When law enforcement officers investigate an organization suspected of criminal wrongdoing, they may not ignore the civil rights of the organization’s employees. Although officers are entitled to act vigorously to gain information and to prevent the flight of the culpable, our Constitution requires that officers heed employees’ rights in the process. This appeal raises such issues. We must decide whether law enforcement officers violated employees’ Fourth Amendment rights by detaining them incommunicado without probable cause and using the threat of continued detention to coerce them to submit to interrogations. Considering the facts in the light most favorable to the employees,
I
■ Most of the plaintiffs in this civil rights lawsuit are former employees of Ear-Tec
On the morning of December 23, 1999, law enforcement officers arrived at the Ear-Tec offices in Puyallup, Washington, to serve a search warrant.
The officers detained the plaintiffs in this severely restrained status for time periods ranging from one hour and forty-five minutes to four hours and forty-five minutes. They released the plaintiffs only after the plaintiffs submitted to tape-recorded interrogations.
When one of the plaintiffs, Linda Horn-beck, declined to make a statement after being brought to the back room, police detained her for another two and a half hours in the waiting room. They then brought her to the back room for questioning a second time. Hornbeck, concluding that she would not be released until she made a statement, submitted to the interrogation.
Also present at Ear-Tec when the officers served the search warrant were the four plaintiff children, ranging in age from seven to twelve years old, who had come to Ear-Tec with their parents for an office Christmas party. The officers refused to permit the children to leave the waiting room and prevented the children’s parents from calling their spouses to retrieve the children. After about forty-five minutes, the officers permitted the children to leave with the adult daughter of another Ear-Tec employee.
If we credit the plaintiffs’ affidavits, as we must at this stage, none of them had any knowledge of their employer’s allegedly fraudulent trade and billing practices. Indeed, only two of the plaintiffs had worked at Ear-Tec more than two months.
The plaintiffs filed suit against Pierce County and two officers, Ronald Knapp and Deborah Heishman, under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. They allege that the incommunicado detention and coerced interrogations violated their Fourth Amendment rights and that denying them the use of a telephone violated their First Amendment and Fourteenth Amendment procedural due process rights.
Before deciding the constitutional issues, we first must determine whether we have jurisdiction.
It is settled that a district court’s denial of qualified immunity is an immediately appealable final decision under the collateral order doctrine. Mitchell v. Forsyth,
The Supreme Court in Behrens v. Pelletier,
Forcing the defendant officers to undergo discovery, without the possibility of appeal to us, would erode any qualified immunity to the burdens of discovery the officers might possess. We hold that the district court’s denial of the officers’ pre-discovery qualified immunity motion was an immediately appealable final judgment.
We turn to the main issues in this appeal.
Ill
Whether the defendant officers are entitled to summary judgment on the basis of qualified immunity depends on a two-step inquiry. Saucier v. Katz,
A
We begin with the adult plaintiffs’ claims that the officers detained them in violation of the Fourth Amendment.
The Fourth Amendment says that the “right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated.” U.S. Const., Amend. IV. “Its central requirement is one of reasonableness.” Illinois v. McArthur,
This appeal fits within the category of cases in which it is appropriate to balance governmental and individual interests. The officers’ seizure
“[W]e balance the privacy-related and law enforcement-related concerns to determine if the intrusion was reasonable.” McArthur,
Detaining the plaintiffs in the Ear-Tec waiting room during the search of the premises served important law enforcement interests. It prevented any of the Ear-Tec employees from fleeing in the event that incriminating evidence was found. It minimized the risk of harm to officers by ensuring that none of the employees were able to obtain a weapon. And it ensured that employees were on the premises to assist officers in case they needed (for example) a door or cabinet unlocked. On the other side of the balance, holding the plaintiffs in the waiting room worked no great invasion of privacy.
Because the important law enforcement interests in this conduct outweighed the plaintiffs’ privacy rights, it was reasonable and, therefore, lawful under the Fourth Amendment. Indeed, the officers’ holding the plaintiffs in the waiting room was precisely the conduct the Supreme Court deemed reasonable in Michigan v.
But the officers did not merely require the plaintiffs to remain in the waiting room during the search. Rather, the officers told the plaintiffs, who already had been detained for more than an hour, that they would not be released until they submitted to individual interrogations. The officers then brought each plaintiff to a back room, where officers interrogated him or her. Although the defendants offer little explanation of what law enforcement interests this procedure might serve, it is plain that such questioning serves the government’s proper interest in gathering information about allegedly criminal activities. This government interest may be important.
The officers’ conduct in the back room closely resembled the custodial interrogation that might take place at a police station. We hold that this sort of coerced interrogation is a serious intrusion upon the sanctity of the person. It may inflict great indignity and arouse strong resentment. It may make the subject feel the target of the government’s vast machinery, in grave legal peril, alone and without counsel. It may make the subject feel that dread consequences hang on his or her words.
Our holding is confirmed by another rule of Fourth Amendment law: A seizure becomes unlawful when it is "more intrusive than necessary." Florida v. Royer,
Our analysis tracks the Supreme Court’s analysis in Florida v. Royer. In Royer, police suspected a man was transporting narcotics through an airport.
As in Royer, the legitimate law enforcement purposes that justified the detention of the plaintiffs in this case — purposes that related to the need to control the premises during the search — were not furthered by removing the plaintiffs to back rooms to be interrogated.
An additional aspect of the officers’ conduct was objectionable under the Fourth Amendment: their preventing the plaintiffs from making a telephone call for extended times during the detention. It follows from Royer that officers may prevent temporary detainees from using a telephone only so long as that restriction is “carefully tailored to its underlying justification.” See Royer,
The officers argue that they had a legitimate law enforcement interest in preventing the plaintiffs from warning other Ear-Tec offices of the investigation, for fear that conspirators would destroy evidence at other offices.
The officers may have had some (conjectural) interest in preventing the plaintiffs from summoning armed assistance from others. But that already speculative interest became too weak to justify restricting communications after the first Ear-Tec employee was released one hour and forty-five minutes into the search. Because that employee, or any of the other employees who were released subsequently, could have summoned the assistance of allies, if any existed, the law enforcement officers’ interest did not justify the four hour and forty-five minute deprivation of telephone access. See Leveto,
Even if at the start the officers had an interest in preventing the plaintiffs from making a telephone call, the officers’ interest was soon outweighed by the plaintiffs’ stronger interests in contacting relatives. For example, certain plaintiffs needed to use the telephone to contact their spouses or other family members to arrange for the care of their children. Others may have needed to use the telephone to explain to relatives their apparent disappearance. Because the defendants held the
Under the circumstances of this case, the officers’ holding the plaintiffs incommunicado and using their continued detention to coerce them into submitting to interrogations was not “carefully tailored” to the justification underlying a Summers-type detention.
Having determined that the officers violated the plaintiffs’ Fourth Amendment rights, we turn now to the second step in the qualified immunity analysis: We ask whether the right was “clearly established.” Saucier,
When the officers seized the plaintiffs by detaining them in the waiting room, well-known and indisputable Fourth Amendment principles should have been known to the officers: First, officers normally may not seize a person absent probable cause, except in a handful of well-defined situations. See Skinner v. Railway Labor Execs. Ass’n,
The officers also should have known that a seizure becomes unlawful when it is more intrusive than necessary to accomplish the objectives that justified the seizure in the first place. Royer,
It may be arg-ued that judges should not expect police officers to read United States Reports in their spare time, to study arcane constitutional law treatises, or to analyze Fourth Amendment developments with a law professor’s precision. We do not expect police officers to do those things. We do, however, expect officers to think twice before embarking on a course of conduct, such as the one here, that is unusual, unfair, and unduly coercive. When the officers seized the plaintiffs, with no probable cause to arrest them, and then used the threat of continued incommunicado detention to coerce them to submit to police interrogation, the officers exceeded the generous leeway that the qualified immunity doctrine allows.
We hold that Pierce County is not entitled to summary judgment and that the defendant officers are not entitled to qualified immunity from this claim. The adult plaintiffs’ evidence, if credited, would show that a genuine issue of material fact exits concerning whether the officers violated the plaintiffs’ clearly established Fourth Amendment rights.
B
Finally, the defendants argue that the officers’ conduct never implicated the plaintiff children’s Fourth Amendment rights because the officers never “seized” the children.
“[A] person has been ‘seized’ within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment only if, in view of all of the circumstances surrounding the incident, a reasonable person would have believed that he was not free to leave.” United States v. Mendenhall,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Because this is an appeal from the denial of a summary judgment motion, we must view the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party. Oliver v. Keller,
. The employees may assert their Fourth Amendment rights against state officers because the Fourth Amendment was made applicable to the states by the Fourteenth Amendment's Due Process Clause. See, e.g., Baker v. McCollan,
. The Pierce County Superior Court later determined that the search warrant was invalid as overbroad. We need not and do not consider the effect of the search warrant’s invalidity (if, indeed, it was invalid) on the constitutionality of the defendants' seizure of the plaintiffs because we decide on other grounds that the seizure violated clearly established Fourth Amendment law.
. The plaintiffs also alleged that the interrogations violated their Fifth Amendment rights. But that claim is not at issue in this appeal.
. The plaintiffs also argue that we lack jurisdiction because the defendants’ appeal is premised on disputes with the district court’s view of the facts, not just its rulings of law. To the extent that the defendants' arguments quibble with the district court's view of the facts, we do not consider them. We view the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs. Oliver,
. We have pendent party jurisdiction over defendant Pierce County’s appeal because our decision on the individual officers' qualified immunity claims necessarily will decide whether Pierce County is entitled to summary judgment on the merits of the constitutional questions. See Streit v. County of Los Angeles,
. It is undisputed that the adult plaintiffs were "seized” within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment. We assume, without deciding, that the plaintiffs' detention here did not mature into a full-fledged arrest. The plaintiffs have not attempted to argue, either in the district court or before us, that the officers arrested them. They have cited no judicial decisions that address the question of when a detention matures into an arrest, and throughout their briefs they refer to their seizure as a "detention" rather than as an "arrest” or as being taken "into custody.” By contrast, they refer to the seizure of Ear-Tec owner Shahn Divorne, who is not a plaintiff here, as his being "taken into custody and brought to the parking lot ... in handcuffs.” See Stansbury v. California,
. The defendants did not argue to the district court or in their opening brief on appeal that probable cause supported the seizures of the plaintiffs, so we do not consider that argument. See S.D. Myers,
. The detention of building occupants during the execution of a search warrant may become unreasonable if it lasts too long. We cannot tell whether the detention during the execution of the warrant was too long in this instance, as the officers did not limit their activities to executing the warrant. It is therefore impossible to tell whether the duration of the detention would have been reasonable had the officers properly restricted their activities during the detention.
. The Supreme Court in Summers implied that questioning witnesses is not a legitimate justification for a Summers-type detention. The Court stated that a Summers-type detention is not unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment because it "is not likely to be exploited by the officer or unduly prolonged in order to gain more information, because the information the officers seek normally will be obtained through the search and not through the detention.” Summers,
.We are reminded of. the custodial interrogation that took place in Florida v. Royer,
requested [Royer] to accompany them to the[airport] police room. Royer went with them. He found himself in a small room— a large closet — equipped with a desk and two chairs. He was alone with two police officers who again told him that they thought he was carrying narcotics. He also found that the officers, without his consent, had retrieved his checked luggage from the airlines. What had begun as a consensual inquiry in a public place had escalated into an investigatory procedure in a police interrogation room, where the police, unsatisfied with previous explanations, sought to confirm their suspicions. The officers had Royer’s ticket, they had his identification, and they had seized his luggage. Royer was never informed that he was free to board his plane if he so chose, and he reasonably believed that he was being detained. At least as of that moment, any consensual aspects of the encounter had evaporated.
Id. at 502-03,
. The defendants argue that the officers possessed individualized suspicion that each adult plaintiff had committed a crime. But the record does not bear out that argument. Rather, the record shows that the officers suspected that some. Ear-Tec employees had committed crimes. But even if individualized suspicion existed, it would not have justified the officers' coercing the plaintiffs into backroom interrogations. See Royer,
. We do not consider the officers' subjective motivations. See, e.g., Whren v. United States,
. The defendants applied for a warrant to search three Ear-Tec locations and owner Shahn Divorne’s home. It is not clear from the record when the officers intended to conduct the other searches.
. Our approach here accords with courts’ repeated recognition that Summers grants the police only limited powers to detain building occupants. See, e.g., Heitschmidt v. City of Houston,
. Because we hold that the officers' holding the plaintiffs incommunicado violated their Fourth Amendment rights, we need not decide whether that conduct also violated their First Amendment or Fourteenth Amendment due process rights.
. Defendant Deborah Heishman argues that she cannot be liable because there was an insufficient causal connection between her conduct and the constitutional violation. Considering the facts in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs, we disagree. The record suggests that Heishman was involved both in the planning and execution of the plaintiffs’ seizure.
. Of course, the mere fact that the children were "seized” does not mean that their seizure was unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment. We express no opinion as to
