During а prison shakedown, guards found a syringe in one of Isaac Sparks’ shoes. They wanted to learn whether Sparks had been using drugs or whether, as he claimed, another inmate put the syringe in the shoe. They asked for a urine sample, which Sparks did not provide. He said that he could not; the guards did not believe this and conducted him to the infirmary, where Manuel Largaes-pada, the prison’s physician, passed a catheter up Sparks’ urinary tract and discovered that his bladder was indeed empty. A urine sample that Sparks provided several hours later tested positive for drugs. Discipline followed — as did this suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
After a bench trial, the district judge concluded that Largaespada and Ronald Stutter, one of the guards, violated Sparks’ rights under the fourth amendment (applied to the states by the due process clause of the fourteenth) by using a catheter to extract urine from his blаdder. In response to the defendants’ claim of official immunity, the district court conceded that “the legal effect of the involuntary cathеterization of a State prisoner by a prison physician appears to be a question of first impression. Perhaps the nearest approach is to be found in the cases having to do with body cavity searches”. And these cases have permitted guards to search prisoners’ body cavities for drugs— both visually, see
Bell v. Wolfish,
The fourth amendment protects privacy, and the Supreme Court held in
Hudson v. Palmer,
“Privacy” is a variegated term, and
Hudson
did not require the Court to decide what interests prisoners retain in thеir bodies, as opposed to their surroundings. Suppose a prison decided to use the inmates as subjects in hazardous medical tests, without seeking their consent. Introducing drugs or biological material into prisoners could well violate their rights under the fourth amendment, even though the warden and medical staff acted for noble purposes and with a belief that the experiment was safe.
Vitek v. Jones,
To say that cоnvicts retain rights under the fourth amendment does not decide any concrete ease, however. Rights of all kinds are much diminished in prison — and the right to bе free of unwelcome medical procedures has an uncertain scope even for persons suspected but not yet convicted of crime. All the fourth amendment requires is that searches and seizures be reasonable, and although the existence of a warrant sometimes is essential to reasonableness, Sparks does not suggest that medical procedures within prisons must be preceded by judicial apрroval. But if doctors must reach their own conclusions about reasonableness, then the lack of clear substantive rules precludes an аward of damages. Until the right in question has been “clearly established,” courts do not demand that public officials dig into their pockets.
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
The district court recognized that the use of a catheter is similar to a body-cavity search. These hаve uniformly been held to be consistent with constitutional norms when conducted within prisons. Other analogies are possible. A catheter may be likе a needle used to draw blood, a procedure held permissible in
Schmerber v. California,
Uncertainty surrounding the application of the fourth amendmеnt would not block inquiry based on the cruel and unusual punishments clause of the eighth. A person who engages in “calculated harassment unrelated to prison needs” cannot contend that legal uncertainty thwarted him from making the correct judgment. The eighth amendment’s mental-state requirement, rаther than doctrines of immunity, supplies protection for honest errors. But Sparks cannot take advantage of this possibility. He raised an eighth аmendment argument early in the case but abandoned it and does not now argue that the defendants acted with the mental state required to violate that provision. Accordingly, the judgment is
REVERSED.
