In re Martinez , 216 Cal. App. 4th 1141 ( 2013 )


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  • Filed 5/31/13
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION TWO
    In re ANDRES MARTINEZ,                              A134400
    on Habeas Corpus.
    (Del Norte County
    Super. Ct. No. HCPB11-5224)
    Petitioner Andres Martinez, a prison inmate, ordered by mail a copy of The Silver
    Crown, a book by Mathilde Madden. The book was confiscated by prison authorities
    before it was delivered to petitioner on grounds that it was contraband, specifically
    “erotica.” Through a series of administrative appeals the prison has clarified that it
    deems the book “obscene” and tending to incite violence, and therefore subject to rules
    governing contraband in prison.
    We conclude first that the prison failed to abide by governing statutes and
    regulations in judging the book to be obscene. And we go on to find that the book is not
    obscene applying the correct definition, and further that it is not likely to incite violence.
    We therefore grant the writ and order the Warden to give the book to petitioner.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Petitioner’s criminal history
    In 1990 to 1992, petitioner was convicted of multiple crimes, including firearm
    assault, attempted second degree robbery, and attempted murder. (Pen. Code, §§ 187,
    211, 245, subd. (a)(2), 664.) He is currently an inmate in the custody of the California
    Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR) and is housed at Pelican Bay State
    Prison (Pelican Bay) in the Security Housing Unit (SHU), where the most dangerous
    prisoners are housed. He has been assigned to the SHU in part for violence in prison,
    1
    including battery on an inmate, possession of a deadly weapon, and battery on a peace
    officer. He is also considered a “validated associate” of the Mexican Mafia prison gang.
    Confiscation of the book
    More than two years ago, petitioner ordered a copy of The Silver Crown, a
    paperback book written by Mathilde Madden and published by Black Lace books. 1 On
    January 10, 2011, before the book was delivered to petitioner, prison authorities notified
    him the book was being withheld, citing California Code of Regulations, title 15, section
    3006, subdivision (c)(1),2 and labeling the book “erotica.” On January 12, 2011, a
    second notice (CDCR form 1819) recited that the book was being withheld because “it
    contains descriptions of explicit sexual conduct,” this time citing subdivision “(c)(15)(A)
    (B)(C)(1).”3
    The book
    The Silver Crown is the second book in a trilogy and is described on the back
    cover this way: “Every full moon, Iris kills werewolves. It‟s what she‟s good at; it‟s what
    she‟s trained for. She‟s never imagined doing anything else . . . until she falls in love
    with one. And being a professional werewolf hunter and dating a werewolf poses a
    serious conflict of interest. To add to her problems, a group of witches decides she is the
    chosen one—destined to save humanity from the wolves at the door—while her boss,
    Blake, who just happens to be her ex-husband, is hell-bent on sabotaging her new
    relationship. All Iris wants is to snuggle up with her alpha wolf and be left alone. He
    might turn into a monster once a month, but in a lot of ways, Iris does, too.”
    We have reviewed the book. As will be described more fully below, the plot
    involves werewolves, witches, a ghost, and magic spells. It is 262 pages long with
    1
    According to the publisher‟s Web site (www.blacklace.co.uk), it specializes in
    erotic books written by women for women.
    2
    Section references without further specification are to title 15, California Code of
    Regulations.
    3
    References to subdivisions without further specification are to the subdivisions
    of California Code of Regulations, title 15, section 3006.
    2
    44 chapters. There is a fair amount of violence in it, but that is not dwelt upon and is not
    shocking or gory.
    There are also a great number of graphic sexual encounters, one per chapter
    through most of the book, including detailed descriptions of intercourse, sodomy,
    oral-genital contact, oral-anal contact, voyeurism, exhibitionism, and ménage à trois.
    Semen is mentioned. Crude slang is used to describe various body parts and the sex act
    itself. The sex is sometimes rough but always consensual. Women are portrayed as
    frequently aggressive, always willing, and seemingly insatiable. Men are portrayed as
    frequently demanding, always ready, and seemingly inexhaustible. The sex occurs
    between humans and werewolves, as well as intra-species.
    On the other hand, the sex appears to be between consenting adults. No minors
    are involved. No bestiality is portrayed (unless werewolves count). And there is no
    sadomasochism.
    Administrative appeals
    Petitioner filed an administrative appeal on January 11, 2011. (§ 3084.1.) He
    argued section 3006 “does not ban descriptions of sexually explicit conduct, as long as
    those descriptions are not obscene . . . .” Petitioner claimed the decision to withhold the
    book was “arbitrary and irrational” and violated his rights under Penal Code section 2601
    and the First Amendment. He also argued the book would not incite violence as
    prohibited under subdivision (c)(1).4
    Prison authorities responded that the book “contain[s] very detailed descriptions of
    penetration of the vagina, mouth and genitals, as well as excretory functions” and that it
    “advocates violence because it describes ripping at a decapitated mans [sic] head and
    other violent killings.” The reviewer also noted that “the back cover of the book list [sic]
    the book as Erotic Romance.” The denial underscored the language of
    4
    This was evidently included in the appeal because the first notice had cited
    subdivision (c)(1) in withholding the book. That initial citation appears to have been in
    error, as subdivision (c)(1) governs violent content, not erotica.
    3
    subdivision (c)(15)(C)(1) in explaining why the book had been confiscated and also cited
    Pelican Bay Operational Procedure No. 806, Personal Property Plan, Section VI-F-7.5
    Petitioner filed a second level appeal on February 21, 2011, claiming the “first
    level reviewer failed to properly apply all (3) three prongs of the obscene material test
    articulated in” subdivision (c)(15)(A), including whether the book “taken as a whole
    appeals to prurient interest6 and whether the book taken as a whole lacks serious literary,
    artistic, political or scientific value.” He also argued again that the book would not incite
    violence.
    On March 9, 2011 the second level appeal was denied by the Warden, again citing
    and underlining subdivision (c)(15)(C)(1). The warden also cited Pelican Bay‟s
    Operational Procedure No. 806, quoting that provision, in part, as stating, “Inmates will
    not be allowed to possess publications, pictorials, or drawings consistent with
    CCR Title 15, Section 3006(c)(15). Except as authorized by institutional head, inmates
    shall not possess or have under their control matter which contains any of the following:
    Obscene material. Obscene material includes but is not limited to material that depicts,
    displays or describes penetration of the vagina.” The denial also stated “sexually
    explicit erotica is present in this publication, and [it] is therefore contraband.”
    Petitioner then filed a Director‟s Level Review, which resulted in a letter from
    CDCR dated July 29, 2011, again denying petitioner‟s appeal. The Director‟s Level
    Review concluded “appellant has not supported his appeal issue with sufficient evidence
    or facts to warrant a modification” of the second level review. “This decision exhausts
    the administrative remedy available to the appellant within CDCR.”
    5
    Both the first and second level appeal denials refer to this section of the
    Operational Procedure, but we find the correct reference is to section VI-F-6. (Pelican
    Bay Operational Procedure No. 806 (Jan. 2010) pp. 11-14.) This procedural rule appears
    to be applicable only to Pelican Bay, as opposed to CDCR as a whole. We take judicial
    notice of this document under Evidence Code sections 452, subdivision (b), and 459.
    6
    “Prurient interest” is “a shameful or morbid interest in nudity, sex, or excretion.”
    (Former Pen. Code, § 311 (Stats. 1969, ch. 249, § 1, p. 598); Miller v. California (1973)
    
    413 U.S. 15
    , 16, fn. 1 (Miller); Bloom v. Municipal Court (1976) 
    16 Cal. 3d 71
    , 77.)
    4
    Habeas petition in superior court
    On September 22, 2011, petitioner filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in Del
    Norte County Superior Court (Docket No. HCPB11-5224) raising the same issues raised
    in the administrative appeals.
    On November 3, 2011, Superior Court Judge William H. Follett issued a four-page
    opinion denying the petition. The court concluded “prison officials acted within their
    authority to ban the book due to its sexually explicit descriptions,” and therefore did not
    address whether the book might “also have been disallowed due to its depiction of
    violence. [¶] . . . [¶] While it could be argued that section 3006 requires application of
    broader „statewide‟ standards, and not special standards for prisons, recent case law does
    not appear to agree.” The court also concluded that petitioner‟s argument that his rights
    under Penal Code section 2601, subdivision (c)(1), had been violated had “previously
    been considered by the appellate courts and has been rejected.”
    The gist of the court‟s decision is reflected in the following excerpt:
    “A cursory review of the book in question, The Silver Crown, reveals that explicit
    language is used to describe various sex acts from which prison authorities could
    determine the book falls within the definition of „obscene‟ under prison regulations. The
    excerpt from the book on the front endpaper describes in explicit terms a woman having
    sex with a werewolf. . . . Thumbing through the book reveals many descriptions of
    several sex acts listed in subdivision (c)(15) of section 3006.
    “Case law has determined that the ban on sexually explicit materials under
    section 3006 of Title 15 of the California Code of Regulations does not violate the state
    and federal constitutions nor Penal Code section 2601. See, Snow v. Woodford (2005)
    
    128 Cal. App. 4th 383
     (Snow). The Snow court made a four-prong Turner v. Safley (1987)
    
    482 U.S. 78
     analysis, which will not be repeated here, to determine that prison authorities
    had a legitimate penological interest in prohibiting inmates from possessing sexually
    explicit materials. The court quoted the department‟s written reasons for the provision
    published during the rule-making process.
    5
    “ „Rules governing possession of contraband in prison are complex and not easily
    evaluated outside prison walls.‟ In re Johnson (2009) 
    176 Cal. App. 4th 290
    , 301. „Prison
    officials have a strong interest in excluding material that appeals to the prurient interest of
    inmates.‟ Id. at 302. In Johnson, prison officials had disciplined an inmate for
    possessing a copy of an article from Men’s Health magazine, which the Court of Appeal
    sustained. That Court noted that such a magazine is not one that would normally be
    characterized as an obscene publication in that it contained useful and socially acceptable
    articles suited for adults in America. Nevertheless, the Court agreed that such material
    may not be suitable for prison inmates. In reviewing a challenge to the administrative
    decision of prison officials, a court must determine whether there is „some evidence‟ to
    support the prison officials‟ determination that the material falls „within the expanded
    definition of obscenity found in section 3006 subdivision (c)(15)(A) . . .‟ Id. at 301. As
    noted by the Johnson court, subdivision (c)(15)(C) reaches „beyond to sexually explicit
    material that would generally not be considered obscene outside prison walls.‟ Id. at 302.
    A review of the book in question demonstrates that it fits within the regulatory expanded
    definition of obscenity as determined by the appellate court.”
    Proceedings in this court
    On January 30, 2012, petitioner filed his habeas petition in this court. He contends
    authorities at Pelican Bay arbitrarily applied the governing regulation so that, as applied,
    he has been deprived of his First Amendment rights and his rights under Penal Code
    section 2601. The essence of petitioner‟s claim is that the prison authorities who
    confiscated his book and ruled on his administrative appeals misapplied section 3006
    because they failed to apply all three prongs of the test contained within
    subdivision (c)(15)(A). Specifically, he claims that none of the reviewing authorities
    considered the third prong of the test, namely whether the book “taken as a whole, lacks
    serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value.”
    Petitioner also claims the violence in the book is not such as to incite murder,
    arson, riot, or other violence within the prison. (§ 3006, subd. (c)(1).) In particular,
    petitioner contends that The Silver Crown is no more violent than several other books
    6
    available in the SHU general library at Pelican Bay, as well as other recognized great
    works of literature, such as Homer‟s Iliad and Dostoyevsky‟s Crime and Punishment.
    We issued an order to show cause and appointed counsel for petitioner.
    The warden‟s return was filed on April 16, 2012. It argues that the book was
    properly confiscated, that some literary content socially acceptable outside of prison may
    not be suitable for prison inmates, that prison officials are best left in charge of what is
    deemed contraband, and that deference is owed to those officials when they make a
    determination that a literary restriction is necessary to advance a legitimate penological
    interest.
    Attached to the return as Exhibit 2 is a declaration of Lt. Ricky Graves, who
    signed petitioner‟s CDCR Form 1819. Graves had been a correctional officer for
    approximately 28 years and declared he had personally noticed a decline in inmate
    “sexual harassment and predatory-type behavior” since the prison started restricting
    inmate access to pornography.
    On May 22, 2012, petitioner‟s counsel filed a motion to compel discovery from
    the prison. We granted the motion, ordering five categories of discovery to be provided,
    including records documenting the date on which inmates‟ access to obscene and violent
    materials was first restricted, records of incidents both before and after that date that
    resulted from access to obscene or violent materials, and a list of all fiction titles
    available in the Pelican Bay library as well as those confiscated as contraband based on
    obscene or violent content.
    In response to the discovery order, the warden represented that restrictions on
    obscene and violent materials have been in force since January 3, 1995. He also provided
    background materials relating to the promulgation of the relevant subdivisions of
    section 3006 ; a list of fiction titles available in the Pelican Bay library; approximately
    175 CDCR forms 1819 showing materials that had been withheld from prisoners as
    obscene or inciting violence; and a list of publications disallowed throughout CDCR. No
    documentary support was provided for Graves‟ testimony that incidents of harassment
    7
    and predatory behavior by inmates had decreased following restriction of obscene and
    violent materials.7
    Petitioner filed his traverse on September 21, 2012. As exhibits to the traverse,
    petitioner provided us with copies of the discovery material produced by respondent, as
    well as with complete copies of three books he claims are comparable to The Silver
    Crown available in the Pelican Bay SHU general library: Kissing Sin, by Keri Arthur;
    Full Moon Rising, also by Keri Arthur; and Inner City Hoodlum, by Donald Goines.
    Another exhibit to the traverse was a declaration by Peter Orner, a college-level professor
    of creative writing, opining that The Silver Crown is not obscene and possesses “literary
    merit.”
    DISCUSSION
    Introduction
    Central to our inquiry is the interpretation of two specific provisions of section
    3006, subdivision (c), which define two types of prison contraband, subdivisions (c)(1)
    and (c)(15). Subdivision (c)(1) prohibits material that tends to incite violence: “Inmates
    may possess only the personal property, materials, supplies, items, commodities and
    substances, up to the maximum amount, received or obtained from authorized sources, as
    permitted in these regulations. Possession of contraband as defined in section 3000 may
    result in disciplinary action and confiscation of the contraband. [¶] . . . [¶] . . . (c) Except
    as authorized by the institution head, inmates shall not possess or have under their control
    any matter which contains or concerns any of the following: (1) Any matter of a
    character tending to incite murder; arson; riot; or any form of violence or physical harm
    to any person, or any ethnic, gender, racial, religious, or other group.”
    7
    The Attorney General explained that Graves‟s declaration was “not based on
    specific records of any such incidents,” but rather was “based on his experience working
    in the . . . SHU over the last twenty years.” She also argued “it is unlikely that the prison
    would have documented that an incident resulted from access to obscene or violent
    materials in describing the offending misconduct.”
    8
    Subdivision (c)(15) further defines as contraband, “Obscene material and mail
    containing information concerning where, how, or from whom obscene material may be
    obtained. [¶] (A) Obscene material means material taken as a whole, which to the average
    person, applying contemporary statewide standards, appeals to the prurient interest; and
    is material which taken as a whole, depicts or describes sexual conduct; and which, taken
    as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value. [¶] (B) When it
    appears from the nature of the matter or the circumstances of its dissemination,
    distribution, or exhibition that it appeals to deviant sexual groups. [¶] (C) Material subject
    to the tests in paragraphs (A) or (B) includes, but is not limited to material that:
    [¶] (1) Depicts, displays, or describes penetration of the vagina or anus, or contact
    between the mouth and the genitals. [¶] (2) Depicts, displays, or describes bestiality,
    sadomasochism, or an excretory function including urination, defecation, or semen.
    [¶] (3) Portrays the nudity of a minor, or person who appears to be under 18 years old.
    [¶] (4) Portrays conduct which appears to be non-consensual behavior. [¶] (5) Portrays
    conduct which is or appears to be forceful, threatening, or violent. [¶] (6) Portrays
    conduct where one of the participants is a minor, or appears to be under 18 years old.”
    Subdivision (c)(15) focuses the obscenity inquiry on a three-part definition which
    derives immediately from state statute, and ultimately from the United States Supreme
    Court‟s decision in Miller, supra, 413 U.S. at p. 24. The test in section 3006 is taken
    almost verbatim from Penal Code section 311, subdivision (a), which defines “obscene”
    for purposes of criminal penalties: “ „Obscene matter‟ means matter, taken as a whole,
    that to the average person, applying contemporary statewide standards, appeals to the
    prurient interest, that, taken as a whole, depicts or describes sexual conduct in a patently
    offensive way, and that, taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or
    scientific value.”8 This test incorporates only “hard-core” pornography, including
    8
    The prison regulation omits the reference to “patently offensive” depictions and
    descriptions. Because we find the definition of obscenity under Penal Code section 311
    is implicitly incorporated in the definition of “obscene” in section 3006, we conclude that
    section 3006 authorizes exclusion of only “patently offensive” material.
    9
    Miller‟s list of depictions of specific conduct: “ „ultimate sexual acts, normal or
    perverted, actual or simulated,‟ and „masturbation, excretory functions, and lewd
    exhibitions of the genitals.‟ ” (Bloom v. Municipal Court, supra, 
    16 Cal. 3d 71
    , 81.)
    Penal Code section 311 is itself patterned after, and incorporates but actually narrows,
    Miller‟s test separating protected speech from obscenity. (People v. Powell (2011)
    
    194 Cal. App. 4th 1268
    , 1289-1290 [same language in Pen. Code, § 313]; Brian T. v.
    Pacific Bell (1989) 
    210 Cal. App. 3d 894
    , 902.) There, distinguishing obscenity from
    protected First Amendment speech, the Supreme Court held: “The basic guidelines for
    the trier of fact must be: (a) whether „the average person, applying contemporary
    community standards‟ would find that the work, taken as a whole, appeals to the prurient
    interest [citation]; (b) whether the work depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way,
    sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law; and (c) whether the work,
    taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value.” (Miller,
    supra, 413 U.S. at p. 24.) Section 311 arguably defines as obscene an even narrower
    class of publications by applying the “taken as a whole” requirement to all three prongs
    of the Miller test. (See People v. Powell, supra, at pp. 1289-1290.)
    Both parties focus their briefing in large part on whether the prison could lawfully
    restrict petitioner‟s right to read The Silver Crown applying the four-part test of Turner v.
    Safley, supra, 
    482 U.S. 78
    . We are aware that prisoners‟ constitutional rights may be
    restricted in the interest of legitimate penological goals. (Id. at p. 89; Thornburgh v.
    Abbott (1989) 
    490 U.S. 401
    , 403-404; Pell v. Procunier (1974) 
    417 U.S. 817
    , 822;
    Bailey v. Loggins (1982) 
    32 Cal. 3d 907
    , 920; Pen. Code, § 2600; see also Thompson v.
    Patteson (5th Cir. 1993) 
    985 F.2d 202
    , 205-207 [sexually explicit material, though not
    legally obscene, may constitute contraband in prison]; Calvert & Murrhee, Big
    Censorship in the Big House―A Quarter-Century After Turner v. Safley: Muting Movies,
    Music & Books Behind Bars (2012) 7 Nw. J. L. & Soc. Pol‟y 257, 263-264.) Prison
    incursions on the rights of prisoners are limited primarily by the reasonableness of the
    relationship between the adopted means and the asserted legitimate penological goals,
    and by the caveat that prison officials must not act in an exaggerated response to
    10
    perceived security and safety concerns. (Turner v. Safley, supra, 482 U.S. at pp. 87,
    89-90; Pell v. Procunier, supra, 417 U.S. at pp. 822, 827.) And a regulation may also be
    challenged under Turner if it has been applied in an arbitrary and capricious manner so
    that, as applied, it is not reasonably related to legitimate penological interests. (See
    Turner v. Safley, supra, 482 U.S. at p. 100; Shaw v. Murphy (2001) 
    532 U.S. 223
    , 232.)
    But we find it more productive to address the obscenity issue from the perspective
    of the rights the Legislature has specifically guaranteed to inmates in California‟s prisons,
    including the right to read. The immediate question before us is not whether the
    California Legislature or penal authorities could lawfully place otherwise
    unconstitutional restrictions on prisoners‟ First Amendment rights by limiting their access
    to sexually explicit material, but the extent to which they in fact have done so. We
    answer that question favorably to petitioner, agreeing with his interpretation of the
    statutes and regulations. And we conclude that the prison failed to comply with
    section 3006, subdivision (c)(15)(A), in determining that The Silver Crown was obscene
    contraband, and that its confiscation of the book for violent content was an arbitrary and
    capricious application of the regulation, given the presence of more violent books in the
    prison‟s own library.
    Prisoners’ Rights to Reading Material
    Penal Code section 2601, sometimes called the “Inmate Bill of Rights,” specifies
    prisoners‟ “guaranteed rights,” including their rights to reading material: “Subject only to
    the provisions of that section, each person described in Section 2600 shall have the
    following civil rights: [¶] . . . [¶] (c) (1) To purchase, receive, and read any and all
    newspapers, periodicals, and books accepted for distribution by the United States Post
    Office. Pursuant to this section, prison authorities may exclude any of the following
    matter: [¶] (A) Obscene publications or writings, and mail containing information
    concerning where, how, or from whom this matter may be obtained. [¶] (B) Any matter
    of a character tending to incite murder, arson, riot, violent racism, or any other form of
    violence. [¶] (C) Any matter concerning gambling or a lottery.”
    11
    In determining the meaning of this statute and the regulation implementing it, we
    employ our own independent judgment. We review de novo “purely legal issues such as
    statutory interpretation.” (Snow v. Woodford, supra, 128 Cal.App.4th at p. 393.)
    Obscenity
    One question before us is what the Legislature meant by “obscene publications or
    writings” in Penal Code section 2601. Our answer is the Legislature intended to allow
    prisoners to receive and read any material that does not qualify as “obscene” under the
    definition contained in Penal Code section 311. The Legislature did not give CDCR
    authority to define “obscene publications or writings” more broadly.
    Obscenity is not protected by the First Amendment. (Miller, supra, 413 U.S. at
    p. 36.) But defining what is obscene is a notoriously difficult task. Justice Potter
    Stewart‟s famous observation, “I know it when I see it” (Jacobellis v. Ohio (1964)
    
    378 U.S. 184
    , 197), besides being an unsatisfactory solution, is not necessarily as
    foolproof as it sounds. The modern test of obscenity traces back to Miller, supra,
    
    413 U.S. 15
    , 24. “In evaluating the free speech rights of adults, [the Supreme Court has]
    made it perfectly clear that „sexual expression which is indecent but not obscene is
    protected by the First Amendment.‟ ” (Reno v. ACLU (1997) 
    521 U.S. 844
    , 874.)
    Although Penal Code section 2601 does not define “obscene,” Penal Code
    section 311 does, as quoted above. We presume the Legislature was aware of that
    definition and used the word “obscene” advisedly. (See In re Greg F. (2012) 
    55 Cal. 4th 393
    , 407.) By 1994, when Penal Code section 2601 subdivision (c), was amended to
    preclude inmate access to “obscene publications or writings,”9 Miller was well
    established as the law governing obscenity, with the terms “obscene” and “obscenity”
    9
    Prior to 1995, Penal Code section 2601, subdivision (c), did not restrict
    prisoners‟ access to obscenity at all. The obscenity and violence provisions were
    contained in an amendment passed in 1994. (Stats. 1994, ch. 555, § 2, p. 2822.) Prior to
    that amendment, inmates‟ reading was restricted only insofar as it “describe[d] the
    making of any weapon, explosive, poison, or destructive device,” or “depict[ed],
    portray[ed], or describe[d] a sexual assault upon a correctional employee.” (Former Pen.
    Code, § 2601, Stats. 1975, ch. 1175, § 3, p. 2898; Stats. 1986, ch. 1177, § 1, p. 4176.)
    12
    having long since acquired the status of terms of art. (Hamling v. United States (1974)
    
    418 U.S. 87
    , 118.)
    Indeed, CDCR itself has treated Penal Code section 2601‟s reference to “obscene
    publications or writings” as encompassing the test of obscenity under Penal Code
    section 311. Section 3006, subdivision (c) was amended by CDCR on January 3, 1995 to
    implement the restrictions imposed by the 1994 amendment to Penal Code
    section 2601.10 “Obscene material means material that is defined in Penal Code
    section 311and may include but is not limited to the following,”11 after which the
    regulation specifies categories of potentially restricted materials similar to those now
    contained in subdivision (c)(15)(C)(1)-(C)(6). (Former § 3006, subd. (c)(14), effective
    Jan. 3, 1995.) CDCR also adopted an operating procedure incorporating the three-part
    test of obscenity contained in Penal Code section 311 and section 3006, subdivision
    (c)(15)(A). (CDCR, Adult Institutions, Programs, and Parole Operations Manual, section
    10
    “The director [of CDCR] may prescribe and amend rules and regulations for the
    administration of the prisons . . . .” (Pen. Code, § 5058, subd. (a).) But Government
    Code section 11342.2 requires regulations promulgated by state agencies to be consistent
    with the statutes they are designed to implement: “Whenever by the express or implied
    terms of any statute a state agency has authority to adopt regulations to implement,
    interpret, make specific or otherwise carry out the provisions of the statute, no regulation
    adopted is valid or effective unless consistent and not in conflict with the statute and
    reasonably necessary to effectuate the purpose of the statute.” Thus, a prison regulation
    that would impinge upon a prisoner‟s “guaranteed rights” under Penal Code section 2601
    would overstep the regulation-making power of CDCR. “ „ “[F]inal responsibility for the
    interpretation of the law rests with the courts.‟ [Citation.] Administrative regulations that
    alter or amend the statute or enlarge or impair its scope are void and courts not only may,
    but it is their obligation to strike down such regulations.” ‟ ” (California Assn. of
    Psychology Providers v. Rank (1990) 
    51 Cal. 3d 1
    , 11; see also, Batt v. City and County of
    San Francisco (2010) 
    184 Cal. App. 4th 163
    , 168-169 [applying same analysis to Tax
    Collector‟s “guidelines”].)
    11
    The regulation was amended in 1996 to its current form and numbering. The
    amendment deleted the incorporation by reference of the standards of Penal Code
    section 311, and instead incorporated those standards almost verbatim. (See fn. 9, ante,
    and accompanying text.)
    13
    54010.15, available online at http://www.cdcr.ca.gov/ Regulations/Adult_Operations/
    docs/DOM/DOM%202013/2013%20DOM.PDF.)
    We therefore conclude that both the Legislature and CDCR intended only obscene
    materials as defined in Penal Code section 311, not otherwise sexually explicit materials,
    could be withheld under the statute and regulation. But we are troubled by the manner in
    which the regulation was applied in this case.
    Pelican Bay Operational Procedure No. 806
    In addition to the foregoing statutes and regulations, Pelican Bay has its own
    Operational Procedures, one of which deals with obscenity. Operational Procedure
    No. 806, Personal Property Plan, Section VI-F-6 (see fn. 5, ante), provides in part:
    “Except as authorized by institutional head, inmates shall not possess or have under their
    control matter which contains or concerns any of the following: Obscene material.
    Obscene material means material taken as a whole, which to the average person, applying
    contemporary statewide standards, appeals to the prurient interest, when it appears from
    the nature of the matter or the circumstances of the dissemination, distribution, or
    exhibition that it appeals to deviant sexual groups. The material includes, but is not
    limited to material that depicts, displays, or describes penetration of the vagina, or
    sexually explicit images that display frontal nudity in the form of personal photographs,
    drawings, magazines, or other format. Sexually explicit material shall be defined as
    material that shows frontal nudity of either gender, including the exposed female breasts
    or genitalia of either gender.” (Pelican Bay Operational Procedure No. 806, Personal
    Property Plan, Section VI-F-6 at pp. 13-14.)
    Here, we see a departure from the three-part test. The Pelican Bay Operational
    Procedure appears to eliminate―certainly, not to ensure the application of―the
    three-part test of Miller, Penal Code section 311, and section 3006,
    subdivision (c)(15)(A). We find the Operational Procedure problematic for this reason,
    and we fear it may, in effect, authorize Pelican Bay employees to withhold from inmates
    materials that may not properly be classified as obscene because they have “serious
    literary, artistic, political or scientific value.” To the extent the guidelines established by
    14
    current section 3006, subdivision (c)(15)(C)(1)-(C)(6), have been understood by
    individuals within CDCR, or specifically at Pelican Bay, to establish hard-and-fast
    categories of “obscene” material without further analysis, they have been misconstrued.
    Subdivision (c)(15)(C)(1) expressly provides that material which “[d]epicts, displays, or
    describes penetration of the vagina or anus, or contact between the mouth and the
    genitals” is “subject to the tests in paragraphs (A) or (B).” (Italics added.) The list is not
    intended to supplant the three-part test under subdivision (c)(15)(A), nor is it meant to
    categorically expand the definition of obscenity contained in subdivision (c)(15)(A).12
    Application of the statutes and regulations by prison authorities
    We see nothing in the procedures actually employed to suggest that prison staff
    understood their obligation to consider the literary value of the book as a whole before
    declaring it to be contraband. Both the first and second level reviews made specific
    reference to, and quoted, ambiguous and incomplete Pelican Bay Operational Procedure
    No. 806. This quotation of the Operational Procedure may, in part, explain why they
    seem to have overlooked the “serious literary value” prong. The fact that prison
    authorities withheld petitioner‟s book because sexually explicit descriptions were
    “present” or “contain[ed]” within it further suggests they failed to consider the literary
    value of the work “taken as a whole” as required under subdivision (c)(15)(A). By so
    doing, they also failed to respect petitioner‟s rights under Penal Code section 2601,
    subdivision (c)(1).
    The Attorney General fails entirely to appreciate the problem, and instead seems
    to argue in favor of a categorical exclusion of all sexually explicit materials falling within
    subdivision (c)(15)(C)(1)-(C)(6). She argues, for instance, that even if The Silver Crown
    “has some redeeming literary value, it would not justify releasing the book to Martinez,
    as this exception would swallow the rule. Moreover, prisons may expand the definition
    for obscenity when evaluating material viewed by inmates.”
    12
    Alternatively, materials identified in subdivision (c)(15)(C)(1)-(C)(6) may be
    subjected to the test specified in subdivision (c)(15)(B), but that subdivision does not
    apply to our case.
    15
    We cannot agree that prison authorities may simply overlook the third prong of the
    obscenity test or that they may “expand,” without legislative approval, the category of
    materials subject to exclusion from prisons beyond that authorized by Penal Code
    section 2601. We also part company with Johnson, supra, 
    176 Cal. App. 4th 290
    , to the
    extent it suggests that subdivision (c)(15)(C) somehow “expands” the definition of what
    constitutes “obscene material” for purposes of prison administration. (Id. at p. 301
    [subdivision (c)(15)(A) is “refined” by subdivision (c)(15)(C), and together they
    represent an “expanded definition of obscenity”].) As we see it, subdivision (c)(15)(C) is
    the beginning point of the analysis, not the end. The reference back to
    subdivision (c)(15)(A) clearly calls for application of the three-part test, including an
    assessment of literary value.
    There is no support in the record of administrative action to suggest the authorities
    moved on to the third step of the analysis―and much to suggest they did not.13 The only
    reference in the record to which the Attorney General points as encompassing a finding
    of “no serious literary value” is this statement made in the first level review: “the book in
    question does not meet any of the criteria that would allow it to be issued.” This
    amorphous statement is insufficient to constitute a finding on the third prong of the
    obscenity test because no reference to literary value is made whatsoever. Moreover, it
    appears to misplace the burden of proof, as it is clear from the regulation that the prison
    must bear the burden of showing the publication lacks serious literary value, not the
    inmate who must show that the book has serious literary value.
    Given the foregoing factors, we find the third prong of the test required by
    subdivision (c)(15)(A) was never applied by the CDCR representatives in the case before
    13
    Petitioner includes details about his interview with prison officials concerning
    his administrative appeals. These allegations strongly suggest the prison applied
    subdivision (c)(15)(C)(1) and (C)(2) without then applying the three-prong test of
    subdivision (c)(15)(A). Respondent denied these facts, professing to have insufficient
    information to respond further. We find it unnecessary to determine these facts because
    we are convinced by the written record alone that subdivision (c)(15)(A) was not
    properly applied by the prison authorities.
    16
    us. Thus, the decision to exclude The Silver Crown from petitioner‟s possession
    constituted a misapplication of the governing regulation and statute.
    The Attorney General urges us to defer to the judgment of the prison authorities
    regardless, citing cases holding that courts ordinarily do defer to prison authorities on
    questions of prison discipline, classification, gang designation, parole, and the like,
    applying the deferential standard of review asking only whether the authorities‟ action
    was supported by “some evidence.” (In re Shigemura (2012) 
    210 Cal. App. 4th 440
    ,
    451-452; In re Morganti (2012) 
    204 Cal. App. 4th 904
    , 916-917; Johnson, supra,
    176 Cal.App.4th at pp. 295, 299 [discipline based on possession of “obscene” matter].)
    But the some evidence standard would not apply, as the standard of review in cases
    involving obscenity is de novo. (In re George T. (2004) 
    33 Cal. 4th 620
    , 632; Zeitlin v.
    Arnebergh (1963) 
    59 Cal. 2d 901
    , 909).
    Thus it is appropriate we address the question of serious literary value ourselves,
    the question to which we now turn.
    Serious literary value
    Our analysis begins with a more detailed description of the plot of The Silver
    Crown, set primarily in the town of Oxford, England: The Silver Crown is a group of
    12 elite and especially powerful werewolves (Ancient Beasts), one of which has been
    killed by Iris. Mistakenly believing he was killed by Alfie, Iris‟s werewolf boyfriend, the
    remaining 11 search for Alfie, ostensibly to put him on trial as a traitor. Witches,
    meanwhile, have prophesied that Iris will kill the Silver Crown.
    Iris herself has a motive of revenge against werewolves because one of them killed
    her brother years earlier. She and Alfie were a couple when Alfie was still human; Alfie
    apparently was attacked by a werewolf and transformed into one at the same time Iris‟s
    brother was killed. After her brother‟s death, Iris joined together with Blake to become a
    werewolf hunter, while Alfie disappeared into his new werewolf life. Blake and Iris
    eventually married, but when Alfie reappeared in Iris‟s life, Iris left Blake for Alfie.
    Alfie, for the love of Iris and out of remorse for the damage he had done to others, joins
    forces with the werewolf hunters, torn between two worlds. In the end, Iris risks her life
    17
    to rescue Alfie, only to find there may be another influence over him more powerful than
    his love for her.
    Several other werewolves (Alfie‟s pack) populate the cast of characters, all inter-
    related through complex and conflicting loyalties that exist between a new werewolf and
    the werewolf who bit (and thereby transformed) him or her. These are the complexities,
    the reader is told, of the “sire-cub” relationship. The werewolf pack in some ways
    mimics a familial system. Intense emotions, both positive and negative, characterize the
    relationships among werewolves within and without the pack, including a love-hate
    relationship between some of the characters. Themes of love, divided loyalty, destiny,
    transformation, betrayal, and revenge run through the novel.
    Granted, we are dealing with a book, isolated passages of which, standing alone,
    may be considered sexually offensive. The question then becomes whether the work “as
    a whole” may be said to lack “serious literary value” because it is interlaced with
    pornography. (Miller, supra, 413 U.S. at p. 24.)
    As the Supreme Court has said, “A quotation from Voltaire in the flyleaf of a book
    will not constitutionally redeem an otherwise obscene publication . . . .” (Kois v.
    Wisconsin (1972) 
    408 U.S. 229
    , 231.) “[A] truly pornographic film would not be rescued
    by inclusion of a few verses from the Psalms.” (United States v. A Motion Picture Film
    Entitled I Am Curious-Yellow (2d Cir. 1968) 
    404 F.2d 196
    , 201 (conc. opn. of Friendly,
    J.).) And obscene videos do not have “serious” social value simply because the
    participants wear condoms and the films occasionally remind viewers to practice “safe
    sex.” (United States v. Schein (3d Cir. 1994) 
    31 F.3d 135
    , 137.)
    On the other hand, “[w]here the scene is part of the narrative, the work itself does
    not for this reason become obscene, even though the scene in isolation might be
    offensive.” (Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition (2002) 
    535 U.S. 234
    , 248; see also, e.g.,
    Powell’s Books, Inc. v. Kroger (9th Cir. 2010) 
    622 F.3d 1202
    , 1214 [coming-of-age
    novel does not become obscene for minors simply because it includes explicit sexual
    scenes]; People v. Dyke (2009) 
    172 Cal. App. 4th 1377
    , 1386 [where the context of
    18
    television scenes shown to minor was not clear, there had been no showing of lack of
    serious value, and conviction under Pen. Code, § 288.2, subd. (a) had to be reversed].)
    When, then, does a work which contains both literary speech and some offensive
    sexual content lose its “literary value” and become contraband in prison?
    To begin with, we cannot simply dismiss the work as nonserious literature because
    it deals with werewolves and other paranormal creatures and activities. For better or
    worse, some segment of the population is fascinated by werewolves and other mythical
    beings, as most recently shown by the Twilight (Summit Entertainment 2008) movies.
    Werewolves, in fact, have played a role in popular fiction for centuries14 and became a
    popular subject of the cinema, including the early films Werewolf of London (Universal
    Pictures 1935) and The Wolfman (Universal Pictures 1941). Whether contemporary
    readers drawn to this genre actually believe in werewolves, whether they see in such
    works a metaphor for some kind of human transformation, or whether they simply read
    werewolf literature as escapist fantasy, the fact remains that werewolf literature retains a
    place in modern American and European society.
    Having determined the work has some societal value, how does one judge whether
    it has “serious” literary value? “[E]ven after years of federal obscenity jurisprudence,
    there has arisen no set, uniform standard by which courts may discern whether a work has
    serious „literary, artistic, political or scientific value.‟ ” (Note, The Auto-Authentication
    Of The Page: Purely Written Speech And The Doctrine Of Obscenity (2011) 20 Wm. &
    Mary Bill of Rts. J. 253, 273 (Auto-Authentication); see also, Main, supra,11 S. Ill. U.
    L.J. at pp. 1162-1174.)
    The Supreme Court has most recently discussed the concept of “serious” value in
    United States v. Stevens (2010) 559 U.S 460[130 S.Ct. 1577] (Stevens).15 Stevens, which
    was not an obscenity case, involved a challenge to the constitutionality of 18 United
    14
    See Frost, The Essential Guide to Werewolf Literature (2003) at pp. 50-105.
    15
    Opinion by Roberts, C.J., joined by Stevens, Scalia, Kennedy, Thomas,
    Ginsburg, Breyer, and Sotomayor, JJ. Alito, J., in dissent defined “serious” as “not
    „trifling.‟ ” (Stevens, supra, 559 U.S. at p. __ [130 S.Ct. at p. 1595].)
    19
    States Code section 48, which outlawed depictions of animal cruelty. (Stevens, supra,
    559 U.S. at p. __ [130 S.Ct. at p. 1582].) The statute included an exception for “any
    depiction that has serious religious, political, scientific, educational, journalistic,
    historical, or artistic value.” (Id. at p. __ [130 S.Ct. p. 1590.)
    Addressing an overbreadth argument, the Court said: “The Government‟s attempt
    to narrow the statutory ban, however, requires an unrealistically broad reading of the
    exceptions clause [i.e., “serious” value clause]. As the Government reads the clause, any
    material with „redeeming societal value,‟ [citation] „ “at least some minimal value,” ‟
    [citation] or anything more than „scant social value,‟ [citation] is excluded under § 48(b).
    But the text says „serious‟ value, and „serious‟ should be taken seriously. We decline the
    Government‟s invitation― advanced for the first time in this Court―to regard as
    „serious‟ anything that is not „scant.‟ (Or, as the dissent puts it, „ “trifling.” . . .) As the
    Government recognized below, „serious‟ ordinarily means a good bit more. The District
    Court‟s jury instructions required value that is „significant and of great import,‟ [citation]
    and the Government defended these instructions as properly relying on „a commonly
    accepted meaning of the word “serious,” ‟. . .” (Stevens, supra, 559 U.S. at p. __
    [130 S.Ct. at p. 1590].)
    Personally, we would be hard-pressed to say The Silver Crown has “significant”
    literary value and is a work “of great import.” The majority opinion in Stevens, however,
    merely recited as a fact of record the jury instructions ascribing to the phrase the meaning
    “ „significant and of great import.‟ ” (Stevens, supra, 559 U.S. at p. __ [130 S.Ct. at
    p. 1590.) It did not purport to establish a definition of the word “serious.” And we do not
    read it as a mandate equating “serious” with “significant” and “of great import” in the
    obscenity context.
    Indeed, we question whether we should judge the superior or inferior literary merit
    of the book at all. We suspect it is the nature of the work rather than its quality that lends
    it “serious literary value.” In other words, we attempt to determine whether the book is
    serious literature, not whether it is good literature.
    20
    We start with the observation that we deal with words alone and no other
    depictions. While the Supreme Court has made clear that words as well as pictures may
    be deemed obscene (Kaplan v. California (1973) 
    413 U.S. 115
    , 118-119), many of the
    obscenity cases deal with photographs, magazines, and films, where the portrayal is
    visual and, at least from an objective perspective, uniform to all observers. With the
    written word, however, the images come to fruition only in the mind of the reader, and it
    is arguable that purely literary works without illustrations or photographs are less
    amenable to regulation as obscenity. (See Auto-Authentication, supra, 20 Wm. & Mary
    Bill of Rts. J. at pp. 263-269.)
    Nevertheless, it is perhaps easier to apply Justice Stewart‟s “I know it when I see
    it” test to a picture than it is the corollary we must consider in this case: Do we know it
    when we read it? We find it harder to dismiss a novel-length work of fiction as lacking in
    literary value than we might find it to so dismiss a magazine containing obscene
    photographs.
    Indeed, the prison regulation itself places images in a more restricted category
    than the written word.16 (See § 3006, subd. (c)(17).) Snow v. Woodford, supra,
    
    128 Cal. App. 4th 383
    , upheld the constitutionality of subdivision (c)(17), which was
    added in 2003, and which prohibits inmate access to images of frontal nudity.17 Doing
    16
    Compare § 3006, subdivision (c)(15)(C)(1)-(C)(6), making written works
    subject to the test in subdivision (c)(15)(A), with subdivision (c)(17), forbidding
    “[s]exually explicit images that depict frontal nudity in the form of personal photographs,
    drawings, magazines, or other pictorial format,” without reference back to
    subdivision (c)(15)(A).
    17
    Although it is true that Snow found the regulation on its face did not violate
    Penal Code section 2601, it relied upon CDCR‟s regulation-making authority to
    effectuate subdivision (c)(1)(B) of that statute, finding CDCR‟s adoption of a complete
    ban on images of frontal nudity was within the department‟s authority to exclude material
    that “ „might have a tendency to incite violent situations.‟ ” (Snow, supra,
    128 Cal.App.4th at p. 394, citing Pen. Code, § 2601, subd. (c)(1)(B).) The prison‟s
    explanation for the regulation when it was added in 2003 included representations that
    nude images increased harassment of female prison staff and possible anatomical
    comparisons that could lead to fights between inmates. (Id. at p. 388.) We deal, of
    21
    so, the court distinguished pictures from words, noting the regulation “does not ban
    sexually explicit writings.” (Id. at p. 393; see also Frost v. Symington (9th Cir. 1999)
    
    197 F.3d 348
    , 357 [Arizona prison regulation banning depictions of sexual penetration
    did not ban “sexually explicit articles”]; Mauro v. Arpaio (9th Cir. 1999) 
    188 F.3d 1054
    ,
    1057-1060 [approving similar jail regulation for pretrial detainees]; Amatel v. Reno
    (D.C. Cir. 1998) 
    156 F.3d 192
    , 202 [commenting that a similar federal regulation
    (28 C.F.R. § 540.72) “by its terms only restricts pictures; a prisoner may read anything
    he pleases”].)
    We turn, then, to the evidence before us on the issue of literary value. As noted,
    as one of the exhibits to his traverse, petitioner submitted the declaration of Peter Orner, a
    creative writing instructor at San Francisco State University who has also taught at other
    institutions, written books, and received various literary awards for his work. Orner
    opines that The Silver Crown has “literary merit.” In his words, “It‟s not pornographic,
    it‟s erotic fiction that centers around a relationship that consists of yes, a lot of sex but
    also love too. The book has a plot, a theme. Freedom, I would say is the main theme, a
    woman freeing herself from the confines of her set life―Alfie represents a kind of
    freedom she never had with her husband Blake. The complication, of course, is that he is
    a werewolf and a relationship with him interferes with her professional responsibility.
    This involves a universal problem: you have a certain responsibility to be one person, but
    life comes along and changes you. . . . Further, the characters have a certain depth,
    personalities that make [them] distinct. . . . The book has what I would call forward
    momentum, including plot twists, surprises, and a sense of resolution at the end, which
    leaves the door open to further adventures.”
    Orner continues: “The Silver Crown is a fantasy story, one that transports us into
    other worlds. Again, the characters have sex but the book is about more than sex. As I
    said above, it seems to me that the book is an exploration of the confines of a certain
    course, with a different subdivision of section 3006, enacted at a different time, in an “as
    applied” challenge, and in a case where the warden has not argued that explicit sexual
    content is banned under subdivision (c)(17), but under (c)(15).
    22
    society, one that is in some ways similar to our own but that also contains magical
    elements. It‟s about freeing oneself from one‟s greatest fears, and in this way this is
    clearly a work of literature. It‟s not Tolstoy, fine, but this author knows how to move
    story, carry out a plot, with a theme, and how to give her characters a certain depth
    characteristic of literary fiction.” While Orner does not say the work has “serious”
    literary value, such a finding could be derived from his declaration.18
    Significantly, the warden has submitted no contrary expert evidence that the work
    lacks serious literary value.19 In similar circumstances, Luke Records v. Navarro
    (11th Cir. 1992) 
    960 F.2d 134
    , 138-139, held that where an expert testified that a rap
    album had serious value, the government‟s failure to present controverting evidence
    required reversal of an obscenity finding.
    Instead of presenting expert literary opinion, as discussed above, the Attorney
    General submitted the declaration of correctional officer Graves that he considered the
    “serious literary value” factor in determining The Silver Crown was contraband. But we
    have no clue what criteria or reasoning he used in reaching any such decision, and his
    own description of his process leads us to doubt that he applied any such test at all.20
    In line with the expert opinion, we too note that Madden‟s book employs
    techniques recognized as literary devices. (Auto-Authentication, supra, 20 Wm. & Mary
    18
    Madden also apparently won some sort of award as an erotic writer. The book
    cover describes her as the “The Erotic Awards Writer of the Year 2007,” and contains
    positive critical comments about her previous works. These factors contribute to a
    finding that the book has “serious literary value.”
    19
    While expert opinion is not required in obscenity cases, it is allowed. (Pen.
    Code, § 312.1.)
    20
    Graves‟ declaration says that he considers a book “as a whole” when he reviews
    it pursuant to section 3006 and that he considers “whether the book, taken as a whole,
    lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value.” However, here is how he
    describes the exact process he follows: “My process is to thumb through pages of the
    book to read various excerpts and if I continue to come across sexually explicit depictions
    or descriptions that intend to appeal to the prurient interest of the reader, that book as a
    whole would meet the criteria of obscene contraband.” This description hardly reassures
    us that he or other prison officials consider the literary value of the work as a whole.
    23
    Bill of Rts. J. at p. 274; see Memoirs v. Massachusetts (1966) 
    383 U.S. 413
    , 419.) The
    plot unfolds from the points of view of at least three character groups: (1) Iris, Alfie,
    Blake (and related characters), (2) Leon and his packmates, and (3) Sabrina and the Silver
    Crown. These three viewpoints are developed simultaneously throughout the novel,
    interspersed between or within chapters. The characters are developed to a degree, with
    distinctive personalities, though deep introspection is lacking. Dialogue is employed to
    move the plot forward. There is frequent retrospective reference so as to fill the reader in
    on past events, most of which presumably were explored more fully in the first book of
    the trilogy. And though perhaps less than Shakespearean, a ghost of Iris‟s dead brother
    appears in various scenes, especially to provide guidance to Iris in times of strife. The
    Silver Crown ends on an uncertain note, with the promise “To be continued” as the final
    words of the book. This undoubtedly was intended to build suspense and whet the
    reader‟s appetite for the third book of the trilogy.
    In addition, judged quantitatively, the amount of offensive material in The Silver
    Crown is smaller than the portion of the book carrying forward the nonoffensive plot.
    (See State v. Walden Book Co. (La. 1980) 
    386 So. 2d 342
    , 345 [228-page magazine had
    96 pages lacking serious value].) This is not a book in which a minimal amount of
    literary material has been added as a sham to attempt to constitutionalize otherwise
    unprotected obscenity. While we have not calculated a page-by-page comparison, it is
    clear that the number of pages devoted to sexually explicit material is a minority of the
    overall text. The sexual scenes in The Silver Crown are also thematically related to the
    rest of the book. Considerable effort went into the creation of the book, and the plot is
    more than a sham. (Ibid.)
    For the foregoing reasons, we find The Silver Crown does not lack serious literary
    value and thus should not have been withheld from petitioner on grounds of obscenity.
    We feel certain the book should be protected by the First Amendment in ordinary
    commerce, and our analysis of Penal Code section 2601 concludes it is therefore
    allowable reading for inmates.
    24
    Violence
    As noted, in the first level administrative appeal the prison authorities cited
    section 3006, subdivision (c)(1), which defines as contraband “[a]ny matter of a character
    tending to incite murder; arson; riot; or any form of violence or physical harm to any
    person, or any ethnic, gender, racial, religious, or other group.” Not all books containing
    descriptions of violence are forbidden to inmates. Only those that tend to incite violence
    are prohibited. The Silver Crown does not fall into that category. Indeed, we find some
    facts relied upon by the prison and the superior court amount to a misreading of the
    text.21
    Although The Silver Crown includes some violence within the plot line, it is not
    gratuitous or particularly graphic. And it does not advocate or tend to incite violence.
    Werewolves attack humans. Werewolf hunters kill werewolves. There is no morbid
    fixation on violence. In fact, most of the violence in the book is committed by or against
    mythical creatures, not humans.
    Moreover, the descriptions of killing and violence are in a matter-of-fact way. For
    instance, the killing of one werewolf is described as follows: “ „Thank you, Aurelia,‟
    Blake said, as he raised his gun and shot her between the eyes.” Another example: “Iris‟s
    dart hit the grey [wolf] and he went down.” One of the most violent passages in the book
    21
    The prison cited one particular passage in the book in claiming it was
    contraband under the violence standard: “the book in question also advocates violence
    because it describes ripping at a decapitated mans [sic] head and other violent killings.”
    This is an inaccurate description of the book‟s content. There is no description of anyone
    “ripping” at a decapitated head. The passage dealing with the decapitated head reads as
    follows: “The dark-haired man was decapitated. His head two feet away from his body.
    The wolf was standing on the blond‟s chest ripping at his face.” And the “ripping” was
    committed by a wolf, Alfie in his wolf state.
    The superior court also inaccurately described a part of the book when it said,
    “The five-page, first chapter describes a woman having oral sex and intercourse with
    another werewolf before she intentionally shoots him in the leg and then, after more
    dialogue, administers the coup de grace with a silver bullet.” The first part of the
    sentence is accurate, but the woman does not kill the werewolf (Leon), with a silver
    bullet or otherwise. He appears as a character through the remainder of the book.
    25
    is when Iris begins to fulfill the witches‟ prophecy by killing several of the Ancient
    Beasts, a passage we quote in the margin.22 Although it describes a violent scene, the
    violence is muted, not exploited.
    Again, we are urged by the Attorney General to defer to prison authorities in
    deciding what kind of material is likely to “incite violence” in a penal institution. We
    would be inclined to do so, but we have reviewed excerpts from other books contained in
    Pelican Bay SHU‟s general library and find this book no more violent than the others.
    For example, in Inner City Hoodlum, Donald Goines portrays the death of Josh, a young
    petty thief, killed by Wilbur Mann, a white security guard who caught Josh looting a
    22
    “Iris raised the bow and took aim. One Beast was down, it‟s [sic] throat slashed
    by Pure‟s blade. But Pure was on the ground, the other three Beast‟s [sic] surrounding
    him. Iris fired.
    “And, oh, the crossbow was amazing. If holding it had felt good, firing it was
    orgasmic. It seemed to respond to her will, like a lost part of her. She took one of the
    Beasts down with her first bolt.
    “Two left. One was on Pure‟s chest, the other was looking at her, readying itself
    for attack. Iris aimed. But this bolt only hit the creature‟s leg. It didn‟t flinch.
    “Still need a fatal shot, Iris.
    “The crossbow only took two bolts at a time. Iris scrambled in her pocket for
    more and reloaded. By the time she was ready to fire again the wolf had decided to
    spring. She caught it in mid-air. It crashed to the floor so hard the whole cavern seemed
    to shake.
    “As Iris whirled around to finish off the final wolf her heart stopped. Pure was on
    the ground beneath it. The side of his face was covered in blood. Iris screamed. She ran
    towards the wolf, aiming and firing as she went. The bolt slammed into it almost as Iris
    thought it. The wolf fell and Iris landed on her knees next to Pure.
    “Pure looked at her. „It bit me,‟ he said.
    “Iris looked Pure right in the eyes. „Yes,‟ she said. His face. It wasn‟t a fatal bite.
    Iris pulled the crossbow bolt out of the dead Beast lying next to them. She took Pure‟s
    hand in hers and with the other slammed the crossbow bolt right into his chest.”
    26
    boxcar. Mann screams at Josh, “You fuckin‟ little nigger boy!” and then shoots him dead
    with his .38. Again, we quote the text in full in a footnote.23
    We find Goines‟s book is more likely to incite a violent response than is
    Madden‟s. It is more realistic, as the killings are perpetrated with weapons in current
    circulation. The wounds are described in greater detail, which tends to create a more
    vivid image in the mind. The author describes Mann‟s “joy” at having killed a young
    boy. And there is an interracial element to the killing, which could tend to trigger
    interracial violence in prison.
    By contrast, when Iris kills the Beasts as recounted above, she acts heroically to
    attempt to rescue Alfie. When she kills Pure it is because he has been bitten by a
    werewolf and will become one if not killed by Iris. She thus carries out an oath taken by
    all of the werewolf hunters to kill each other if they suffer a nonlethal bite. Too, Iris uses
    a crossbow, an ancient weapon probably endowed with magical properties, not one so
    common as the gun or the nunchakus in Goines‟s book. And the violence, like the rest of
    the plot, occurs in a realm of pure fantasy.
    We have also reviewed an excerpt from Chainfire by Terry Goodkind, copied by
    hand by petitioner as an exhibit to his petition, which is available in the Pelican Bay SHU
    23
    “The shot was fired directly into Josh‟s tear-stained cheek, tearing away the
    entire left side of his skull. The second shot entered his neck and ripped the muscles and
    cords out of his body. As his skinny little body flew backward into the dark recesses of
    the boxcar, Josh‟s skull and throat were being splattered against the boxes of imported
    watches.”
    Mann “was at that moment seething with a kind of angry joy at what he had done.
    For those brief moments, he had come to be the man once again. The kid inside the
    boxcar was dead, and he, Wilbur Mann, had killed him. The kid was a nigger and that
    had made it even better.”
    But Josh‟s friend gets even: “Buddy knew it was the most powerful thrust he had
    ever made with his [nunchaku] sticks. Every part of him was there, adding to the strength
    of his swing. The sticks came down directly at the center of the guard‟s cap and the
    sickening sound of the man‟s skull being crushed turned Bobby‟s stomach. [¶] „Oh my
    God!‟ Johnny ran up at that moment behind Buddy. The nunchaku was embedded in the
    dead man‟s skull, and Buddy was struggling to pull it free. Johnny watched in horror,
    then saw the remains of Josh.”
    27
    general library. We will not quote its contents, but we find the excepts provided by
    petitioner far more violent and gruesome than anything contained in The Silver Crown.
    By either historical or contemporary standards, the violence in The Silver Crown
    is not extreme. More graphic violence appears on television nightly. Since other more
    violent books are available to prisoners in the SHU general library, we see no reason to
    withhold petitioner‟s self-purchased book on account of its violent passages. We
    therefore conclude the prison authorities misapplied section 3006, subdivision (c)(1),
    when they withheld the book from petitioner on grounds of its violent content. The
    confiscation was arbitrary and capricious and not reasonably related to legitimate
    penological interests as applied to petitioner‟s book. (See Shaw v. Murphy, supra,
    532 U.S. at p. 232; Turner v. Safley, supra, 482 U.S. at p. 100.)
    DISPOSITION
    The petition for writ of habeas corpus is granted. The Warden of Pelican Bay
    State Prison is ordered to allow petitioner to receive, possess, and read his copy of The
    Silver Crown. We currently have possession of the book as an exhibit to the petition.
    The clerk of this court shall deliver the book to the Deputy Attorney General, who shall
    oversee its delivery to petitioner.
    28
    _________________________
    Richman, J.
    We concur:
    _________________________
    Kline, P.J.
    _________________________
    Lambden, J.
    29
    A134400, In re Martinez
    Trial Court:                 Del Norte County Superior Court
    Trial Judge:                 Hon. William H. Follett
    Attorney for Petitioner:     Matthew Zwerling and L. Richard
    Braucher, under appointments by the Court
    of Appeal
    Attorneys for Respondent:    Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General,
    Jennifer A. Neill, Senior Assistant Attorney
    General, Anya M. Binsacca, Supervising
    Deputy Attorney General, Stacey D.
    Schesser, Amanda Lloyd, Deputy
    Attorneys General
    30