MEMORANDUM
TABLE OF CONTENTS
I. INTRODUCTION 486
*436 II. BACKGROUND...........................................................437
A. Procedural History.....................................................437
B. Factual Background....................................................438
1. Penny Allison......................................................438
2. Zoran Hocevar.....................................................439
3. Plaintiff Class......................................................439
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW .................................................440
IV. DISCUSSION.............................................................440
A. Legal Standard for Assessing the Constitutionality of Custodial Strip
Searches Under the Fourth Amendment................................440
1. Fourth Amendment Rights Generally.................................440
2. Fourth Amendment Rights in Custodial Facilities.......................442
3. Bell Standard for Custodial Strip Searches ............................443
B. Defendant’s Arguments that Bell No Longer Applies.......................444
1. Inmates’ Fourth Amendment Rights in Custodial Facilities Under
Hudson v. Palmer................................................444
2. The Turner v. Safley Standard of Review for Prison Regulations.........446
C. The Constitutionality of Suspicionless Arrestee Strip Searches in Custodi-
al Facilities .........................................................448
1. The Constitutionality of Contact Visit Strip Searches Under Bell v.
Wolfish.........................................................449
2. Circuit Court Rulings on Arrestee Strip Searches in Custodial
Facilities........................................................451
a. The Invasion of Rights that the Search Entails.....................452
b. The Need for the Particular Search...............................454
c. Reasonableness and Reasonable Suspicion Standard................455
3. Powell v. Barrett and Defendant’s Powell-Based Arguments.............456
a. The Source of the Reasonable Suspicion Standard Identified by
Powell......................................................457
b. Powell’s Rejection of the Misdemeanor-Felony Distinction and
the Distinction between Contact Visit Strip Searches and Arrestee Strip Searches.......................................459
c. Fourth Amendment Analysis Absent a Factual Record..............461
D. Plaintiffs’ Fourth Amendment Claims.....................................462
VI. CONCLUSION............................................................463
I. INTRODUCTION
In this litigation, plaintiffs, detained arrestees at custodial facilities operated by defendant The GEO Group, Inc. (“GEO”), challenge the legality of strip searches conducted by defendants. GEO and John Does 1 — 100.
1
Plaintiffs allege that the searches were performed pursuant to a blanket policy of strip searching all arrestees and that such a policy violates the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States. This Memorandum addresses the issues presented by defendant GEO’s Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings which seeks to dismiss Counts I, II, and III of plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint, those that allege Fourth Amendment violations, for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted.
2
*437
Plaintiffs’ cause of action is based on
Bell v. Wolfish,
Defendant’s Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings advances three alternative grounds for dismissal. First, defendant argues that plaintiffs’ Fourth Amendment claims must fail because, under
Hudson v. Palmer,
Although the issues before the court have been addressed by many circuit courts, the Third Circuit has never ruled on the constitutionality of strip searches in detention facilities. This Court must, therefore, look to other circuits for persuasive authority. For the reasons stated in this Memorandum, the Court rejects defendant’s Hudson and Turner arguments and declines to adopt the Eleventh Circuit’s holding in Powell. This Court concludes that under the persuasive authority of nine courts of appeals, plaintiffs have stated a claim for relief. Accordingly, defendant’s Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings must be denied.
II. BACKGROUND
A. Procedural History
Plaintiffs commenced this action by filing a Complaint against GEO and John Does 1-100 in their official and individual capacities on January 30, 2008. On March 28, 2008, plaintiffs filed an Amended Com *438 plaint against the same defendants. The Amended Complaint asserts the following causes of action against all defendants:
Count I: Monetary damages for Fourth Amendment violations pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983
Count II: Demand for declaratory judgment as to Fourth Amendment violations
Count III: Demand for preliminary and permanent injunction as to Fourth Amendment violations Count IV: Battery CountV: Negligence Count VI: Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress
Count VII: Negligent Infliction of Emotional Distress
On May 2, 2008, GEO filed an unopposed Motion to Dismiss Counts IV, VI, and VII of Plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint. By Order dated May 30, 2008, the Court dismissed those Counts with prejudice. Defendant’s motion to dismiss did not challenge any of plaintiffs’ federal claims (Counts I — III) or plaintiffs’ state law negligence claim (Count V). On June 19, 2008, GEO filed an Answer to the remaining Counts of plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint, and the parties proceeded to conduct discovery.
On September 18, 2008, soon after the issuance of
Powell v. Barrett,
B. Factual Background 4
GEO, a Florida corporation, manages numerous correctional, detention, mental health, and residential treatment facilities in the United States (“Facilities”), including the George W. Hill Correctional Facility in Thornton, Pennsylvania (“Hill Facility”). (Am. Compl. ¶¶ 15-16, 26, 36.) Plaintiffs aver that in operating its Facilities, defendant has a written or de facto policy of strip searching “all individuals placed into the custody of the Facilities” including recently arrested individuals and pretrial detainees. (Id. ¶ 22.) The searches are allegedly conducted regardless of the existence of reasonable suspicion or probable cause that any particular individual is carrying weapons or contraband on his person. (Id. ¶¶ 22-23.)
Plaintiffs Penny Allison (“Allison”) and Zoran Hocevar (“Hocevar”) each allege that they were subjected to strip searches that were not based on reasonable suspicion. Plaintiffs further allege that a class of similarly situated individuals were subjected to strip searches under similar circumstances, in accordance with the blanket policy and without reasonable suspicion. (Id. ¶¶ 23, 45.) The facts, as they pertain to each named plaintiff and the putative plaintiff class, are as follows.
1. Penny Allison
Plaintiff Allison was arrested -and charged with driving under the influence (“DUI”) in November 2005. (Am. Compl. ¶ 25.) In lieu of formal prosecution, Allison was placed in a pretrial diversion program known as Accelerated Rehabilitative *439 Disposition (“ARD”). (Id.) In or around July 2006, Allison failed to appear for one of her ARD-related court dates, and a bench warrant issued. (Id. ¶¶ 25-26.)
On July 25, 2006, police officers in Springfield, Pennsylvania stopped Allison for driving with an expired registration sticker and arrested her on the outstanding bench warrant. (Id. ¶ 26.) Following arrest, Allison was transferred to the Hill Facility. (Id.) As part of the intake process, a female officer escorted Allison to a private room and instructed her to remove her clothing, squat, and cough. (Id. ¶ 27.) Allison remained in custody for eight days. (Id. ¶¶ 27-28.) At Allison’s next court date, her attorney explained her failure to appear at the earlier court date, and the court ordered that she be released from detention at the Hill Facility. (Id. ¶ 28.)
In or around December 2007, Allison pled guilty to a second DUI charge and was sentenced to fifteen weekends of incarceration. At the time the Amended Complaint was filed, Allison had begun serving her sentence by reporting each weekend to the Hill Facility. On each occasion, Allison was ushered into a room along with all of the other female weekend inmates. One by one, a corrections officer strip searched each inmate in front of the others. (Id. ¶ 29.)
2. Zoran Hocevar
In or around March 2005, Plaintiff Hocevar was arrested on charges arising out of a domestic dispute. All but one of the related charges were dismissed some time between March 2005 and June 2006. 5 Thinking that all of the charges had been resolved, Hocevar mistakenly failed to appear for a scheduled court date in June 2006. A bench warrant issued. (Am. Compl. ¶ 38.)
Police officers in Montgomery County stopped Hocevar’s vehicle in July 2007. (Id. ¶ 34.) Upon discovering the outstanding bench warrant, the officers took Hocevar into custody and transported him to the Hill Facility. (Id.) During his admission to the Hill Facility, Hocevar was strip searched in the presence of other individuals. (Id.)
3. Plaintiff Class
Plaintiffs define the proposed class as:
All persons who have been or will be placed into the custody of one or more of the Facilities after being detained for misdemeanors, summary offenses, or other crimes that do not involve the possession or distribution of drugs, possession of weapons, or violent felonies, and who were or will be strip searched upon their admission into one or more of the Facilities pursuant to Defendants’ ... uniform practice and procedure of strip searching all pre-trial detainees who enter the Facilities, regardless of the crime or violation for which they are detained, and without making the legally required determination of whether reasonable suspicion exists to justify a strip search.
(Am. Compl. ¶¶ 1, 45.) The salient features of the putative class, for the purposes of ruling on the instant motion are as follows. First, class plaintiffs are minor offenders and/or non-violent, non-drug offenders. Second, class plaintiffs are detained arrestees or pretrial detainees. Finally, class plaintiffs are subjected to strip searches which are conducted pursuant to a blanket policy and lack individualized reasonable suspicion. (Id. ¶¶ 22-23.) The *440 Court also notes that plaintiffs do not describe the nature of the strip searches mandated by the blanket policy or specify whether the policy requires the inspection of body cavities.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
A motion for judgment on the pleadings under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(c) is analyzed under the same standard as a motion to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6).
See Shelly v. Johns-Manville Corp., 798
F.2d 93, 97 n. 4 (3d Cir.1986):
Regalbuto v. City of Phila.,
A motion for judgment on the pleadings, like a motion to dismiss, tests the legal sufficiency of a claim in light of the facts pled in the complaint. To survive such a motion, “a civil plaintiff must allege facts that ‘raise a right to relief above the speculative level
Victaulic Co. v. Tieman,
IV. DISCUSSION
Defendant’s three grounds for dismissal implicate the legal standard to be applied to plaintiffs’ claims and the application of that standard. The Court begins by providing a brief summary of relevant Fourth Amendment principles and then addresses each of defendant’s arguments in turn.
A. Legal Standard for Assessing the Constitutionality of Custodial Strip Searches Under the Fourth Amendment
1. Fourth Amendment Rights Generally
The fundamental purpose of the Fourth Amendment is to “safeguard the privacy and security of individuals against arbitrary invasions” at the hands of the government.
Camara v. Mun. Ct. of S.F.,
In broad terms, the Fourth Amendment has two areas of application. The first, and more common, context involves the individualized search of a person or his belongings, typically in relation to a criminal investigation. In such cases, “the reasonableness standard usually requires, at a minimum, that the facts upon which an intrusion is based be capable of measurement against ‘an objective standard,’ whether this be probable cause or a less stringent test.”
Prouse,
The second context involves suspicion-less searches conducted pursuant to search policies. “In [some] situations ... the balance of interests precludes insistence upon ‘some quantum of individualized suspicion.’”
Prouse,
By virtue of plaintiffs’ status as detained arrestees, there are two categories under which the challenged strip searches might fall — searches incident to arrest or searches in detention facilities. The parties, by pleading and motion, have only disputed the law governing the latter category. The scope of searches incident to arrest remains relevant, however, for determining what is reasonable in the arrestee context.
In a quartet of cases, the Supreme Court discussed the extent of searches incident to lawful arrest. In
United States v. Robinson,
No Supreme Court case discusses the constitutionality of strip searches incident to arrest, which appear to fall between the “full searches” considered by
Robinson
and the “intrusions beyond the body’s surface” considered by
Schmerber.
Nevertheless, several circuit courts have ruled that strip searches are not included in the category of permissible searches incident to arrest.
Fuller v. M.G. Jewelry,
2. Fourth Amendment Rights in Custodial Facilities
Detention and incarceration necessarily require certain limitations on otherwise protected civil liberties.
Hudson v. Palmer,
Courts necessarily play a “limited role” in the administration of detention facilities.
Block v. Rutherford,
In affording due deference to prison administrators, courts must not, however, abdicate their duty to protect individuals from government overreaching. “[P]risons are not beyond the reach of the Constitution,”
Hudson,
3. Bell Standard for Custodial Strip Searches
In
Bell v. Wolfish,
The Fourth Amendment standard that
Bell
articulated for custodial strip searches is not unique to
Bell.
The Court affirmed the same balancing approach that it had applied in other Fourth Amendment contexts.
Delaware v. Prouse,
B. Defendant’s Arguments that Bell No Longer Applies
Since
Bell,
most courts faced with challenges to the constitutionality of custodial strip searches have relied on the standard articulated in
Bell. See, e.g., Powell v. Barrett,
1. Inmates’ Fourth Amendment Rights in Custodial Facilities Under Hudson v. Palmer
The first question before the Court is whether persons who are detained or incarcerated in custodial facilities enjoy the protection of the Fourth Amendment at all. For the contact visit strip searches of pretrial detainees in
Bell,
the Supreme Court “assume[d without deciding] that inmates, both convicted prisoners and pretrial detainees, retain some Fourth Amendment rights upon commitment to a corrections facility.”
Bell,
In
Hudson,
the Court considered a cell search challenged by a convicted inmate and questioned whether the inmate had a reasonable expectation of privacy in his cell which would entitle him to Fourth Amendment rights.
Hudson,
The majority of circuit courts that have considered the relationship between
Hudson
and
Bell
have limited
Hudson
to cell searches and have held, either explicitly or implicitly, that
Hudson
did not disturb Bell’s Fourth Amendment approach to analyzing the constitutionality of strip searches conducted in custodial settings.
See Elliott v. Lynn,
*446 Although none of the cases cited above explain the Bell-Hudson relationship in much detail, the vast majority clearly distinguish Hudson from Bell and support the continuing validity of Bell with regard to the constitutionality of custodial strip searches. This Court agrees with that distinction. Strip searches of the body, such as those at issue in Bell, inflict a much greater invasion of privacy than searches of prison cells. This fact suggests that the Hudson Court would not overrule, sub silentio, Bell’s implied assumption that pretrial detainees have a reasonable expectation of privacy with regard to their own bodies. Although the Supreme Court’s Bell holding is based on an assumption that the Fourth Amendment governs strip searches in custodial facilities, that assumption survives Hudson and controls the Court’s review of plaintiffs’ claims.
In reaching this conclusion, the Court is particularly mindful of the Supreme Court’s caution in approaching claims that the Fourth Amendment is inapplicable in a given context,
Hudson,
2. The Turner v. Sañey Standard of Review for Prison Regulations
Defendant next argues that this Court should employ the standard articulated in
Turner v. Safley,
The
Turner
plaintiffs, inmates of a correctional institution in Missouri, challenged certain prison regulations under the First and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution.
Turner,
Turner,
and the Supreme Court eases which apply
Turner,
concern First and Fourteenth Amendment challenges to prison regulations, not Fourth Amendment challenges.
Overton v. Bazzetta,
Although a number of courts, including most courts of appeals, have ruled on the constitutionality of strip searches in custodial facilities, defendant has cited no case which applies the Turner test instead of the Bell test in circumstances similar to those at bar involving arrestees. In fact, only two courts of appeals, the Second and Ninth Circuits, have even addressed Turner ’s applicability to custodial strip search cases. This Court is not persuaded by the analysis of those circuits.
The Ninth Circuit, in
Michenfelder v. Sumner,
The Second Circuit applies both
Bell
and
Turner
to claims involving custodial strip searches but differentiates based on the type of facility. It restricts
Turner
to cases involving prison regulations,
Iqbal v. Hasty,
Ultimately, defendant’s
Turner
argument fails for the same reason that defendant’s
Hudson
argument failed. Like
Hudson. Turner
cited
Bell
with approval and did not at any point suggest that
Bell’s
approach to Fourth Amendment claims should no longer be controlling law.
Turner,
C. The Constitutionality of Suspicionless Arrestee Strip Searches in Custodial Facilities
Having determined that
Bell’s
Fourth Amendment standard is the appropriate test by which to measure the viability of plaintiffs’ claims, the Court now turns to the constitutionality of suspicionless arrestee strip searches under that standard. Prior to the issuance of
Powell v. Barrett,
After conducting a thorough review of Bell, the circuit court cases following Bell, and Powell, this Court is unconvinced by the reasoning of the Eleventh Circuit and rejects defendant’s argument that plaintiffs have failed to state a claim under Bell and its progeny. To fully explain its rejection of the Powell opinion, this Court must describe, at some length, the Supreme Court’s holding in Bell and the reasoning of the circuit opinions which followed Bell.
1. The Constitutionality of Contact Visit Strip Searches Under Bell v. Wolfish
The
Bell
opinion primarily concerns the Due Process right “to be free from punishment” during pretrial detention and the Supreme Court’s assessment of whether particular prison practices constitute punishment.
Bell,
Bell
began as a class action petition
10
which challenged certain conditions of confinement at the Metropolitan Correctional Center (MCC), a custodial facility in New York City.
Bell,
At trial on the constitutionality of the MCC’s contact visit strip searches, the district court approved the blanket policy with regard to the observation of inmates’ naked bodies but held that it was unconstitutional to the extent that it authorized visual body cavity searches absent proba
*450
ble cause to believe that the inmate was concealing contraband.
United States ex rel. Wolfish v. Levi,
The Court began its analysis of the strip search issue by admitting that “this practice instinctively gives us the most pause.”
Bell,
With regard to the scope of the intrusion, the Bell Court described the searches as follows: “If the inmate is a male, he must lift his genitals and bend over to spread his buttocks for visual inspection. The vaginal and anal cavities of female inmates also are visually inspected. The inmate is not touched by security personnel at any time during the visual search
procedure.”
Bell,
On the other side of the equation were the needs of the institution. The Court characterized detention facilities as “unique place[s] fraught with serious security dangers” and described the risks posed by the smuggling of money, drugs, and weapons.
Bell,
Despite the highly intrusive nature of the searches, the Court found that the inmates’ privacy interests were outweighed by the “significant and legitimate security interests of the institution” and
*451
upheld the MCC’s contact visit strip search policy as reasonable.
Bell,
2. Circuit Court Rulings on Arrestee Strip Searches in Custodial Facilities
By the time the Eleventh Circuit decided
Powell,
nine other circuits had applied the
Bell
standard in cases involving recently arrested persons who were subjected to suspicionless strip searches upon admission to a custodial facility and ruled that such searches were unconstitutional.
Powell
correctly notes that while these decisions “vary in detail around the edges, the picture they paint is essentially the same.”
Powell,
Although it is difficult to precisely characterize the collective holdings of these cases, especially considering the fact-sensitive nature of reasonableness analysis, suffice it to say that all nine circuits found suspicionless strip searches of recently arrested persons unreasonable and therefore unconstitutional.
Swain v. Spinney,
In none of the cases cited above did the court determine that Bell’s reasonableness ruling with regard to the MCC’s contact visit strip searches controlled the reasonableness of custodial strip searches in other contexts. Rather, each court recited
Bell’s
Fourth Amendment standard and then proceeded to apply that standard to the facts before it. In balancing “the need for the particular search against the invasion of rights that the search entails,” courts considered the factors identified by
Bell
(“the scope
of
the particular intrusion, the
manner in which
it is conducted, the justification for initiating it, and the place in which it is conducted”) and considered the
Bell
Court’s analysis of those factors.
Bell,
a. The Invasion of Rights that the Search Entails
In
Bell,
the contact visit strip searches involved visual body cavity inspection. Subsequent cases have noted that strip searches, regardless of the particular procedures used,
12
constitute extremely invasive government action.
Giles v. Ackerman, 746
F.2d at 617 (stating that a skin search invaded plaintiffs privacy “in a frightening and humiliating manner”);
Logan v. Shealy,
Strip searches are more intrusive than searches of arrestees incident to arrest.
See Mary Beth G.,
Strip searches differ qualitatively from other intake procedures which entail some incidental nudity but do not involve visual inspection of the naked body.
Cf. Stanley v. Henson,
The intrusiveness of the search must also be considered in light of the circumstances and context of the search. For offenses that are relatively minor, a strip search represents a grossly disproportionate consequence of arrest. Few people would think that their right of privacy in their own body, a “cherished value of our society,”
Schmerber,
b. The Need for the Particular Search
In
Bell,
the Court identified two reasons why the contact visit strip search policy at issue in that case which involved visual body cavity inspection advanced the defendants’ institutional security interests. First, the policy enabled prison officers to discover contraband smuggled during contact visits, and second, the blanket policy deterred the smuggling of contraband during contact visits.
Bell,
Because arrest and detention are generally “unplanned events,” most arrestees have little opportunity to plan or carry out smuggling activities.
See Giles v. Ackerman,
For offenses that are not commonly associated with the possession of weapons, drugs, or other contraband, the risk that an arrestee has secreted contraband in such a way that it could only be detected by a strip search shrinks further.
Shain v. Ellison,
The second
Bell
justification — deterrence — figured prominently in the Supreme Court’s determination that the
*455
MCC’s blanket policy was reasonable. The district court struck down the MCC policy with regard to visual body cavity searches because it concluded that “giving full weight to [the deterrence] factor, ... it cannot justify the more extreme and offensive aspects of the strip search.”
United States ex rel. Wolfish v. Levi,
In the arrestee context, a blanket strip search policy serves little deterrent function. “[T]he deterrent rationale for the
Bell
[contact visit] search is simply less relevant given the essentially unplanned nature of an arrest and subsequent incarceration.”
Roberts,
c. Reasonableness and Reasonable Suspicion Standard
Balancing the justifications advanced by custodial facilities against the intrusion on privacy interests inherent in strip searches, the courts cited above concluded that suspicionless arrestee strip searches, either pursuant to a blanket policy or conducted individually, violate the Fourth Amendment. In reaching this conclusion, these courts did not underestimate the significant institutional security concerns of custodial facilities or overstep the deference owed to prison officials. Even with those weighty considerations, the courts found that blanket policies which allow indiscriminate searches of arrestees simply do not satisfy the basic Fourth Amendment requirement of reasonableness because they subject too many people to highly invasive, humiliating searches that do not actually promote the institutional security interests of the custodial facility.
The individualized standard that courts have imposed after striking down blanket policies or suspicionless searches — reasonable suspicion which can be based on “the crime charged, the particular characteristics of the arrestee, and/or the circumstances of the arrest” — is a relatively low burden in the Fourth Amendment context.
Weber v. Dell,
Because a search may be justified by an arrestee’s current or prior charges, the reasonable suspicion standard developed in this context allows officials to take a more categorical approach to custodial strip searches.
Roberts,
Defendant does not argue that plaintiffs have failed to state a claim under this precedent. Instead, defendant argues that the Court should follow Powell and disregard the foregoing authority in its entirety. On this front, defendant’s arguments fail.
3. Powell v. Barrett and Defendant’s Powell-Based Arguments
Powell
began as a putative class action by eleven former inmates of the Fulton County Jail in Georgia (“FCJ”), all of whom were strip searched pursuant to the FCJ’s blanket policy of strip searching inmates entering or reentering the general prison population.
Powell v. Barrett,
On interlocutory appeal, the Eleventh Circuit panel reversed the district court’s qualified immunity ruling. Following the binding precedent of earlier Eleventh Circuit opinions, the panel concluded both that “the Jail’s alleged policy of conducting blanket strip searches on all arrestees at booking, on the single ground that they are to be placed in the Jail’s general population, must be deemed unconstitutional” and that the unconstitutionality of the policy was clearly established.
Powell v. Barrett,
Sitting
en banc,
the Eleventh Circuit overruled its own precedent with regard to the constitutionality of blanket arrestee strip search policies and affirmed the dismissal of plaintiffs’ claims.
Powell,
The Eleventh Circuit forcefully criticizes that precedent as “thinly disguised defiance” of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Bell Powell,
a. The Source of the Reasonable Suspicion Standard Identified by Powell
The Eleventh Circuit summarized circuit precedent on the constitutionality of arrestee strip searches by stating “[w]e are aware that some courts have interpreted the
Bell
decision as requiring, or at least permitting lower courts to require, reasonable suspicion as a condition for detention facility searches, especially those that in
*458
volve visual body cavity inspections.... Those decisions misread
Bell
as requiring reasonable suspicion.”
Powell,
Powell
attributes the reasonable suspicion standard to the following sentence in
Bell:
“We deal here with the question whether visual body-cavity inspections as contemplated by the MCC rules can
ever
be conducted on less than probable causé.”
Bell,
Circuits other than the Eleventh Circuit relied on the Fourth Amendment’s reasonableness requirement and the balancing test articulated in
Bell
to strike down suspicionless custodial strip searches of detained arrestees. Applying that test, circuit courts have ruled that policies requiring strip searches for all arrestees, regardless of the charges or circumstances, are unreasonable and therefore unconstitutional.
See
Part IV.C.2
supra.
In the wake of such rulings, courts had to determine under what circumstances officials would be constitutionally permitted to search a detained arrestee in accordance with the Fourth Amendment. The reasonable suspicion standard resulted from that inquiry and not because it was required by
Bell. See, e.g., Mary Beth G.,
In contesting the premise that Bell requires custodial strip searches to be predicated on reasonable suspicion, Powell focuses on three features of the Bell opinion. First, Bell, in approving a blanket policy, upheld suspicionless strip searches and rejected a case-by-case approach to the reasonableness inquiry. 17 *459 Second, the Eleventh Circuit points to Justice Powell’s dissenting opinion in Bell which reads, in its entirety:
I join the opinion of the Court except the discussion and holding with respect to body-cavity searches. In view of the serious intrusion on one’s privacy occasioned by such a search, I think at least some level of cause, such as a reasonable suspicion, should be required to justify the anal and genital searches described in this case. I therefore dissent on this issue.
Bell,
At most, these three considerations prove that the Supreme Court, on the facts before it, approved a blanket policy requiring strip searches for all inmates following contact visits as reasonable and did not require searches conducted pursuant to that policy to be based on individualized reasonable suspicion. The Court did not have occasion to rule on the reasonableness of custodial strip searches in other circumstances or under what circumstances reasonable suspicion might be required.
See Powell,
This is one of many situations where linguistic precision matters a great deal. Other courts did not hold that Bell “requires” reasonable suspicion; they held that Bell requires reasonableness and that reasonableness, in certain circumstances, requires that searches be based on individualized suspicion of wrongdoing measured against some objective standard such as reasonable suspicion. For this reason, this Court concludes that the Powell opinion does not, in fact, demonstrate that other circuit opinions were wrongly decided or that they misapplied Bell.
b. Powell’s Rejection of the Misdemeanor-Felony Distinction and the Distinction between Contact Visit Strip Searches and Arrestee Strip Searches
Although the Eleventh Circuit describes the misdemeanor-felony distinction as simply “[o]ne other point ... worth discussing,” it is one of the reasons for the Eleventh Circuit’s rejection of circuit precedent and subsequent conclusion that blanket policies are equally justified for contact visit strip searches and arrestee strip searches.
Powell,
Powell
states that “[t]he difference between felonies and misdemeanors or other lesser offenses is without constitutional significance when it comes to detention
*460
facility strip searches” because it “finds no basis in the
Bell
decision, in the reasoning of that decision, or in the real world of detention facilities.”
Powell,
The distinction between felonies and misdemeanors is relevant in the arrest context because it serves as a rough proxy for whether or not an arrestee will be detained pending trial. For persons arrested on misdemeanors or other minor offenses, detention is usually temporary. The strip searches at issue in this case and in the cases discussed in this Memorandum generally occurred during the intermediary period after arrest and before arraignment, before a bench warrant hearing, or before the posting of bail. For serious offenders who will be detained pending trial and subject to the regular and constitutional incidents of detention, such as contact visit strip searches, an intake strip search represents one of several strip searches to which such pretrial detainees will be subjected. The same cannot be said for minor offenders who will not be detained pending trial. Further, the distinction between minor offenders and serious offenders, which tracks the misdemeanor-felony distinction, impacts the balance between the need for the search and the invasion of rights that the search entails, as discussed in Part IV.C.2.
Powell
states that plaintiffs’ “best hope for distinguishing
Bell
lies in the fact that they were strip searched as part of the booking process instead of after contact visits.”
Powell,
Similarly, in ruling on the pending motion, the Court is not influenced by the fact
*461
that some persons do anticipate their own arrests and might have the opportunity to conceal contraband.
See Powell,
This Court disagrees with Powell’s conclusion that the holding in Bell invalidates the analysis of other courts with respect to the reasonableness of blanket strip search policies in the arrestee context. Reasonableness is a flexible standard which allows for consideration of different factors in different contexts. In the arrestee context, a person’s charges and the circumstances of his arrest are relevant for the determination of whether a blanket intake strip search policy is reasonable. The fact that Bell did not discuss those factors in the contact visit context, where they were less relevant, is of no moment.
c. Fourth Amendment Analysis Absent a Factual Record
The Eleventh Circuit affirmed the dismissal of the
Powell
plaintiffs’ complaint because “the security needs that the Court in
Bell
found to justify strip searching an inmate re-entering the jail population after a contact visit are no greater than those that justify searching an arrestee when he is being booked into the general population for the first time.”
Powell,
Maintaining institutional security within custodial facilities obviously qualifies as a legitimate governmental interest.
Bell
recognized that “[a] detention facility is a unique place fraught with serious security dangers.”
Bell,
*462
As summarized above in Part IV. C.2.b, courts have consistently concluded that the interests which justified the implementation of a
blanket
policy in the
contact visit
context in
Bell
— discovery and deterrence — did not justify the implementation of a
blanket
policy in the
arrestee context. Powell
does not address this reasoning. Instead,
Powell
relies on generalizations and the factual findings in other cases to demonstrate that arrestee strip searches might be warranted under certain circumstances.
Powell,
The Eleventh Circuit’s decision to uphold a blanket strip search policy on appeal from a motion to dismiss does not take into consideration the fact-intensive nature of Fourth Amendment analysis generally and under
Bell Powell,
Because this Court concludes that the Supreme Court ruling in
Bell
with regard to contact visit strip searches does not control the constitutionality of custodial strip search policies involving detained arrestees, such as the one alleged by plaintiffs, the Court must independently rule on the reasonableness of such a policy. Without a factual record, however, this Court is unable to balance “the need for the particular search [policy] against the invasion of personal rights that the search [policy] entails” as
Bell
requires.
Bell,
D. Plaintiffs’ Fourth Amendment Claims
Having found Powell’s criticisms of circuit precedent unpersuasive, this Court will continue to follow the authority of other circuits, as described in Part IV.C.2 of this Memorandum. That authority holds that suspicionless strip searches of detained arrestees upon admission to a custodial facility violate the Fourth Amendment and requires that cus *463 todial strip searches of detained arrestees be based on reasonable suspicion that the arrestee has concealed weapons or contraband. In this case, plaintiffs allege that defendant has a policy or practice of strip searching all arrestees without any individualized suspicion that those arrestees have secreted contraband. The named plaintiffs further allege that they were strip searched upon admission to defendant’s Hill Facility and that their strip searches were not based on reasonable suspicion.
The strip searches described in plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint involved the visual inspection of the named plaintiffs’ naked bodies. Plaintiff Allison was required to squat and cough while naked. Plaintiff Hocevar was required to remove his clothes in the presence of other detainees. While not as invasive as the strip searches in
Bell,
which involved visual body cavity inspection, plaintiffs’ searches were similar to, or more invasive than, the strip searches that have been scrutinized and struck down by other courts.
Masters v. Crouch,
Also, at least two cases suggest that the named plaintiffs’ charges, DUI and domestic dispute charges, do not give rise to reasonable suspicion for the purposes of conducting a custodial strip search on an arrestee.
Logan v. Shealy,
More importantly, however, all courts confronted with the issue have ruled that blanket arrestee strip search policies, such as the one alleged by plaintiffs, are unreasonable and therefore unconstitutional.
See, e.g., Weber v. Dell,
V. CONCLUSION
For all of the foregoing reasons, the Court denies the Motion of Defendant The GEO Group, Inc. for Judgment on the Pleadings. Plaintiffs’ claims for relief will be judged against the Fourth Amendment standards summarized in this Memorandum and not the Eleventh Circuit decision in Powell. This ruling is without prejudice to defendant’s right to argue the constitutionality of its actions at the summary judgment stage and/or at trial.
An appropriate Order follows.
ORDER
AND NOW, this 24th day of March, 2009, upon consideration of the Motion of Defendant The GEO Group, Inc. for Judgment on the Pleadings (Document No. 29, filed September 18, 2008), Plaintiffs’ Memorandum of Law in Opposition to Defendant The GEO Group, Inc.’s Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings (Document No. 35, filed October 21, 2008), the Reply Memorandum of Law in Support of the Motion of Defendant The GEO Group, Inc. for Judgment on the Pleadings (Document No. 37, filed November 5, 2008), and the *464 related submissions of the parties, for the reasons set forth in the attached Memorandum, IT IS ORDERED that the Motion of Defendant The GEO Group, Inc. for Judgment on the Pleadings is DENIED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that defendant’s request for oral argument is DENIED AS MOOT.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the partial stay on discovery imposed by Order dated October 10, 2008 is VACATED. The Court will convene a scheduling conference in due course.
Notes
. The Court will use the singular term "defendant” when discussing the alleged strip search policy promulgated by defendant GEO or the Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings filed by defendant GEO. The Court will use the plural term "defendants” when discussing individual strip searches conducted by John Doe defendants pursuant to GEO’s alleged strip search policy.
. Defendant’s motion does not address Count V of plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint which as *437 serts a state law negligence claim. Counts IV, VI, and VII of the Amended Complaint were previously dismissed by agreement of the parties. (Order of May 30, 2008.)
. For purposes of this Memorandum, the Court uses the term “custodial facility” to refer collectively to jails, prisons, and other detention facilities. The Court uses the term "custodial strip search” to mean a strip search conducted in a custodial facility for non-investigatory purposes.
. This Memorandum recites only those factual allegations contained in the Amended Complaint that are necessary for the determination of the instant motion. All facts are presented in the light most favorable to plaintiffs, the non-moving party.
. The Amended Complaint states that the charges were dropped in “August of 2007,” but this date appears to be erroneous in that it does not match Hocevar's chronology of events.
. Eight years after
Phelan,
the Seventh Circuit applied Bell's Fourth Amendment analysis to a custodial search during which an arrestee was required to strip down to her undergarments while under the observation of an officer.
Stanley v. Henson,
. The Eighth, Third, and D.C. Circuits have not addressed the relationship between Bell and Hudson.
. This Court is not aware of any Supreme Court opinions which even mention standards of review, such as strict scrutiny or rational basis, when ruling on Fourth Amendment challenges, much less any cases which actually apply such a standard to a Fourth Amendment challenge.
. The Second Circuit uses Black’s Law Dictionary to define "prisons” and "jails”: "A prison is ‘[a] state or federal facility of confinement for convicted criminals, especially] felons.’ A jail, on the other hand, is '[a] place where persons awaiting trial or those convicted of misdemeanors are confined.’ "
Shain v. Ellison,
. The petitioners filed a petition for a writ for habeas corpus that was later certified as a class action. Despite this unusual procedural posture, the Supreme Court addressed petitioners’ claims on the merits.
Bell,
. Most circuits have also affirmed the holdings of the above-cited cases in subsequent opinions. As the Court noted in the Introduction, the Third Circuit has not
ruled on the
constitutionality of custodial arrestee strip searches. Several district courts in the Third Circuit have ruled on this issue, however. Those opinions also hold that suspicionless custodial strip searches of detained arrestees violate the Fourth Amendment.
Florence v. Bd. of Chosen Freeholders of Burlington,
. The term "strip search” genetically refers to a variety of searches and search techniques which vary in scope.
See N.G. v. Connecticut,
. This concept of disproportionality is not foreign to Fourth Amendment analysis. "The logic of distinguishing between minor and serious offenses in evaluating the reasonableness of ... searches is almost too clear for argument.”
New Jersey v. T.L.O.,
. Citations to “Powell" in this Part of the Memorandum, as in other Parts, refer to the Eleventh Circuit’s en banc opinion, and not to the lower court opinion or the Eleventh Circuit's panel opinion.
. The other two groups included detainees who were strip searched before being released from the FCJ, either after initial bail hearings or after court appearances. After ruling on the constitutionality of the point-of-entry strip searches conducted on arrestees being placed in the general population, the Eleventh Circuit remanded the case to the panel to apply the principles discussed in the
en banc
opinion to the other two groups.
Powell,
. The only cases which state that
Bell,
itself, "requires" an objective standard, such as probable cause or reasonable suspicion, are the Eleventh Circuit decisions which preceded
Powell. Justice v. City of Peachtree,
. At least one court questions this conclusion. "[Jjust because the searches in
Bell
were conducted pursuant to a blanket policy does not mean that reasonable suspicion was lacking.... [Contact] visits, by their very nature, may ... provide the requisite reasonable suspicion for jail officers to justify the blanket search policy."
Florence v. Bd. of Chosen
*459
Freeholders of Burlington,
. To demonstrate that the Supreme Court had occasion to consider this issue, the Eleventh Circuit points out that the MCC housed "detainees facing only lesser charges, people incarcerated for contempt of court, and witnesses in protective custody.”
Powell,
