Legal Research AI

King v. Greenblatt

Court: Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
Date filed: 1995-04-06
Citations: 52 F.3d 1
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7 Citing Cases

                UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                            UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                         

No. 94-1751

                  MITCHELL G. KING, ET AL.,

                    Plaintiffs, Appellees,

                              v.

              MILTON GREENBLATT, LESLIE TAYLOR,
           CHARLES W. GAUGHAN, M.C.I. BRIDGEWATER,

                   Defendants, Appellants.

                                         

         APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

              FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

     [Hon. A. David Mazzone, Senior U.S. District Judge]
                                                                   

                                         

                            Before

                    Torruella, Chief Judge,
                                                      
                Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge,
                                                        
                  and Stahl, Circuit Judge.
                                                      

                                         

William L.  Pardee, Assistant  Attorney General,  with whom  Scott
                                                                              
Harshbarger, Attorney General, and  Scott M. Davis, Assistant Attorney
                                                          
General, were on brief for appellants.
Anthony  A.  Scibelli,  with  whom Robert  D.  Keefe,  Stephen  C.
                                                                              
Reilly, and Hale and Dorr, were on brief for appellees The Class of 48
                                 
+ 1;  David R.  Geiger, with  whom Sarah B.  Reed, and  Foley, Hoag  &
                                                                              
Eliot, were on brief for intervenors/appellees Donald Pearson, et al.
             

                                         

                        April 6, 1995
                                         


          BOWNES, Senior  Circuit Judge.  This  is the latest
                      BOWNES, Senior  Circuit Judge.
                                                   

chapter in  the  institutional reform  litigation brought  in

1972  by plaintiff  Mitchell  King, then  a civilly-committed

patient  of the  Massachusetts Treatment Center  for Sexually

Dangerous  Persons in Bridgewater,  Massachusetts, to correct

allegedly  unconstitutional practices  by  the Department  of

Correction (DOC) at the Treatment Center.  The history of the

litigation has been exhaustively covered:  In re Pearson, 990
                                                                    

F.2d  653 (1st Cir. 1993) (Pearson III), Pearson v. Fair, 935
                                                                    

F.2d 401 (1st Cir.  1991) (Pearson II), Langton  v. Johnston,
                                                                        

928 F.2d 1206 (1st  Cir. 1991), Williams v. Lesiak,  822 F.2d
                                                              

1223 (1st Cir. 1987), and Pearson v. Fair, 808  F.2d 163 (1st
                                                     

Cir.  1986) (per  curiam) (Pearson  I).   We review  the case
                                                 

history only to put this appeal in perspective.

                              I.
                                          I.
                                            

          King  alleged  that he  had  been  deprived of  due

process  and  other  federal  constitutional  rights  by  the

defendants,   specifically  by  officials  of  the  DOC,  who

allegedly placed him in  solitary confinement without  notice

of  the charges against him or a meaningful opportunity to be

heard.    DOC's  actions  allegedly  interfered  with  King's

treatment  by  the Department  of  Mental  Health (DMH),  the

agency  vested with primary  jurisdiction over  the Treatment

                             -2-
                                          2


Center.  See Mass. Gen. L. ch. 123A,   2.1   Thus, an element
                        

of this litigation, present from the very beginning, has been

DOC's alleged  usurpation of DMH's  statutory authority  over

patients at the Treatment Center, during which usurpation the

patients'  constitutional  rights  were  allegedly  violated.

Invoking both  the Federal  Constitution and state  law, King

sought  declaratory  and  injunctive relief  from  the  DOC's

sequestration practices.

          In  1974,  the district  court  held  a hearing  on

King's  allegations   and  entered  a   consent  decree  that

provided, in relevant part:

               1.    The  Treatment Center  at  MCI
          Bridgewater   shall   be  treated   as  a
          facility  of  the  Department  of  Mental
          Health.

               2.   Primary   responsibility    and
          authority for the Treatment  Center shall

                    
                                

1.  Section 2 of ch.  123A (as amended through St.  1959, ch.
615) provided in pertinent part:  "The commissioner of mental
health  shall   establish  and  maintain,   subject  to   the
jurisdiction of the department  of mental health, a treatment
center  . . . at  a correctional institution  approved by the
commissioner of correction, for the  care, custody, treatment
and rehabilitation  of [sexually dangerous]  persons . .  . .
The  commissioner of correction  shall appoint such custodial
personnel as may be required for such center.  Such custodial
personnel shall be subject to the control of the commissioner
of mental  health  with respect  to the  care, treatment  and
rehabilitation of persons in their custody, but shall at  all
times   be   under   the  administrative,   operational   and
disciplinary control of the  commissioner of correction.  The
commissioner of  mental health shall appoint  to such center,
in addition to the personnel appointed by the commissioner of
correction, adequate  personnel for the  care, treatment  and
rehabilitation of such persons committed to their care."

                             -3-
                                          3


          be  exercised by the Department of Mental
          Health.

               3.  All  personnel at the  Treatment
          Center        (clinical,       custodial,
          administrative) shall be  subject to  the
          control  of  the  Commissioner of  Mental
          Health  with respect  to the  handling of
          patients.

               4.    Custodial  personnel, but  not
          patients,    shall     be    under    the
          administrative,      operational      and
          disciplinary control  of the Commissioner
          of Correction.

               5.  The  Department of Mental Health
          shall  exercise  the  responsibility  and
          authority  set  forth  in subparagraph  2
          above so  that patients at  the Treatment
          Center should have the  least restrictive
          conditions   necessary  to   achieve  the
          purposes of commitment. . . .

The first four paragraphs of the consent decree closely track

the requirements of ch. 123A,   2, the law in effect when the

consent decree was entered.2

          Over  time, the residents  of the  Treatment Center

brought  various suits to  enforce or  to modify  the consent

decrees.  In 1988,  the Commonwealth sought unsuccessfully to

vacate the  decrees.  "The stream  of litigation occasionally

overflowed the district court," Pearson III, 990 F.2d at 655,
                                                       

and this court as well.

                    
                                

2.  The district court  also entered  a supplemental  consent
decree  that (1)  prohibited defendants  from  using solitary
confinement for the purposes of discipline or punishment; and
(2) imposed  various procedural and  substantive requirements
for  the use of sequestration.  The defendants do not seek to
modify the supplemental consent decree.

                             -4-
                                          4


          While the residents were attempting  to enforce the

consent decrees,  forces on  the sidelines of  the litigation

were  mobilizing  to amend  ch.  123A.   Beginning  in  1986,

Massachusetts' executive branch filed a number of legislative

bills that sought to transfer control of the Treatment Center

from DMH to  DOC.   None of  these bills  were adopted  until

1994, when  the Massachusetts  legislature enacted  St. 1993,

ch. 489.  Chapter 489 purports to transfer all authority over

the Treatment Center to  the DOC, in direct contravention  of

the first five paragraphs  of the consent decree.   Section 2

of ch.  489 provides  that "[t]he commissioner  of correction

shall maintain subject to  the jurisdiction of the department

of correction  a treatment  program  or branch  thereof at  a

correctional institution for the care, custody, treatment and

rehabilitation  of persons  [ad]judicated  as being  sexually

dangerous."

          The defendants immediately moved under Fed. R. Civ.

P. 60(b)(5) to  modify the  decree so that  DOC might  assume

plenary authority  over the Treatment Center,  subject to all

other   substantive  and   procedural  requirements   of  the

decree.3   Their  sole  argument was  that the  Massachusetts

legislature's enactment of ch. 489 constituted "a significant

                    
                                

3.  The defendants also moved to reopen Williams v. Lesiak, a
                                                                      
related  litigation that involved  a similar  consent decree.
See Williams,  822 F.2d at 1224.   The district court did not
                        
rule on the motion because counsel had not yet been appointed
for the plaintiffs in Williams.
                                          

                             -5-
                                          5


change in circumstances warrant[ing] revision of the decree."

See Rufo v. Inmates of Suffolk County Jail, 502 U.S. 367, 383
                                                      

(1992) (setting  forth standard for  modification of  consent

decrees, and reversing the decision of this circuit).  

          The  district court  denied  the  motion  from  the

bench:    "On  the   record  that  is  now  before   me,  and

incorporated into that record, everything that I have learned

about the case and found  in the case from the trials  of the

Bruder  and  the  Pearson  cases [companion  cases],  I  will
                                     

conclude at this time that the  defendants have not sustained

their burden of showing  a significant change in law  or fact

under Rufo."  The court also made the following findings:
                      

               I do find  that the consent  decrees
          sought to  address federal constitutional
          violations  articulated  by  King and  in
                                                       
          Williams [a related case].
                              

               A critical component  of the  remedy
          provided  by the consent decrees was that
          the  Department of  Mental Health  was in
          control of the Treatment Center which was
          to  provide,  in  part, a  check  on  the
          Department    of   Correction[,]    which
          compromised treatment.

               I  conclude  that the  Department of
          Mental Health is an essential part of the
          decree, and  on the record  before me  at
          this time, the  Department of  Correction
          has done nothing yet that I can see which
          warrants  my  placing  confidence in  its
          ability   to  deliver   .  .   .  patient
          treatment.

               I  conclude at  this  time that  the
          Department of Correction's control of the
          Treatment Center  compromises the federal
          constitutional  remedy which  the consent

                             -6-
                                          6


          decree  sought  to   impose,  and   would
          compromise  the   federal  constitutional
          rights which the  consent decrees  sought
          to protect.

          . . . .

               Will  the  Department of  Correction
          provide  th[e]  same treatment  [as DMH]?
          That's  not  shown.    If  they  were  to
          provide that treatment,  if there were to
          be  a case-specific  inquiry in  what the
          Department  of Correction was going to do
          and  proposed to do, then perhaps I would
          be able  to rule otherwise.   But at this
          point, there is not that showing. . . .

The district  court invited the Commonwealth  to propose ways

to  modify  the  decree   that  would  preserve  the  federal

constitutional remedies, and  yet accommodate  the change  in

the underlying state law.  It noted, however, that "we're not

going to go anywhere"  before the defendants have tested  the

court's interpretation  of Rufo on appeal.4   Undeterred, the
                                           

                    
                                

4.  We  asked the parties to brief the issue of our appellate
jurisdiction in light of Carson v. American Brands, Inc., 450
                                                                    
U.S.  79, 84 (1981), which, in the  context of an appeal from
an interlocutory  order refusing  to enter a  consent decree,
                                                      
applied the general  rule that  an appeal under  28 U.S.C.   
1292(a)(1)  is available  only  if the  order  "might have  a
'serious,  perhaps  irreparable  consequence,'"  and  can  be
"'effectually   challenged'   only   by   immediate   appeal"
(citations omitted).  Assuming, without deciding,  that these
conditions apply where the district court refuses to modify a
                                                                       
longstanding consent decree, we  think the appeal is properly
before us.  In particular, the district court's forecast of a
stalemate  pending  appeal suggests  that  its  order can  be
effectually challenged only by immediate appeal.

   We also note that Rufo itself  was an interlocutory appeal
                                     
from the denial of a Rule 60(b)(5) motion to modify a consent
decree.  Neither the Supreme Court nor we, however, addressed
the jurisdictional issues in that case.

                             -7-
                                          7


defendants  filed a  renewed  motion for  modification and  a

motion  to vacate the  consent decrees while  this appeal was

pending.

                             II.
                                         II.
                                            

          We review  the district court's application  of the

Rufo standard, and the more general requirements for granting
                

relief from a final judgment under Rule  60(b)(5), for errors

of law or abuse of discretion.   See Alexis Lichine & Cie. v.
                                                                      

Lichine Estate Selections, Ltd., No. 94-1918,  slip op. at 10
                                           

(1st Cir.  Jan. 30, 1995).   Rufo held that "a  party seeking
                                             

modification  of  a  consent   decree  bears  the  burden  of

establishing  that a  significant change"  in either  factual

conditions  or in law "warrants revision of the decree."  502

U.S. at 383-84.   If  the moving party  meets this  standard,

"the court should consider whether the  proposed modification

is  suitably tailored to  the changed circumstance."   Id. at
                                                                      

383.    This  "standard .  .  . applies  when  a  party seeks

modification  of  a term  of a  consent decree  that arguably

relates to the  vindication of a constitutional right."   Id.
                                                                         

at 383 n.7.

          Rufo  instructed  district   courts  to   "exercise
                          

flexibility in considering requests for modification of . . .

institutional reform consent  decree[s]" because such decrees

"'reach beyond the  parties involved directly in the suit and

                             -8-
                                          8


impact  on  the public's  right  to the  sound  and efficient

operation  of its institutions.'"   Id. at  381, 383 (quoting
                                                   

Heath v. De Courcy, 888 F.2d 1105, 1109 (6th Cir. 1989)).  We
                              

have echoed these concerns.  See, e.g., Pearson III, 990 F.2d
                                                               

at  658  ("In  institutional  reform  litigation, injunctions

should not operate inviolate in perpetuity."); Mackin v. City
                                                                         

of Boston, 969 F.2d  1273, 1275 (1st Cir. 1992)  ("we believe
                     

that  district  courts  should  be  flexible  in  considering

requests for  relaxation of,  or release from,  decrees which

were    initially   established   to   bring   about   needed

institutional  reforms"),  cert.  denied,  113  S.  Ct.  1043
                                                    

(1993).    Notwithstanding  the  application  of  this  "less

stringent, more flexible standard,"  a modification "must not

create or perpetuate a  constitutional violation."  Rufo, 502
                                                                    

U.S. at 380, 391.

                             III.
                                         III.
                                             

          We shall refer to the first five  paragraphs of the

1974 consent  decree as "structural" terms,  inasmuch as they

incorporate  the administrative  structure mandated  by state

law.  These are the only terms the defendants seek to modify.

          For the  purposes of  their motion,  the defendants

assume that  the structural  terms "arguably relate[]  to the

vindication of a constitutional right."  Id. at 383  n.7.  Of
                                                        

course, if the terms  at issue were directly mandated  by the
                                                                 

Constitution, a change  in state law  without more would  not

                             -9-
                                          9


warrant a modification.  Modifiable terms will typically fall

somewhere  along a spectrum:  in general, terms that directly

implement    constitutional    requirements   --    e.g.,   a
                                                                    

predeprivation hearing to  satisfy procedural due  process --

will  be  more  closely  related  to  the  vindication  of  a

constitutional right  than terms that lay  the groundwork for

other remedial measures.

          We  think that  the structural  terms in  this case

belong  in the  latter  class.   The  Constitution itself  is

indifferent to  whether DOC or DMH  administers the Treatment

Center.  If, however, as King alleged, DOC personnel violated
                       

his constitutional  rights in  the process of  usurping DMH's

authority and interfering with his clinical treatment, then a

decree keeping DOC within its  statutory ambit begins to make

sense in  the context of  a constitutional remedy.   Although

we, unlike the  district court, would have eschewed the words

"essential"  and "critical,"  we  think the  structural terms

were   clearly,   not   just   arguably,   related   to   the

constitutional remedy provided by the decrees.

          This is not to  say that a change in  the statutory

scheme cannot  be a significant  change in law  that warrants

modification  of the  structural terms.5   In the  context of

                    
                                

5.  In   Rufo  itself,   the  Supreme   Court   remanded  for
                         
reconsideration under  the  standard it  had just  announced,
even though "the agreed-upon decree . . . clearly was related
to the  conditions found  to offend the  Constitution."   502
U.S. at 389.

                             -10-
                                          10


King,  the  structural  terms may  have  been  a  means to  a
                

constitutional  end; but it  was possible to  include them in

the decree only because Massachusetts law already  structured

the Treatment Center in the same way.  If existing  state law

had  granted DOC  exclusive jurisdiction  over  the Treatment

Center,  the parties could not have agreed to insert DMH into

the administrative structure.  Thus, a change in the very law

underlying the structural terms is likely to be "significant"

under Rufo,  and may  therefore require some  modification of
                      

the structural terms.

          This  preliminary analysis  is consistent  with our

own  decisions before and after  Rufo.  In  Rufo, the Supreme
                                                            

Court  offered  several examples  of  potentially significant

changes in federal law.   See id. at 388-90 ("one or  more of
                                             

the   obligations   placed  upon   the  parties   has  become

impermissible   under   federal  law";   "the   statutory  or

decisional  law has changed to make legal what the decree was

designed to prevent"; "a decision that clarifies the law" has

undermined an  agreement based on "a  misunderstanding of the

governing  law").  Although none of the examples from Rufo is
                                                                      

on point here, our decision in Williams, which predated Rufo,
                                                                        

suggests the proper test for significance in this case.  If a

subsequent state statute appears  to overlap or conflict with

a  federal consent  decree, "and the  conflict . .  . is less

than clear, delicate questions  of federalism must enter into

                             -11-
                                          11


our inquiry."   See id.,  822 F.2d at  1228 (citing  Rizzo v.
                                                                      

Goode,  423   U.S.  362,  379  (1976)   (federalism  must  be
                 

considered in  determining scope of equitable  relief)).  The

district   court  should  conduct  a  "careful  case-specific

inquiry" into  both the decree  and the statute  "to discover

whether their objectives  and provisions necessarily conflict

and  to consider the importance  of the areas  of conflict to

the overall goals of the litigation."  Id.
                                                      

          We think  that the nuanced,  case-specific approach

of Williams is  consistent with  the strictures  of Rufo  and
                                                                    

with  the equitable nature of relief from a decree under Rule

60(b)(5).   See  Rufo,  502 U.S.  at  383 (noting  that  Rule
                                 

60(b)(5)  permits relief from a  court order when  "'it is no

longer equitable  that the  judgment should  have prospective

application'").   See  also  Mackin, 969  F.2d at  1278 ("the
                                               

decision as to  whether to modify  or dissolve [a  structural

decree]  is at bottom  an exercise  of equitable  power" that

calls for a "deferential standard of review").

          Chapter  489  reflects  Massachusetts'  legislative

judgment that one agency rather than two can best perform the

conflicting functions of the Treatment Center, i.e., maintain
                                                               

security as well as provide treatment.  As the district court

noted, no  one regards  dual administration of  the Treatment

Center as workable.   But why give DOC the  run of the place?
                                                  

The  legislature apparently accepted the professional opinion

                             -12-
                                          12


that   behavior  modification   or   control,   rather   than

traditional  mental health treatment,  is the  most effective

way to  protect society  from sexually dangerous  persons and

such persons  from themselves.  The correctness  of this view

is not before  us; what matters is  whether the goals  of ch.

489  necessarily conflict  with  the rights  enforced by  the

federal  consent  decree,  and  the importance  of  any  such

conflict to the overall goals  of the litigation.   Williams,
                                                                        

822 F.2d at 1228.

          The extent  and importance  of the conflict  can be

exaggerated  or trivialized, as the parties have tried to do.

We think that  the conflict  is real but  not so  fundamental

that  ch. 489  necessarily thwarts the  overall goals  of the

King  litigation.  King's primary goal was to ensure that his
                

treatment  complied  with the  Constitution.   The structural

terms  of  the decree  may serve  that  goal by  keeping DOC,

allegedly the offending actor, out of DMH's  province; but as

we have explained, those  terms would have been inconceivable

without  the underlying  state  law.   After all,  plaintiffs

cannot   claim  that   DOC  control   per  se   violates  the
                                                         

Constitution.  With the amendment  of ch. 123A, the governing

state law no longer gives DMH any role to play.  In  light of

these federalism concerns, we  think there has certainly been

a  "significant change  . . .  in law" within  the meaning of

Rufo, and  that the plaintiffs cannot  enforce the structural
                

                             -13-
                                          13


terms of the decree in perpetuity.  See Pearson III, 990 F.2d
                                                               

at 658.

          In  holding that  the  defendants had  not shown  a

significant  change  in law,  the  district court  apparently

relied upon our decision in  Coalition of Black Leadership v.
                                                                      

Cianci, 570 F.2d 12  (1st Cir. 1978).  The consent  decree in
                  

Cianci   established   a  procedure   whereby   residents  of
                  

Providence, Rhode Island, could file complaints against their

police  officers for  alleged civil  rights violations.   The

Rhode   Island  legislature   subsequently  enacted   a  "Law

Enforcement Officers'  Bill of  Rights"  which conflicted  in

part with the decree.   There was an "obvious  subject matter

overlap between the decree and the legislation," which served

"dual  and partially inconsistent purposes."  Id. at 14.  The
                                                             

City of  Providence  moved  to  vacate the  decree,  and  the

district  court denied the motion.   We affirmed, noting that

the court had "ordered both parties to work out modifications
                                                                         

in the  decree so that  the protection of  policemen's rights
                          

mandated by state law  and the right of plaintiffs to be free

from 'racially discriminatory police conduct' could[,] to the

extent  possible, both  be achieved."   Id.  at 13  (emphasis
                                                       

added).    Moreover,  we  emphasized   the  district  court's

statement that 

          the  Court  is   inclined  to  look  with
          deference  upon the  alternate procedural
          means embodied in  the 1976 Act  . . .  .
          If  the  Rhode  Island   legislature  has

                             -14-
                                          14


          determined  that  the  rights  of  police
          officers  are in  need of  protection and
          that this protection can best be achieved
          by   adoption   of   certain   procedural
          protections, the Court is not prepared to
          question this judgment or to stand in the
          way  of its implementation in the absence
          of  any  showing that  the 1976  Act will
          hamper  the   effective  presentation  of
          civilian  complaints  which  the  consent
          decree has apparently accomplished.  

Id. at 14  n.1.   We approved the  district court's  flexible
               

approach for  resolving the  conflict between the  decree and

the Act, even  though the  decree in Cianci,  unlike that  in
                                                       

King, did  not incorporate an  administrative structure based
                

on superseded state law.  Cf.  Williams, 822 F.2d at 1234 n.5
                                                   

(on  remand, "[a]s  in  Cianci .  .  .  the court  should  be
                                          

flexible in framing  a response  to the motion  to avoid  any

conflict  with the  state  statute when  unnecessary for  the

goals underlying  this litigation").  If  anything, this case

presents  the stronger argument  for modification,  given the

source  of the  structural terms,  their relationship  to the

constitutional  remedy,  and  the legislature's  autonomy  to

restructure    the    governmental   institutions    of   the

Commonwealth.

                             IV.
                                         IV.
                                            

          Having found  a significant  change in law,  we now

"focus . . . on whether the proposed modification is tailored

to   resolve  the   problems   created  by   the  change   in

circumstances."   Rufo,  502  U.S. at  391.   "Of  course,  a
                                  

                             -15-
                                          15


modification must not  create or perpetuate a  constitutional

violation."  Id. at 391.
                            

          The  district  court   evidently  feared  that  the

proposed modification  would produce  a de facto  increase in
                                                            

constitutional violations  at the  Treatment Center, even  if

there  is  nothing  unconstitutional   de  jure  about  DOC's
                                                           

assuming  plenary authority.  Based  on its assessment of the

history  of this  litigation,  the court  concluded "at  this

time"  that  DOC's  control  of the  Treatment  Center  would

compromise the federal constitutional remedies imposed by the

consent  decree, and  the federal constitutional  rights that

the decree sought to protect.  Critically, the defendants had

not shown "what the  Department of Correction . .  . proposed

to do" to  "provide th[e]  same treatment" as  DMH under  the

remainder  of the  decree.   Had the  defendants made  such a

showing, "then perhaps  [the district court] would be able to

rule otherwise."

          This leaves  us  unsure  of  the  district  court's

reason(s) for denying the  proposed modification.  Earlier in

the hearing,  the  court had  ruled  that ch.  489 is  not  a

significant  change in law.   Perhaps it was  now saying that

ch.  489 might be a  significant change in  law that warrants
                          

modification of  the consent  decree, but the  defendants had

not  yet   demonstrated  as  a  practical   matter  that  the
                                                              

modification   would  be  implemented  without  producing  or

                             -16-
                                          16


exacerbating  constitutional  violations  at   the  Treatment

Center.   In fact, the defendants submitted no testimonial or

documentary evidence  of DOC's  transfer plans; nor  did they

request an evidentiary hearing.  On the sparse record  before

the  district court,  in  light of  the court's  inconsistent

observations, we cannot say whether the court properly denied

modification  for lack of suitable  tailoring.  See Rufo, 502
                                                                    

U.S.  at 383.   The  prudent course  is to  remand for  a new

hearing.

          On  remand, the  district  court may  inquire  into

DOC's transfer plans.   We note, however, that "once  a court

has  determined  that a  modification  is  warranted, .  .  .

principles of federalism and  simple common sense require the

court  to give significant weight  to the views  of the local

government  officials who  must implement  any modification."

Id.  at 392 n.14.   "[T]he public interest and considerations
               

based on the allocation of powers within our federal system .

. . require that the district court defer to local government

administrators,  who have  the  'primary  responsibility  for

elucidating,   assessing,  and   solving'  the   problems  of

institutional   reform,  to   resolve   the  intricacies   of

implementing  a decree  modification."   Id. at  392 (quoting
                                                        

Brown v. Board  of Educ.,  349 U.S. 294,  299 (1955))  (other
                                    

citations and  quotation marks omitted).   The district court

                             -17-
                                          17


should  rely  primarily on  its  jurisdictional  oversight to

ensure DOC's compliance with the decrees.

          Remanded.
                      Remanded
                              

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