates consistently misuse unsolicited paper in ways that
    threaten institutional security.
    4
    CJ&A also contends that because the Butte County Jail
    already has rules governing paper in the jail, the ban on
    unsolicited commercial mail is irrational. Inmates may not
    keep more than a three-inch stack of non-legal paper in their
    cells, and they are not permitted to leave paper in common
    areas. Thus, CJ&A argues that its magazine could not
    increase clutter in cells or common areas.
    We have taken these sorts of rules into account before.
    In Morrison, we stated that because the defendant prison
    system already “limit[ed] the total amount of property in a
    cell . . . permitting inmates to receive for-profit, subscription
    publications could not possibly increase the total volume of
    cell materials.” 
    261 F.3d at 902
    . We used similar logic to
    reject justifications of mail restrictions in PLN I. See
    
    238 F.3d at
    1150–51.
    However, in those cases, prison officials’ rationales for
    limiting mail, such as reducing fire hazards and ensuring
    efficient cell searches, had more to do with the amount of
    paper in inmates’ cells than the type of paper. See 
    id.
     The
    fact that jail regulations already restricted the amount of
    paper inmates could have made restrictions on the type of
    mail unnecessary.
    Here, however, the Sheriff’s justification—jail
    security—is tied to the type of paper inmates have access to,
    not the amount of it. Inmates are more likely to commit
    security violations using paper with which they have no
    personal connection. Thus, a policy that forbids delivery of
    unsolicited commercial mail is rational, even if there are
    CRIME & JUSTICE AMERICA V. HONEA                 15
    already limits on the amount of paper inmates can keep in
    their cells.
    Maintaining security in a jail is inarguably a legitimate
    government interest. See Thornburgh, 
    490 U.S. at 415
    (“[P]rotecting prison security . . . is central to all other
    corrections goals.” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
    Because the Sheriff presented extensive evidence regarding
    the security risks posed by paper, and the fact that generally
    available paper is most likely to be misused, he established
    that the ban on unsolicited commercial mail is rationally
    connected to a legitimate government interest. Therefore,
    the first Turner factor weighs in favor of the Sheriff.
    B
    The second Turner factor asks “whether there are
    alternative means of exercising the right that remain open to
    prison inmates.” 
    482 U.S. at 90
    . “Where other avenues
    remain available for the exercise of the asserted right, courts
    should be particularly conscious of the measure of judicial
    deference owed to corrections officials . . . in gauging the
    validity of the regulation.” 
    Id.
     (internal citation and
    quotation marks omitted). These alternatives “need not be
    ideal, however; they need only be available.” Overton v.
    Bazzetta, 
    539 U.S. 126
    , 135 (2003).
    The district court considered two alternatives to
    distributing hard copies of CJ&A’s magazine to ten percent
    of Butte County inmates every week: the jail library and
    electronic kiosks. Jail officials offered to make two copies
    of the magazine available in the library, but the library can
    only be accessed by request, and only by about twenty-five
    inmates per day. Officials installed electronic kiosks
    throughout the jail during the litigation, and they testified
    that they could now load PDF versions of the magazine onto
    16           CRIME & JUSTICE AMERICA V. HONEA
    the kiosks. The district court found that the library alone was
    inadequate, but the kiosks constituted an adequate
    alternative.
    The district court correctly found that the kiosks are an
    adequate alternative. With the kiosks in place, there are
    thirty-one locations throughout the jail where inmates could
    access an electronic version of the magazine, plus two
    portable kiosks. 3 This amounts to one kiosk for every
    eighteen inmates. Although the kiosks do not guarantee the
    same level of saturation as delivering fifty-five hard copies
    of the magazine to the jail every week, they do provide a
    meaningful way for CJ&A to offer its magazine to inmates.
    Turner does not require that the “alternative avenue” provide
    exactly the same level of communication as the plaintiff’s
    preferred method, only that “other means of expression” be
    available. See Thornburgh, 
    490 U.S. at
    417–18. Thus, the
    second Turner factor weighs in favor of the Sheriff. 4
    C
    The third Turner factor requires us to consider “the
    impact accommodation of the asserted constitutional right
    The magazine is not currently available on the kiosks, but at oral
    3
    argument, counsel for CJ&A admitted that this is because CJ&A has
    chosen not to provide the jail with PDF versions of the magazine.
    4
    Our conclusion on this point also disposes of CJ&A’s argument
    that the district court abused its discretion by denying injunctive relief.
    CJ&A argues that the district court “based its denial of injunctive relief
    on an erroneous legal conclusion,” namely that “the kiosks would
    provide an adequate alternative to delivery of hard copies of the
    magazine.” But we agree with the trial court and hold that on this record,
    the kiosks are in fact an adequate alternative. The district court did not
    abuse its discretion by denying injunctive relief.
    CRIME & JUSTICE AMERICA V. HONEA                        17
    will have on guards and other inmates, and on the allocation
    of prison resources generally.” 
    482 U.S. at 90
    . “When
    accommodation of an asserted right will have a significant
    ‘ripple effect’ on fellow inmates or on prison staff, courts
    should be particularly deferential to the informed discretion
    of corrections officials.” 
    Id.
    The Sheriff argues that requiring the jail to distribute
    hard copies of the magazine would burden prison resources
    for two related reasons. First, “additional resources would
    be necessary to monitor and clean the large quantity of paper
    publications that would be added to the jail each week
    following [the magazine’s] delivery.” 5 Second, allowing
    distribution of CJ&A’s magazine could prompt other
    commercial publications to seek distribution in the jail,
    which would either require the jail to make content-based
    decisions about what should be delivered, or create a
    “significant increase in paper product problems.”
    Regarding the Sheriff’s “slippery slope” argument, the
    evidence does not establish that overturning Butte County’s
    mail policy would result in a flood of unsolicited mail. The
    5
    Initially, the Sheriff also argued that “the increase in the time
    required to process unsolicited unrequested commercial mail will drain
    essential prison resources.” The district court granted summary
    judgment for CJ&A on this point prior to trial, holding that the Sheriff
    had “not provided this Court sufficient additional evidence” regarding
    “the additional resources that would be required to distribute” the
    magazine. CJ&A contends that this grant of partial summary judgment
    should preclude the Sheriff from arguing that distributing its magazine
    will affect prison resources. But the district court’s finding only
    concerned the burden that initially processing magazines would have on
    the jail. At trial, the Sheriff presented evidence that the magazine will
    impose burdens on the jail’s staff even after it has been distributed,
    because employees will have to clean up unwanted copies and monitor
    inmate usage of thousands of additional pieces of paper each week.
    18          CRIME & JUSTICE AMERICA V. HONEA
    Sheriff presented no evidence that other publishers are likely
    to request distribution in the jail. In fact, Lt. Flicker testified
    that he was only aware of three instances in twenty-six years
    in which someone had asked to distribute unsolicited mail.
    Butte County’s ban on unsolicited commercial mail was not
    put in writing until 2004. Thus, the virtual absence of
    requests to distribute such mail more likely reflects a lack of
    interest in reaching the jail’s population than a reaction to
    the jail’s mail policy. We do “not accord defendants
    deference on the basis of mere speculation,” and that is all
    the Sheriff has offered on this point. See Cal. First
    Amendment Coal., 299 F.3d at 884.
    However, the Sheriff has established that distributing the
    magazine itself would have a significant impact on the
    allocation of jail resources. CJ&A wants to introduce almost
    2,000 pages of unsolicited paper into the jail every week,
    even as jail officials work to reduce the quantity of paper
    available to inmates. The Sheriff’s evidence supports an
    inference that if thousands of pages of unsolicited paper are
    distributed in the jail every month, unsupervised inmates
    will use at least some of those pages for “nefarious acts,”
    which will force a jail staff that is already stretched thin to
    respond to and remedy those violations.
    In this situation, the court must be “particularly
    deferential to the informed discretion of corrections
    officials.” Turner, 
    482 U.S. at 90
    ; see also O’Lone v. Estate
    of Shabazz, 
    482 U.S. 342
    , 353 (1987) (“We take this
    opportunity to reaffirm our refusal, even where claims are
    made under the First Amendment, to substitute our judgment
    on . . . difficult and sensitive matters of institutional
    administration, for the determinations of those charged with
    the formidable task of running a prison.”) (internal citation
    CRIME & JUSTICE AMERICA V. HONEA                        19
    and quotation marks omitted). Therefore, the third Turner
    factor favors the Sheriff.
    D
    The fourth and final Turner factor asks “whether the
    existence of easy and obvious alternatives indicates that the
    regulation is an exaggerated response by prison officials.”
    Hrdlicka, 631 F.3d at 1054 (quoting PLN II, 
    397 F.3d at 699
    ). However, “[t]his is not a ‘least restrictive alternative’
    test: prison officials do not have to set up and then shoot
    down every conceivable alternative method of
    accommodating the claimant’s constitutional complaint.”
    Turner, 
    482 U.S. at
    90–91.
    CJ&A argues that because its magazine is widely
    distributed at other jails, Butte County’s ban on unsolicited
    commercial mail must be an “exaggerated response” to the
    problems posed by paper in the jail. It is true that “the
    policies followed at other well-run institutions [are] relevant
    to a determination of the need for a particular type of
    restriction.” Morrison, 
    261 F.3d at 905
     (quoting Martinez,
    
    416 U.S. at
    414 n.14, rev’d on other grounds, Thornburgh,
    
    490 U.S. at 413
    ). However, not all jails are the same, and
    the district court found that Butte County uses supervision
    models that provide far less direct supervision than models
    employed in some other counties, such as Los Angeles
    County. 6 Therefore, distribution of unsolicited paper may
    6
    CJ&A relies heavily on the testimony of Richard Lichten, a retired
    lieutenant from the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department. Lt.
    Lichten worked in corrections for over thirty years and testified that he
    did not know of any instances in which an inmate used CJ&A’s magazine
    for a “malicious purpose.” But Los Angeles County employs a “direct
    supervision” model, which gives corrections officers “a lot more control
    over the inmates” than the supervision models used in Butte County.
    20          CRIME & JUSTICE AMERICA V. HONEA
    cause more problems in the Butte County Jail than in other
    jails.
    The jail’s installation of electronic kiosks also indicates
    that the mail policy is not an exaggerated response. Lt.
    Flicker testified that the kiosks were installed to “eliminate
    as much paper as [possible] in the housing units,” because
    inmates commit so many rule violations with paper. The
    kiosks are not just designed for reading material; jail
    officials are trying to eliminate from housing units hard
    copies of inmate request forms, property release forms, sick
    slips, grievance forms, and the jail handbook. This confirms
    that paper has created serious problems at the Butte County
    Jail, and the jail’s mail policy is not an exaggerated response
    to those problems.
    Because each of the Turner factors favors the Sheriff, we
    agree with the district court’s determination and hold that
    Butte County’s ban on inmates’ receipt of unsolicited
    commercial mail is reasonably related to a legitimate
    penological objective and therefore does not violate the First
    Amendment.
    IV
    Captions in the final pages of its opening brief indicate
    that CJ&A appeals the district court’s post-trial admission of
    the Jones declaration, and its denial of CJ&A’s motion for
    relief from judgment and motion to re-open discovery. But
    “[a] caption is not an argument.” Affordable Housing Dev.
    Corp. v. City of San Francisco, 
    433 F.3d 1182
    , 1192 (9th
    Thus, Lt. Lichten’s testimony about his experience in Los Angeles
    hardly establishes that Butte County’s commercial-mail policy is an
    exaggerated response to the problems it faces in its own, much smaller
    jail.
    CRIME & JUSTICE AMERICA V. HONEA                  21
    Cir. 2006).      An appellant’s brief must contain the
    “appellant’s contentions and the reasons for them, with
    citations to the authorities and parts of the record on which
    the appellant relies.” Fed. R. App. P. 28(a)(8)(A). “Issues
    raised in a brief which are not supported by argument are
    deemed abandoned.” Leer v. Murphy, 
    844 F.2d 628
    , 634
    (9th Cir. 1988).
    CJ&A does not explain anywhere in its opening or reply
    brief why it objected to the admission of the Jones
    declaration or why it was an abuse of discretion for the
    district court to accept it.
    As for the denial of relief from judgment and motion to
    re-open discovery, CJ&A’s opening brief does little more
    than state the standard of review and the relevant Rules of
    Civil Procedure. It references “newly discovered evidence
    concerning kiosks,” but it does not explain what new
    evidence it could have uncovered about the kiosks, or why it
    was error for the district court to deny its motion. Its reply
    brief does not clarify the matter.
    Therefore, we hold that CJ&A has abandoned its
    arguments related to the post-trial admission of the Jones
    declaration and its appeal of the district court’s denial of its
    motion for relief from judgment and motion to re-open
    discovery.
    Costs are awarded to the Appellee.
    The district court’s judgment following trial on the
    merits is AFFIRMED.