Affirmed by published opinion. Judge GREGORY wrote the opinion, in which Judge KING and Judge DAVIS joined.
OPINION
In this case, Appellant appeals the dismissal of its civil action brought against Appellees for alleged Fourth Amendment violations in conjunction with warrantless searches of Appellant’s mining facility. Finding that there was no constitutional violation, we affirm.
I.
LeSueur-Richmond Slate Corporation (“LeSueur-Richmond”) operated a slate quarry in Virginia. Appellees Damien Fehrer and Vernon Harris are mineral inspectors for the Virginia Department of Mines (“the Department”), James Smith is an inspector supervisor at the Department, and Conrad Spangler is the Department’s director. The Department administers Virginia’s Mineral Mine Safety Act (“the Act”), which in relevant part provides for the warrantless administrative inspections of surface mines to “respond to complaints of violations of’ the Act. Va.Code Ann. § 45.1-161.292:54(B). The Department’s procedures manual provides additional guidance on how these inspections are to be conducted. In particular, Procedure No. 2.12.00 provides:
Upon arrival at the mine site, the mine inspector will inform the operator ... of the nature of the complaint and the intention to conduct an investigation;
When investigating a safety complaint, the mine inspector will make effort to conduct the inspection so as not to divulge or direct attention to the complainant who will remain anonymous. This may require the inspection of a variety of equipment and areas other *264 than those indicated in the original complaint.
J.A. 11.
From December 2007 to June 2008, Fehrer conducted approximately twenty-five warrantless inspections of LeSueurRichmond’s mining operation after receiving anonymous tips that the mine was not in compliance with Virginia regulations. He was, on at least some of those occasions, accompanied by Smith and Harris. As a result of these inspections, the Department issued thirty-two violations against LeSueur-Richmond. In December 2009, LeSueur-Richmond filed this § 1983 action against appellees, contending that the Department’s warrantless investigations violated both the federal and Virginia state constitutions. Appellees filed a motion to dismiss on four grounds: claim preclusion, Younger abstention, qualified immunity, and failure to state a claim. The district court granted the motion on the third and fourth grounds, and LeSueur-Richmond timely appealed.
II.
A district court’s dismissal of a complaint is reviewed de novo.
Smith v. Smith,
When qualified immunity is asserted, the reviewing court should usually first ask whether the right was violated on the facts alleged, and then determine whether that right was “clearly established.”
Smith,
III.
The Fourth Amendment, incorporated against the states by the Fourteenth Amendment,
Wolf v. Colorado,
A.
LeSueur-Richmond first argues that the Virginia statute is unconstitutional. A statute permitting government agents to conduct warrantless searches in the context of a heavily regulated industry is constitutional so long as it satisfies the three-pronged test laid out by the U.S. Supreme Court in
New York v. Burger,
[T]he regulatory statute must perform the two basic functions of a warrant: it must advise the owner of the commercial premises that the search is being made pursuant to law and has a properly defined scope, and it must limit the discretion of the inspecting officers. To perform this first function, the statute must be sufficiently comprehensive and defined that the owner of commercial property cannot help but be aware that his property will be subject to periodic inspections undertaken for specific purposes. In addition, in defining how a statute limits the discretion of the inspectors, we have observed that it must be carefully limited in time, place, and scope.
Id.
at 703,
Without delving too deeply into the intricacies of facial versus as-applied challenges, we find that the Act provided adequate safeguards for LeSueur-Richmond.
2
Appellant argues that while the Supreme Court requires notice that the property
“will
be subject to periodic inspections,” the Virginia statute only says that “the Department
may
enter such mines.... ” Va.Code Ann. § 45.1-161.292:54(B) (emphasis added). Because the Act does not guarantee that any inspections will take place, LeSueur-Richmond claims,
Burgees
notice requirement is not satisfied. But this argument necessitates the conclusion that the statute would be constitutional only if inspectors were
obligated
to investigate each and every anonymous complaint they received — an outcome that is both a drain on the Department’s resources and unnecessarily intrusive on mine operators like the appellant. Fairly read, the
Burger
Court meant that a statute permitting warrantless administrative searches must clearly indicate that the mine operator’s property is subject to search, whether or not any government official actually conducts one. And here, a cursory reading of the Act demonstrates that such notice was given: “[M]ine inspectors and other employees of the Department may enter such mines in order to (i) respond to complaints of violations of this chapter____” VaCode Ann. § 45.1-161.292:54(B). The statute informs the operator “that the inspections to which he is subject do not constitute discretionary acts by a government official but are conducted pursuant to statute.”
Burger,
LeSueur-Richmond further asserts that the Act is not properly limited in time, place, and scope. With respect to time, the Virginia statute provides very few express limits. While the New York statute
*266
in
Burger
limited warrantless searches to “regular and usual business hours,” this Act permits inspections at any time “to the extent deemed reasonable and prudent ... at a variety of hours of the day and days of the week, including evening and night shifts, weekends, and holidays.” Va.Code Ann. § 45.1-161.292:58(B). The Fourth Circuit has not considered a statute with such broad application, but several sister circuits have upheld statutes that have similarly expansive language with respect to time. In
Ponce-Aldona,
for example, the Eleventh Circuit upheld a statute permitting warrantless inspections of commercial vehicles at any time, finding that “[t]ime restrictions are not feasible because trucks operate twenty-four hours a day.”
United States v. Ponce-Aldona,
As for place and scope — two interrelated inquiries — the Act provides sufficient restrictions. The statute permits warrantless searches of surface mines. Thus the discretion of inspectors extends only to mines that are regulated by the Mineral Mine Safety Act, which is analogous to the New York statute’s application to any “vehicle dismantler.”
Burger,
It is true that under the Department’s regulations, inspectors are instructed to make efforts “not to divulge or direct attention to the [anonymous] complainant.” J.A. 11. “This may require the inspection of a variety of equipment and areas
other than those indicated
in the original complaint.”
Id.
(emphasis added). LeSueurRichmond argues that this regulation — not part of the Act itself — means that inspections conducted under the Act are not sufficiently restricted. But the New York law at issue in
Burger
is broader in scope: The Virginia regulation permits inspection only of (i) areas relevant to an anonymous complaint received by the Department and (ii) such other areas which the inspector is “required” to inspect so as to “not divulge or direct attention” to the complainant. New York’s law, on the other hand, permits “an agent of the commissioner [or] any police officer” to inspect a dealer’s vehicle records “and any vehicles or parts of vehicles which are subject to the record keeping requirements of this section and which are on the premises.”
Burger,
Moreover, the mineral mine inspection regime, while warrantless, is not suspicionless. To the contrary, the statute’s complaint requirement imposes an individualized suspicion requirement pursuant to *267 which inspectors may only enter a premises where they have received a complaint of an actual health or safety violation. To the extent commentators have criticized the Supreme Court’s administrative search doctrine, the principal criticism is of cases that uphold search regimes that not only lack limits on inspectors’ discretion but also do not require individualized suspicion. See, e.g., Eve Brensike Primus, Disentangling Administrative Searches, 111 Colum. L.Rev. 254, 277-90 (2011). The Virginia surface mineral mine inspection regime both limits inspectors’ discretion and requires individualized suspicion, further buttressing its facial constitutionality.
Finally, there is a sound policy justification for Virginia’s decision to extend the scope of the inspection to areas not relevant to the complaint. The regulations are designed to protect the identity of anonymous tipsters, which both prevents retribution against those who report violations and encourages future whistleblowers. We therefore find that the Act satisfies the third prong of the Burger test.
B.
LeSueur-Richmond next contends that even if the statute is constitutional, the mine inspectors’ conduct was not. Relying on this Court’s decision in
Turner v. Dammon,
Our decision in Turner points up a significant ambiguity in the Supreme Court’s precedent regarding warrantless searches of heavily regulated industries. In an “ordinary” area of law where a statute/conduct distinction is made, the reviewing court can easily separate the two inquiries. In such a case, the court can first lay out a test to evaluate whether the statute is legally valid, and then go on to apply a different test to determine if the conduct in the particular case is valid. Here, in contrast, the two are not so easily pulled apart. The Burger decision laid out a test that applied the Fourth Amendment to the warrantless administrative search context, but that test inquires only into the provisions of the statute and not into the particular conduct of the officers in a given case. As a result, Burger appears to have implicitly collapsed the statute/conduct distinction: in the administrative search context, the Fourth Amendment only requires that the statute meet certain minimum requirements. At the same time, our decision in Turner made clear that warrantless searches may be challenged on the basis of an official’s conduct.
There are two ways we might resolve this tension. First, this Court can read
Turner
as an application of the cannon of constitutional avoidance. Because the statute in
Turner
imposed little to no limits on the police, this interpretation goes, this Court was faced with either declaring the entire law void or else reading additional restrictions into the statute. We chose the latter option, finding that where an administrative search program “provides no rules governing the procedure that inspectors must follow, the Fourth Amendment and its various restrictive rules apply.”
Id.
at 446 (citing
Donovan v. Dewey,
Alternatively, we might resolve the tension by assuming that
Turner
instead intended to rely on the statute/conduct distinction. To do so, we must assume that
Burger
left open the question of whether a state official, acting pursuant to a constitutional law that permits warrant-less inspections, can still violate the Fourth Amendment through her conduct. The Supreme Court has never directly addressed the issue.
See
Wayne R. Lafavre, Searches & Seizures § 10.2 (4th ed. 2011) (“If a departure from the traditional probable cause test is permissible as to a certain kind of business inspection, then what (if anything) is needed to justify a particular inspection at a particular business place at a particular time?”)
3
see also Lesser v. Espy,
We adopt the second approach, and do so for two reasons. First, the only alternative is at odds with Supreme Court precedent. In
Burger,
the Supreme Court was presented with the question of what the Fourth Amendment requires of statutes that permit warrantless administrative searches, and it answered by laying out a three-prong test.
See supra
note 1. To hold that there are additional requirements would be to ignore
Burger’s
plain holding. Second, this interpretation best comports with the purpose of the Constitution’s protection against unreasonable searches and seizures. The three-pronged
Burger
test permits warrantless searches so long as the relevant statute satisfies some rather basic standards. But as
Turner
demonstrates — a case where the police conducted over one hundred warrantless searches without any justification or explanation, and did not issue a single citation,
Turner,
Having determined that under the Fourth Amendment a party may challenge both the constitutionality of the Act permitting warrantless searches as well as the conduct of the government officials in a
*269
particular case, we must go on to consider whether the conduct of the mine inspectors in
this
case was unconstitutional. Unfortunately, neither the Supreme Court nor this Court has provided much guidance in answering this question.
Turner
did hold that if the officers had “no basis from which any reviewing authority can gauge the reasonableness of their actions,”
id.
at 445, there is a violation of clearly established Fourth Amendment law. That is, we indicated that satisfaction of the “no basis” test would be
sufficient
to demonstrate a constitutional violation of
clearly established
law, but we never discussed what is
necessary
to prove a Fourth Amendment violation, whether clearly established or not. We further noted that the outcome in
Turner
would have been different “if the large and disproportionate number of searches ... was objectively supported by[, among other things,] logs detailing the subject of complaints by patrons, passersby, or neighboring establishments to which the officers had responded.” Turner,
IV.
Appellants also included in their complaint a claim based on Virginia Code § 19.2-59, which prohibits any “search” by a state officer “except by virtue of and under a warrant issued by a proper officer.” Contending that this imposes a warrant requirement for all searches, whether conducted pursuant to the Act or not, LeSueur-Richmond seeks damages pursuant to this state statute. However, under Virginia law a court must “harmonize apparently conflicting statutes to give effect to both.”
Boynton v. Kilgore,
V.
Finally, we address qualified immunity. Qualified immunity protects government officials from civil suits for damages “insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.”
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
VI.
For the reasons given above, we affirm the district court’s dismissal of LeSueurRichmond’s complaint.
AFFIRMED
Notes
. The three prongs of the
Burger
test are that (i) there is a substantial government interest in the regulatory scheme; (ii) warrantless inspections are necessary to further the regulatory scheme; and (iii) the program provides an adequate substitute for a warrant.
Burger,
. Richmond could have styled its argument as an as-applied challenge, contending that it was subject to unconstitutional searches pursuant to the Virginia Act in this case. However, our holding that the Act provided adequate safeguards for Richmond precludes reversal under either formulation.
. A close reading of the language used in
Burger
provides little guidance. The Supreme Court did note in that case that the appeal was "primarily on the ground that [the New York law] was unconstitutional.”
Burger,
