*218 MEMORANDUM — DECISION & ORDER
I. INTRODUCTION
This is аn action brought pursuant to Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act (the “ADA”), 42 U.S.C. § 12101, et seq.; § 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (the “Rehabilitation Act” or “ § 504”), 29 U.S.C. § 794, et seq.; 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (“ § 1983”) asserting deprivations of rights secured by the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution; and the New York State common law asserting tort claims sounding in “assault and battery” and negligence.
Defendants move pursuant to FED. R. CIV. PRO. 12(b)(6) to dismiss plaintiffs’ claims under the ADA, the Rehabilitation Act, plaintiffs’ claims for injunctive relief, and the § 1983 claims and pendent state law claims against defendants Nixon, Gleb-ba, DiBlasio, and Cavanaugh. For the reasons that follow, the motion is granted in part and denied in part.
II. BACKGROUND
The case surrounds the search policy of the Capital District Psychiatric Center (“CDPC”) in Albany and the application of that policy when patients are voluntarily admitted there. As addressed more fully below, plaintiff William Aiken (“Aiken”) alleges that on January 19, 2000 he was illegally strip searched and body cavity searched upon his voluntary admission to CDPC. Aiken serves as the representative plaintiff for the association claims brought by Disability Advocates, Inc. on behalf of all present and future patients of the Capital District Psychiatric Center who may be subjected to the challenged searches, See-ond Amended Complaint (“complaint” or “compl.”) ¶ 12, 1 and who challenge the legality of the policy.
A. January 19, 2000 search
The complaint alleges that in October of 1998, Defendant Kathleen Cavanaugh, then-CDPC Program Director and Supervisor of the crisis nursing staff, placed a “standing order” on Aiken’s clinical record at CDPC which ordered staff in the crisis unit of CDPC to carefully search Aiken whenever he appeared for admission. Compl. ¶¶ 32-33. Plaintiffs contend that Cavanaugh lacked probable cause to issue this standing order and that it was issued in violation of CDPC’s search policy. Compl. ¶¶ 36-40.
On January 19, 2000 Aiken sought voluntary admission for emergency psychiatric care and treatment at CDPC’s crisis unit. Compl. ¶¶ 43, 49. He was strip searched and visual body cavity searched by defendants DeSeve, Harper, and Monte in a bathroom, allegedly pursuant to the direct order of defendant Bellinger-Alle-man. Compl. ¶¶ 51-57. Plaintiffs allege that Aiken’s search was unreasonable in scope and without probable cause or a warrant, and therefore in violation of his constitutional rights. Compl. ¶ 105.
Many of the defendants’ arguments turn on whether this search occurred in accordance with — or in contravention to — the CDPC policy in issue. Plaintiffs contend that “plaintiff Aiken and other CDPC patients” were “searched pursuant to the illegal policy.” Compl. ¶ 104. However, the complaint also alleges that Aiken’s January 19, 2000 search deviated in certain material respects from the requirements of *219 the policy. See Compl. ¶¶ 51-57, 65-75. 2 As addressed more fully below, plaintiffs seem to argue that this search was conducted pursuant to the authority of the policy (which they assert is itself unconstitutional), and further that the manner of search (the deviations from the policy) compounded Aiken’s injury.
B. CDPC’s Search Policy
With regard to the policy, plaintiffs contend that CDPC’s written policy authorizes unconstitutional strip searches, visual body cavity searches, and internal body cavity searches because these searches are allowed if there is merely a “potential risk” or “reasonable possibility” that the admit-tee possesses contraband or an item restricted by the treatment team, but does not require a finding of probable cause or a judicial warrant. Compl. ¶¶ 88-105. Plaintiffs also allege that the CDPC policy violates the ADA and Rehabilitation Act. Compl. ¶¶ 120-127.
Inasmuch as CDPC’s search policy is repeatedly referenced in the complaint and integral to a determination of the instant motion, pertinent portions of that policy are recited here.
See Yak v. Bank Brussels Lambert,
Regarding the decision to institute a search, the policy provides as follows:
It is recognized that CDPC staff have responsibility for making clinical decisions in accordance with their expertise and delegated responsibility. The decision to search a patient is authorized when the basis for this decision is clinical. Staff shall at all times attempt to balance issues concerning the clinical appropriateness or necessity of action vs. legal aspects of patients’ rights. However, the most important consideration is the ability to prоvide services in a safe and secure environment.
The decision to search a patient ... is based upon a determination that there exists potential risk and/or reasonable possibility that the patient possesses an item restricted by his or her treatment team, an item considered to be contraband by local, state, or federal law, or an item that is stolen.
Search Policy, part II, p. 1 (emphasis added).
The policy is divided in to “emergency” and “non-emergency” situations and indicates that the “senior clinical staff member on duty” shall make the determination whether an emergency situation exists. Assuming one does, the senior clinical staff member on duty shall be responsible: “for taking appropriate action to insure the safety of other patients;” for making a decision regarding the ability of “program staff to handle the situation without assistance” from the Safety Office; and for making decisions “concerning the level and degree of search as well as the appropriate place to conduct the search.” Search Policy, p. 3, ¶ 1. In conducting a search in an emergency situation, the staff is to inform the patient of the reason for conducting the search and seek the patient’s permis *220 sion if possible. Id., p. 3, ¶2. The staff must also insure that two staff members are present with at least one being of the same sex as the person being searched with the “staff member of the same sex ... responsible for conducting the actual search.” Id., p. 3, ¶ 2.
Searches in non-emergеncy situations proceed in essentially the same fashion with the exception that the non-emergency search needs to be authorized by the “Program Director or designee.” Id., p. 4, ¶¶ 1-3. The policy applies to individuals being screened by the Crisis Intervention Program and, in accordance with the policy, the Crisis staff has initiate guidelines for searches of these patients. These guidelines do not deviate in material respect from the general policy.
The policy delineates that “the typical and routine search” for both emergency and non-emergency situations involves having a patient empty his or her pockets and packages, with staff then examining the patient’s clothing to “ensure noting is concealed within the clothing.” Search Policy, p. 3, ¶ 4(a). The policy further provides that “[o]n occasion, based on clinical judgment, a patient will be asked to submit to a metal detector search” to be conducted by a Safety Officer. Id. at ¶ 4(b).
Still further, the policy provides that:
[o]n rare occasion, based on clinical judgement, a patient will be asked to submit to a body search and to disrobe down to their undergarments for the search. The Program Director, or Administrator on Call after hours, must give permission for a strip search. Upon reasonable belief and to prevent serious harm to themselves, a body cavity search may be instituted with the permission of the Program Director, Administrator on Call after hours. Strip searches and body cavity searches may only be conducted by or under the supervision оf a physician (resident physician after hours). The presence of at least one same sex staff member during a strip or body cavity search is essential.
Id. ¶ 4(c)(emphasis added).
The policy indicates that “items obtained in a search that were confiscated because they are restricted by the patient’s treatment team should be held by the facility until such time as the patient is discharged ....” Id., p. 2, § 111(A). “Items that are confiscated because they are contraband ... and items that are stolen, but their ownership cannot be determined, shall be turned into the Safety Office.” Id. The complaint alleges that the Safety Officers are peace officers under New York Law and, therefore, this provision of the policy “permits searches for law enforcement purposes.” Compl. ¶ 98. However, there is no allegation of any criminal prosecution arising from any search conducted in accordance with this policy.
Finally, the search policy is made applicable to visitors to CDPC when “the Program Director or designee has decided that it is appropriate to search a visitor in order to maintain a safe and secure environment ....” Id. p. 5.
C. Relief Sought
Plaintiffs Disability Advocates, Inc. and Aiken seek injunctive and declaratory relief against the defendants 3 under § 1983 to halt illegal searches of patients at CDPC which violate the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments, and against CDPC to enjoin searches in violation of Title II of *221 the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act. In addition, Aiken seeks monetary damages pursuant to § 1983, the ADA, and Section 504 for damages arising from the January 19, 2000 search.
III. DISCUSSION
A. Rule 12(b)(6) -Standard
On a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, a court must assume that the allegations in the complaint are true and draw all reasonable inferences in the plaintiffs’ favor.
Cooper v. Pate,
B. Standing to Raise Claims for In-junctive & Declaratory Relief
The Court will first address defendants’ challenge to plaintiffs’ standing to raise the claims for injunctive and declaratory relief. “The party invoking federal jurisdiction bears the burden of establishing the elements of standing.”
Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
As an element of standing and a prerequisite for invoking federal jurisdiction, plаintiffs must allege an actual case or controversy ripe for review.
Carpenter Technology v. Bridgeport,
(1) it has suffered an ‘injury in fact’ that is (a) concrete and particularized and (b) actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical; (2) the injury is fairly traceable to the challenged action of the defendant; and (3) it is likely, as opposed to merely speculative, that the injury will be redressed by a favorable decision.
Laidlaw,
Defendants assert that the plaintiffs lack standing to raise their claims for injunctive and declaratory relief related to
*222
the CDPC’s search policy because Aiken’s injury occurred, according to his own allegations, because the officials
deviated
from the policy when they searched Aiken on January 19, 2000.
See
compl. ¶¶ 55-66,
4
71-75, 94-100. Defendants further contend that the plaintiffs have failed to allege that anyone has ever been unlawfully searched pursuant to the state policy they now attempt to challenge. Thus, defendants assert that because the violation to Aiken’s rights, if any, was caused by
the deviation
from the policy — not the policy itself, and because the deviation from the policy is not likely to re-occur, plaintiffs lack standing to pursue the claims. Thus, defendants argue that plaintiffs’ claims cannot satisfy the second and third elements of the
Laidlaw
test.
See Rizzo v. Goode,
The plaintiffs counter that the allegations in the complaint are made in the alternative as allowed by Rule 8 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and, alternatively, that the allegations of the search being pursuant to and in deviation from the official policy are not mutually exclusive. Plaintiffs argue that, unlike in Lyons, the complaint asserts that the CDPC policy authorizes unconstitutional searches, and that the policy caused the search complained of and will therefore likely cause unconstitutional searches in the future. See Compl. ¶¶ 88-105. Plaintiffs further contend that, unlike the plaintiff in Lyons, Aiken faces a real and immediate threat of repeated injury from the defendants’ policies (and therefore is entitled to injunctive and declaratory relief, as well as damages) because Aiken’s illness makes it very likely that he will need emergency mental health care at any moment, and because seeking such care necessitates his evaluation at CDPC. Comp. ¶¶ 6-8, 46,114-15. 5
This particular dispute centers as much on the confluence of two important fundamentals of federal practice — namely, the right to plead a case in the alternative under FED. R. CIV. P. 8 and the obligation to plead with enough sufficiency to withstand a motion to dismiss under FED. R. CIV. P. 12(b)(6) — as it does on the prudential concerns of standing. Rule 8 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure requires only “a short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 8(a)(2). “Such a statement must simply ‘give the defendаnt fair notice of what the plaintiffs claim is and the grounds upon which it rests.’ ”
Swierkiewicz v. Sorema,
Further, Rule 8(e) “authorizes alternative and hypothetical pleading, and eliminates any requirement of consistency of statement, subject to the good-faith obligation in Rule 11.” 5 C. Wright & A. Miller, FEDERAL PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE § 1215 (emphasis added); see also 5 C. Wright & A. Miller, FedeRal Practioe And Procedure § 1282 (2002)(Altern'ative And HypothetiCal Pleading)(“Rule 8(e)(2) affords a party considerable flexibility in framing his pleading by expressly permitting him to set forth his claims or defenses in an alternative or hypothetical manner.”). Thus, alternative and even contradictory allegations may be plead in a complaint.
Assuming the truth of the allegations in the complaint, a finder of fact could conclude that the search occurred
because of
the existing policy,
see
compl. ¶ 104, and, as plaintiffs seem to assert, that the contravention of policy caused an even more egregious injury. Indeed, it is possible that the “standing order” to search Aiken drew its authority from the official search policy and therefore a finder of fact could conclude that the policy itself put into motion the series of events which culminated on January 19, 2000. Plaintiffs may be able to establish that the official policy was the cause of the search even though the defendants who actually conducted the search failed to comply with all of the requirements of the policy.
See Deshawn E. v. Safir,
Here, the allegation that Aiken was searched in violation of his constitutional rights is sufficient to satisfy the injury-in-fact еlement for standing.
Lerman v. Board of Elections,
Finally, the relief sought, if granted, would likely redress future violations which are, in these circumstances, likely to reoccur. “It is the
reality
of the threat of repeated injury that is relevant to the standing inquiry, not the plaintiffs subjective apprehensions.”
Lyons,
*224
Therefore, the Court finds that Aiken has standing to assert the claim for injunc-tive and declaratory relief.
See Risinger v. Concannon,
4. Associational standing
DAI is an “authorized protection аnd advocacy agency under the Protection and Advocacy for Individuals with Mental Illness Amendment Act of 1991, 42 U.S.C. § 10801.” Compl. IF 10. 42 U.S.C. § 10805 authorizes such an organization to bring suit on behalf of its members if it can meet the traditional test of associational standing and sufficiently allege and adequately plead that one of its constituents has suffered an actual concrete injury that would allow it to bring suit in its own right.
Doe v. Stincer,
“An association has standing to bring suit on behalf of its members when: (a) its members would otherwise have standing to sue in their own right; (b) the interests it seeks to protect are germane to the organization’s purpose; and (c) neither the claim asserted nor the relief requested requires the participation of individual members in the lawsuit.”
Hunt v. Washington State Apple Advertising Comm’n,
C. Pullman Abstention
In the Reply brief, defendants argue that the Court should abstain from adjudicating this matter to allow the state court to interpret the search policy. Plaintiffs contend that the defendants are arguing for Pullman abstention which is inapplicable here. The Court agrees with the plaintiffs on this point.
In
Railroad Commission of Texas v. Pullman Co.,
*225
The Second Circuit has held that
Pullman
abstention “may be appropriate when three conditions are met: (1) an unclear state statute is at issue; (2) resolution of the federal issue depends on the interpretation of state law; (3) the law is susceptible to an interpretation by a state court that would avoid or modify the constitutional issue.”
Vermont Right to Life Comm., Inc. v. Sorrell,
Here, defendants do not argue convincingly that these conditions are met. The issue to be resolved is whether the state agency’s policy violates the constitutional rights of admittees into the CDPC facility, and whether the search of Aiken on January 19, 2000 violated his federally protected and constitutional rights. The Court fails to see what difficult and unsettled questions of state law must be resolved before these federal questions can be decided. Therefore, the Court declines to abstain in this matter.
D. ADA and § 504 Claims
Defendants next argue that plaintiffs fail to assert viable ADA and Rehabilitation Act claims. The Court аgrees.
1. ADA & Rehabilitation Act
“Both the Rehabilitation Act and the ADA protect disabled persons from discrimination in the provision of public services.”
Cercpac v. Health & Hosps. Corp.,
The purpose of both of these statutes is “to eliminate discrimination on the basis of disability and to ensure evenhanded treatment between the disabled and the able-bodied.”
Pfrommer,
2. Allegations in the Complaint
The complaint provides no factual basis on which a finder of fact could conclude that the disabled who seek to enter CDPC as a patient, either voluntarily or involuntarily, are treated any differently than an “able-bodied” individual who attempts the same treatment. Plaintiffs do not allege that any individual has been denied any benefit or service on the basis of a disability. Rather (as defendants point out), in their claims for injunctive relief, plaintiffs challenge a general state policy that is applicable to all who enter CDPC, and plaintiffs do not allege that this policy differentiates in its applicability based upon a disability. Plaintiffs’ allegation that the CDPC policy “discriminates against qualified disabled patients, by reason of their disability, by denying their right to be free of unreasonаble searches and seizures which is enjoyed by all other free persons” is nothing more than a legal argument cast as a factual pleading. This is insufficient to oppose the present motion.
See Hirsch,
Even construing the allegations of the complaint liberally, it simply does not state the factual grounds upon which such dis
*226
crimination claims could be based.
See Swierkiewicz,
E. Eleventh Amendment
1. Monetary Claims
Defendants next argue that to the extent that plaintiffs are suing CDPC (a state agency) and the individual defendants in their official capacities for monetary damages, the suit is barred by the Eleventh Amendment. To the extent the argument is applicable to the remaining claims, 8 the Court finds that such claims for monetary damagеs are barred.
The Eleventh Amendment prohibits courts from exercising jurisdiction over lawsuits against a state seeking monetary damages unless it waives sovereign immunity or Congress has expressly and validly abrogated that immunity.
Board of Trustees of Univ. of Alabama v. Garrett,
“It has long been held that Section 1983 does not allow a State to be called into Federal Court to answer in damages for the alleged deprivation of a federal right.”
A.A. v. Board of Edu.,
Further, “[j]ust as the Eleventh Amendment bars claims for relief under
*227
federal law, it acts as a bar to state law claims brought against a state in federal court.”
A.A. v. Board of Edu.,
2. Equitable Relief
Defendants also argue that “absent credible allegations of an ongoing constitutional violation as a direct result of state policy, plaintiffs’ suit [seeking equitable relief] is barred by the Eleventh Amendment.” In this regard, defendants again contend that because plaintiffs affirmatively aver that the individuals who searched Aiken were acting contrary to an official state policy, plaintiffs fаil to allege facts demonstrating that a state policy is in direct conflict with any federal law warranting a federal court’s interference with the daily operations of a state agency.
While it is true that, in general, the Eleventh Amendment serves as a jurisdictional bar to suits against a state agency regardless of the nature of the relief sought, including suits in equity,
Pennhurst,
The Supreme Court has held that “[i]n determining whether the doctrine of
Ex Parte Young
avoids an Eleventh Amendment bar to suit, a court need only conduct a ‘straightforward inquiry into whether [the] complaint alleges an ongoing violation of federal law and seeks relief properly characterized as prospective.’ ”
Verizon Maryland Inc. v. Public Serv. Comm. Of Maryland,
Here, inasmuch as plaintiffs’ minimally allege that CDPC’s search policy caused Aiken’s search,
see
compl. ¶ 104, and imposes a potential violation to all future admittees’ constitutional rights if applied as it was to Aiken, the complaint states sufficient facts to allow the claims for in-junctive and declaratory relief to go forward under the exception enunciated in Ex Parte Young. The prayer for injunctive relief is clearly prospective in nature and therefore falls under the
Ex Parte Young
exception. The prayer for declaratory relief, inasmuch as it seeks a declaration for past wrongs, does not seek to impose a monetary loss upon the state for past conduct. Therefore, “[i]nsofar as the expo
*228
sure of the State is concerned, the prayer for declaratory relief adds nothing to the prayer for injunction.”
Verizon Maryland Inc.,
535 U.S. at-,
F. Personal Involvement of Defendants Nixon, Glebba, Di Blasio, and Cavanaugh
Defendants next contend that plaintiffs have failed to allege sufficient personal involvement on the part of defendants Nixon, Cavanaugh, Di Blasio, and Glebba in any alleged constitutional violation to make out a viable Section 1983 claim against them. Plaintiffs counter that Defendant Cavanaugh’s “standing order” caused Aiken to be searched without probable cause, see compl. ¶¶ 37, 51, 108; that Defendant Nixon promulgated a search policy that authorizes unconstitutional searches, compl. ¶¶ 93 — 104; and that defendants Nixon, Glebba and Di Blasio have supervisory liability for Aiken’s unconstitutional search because they failed to train CDPC staff in constitutionally proper search techniques. Compl. ¶¶ 81-87.
1. Supervisory Liability — Standard
To establish personal liability against a government official for a constitutional violation, a plaintiff must show that “the official, acting under color of state law, caused the deprivation of a federal right.”
Kentucky v. Graham,
“Personal involvement” of a supervisory official may be established by evidence of: (1) direct participation in the alleged constitutional violation; (2) failure to remedy a wrong after learning of it; (3) creation or maintenance of a policy under which unconstitutional violations occurred; (4) gross negligence in managing subordinates who committed the unconstitutional acts; or (5) deliberate indifference by failing to act on information indicating that constitutional violations were occurring.
Colon,
2. Supervisory Liability — Cavanaugh
Inasmuch as the Court must accept as true the allegations contained in the complaint on this Rule 12(b)(6) motion, the Court finds that plaintiffs have stated sufficient personal involvement regarding Cavanaugh based. upon her placing a standing order on Aiken’s file. This order supposedly required that Aiken be searched each time he enters the facility. The cоnduct alleged, if true, constitutes direct participation in the alleged constitutional tort
9
and satisfies the first ground stated in
Colon,
*229 3. Supervisory Liability — Nixon (promulgated policy)
There is also sufficient personal involvement regarding defendant Nixon to satisfy the third ground stated in
Colon,
4. Supervisory Liability — Nixon, Glebba and Di Blasio
Finally, the allegations of Nixon, Glebba and Di Blasio’s personal involvement under a “failure to train” theory, while slim, are sufficient at this stage to withstand the motion. In this regard, the complaint alleges that “Defendants Nixon, Di Blasio and Glebba had a duty to train CDPC staff,” compl. ¶ 84, but “failed to provide such training,” compl. ¶ 85, thereby “set[ting] in motion a series of acts by [the other individual defendants] which they knew or reasonably should have known, would cause [the other individual defendants] to inflict constitutional injury to patients such as Aiken.” Compl. ¶ 86. While the complaint does not use the terminology of gross negligence or deliberate indifference, the allegations put the defendants on notice of the nature of the claim. Implicit in these allegations is the contention that these three defendants had supervisory control over the actors who actually performed the search, yet knowingly failed to prevent a constitutional violation through proper training, and therefore satisfies the fourth and fifth grounds stated in
Colon,
G. Defendants Cavanaugh, Nixon, Glebba, and Di Blasio-Qualified Immunity
Defendants Nixon, Cavanaugh, Di Bla-sio, and Glebba also contend that they are entitled to qualified immunity because the right allegedly violated was not clearly established at the time of the alleged constitutional violation.
1. Qualified Immunity — General
Qualified immunity is available only to defendants in their individual capacities and only on that much of the claims seeking monetary damages.
Lewis v. Cowen,
In analyzing a claim of qualified immunity, the Court must go through the proper sequence of inquiries.
Saucier,
121
*230
S.Ct. at 2155. First, the Court must determine “whether plaintiffs allegations, if true, establish a constitutional violation.”
Hope v. Pelzer,
— U.S. -,
Thus, the Court must first address the central issue of this case, that is, whether the facts alleged and taken in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs could establish a violation of the Fourth Amendment. 11 Only after that is done can the Court address the question of whether that right was clearly established at the time.
2. Fourth Amendment
“[T]he Fourth Amendment vests individuals with the right to be free from ‘unreasonable government intrusions into their legitimate expectations of privacy.’ ”
Chandler v. Miller,
In order to further “[t]he purpose of the fourth amendment [which] is to protect people from arbitrary and oppressive governmental conduct,” Sec. and
Law Enforcement Employees v. Carey,
Here, there is no overt indication of any entanglement with law enforcement arising from the searches. While the complaint alleges that the Safety Officers are peace officers able to institute criminal prosecution, there is no indication of any criminal prosecution arising from the searches or other indica indicating that the searches serve the State’s general interest in law enforcement. Further, the policy has as both its stated and apparent purposes the goal of protecting the welfare of the patients and staff at the psychiatric hospital. Therefore, this appears to be a special needs case and, consequently the Court turns to the reasonableness test to determine whether a violation of the Fourth Amendment is made out.
3. The Fourth Amendment’s Reasonableness Requirement
Of course, “what is reasonable depends on the context within which a search takes place.”
New Jersey v. T.L.O.,
The reasonableness test has been viewed as a two pronged analysis.
See Carey,
*232
On the second prong, the legitimate governmental interests which the search seeks to promote is viewed for reasonableness within the context of the intrusion on the fundamental right to privacy.
Sec. and Law Enforcement Employees v. Carey,
The test, overall, is not capable of precise definition and depends upon many case-specific factors.
Bell,
4. The Fourth Amendment’s Requirement Here
a. Expectation of Privacy
Addressing first the legitimate subjective expectation of privacy of voluntary admittees into a crisis psychiatric ward, the Court finds that the expectation, while certainly not de minimis, is diminished below that of the public in society generally. The admittees, whether having been to such a unit in the past or not, must necessarily expect that they cannot bring illegal substances or weapons into the facility. Further, they must necessarily expect (and indeed, in the case of a voluntary admissions such as Aiken’s, request) that they will be subjected to an array of medical procedures which necessarily involve invasions of bodily and personal integrity.
This diminished expectation of privacy of these admittees is what society is prepared to recognize as reasonable given the societal interest in protecting the health, safety, and welfare of the patients and staff of these units who would be detrimentally affected without sufficient precautionary measures.
See Jennings v. New York State Off. of Mental Health,
b. Governmental Interest
Turning to the second prong, the Court finds that the Government has a legitimate and significant interest in curbing the infiltration of drugs and weapons into the psy-ehiatric units. This interest is no less important than the Government’s interest in preventing contraband into a prison which the Second Circuit and other courts have found justified warrentless strip searches of prison guards and prison visitors suspected of smuggling contraband into these facilities. These cases (with the limited exception articulated in
Carey
and which is discussed at fn. 15,
infra)
have found that, when balancing the diminished expectation of privacy of these individuals against the legitimate penological interest of the Government, a reasonable suspicion standard controls both strip searches and body cavity searches.
See Sec. and Law Enforcement Employees v. Carey,
By the very nature of the services provided here, the Government is dealing with individuals who may present an array of psychological difficulties which will only be exacerbated by illicit substances (the ingestion of which will, in turn, defeat the purposes of the sought-after treatment); who may be especially vulnerable to abuse of these substances; and who may become a safety threat to themselves, other patients, and staff alike if such substances are ingested.. Further, the danger arising from the possession of a weapon by a person seeking psychiatric care is self-evident. Thus, the Government has a significant interest in curtailing the smuggling of drugs and weapons into the facility.
However, the policy allows the Government to search for stolen property. The governmental interest in discovering this material (unless the stolen property is drugs or a weapon of some sort) does not rise to the level associated with the discovery of drugs and weapons and does not sufficiently override even the diminished expectation of privacy justifying a strip or body cavity search without a warrant.
c. Conclusion
The Court finds that given the competing interests, the complained of searches may be reasonable under the Fourth Amendment depending upon the basis for the search, the level of suspicion, and other considerations of reasonableness as addressed above, including the manner and place that the search is conducted. However, questions of fact exist as to whether an articulable suspicion existed for Aiken’s search. Further, assuming that it did, questions of fact exist as to the reasonableness of scope of the particular intrusion to which Aiken was subjected, the manner in *235 which it was conducted, the justification for initiating it, and the place in which it was conducted.
Still further, it is unclear whether any search allowed under the policy would follow the protocols (or lack thereof) employed in Aiken’s search. Finally, a strip search or body cavity search without a warrant for purpose of discovering stolen property which does not pose a risk of harm to the patient or others would not be constitutionally permissible.
Therefore, the Court concludes that a constitutional violation could be made out under the policy. Given the allegations of the complaint asserting that Aiken’s search was conducted without probable cause and in a manner, scope and place which would appear to be unreasonable on the stated facts, and the possibility that this conduct was occasioned by the policy, plaintiffs could establish a constitutional tort. This is sufficient to allow the Court to proceed to the second phase of the qualified immunity inquiry.
5. Clearly established
Next, the Court must “determine whether the right in question was clearly established at the time the violation occurred, that is, whether ‘it would be clear to a reasonable [official] that his conduct was unlawful in the situation he confronted.’ ”
Poe v. Leonard,
Determining first whether the right was clearly established requires an inquiry “undertaken in light of the specific context of the case, not as a broad general proposition. ...”
Saucier,
[f]or a constitutional right to be clearly established, its contours “must be sufficiently clear that a reasonable official would understand that what he is doing violates that right. This is not to say that an official action is protected by qualified immunity unless the very action in question has previously been held unlawful, but it is to say that in the light of pre-existing law the unlawfulness must be apparent.”
Hope,
— U.S. at -,
The qualified immunity question for these defendants is not simply whether the Fourth Amendment protects citizens from strip searches and body cavity searches without a reasonable suspicion to believe that the person being searched possessed a weapon or contraband, but rather whether a reasonable state official working in a psychiatric center would know that what the defendant is accused of doing was unlawful. Three factors generally determine whether a right is clearly established: (1) whether the right in question was defined with reasonable specificity; (2) whether the decisional law of the Supreme Court and the applicable circuit court support the existence of the right in question; and (3) whether under preexisting law a reasonable defendant official would have understood that his or her acts were unlawful.
Shechter v. Comptroller of City of New York,
Here, there are no cases from the Supreme Court or the circuit courts directly on point.
17
The issue is novel, at least
*236
from a qualified immunity perspective. In
Hope,
the Supreme Court explained that “officials can still be on notice that their conduct violates established law even in novel factual circumstances” when “the state of the law [at the time of the state action] gave respondents fair warning that their alleged treatment of [the plaintiff] was unconstitutional.”
Hope,
— U.S. at -,
Situations governing strip and body cavity searches of prison visitors are, in the Court’s opinion, the most fundamentally similar to the instant case. In those circumstances, the Second Circuit has ruled that, as early as 1989, strip searches of prison visitors without a reasonable suspicion violated clearly established law.
Var-rone,
6. Defendants’ entitlement to Qualified Immunity
a). Cavanaugh
Inasmuch as defendant Cavanaugh 'is alleged to have ordered the search of Aiken without a reasonable
*237
suspicion that he possessed weapons or contraband, qualified immunity must be denied to her at this stage of the proceedings.
20
Such conduct violates the clearly defined rights which a reasonable competent state official should have been aware. Whether her actions were objectively reasonable under the circumstances cannot be determined at this stage.
See Martinez v. Simonetti,
b). Nixon — Promulgation of Policy
Next, the Court turns to the claim against Nixon which is premised upon the promulgation of the instant policy. The Court concludes that he is entitled to qualified immunity on this claim. In this regard, it was not clearly established that a search conducted in accordance with CDPC’s policy violated the searchee’s constitutional rights. Indeed, based upon the fundamentally similar situation of searches of prison visitors, a reasonably competent state official would not have reason to believe that a search conducted upon individualized reasonable suspicion that the prospective admittee possessed a weapon or drugs violated the searchee’s constitutional rights.
As above indicated, the policy does not allow for the contested searches without individualized suspicion. Further, CDPC’s search policy specifically provides that the level of intrusion into an admittee’s privacy rights must be based upon the degree of individualized suspicion, and that the level of intrusion must be carefully tailored to address each person’s individual situation. 21 A reasonable state official working for CDPC could assume that the policy’s requirement that: (1) all searches required a “potential risk and/or reasonable possibility that the patient possesses” a weapon or contraband, combined with (2) the provision that strip searches are justified “on rare occasion, based on clinical judgement”, and (3) that body cavity searches are justified only “upon reasonable belief and to prevent serious harm to themselves,” meant that the such searches were allowed only upon possession of reasonable *238 suspicion and/or probable cause to believe that the person possessed contraband (drugs) or a weapon. Further, the policy provides for safeguards addressed to the scope, nature, and conduct of the search.
Certainly, the ambiguity arising from the balance between a person’s reasonable expectations of privacy when voluntarily admitting himself into a psychiatric crisis unit and the legitimate governmental interest in keeping illicit drugs and weapons out of the crisis unit as discussed above, combined with the case law that allows strip and body cavity searches of prison visitors suspected of possessing contraband, renders the law in this area far from clear. 22
Turning to the issue of a strip search or body cavity search for stolen property (unless the stolen property was a weapon or drugs), even assuming the law was clearly established that such searches would be unjustified under the Fourth Amendment even with reasonable suspicion, the promulgation of the instant policy would not be objectively unreasonable.
23
Under the CDPC’s policy, in order to conduct
any
strip search or body cavity search, there first must be a “clinical decision” that the search is necessary and only then under the supervision of a physician. Reasonably competent state officials in Nixon’s position could certainly conclude that such a
proviso
excluded the possibility of strip or body cavity searches for stolen property of an innocuous nature.
See Poe v. Leonard,
Thus, the Court concludes that Nixon is entitled to qualified immunity on this claim.
d.) Nixon, Di Blasio & Glebba — Failure to Train
Turning the failure to train claims аgainst Nixon, Di Blasio and Glebba, the complaint asserts what seems to be two *239 separate theories: 1) that these defendants did not train the staff to follow the procedures in the policy; and, 2) that they did not train the staff to follow “lawful rules and procedures for searching patients” other than in the CDPC policy. Compl. ¶ 82, see compl. ¶¶ 81-86. 24
The Court finds that these defendants are entitled to qualified immunity on the theory that they failed to train staff on rules and procedures for searching patients other than those contained in the CDPC policy. For the reasons discussed above, a reasonably competent state official in each defendant’s respective position would not know that the failure to train the staff in policies and practices other than contained in the official policy violated clearly established law.
With regard to the theory that the defendants are liable for failing to train staff to comply with the instant policy and prevent transgressions such as occurred with regard to Aiken’s search, the existence of disputed material facts at this stage of the litigation prevents the Court from granting qualified immunity. It is unclear at this stage whether each defendant had such a duty; whether the staff received such training; and whether any of the defendants had notice that the staff would deviate from the policy in a constitutionally material respect.
See Poe,
H. ASSAULT AND BATTERY CLAIM AGAINST DEFENDANT CAVANAUGH
The Second Amended Complaint alleges a state law cause of action against Defendant Cavanaugh sounding in assault and battery. Defendants argue that this claim must be dismissed because it is untimely and without merit.
I. Statute of Limitations
Under New York State law there is a one year statute of limitations for a claim of assault ' and battery. N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 215(3). According to the defendants, the claim against Cavanaugh was added on October 1, 2001, three years after she allegedly placed a note in plaintiff Aiken’s crisis file and approximately twenty-two months after the alleged unlawful search. Defendants further assert that the claim does not relate back to the filing of either prior complaint under Fed. R. Civ. PRO. 15, and therefore must be dismissed. Plaintiffs assert that the statute of limitations is equitably tolled because Cavanaugh destroyed her written order and thereby “fraudulently concealed her wrongful conduct, and her personal involvement.” Plaintiffs argue that “therefore Aiken did not know he had a cause of action against Cavanaugh. As a result, plaintiff Aiken did not learn of thе facts regarding Cava-naugh’s involvement until Cavanaugh was deposed as a non-party witness on July 12, *240 2001.” Plaintiffs further contend that they need discovery to establish the basis for equitable tolling.
The doctrine of equitable tolling allows a plaintiff to file his claim outside of the applicable statute of limitations if, because of some action on a defendant’s part, the plaintiff was unaware that the cause of action existed.
Long v. Frank,
Based upon the factual disputes that underlie the question of whether any of these equitable doctrines should apply, the motion is denied.
2. Merits of “assault & battery claim.”
Defendants also argue that the assault and battery claim is without merit and should be dismissed. In this regard, defendants argue that the mere placing of a note in a patient’s emergency crisis folder by a nursing supervisor ordering that he be searched carefully upon admission does not, as a matter of law, constitute an assault or battery in New York. Furthermore, defendants argue that plaintiffs’ complaint is wholly devoid of any allegations that Cavanaugh committed an overt act encouraging or aiding and abetting in the alleged unlawful search of Aiken on January 19, 2000. Plaintiffs assert that Cavanaugh issued the order without regard to whether there was lawful basis to do so. Compl. ¶¶ 32-38. Plaintiff further contend that “Aiken learned of the order, and was placed in fear of a humiliating search.” Compl. ¶¶ 44-45.
It is possible on this record that the plaintiffs could establish that Cavanaugh’s “standing order” constituted an intentional or deliberate act directed at causing harm which would rise to the level of actionable conduct in relation to the subject assault.
See Crespi v. Ihrig,
I. Absolute Immunity as to Plaintiffs’ Negligence Claim.
Plaintiffs also bring a common law negligence action against defendants Nixon, Glebba, and Di Blasio for their alleged negligent failure to train CDPC employees. Defendants contend that the claim must be dismissed as matter of law.
Under New York State law, “when official action involves the use of discretion, the officer is not liable for the injurious consequences of that action even if resulting from negligence or malice.”
Tango v. Tulevech,
IV. CONCLUSION
For the reasons discussed above, defendants’ motion is granted in part and denied in part. In this regard:
The claims brought under Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act, 42 U.S.C. § 12101, et seq. and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 are DISMISSED;
All claims brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and state common law seeking monetary damages against the State of New York (including claims against the Capital District Psychiatric Center and the individual defendants in their official capacities) are DISMISSED;
Defendant Nixon is granted qualified immunity on any claim asserting personal liability against him on the ground that he promulgated the Capital District Psychiatric Center’s search policy; and
Defendants Nixon, Di Blasio and Glebba are granted qualified immunity on any claims premised on the theory that they are individually liable for failing to train staff on rules and procedures for searching patients other than those contained in the CDPC policy.
The motion is, in all other respects, DENIED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. On October 1, 2001, plaintiffs filed their Second Amended Complaint ("complaint”) in the case at bar which alleges several federal and state law claims against CDPC and various officials of CDPC as indicated above.
. With regard to deviations from the search policy, the complaint alleges that Aiken's strip search was conducted in a public rest room and in a manner that was degrading, humiliating, and unreasonable. Compl. ¶¶ 51-57. Further, the complaint alleges that the staff never sought Aiken's permission for the search, nеver notified him of the reason for the search, never received authorization for the search from the program director, had no probable cause for the search, and the search was not conducted under the supervision of a physician or resident physician. Compl. ¶¶ 65-75.
. Injunctive relief is sought against all defendants except defendant Cavanaugh, who no longer works at CDPC.
. See e.g. Compl. ¶ 65 ("Defendants failed to comply with the written Search Policy set forth in the CDPC Clinical Policy Manual”); Compl. ¶ 66 ("Defendants failed to comply with the written Search Policy set forth in the CDPC Crisis Care Program Manual.”); Compl. ¶¶ 71-75 (enumerating the numerous ways in which these defendants allegedly violated the official policy).
. The complaint asserts that: Aiken has a serious and persistent mental illness. (¶ 6); he has repeatedly been admitted to CDPC for inpatient care and treatment. (¶ 7); due to his serious, persistent mental illness he is likely to be a patient at CDPC again. (¶ 8); he has a mental condition which requires emergency mental health care frequently, and without such care he is at great risk of harm. (¶ 46); and, CDPC plays a gatekeeper function for emergency mental health care in Albany County, where Aiken lives in that everyone in Albany County who needs evaluation for emergency medical care first goes, or is taken by the police or mental health crisis team, to the CDPC crisis services. (¶ 114).
. The Second Circuit has directed that on a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, the determination of whether Article III standing exists must comport with the manner and degree of evidence required at that stage of the litigation.
Ler-man,
. In fact, the policy itself indicates that it is applicable to visitors who, the Court must presume, are not necessarily disabled.
. Inasmuch as the ADA and Rehabilitation Act claims are dismissed, the Court does not embark on an analysis of the viability of such claims under the Second Circuit's recent holding in
Garcia v. S.U.N.T. Health Sciences Center of Brooklyn,
. A genuine question of material fact exists as to whether the acts of Defendant Bellinger-Alleman and the employees who conducted the search (DeSeve, Harper, and Monte) constituted an intervening event breaking the chain of causation back to Cavanaugh's standing order (as the defendant asserts). At this stage, it is unknown precisely what the "standing order” stated or even whether the persons who conducted the search read the order so the Court cannot resolve the inherently factual issue of whether the standing order set into motion the January 19, 2000 search. Inasmuch as the Court’s function is to determine only whether issues exists upon which plaintiffs might prevail, the Court must conclude that plaintiffs might present facts establishing this causal conneсtion exits.
. In
Koch,
the Second Circuit stated that "[a]lthough we normally apply this two-step test, where we are convinced that the purported constitutional right violated is not 'clearly established,’ we retain the discretion to refrain from determining whether, under the first step of the test, a constitutional right was violated at all.”
. Plaintiffs’ complaint casts the constitutional violation as flowing from both the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments. Plaintiffs argue that a Fourth Amendment analysis applies, and therefore the Court proceeds under that Amendment.
See County of Sacramento
v.
Lewis,
. In
Von Raab,
the Court held that when such special governmental needs were present "it is necessary to balance the individual's privacy expectations against the Govern-menl's interests to determine whether it is impractical to require a warrant or some level of individualized suspicion in the particular context.”
. In dicta in Jennings, District Judge Goettel stated:
Another [Security Hospital Treatment Assistant ("SHTA”) ] duty which potentially implicates patient privacy is frisks. It appears that frisks are performed routinely at [Mid-Hudson Psychiatric Center ("MHPC”) ]. In general, a frisk, which is performed by an SHTA either upon the patient’s admission to the facility or on the orders of a physician, is limited to the arms and legs and an examination of the contents of the patient’s pockets which the patient has emptied. In addition, a patient can be strip searched. These are conducted by a physician although in the presence of the SHTA who provides security. It is hospital policy to have an SHTA of the same gender perform all body searches no matter how invasive although we do not agree that the limited frisk violates the patients’ privacy in any manner.
Jennings,
In another part of this same decision, District Judge Goettel wrote:
The patients at [MHPC] are not convicted criminals but instead are there as a result of civil commitments. Thus, their right to privacy may not be abrogated by virtue of their confinement in a state-run facility unlike a prison inmate who has forfeited some rights in repayment to society. The patients at [MHPC] are just that, patients. They are vulnerable and mentally ill. Basic decency demands that their privacy be respected to whatever degree feasible. In addition, in this Circuit, even prison inmates are accorded some degree of privacy.
Id. at 384.
. In his dissent in
Bell v. Wolfish,
. The Carey Court concluded that given the competing interests at stake, "warrantless strip searches of correction officers within correctional facilities are not per se violative of the fourth and fourteenth amendments of the Constitution,” Sec. and Law Enforcement Employees v. Carey, 737 F.2d at 203, and thus concluded that "strip searches of сorrection officers, under certain circumstances, may be reasonable in the absence of warrants issued on the basis of probable cause.” Id. The Court further determined that, when balancing the diminished expectation of privacy against the legitimate governmental interest at stake, "a reasonable suspicion standard should govern strip searches of correction officers working in correctional facilities.” Id. at 204.
On the issue of visual body cavity searches, however, the Carey Court held such searches present a much greater affront to personal dignity and privacy than do strip searches and serve a "severely diminished” governmental interest. Id. at 207-08. The Court concluded that given the balance of interests, visual body cavity searches required a warrant from a judicial officer based upon probable cause. Id. at 208.
This differentiation between the levels of suspicion for strip searches and for visual body cavity searches, however, appears to have been somewhat minimized two years later in the case of
Weber v. Dell,
[T]he Fourth Amendment precludes prison officials from peforming strip/body cavity searches of arrestees charged with misdemeanors or other minor offenses unless the officials have a reasonable suspicion that the arrestee is concealing weapons or other contraband based on the crime charged, thе particular characteristics of the arrestee, and/or the circumstances of the arrest.
Id.
at 802 (emphasis added). The nearly similar treatment of these two types of searches has been followed by the Second Circuit since
Weber
with regard to pretrial detainees, at least inasmuch as the body cavity searches are visual and "non-intrusive.”
See Shain v. Ellison,
This appeal requires us to determine whether it was clearly established in July 1995 that corrections officers in a local correctional facility could not perform a strip search including a non-intrusive examination of body cavities on an individual ar *234 raigned on misdemeanor charges unless the officers had reasonable suspicion that the individual possessed contraband or weapons. We hold that after this court's decisions in Wachtler v. County of Herkimer,35 F.3d 77 (2d Cir.1994), Walsh v. Franco,849 F.2d 66 (2d Cir.1988), and Weber v. Dell,804 F.2d 796 (2d Cir.1986), no law enforcement officer reasonably could have believed that it was permissible to perform such a search absent individualized reasonable suspicion.
. In
Woods,
the First Circuit used the term “strip search” but the factual recitation of the search indicates that a visual body cavity search was performed of the searchees.
. Ironically, both sides cite to the
Jennings
decision in support of their respective positions on whether the right in issue was clearly established.
See Jennings v. New York State Off. of Mental Health,
. The Second Circuit has long recognized the rule that even when no case is directly on point, the law can still be clearly established if decision in other yet similar areas "clearly foreshadow” a particular ruling on the issue.
. The prisoner cases cited by the plaintiffs,
Shain v. Ellison,
. At this stage, it is unclear what was the content or basis of the "standing order” issued by defendant Cavanaugh. It is possible that plaintiffs could establish facts demonstrating that Cavanaugh ordered her subordinates to search Aiken regardless of individualized suspicion, or perhaps even for some malicious personal motive. Given the constellation of factual possibilities surrounding this "standing order” which might establish that Cavanaugh ordered a strip search in contravention of the clearest Fourth Amendment dictates, qualified immunity is improper at this time for her.
. Contrary to plaintiffs' assertion that the policy does not require a reasonable suspicion basis to conduct a search or a probable cause basis for a body cavity search, the reverse is true. The policy provides that the decision to search a patient (involving any search) is based upon "a determination that there exists potential risk and/or reasonable possibility that the patient possesses an item restricted by his or her treatment team, an item considered to be contraband by local, state, or federal law, or an item that is stolen." The policy further provides that "on rare occasion, based on clinical judgement, a patient will be asked to submit to a body search and to disrobe down to their undergarments for thе search.... [And], [u]pon reasonable belief and to prevent serious harm to themselves, a body cavity search” may be conducted. Under New York law, “probable cause” and "reasonable cause” are used interchangeably in many situations.
See e.g. Post v. Elser,
. Even accepting the well reasoned standard of
Carey,
the circumstances here are different in many respects. The searches are not of employees at prisons conducted for purposes of preventing the patently criminal infiltration of contraband into the prison, but rather at a mental health facility for the purpose of protecting the well being of the patient patients and staff. The searches are conducted pursuant to a policy that requires varying levels of individualized suspicion depending upon the level of intrusiveness occasioned by each particular search. The policy mandates the circumstances of a search (at least according to the terms of the policy) which, to a reasonable official based upon state of the law at the time, would appear reasonable. For instance, the more intrusive searches are, at least according to the policy, conducted under the supervision of a physician in a setting similar to that used in medical рrocedures.
See Schmerber v. California,
. While the question of objective reasonableness is generally not susceptible to resolution on a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, here, at least with regard to the claim as Nixon based upon the promulgation of the policy, there exists no factual dispute. The Court assumes that Nixon did, in fact, promulgate this policy.
. These defendants are not alleged to have had any direct involvement in the search of Aiken or of any search occurring in contravention of the stated policy, but instead are alleged to have supervisory liability only as a direct result of application of the search policy-
. Plaintiffs' argument that Aiken learned of the order which in turn placed him in fear of repeated searches appears to be contrary to their argument for equitable tolling where they assert that he did not know about it after the action was sued. However, in an effort to afford the plaintiffs the benefits of alternative pleading, the claim will be allowed to stand at this juncture of the case.
. Mental Hygiene Law § 7.23(a) grants the commissioner of mental health the authority "to establish such programs of training and education related to mental illness as he shall deem desirable.” (Emphasis added). Mental Hygiene Law § 7.23(b) states that the director of an Office of Mental Health facility "with the approval of the commissioner of mental health may establish and supervise training and education programs for employees." (Emphasis added).
