Case Information
*1 R AGGI and S TRAUB , Circuit Judges , C OGAN , District Judge [*]
________________
Appeal from an award of summary judgment to defendants on plaintiffs’ Fourth Amendment challenge to the New York City Police Department’s policy *2 of administering a breathalyzer test to any officer who discharges a firearm resulting in death or personal injury. Plaintiffs challenge the district court’s determination that the policy is constitutionally reasonable under the “special needs” doctrine, arguing that the policy does not serve a primary purpose distinct from normal criminal law enforcement, and, even if it did, that any special needs are sufficiently outweighed by officers’ privacy interests as to preclude warrantless, suspicionless breathalyzer testing.
A FFIRMED .
________________ E ILEEN P ENNER (Andrew L. Frey, Mayer Brown LLP, New York, New York; Michael T. Murray, Michael T. Murray & Associates, P.C., New York, New York, on the brief ), Mayer Brown LLP, Washington, D.C., for Appellants Patrick J. Lynch and Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association of the City of New York, Inc.
J ANE L. G ORDON (Edward F.X. Hart, Alan Schlesinger, on the brief ), of Counsel, for Michael A. Cardozo, Corporation Counsel of the City of New York, New York, New York, for Appellees The City of New York, New York City Police Department and Raymond W. Kelly .
________________ R EENA R AGGI , Circuit Judge :
Plaintiffs, the Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association of the City of New York,
Inc., a union representing New York City’s 35,000 police officers (except certain
*3
ranks of detective), and its President, Patrick J. Lynch, appeal from an award of
summary judgment entered on June 28, 2012, in the United States District Court
for the Southern District of New York (George B. Daniels,
Judge
) in favor of
defendants, the City of New York, the New York City Police Department, and
Police Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly (collectively, the “NYPD”), on
plaintiffs’ Fourth Amendment challenge to NYPD Interim Order 52 (“IO-52”),
which requires the administration of a breathalyzer test to any officer whose
discharge of his firearm within New York City results in death or injury to any
person. See Palladino v. City of New York,
While the district court relied on Lynch I’s special needs analysis in granting judgment to the NYPD, plaintiffs submit that Lynch I’s rulings do not control our summary judgment review. See Brody v. Vill. of Port Chester, 345 F.3d 103, 110 (2d Cir. 2003). They argue that the record does not in fact support, *4 much less compel, the conclusion that the primary purpose of IO-52 testing is special needs distinct from normal criminal law enforcement. In any event, plaintiffs contend that any such special needs do not sufficiently outweigh officers’ privacy interests to make warrantless, suspicionless breathalyzer testing constitutionally reasonable. Even assuming that a panel reviewing a summary judgment award is free to revisit not only the merits predictions of a prior panel, but also that panel’s resolution of purely legal issues, we see no reason to depart from Lynch I’s sound legal analysis of the special needs doctrine. On our own review of an expanded record as well as relevant precedent, we conclude that IO-52 testing is reasonable under the special needs doctrine and that plaintiffs’ Fourth Amendment challenge fails as a matter of law. Accordingly, we affirm the award of summary judgment in favor of the NYPD.
I. Background
A. NYPD Interim Order 52
1. Circumstances Giving Rise to IO-52
IO-52 has its origins in events occurring in Queens, New York on November 26, 2006, when, during an undercover operation, NYPD officers shot and killed a man named Sean Bell and wounded two of his companions. In the *5 wake of public criticism, the NYPD convened a Committee for Review of Undercover Procedures, chaired by Charles V. Campisi, Chief of the NYPD Internal Affairs Bureau (“IAB”), which is charged with investigating police misconduct. The Committee ultimately released 19 recommendations, including a recommendation for mandatory breathalyzer testing of NYPD officers involved in shootings that resulted in death or personal injury. On September 30, 2007, the Police Commissioner implemented that recommendation by issuing IO-52, which sets forth procedures for alcohol testing “when a uniformed member of the [NYPD], on or off duty, is involved in a firearms discharge within New York City which results in injury to or death of a person.” IO-52, Joint Appendix (“J.A.”) 45. [1]
2. Stated Purpose of IO-52 The stated purpose of IO-52 is “[t]o ensure the highest levels of integrity at the scene of police involved firearms discharges which result in injury to or death of a person.” IO-52, J.A. 45. As explained further by Chief Campisi in opposing plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction, IO-52 serves (1) to *6 protect “the integrity of the NYPD”; (2) to protect “the safety of the public and NYPD officers”; (3) to deter “alcohol intoxication by NYPD who are carrying firearms”; and (4) to assure “the public that one of the most important and daunting powers of the police, the power to apply deadly force when necessary, is not being abused or used by officers who are under the influence of alcohol.” Campisi Decl. ¶ 70, J.A. 104.
3. IO-52 Testing Procedures Toward these ends, IO-52 mandates, inter alia, that a Patrol Services Bureau Duty Captain or Inspector respond to the scene of any police shooting in New York City resulting in death or personal injury, advise each officer who discharged a firearm that he will be tested for alcohol consumption, and ensure that each such officer “remain[s] on the scene when feasible and consistent with safety (i.e., hospitalization not immediately required)” until an IAB Duty Captain arrives to administer a portable breathalyzer test. IO-52, J.A. 45.
Upon arrival, the IAB Duty Captain must administer a breathalyzer test to each officer who discharged his firearm in a “private setting (e.g., Nearest Department facility [or] Department auto being used by the supervisor concerned)” and in “a dignified, respectful fashion.” IO-52, J.A. 46. If the *7 breathalyzer test, which takes about five minutes to complete, produces a reading of less than .08—the legal limit for operating a motor vehicle under N.Y. Veh. & Traf. Law § 1192—IO-52 requires no further testing. If the reading is .08 or greater, however, the officer must be transported to an IAB testing location for a second, more alcohol sensitive test on an Intoxilyzer machine. That process, which includes questioning the officer about recent alcohol and drug use, is recorded on videotape. If the Intoxilyzer reading exceeds .08, the videotape is provided to the IAB Duty Captain, who follows applicable procedures to “safeguard [it] for evidentiary purposes.” IO-52, J.A. 46. The IAB Duty Captain then determines whether the officer is unfit for duty due to intoxication.
4. NYPD Alcohol Use Guidelines IO-52 testing operates within a larger administrative context addressing alcohol use by NYPD officers. NYPD Patrol Guide Procedures (“PG”) require officers to be “fit for duty at all times, except when on sick report.” PG 203–04, J.A. 111. Consistent with this requirement, officers are instructed that they “SHOULD NOT be in possession of their firearms if there is any possibility that they may become unfit for duty due to the consumption of intoxicants.” Id. (emphasis in original). NYPD supervisors are authorized and, indeed, obligated *8 to remove firearms from any officer “who appears unfit for duty due to intoxication.” PG 206–12, J.A. 131. An officer who is “unfit for duty due to excessive consumption and intoxication from alcohol while armed with a firearm” is subject to the administrative charge of being “Unfit for Duty While Armed,” with “strict punitive sanctions” if the charge is sustained at a disciplinary proceeding. PG 203–04, J.A. 111. An officer’s “misuse of a firearm while unfit for duty due to excessive consumption of, and intoxication from, alcohol will result in that [officer’s] termination from the [NYPD].” Id. [2]
5. NYPD Procedures for Investigating Police Shootings IO-52 testing also operates within a larger set of procedures whereby the NYPD investigates every incident in which an officer discharges his firearm other than at the firing range. See PG 212–29, J.A. 134 (“Firearms Discharge by Uniformed Member of the Service”); PG 212–53, J.A. 144 (“Command Responsibilities When a Person Dies or Sustains a Serious Injury in Connection with Police Activity”). These procedures require that the initial investigation *9 into a police shooting be conducted by an NYPD officer with the rank of captain or higher, who must prepare a narrative report of the relevant events, which may or may not also contain a preliminary evaluation of whether the shooting comported with NYPD guidelines and a recommendation as to possible corrective or disciplinary action. At the same time, procedures require the shooting site to be treated in the same manner as a crime scene. As explained by Chief Campisi, this is done “to assure the public and the NYPD’s own officers that the truth of the shooting will be brought out and appropriate actions taken,” Campisi Decl. ¶ 45, J.A. 99, and because “whether criminal charges against anyone will result cannot be determined until the investigation is completed,” id. ¶ 33, J.A. 96.
Within 90 days of the shooting, or as soon as possible thereafter, a commanding officer must complete a final report of findings and recommendations, including therein the Medical Examiner’s report (if applicable), a ballistics report, a summary of the shooting officer’s statements, and any applicable IAB, District Attorney, or grand jury findings. The matter is then reviewed further first by the Borough Firearms Discharge Advisory Board and then by the Chief of the Department’s Firearms Discharge Review Board to *10 decide what action, if any, should be taken. Such action may provide for “additional training,” “disciplin[e],” or, “in relatively rare circumstances,” criminal prosecution. Id. ¶ 46, J.A. 99.
6. Reported Frequency and Perceptions of IO-52 Testing Plaintiffs submit that since the 2007 implementation of IO-52 , NYPD officers have been subjected to IO-52 breath testing on approximately 15 to 20 occasions. No tested officer has exceeded the .08 threshold on Intoxilyzer testing, nor has any officer been criminally charged in connection with the shootings at issue. Nevertheless, plaintiffs have submitted affidavits from some of the tested officers stating that they found IO-52 testing burdensome, embarrassing, stressful, and degrading. These same officers, like all their NYPD counterparts, are subject to periodic, and even random, drug testing throughout their NYPD careers.
B. Prior Proceedings
Plaintiffs initially moved for a preliminary injunction barring IO-52 testing
during the pendency of this case. The district court denied the motion, finding
that plaintiffs were unlikely to succeed on the merits of their Fourth Amendment
claim because the challenged warrantless testing was supported by special needs
*11
unrelated to crime control. See Palladino v. City of New York, No. 07-CV-9264
(GBD), 2008 WL 4539503 (S.D.N.Y. Sept. 30, 2008). Affirming that decision in
Lynch I, this court concluded that IO-52 testing serves multiple purposes.
First, it facilitates “personnel management” by allowing the NYPD quickly
to identify and discipline or remove from duty officers who clearly violated
NYPD policy by firing their guns while intoxicated. Lynch I,
Second, IO-52 testing “promot[es] the NYPD’s reputation among New York City residents” by showing that the NYPD takes its alcohol and firearms policies seriously. Id. Indeed, Lynch I observed that this purpose is as well served by test results showing that the officer was not under the influence of alcohol—the more common occurrence—as by results showing inebriation. See id. (“[W]hen an officer fires his or her gun while not under the influence of alcohol, a breathalyzer test assures the public that the officer was fit for duty when he or she chose to fire.” (emphasis in original)).
Third, IO-52 testing serves criminal law enforcement because “to the extent that a police officer commits a crime by firing his or her gun, the NYPD is charged with investigating that crime, and the breathalyzer program is meant to be one investigatory tool at the NYPD’s disposal.” Id. at 102.
In light of these multiple purposes, Lynch I identified the “critical
question” for special needs analysis to be whether criminal law enforcement was
the “‘primary purpose’” of IO-52. Id. (quoting City of Indianapolis v. Edmond,
Proceeding to evaluate the reasonableness of IO-52 testing by balancing the government’s special needs against officers’ privacy interests, Lynch I determined that (1) NYPD officers have a “diminished expectation of privacy when it comes to carrying and using firearms,” (2) IO-52 breathalyzer testing was *13 minimally intrusive, (3) the NYPD’s need to regulate the use of alcohol by armed officers authorized to use deadly force is “manifest,” and (4) IO-52 “straightforwardly addresses” that need. Id. at 103–04 (internal quotation marks omitted). Accordingly, because the NYPD’s special need to conduct IO-52 testing outweighed the privacy interests advanced by plaintiffs, Lynch I affirmed the district court’s denial of a preliminary injunction. See id. at 104.
Further discovery ensued on remand, followed by the parties’ cross-
motions for summary judgment. Relying on Lynch I’s analysis of special needs,
the district court concluded as a matter of law that IO-52 testing is
constitutionally reasonable and, therefore, granted the NYPD’s motion for
summary judgment, and denied plaintiffs’ parallel motion. See Palladino v. City
of New York,
Plaintiffs timely appealed.
II. Discussion
We review an award of summary judgment de novo, construing the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party. See Dickerson v. Napolitano, 604 F.3d 732, 740 (2d Cir. 2010). We will affirm an award of summary judgment only where there is no genuine issue of material fact, and the *14 moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. See id.; Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). This is such a case.
A. The “Special Needs” Doctrine
The Fourth Amendment, applicable to the states through the Fourteenth
Amendment, see Elkins v. United States,
“Where a search is undertaken by law enforcement officials to discover
evidence of criminal wrongdoing, . . . reasonableness generally requires the
*15
obtaining of a judicial warrant” supported by probable cause. Vernonia Sch.
Dist. 47J v. Acton,
As this precedent suggests, the “special needs” category of constitutionally
permissible warrantless, suspicionless searches is “closely guarded.” Chandler
v. Miller,
Primary purpose is determined by reference to the “immediate objective”
of the challenged search program, not its “ultimate goal.” Ferguson v. City of
*17
Charleston,
Relying on Lidster, this court has employed the special needs doctrine to
uphold state and federal laws requiring convicted felons to provide DNA
samples in order to create databases “to assist in solving crimes should the
*18
investigation of such crimes permit resort to DNA testing of evidence.” Nicholas
v. Goord,
The identification of special needs does not, by itself, mean that it is
constitutionally reasonable to conduct such searches in the absence of a warrant
or individualized suspicion. That conclusion requires a further finding that the
interests served by the special needs outweigh the privacy interests at stake. See
*19
United States v. Amerson,
B. IO-52 Testing Is Constitutionally Reasonable Under the Special Needs Doctrine
When we apply these principles to this case, the record compels the following conclusions.
First, it is evident that IO-52 testing is conducted to determine an officer’s sobriety at the time he discharged his firearm. Sobriety is a fitness-for-duty condition of employment with the NYPD. Thus, a sobriety determination serves special needs distinct from criminal law enforcement, specifically, personnel management of, and maintaining public confidence in, the NYPD. Indeed, these needs must be served in every police shooting case, without regard to whether the shooting implicates the criminal laws, which most police shootings, in fact, do not.
Second, the NYPD’s interest in these special needs is not compatible with the warrant requirement applicable to criminal investigations.
Third, the NYPD’s interest in these special needs sufficiently outweighs the privacy interests of tested police officers as to render warrantless, suspicionless IO-52 testing constitutionally reasonable.
1. Primary Purpose
Plaintiffs maintain that the district court erred in finding that the NYPD had conclusively proved normal law enforcement not to be the primary purpose of IO-52 testing. Indeed, plaintiffs contend that law enforcement is the central and indispensable feature of IO-52 testing. The record does not admit such a conclusion.
IO-52 testing determines sobriety. In the case of a police officer who has just discharged his or her firearm, the immediate object of such a mandatory sobriety determination is not criminal law enforcement as plaintiffs assert. Indeed, nothing in the record indicates that IO-52 testing is premised on any assumption that every time a police officer discharges his firearm causing death or personal injury he commits a crime. Cf. Nicholas v. Goord, 430 F.3d at 675 (noting “usual law-enforcement circumstance” where search is “motivated by suspicion that the person being searched was involved in any unsolved crime”). Nor does IO-52 testing itself indicate criminal behavior. The ingestion of alcohol—unlike the ingestion of illegal drugs, for which police officers are routinely tested—is not, after all, criminally proscribed. Moreover, an officer whose breathalyzer results are above .08 may well have discharged his firearm *21 lawfully, for example, to stop a life-threatening crime. [3] Meanwhile, an officer with test results below .08 may have discharged his firearm unlawfully, for example, to commit premeditated murder. In short, even if IO-52 test results might ultimately provide evidence relevant to a criminal prosecution— something that has never occurred to date—the record does not here admit a conclusion that the immediate object of IO-52 testing is the procurement of criminal evidence in order to prosecute the police officer in question. Cf. Ferguson v. City of Charleston, 532 U.S. at 82 (concluding that immediate objective of searches was to generate evidence for arrest and prosecution of drug- abusing mothers).
Rather, what the record does show is that the immediate purpose of IO-52
testing is personnel management of, and the maintenance of public confidence
in, the NYPD, specifically with respect to officers’ discharge of firearms in
circumstances causing death or personal injury.
[4]
The Supreme Court has
*22
specifically recognized a public employer’s regulation of its employees’ conduct
as a special need that can support warrantless, suspicionless testing to ensure
safe and responsible performance of hazardous duties, a conclusion that obtains
without regard to whether the testing occurs before or after any harm actually
occurs and whether the employer is itself involved in law enforcement. See
National Treasury Emps. Union v. Von Raab,
which it came to recommend the challenged mandatory breathalyzer testing. Moreover, plaintiffs have adduced no evidence contradicting Chief Campisi’s assertions.
breathalyzer test assures [both supervising officers and] the public that the
officer was fit for duty when he or she chose to fire.”
IO-52 testing also serves the special needs of personnel management and public confidence by providing an added deterrent to officers who might otherwise consider carrying their firearms while unfit for duty due to alcohol. Plaintiffs submit that deterrence is not the immediate object of IO-52 testing and, in any event, the infrequency of such testing makes it an ineffective means of detecting and deterring excessive alcohol use by police officers. The argument is unconvincing. While deterrence is generally achieved in the long run, the immediacy of that objective to NYPD personnel management and public confidence needs is evident from the fact that the policy alerts every police officer and the public that IO-52 testing will be conducted, without exception, *24 every time an officer discharges his firearm causing death or personal injury. As the Supreme Court has observed in recognizing deterrence as a special need supporting the suspicionless testing of railroad employees after train accidents, policies alerting “employees in safety-sensitive positions [that] they will be tested upon the occurrence of a triggering event, the timing of which no employee can predict with certainty, . . . significantly increase the deterrent effect of the administrative penalties associated with the prohibited conduct, concomitantly increasing the likelihood that employees will forgo using drugs or alcohol while subject to being called for duty.” Skinner v. Ry. Labor Execs.’ Ass’n, 489 U.S. at 630 (internal citation omitted).
Thus, both by promptly determining whether officers who discharged their firearms were in compliance with NYPD fitness-for-duty requirements and by deterring officers generally from carrying firearms when not sober, IO-52 testing serves personnel management and public confidence needs distinct from normal law enforcement. [5]
*25 Plaintiffs nevertheless contend that Ferguson v. City of Charleston, 532 U.S. at 84, precludes a finding of special needs when, as in the case of IO-52 testing, there is “extensive involvement of law enforcement officials at every stage” of the program. This argument overlooks important distinctions between Ferguson and this case. Specifically, Ferguson did not arise in an employment context, much less one where the tested employees occupied safety-sensitive positions. Further, as we have already explained supra at 16–17, the immediate purpose of the testing program at issue in Ferguson was the “arrest and prosecution” of the pregnant women who tested positive for drugs. Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). It was in that context that the Court concluded that extensive law enforcement involvement in drug testing by a public hospital precluded a finding of special need. Id. at 85–86.
Here, the immediate object of IO-52 testing is not to arrest or prosecute the
police officer who discharged his firearm but, rather, to confirm—for his
employer and the public—that the officer was fit for duty when he fired his gun.
While every IO-52 test to date has provided such confirmation of fitness, if the
results were otherwise, they would provide the objective ground necessary for
see Chandler v. Miller,
the employer to order appropriate administrative discipline. Positive results would not, however, necessarily support criminal prosecution. Thus, while the NYPD certainly controls IO-52 testing, it does so first and foremost as the public employer responsible for overseeing its officers’ use of authorized firearms and for assuring the public of that oversight.
In urging otherwise, plaintiffs emphasize that the language of IO-52 identifies its purpose as to “ensure the highest levels of integrity at the scene” of police shootings, IO-52, J.A. 45 (emphasis added), that the NYPD employs the same procedures with respect to the site of police shootings as it employs at crime scenes, and that Chief Campisi acknowledged that police shooting sites are treated as crime scenes “to ensure prosecution,” Campisi Decl. ¶ 45, J.A. 99. When reviewed in context of the record as a whole, however, these facts cannot support a conclusion that the NYPD’s immediate purpose in using certain criminal procedures at the site of a police shooting—much less its immediate purpose in mandating breathalyzer testing—is to solve a crime. Rather, the record indicates that the immediate objective of these practices is to assure the public that every investigation into a police shooting is conducted with the greatest rigor. Id. ¶¶ 33, 70, J.A. 99, 104. Such assurance is essential to *27 maintaining public confidence that police officers, armed and authorized to use deadly force, do so consistently not only with the law but also with NYPD training and guidelines. Indeed, the immediate importance of rigorous investigation to ensuring public confidence in the NYPD rests not on the fact that in rare instances police officers may be prosecuted for discharging their firearms but on the fact that in the vast majority of cases they will not be prosecuted. Thus, the full record demonstrates that ensuring the “integrity at the scene,” as that phrase is used in IO-52, serves the immediate purpose of promoting public confidence in the overall investigation, not of conducting regular, routine law enforcement.
In sum, the record compels the conclusion that the primary, i.e., immediate, purpose of IO-52 testing is personnel management and the maintenance of public confidence in the NYPD, needs present in every shooting case and distinct from normal law enforcement objectives to solve crimes and prosecute their perpetrators. In these circumstances, the possibility that IO-52 test results might ultimately be used as evidence in a criminal prosecution does not take the case out of the special needs doctrine. See Illinois v. Lidster, 540 U.S. *28 at 423–27; United States v. Amerson, 483 F.3d at 80–83; Nicholas v. Goord, 430 F.3d at 667–69.
2. Incompatibility of the Identified Special Needs with the Warrant Requirement
For non-law enforcement objectives to qualify as “special needs,” a court must conclude that those needs are incompatible with the usual warrant and probable cause requirements and “not needed to prevent the mischief” that those requirements “are designed to prevent.” United States v. Amerson, 483 F.3d at 82 (internal quotation marks omitted) (emphasis added). In making that determination, we start with the Supreme Court’s observation that “[a] warrant serves primarily to advise the citizen that an intrusion is authorized by law and limited in its permissible scope and to interpose a neutral magistrate between the citizen and the law enforcement engaged in the often competitive enterprise of ferreting out crime.” National Treasury Emps. Union v. Von Raab, 489 U.S. at 667 (internal quotation marks omitted). Thus, the Court has held that where “the circumstances justifying toxicological testing and the permissible limits of such intrusions are defined narrowly and specifically” and “are well known to covered employees,” there is little need for a warrant. Id. (alteration and internal quotation marks omitted). Indeed, that conclusion is most apt when the *29 challenged testing is mandatory and admits no exercise of discretion. See Maryland v. King, 133 S. Ct. at 1969 (“The need for a warrant is perhaps least when the search involves no discretion that could properly be limited by the interpolation of a neutral magistrate between the citizen and the law enforcement officer.”) (internal quotation marks omitted); United States v. Amerson, 483 F.3d at 82 (observing that lack of discretion removes “significant reason for warrants—to provide a check on the arbitrary use of power”).
The circumstances triggering mandatory IO-52 testing are narrowly and
specifically defined. IO-52 applies only when (1) an on- or off-duty NYPD officer
discharges his firearm (2) within the City of New York (3) resulting in death or
injury to a person. When these circumstances are present, IO-52 mandates that
an IAB Duty Captain respond to the scene of the shooting and administer a
standardized breathalyzer test to each officer who discharged his firearm. The
policy affords the IAB Duty Captain no discretion in determining whether to
administer the test; he must do so. Moreover, as is evident from the very fact of
this lawsuit, brought by the union representing the vast majority of NYPD
officers, officers are aware that they are subject to such mandatory testing. Thus,
here, “a warrant would provide little or nothing in the way of additional
*30
protection of personal privacy” to NYPD officers. National Treasury Emps.
Union v. Von Raab,
The Supreme Court has further recognized that “the government’s interest
in dispensing with the warrant requirement is at its strongest when, as here, the
burden of obtaining a warrant is likely to frustrate the governmental purpose
behind the search.” Skinner v. Ry. Labor Execs.’ Ass’n,
Accordingly, we conclude that the primary non-law enforcement objectives of IO-52 testing—personnel management of and public confidence in the NYPD—are properly deemed “special needs” in that they are incompatible with the general warrant/individualized suspicion requirements and, further, that the mandatory, narrow, and specific nature of IO-52 testing greatly ameliorates the mischief that the warrant/individualized suspicion requirements were designed to prevent.
*32 3. Reasonableness
The fact that a challenged search program is supported by special needs
does not, by itself, establish the reasonableness of searches conducted
thereunder. See Illinois v. Lidster,
First, because NYPD officers are authorized to carry firearms and to use
deadly force, they have a diminished expectation of privacy in employer testing
that ensures their fitness for duty. The Supreme Court has generally recognized
*33
that the “‘operational realities of the workplace may render entirely reasonable
certain work-related intrusions by supervisors and co-workers that might be
viewed as unreasonable in other contexts.’” Maryland v. King,
Second, the nature of the challenged intrusion, breath testing, is one that the Supreme Court has recognized not to “implicate[] significant privacy concerns.” Skinner v. Ry. Labor Execs.’ Ass’n, 489 U.S. at 626; see Maryland v. King, 133 S. Ct. at 1969 (“The fact that an intrusion is negligible is of central *34 relevance to determining reasonableness.”). Such tests are obviously less invasive than blood sampling, in that they “do not require piercing the skin and may be conducted safely outside a hospital environment and with a minimum of inconvenience or embarrassment.” Skinner v. Ry. Labor Executives Ass’n, 489 U.S. at 625. Breath tests are also less invasive than urine tests, which may require observation of a function “traditionally shielded by great privacy.” Id. at 626.
In urging us nevertheless to weigh this factor in their favor, plaintiffs rely
on affidavits submitted by police officers subjected to IO-52 testing who state
that the tests were degrading and traumatic, especially in the immediate
aftermath of a shooting. Plaintiffs fail, however, to explain why IO-52 testing is
any more traumatic or intrusive than the drug, urine, and blood testing of
railroad employees following train accidents that the Supreme Court held
minimally intrusive in Skinner. See id. IO-52 specifically instructs that the initial
breathalyzer test be performed in a “private setting” and in a “dignified,
respectful fashion.” IO-52, J.A. 46. There is no record basis to think that a five-
minute breath test conducted under such circumstances imposes a significant
burden on officers.
[7]
Nor does the record indicate that IO-52 testing “threaten[s]
*35
the safety or health” of the officers tested. Maryland v. King,
Third, the NYPD’s need promptly to confirm that officers who discharged
firearms were then fit for duty is manifest, and IO-52 directly addresses that
need. NYPD officers “who may use deadly force plainly ‘discharge duties
fraught with such risks of injury to others that even a momentary lapse of
attention can have disastrous consequences.’” National Treasury Emps. Union v.
Von Raab,
conducted only after a breathalyzer test provides individual suspicion of intoxication. Thus, if IO-52 breathalyzer testing is reasonable, so too is subsequent Intoxilyzer testing.
alcohol and firearms are vital to public safety,” 589 F.3d at 104, and the NYPD has a substantial interest, when officers discharge their firearms, in promptly confirming for itself and the public that officers were in compliance with those regulations, as well as in detecting and disciplining officers who were not, see id. at 101. Indeed, when IO-52 testing promptly eliminates the influence of alcohol in a police shooting, the NYPD can more readily consider whether any concerns raised by the shooting suggest the need for other administrative action, such as better training. See Skinner v. Ry. Labor Execs.’ Ass’n, 489 U.S. at 630 (recognizing that negative drug test results for railway employees after train accident “would help establish the significance of equipment failure, inadequate training, or other potential causes”).
Plaintiffs argue that the NYPD was required to show that less-intrusive, suspicion-based testing was impractical before implementing suspicionless testing under IO-52. They note that Chief Campisi himself initially supported a suspicion-based testing policy, although that view was not adopted by the Committee of Review in recommending mandatory breath testing in all shooting cases. We need not discuss this point at length because the Supreme Court has “repeatedly refused to declare that only the least intrusive search practicable can *37 be reasonable under the Fourth Amendment” in the context of special needs. Vernonia Sch. Dist. 47J v. Acton, 515 U.S. at 663 (internal quotation marks omitted). Plaintiffs’ complaint is that such a shooting, by itself, provides no basis for suspecting the individual officer of having fired under the influence of alcohol. But, as we have observed throughout this opinion, the object of IO-52 testing is not simply to identify officers who discharged their firearms under the influence of alcohol; it is also to provide police supervisors and the public with prompt assurance that a shooting officer’s actions were not influenced by alcohol, i.e., that he was fit for duty when he fired his weapon. Limiting breathalyzer testing to officers specifically suspected of intoxication not only fails effectively to provide such objective evidence of fitness, it effectively “transforms the [breath testing] process into a badge of shame,” which is not consistent with the special needs at issue. Id.; see also id. at 664 (observing that suspicion based testing “would not be better, but worse,” given the special needs at issue).
The same flaw informs plaintiffs’ contention that IO-52 testing is not necessary because the NYPD has other equally or more effective means in place to detect violations of its alcohol policies, for example, observation by fellow officers trained to detect intoxication. Such subjective assessments, even by *38 trained officers, are unlikely to inspire the same public confidence as an objective breath test in determining whether a shooting officer was or was not under the influence of alcohol. In any event, our task is not to determine whether IO-52 is “optimally effective, but whether it [is] reasonably so.” Cassidy v. Chertoff, 471 F.3d at 85.
Having carefully weighed the relevant factors in the specific context of this case, we conclude that the NYPD’s special need to manage a force of officers authorized to carry firearms and to use deadly force, as well as its special need to maintain public confidence in the NYPD, outweigh the privacy interests of a police officer who has discharged his firearm so as to cause death or personal injury with respect to undergoing the negligible intrusion of breathalyzer testing.
Accordingly, we conclude that warrantless, suspicionless IO-52 breath tests are supported by special needs and constitute reasonable searches under the Fourth Amendment. The district court therefore correctly entered summary judgment in favor of the NYPD.
III. Conclusion
To summarize, we conclude that the record compels the following conclusions:
1. The immediate objectives of IO-52 testing are personnel management of, and public confidence in, the NYPD.
2. The identified objectives qualify as “special needs” for purposes of Fourth Amendment reasonableness review because they are distinct from normal law enforcement concerns and incompatible with the warrant and probable cause requirements for law enforcement searches.
3. The aforementioned special needs greatly outweigh officers’ reduced expectation of privacy with respect to alcohol testing at the time of any firearms discharge causing death or personal injury, thereby rendering warrantless, suspicionless IO-52 testing constitutionally reasonable as a matter of law.
The district court’s award of summary judgment to the NYPD on plaintiffs’ Fourth Amendment challenge to IO-52 is AFFIRMED.
Notes
[*] The Honorable Brian M. Cogan, of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York, sitting by designation.
[1] In February 2011, the NYPD replaced IO-52 with Patrol Guide Procedure No. 212-109, which is substantially identical to IO-52 in all aspects relevant to this litigation. Like the parties, we refer to the challenged policy throughout this opinion by its original designation.
[2] The NYPD addresses officers’ various problems—including alcohol use— proactively as well as reactively, maintaining a confidential counseling program that interviewed approximately 600 officers from 2005–07, the years immediately prior to IO-52’s implementation. During that same time period, between 10 and 16 off-duty officers were arrested each year for drunk driving. Four police suicides during that period were linked in some way to alcohol use.
[3] The one officer who registered above .08 on the initial breathalyzer test (though presumably less than .08 upon further Intoxilyzer testing) was ultimately commended for his actions in the discharge of his firearm.
[4] Plaintiffs contend that Chief Campisi’s declaration as to the purposes of IO-52 merits no weight because it post-dates the Committee of Review’s recommendation and does not state its reasoning. We disagree. Chief Campisi chaired the Committee and, therefore, has personal knowledge of the process by
[5] The special need of public employers to conduct deterrent testing of employees
engaged in safety-sensitive tasks, see Skinner v. Ry. Execs.’ Ass’n,
[6] McNeely made this observation in a criminal case, not one presenting special needs distinct from law enforcement. In that context, it concluded that metabolization of alcohol in the bloodstream does not establish “a per se exigency that justifies an exception to the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement for nonconsensual blood testing in all drunk-driving cases.” 133 S. Ct. at 1556. Rather, exigency would have to be determined “case by case based on the totality of the circumstances.” Id. Contrary to plaintiffs’ assertion, however, McNeely does not demonstrate that a warrant or individualized suspicion is required in cases presenting special needs apart from law enforcement. Indeed, McNeely cited approvingly to Skinner in observing that “medically drawn blood tests are reasonable in appropriate circumstances,” id. at 1565, and nowhere questioned Skinner’s conclusion that insistence on the warrant requirement would frustrate the suspicionless testing regime at issue in that special needs case.
[7] Plaintiffs do not contend that a subsequent Intoxilyzer test is any more intrusive than the five-minute breathalyzer test. In any event, Intoxilyzer testing is
