Appellant Dawn Cochrane brought an action for damages in the United States District Court for the District of Rhode Island asserting civil rights violations under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and pendent state law claims for battery, intentional infliction of emotional distress, false imprisonment and assault, stemming from the strip search to which she was subjected before being permitted to visit her father in the Rhode Island Adult Corrections Institute [“ACI”]. The district court directed verdicts in favor of all defendant-appellees at the conclusion of appellant’s case in chief. We vacate the district court judgment and remand for a new trial.
I
FACTS
Viewing the evidence and all fair inferences in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, the jury could have found the following facts. 1 Appellant, the teenage daughter of ACI inmate Rickie A. Cochrane (“Cochrane”), has been a regular visitor at ACI since she was very young. She has never violated a prison visitation rule or presented any threat to institutional security. Cochrane, on the other hand, has spent most of his adult life in prison and admits to having used contraband drugs on ten to twenty occasions while incarcerated.
On arrival at ACI on June 10, 1989, appellant was informed that she would not be allowed to visit her father that day, or ever again, until she submitted to a strip search. Appellant was presented with a form containing a consent to search, which she signed. Two female correctional officers then led her into a bathroom, where she was told to remove her clothing. A correctional officer checked her hair and her ears. Appellant was instructed to squat, hold her head to her chest and cough, while two female correction officers stood behind her. No contraband was discovered and appellant was permitted to visit her father. Appellant was emotionally shaken by the experience.
During October 1988, inmate Cochrane had been found unconscious in his cell following an overdose of cocaine, which Coch-rane told a police officer was supplied by appellee Deputy Quattrocchi or his son, a correctional officer at ACI. Upon learning that Cochrane had mentioned him and his son, appellee Quattrocchi became angry and warned Cochrane, “I’m going to get you for that.”
The district court first ruled that appellant had no constitutional right to visit her father in prison. The court then concluded that there could be no fourth amendment violation, since appellant had consented to the strip search and the search was reasonable in scope. The court directed the challenged verdicts before the defendants presented their case.
II
DISCUSSION
Like every other circuit that has considered the question,
see Thorne v. Jones,
On the other hand, we recognize that “a strip search, by its very nature, constitutes an extreme intrusion upon personal privacy, as well as an offense to the dignity of the individual____”
Burns v. Loranger,
Appellees contend that the strip search was reasonable, as it was based both on information from a reliable informant and on the uncontroverted evidence of Cochrane’s repeated drug use while incarcerated. The view we are required to take of the evidence,
see supra
note 1, precludes either contention on the present record.
See also De Leon Lopez v. Corporacion Insular De Seguros,
Appellant argues that two factors undermine the validity of the strip search: (1) it was done in retaliation for Cochrane’s allegations against appellee Quattrocchi (2) there were insufficient indicia of reliability surrounding the evidence that appellant had, in the past, brought drugs into the correctional facility. On this record we conclude that a reasonable person, crediting Cochrane’s testimony, as we are presently required to do, could have found that the strip search was conducted in retaliation for Cochrane’s allegations — whether made seriously or sardonically —
3
that Quat-trocchi or his son supplied the cocaine used by Cochrane in October, 1988. Moreover, absent any evidence that appellant ever violated a prison visitation rule, or ever supplied Cochrane with drugs, a reasonable juror could have concluded that Cochrane’s contraband drugs were supplied by prison officials or other inmates. Thus, the jury could have found that the strip search of appellant was unreasonable because it was based on
no
“individualized suspicion.”
Blackburn,
Our conclusion finds further support in Quattrocchi’s testimony as to the reliability of his confidential informant. On direct examination, Quattrocchi admitted that until the morning of the trial, he had been unable to remember the name of the informant who told him that Dawn Cochrane had been carrying drugs to her father. Thereafter, he vouched for the reliability of the informant in only the most general terms, stating in formulaic fashion that the inmate was “a reliable informant, who had proved reliable in the past.”
Only much later, ironically on cross-examination by appellant’s lawyer, was there any approach to specificity. Even then, the indicia of reliability were meager. Quat-trocchi was unable to recall the date when he began to use the informant, and was unwilling to specify the time period during which the information was supplied, or to describe the information received in any detail, stating only that “whenever [the informant] did give me information, it was reliable.” With considerable prodding by appellant’s counsel, Quattrocchi eventually testified that the informant had, over roughly a six month period, provided reliable information regarding the introduction of narcotics and weapons into the correctional facility.
While this evidence, standing alone, might be viewed as sufficient to justify the strip search of appellant, it is fragile enough to be overcome by a finding that a retaliatory motive, rather than “individualized suspicion,” was the real basis for the search.
Since it is the province of the jury to judge witness credibility,
see, e.g., United States v. Seeley,
The district court ruling that appellant’s execution of the consent form mooted any question as to whether there was a reasonable basis for the strip search runs counter to our decision in
Blackburn, supra.
There we considered whether a prison visitor who had provided written consents to successive strip searches had waived any fourth amendment claim.
4
The
Blackburn
panel decided, as a matter of law,
Blackburn,
The district court judgment is vacated and the case is remanded for a new trial. Costs are awarded to appellant.
Notes
. On a motion for directed verdict under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 50(a), the trial court must view the evidence, and draw all fair inferences, in the light most favorable to the party against whom the motion for directed verdict is made.
See Dehydrating Process Co. v. A.O. Smith Corp.,
. Appellees neither assert, nor have they yet evidenced, "highly unusual circumstances" such as might remove the case from the holding in
Blackburn. See Blackburn,
. The record suggests that Cochrane’s allegation regarding Quattrocchi’s role in his cocaine overdose may have been flippant, a sarcastic response to a police officer’s ”insult[ing]” suggestion that Cochrane “was going to tell him anything.”
. Unlike the present case, Blackburn involved a uniform jail policy requiring strip searches of all visitors. Blackburn, 771 F.2d at 559.
