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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF TENNESSEE AT GREENEVILLE BOAZ PLEASANT-BEY, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) No. 2:15-cv-00174-RLJ-CRW v. ) ) TENNESSEE DEPARTMENT OF ) CORRECTION, et al., ) ) Defendants. ) MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER This matter is before the Court on Plaintiffâs Motion for Summary Judgment [Doc. 142], Defendants Tennessee Department of Correction; Craig Jullian; Randy Lee; Gerald McAllister; Derrick Schofield; Bennie Townsend; John Walker; and Maurice Widenerâs Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings and Motion for Summary Judgment [Doc. 144], Defendantsâ Memorandum in Support [Doc. 145], Defendantsâ Statement of Material Facts [Doc. 146], Defendantsâ Response in Opposition to Plaintiffâs Motion for Summary Judgment [Doc. 147], Plaintiffâs Response to Defendantsâ Motion [Doc. 156], Plaintiffâs âRebuttal Statement of Factsâ [Doc. 157], Plaintiffâs Reply to Defendantâs Opposition [Doc. 158], and Plaintiffâs Motion to Dismiss Defendants Randy Lee and John Walker [Doc. 155]. For the reasons herein, the Court will DENY Plaintiffâs Motion for Summary Judgment [Doc. 142], GRANT in part and DENY in part Defendantâs Motion for Summary Judgment [Doc. 144], and GRANT Plaintiffâs Motion to Dismiss [Doc. 155]. I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PLAINTIFFâS ALLEGATIONS1 Plaintiff, proceeding pro se, brings this section 1983 civil rights action, alleging that Defendants violated his rights under the Establishment Clause and religious rights under the First Amendmentâs Free Exercise Clause and under the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act (RLUIPA). [Doc. 1]. Plaintiff is a state prisoner currently housed at the Trousdale Turner Correctional Center in Hartsville, Tennessee. [Doc. 145-3 at 4:7]. The events of which he complains, however, arose while he was housed at Northeast Correctional Facility (NECX) in Mountain City, Tennessee, from approximately 2014 through 2018. [See Doc. 1; Doc. 145-3 at 61:12â16; Doc. 109]. A. Plaintiffâs Halal Diet Plaintiff, who is Muslim, became a follower of Sunnah of Prophet Muhammed. [Doc. 1 at 1; Doc. 109 at 12; Doc. 145-3 at 49:2â6]. He describes eating as âan act of worshipâ and believes that he can only eat traditional Halal foods âthat were eaten by Prophet Muhammad himself, his Companions, and the 1st Three Generations of Muslims[.]â [Doc 109 at 10; Doc. 142 at 9; Doc. 145 at 90:14â16]. As part of his strict Halal diet, Plaintiff can only eat: â[n]atural boiledâ or organic eggs [Doc. 145 at 87:24, 89:4â6]; organic, whole milk from a goat or cow [id. at 87:24â25, 91; 8â 11, 98:7â8]; brown rice [id. at 94:2]; wheat bread [id. at 91:14â16]; a variety of green vegetables [id. at 91:18â22]; fish [id. at 89:15]; and ânatural fruitsâ with seeds [id. at 92:18â20, 93:4]. Plaintiff can also eat lamb, chicken, or beef, but only if they are Halal. [Id. at 94:14â16]. To be considered Halal, the meat must be slaughtered by an Imam or a âqualified Muslimâ [id. at 96:22â25, 97:1â 1 The Court drafted this section according to Plaintiffâs allegations in his Complaint, Plaintiffâs deposition testimony, and both partiesâ submissions, including Defendantsâ statement of undisputed facts. [Doc 146]. Plaintiff did not file his own statement of undisputed facts but filed a âRebuttal Statement of Facts.â [Doc. 157]. 8; Doc. 157 at 3] in âthe name of Allah,â2 [id. at 96:13]. The meat must also be prepared properly, free from contamination with other non-Halal meats and gelatin, which may also contain pork product. [Id. at 100:1â3]. Plaintiffâs religious beliefs strictly prohibit him from eating pork and non-Halal meats, which he considers âharamââfoods which he states are âtotally forbiddenâ and unlawful. [Id. at 89:4â6; see Doc. 109 at 9]. He also avoids âinnovate[ed]â food [Doc. 145-3 at 88:25], ânon- traditional food,â or food that is in the âgray areaâ [id. at 89:2], all of which are called âBiddâa Taâam.â3 Unlike haram, which are forbidden foods, Plaintiff describes Biddâa Taâam foods as those that are âalmost haramâ and foods that his religion âfrown[s] upon.â [Id. at 89:1â7, 158:18; see Doc. 109 at 12]. â[P]rocessed foods, such as tofu and soybean meals, powdered eggs, powdered and reduced fat milk, and white breadâ and generally, non-organic foods, are Biddâa Taâam. [Doc. 142 at 9, 77; Doc. 145 at 163:13, 16â17]. In 2014, TDOC allowed inmates to participate in the Religious Diet Program. [Doc. 142 at 52]. Jewish inmates could register to receive Kosher meals, which were either labeled as Kosher or Kosher/Halal. [Doc. 145-3 at 102:10â16, 137:5â10]. Muslim inmates could register to receive Halal meals on TDOCâs Halal menu. [Doc. 109 at 9]. To ensure that Jewish and Muslim inmatesâ religious and dietary requirements were met, âTDOC personnel consult[ed] with external religious leaders, including imams and rabbis.â [Defâs Undisputed Facts, Doc. 146, at 3]. 2 According to Plaintiffâs religious beliefs, â[t]he name of Allah must be mentioned over the animals when they are slaughtered, [and] they must die in a state of peace.â [Doc. 142 at 77]. The animals must also be âproperly cut [on] the esophagus, trachea and two jugular veins allowing the blood to pour out . . . to prevent the Muslims from consuming the animals blood.â [Id.]. 3 Plaintiff also refers to the non-traditional and processed foods as Biddâa Taâam foods and âmakruhâ throughout the record, but for consistency, the Court will refer to these foods as Biddâa Taâam. While Plaintiff was housed at NECX, he enrolled in the Religious Diet Program âand was placedâ on TDOCâs Halal menu. [Doc. 109 at 9]. According to Plaintiff, Defendants TDOC, TDOC Commissioner Derrick Schofield, and NECX Warden Gerald McAllister âimplementedâ TDOCâs 2013-2015 Halal menus. [Doc. 1 at 6; Doc. 142 at 78]. He also states that Defendants NECX Chaplain Maurice Widener4 and NECX Kitchen Staff Bennie Townsend âmandatedâ TDOCâs 2013-2015 Halal menus. [Doc. 142, at 79; Doc. 145-3 at 162:10â11].5 According to Plaintiff, TDOCâs Halal menu consisted of foods that were âagainst his beliefs to consume,â and he âlos[t]a lot of weightâ while trying to abstain from eating those foods. [Doc. 109 at 10]. He avers that TDOCâs Halal menu consisted of Biddâa Taâam foodsâprocessed foods, such as powdered eggs, two percent milk, powdered milk grits, mechanically separate meat, fish patties, and unsweetened peanut butter and jelly sandwiches. [Id.]. He states that lunch and dinner ârepeatedlyâ consisted of ânon-traditional [Biddâa Taâam]â foods, such as âinedible soybean and tofu[-] based rice meals,â seedless fruits, powdered eggs, and powdered milk. [Doc. 142 at 7]. Plaintiff also asserts that TDOCâs Halal menu contained haram, and he offers three reasons as to why he believes the foods served on TDOCâs Halal menu were haram. First, he maintains that at least one of the meats on the Halal menuâcanned chicken con carneâwas haram because 4 The parties refer to Defendant Widener throughout the record as âWeidner.â His correct surname, however, appears to be Widener, [see Doc. 46 at 2], and the Court will refer to him as Defendant Widener in this opinion for consistency. 5 For clarification, Plaintiff does not state, either in his Complaint or supporting affidavits, that Defendant Jullian was involved in implementing or mandating the TDOC Halal menu; he, therefore, does not appear to be involved in Plaintiffâs free-exercise claims as they relate to TDOCâs Halal menu or Plaintiffâs Halal diet. [See Docs. 1 at 6; 142 at 79 ]. it did not contain a Halal symbol. [Id. at 6â8].6 Second, Plaintiff maintains that he personally witnessed cross-contamination of the Halal meals in NECXâs kitchen. The cross-contamination would occur when inmates âoccasionally prepare[d] pork and other Haram meats [and] then prepare[d] the Plaintiffâs food.â [Id. at 5]. Despite bringing âthe issue to Townsend . . . . it [would] just [go] on,â [Doc. 145-3 at 151:18â25], and although a âfew times accommodations were made, . . . a lot of times, . . . they didnât even care,â [id. at 145-3 at 151:18â25, 152:1â2]. Third, he states that a large portion of the foods on TDOCâs Halal menu came from a facility called Cook Chill in Nashville, Tennesseeâthe same facility that he states would also prepare meals, including haram meats, for the general prison population. [Id. at 152:12â16]. According to Plaintiff, Cook Chill contaminated the Halal foods by using âthe same pots, pans and with the same utensilsâ used to prepare haram meats for the general prison population. [Doc. 1 at 5â12]. Plaintiff states that he âfiled numerous grievance[s] concerning . . . . the mealsâ on TDOCâs Halal menu. [Doc. 109 at 10 Âś 4]. He âeven made efforts to make requests with . . . [Defendants] Townsend and . . . [Widener] concerning the meals, but . . . was told that Imam Bahloul [TDOCâs Contracted Imam] approved the meals and they were the only meals available for Muslim inmates.â [Id.].7 Although Plaintiff states that tuna fish was a dietary option on TDOCâs menu, it was âeventually removed from the TDOC Halal Menu.â [Doc. 156 at 7]. He denies that he had alternative food options to the meals served on TDOCâs Halal menu. [Id.]. 6 Plaintiff identifies two other meats served on TDOCâs Halal menu as haram in his motion: chicken fricassee and southwest chicken. He does not indicate why he believes these meats are haram, but the Court infers it is because it was unknown to Plaintiff whether the meat was slaughtered in accordance with his religious beliefs. 7 Plaintiff does not state who told him that an Imam approved the meals on TDOCâs Halal menu or who told him that those were the only meals available to Muslim inmates. B. Special Treatment of Kosher Meals While housed at NECX, Plaintiff states that Defendants Schofield, McAllister, Widener, Townsend, and NECX Assistant Warden Craig Jullian gave Jewish inmates âspecial treatmentâ by affording them greater dietary protections. [Doc. 1 at 6]. Kosher meals, for example, were imported to NECX from a Halal/Kosher vendorâmeals that Plaintiff says were âvery nicely packagedâ and free from contamination. [Doc. 109 at 9]. He states that Muslim inmates, however, were not afforded those same dietary protections because âHalal food [was not] imported by a Halal vendorâ and the meals were not prepackaged. [Doc. 1 at 6; see Doc. 145 at 139:12-14]. Instead, a large majority of those foods on TDOCâs Halal menu came from Cook Chill where he believes the foods were contaminated. C. The Id Ul Fitra Feast Plaintiff also celebrates Id Ul Fitraâan annual feast and âcongregation . . . of worshipâ that concludes Ramadan. [Doc. 145 at 120:1, 121:8â9]. Like Thanksgiving, it is tradition to have certain foods for the feast. [Id. at 119:7â22]. Halal lamb, for instance, is an essential and traditional food for the feast and must be slaughtered at sunset, the day before the feast, or the lamb is haram. [Id. at 3â11]. In 2013, 2015, and 2016, Plaintiff maintains that TDOC allowed Muslim inmates to purchase traditional Halal foods and receive traditional Halal foods from âlocal Masjids [Islamic Places of Worship]â for the Id Ul Fitra feast. [Doc. 142 at 77]. In 2014, however, he states that TDOC implemented its own policy8 and created its own menu of non-traditional foods for the 8 Plaintiff appears to refer to this âpolicyâ interchangeably throughout his motion as a âmemorandumâ that he claims was signed by Defendant Schofield. He states, however, that the memorandum is unavailable. 2014 Id Ul Fitr feast, which included âbreaded fish with [overcooked] macaroni noodles.â [Id. at 3, 78]. He states that during the feast, Defendants Widener and Townsend served him the overcooked noodles and fish on the same trays that they âused to serve pork and other haram meats.â [Id. at 77]. II. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND On June 24, 2015, Plaintiff filed suit in this Court against Johnson County; Mountain City, Tennessee; Tennessee Department of Correction (TDOC); TDOC Commissioner Derrick Schofield; NECX Kitchen Staff Bennie Townsend; NECX Warden Gerald McAllister; NECX Assistant Warden Craig Jullian; NECX Chaplain Maurice Widener; and âKitchen Stewar[dess] Walker,â9 stating that he exhausted all administrative grievances. [Doc. 1 at 1â2].10 Plaintiff brought several claims against Defendants under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for a violation of his rights under the First Amendment of the United States Constitution and claims for a violation of his rights under RLUIPA. [Id.]. For his section 1983 claims, he seeks $700,000 from each Defendant for their alleged First Amendment violations. [Id. at 10].11 Under RLUIPA, he âdemands that all policies/customs be invalidated [.]â [Id. Âś 4]. On March 29, 2018, the Court entered a Memorandum Opinion and Order [Doc. 97] granting Defendantâs first motion for summary judgment [Doc. 89], denying Plaintiffâs first 9 Plaintiff moved to voluntarily dismiss Defendants Johnson County and Mountain City. [Doc. 51]. The Court granted Plaintiffâs motion, and Johnson County and Mountain City are no longer parties in this action. [Doc. 52]. 10 Plaintiff does not state in his Complaint whether he is suing TDOCâs and NECXâs employees in their official or individual capacities. 11 Plaintiffâs Complaint does not indicate that he is seeking injunctive relief for his section 1983 claims; it only indicates that he is seeking monetary damages for his section 1983 claims. [See Doc. 1 at 10]. motion for summary judgment [Doc. 92], and dismissing the action with prejudice. Plaintiff appealed to the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals. The Sixth Circuit affirmed, in part, and vacated, in part, the Courtâs decision granting summary judgment in Defendantsâ favor. [Doc. 105 at 10]. It remanded the case to this Court for consideration of âPleasant-Beyâs free-exercise claim related to his âstrict traditional Halal food diet,â stating the following: At the summary judgment stage . . . the court must accept [Plaintiffâs] affidavit, which stated that the halal menu mainly consisted of processed foods violating his religious dietary restrictions and that he was denied adequate nutrition and caloric intake because he could not eat those meals. He also stated in his affidavit that the halal meals were prepared by inmates and staff who touched pork. Because a genuine factual dispute exists as to whether the defendants substantially burdened Pleasant-Beyâs religious exercise in following a âstrict traditional Halal food diet,â the district court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of the defendants on this free-exercise claim. [Doc. 105 at 6]. The Sixth Circuit also remanded the case to this Court as it relates to the issue of Plaintiffâs Establishment Clause claim and his free-exercise claims that Defendants denied Plaintiff the opportunity to purchase traditional Halal foods and receive traditional Halal foods from local Masjids for the 2014 Id Ul Fitra Feast. [Id. at 7â8]. The Court, having carefully reviewed the partiesâ motions, is now prepared to rule on them. III. PRELIMINARY MATTERS A. Defendantsâ Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings Defendants have moved for judgment on the pleadings under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(c). Defendants maintain that Plaintiffâs âallegations in his complaint and in subsequent filings fail to specifically allege, as to each individual defendant, the specific manner and mechanism whereby they allegedly violated Plaintiffâs civil liberties.â [Doc. 145 at 15]. They therefore claim that they are entitled to judgment on the pleadings. But because Defendants have also attached affidavits to their motion, the Court will first address whether it should exercise its discretion in converting Defendantsâ Rule 12(c) motion to dismiss into a motion for summary judgment. See Hester v. United Healthcare Ins. Co., No. 1:08- cv-105, 2009 WL 128303, at *1 (E.D. Tenn. Jan. 16, 2009) (âWhen one or both parties present matters outside the pleadings in conjunction with a Rule 12(c) motion, the Court may, at its discretion, either consider these matters and convert the motion to one for summary judgment or exclude the extra-pleading materials and apply the standard set forth in Rule 12(c).â (citing Max Arnold & Sons, L.L.C., v. Hailey & Co., 452 F.3d 494, 502 (6th Cir. 2009))). Before a court, however, converts a 12(c) motion to dismiss into a motion for summary judgment, â[a]ll parties must be given a reasonable opportunity to present all the material that is pertinent to the motion.â Fed. R. Civ. Proc. 12(d). But see Max Arnold, 452 F.3d at 504 (stating that â[t]he district courtâs failure to give such notice and opportunity to respond is not reversible error, however, where all parties in fact had a sufficient opportunity to present pertinent materialsâ (citation omitted)). In reviewing the partiesâ papers, they appear to have had ample opportunity to present their pertinent materials. As mentioned above, Defendants submitted affidavits in support of their motion and directs the Court to consider âsubsequent filingsâ in deciding their motion. [Doc. 145 at 16]. Plaintiff, in opposition to Defendantsâ motion, also directs the Court to consider outside materials, including his own affidavits and his deposition testimony, suggesting to the Court that Defendantsâ motion for judgment on the pleadings should be treated as one for summary judgment. [See Doc. 156 at 7â9, 13â14)]. See Morton v. ICI Acrylics, Inc., 69 F. Supp. 2d 1038, 1041 (W.D. Tenn. Oct. 14, 1999) (â[W]here the plaintiff responds to the motion to dismiss by also relying on evidence outside the pleadings and by suggesting to the court that the motion be treated as one for summary judgment, no notice is necessary, and no surprise should result from the conversion.â (citing Emmons v. McLaughlin, 874 F.2d 351, 356 (6th Cir. 1989))). The Court will therefore convert Defendantsâ motion for judgment on the pleadings into a motion for summary judgment. B. Plaintiffâs Motion to Dismiss After filing his motion for summary judgment [Doc. 142], Plaintiff moved to dismiss Defendants Randy Lee and John Walker [Doc. 155]. Plaintiff states that he âdeems [them] as not part of this actionâ and requests their dismissal from this action. [Id. at 1]. The Court construes Plaintiffâs motion as one in which he seeks to voluntarily dismiss Defendants Lee and Walker under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 41(a)(2). Rule 41(a)(2) states that âan action may be dismissed at the plaintiffâs request . . . by court order, on terms that the court considers proper.â Defendants do not oppose Plaintiffâs motion. The Court therefore GRANTS Plaintiffâs motion [Doc. 155], and Defendants Randy Lee and John Walker are hereby DISMISSED from this action. IV. MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT A. Legal Standard Summary judgment is proper when the moving party shows, or âpoint[s] out to the district court,â Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 325 (1986), that the recordâthe admissions, affidavits, answers to interrogatories, declarations, depositions, or other materialsâis without a genuine issue of material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law, Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a), (c). The summary judgment standard under Rule 56, moreover, mirrors the directed verdict standard under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 50(a) because â[i]n essence . . . the inquiry under each is the same: whether the evidence presents a sufficient disagreement to require submission to a jury or whether it is so one-sided that one party must prevail as a matter of law.â Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 250â52 (1986). On a motion for summary judgment, the movant shoulders the initial burden of identifying the basis for summary judgment and the portions of the record that lack genuine issues of material fact. Celotex Corp., 477 U.S. at 323. The movant discharges this initial burden by showing âan absence of evidence to support the nonmoving partyâs case,â at which point the nonmoving party, to survive summary judgment, must identify facts in the record that create a genuine issue of material fact. Id. at 324â25. âThe evidence of the non-movant is to be believed, and all justifiable inferences are to be drawn in his favor.â Anderson, 477 U.S. at 255. A courtâs role in deciding a motion for summary judgment is limited to whether the record contains evidence that âpresents a sufficient disagreement to require submission to a jury or whether it is so one-sided that one party must prevail as a matter of law,â id. at 251â52; it is not a judgeâs function âto weigh the evidence and determine the truth of the matter but to determine whether there is a genuine issue for trial,â id. at 242â43. When, as here, a party has cross-moved for summary judgment, a court ââmust evaluate each motion on its own merits and view all facts and inferences in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.ââ Hensley v. Gassman, 693 F.3d 681, 686 (6th Cir. 2012) (quoting Wiley v. U.S., 20 F.3d 222, 224 (6th Cir. 1994)). A court may also resolve pure questions of law on a motion for summary judgment. See Hill v. Homeward Residential, Inc., 799 F.3d 544, 550 (6th Cir. 2015). B. Section 1983 Claims Section 1983 permits a claim for damages against â[e]very person who, under color of [state law], subjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States or other person within the jurisdiction thereof to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws.â 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The violation of a constitutional or federal statutory right is a prerequisite to a section 1983 claim because section 1983 âdoes not confer substantive rightsâ on a plaintiff; instead, it is merely a conduit through which a plaintiff may sue another to âvindicate rights conferred by the Constitution or laws of the United States.â Aldini v. Johnson, 609 F.3d 858, 864 (6th Cir. 2010); see Graham v. Conner, 490 U.S. 386, 393â 94 (1989) (âAs we have said many times, § 1983 âis not itself a source of substantive rights,â but merely provides âa method for vindicating federal rights elsewhere conferred.ââ (quotation omitted)). âThe first inquiry in any § 1983â suit is therefore âto isolate the precise constitutional violation with which [the defendant] is charged.â Baker v. McCollan, 443 U.S. 137, 140 (1979). Second, a plaintiff must make the requisite showing that âthe alleged deprivation was committed by a person acting under the color of state law.â West v. Akins, 487 U.S. 42, 48 (1988). In a section 1983 suit, an individual may bring an official-capacity suit âagainst the governmental entity of which the officer is an agentâ or an individual-capacity suit against a government official âfor actions he takes under color of state law.â Ky. v. Graham, 473 U.S. 159, 165 (1985). In the former, an entityâs ââpolicy or customâ must have played a part in the violation of federal lawâ and â[m]ore is required in an official-capacity action . . . for a governmental entityâ to be liable under section 1983. Id. at 166 (quotation omitted). See Carrion v. Wilkinson, 309 F. Supp. 2d 1007, 1013 (N.D. Ohio Mar. 10, 2004) (â[A] local government entity can be found liable under § 1983 only where the harm was caused by an unconstitutional policy statement ordinance, regulation, or decision officially adopted and promulgated by the entityâs officers, or custom.â (citing Monell v. N.Y.C. Depât of Soc. Servs., 436 U.S. 658, 690 (1978))). Specifically, the entity must be ââthe moving forceââ behind the alleged constitutional deprivation. Polk Cty. v. Dodson, 454 U.S. 312, 326 (1981) (quotation omitted). An individual capacity suit, on the other hand, âimpose[s] personal liability upon a government official for actions he takes under color of state law.â Graham, 473 U.S. at 165. The remaining Defendants in this suit are TDOC, TDOC Commissioner Derrick Schofield, and NECX employees, whom Plaintiff appears to have sued in both their official and individual capacities,12 and because âthe Eleventh Amendment places a jurisdictional limit on federal courts in civil rights cases against states and state employees,â the Court will address this topic first before addressing the merits. Wells v. Brown, 891 F.2d 591, 593â94 (6th Cir. 1989) (â[T]hose entitled to immunity should be granted that immunity at the earliest possible stage of the case.â). 1. Official Capacity Claims and Monetary Damages Defendants argue that the Eleventh Amendment bars them from suit for monetary damages in their official capacities and that they have not waived their immunity. [Doc. 145 at 14â15]. Plaintiff, in opposition, responds that Defendants waived their âimmunity defenses,â because they were ânot previously raised in [Defendantsâ] first motion for summary judgment[.]â [Doc. 156 at 1, 3]. The Eleventh Amendment of the United States Constitution states that âno suit shall be commenced or prosecuted against a state[.]â U.S. Const. amend. XI. The Supreme Court has recognized that section 1983 provides litigants âa federal forum to remedy many deprivations of civil liberties, but it does not provide a federal forum for litigants who seek a remedy against a State for alleged deprivations of civil liberties.â Will v. Mich. Depât. of State Police, 491 U.S. 58, 66 (1989). See Graham, 473 U.S. at 169 (â[T]he Eleventh Amendment bars a damages action against a State in federal court.â). The Sixth Circuit has also applied Eleventh Amendment immunity to RLUIPA claims when a prisoner sues officials in their official capacities for monetary 12 Defendants correctly point out that Plaintiff has not specified in his Complaint whether he is suing TDOCâs employees in their official capacities as well as in their individual capacities. See supra note 10. damages. See e.g., Cardinal v. Metrish, 564 F.3d 794, 799 (6th Cir. 2009) (affirming the district courtâs holding that the plaintiffâs RLUIPA claim for monetary damages against the defendant was barred by the Eleventh Amendment absent waiver of immunity). Here, TDOC, NECX, and their employees in their official capacities are not persons under section 1983; instead, they are âarmsâ of the State of Tennessee. See Fields v. Tenn. Depât of Corr., No. 1:18-cv-1117, 2019 WL 2305155, at *3 (W.D. Tenn. May 30, 2019) (â[O]fficial-capacity claims against NECX employees also are construed as claims against . . . the State of Tennessee.â); Bostic v. Tenn. Depât of Corr., No. 3:18-cv-00562, 2018 WL 3539466, at *7 (W.D. Tenn. July 23, 2018) (âA suit against the [prison] facility is in reality a suit against TDOC itself.â); Hix v. Tenn. Depât of Corr., 196 F. Appâx 350, 355 (6th Cir. 2006) (holding that TDOC is not a person within the meaning of section 1983); Will, 491 U.S. at 71 (â[A] suit against a state official in his or her official capacity is not a suit against the official but that is a suit against the officialâs office.â). Defendants, therefore, are correct in that they are barred from suit for monetary damages absent waiver of Eleventh Amendment immunity. Id. at 66 (âThe Eleventh Amendment bars such suits unless the State has waived its immunity[.]â (citation omitted)).13 In turning to whether Defendants waived Eleventh Amendment immunity, the Court must determine whether Defendants âvoluntarily invoke[d]â the federal courtâs jurisdiction or made a âclear declarationâ submitting itself to the federal courtâs jurisdiction. Coll. Sav. Bank v. Fla. Prepaid Postsecondary Educ. Expense Bd., 527 U.S. 666, 676 (1999) (âGenerally, we will find 13 Congress may also abrogate a stateâs Eleventh Amendment immunity, but its intent to do so must be âan unequivocal expression.â Pennhurst State Sch. & Hosp. v. Halderman, 465 U.S. 89, 99 (1984). Neither party argues, however, that Congress, in implementing section 1983, intended to abrogate Defendantsâ Eleventh Amendment immunity. See Quern v. Jordan, 440 U.S. 332, 350 (1979) (holding that section 1983 does not abrogate a stateâs Eleventh Amendment immunity). waiver either if the State voluntarily invokes . . . or else . . . makes a âclear declarationâ that it intends to submit itself to . . . jurisdiction[.]â (quotation omitted)). The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals has held that a state can waive Eleventh Amendment immunity based on its âconduct in litigation.â Boler v. Earley, 865 F.3d 391, 409â10 (6th Cir. 2017) (stating that in âKu v. Tennessee . . . the State of Tennessee had voluntarily invoked jurisdiction sufficient to waive its sovereign immunity defenseâ after engaging in substantial discovery, filing a motion for summary judgment, and only raising Eleventh Amendment immunity after an adverse ruling). A state, for example, cannot enjoy Eleventh Amendment immunity when it engages in extensive discovery and raises this defense for the first time in its motion for a stay pending appeal of a district courtâs decision on the merits. Ku v. Tenn., 322 F.3d 431, 432, 435 (6th Cir. 2003) (stating that âthis type of clear litigation conduct creates the same kind of inconsistency and unfairness the Supreme Court was concerned withâ (internal quotation marks omitted)). Some litigation conduct, however, does not rise to the level of a waiver of Eleventh Amendment immunity. Boler, 865 F.3d at 411 (holding that the state defendants did not waive Eleventh Amendment immunity âwhere the district court never issued any final judgments before the motion to dismiss and the parties had not yet engaged in discoveryâ). Plaintiffâs contention, however, that Defendants did not raise its immunity defenses until their second motion for summary judgment is inaccurate based on a review of the record. Defendants asserted Eleventh Amendment immunity as an affirmative defense in their Answer to the Complaint [see Doc. 60 at 3], Amended Answer to the Complaint [see Doc. 64 at 2], and in their first motion for summary judgment [see Doc. 91 at 8]. Although the Court entered an order on the merits [see Doc. 98], unlike the defendant in Ku, Defendants did not wait until after the Courtâs decision on the merits to raise the Eleventh Amendment immunity defense. The âclear litigation conductâ that would show that Defendantâs intended to waive immunity is therefore absent. Ku, 322 F.3d at 435. See Boler, 865 F.3d at 411 (âThough we find that the State Defendants have participated in some litigation conduct, their actions do not rise to the level of a waiver of their Eleventh Amendment immunity.â). Nor is Defendantsâ conduct âthe same kindâ that creates inconsistency and unfairness that would rise to the level of waiver of Eleventh Amendment immunity. Ku, 322 F.3d at 435. Because Defendants did not waive their Eleventh Amendment immunity, Plaintiffâs section 1983 and RLUIPA claims for monetary damages against Defendants in their official capacities fail. 2. Individual Capacity Claims Five issues are before the Court in this section 1983 suit against Defendants in their individual capacities. The Court must determine whether: (1) Defendants Townsend and Widener contaminated Plaintiffâs food, in violation of his RLUIPA rights and First Amendment rights under the Free Exercise Clause; (2) TDOCâs 2013-2015 Halal menu violated Plaintiffâs RLUIPA rights and First Amendment rights under the Free Exercise Clause; (3) Plaintiffâs diet was insufficient to sustain good health, in violation of his First Amendment rights under the Free Exercise Clause; (4) Defendants, by ârefusing to allowâ and âdeprivingâ Muslim inmates the opportunity to purchase Halal food from a Halal vendor for the 2014 Id Ul Fitr Feast, violated Plaintiffâs RLUIPA rights and First Amendment rights under the Free Exercise Clause [Doc. 1 at 7]; and (5) Defendants Schofield, Jullian, McAllister, Townsend, and Widener all gave Jewish inmates special treatment over Muslims inmates, in violation of his First Amendment rights under the Establishment Clause. [Id. at 5]. With respect to all of Plaintiffâs individual-capacity claims, Defendants argue that they were not personally involved in any of the alleged unconstitutional conduct for Plaintiff to sustain his section 1983 claims and, in the alternative, that they are entitled to qualified immunity. [See Doc. 146]. Because personal involvement is a prerequisite to a section 1983 claim, the Court will address this issue before addressing the merits of Plaintiffâs motion. See Mullins v. Hainesworth, No. 95-3186, 1995 WL 559381, at *1 (6th Cir. Sept. 20, 1995) (âLiability cannot be established absent a clear showing that the defendants were personally involved in the activity forming the basis of the alleged unconstitutional behavior.â (citing Rizzo v. Goode, 423 U.S. 362, 372 (1976)). See also McLauren v. Morton, 48 F.3d 944, 947 (6th Cir. 1995) (stating that â[w]hen a claim to qualified immunity arises in the context of a motion for summary judgment,â the court should âfirst decide whether a plaintiff has stated a section 1983 against the individual defendantsâ). a. Personal Involvement Defendants maintain that Plaintiff has made no allegations of personal involvement against them to sustain a section 1983 claim. Instead, they claim that they are named as Defendants solely because on their âposition[s] . . . within the TDOC hierarchy at the time of the alleged events.â [Doc. 145 at 13â14]. They state, moreover, that many of Plaintiffâs claims, if not all, are based on âan impermissible theory of respondeat superior.â [Id. at 5]. Defendants are correct in their assertion that section 1983 liability âmust be based on more than respondeat superior, or the right to control employees.â Shehee v. Luttrell, 199 F.3d 295, 300 (6th Cir. 1999). When a plaintiff, therefore, attributes section 1983 liability to a supervisory official, a plaintiff must demonstrate that âthe supervisor âeither encouraged the specific incident of misconduct or in some other way directly participated in it.ââ Id. (quotation omitted). That is, at the very least, âa plaintiff must show that the official . . . implicitly authorized, approved, or knowingly acquiesced in the unconstitutional conduct of the offending officers.â Hays v. Jefferson Cty., 668 F.2d 869, 874 (6th Cir. 1982). Before addressing the merits of Defendantsâ motion, however, the Court will first address Plaintiffâs argument that Defendants have somehow âwaivedâ their argument based on the âthe theories of respondent superior.â [Doc. 156 at 1]. In making this argument, he appears to rely on Franklin v. Jenkins, 893 F.3d 465, 471 (6th Cir. 2016), and he states that â[t]he general appellate rule of law is: âIssues []not raised on appeal are considered abandoned and not reviewable on appeal [or on remand after appeal].ââ [Doc 156 at 2]. Plaintiff, however, misapprehends this case. In Franklin, the petitionerâan Ohio state prisoner on death rowâfiled a writ of habeas corpus petition in the federal district court. 893 F.3d at 465. The district court denied his request for relief from judgment under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b), and the petitioner appealed this decision to the Sixth Circuit. Id. The Sixth Circuit declined to rely âon the evidence introduced in federal courtâ that he failed to introduce on appeal. Id. at 474. As such, the Sixth Circuit considered that evidence as âabandonedâ for purposes of his appeal. Id. This Court, however, is not an appellate court. To the extent, moreover, that Plaintiff argues that Defendants âwaivedâ their argument by failing to address it in their first motion for summary judgment, this argument is unpersuasive; Defendants addressed respondeat superior liability in their first motion for summary judgment [see Doc. 91 at 2], Answer [see Doc. 60 at 3], and Amended Answer [see Doc. 64 at 3]. The Court will now turn to the merits of Defendantsâ motion concerning their lack of personal involvement, and because of the multiple claims involved in this case, it will address each claim separately.14 i. Free-Exercise ClaimsâHalal Diet and Adequate Nutrition 14 Defendants do not appear to argue that they lacked personal involvement with respect to Plaintiffâs claims relating to the contamination of the foods on TDOCâs Halal menu. The Court will therefore address the merits of that claim in section IV-C of this opinion. Defendants argue that Plaintiff has not pointed to any individual Defendantsâ wrongdoing with respect to his First Amendment claim relating to his strict Halal diet. As to Defendants Schofield and McAllister, for example, they point out that Plaintiff merely alleges that they âimplement[ed] a food menu for TDOC[.]â [Doc. 145 at 17]. Defendants do not cite to any case that supports their argument that implementing a food menu is insufficient personal involvement under section 1983. In response to Defendantâs motion, Plaintiff points to the TDOC Halal menus attached to his motion for summary judgment as proof that Defendant Schofield was personally involved in Plaintiffâs alleged wrongdoing. He states that Defendant Schofield âsignedâ the TDOC Halal menus attached to Plaintiffâs motion. [Id. at 6]. In examining the TDOC Halal menus, however, they contain no signatures or reference as to who approved or implemented them. [See Doc. 142 at 16â23]. Plaintiff also directs the Court, however, to his affidavit attached to his summary judgment motion in which he attests that Defendants Schofield and McAllister âimplementedâ the TDOC Halal menus, and the Court must accept his affidavit as true. See Anderson, 477 U.S. at 255 (âThe evidence of the non-movant is to be believed, and all justifiable inferences are to be drawn in his favor.â (citing Adickes v. S.H. Kress & Co., 398 U.S. 144, 158â59 (1970)). See also Alspaugh v. McConnell, 643 F.3d 162, 168 (6th Cir. 2011) (stating that â[w]hen âreviewing a summary judgment motion, credibility judgments and weighing of the evidence are prohibitedââ (quoting Schreiber v. Moe, 596 F.3d 323, 333 (6th Cir. 2010))). As to Defendants Townsend and Widener, Defendants ignore evidence in the record that they were directly involved in serving the foods on TDOCâs Halal menu. For instance, Plaintiff states in his affidavits that Defendant Townsend âplaced . . . [TDOCâs] Halal Food Meals on a Styrofoam tray,â [Doc. 109 at 10], and that he was âserved byâ Townsend and Widener at the 2014 Id Ul Fitr Feast, [Doc. 142 at 77]. Plaintiff has therefore pointed to specific facts demonstrating Defendant Widenerâs and Townsendâs direct involvement in serving the foods at NECX to allow his First Amendment claims against them to proceed. See Colvin v. Caruso, 605 F.3d 282, 291â93 (6th Cir. 2010) (stating that because the remaining defendants were âspecifically identified by [plaintiff] as having been actively involved in serving [plaintiff] nonkosher food items . . . . [w]e must . . . address the meritsâ). ii. Free-Exercise Claimâ2014 Id Ul Fitr Feast As to Plaintiffâs First Amendment claim regarding the 2014 Id Ul Fitr Feast, Defendants argue that Plaintiffâs allegations are âtargeted, without any specificity towards Defendants McAllister, Jullian, Townsend, and [Widener].â [Doc. 145 at 16]. This is the extent, however, of Defendantsâ argument. They ignore Plaintiffâs affidavit that states that Defendants Schofield, McAllister, Townsend, Jullian, and Widener âall stoppedâ him from purchasing Halal meats, baklavas, dates, thamaran fruit, and Islamic danishes or pastries, and 100% milk for the 2014 Id Ul Fitr Feast despite his ânumerous requests.â15 [Doc. 142 at 77â78]. As stated above, the Court must accept Plaintiffâs evidence as true. See Anderson, 477 U.S. at 255 (âThe evidence of the non-movant is to be believed[.]â). Defendants have therefore failed to meet their initial burden as the proponents of summary judgment. 15 The record is unclear as to who Plaintiff filed ânumerous requestsâ with, whether these requests were grievance requests, and whether Defendants were merely involved in the denial of those grievances. Plaintiff has only attached blank grievance forms to his motion. See Shehee, 199 F.3d at 300 (holding that the defendants could not be held liable under § 1983 when their only roles âinvolved the denial of administrative grievances or the failure to actâ). iii. Establishment Clause Claim Defendants state that Plaintiffâs allegation that Defendants Schofield, McAllister, and Widener ensured that Jewish Kosher meals were imported to NECX, in violation of the Establishment Clause, is ânon-specific and conclusory.â [Doc. 145 at 16]. They further state that Plaintiffâs claims that Defendants gave special treatment to Jewish inmates and discriminated against Muslim inmates are âwholly conclusory.â [Id.]. In response, Plaintiff does not address each Defendantsâ personal involvement relating to his Establishment Clause claim. Instead, he merely quotes cases and states that â[t]he Kosher Menu and Halal Menu[s] . . . [are] facially different[.]â [Doc. 156 at 5]. The record as a whole is also bereft of Defendantsâ personal involvement as to this claim. For example, in Plaintiffâs motion, he points to TDOCâs Kosher menus and a policy attached to his motion in support of his argument that Defendants gave special treatment to Jewish inmatesâ Kosher meals. [Doc. 142 at 11]. The policy, however, is approved by Tony Parker, who is not a party to this action. [Id. at 40â46]. The TDOCâs Kosher menus, moreover, reflect that they were approved by the Departmentâs contracted Rabbi, who is also not a party to this action. [Id. at 24â25]. He also points to an email in support of his claim that âDefendant Schofield strategically choose [sic] to make special orders for vegetarian and meat entrees for the Jewish Kosher Menu while refusing to make the same purchase for the TDOC Islamic Halal Menu.â [Id. at 9]. Defendants do not address this email or its contents, but it nonetheless does not make any mention of Defendant Schofield.16 16 The email was sent from a âMary Anne Jacksonâ to a âChaplain Simic.â [See Doc. 142 at 87â88]. Plaintiff, therefore, has not pointed to facts showing that each of the individual Defendants were personally involved in the disparate treatment alleged in his Complaint. See Binay v. Bettendorf, 601 F3d 640, 650 (6th Cir. 2010) (âEach defendantsâ liability must be assessed individually based on his own actions.â (quotation omitted)). Plaintiff, moreover, cannot rest on his mere allegations to survive Defendantsâ motion for summary judgment. See Anderson, 477 U.S. at 249 (â[T]he plaintiff [can] not rest on his allegations . . . without âany significant probative evidence tending to support the complaint.ââ (quotation omitted)). For these reasons, Plaintiffâs Establishment Clause claim fails. C. Plaintiffâs First Amendment and RLUIPA Claims There are four remaining claims for the Courtâs consideration: whether (1) Defendants Townsend and Widener contaminated Plaintiffâs food, in violation of his free-exercise rights under the First Amendment and RLUIPA; (2) the haram and Biddâa Taâam foods served on TDOCâs 2013-2015 Halal menu violated Plaintiffâs free-exercise rights under the First Amendment and RLUIPA; (3) Plaintiffâs diet was insufficient to sustain good health, in violation of his free- exercise rights under the First Amendment; (4) and Defendants, by ârefusing to allowâ and âdeprivingâ Plaintiff the opportunity to purchase Halal food from a Halal vendor for the 2014 Id Ul Fitr Feast, violated his free-exercise rights under the First Amendment and RLUIPA. [Doc. 1 at 7]. The First Amendmentâs Free Exercise Clause, applicable to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment, provides that âCongress shall make no law . . . prohibiting the free exercise [of religion].â U.S. Const. amend. 1. Although a prisonerâs First Amendment right to exercise their religion may be subjected to reasonable restrictions and limitations, they still retain this right. See Abdur-Rahman v. Mich. Depât of Corr., 65 F.3d 489, 491 (6th Cir. 1995) (âInmates retain their First Amendment right to exercise their religion.â (citation omitted)). In assessing whether a plaintiffâs free-exercise rights have been violated under the First Amendment, the Sixth Circuit has generally applied a two-step inquiry: a court must determine (1) whether plaintiffâs religious beliefs are sincere and (2) whether the âchallenged practiceâ infringes on the plaintiffâs religious belief. Kent v. Johnson, 821 F.2d 1220, 1224â25 (6th Cir. 1987). âA practice will not be considered to infringe on a prisonerâs free exercise unless it âplaces a substantial burden on a central religious belief or practice[.]ââ Evans v. Washington, 1:19-cv- 953, 2019 WL 6974735, at *5 (W.D. Mich. Dec. 20, 2019) (quoting Hernandez v. C.I.R., 490 U.S. 680, 699 (1989)). See Living Water Church of God v. Charter Tp., 258 F. Appâx 729, 734 (6th Cir. 2007) (stating that â[i]n the Free Exercise context, the Supreme Court has made clear that the substantial burden hurdle is high and that determining its existence is fact intensiveâ (internal quotation marks omitted)). That is, the burden must be more than a âmere inconvenienceâ and is substantial when it forces an individual to choose between the tenets of his religion and foregoing governmental benefits or places âsubstantial pressure on an adherent to modify his behavior and to violate his beliefs.â Id. at 734, 739, 741. RLUIPA also applies a â[]substantial burden[] inquiry.â Holts v. Hobbs, 574 U.S. 352, 356â57, 361 (2015). But the Sixth Circuit has held that RLUIPA affords greater religious protections to prisoners than the First Amendment, stating that RLUIPAâs substantial burden inquiry âasks whether the government has substantially burdened religious exercise . . . not whether the RLUIPA claimant is able to engage in other forms of religious exercise.â Id. at 361â 62. See Fox v. Washington, 949 F.3d 270, 277 (6th Cir. 2020) (âCourts have recognized that, in the prison context, RLUIPA provides greater protection than the First Amendment[âs Free Exercise Clause].â). Under RLUIPA: No government shall impose a substantial burden on religious exercise of a person residing in or confined to an institution, . . . unless the government demonstrates that imposition of the burden on that personâ(1) is in furtherance of a compelling governmental interest; and (2) is the least restrictive means of furthering that compelling government interest. 42 U.S.C. § 2000cc-1(a)(1)â(2). But the Sixth Circuit has stated that RLUIPA, involves a ââthree- act play.ââ Fox, 949 F.3d at 277 (quoting Cavin v. Mich. Depât of Corr. 927 F.3d 455, 458 (6th Cir. 2019)). Under the first two steps, the prisoner shoulders the burden of demonstrating that (1) âhe seeks to exercise his religion out of a sincerely held religious beliefâ and (2) the government substantially burdened his religious exercise. Cavin, 927 F.3d at 458. Once the prisoner satisfies these two steps, the burden shifts to the government to show that the burden imposed on the prisonerâs religious exercise was to further a compelling government interest. Id. Defendants do not dispute the sincerity of Plaintiffâs religious beliefs under his First Amendment or RLUIPA claims. The Court will therefore focus its analysis on whether Plaintiff, as the movant for summary judgment, met his initial burden of showing that the record lacks a genuine issue of material fact as to whether Defendants substantially burdened his religious rights under the First Amendment and RLUIPA. See Copeland v. Machulis, 57 F.3d 476, 478â79 (6th Cir. 1995) (âThe moving party bears the initial burden of establishing an absence of evidence to support the nonmoving partyâs case.â). 1. Contamination Plaintiff maintains that the âmeals [on TDOCâs Halal menu] substantially burdened his free-exercise rights under the First Amendment and RLUIPA because the meals were contaminated with haram meats. [Doc. 142 at 6, 9]. He appears to allege that the cross- contamination of the Halal meals occurred inside NECX as well as outside NECX at the Cook Chill facility. [See Doc. 1]. First, Plaintiff states that âBennie Townsend . . . . failed to train other inmatesâ to avoid cross-contaminating the Halal meals with pork. [Doc. 142 at 8]. He also states in his affidavit that Defendant Widener, as well as Defendant Townsend, contaminated his food at the 2014 Id Ul Fitr Feast when they served his food on the same trays used to serve haram meats to the general prison population. [Doc. 142 at 77]. Second, Plaintiff states in his Complaint and his motion that the pre-cooked meals prepared at Cook Chill were contaminated with pork and other haram meats. [Doc. 1; Doc. 142 at 1]. In liberally construing Plaintiffâs motion, he appears to attribute liability to Defendant Townsend based on his alleged failure to train other inmates. [Doc. 142 at 8]. See Boswell v. Mayer, 169 F.3d 384, 387 (6th Cir. 1999) (âPro se plaintiffs enjoy liberal construction of their pleadings and filings.â). A claim against a supervisor for failure to train or supervise an offending subordinate is actionable if that supervisor (1) âencouraged the specific incident of misconduct or in some other way directly participated in itâ or (2) âimplicitly authorized, approved, or knowingly acquiesced in the unconstitutional conduct.â Hays, 668 F.2d at 874. By satisfying either of these elements, a plaintiff establishes what courts have described as a necessary causal connection between the execution of a supervisorâs job-related functions and the constitutional deprivation at issue. See Doe v. Claiborne Cty., 103 F.3d 495, 511 (6th Cir. 1996) (stating that âa show[ing] that a supervisory official at least implicitly authorized, approved or knowingly acquiesced in the unconstitutional conduct . . . . follow[s] section 1983âs requirement that the person sought to be held accountable actually . . . caused the deprivationâ (internal quotation marks omitted)); see also section 1983 (stating that liability attaches to a person who, under color of state law, âsubjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizenâ to a constitutional deprivation (emphasis added)). But Plaintiff has not established that causal connection that would show that Defendant Townsend had any direct responsibility in training employees or inmates in NECXâs kitchen or that he otherwise implicitly authorized or knowingly acquiesced the alleged misconductâhe merely states in his motion that Defendant Townsend âfail[ed] to train inmates.â [Doc. 142 at 8]. See Lupo v. Voinovich, 235 F. Supp. 2d 782, 793 (stating that âthe Sixth Circuit requires some sort of direct involvement . . . in order to impose liability under §1983â) (citing Bellamy v. Bradley, 729 F.2d 416, 421 (6th Cir. 1984)). To the extent, that Plaintiff alleges that Defendants Townsend and Widener, themselves, contaminated Plaintiffâs food, the record is bereft of any evidence that would support that these occurrences were âwillful.â Colvin, 605 F.3d at 282, 293â94 (citing Gallagher v. Shelton, 587 F.3d 1063, 1070 (10th Cir. 2009) (affirming the dismissal of an inmateâs free-exercise claim absent evidence that the defendants deliberately contaminated the utensils). Plaintiff also has not shown Defendantsâ personal involvement in the alleged contamination of Halal meals that occurred outside of NECX at Cook Chill; in fact, he does not say whether any Defendant directly participated in the contamination that allegedly occurred at Cook Chill. Plaintiff also has not offered any evidence in the form of an affidavit or otherwise showing that he had personal knowledge of the contamination that occurred at Cook Chill. See Weberg v. Franks, 229 F.3d 514, 528 n.13 (âWe have had to disregard many of Plaintiffâs allegations because they were not made with Plaintiffâs personal knowledge[.]â (citing Wiley v. U.S., 20 F.3d 222, 226 (6th Cir. 1994))). As to Plaintiffâs RLUIPA claim, this claim is moot because he has since transferred from NECX to Trousdale Turner Correctional Facility and challenged the food-service practices at NECX by NECX employees, i.e., NECX Warden Widener, NECX Kitchen Staff Townsend, and NECX inmates, as opposed to challenging TDOCâs policy âas a whole.â Crump v. Patrick, No. 1:11-cv-15, 2011 WL 672213, at *6 (W.D. Mich. Feb. 18, 2011) (holding that the prisonerâs RLUIPA claim was moot when he had âbeen transferred from MTU to JCF . . . . [and] specifically challenged only the food-service practices at MTU, not the policy of the MDOC as a wholeâ); Colvin, 605 F.3d at 289 (holding that the prisonerâs challenge to the kosher-meal program was moot because the prisoner attacked only the policy at one prison rather than the overall MDOC kosher-meal policy). For the foregoing reasons, Plaintiffâs First Amendment claim as it relates to cross-contamination of the Halal foods on TDOCâs Halal menu fails, and Plaintiffâs RLUIPA claim is moot. 2. Halal Diet and Adequate Nutrition Plaintiff maintains that TDOCâs 2013-2015 âplace[d] a substantial burden on Plaintiffâs religious exercise[.]â [Doc. 142 at 9]. He appears to challenge the TDOC Halal menu itself and offers a few reasons why âthese mealsâ substantially burdened his First Amendment rights to freely exercise his religion. [Id.]. First, he states that TDOCâs Halal menu âforcedâ him to choose between eating â[non-traditional] Biddâa Taâam foods [Soybean, Tofu, processed foods, powdered eggs, powdered milk, etc]â and âHaram Meats . . . (Chili Con carne)[].â [Doc. 142 at 13, 79]. He states that because âDefendants [did] not feed[] [him] any traditional Halal Foods on the [TDOC] Halal Menu,â he is entitled to summary judgment. [Id. at 1]. Second, he appears to allege that the foods on the TDOC Halal menu did not afford him adequate nutrition, stating: â[I] los[t] a lot of weight due to . . . being forced to abstain from the haram foods and Biddâa Taâam meals that were served abundantly as the main portions of the Halal Menu established by the TDOC.â [Id. at 10]. The Court, therefore, sees three issues before it as they relate to Plaintiffâs free-exercise claims regarding TDOCâs Halal menu: whether (1) the Biddâa Taâam foods, themselves, that were served on TDOCâs Halal menu substantially burdened Plaintiffâs First Amendment and RLUIPA rights; (2) the haram foods, themselves, that were served on TDOCâs Halal menu substantially burdened Plaintiffâs First Amendment and RLUIPA rights; and (3) the TDOCâs Halal menu substantially burdened his First Amendment rights by forcing him to choose between eating Biddâa Taâam and haram foods and sustaining an adequate diet. See Alexander v. Carrick, 31 F. Appâx 176, 179 (6th Cir. 2002) (Under the First Amendment, â[p]rison administrators must provide an adequate diet without violating the inmateâs religious dietary restrictionsâ). For clarity, the Court will address each issue separately. a. Substantial Burden â Biddâa Taâam Foods Plaintiff maintains that his First Amendment and RLUIPA rights were substantially burdened by the âBiddâa Taâam foods that were served abundantly as the main portions of the Halal Menu established by the TDOC.â [Doc. 109 at 5; 142 at 10]. In his motion and his affidavit, he identifies Biddâa Taâam foods served on TDOCâs Halal menu as ânon-traditional foodsâ and âinnovated foodsâ that included soybean, tofu, mechanically separated meat, powdered milk, one percent, milk, powdered eggs. [Doc. 142 at 10, 77]. Defendants respond that Plaintiff does not have a constitutional right to be served specific foods that he desires and that correctional facilities are only required to avoid feeding prisoners food that is haram. [Doc. 145 at 25]. Defendants also aver that the Biddaâ Taâam foods are not âunlawfulâ or âforbiddenâ foods, as defined by Plaintiff, and therefore, the Biddâa Taâam foods did not substantially burden his First Amendment or RLUIPA rights. [Id. at 26]. In support of their arguments, they point to Plaintiffâs deposition testimony: Q. Now as I understand soybean and stuff . . . . You could say thatâs haram[?] A. No, itâs not haram. Itâs innovation and itâs makruh [Biddâa Taâam]. [Id. at 26; 145-3 at 158:16â17]. In reply, Plaintiff appears to reframe his argument, stating that â[t]his complaint is not about what the Plaintiff likes or what he dislikes, but rather the issue of the Plaintiff becoming malnourished from exercising his 1st Amendmentâ rights. [Doc. 158 at 7]. Defendants are correct, however, in that a prisoner does not have a constitutional right to specific foods that he desires. See Rains v. Washington, No. 2:20-cv-32, 2020 WL 1815839, at *7 (W.D. Mich. Apr. 10, 2020) (stating that âthere is no constitutional right for each prisoner to be served the specific foods he desiresâsuch as Halal meatâin prisonâ); Robinson v. Jackson, 615 F. Appâx 310, 313â14 (6th Cir. 2015) (under RLUIPA or the First Amendment, âthere is no constitutional right for each prisoner to be served . . . specific foodsâ). It is also true that âa correctional facility need only provide Muslim inmates with food that is not haram (impermissible).â Cloyd v. Dulin, No. 3:12-cv-1088, 2012 WL5995234, at *4 (M.D. Tenn. Nov. 30, 2012). The law, moreover, does not support, nor is the Court aware of a case, that stands for the principle that an inmate has a constitutional right to not be served Biddâa Taâam food themselves, as Plaintiff defines them, or foods that Plaintiff has otherwise not identified as haram foods. See e.g., Davis v. Heyns, No. 17-1268, 2017 WL 8231366, at *3 (6th Cir. Oct. 16, 2017) (holding that the prisonerâs First Amendment rights were not substantially burdened when he âd[id] not argue that the vegan meals available to him were haramâ). To the extent, therefore, that Plaintiff claims that Defendants substantially burdened his First Amendment and RLUIPA rights by serving him Biddâa Taâam foods, case law simply does not support this claim and it therefore fails as a matter of law. See e.g., Carrick, 31 F. Appâx at 179 (stating that the âcase law does not support his claim that the denial of his request for a food . . . by itself violated the First Amendment rightâ). b. Substantial BurdenâHaram Foods Plaintiff argues that his RLUIPA and First Amendment rights were substantially burdened by the haram foods served on TDOCâs Halal menu. [Doc. 109 at 5; 142 at 10]. Other than the foods he claims were haram as a result of contamination, Plaintiff identifies three haram items on TDOCâs Halal menu: chicken con carne, chicken fricassee, and southwest chicken. [Doc. 142 at 6â8]. He states that the chicken con carne was haram because the can did not contain a Halal symbol. Plaintiff attached TDOCâs Halal food menus for 2013-2015 to his motion, which reflect that chicken con carne was served on TDOCâs Halal menu. [See id. at 16â23]. Defendants do not address the TDOC Halal menus attached to Plaintiffâs motion but make several arguments in response to Plaintiff. First, they argue that Plaintiff was not substantially burdened by any haram foods served on TDOCâs Halal menu, because Plaintiff testified that he could avoid haram food: Q. So at Northeastern, you could eat â you could avoid haram food: is that fair? A. I could avoid haram food, generally. [Doc. 145 at 19]. Second, Defendants argue that they did not serve haram foods on TDOCâs Halal menu, in the first instance. In support of their argument, they have attached the affidavit of Jane Amonett, who is currently an employee of TDOC and was TDOCâs former Director of Food Services. [Doc. 145-1]. Ms. Amonett attests that â[t]he meals that were provided to the Muslim inmates were in keeping with the tenants of their religion and were pork free . . . and did not contain meat items that are Haram or forbidden under Muslim dietary restrictions.â [Id. at 2]. She also states that she âconsult[ed] with outside entities which contract with TDOC to provide guidance on religious requirements related to worship and dietâ including âan Imam for consultation on issues related to Muslim inmates.â [Id.]. Ms. Amonettâs affidavit, however, contradicts the TDOC Halal menus attached to Plaintiffâs motion, which indicate that some of the foods contained pork or pork product.17 Third, Defendants state that Plaintiff could eat the non-haram Biddâa Taâam foods on TDOCâs Halal menu, because Plaintiff does not identify those foods as haram. [Id. at 11]. They also point to Plaintiffâs Complaint, in which Plaintiff conceded to being able to eat Kosher/Halal Menus as a meal alternative [id. at 20]âa concession which Plaintiff vehemently refutes in his reply, stating that this was a âhandwritten . . . error; that â[t]he Defense has made every effort to distort the evidenceâ; and that he never had access to âprepackaged Kosher meals[] or the prepackaged dual certified Halal/Kosher vegetarian meals.â [Doc. 156 at 7]. The Court is mindful, however, that handwritten pro se civil rights complaints of a prisoner are to be liberally construed by a court. See Estelle v. Gamble, 429 U.S. 97, 106 (1976) (stating that â[t]he handwritten pro se document [the complaint] is to be liberally construed.â). Plaintiff does, in fact, dispute that he 17 Defendants also make a fourth argument. They argue that, under the Turner v. Safley framework, they have a legitimate penological interest in serving non-Halal meat. 482 U.S. 78, 89 (1987) (â[W]hen a prison regulation impinges on inmatesâ constitutional rights, the regulation is valid if it is reasonably related to legitimate penological interests.â). The Court is mindful of the Turner framework, but it is noteworthy to point out that Plaintiff does not attach an actual policy directive from TDOC for it to apply the Turner framework; Plaintiff has only attached the TDOC Halal menus. While he does attach policies, they are not relevant to the time period in dispute, i.e., 2013-2015. This case, therefore, appears to be distinguishable from other cases where courts in this circuit have applied the Turner framework. In those case, the courts applied the Turner framework to the policy directives before it. See e.g., Davis, 2017 WL 8231366 at *1 (applying the Turner framework to MDOCâs policy directive requiring vegan meals); Abdullah v. Fard, 974 F. Supp. 1112, 1114 (N.D. Ohio July 7, 1997) (applying the Turner framework to ODRC policy 309.01, which governed provisions concerning inmatesâ religious meals), affâd 173 F.3d 854 (6th Cir. 1999); Spies v. Voinovich, 173 F.3d 398, 401â02 (6th Cir. 1999) (applying the Turner framework to NCCIâs ârule-of-fiveâ prison policy). had access to the dual-certified Halal/Kosher meals in his first motion for summary judgment as well as in his second motion for summary judgment. [See Doc. 109 at 10]. Plaintiff, in his reply, also challenges the sufficiency of Ms. Amonettâs affidavit, stating that it is not based on personal knowledge nor are there âcited specifics . . . about when Ms. Amonett worked as the Director of Food services with TDOC.â [Doc. 158 at 9]. Plaintiff, therefore, maintains that Defendantsâ affidavit is insufficient to defeat Plaintiffâs motion for summary judgment. The Court, however, deems Ms. Amonettâs affidavit as sufficiently probative under Federal Rule 56. Under Rule 56(c)(4), â[a]n affidavit . . . used to support or oppose a motion must be made on personal knowledge, set out facts that would be admissible in evidence, and show that the affiant or declarant is competent to testify on the matters stated.â Ms. Amonett states that she has personal knowledge based on her past position as TDOCâs Director of Food Services in which she was âdirectly responsible for management and oversight of all dietary and food services at TDOC facilities.â [Doc. 145-1 Âś 5]. She also states that she âensure[d] that food items provided to inmates met[] both nutritional and religious requirementsâ by consulting with âoutside entities which contract with TDOC . . . . includ[ing] an Imam[.]â [Id. œœ 6â7]. As such, âthe food items provided to inmates [met] both nutritional and religious requirements.â [Id. Âś 6]. As the Court previously stated, under RLUIPA and the First Amendment, âa correctional facility need only provide Muslim inmates with food that is not haram (impermissible).â Cloyd, 2012 WL5995234 at *4 (citation omitted). Under the First Amendment, whether a prisonerâs rights have been substantially burdened turns on whether the prisoner had an âalternative means of exercising his religionââi.e., an alternative to the haram food served on TDOCâs Halal menu. See e.g., Abdullah, 173 F. 3d at 854 (holding that the defendantsâ prison policy of not providing Halal meat did not violate the plaintiffâs First Amendment rights when the prisoner had an alternative vegetarian meal option); Davis, 2017 WL 8231366 at *3 (holding that the defendants did not violate a prisonerâs First Amendment rights when the prisoner had a vegan meal alternative to non-Halal meals). See also Robinson, 615 F. Appâx at 313 (âWe have explicitly held that vegetarian meals are, in fact, Halal.â). Whether the Plaintiff had an alternative means of exercising his religion, however, is not relevant for purposes of the Courtâs RLUIPA analysis. See Cavin, 927 F.3d at 461 (stating that an âalternative means of practicing [oneâs] religion . . . does not play into a RLUIPA claim but it bears some weight in the First Amendment contextâ). See e.g., Robinson, 615 F. Appâx at 313 (holding that plaintiff failed to state a claim under RLUIPA when he was not denied Halal meals). Defendantâs argument, therefore, that Plaintiff testified that he could avoid haram foods and that therefore he was not substantially burdened by the haram foods is unpersuasive and non- dispositive to the Courtâs First Amendment or RLUIPA analysis. Under RLUIPA, the Court must determine whether the defendants served the plaintiff haram foodâa material issue of fact that the parties dispute. Under the First Amendment, a Court must determine whether a defendant provided plaintiff with an alternative to the haram foodâanother material issue of fact which the parties dispute. Defendantsâ argument, moreover, that Plaintiff could eat other non-haram Halal foods on TDOCâs Halal menu, albeit Biddâa Taâam foods, is also unpersuasive in light of the conflicting evidence in the record; although Ms. Amonettâs affidavit indicates that Muslim inmates were not served any haram food, [Doc. 145-1 Âś 11], Defendants do not specifically address the haram foods that Plaintiff identifies in his motion or the TDOC Halal menus attached to Plaintiffâs motion which reflect that some of the meals on TDOCâs Halal menu contained pork product, [Doc. 142 at 16â23]. At the summary judgment stage, however, it is not the Courtâs role to make credibility determinations or to weigh the partiesâ evidenceâtasks which belong to a jury. Anderson, 477 U.S. at 250. The Court, instead, is limited to âdetermining whether there is the need for a trial.â Id. at 255. Here there are genuine issues of material fact as to whether Defendants substantially burdened Plaintiffâs First Amendment and RLUIPA rights. c. Substantial BurdenâAdequate Diet The Court will now turn to Plaintiffâs claim that the foods on the TDOC Halal menu did not afford him adequate nutrition under the First Amendment. He states in his affidavit that â[he] los[t] a lot of weight due to . . . being forced to abstain from the haram foods and Biddâa Taâam meals that were served abundantly as the main portions of the Halal Menu established by the TDOC.â [Doc. 142 at 10]. He also states in his affidavit that he was âdeprived of the proper caloric intake for years because [TDOCâs Halal] meals . . . violate[d] [his] religious beliefs.â [Doc. 109 at 10]. Defendants respond that the meals on TDOCâs Halal menu were calorically sufficient, and, they maintain that Plaintiff had a âmyriad [of food] options available, from alternative vegetarian menus[] to Halal menus[.]â [Doc. 145 at 27]. They, again, rely on Ms. Amonettâs affidavit, which states that she consulted with âthe Director of Religious Services and TDOC religious personnel . . . to ensure that food items provided to inmates me[t] . . . nutritional requirements.â [Doc. 145-1 at 1]. She also states that vegetarian options were available to Muslim inmates. [Id.]. Under the First Amendment, â[p]rison administrators must provide an adequate diet without violating the inmateâs religious dietary restrictions.â Carrick, 31 F. Appâx at 176. The Sixth Circuit has stated that this is âessentially a constitutional right not to eat the offending food item.â18 Id. âIf the prisonerâs diet, as modified, is sufficient to sustain the prisoner in good health, no constitutional right has been violated.â Id. In Carrick, the Sixth Circuit determined whether the plaintiffâa prisoner who practiced the Hebrew-Israelite faithâwas provided with an adequate diet. Id. at 177. The plaintiff believed in eating a grape-free diet. Id. After being placed under a close-observation cell, prison officials served the plaintiff peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, fruit, and a carton of milk. Id. After the plaintiff discovered that the jelly was grape jelly, he requested that the defendants provide him with a plain, peanut butter sandwich. Id. The defendants denied the request, and thereafter, they placed the plaintiff on a Nutri-loaf diet for seven days. Id. The Sixth Circuit held that there was no evidence in the record to suggest that he would have been malnourished âbut for the peanut butter and jelly sandwich,â when the plaintiff was also served milk, fruit, he was placed on a Nutri-loaf diet, and he was only served peanut butter and jelly sandwiches for a limited time, i.e., while on close observation. Id. at 179. The Sixth Circuit, therefore, held there was no First Amendment violation. Id. The facts in Plaintiffâs case, however, are distinguishable from those in Carrick. For instance, the length of time in which Plaintiff claims he was deprived of an adequate diet is much longer; he attests that he was âdeprived of the proper caloric intake for years because [TDOCâs Halal] meals . . . violate[d] [his] religious beliefs.â [Doc. 109 at 10]. As discussed in the previous section, the parties also dispute whether Plaintiff had an alternative option to eating the foods on 18 The Sixth Circuit appears to have defined offending food items broadly when a prisoner, such as Plaintiff here, claims that he had to choose between the offending food item and an adequate diet. See e.g., Carrick, 31 F. Appâx at 177, 179 (holding that the defendants did not violate the prisonerâs First Amendment rights when they denied his request for a grape-free diet, absent evidence that he was malnourished). It will, therefore, consider the Biddâa Taâam foods as offending food for purposes of analyzing his First Amendment claim that he was deprived of an adequate diet. TDOCâs Halal menu. Plaintiff insists that he had no alterative meal option to the Biddâa Taâam and haram foods on TDOCâs Halal menu. [Doc. 156 at 7]. Defendants, on the other hand, claim that Plaintiff had âa myriadâ of food options. [Doc. 145 at 27]. For these reasons, there are genuine issues of material fact as to whether Defendants substantially burdened Plaintiffâs First Amendment rights under the Free Exercise Clause as it relates to his diet. 3. Id Ul Fitr Feast Plaintiff argues that Defendants Schofield, McAllister, Jullian, Townsend and Widener âall placed a substantial burden upon [him] . . . by not allowing him to purchase traditional Halal Foods for the [2014] Id Ul Fitr Feast or have those foods donated to him by the local Masjids.â [Doc. 142 at 6]. Plaintiff appears to challenge the prisonâs policy, which he refers to interchangeably throughout his motion as a â[m]emorandum,â signed by Defendant Schofield. [Id. at 1]. The memorandum, however, is unavailable. [Id. at 1â2].19 Defendants respond that they did not substantially burden Plaintiffâs First Amendment or RLUIPA rights for several reasons. First, they argue that Plaintiff was allowed to participate in the feast, and therefore, there was no First Amendment or RLUIPA violation. Second, they maintain that Plaintiff was provided with a non-haram food menu for the 2014 Id Ul Fitr Feast. Third, they argue that the âexclusion of non-imported food items [from local Masjids]â occurred only in 2014ââsuggesting an unintentional and de minimis violation, if any.â [Doc. 145 at 6, 28]. 19 Attached to Plaintiffâs motion is TDOC policy 118.01 that governs religious feasts. [Doc 142 at 48]. It reflects that Defendant Schofield approved the policy. The Court infers, however that this is not the policy that governed the 2014 Id Ul Fitr feast, because Plaintiff submitted his own affidavit in his reply to Defendantâs opposition, which states that â[t]here were no policies released or published from TDOC or Derrick Schofield those years that banned outside foods for Christians and Muslims.â [Doc. 158 at 12]. It is unclear why Plaintiff attached this policy and how it is relevant to his claims. When a plaintiff, such as Plaintiff here, challenges a prison policy under the First Amendment, a court must consider whether the policy is reasonably related to legitimate penological interest under the Turner framework. Turner, 482 U.S. at 89 (â[W]hen a prison regulation impinges on inmatesâ constitutional rights, the regulation is valid if it is reasonably related to legitimate penological interests.â); OâLone v. Estate of Shabazz, 482 U.S. 342, 349 (âTo ensure that courts afford appropriate deference to prison officials, we have determined that prison regulations alleged to infringe constitutional rights are judged under a reasonableness test less restrictive than that ordinarily applied to alleged infringements of fundamental constitutional rights.â). Under the first Turner factor, a court should consider whether there is a valid, rational connection âbetween the regulation and a legitimate and neutral government interest put forward to justify it[.]â Turner, 482 U.S. at 78, 89. Prison administrators are given substantial deference with respect to the first factor. See Overton v. Bazzetta, 539 U.S. 126, 132 (2003) (âThis Court accords substantial deference to the professional judgment of prison administrators, who bear a significant responsibility for defining a corrections systemâs legitimate goals and determining the most appropriate means to accomplish them.â). The remaining three factors, which âshould be balanced together,â are: whether alternative means of exercising the right are available to prison inmates; the impact the accommodation the asserted constitutional right will have on guards and other inmates, and the allocation of prison resources, generally; and whether there is a ready alternative that fully accommodates a prisonersâ rights at a de minimus cost to valid penological interests. Flagner v. Wilkinson, 241 F.3d 475, 484 (6th Cir. 2001); Turner, 482 U.S. at 90â91. But âa trial court is not required to weigh evenly, or even consider, each of the four Turner factors.â Spies, 173 F.3d at 403. The analysis, however, is different under RLUIPA. See Hobbs, 574 U.S. at 361 (stating that the district court erred in applying Turner to a prisonerâs RLUIPA challenge to a prison policy). In analyzing the prison policy under RLUIPA, the Court must determine whether Defendants, by banning traditional Halal food for the 2014 Id Ul Fitr Feast, substantially burdened his rights. See id. (âRLUIPAâs []substantial burden[] inquiry asks whether the government has substantially burdened religious exercise, not whether the RLUIPA claims is able to engage in other forms of religious exercise.â). To illustrate, in Haight v. Thompson, the Sixth Circuit held that prison officials violated inmatesâ RLUIPA rights when they denied their request for traditional foods for their âannual powwow.â 63 F.3d 554, 559â60 (6th Cir. 2014). The Sixth Circuit held that it did not âmake a difference that prison officials allowed the inmates to have some traditional foods (fry bread) but not others (buffalo meat and corn pemmican) at the ceremony.â Id. at 565. In response to the defendantsâ argument that plaintiffs only suffered a de minimis burden to their religious beliefs, the Court disagreed: [W]hat is unreasonable about this request? The inmates sought permission to buy two food itemsâat their own expensesâfor a once-a-year religious event . . . . The prison's decision to bar corn pemmican and buffalo meat âeffectively barsâ the inmates from this religious practice and forces them to âmodify [their] behaviorâ by performing less-than-complete powwows with less-than-complete meals. Id. at 565â66. In light of Haight, the Defendantsâ argument that Plaintiff only suffered a de minimus burden under RLUIPA because they served Plaintiff non-haram foods for the feast is unpersuasive. The parties, however, dispute the policyâs directives. According to Defendantsâ affidavit of Ms. Amonett âTDOC policy allowed food items to be brought into prison facilities by volunteers . . . for religious feastsâ up until 2018 (emphasis added). [Doc. 145 at 21; Doc. 145-1 œœ 9â10]. Ms. Amonett also states that, in prior years, TDOC purchased pre-packaged meals for religious feasts. In reply, Plaintiff reiterates that Defendant Schofield signed the âTDOC Memorandumâ governing the Id Ul Fitr Feast. [Doc. 158 at 13]. He also attached two additional affidavits stating that â[t]here were no policies released or published from TDOC or Derrick Sc[h]ofield those years that banned outside foods . . . for the Id Ul Fitr Feast.â [Id. at 12]. It is not the Courtâs role, however, to speculate as to what TDOCâs policy directives were that governed the 2014 Id Ul Fitr Feast. As it stated earlier in this opinion, the Courtâs role is limited to âdetermining whether there is the need for a trial.â Anderson, 477 U.S. at 255. Here, there are genuine issue of material fact as to whether Defendantâs banned traditional Halal foods for the 2014 Id Ul Fitr Feast, in violation of Plaintiffâs RULIPA and First Amendment rights. D. Qualified Immunity The Court will now turn to Defendantâs qualified immunity defense as it applies to Plaintiffâs remaining First Amendment claims under the Free Exercise Clause.20 The Sixth Circuit has stated that the analysis is a two-step inquiry. See Maye v. Klee, 915 F.3d 1076, 1082 (6th Cir. 2019) (stating that â[i]n analyzing whether an official is entitled to qualified immunity, we must make two determinationsâ). But see Williams v. Mehra, 186 F.3d 685, 691 (6th Cir. 1999) (referring to the qualified immunity analysis as âtripartite,â with the final factor being whether âthe plaintiff has alleged sufficient facts . . . to indicate that what the official allegedly did was 20 Defendantsâ motion is unclear as to whether they seek qualified immunity for Plaintiffâs RLUIPA claims. To the Courtâs knowledge, however, qualified immunity does not apply to claims for injunctive relief. See Bonds v. Daley, No. 18-5666, 2019 WL 2647494, at *4 n.2 (6th Cir. May 17, 2019) (stating that qualified immunity ââonly precludes claims for monetary damages against official in their individual capacities, and not claims for injunctive or declaratory reliefââ(quotation omitted)); Flagner, 241 F.3d at 483 (âThe defense of qualified immunity protects officials from individual liability for money damages but not from . . . injunctive relief.â). Because Plaintiff is only entitled to injunctive relief under RLUIPA, it follows that qualified immunity does not apply to Plaintiffâs RLUIPA claims. objectively unreasonable in light of the clearly established constitutional rightsâ (citing Dickerson v. McClellan, 101 F.3d 1151, 1157â58 (6th Cir. 1996)). The first inquiry is whether âthe plaintiffâs version of the facts alleges the deprivation of a constitutional right.â Maye, 915 F.3d at 1082. The second inquiry is whether âthat right was clearly established such that a reasonable official would have known his actions were unconstitutional.â Id. (citations omitted). âAn answer of âyesâ to both questions defeats qualified immunity, while an answer of ânoâ to either question results in a grant of qualified immunity.â Haley v. Elsmere Police Depât, 452 F. Appâx 623, 626 (6th Cir. 2011). In performing its analysis under the two-party inquiry, however, a court does not have to address the prongs sequentially. Pearson v. Callahan, 555 U.S. 223, 236 (2009) (âThe judges of the district courts . . . should be permitted to exercise their sound discretion in deciding which of the two prongs of the qualified immunity analysis should be addressed first[.]â). Under either prong, moreover, âcourts may not resolve genuine disputes of fact in favor of the party seeking summary judgment.â Tolan v. Cotton, 572 U.S. 650, 656 (2014) (citation omitted). The plaintiff bears the âultimate burdenâ of showing that a defendant is not entitled to qualified immunity. Gardenhire v. Schubert, 205 F.3d 303, 311 (6th Cir. 2000). Here, Plaintiff âmust show both that . . . a constitutional right was violated and that the right was clearly established at the time of the violation.â Chappell v. City of Cleveland, 585 F.3d 901, 907 (6th Cir. 2009). Under the second prong, moreover, the plaintiff must show that the right was clearly established in a ââparticularized senseâ such that a reasonable officer confronted with that same situation would have known thatâ he was violating a constitutional right. Id. (quoting Brosseau v. Haugen, 543 U.S. 194, 199â00 (2004)). As to Plaintiffâs remaining First Amendment claims, the Court has already found there are genuine issues of material fact as to whether a constitutional violation occurred under the first prong of the qualified immunity analysis. The Court will therefore focus on the second prongâ whether the âcontoursâ of that right, at the time of the constitutional infringement, were âsufficiently clearâ so âthat a reasonable official would understand that what he [wa]s doing violate[d] that right.â Anderson v. Creighton, 483 U.S. 635, 636 (1987). In other words, âexisting precedent must have placed the statutory or constitutional question beyond debate,â though the existence of precedent that is âdirectly on pointâ with the specific facts or circumstances at issue is unnecessary. Ashcroft v. al-Kidd, 563 U.S. 731, 741 (2011); see Feathers v. Aey, 319 F.3d 843, 848 (6th Cir. 2003) (â[A]n actionâs unlawfulness can be apparent from direct holdings, from specific examples described as prohibited, or from the general reasoning that a court employs.â). The test is simply whether the law was clear enough in relation to the specific facts that confronted an official when he acted. See Crockett v. Cumberland Coll., 316 F.3d 571, 583 (6th Cir. 2003) (âWhether the right at issue was âclearly establishedâ will turn on the âparticularizedâ circumstances of the case.â (quotation omitted)). But before addressing the merits of Defendantsâ defense, we will first briefly address Plaintiffâs arguments that they waived qualified immunity. Our analysis regarding whether Defendants waived their affirmative defense of qualified immunity is essentially unchanged from our analysis addressing whether Defendants waived their arguments regarding respondeat superior liability discussed in section IV(B)(2)(a) of this opinion. Defendants asserted qualified immunity as an affirmative defense in their Answer [Doc. 60], Amended Answer [Doc. 64], and argued qualified immunity in their first motion for summary judgment [Doc. 91]. See cf. Henricks v. Pickaway Corr. Inst., 782 F.3d 744, 749, 752 (6th Cir. 2015) (affirming the district courts holding âthat the defendants had waived their qualified immunity defensesâ when the defendants failed to assert it in their responsive pleading). The Court will now turn to the merits of Defendantsâ qualified immunity defense. 1. First Amendment ClaimâHaram Food Defendants state that Plaintiff does not have a clear constitutional right to a strict traditional Halal diet or to âtraditional Islamic halal meat items,â as Plaintiff defines it. [Doc. 145 at 24]. They cite to the relevant law in this circuit, which states that a correctional facility need only provide Muslim prisoners with food that is not haram. Cloyd, 2012 WL5995234 at *4 (stating that âMuslim prisoners do not have a right under the First Amendment . . . to be provided halal meat entreesâ and that âa correctional facility need only provide Muslim prisoners with food that is not haramâ (internal quotation marks omitted)). They also state that there is no clear constitutional right for a prisoner to be provided Halal meat entrees when a prisoner has non-haram food options to eat as an alternative, citing Robinson, 615 F. Appâx at 314 (holding that a vegetarian meal option was a constitutionally permissible alternative to the prisonerâs request for Halal meals under the First Amendment). [Doc. 145 at 25]. Plaintiff, in response, states that â[t]he law on the Plaintiffâs right not to eat offending food items is clearly established,â citing to Carrick 31 F. Appâx at 176. [Doc. 156 at 6]. He maintains that reasonable officials should have known âthat what they were doing was wrong,â because Plaintiff objected to the offending food items on TDOCâs Halal menu. [Id.]. But the Court must determine whether Defendants Schofield, McAllister, Widener, and Townsend acted reasonably under the circumstances that were before them. Plumhoff v. Rickard, 572 U.S. 765, 779 (2014) (ââWe have repeatedly told courts . . . not to define clearly established law at a high level of generallyâ . . . since doing so avoids the crucial question whether the official acted reasonably in the particular circumstances that he or she faced.â) (quotation omitted)). More, specifically, the Court must determine whether Defendants acted âintentionallyâ and âunreasonablyâ in serving Plaintiff haram foods on TDOCâs Halal menu. Colvin, 605 F.3d at 291. To illustrate, in Colvin, the Sixth Circuit affirmed the district courtâs decision granting summary judgment in the defendantsâ favor on qualified immunity grounds when the record merely showed that the defendants committed âreasonabl[e] mistake[s]â in serving the plaintiff non-kosher meals on âisolate[d] incidents.â Id. at 291, 293. In that case, the plaintiff, a prisoner, sued prison officials after they erroneously denied him kosher meals. Id. at 286. The plaintiff filed grievances with the officials regarding this error, and thereafter, they placed the plaintiff on the kosher-meal program. Id. 287. After he was placed on the program, however, the plaintiff âinadvertently received nonkosher food on various occasions.â Id. As to the chaplain, the district court held that he was entitled to qualified immunity because plaintiff did not point to evidence that he acted unreasonably or that he knowingly denied him kosher meals, stating that âat worst, [the chaplain] committed a reasonable mistake.â Id. at 291. The district court also held that the remaining defendants were entitled to qualified immunity on the plaintiffâs First Amendment claims, because plaintiff âasserted only isolated incidents of [the defendants] serving him nonkosher food.â Id. at 293. Similar to Colvin¸ Plaintiff does not point to facts showing that Defendants Schofield or McAllister acted unreasonably or intentionally in implementing TDOCâs Halal menu when the foods on the menu were approved by an Imam21âa fact that Defendants point out is undisputed.22 21 In Plaintiffâs response to Defendantsâ first motion for summary judgment, Plaintiff disagreed with the foods that TDOCâs Imam approved as Halal on TDOCâs Halal menus [SEALED Doc. 92 at 10â11, 19]. But whether Plaintiff disagreed with the choice of foods that TDOCâs Imam approved has no bearing on whether Defendants acted unreasonably or intentionally under the circumstances for purposes of the Courtâs qualified immunity analysis. He also states in his Complaint that Defendants âfalsely alleged that [an Imam] approve[d]the meals on TDOC[âs] Halal menu.â [Doc. 1 at 6]. But to defeat Defendantsâ motion, Plaintiff cannot merely rely on his allegations in his pleadings. See Behrens v. Pelletier, 516 U.S. 299, 309 (âOn summary judgment . . . the plaintiff can no longer rest on the pleadings[.]â). 22 Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56 instructs a trial court of its options when a party has [See Doc. 145-3]. Plaintiff also does not dispute this fact in his reply. [See Doc. 158]. Plaintiff also testified during his deposition that an Imam is the very person who is qualified to certify that foods are Halal: Q: So when an item has that halal stamp on it, who has observed, and witnessed, and certified that all this has gone on according to what you just said? A: You usually have an Imam. The person thatâs doing it is qualified. He knows what he is doing. [Doc. 145-3 at 96:25, 97:1â8]. Nor does the record reflect that Widener or Townsend intentionally served Plaintiff haram on TDOCâs Halal menu or that they committed anything more than âisolated inciden[ts].â Colvin, 605 F.3d at 293. The record, for example, only reflects that Defendant Widener served Plaintiff non-Halal food on one occasion: at the 2014 Id Ul Fitr Feast. [Doc. 142 at 77]. These foods, according to Plaintiff, were breaded fish and overcooked noodles, neither of which he identifies as haram. As to Defendant Townsend, the record reflects that he also served Plaintiff overcooked noodles and breaded fish at the Id Ul Fitr Feast and on one other occasion when he âplaced . . . Halal Food Meals on a Styrofoam tray.â [Doc. 109 at 3; Doc. 142 at 77]. For the foregoing reasons, even in drawing all âjustifiable inferencesâ in Plaintiffâs favor, Plaintiff failed to create a genuine issue of material fact that Defendants acted intentionally and unreasonably in serving Plaintiff haram food on TDOCâs Halal menu. Anderson, 477 U.S. at 255. failed to address the opposing partyâs assertion of fact: â[T]he court may . . . consider the fact undisputed [and] grant summary judgment if the motion and supporting materials . . . show that the movant is entitled to it[.]â 2. First Amendment ClaimâAdequate Diet As the Court stated earlier, â[p]rison administrators must provide an adequate diet without violating the inmateâs religious dietary restrictions . . . . which, is essentially a constitutional right not to eat the offending food item.â Carrick, 31 F. Appâx at 176. âIf the prisonerâs diet, as modified, is sufficient to sustain a prisoner in good health, no constitutional right has been violated.â Id. (citation omitted). In analyzing the second prong under Plaintiffâs First Amendment claim, however, the Court must again determine whether, under the particular circumstances, a âreasonable prison official should have known that [Plaintiffâs diet] . . . was insufficient to maintain [his] health[.]â Welch v. Spaulding, 627 F. Appâx 479, 481â82 (6th Cir. 2015). In Welch v. Kusey, No. 2:12-cv- 13172, 2014 WL 3543270, at *1 (E.D. Mich. July 17, 2014), the district court denied the defendantsâ motion for summary judgment on qualified immunity grounds. In that case, the prisoner-plaintiff claimed that Ramadan meals consisting of 1,300 calories violated his First Amendment rights. Id. at *3. The court concluded that (1) the meals substantially infringed on the prisonerâs First Amendment rights; and (2) the prisoner had a clearly established right to an adequate diet during Ramadan such that prison officials should have known that a diet consisting of only 1,300 calories per days was inadequate to sustain a ânormal diet.â Id. at *4. The Sixth Circuit affirmed the district courtâs decision and noted that âwhether a prison official has knowingly provided a nutritionally inadequate diet is a fact-specific inquiry that requires . . . daily caloric content, duration of the diet, and the nutritional needs of the prisoner.â Welch, 627 F. Appâx at 483. The Court, however, finds Welch distinguishable from the facts in Plaintiffâs case, in which the Sixth Circuit held that factual issues precluded summary judgment in the defendantsâ favor. Id. at 484 (âThe legal question of immunity will depend on which version of the facts the jury finds most credibleâ). The Sixth Circuit noted that the prisoner in Welch presented evidence that his diet was insufficient to sustain him in good health. Id. at 482. The plaintiff, for instance, submitted nutritional charts with estimates of his daily caloric intake of 1,300 per day during Ramadan, â[t]ying individual menu items to their respective caloric values.â Id. at 484. The Ramadan menus and calorie counts were also available to the defendants, and the plaintiff told the defendants that the meals were calorically insufficient. Id. The Sixth Circuit rejected defendantsâ argument, therefore, that they had no actual knowledge of the caloric content of the Ramadan meals. Id. Plaintiff, by contrast, has not pointed to specific facts showing the Defendants Schofield, McAllister, Widener, or Townsend âknowingly provided a nutritionally inadequate dietâ such that reasonable officials would have known they were violating his constitutional rights. Id. at 482. He does not direct the Court to any specific evidence that Defendants knew that his meals on TDOCâs Halal menu, as modified, were calorically deficient. Although he states that he âfiled numerous grievance[s] concerningâ the foods on TDOCâs Halal menu, it is unclear who he filed grievances with or whether he in fact grieved the caloric content of the meals he states he could not eat on TDOCâs Halal menu. [Doc. 109 at 10].23 He also states that he âeven made efforts to make requests with . . . [Defendants] Townsend and . . . [Widener] concerning the mealsâ on TDOCâs Halal menu, but he does not point to any evidence showing that he in fact made those requests to Defendants Townsend and Widener (emphasis added). [Id.]. For these reasons, the Court finds that Plaintiff has not created a genuine issue of material fact that Defendants knowingly provided Plaintiff with an inadequate diet. 23 Plaintiff has only attached blank grievance forms to his motion. 3. First Amendment ClaimâId Ul Fitr Feast Plaintiff appears to argue that he had a clearly established right at the time of the alleged constitutional violation to have traditional Halal foods for the 2014 Id Ul Fitr Feast. [Doc. 156 at 4â5]. He relies on Dowdy-El v. Caruso, No. 06-11765, 2012 WL 6642763, at *1 (E.D. Mich. Dec. 20, 2012), the Sixth Circuitâs opinion in Haight v. Thompson, 763 F.3d at 554, 558â59, and the Sixth Circuitâs opinion in Whitney v. Brown, 882 F.2d 1068 (6th Cir. 1989), to show that Plaintiff had a clearly established right to be served traditional Halal foods at the 2014 Id Ul Fitr feast. None of the cases, however, put the âconstitutional question beyond debate,â because they are not âdirectly on pointâ with the specific facts or circumstances at issue in Plaintiffâs case. al-Kidd, 563 U.S. at 741 (citations omitted). But beginning with Dowdy-El, the precise constitutional issue there was whether the defendants violated the prisonersâ First Amendment rights when they refused to allow the prisoners to participate in the Eid feast. 2012 WL 6642763 at *1. Plaintiff, however, does not argue, however, that he was unable to participate in the 2014 feast; rather, he argues that Defendants âstoppedâ from purchasing and receiving traditional Halal foods for the 2014 Id Ul Fitr Feast. [Doc. 142 at 77â78]. In Whitney, the inmates challenged a prison policy that eliminated Sabbath service and annual Passover Seders. 882 F.3d at 1071. The Sixth Circuit agreed with the district courtâs holding that the prisonâs policy of eliminating annual Passover Seders violated the inmatesâ First Amendment rights, because it âforeclose[d] the only means by which the Jewish inmates may exercise their asserted right to mark Passover.â Id. at 1073. It also held that the prison policyâs âprohibition of intercomplex travel of the . . . Jewish inmatesâ was an exaggerated response to the prisonâs security objectives under Turner, and therefore, the policy was invalid. Id. at 1078. Whitney, however, is also factually dissimilar from the issues in Plaintiffâs case, because again, Plaintiff does not argue that he was unable to participate in the Id Ul Fitr Feast. Lastly, unlike Dowdy-El and Whitney, Haight is more factually similar to the issues at hand in Plaintiffâs case but only involved prisonersâ claims under RLUIPAânot the First Amendment. As discussed earlier in this Courtâs opinion, the inmates in Haight argued that prison officials denied their request for traditional foods for their âannual powwowâ in violation of their RLUIPA rights. 763 F.3d at 559â60. The Sixth Circuit held that it did not âmake a difference that prison officials allowed the inmates to have some traditional foods (fry bread) but not others (buffalo meat and corn pemmican) at the ceremony.â Id. at 565. In response to the defendantsâ argument that plaintiffs only suffered a de minimis burden on their religious beliefs, the Court disagreed, stating, â[W]hat is unreasonable about this request? The inmates sought permission to buy two food itemsâat their own expensesâfor a once-a-year religious event.â Id. at 566. Despite the factual similarities to Plaintiffâs case, the law was not clearly established under the First Amendment. For these reasons, Plaintiff has failed to show that he had a clearly established right to traditional Halal foods for the 2014 Id Ul Fitr feast under the First Amendment such that Defendants would have known their actionsâin alleging banning traditional Halal foods for the feastâwere unconstitutional. See Key v. Grayson, 179 F.3d 996, 1000 (6th Cir. 1999) (âThe burden of convincing a court that the law was clearly established ârests squarely with the plaintiff.ââ (quotation omitted)). V. CONCLUSION Plaintiffâs Motion to Dismiss [Doc. 155] is GRANTED. For the foregoing reasons, Defendants Randy Lee and John Walker are hereby DISMISSED from this action. Plaintiffâs Motion for Summary Judgment [Doc. 142] is DENIED, and Defendantâs Motion for Summary Judgment [Doc. 144] is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part for the following reasons: Section 1983 Official-Capacity Claims ⢠Plaintiffâs First Amendment claims for monetary damages against Defendants TDOC, Schofield, Jullian, McAllister, Townsend, and Widener, are DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE, because they are barred from suit under Eleventh Amendment Immunity. Section 1983 Individual-Capacity Claims ⢠Plaintiffâs free-exercise claim under the First Amendment against Defendants Townsend and Widener, as it relates to contamination of Plaintiffâs Halal meals, is DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE; ⢠Plaintiffâs free-exercise claim under the First Amendment against Defendants Schofield, McAllister, Townsend, and Widener, as it relates to Biddâa Taâam foods on TDOCâs Halal menu, is DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE; ⢠Plaintiffâs Establishment Clause claim under the First Amendment against Defendants Schofield, Jullian, McAllister, Widener, and Townsend is DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE for their lack of personal involvement; ⢠Plaintiffâs free-exercise claim under the First Amendment against Defendants Schofield, McAllister, Townsend, and Widener, as it relates to haram foods on TDOCâs Halal menu, is DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE, because they are entitled to qualified immunity; ⢠Plaintiffâs free-exercise claim under the First Amendment against Defendants Schofield, McAllister, Townsend, and Widener, as it relates to Plaintiffâs adequate nutrition, is DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE, because they are entitled to qualified immunity; and ⢠Plaintiffâs free-exercise claim under the First Amendment against Defendants Schofield, McAllister, Jullian, Townsend, and Widener, as it relates to the 2014 Id Ul Fitr Feast, is DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE because they are entitled to qualified immunity. RLUIPA Claims ⢠Plaintiffâs RLUIPA claim for injunctive relief against Defendants Townsend and Widener, as it relates to the contamination of foods on TDOCâs Halal menu, is DISMISSED AS MOOT; ⢠Plaintiffâs RLUIPA claim for injunctive relief against Defendants Schofield, McAllister, Townsend, and Widener, as it relates to the Biddâa Taâam foods on TDOCâs Halal menu, is DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE; and ⢠Genuine issues of material fact exist as to two of Plaintiffâs RLUIPA claims for injunctive relief: (1) whether haram food served on TDOCâs Halal menu substantially burdened Plaintiffâs RLUIPA rights; and (2) whether Defendants substantially burdened Plaintiffâs RLUIPA rights by banning traditional Halal food for the 2014 Id Ul Fitr Feast. See Haight, 63 F.3d at 554, 559â60 (holding that prison officials violated inmatesâ RLUIPA rights when they denied the inmatesâ request for traditional foods for their âannual powwowâ). The Court CERTIFIES that any appeal from this action would not be taken in good faith and would be totally frivolous. See Rule 24 of the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure. IT IS SO ORDERED. ENTER: s/ Leon Jordan United States District Judge
Case Information
- Court
- E.D. Tenn.
- Decision Date
- September 28, 2020
- Status
- Precedential