The plaintiffs are a group of patients (collectively the “Patients”) of a psychiatrist who was the subject of a Medicaid fraud investigation. During the investigation, all of the psychiatrist’s records were seized pursuant to a state search warrant. The Patients instituted a civil rights class action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against three state agents (the “defendants”)
The Utah Bureau of Medicaid Fraud was investigating a psychiatrist when it executed a search warrant and seized the psychiatrist’s treatment and billing records. This seizure encompassed the Patients’ records although none of the Patients were Medicaid recipients. Approximately three months later, a state circuit court sealed the material obtained during the seizure. During the investigation, the records containing information on the Patients’ psychiatric treatment were made available to a variety of Bureau employees. The criminal investigation of the psychiatrist ended with an out-of-court civil settlement. In the settlement agreement, the psychiatrist consented to pay restitution and abstain from future participation in the Medicaid program. At the conclusion of the Bureau’s investigation, the records were returned to the psychiatrist.
The Patients sued three state agents in their individual capacities alleging the Bureau’s seizure of the psychiatric records violated the Patients’ constitutional right to privacy. The Patients sought damages, a declaration that the seizure was unconstitutional and an injunction to have the records returned to the psychiatrist. The district court determined the Patients’ claims for equitable relief were moot and granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment on the basis of qualified immunity. The Patients appeal.
MOOTNESS
The initial issue in this case is whether the Patients’ claims for equitable relief are moot. We review the question of mootness
The Patients seek a declaratory judgment that the defendants invaded the privacy of the Patients. The Patients’ claim for a declaratory judgment is similar to their claim for damages. In each, the Patients ask the court to determine whether a past constitutional violation occurred. In this dispute the alleged liability-producing act has already occurred. Because the question still exists as to whether the defendants violated the Patients’ right to privacy, a controversy on the Patients’ right to privacy still exists. But see Facio v. Jones,
However, the claim for injunctive relief is moot. The Patients are seeking an injunction to have their medical records returned to the psychiatrist, yet the records were returned at the end of the Bureau’s investigation. There is no longer a dispute about the current possession of the medical files. There is no present controversy on the claim for injunctive relief because the explicit objective of the proposed injunction has been met: the records were returned.
The Patients argue the exceptions to mootness apply in this case. One exception to mootness is when the dispute is “capable of repetition yet evades review.” Los Angeles v. Lyons,
The Patients correctly note the general rule of law that “voluntary cessation of allegedly illegal conduct does not deprive the tribunal of power to hear and determine the case, i.e., does not make the case moot.” United States v. W.T. Grant Co.,
In arguing voluntary cessation, the Patients rely on Longstreth v. Maynard,
In the instant case, the Bureau returned the files and cannot simply decide to confiscate them again without a warrant issued by a detached and neutral magistrate. The allegedly wrongful action by the Bureau — taking the files from this psychiatrist — has ended. The investigation is closed and the psychiatrist’s conduct has been rectified. The exception of voluntary cessation is not applicable to the Patients’ request to have the files returned to the psychiatrist because that dispute has been completely eradicated.
However, if we read the Patients’ claim for injunctive relief as an effort to enjoin future seizures, it may fit within the voluntary cessation exception. Assuming there is no problem with mootness, the Patients must still show they have standing to bring this claim. Thus, as in Lyons, the issue becomes “not whether that claim has become moot but whether [the Patients] meet[] the preconditions for asserting an injunctive claim in a federal forum.”
The Patients argue “Non-Medicaid psychiatric patients throughout the state face the possibility that documents detailing their most intimate thoughts and feelings, records which they believe are secret and confidential, may be seized, examined and disclosed to and by state officials in the course of an investigation.” The threat to the Patients personally, in this scenario, is not sufficiently real to establish standing. See Lyons,
PRIVACY
The remaining issue is whether the district court erred in finding the defendants were entitled to qualified immunity. We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment on this issue de novo. Cummins v. Campbell,
The first inquiry in assessing the state agents’ defense of qualified immunity is whether the Patients met their burden of establishing a constitutional violation occurred at all and then whether the law was clearly established at the time the action occurred. Siegert v. Gilley,
The right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures originates in the Fourth Amendment and is applied to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment due process clause. Mapp v. Ohio,
The Patients allege the seizure was too broad and served no legitimate state interest. However, as discussed below, the seizure served the compelling state interest of ending fraud in the Medicaid program and the record fails to show how the search could have been narrowed. A reasonable government official has not violated the Fourth Amendment when the official conducts a search pursuant to a facially valid warrant. See Jones v. Denver,
The Patients’ brief also alleges a violation of privacy in the dissemination of information from the seized files. They allege improper handling of confidential material resulted in a violation of their privacy. There is a constitutional right to privacy in preventing disclosure by the government of personal matters. See Whalen v. Roe,
The defendants concede the Patients have a legitimate expectation of privacy in the medical records. Thus we move to the second, inquiry. The second prong of Lichtenstein requires the defendants’ actions serve a compelling state interest. Here, the defendants were acting to prevent and punish Medicaid fraud. The state’s need to investigate and prosecute abuses of the state Medicaid program is a compelling interest.
The Patients had an expectation of privacy in their medical records and the state was serving a compelling interest in trying to protect its Medicaid program; therefore, we are left with the final prong: whether the dissemination of the material was made in the least intrusive manner possible. Because the constitutional right to privacy in this case is being analyzed in the context of qualified immunity, the burden is on the Patients. See Hilliard,
The defendants claim they needed the records to determine if Medicaid patients were being billed at the same rate as non-Medicaid patients, if the Medicaid patients were being billed for individual therapy when in fact the treatment was group therapy, if billing was falsely made, if medications billed to Medicaid patients had been diverted for resale to non-Medicaid patients, and if the psychiatrist contra-indicated medication or over-prescribed medication. The Patients argue the Bureau’s treatment of the files was not the least intrusive method available because the Bureau took every record in the doctor’s office, failed to immediately seal the material, and failed to edit and redact the materials to protect the Patients privacy. However, the Patients do not support these arguments with sufficient facts for us to determine whether the Bureau could have behaved in a less intrusive manner in respect to the Patients’ files. The record simply informs us the psychiatrist’s files were partially in hard copy and the rest were computer files. The defendants claim the billing and treatment records were so intertwined that the han
The Patients have failed to meet their burden in demonstrating a constitutional violation occurred. Therefore, the defendants are entitled to qualified immunity from this § 1983 action.
CONCLUSION
The Patients are unable to make a reasonable showing that their psychiatric records will again be subjected to a seizure by the Bureau. Therefore, their claim for injunctive relief is moot due to the return of the records to the psychiatrist, and they lack standing to enjoin future seizures.
We affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment for the defendants on the remaining claims because the Patients failed to show a constitutional violation and the defendants were thus entitled to qualified immunity. Judgment AFFIRMED.
Notes
. One of the defendants, Lieutenant Susan Jones, settled out of court and is not a parly to this appeal.
