OPINION AND ORDER
In a continuation of this putative class action for federal civil rights violations arising from policies or practices of the New York City Department of Corrections (“DOC”) applied at New York City jails, intervenor-plaintiffs move for partial summary judgment and to certify a damages class of pre-trial detainees who were charged with certain narcotics- or weapons-related misdemeanors and who, after arraignment, were strip-searched pursuant to a mandatory and indiscriminate intake policy. Interve-nor-plaintiffs also move for summary judgment, preliminary injunctive relief, and class certification with respect to all pre-trial detainee misdemeanants who have been or will be affected by DOC’s Housing and Exit Policies, or, in the alternative, to reopen discovery. Defendants oppose intervenor-plain-tiffs’ motions and cross-move for summary judgment.
The principal issues raised by these cross-motions for summary judgment are twofold: first, whether arraignment on a narcotics- or weapons-related misdemeanor offense is, in itself, sufficient to evoke reasonable suspicion that a detainee may be concealing weapons or contraband at intake despite the fact that the offense was not known to the searching officer at the time of the search; and second, whether DOC’s Housing and Exit Policies, under which all pre-trial misdemeanants are routinely strip-searched throughout their stay at DOC, is controlled by the holding of Shain v. Ellison, which requires that searching officers have an individualized reasonable suspicion that a misdemeanant is secreting weapons or contraband. See
BACKGROUND
Much of the lengthy history of this case is laid out in this Court’s opinions certifying the original class of plaintiffs (the “McBean Settlement Class”), see McBean v. City of New York (“McBean I”),
I. The Original McBean Plaintiffs
The original McBean plaintiffs were female pre-trial detainees who were strip-searched and allegedly subjected to nonconsensual gynecological examinations on admission to Rikers Island Correctional Facility.
On October 11, 2002, plaintiffs amended them complaint to add additional named plaintiffs, at least one of whom was male, and to propose two separate classes: first, a class of all newly-admitted pre-trial detainees, without regard to gender, who were strip-searched under DOC’s Prior Admission Policy; and second, a class of newly-admitted female detainees subjected to forced gynecological examinations. (P1.2d Am. Compl. ¶¶ 5-6.)
Just one week after the suit was filed, DOC issued a new intake policy, Operations Order 08/02, which purported to abandon— as required by Shain — the practice of strip-searching misdemeanor detainees absent reasonable suspicion. The policy specifically provided that “[p]ost-arraignment detainee inmates incarcerated for Misdemeanor and/or Violation Offenses shall not be made the subject of a strip search during the new admission process unless there is reasonable suspicion that the inmate is in possession of contraband.” (Int.-Pl. R. 56.1 ¶¶ 34, 36.) On October 17, 2002, plaintiffs moved for a preliminary injunction and for class certification, claiming that, in spite of the purported policy change, DOC had not ended its unlawful practices. (Letter of Richard J. Cardinale to the Court, dated Dec. 9, 2002, at I.) On December 18, 2002, the Court, believing that principles of judicial restraint and the letter and spirit of the Prison Litigation Reform Act (“PLRA”), 18 U.S.C. § 3626 et seq., cautioned against intrusive court supervision, accepted DOC’s representations that, whatever its past derelictions, there would be no fu
Following its denial of defendants’ motion to disqualify plaintiffs’ counsel, see McBean v. City of New York, No. 02 Civ. 5426,
On February 18, 2004, just prior to the conclusion of the settlement negotiations, putative class members Joel Ramos, Foster Thomas, Daniel Velazquez, and Kenneth Williams, all of whom were represented by Emery, Celli, Brinckerhoff & Abady LLP, moved to intervene as of right in the case.
With a class in place, the original McBean plaintiffs settled, providing damages to misdemeanor detainees not arraigned on the excluded offenses (the “McBean Settlement Class”).
II. The Intervenor-Plaintiffs
Following the Court’s preliminary approval of the McBean Settlement Class, intervenor-plaintiffs pursued discovery concerning a number of claims relevant to their First Amended Complaint, which was filed on April 7, 2005.
Discovery revealed that, contrary to DOC’s representations, on which the Court had relied in denying injunctive relief, Operations Order 08/02 had never been implemented. Indeed, for the five years following its announcement that the 08/02 directive had ended the practice of strip-searching misdemeanor detainees — and even after it had agreed to pay substantial damages to settle this action with the original class of plaintiffs — DOC continued to strip-search virtually all misdemeanor detainees per the Prior Admission Policy.
Following a period of intense negotiation, the parties arrived at a settlement in response to this revelation, in the form of a stipulation of facts and preliminary injunctive relief. The stipulation, subsequently put into place by the Court’s Order of October 4, 2007, provided that DOC would implement Operations Order 08/02 (the “Current Admission Policy”), allow certification of certain classes for purposes of damages or injunctive relief, and refrain from “subjecting any misdemeanor detainees] to a strip search upon admission into DOC custody without reasonable suspicion.” (Stipulation and Order 4, § II, ¶ 1, Oct. 4, 2007); see McBean II,
III. Intervenor-Plaintiffs’ Housing and Exit Search Claims
In addition to pursuing discovery on behalf of narcotics and weapons misdemeanants, in-tervenor-plaintiffs also pursued discovery with respect to claims raised in their First Amended Complaint concerning post-intake searches conducted pursuant to the Housing and Exit Policies. Under the Housing Policy, detainees are strip-searched whenever their living quarters are searched, which occurs “regular[ly] and frequently].” (Int.-Pl. R. 56.1 ¶¶ 84, 89, 99.) Detainees are also strip-searched when they exit a DOC facility (the “Exit Policy”), except when insufficient staff, room, or time is available to conduct the searches. (Inb-Pl. R. 56.1 ¶¶ 56, 64.) These searches take place regardless of whether a particular detainee has recently been searched or has been in continuous custody since his last search.
With respect to intervenor-plaintiffs’ Housing and Exit claims, they now move for summary judgment, for preliminary injunctive relief, and to certify a class of all pre-trial detainee misdemeanants who have been or will be affected by DOC’s Housing and Exit Policies, or, in the alternative, to reopen discovery.
DISCUSSION
I. Motions for Summary Judgment
Summary judgment is appropriate where “the pleadings, the discovery and disclosure materials on file, and any affidavits show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). The party moving for summary judgment bears the “burden of showing that no genuine issue of material fact exists and that the undisputed facts entitle it to judgment as a matter of law.” Rule v. Brine, Inc.,
Once the moving party has satisfied its burden, the burden then shifts to the non-moving party to come forward with affidavits, depositions, interrogatories, or other sworn evidence sufficient to create a genuine issue of material fact for trial. See Fed. R.Civ.P. 56(e)(2); see also Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co., Ltd. v. Zenith Radio Corp.,
These standards apply with equal force where, as here, the parties have filed cross-motions for summary judgment. See Morales v. Quintet Entm’t, Inc.,
II. The Narcotics and Weapons Misde-meanants: Liability
The first principal issue raised by these cross-motions for summary judgment is whether arraignment on a narcotics- or weapons-related offense is sufficient to evoke reasonable suspicion that a detainee may be concealing weapons or contraband at intake, despite the fact that the nature of the detainee’s alleged offense was not known to the searching officer at the time of the search.
As the Second Circuit recently noted in Kelsey v. County of Schoharie,
Here, DOC has conceded not only that all misdemeanants were strip-searched pursuant to a mandatory and indiscriminate policy, but also that “the record in this [a]etion demonstrates” a pattern and practice of strip-searching all misdemeanants during the intake process “without [the searching officer’s] making any determination or knowing whether [the detainee] had been arraigned on a charge under the New York Penal Code that was related to the possession or use of a drug and/or weapon.” (Stipulation and Order at 3, Oct. 4, 2007 (emphasis added); see also Def. R. 56.1 Resp. ¶¶ 15-32).3 ********
Defendants’ sole remaining argument is that the claims of narcotics and weapons misdemeanants should nevertheless be dismissed as a matter of law because, “like felony detainees, [these misdemeanants] could never legitimately claim that they had a ‘right’ not to be strip searched.” (Def. Reply Mem. at 38.) This assertion requires a response because it gravely misconstrues a point on which controlling precedent offers absolute clarity. It is bedrock law that whatever the relevant misdemeanor charge— whether it relates to narcotics or weapons— all misdemeanants have a right not to be strip-searched at intake absent reasonable suspicion. See Weber,
To the extent that defendants suggest that strip searches of narcotics and weapons mis-demeanants do not implicate the Fourth Amendment, this argument is contrary to precedent and wholly without basis. See Bell v. Wolfish,
Nevertheless, if that question were squarely before the Court, it is worth noting that there appears to be no support in this circuit’s precedent for the proposition that a bare misdemeanor charge is sufficient to establish reasonable suspicion that a detainee is secreting contraband. The weight of district court authority is squarely against such a proposition,
Several other circuits that have addressed the distinction between a lawful arrest related to contraband and a reasonable suspicion that the arrestee is concealing contraband on his person have come to the same conclusion. See Way v. County of Ventura,
While this case arguably raises certain security concerns not otherwise present in Hartline because the detainees here, unlike the plaintiff in Hartline, were admitted into the general jail population, it is unlikely that Hartline could be distinguished on this basis. In Weber, the court concluded that even if the detainee had been unable to make bail and had been moved from a holding cell to a cell near other arraigned inmates, such a change of circumstances “would still not provide that particularized suspicion, arising either from the nature of the charges and/or the arrest, which the law requires for so intrusive and demeaning a procedure as a strip/body cavity search.”
For much the same reasons, moreover, defendants’ suggestion that the Court find, as a matter of law, that narcotics and weapons misdemeanants are entitled only to nominal damages because their rights were, “at best[,] ... infringed upon in a technical manner” (Def. Reply Mem. at 42) is rejected. In light of Hartline, it is unlikely that these misdemeanants could have been constitutionally strip-searched even if the searching officer had known of them narcotics- or weapons-related charges. In any event, there is nothing “technical” about being subjected to an unconstitutional strip search.
Accordingly, intervenor-plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment as to narcotics and weapons misdemeanants who were searched between July 15, 1999, and October 4, 2007, is granted. The issue of damages will proceed to trial.
III. Class Certification Standards
It is well established that, in order to certify the proposed class, intervenor-plain-tiffs must demonstrate that the proposed class representatives meet all of the requirements of Rule 23(a) — numerosity, commonality, typicality, and adequacy- — and that the proposed class action meets one of the subsections of Rule 23(b). In re Salomon Analyst Metromedia Litig.,
In determining whether each of these Rule 23 requirements are met, a district court must undertake a “rigorous analysis.” Heerwagen v. Clear Channel Comm’ns,
IV. Rule 2S(a) Requirements
Defendants have already consented to certifying a Rule 23(b)(3) class of certain narcotics and weapons misdemeanants that were searched between July 23, 2002, and October 4, 2007. (Stipulation and Order 4, § 1(c), Oct. 4, 2007).
[a]ll pretrial detainees arraigned solely on non-felony charges who were arraigned on Drug or Weapon Charges[18] and who were admitted to DOC custody between July 23, 2002 and October 4, 2007 but were not also simultaneously admitted on: (i) any felony charges; (ii) a parole violation; (iii) an outstanding warrant for a felony offense; (iv) a violation of felony probation; (v) a City sentence of less than one year; or (vi) who were not already serving a State sentence at the time of their admission.
Id.
For purposes of the present motions, the only issue with respect to class certification involves the Rule 23(b)(3) certification of the class of certain narcotics and weapons misde-meanants searched between July 15, 1999, and July 22, 2002. With respect to this group, plaintiffs propose that Arthur Wallace, Kenneth Williams, and Daniel Velazquez be permitted to sue as representative parties
[a]ll persons arraigned solely on non-felony charges — at least one of which must be a charge listed in paragraph 2 of the Stipulation and Order of Class Action Settlement, dated June 21, 2005 — and who were strip searched during the period between July 15,1999, and July 22, 2002, pursuant to the defendants’ blanket policy, practice and custom which required that every pretrial detainee be strip searched during initial admission processing into a DOC facility.
This class is, in all respects, the complement to the McBean Settlement Class, in that it includes, by definition, the claims that were specifically excluded from the McBean Settlement Class. See McBean I,
A. Ascertainability
The requirement of ascertainability, though not expressly mentioned in Rule 23, is fundamental. Hnot v. Willis Group Holdings Ltd.,
As the Court found in McBean I, the class members are readily identifiable as all those admitted to certain facilities, following arraignment on specific charges, and subjected to strip searches.
B. Numerosity
To satisfy the numerosity requirement of Rule 23(a), plaintiffs must show that the class is so numerous that joinder is “impracticable.” Robidoux v. Celani,
This argument is thoroughly unpersuasive, but emerges from defendants’ contention that the statute of limitations is tied to the filing of intervenor-plaintiffs’ First Amended Complaint on April 7, 2005, almost a year after they intervened as of right, and not to the filing of the complaint by the original McBean plaintiffs. This argument, which lacks clarity in part because defendants’ moving papers do not support it with any reasoning or citation to precedent, appears to boil down to the assertion that intervenor-plaintiffs’ claims on behalf of this purported damages class constitute some kind of successive class action wholly unmoored from the original action filed by the McBean plaintiffs. With respect to the narcotics and weapons misdemeanants that constitute this damages class, however, this argument is without basis. These are neither “new” claims, nor claims that the filing of the original class action would have failed to toll. See Am. Pipe & Constr. Co. v. Utah,
Intervenor-plaintiffs moved to intervene as of right in this litigation in early 2004, claiming that their interests would be adversely affected by the original plaintiffs’ decision to narrow the scope of the complaint so as to exclude misdemeanants charged with narcotics- or weapons-related offenses from the settlement class. Intervenor-plaintiffs then opposed certification of just such a class, pointing out that certification would deprive four of the eight original named plaintiffs of a recovery. The Court acknowledged inter-venor-plaintiffs’ position, but, in weighing the competing claims for class certification and in ultimately certifying the narrower McBean Settlement Class, reasoned that “the claims of those [narcotics and weapons misdemean-ants] excluded from the class now certified
The Court so concluded because it is a well-settled principle that the filing of a class action complaint will toll the statute of limitations for the benefit of the class. See Am. Pipe,
C. Commonality and Typicality
Rule 23(a) also requires that the action raise an issue of law or fact that is common to the class (commonality), and that “each class member’s claim arise[ ] from the same course of events, and each class member make[ ] similar legal arguments to prove the defendant’s liability” (typicality). Robinson v. Metro-North Commuter R.R.,
Intervenor-plaintiffs have identified legal and factual issues common to all proposed class members, e.g., whether defendants had a policy of strip-searching all newly-admitted pretrial detainees without regard to reasonable suspicion, and whether plaintiffs were strip-searched pursuant to that policy. As in McBean I, each class member’s claim arises from the same events — the blanket application of the policy — and the alleged absence of reasonable suspicion at the time the searches were conducted supplies the legal theory of liability for each and every class member. It is simply not the case, as defendants claim, that every single class member would “have to be examined, with testimony and evidence introduced by both sides” in order to determine whether reasonable suspicion existed for the search. (Def. Mem. at 72.) Even if there were hypothetical individuals whose special circumstances (had the searching officer been aware of them) might have led to the officer’s reasonable suspicion that a class member was
D. Adequacy
To determine whether a named plaintiff will be an adequate class representative, courts inquire whether: “1) plaintiffs interests are antagonistic to the interest of other members of the class and 2) plaintiffs attorneys are qualified, experienced and able to conduct the litigation.” Baffa v. Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette Sec. Corp.,
Here, defendants do not contest counsel’s experience, qualifications, or ability to conduct the litigation. Indeed, defendants have already stipulated that Emery Celli Brinkck-erhoff & Abady LLP, would serve as class counsel for the class of certain drug and weapon misdemeanants that were searched between July 23, 2002 and October 4, 2007 (Stipulation and Order 4, § 1(c), Oct. 4, 2007). Accordingly, their sole challenge concerns the adequacy of the proposed class representatives. They contend that some of the proposed class representatives lack viable claims, either because the statute of limitations has run or because they purportedly released defendants from any claims resulting from their intake strip searches by participating in the McBean Settlement Class.
Regardless of whether the issue is framed in terms of the typicality of the representative’s claims or the adequacy of his representation, “class certification is inappropriate where a putative class representative is subject to unique defenses which threaten to become the focus of the litigation ... [because] there is a danger that absent class members will suffer if their representative is preoccupied with defenses unique to it.” Gary Plastic Packaging Corp. v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc.,
Here, defendants argue that two of the three proposed class representatives, and presumably a substantial minority of the proposed class, were members of the McBean Settlement Class and therefore have released, as a condition of the settlement, claims for intake searches conducted during the class period, including searches that involved narcotics- and weapons-related charges. In response, intervenor-plaintiffs contend that regardless of whether a person participated, or could have participated, in the McBean Settlement Class, such claims remain unsettled.
Defendants rest their argument on the portion of the Claim Form to participate in the McBean Settlement Class that requires detainees to list the dates “[d]uring [the class period]” they were “detained ... [at any DOC facility],” and to account for whether, “at the time you were a pre-trial detainee, were you, if you know, charged with [the list of excluded drug-weapon offenses].” (Claim Form at 3.) The Claim Form then states “[i]f the answer ... is ‘yes,’ you are not a member of the plaintiff class and therefore cannot receive payment under this class action settlement.” (Id.) Defendants argue that because this portion of the Claim Form requires the claimant to affirm that the only times he was admitted into DOC custody during the class period were the times listed on the Claim Form, and that none of those admissions involved the excluded narcotics or weapons charges, those who submitted a claim form and accepted payment are barred from asserting that they are now entitled to additional payments for any other searches during the class period. This argument, like the argument that no person may recover twice for a single search
Although intervenor-plaintiffs argue that the McBean Settlement Class was intended
The same cannot be said, however, for those who did not fill out a Claim Form. As the defendants point out, the Claim Form specifically asks those seeking to settle their claims to affirm that the only times they were admitted into DOC custody during the class period were the times listed on the Claim Form and that none of those admissions involved the excluded narcotics or weapons charges. It seems entirely plausible, however, that a person who had suffered multiple searches, at least one of which was a search that involved one of the excluded charges, might have discarded his Claim Form, believing that answering “yes” to the question about the excluded charges precluded class membership and, accordingly, that he preserved his rights, at least with respect to the searches that involved the excluded charges, by doing absolutely nothing.
Far from being a mere theoretical possibility, this is precisely the position of proposed class representative Arthur Wallace. Wallace was strip-searched at intake on multiple occasions throughout the class period. (Int.Pl. R. 56.1 ¶ 194.) He was, therefore, by dint of some of those searches, a member of the McBean Settlement Class, although the record reveals that he was also searched pursuant to an arrest for misdemeanor narcotics possession on May 21, 2002 (Int.-Pl. R. 56.1 ¶¶ 187-88), a charge that was specifically excluded from the McBean Settlement Class. Wallace never filed a Claim Form — and, so far, has received nothing. Wallace, and any other person similarly situated, could reasonably have failed to file a Claim Form after concluding that the presence of excluded charges — even if those charges were only relevant to one of several search-claims— made him “not a member of the [McBean Settlement C]lass” (Claim Form at 3), and therefore ineligible for recovery.
While the McBean Settlement Class is long since closed' — indeed plaintiffs do not even contend that claims with respect to the non-narcotics, non-weapons searches during the period covered by the settlement have been preserved — defendants’ argument that Wallace forfeited his claims because, in failing to submit a Claim Form, he, too, “[gave] up and release[d] all claims against all defendants” (Class Notice at 5) for searches conducted during the class period lacks merit. The ambiguity in the Class Notice and Claim Form renders it fundamentally unfair to preclude the claims of detainees who were arguably part of the McBean Settlement Class by virtue of one or more strip searches occasioned by non-narcotics or non-weapons
The Court therefore finds that proposed class representatives Arthur Wallace and Daniel Velazquez adequately represent the class, and that the prerequisites for class certification under Rule 23(a) have been satisfied.
III. Rule 23(b) Requirements
In addition to meeting the requirements of Rule 23(a), a class action must also satisfy one of the requirements of Rule 23(b). In re Vivendi Universal, S.A,
While these claims may be defended against by showing that reasonable suspicion existed at the time the particular searches were conducted, these individual defenses do not preclude certification provided they do not predominate. “As long as a sufficient constellation of common issues binds class members together, variations in the sources and application of [a defense] will not automatically foreclose class certification under Rule 23(b)(3).” In re Visa Check,
On occasion, courts have declined to certify broad classes of individuals subject to blanket strip-search policies because of the role the particular circumstances of each search might play, whether as to liability, class membership, or individual damages claims. See, e.g., Maneely v. City of Newburgh,
A class action is also the most efficient and superior means through which to resolve these claims, especially given defendants’ representation at one point in this litigation that the class size is approximately 82,000 persons. (Int.-Pl. Reply Mem. at 47.) Although the assumed socio-economic status of the proposed class members — misdemean-ants remanded due to their inability to post bail — -is likely to preclude a significant portion of the class from burdening the courts with individual claims, that fact argues in favor of class action treatment to protect the rights of class members unable to litigate their individual claims. See Labbate-D’Alau-
For the foregoing reasons, the class as proposed by plaintiffs meets the requirements of both Rule 23(a) and Rule 23(b)(3). Accordingly, plaintiffs’ motion for certification is granted.
V. Housing and Exit Searches
The next substantive issue raised by these cross-motions is whether DOC’s Housing and Exit Policies, pursuant to which all pre-trial misdemeanants are routinely strip-searched in various circumstances after intake, is controlled by the mandate of Shain “that persons charged with a misdemeanor and remanded to a local correctional facility ... have a right to be free of a strip search absent reasonable suspicion that they are carrying contraband or weapons.”
Even holding that statement in abeyance as dictum, the precedent on which Shain relies still forecloses intervenor-plaintiffs’ argument. Shain emerges from a line of cases that address searches conducted as part of a correctional facility’s admissions process, not searches conducted after a detainee’s entrance into a general institutional population. See Weber,
Intervenor-plaintiffs’ argument to the contrary boils down to the fact that they find it nonsensical that reasonable suspicion of secreted contraband is required to search a detainee upon intake at a correctional facility, while the same detainee can be searched hours later upon entering the general population on “less than probable cause.” See Bell v. Wolfish,
Because post-intake searches are not — as a constitutional matter — indistinguishable from those occurring at intake, the Court must decide the standard under which the constitutionality of the search will be analyzed. Before reaching that issue, however, it is necessary to resolve the threshold question of whether the original complaint in this action addressed claims arising from such searches, or whether the post-intake strip search claims brought by the plaintiff-inter-venors must be dismissed as an impermissible enlargement of the scope of this litigation.
It is well-settled that intervenors must take the litigation as they find it at the time of intervention; they cannot change the issues framed between the original parties. See Hartley Pen Co. v. Lindy Pen Co., Inc.,
Introduction of these claims is problematic, however, because, as discussed above, they arise under different factual circumstances and do not raise common questions of law with the claims raised by the original plaintiffs. And, because they were not raised at the time intervenor-plaintiffs sought to intervene, the Court had no opportunity to exercise its discretion in limiting the scope of intervention, “subject to appropriate conditions or restrictions responsive among other things to the requirements of efficient conduct of the proceedings.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 24, Notes of Advisory Committee on Rules at 18; Shore v. Parklane Hosiery Co., Inc.,
Notably, plaintiff-intervenors do not contest that additional allegations pertaining to post-intake searches could constitute an impermissible enlargement of the litigation under the principle discussed in Hartley Pen,
Plaintiff-intervenors’ reliance on this language, however, to establish that the original plaintiffs were contending that all strip searches of detained misdemeanants were unconstitutional, is unpersuasive. First, for the reasons previously discussed, intervenor-plaintiffs’ argument that a claim for intake searches is really a claim for post-intake searches because the two are constitutionally indistinguishable under Shain, is rejected. Second, it is abundantly clear from the context of plaintiffs’ original and amended complaints that the only searches grieved by the plaintiffs were those that occurred upon intake. There is no mention in either of the original plaintiffs’ complaints that the plaintiffs intended to complain of post-intake strip searches, or even that DOC, in fact, conducted any such searches. Thus, the fact that not every sentence of the complaint modified the word “searches” with the word “intake” does not now permit intervenor-plaintiffs to enlarge the scope of the litigation, particularly where it is manifest that the violations alleged in the original complaint arose from searches of pre-trial detainees conducted at intake.
Next, the original plaintiffs’ filings in this litigation establish that their position up to the point that they settled their claims was that post-intake searches provided no basis for a legal claim because “in the post arraignment context, only the initial intake search into the jail is illegal.” (Pl. Mem. Class Cert, at 13, Mar. 16, 2004 (emphasis added).) In fact, the plaintiffs explicitly negotiated settlement awards in light of this understanding, see McBean I,
Finally, the original plaintiffs’ conduct throughout the litigation makes clear that they were merely trying to strike down an intake policy substantially identical to the one already deemed unconstitutional in Shain. The original plaintiffs took no depositions and retained no experts. {Id.) Moreover, contrary to plaintiff-intervenors’ assertion, there is nothing in the record to support the view that the original plaintiffs raised post-intake claims but, following discovery or some other development, “casually dropp[ed]” those claims in pursuit of a quick, favorable settlement (Int.-Pl. Mem. Opp. PL App. at 20-21). See McBean I,
On the strength of Shain, no more was needed. But, as intervenor-plaintiffs’ request for additional discovery attests, much more factual development is required in order to address the search claims involving the Housing and Exit Policies, which were introduced in this litigation for the first time by intervenor-plaintiffs in their First Amended Complaint, and which raise issues distinct from the well-settled principles governing intake searches.
Accordingly, intervenor-plaintiffs’ post-intake search claims must be dismissed as an impermissible enlargement of the scope of this litigation. Intervenor-plaintiffs remain free to pursue such claims without prejudice in a new action.
VI. PLRA
Defendants’ final argument is that intervenor-plaintiffs’ claims and recovery are barred in their entirety by the Prison Litigation Reform Act (“PLRA”). In particular, defendants contend that intervenor-plaintiffs have failed to exhaust their administrative remedies pursuant to § 1997e(a) and to show physical injury as required by § 1997e(e). The first point is easily disposed of, as it is squarely controlled by Greig v. Goord,
The question of whether the physical injury requirement of § 1997e(e) applies to a plaintiff who is no longer incarcerated when he commences his action is closer, but it, too, fails to provide defendants with a valid defense.
Although defendants cite Cox v. Malone,
Accordingly, because intervenor-plaintiffs were not incarcerated at the time this action was commenced, the Court finds that § 1997e(e) is inapplicable and does not preclude them from proceeding with this litigation.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, defendants’ motion for summary judgment as to all pretrial detainee misdemeanants who have or will be affected by DOC’s Housing and Exit Policies is granted and those claims are dismissed without prejudice to their being renewed in an independent action. Intervenor-plaintiffs’ motion for partial summary judgment as to all narcotics and weapons misdemeanants that were searched between July 15, 1999, and October 4, 2007, and to certify a damages class of pre-trial detainees who were charged with certain narcotic or weapons misdemeanors between July 15, 1999, and July 22, 2002, is also granted. The motions are, in all other respects, denied.
With respect to certification of the aforementioned class, intervenor-plaintiffs have demonstrated that their proposed class and two of its proposed representatives satisfy the requirements of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(a) and (b)(3). Arthur Wallace and Daniel Velazquez are appointed as class representatives. Other named intervenor-plaintiffs, including Kenneth Williams, may apply to the court to be appointed class representatives upon a showing of their class membership. The class certified, as proposed by plaintiffs and amended herein, comprises
[a]ll persons who did not receive a monetary settlement as part of the McBean Settlement Class and who were arraigned solely on non-felony charges — at least one of which must be a charge listed in paragraph 2 of the Stipulation and Order of Class Action Settlement, dated June 21, 2005 — and who were strip searched during the period between July 15, 1999, and July 22, 2002, pursuant to the defendants’ blanket policy, practice and custom which required that every pretrial detainee be strip searched during initial admission processing into a DOC facility.
Finally, the firm of Emery, Celli, Brincker-hoff & Abady LLP, is appointed as lead counsel for the class.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Each party originally moved for summary judgment only with respect to those narcotics and weapons misdemeanants excluded from the McBean Settlement Class, that is, those who were admitted between July 15, 1999, and July 22, 2002. However, in light of defendants’ ad
. The parties have agreed that the issue of gynecological examinations is not at issue in the present motions. (Def. Reply Mem. at 6; Int.-Pl. Reply Mem. 50.) It is therefore unnecessary to reach defendants' arguments concerning the failure of intervenor-plaintiffs to properly serve P.H.S. Medical Services, PC.
. The search followed the following protocol:
a search of the inmate['s] apparel after the inmate has removed his/her clothingb] accompanied by a visual inspection of the inmate's mouth, hair, armpits, knees and toes. The inmate is then instructed to squat to ensure that no contraband is being secreted in the area of the buttocks.
McBean I,
. A related case, Cence v. City of New York, No. 03 Civ. 4114(GEL), was filed on June 5, 2003, and consolidated for all purposes with the McBe-an case on July 25, 2003. The classes proposed in the Cence complaint were coextensive with those for which the McBean plaintiffs moved for certification in October 2002.
. Excluded from the class were pre-trial detainees who, at the time they were admitted to DOC facilities, were charged with the following narcotics- and weapons-related offenses: N.Y. Penal Law Sections: (a) § 220.03 Criminal Possession of a Controlled Substance in the Seventh Degree, a class A misdemeanor; (b) § 220.45, Criminal Possession of a Hypodermic Instrument, a class A misdemeanor; (c) § 220.50, Criminal Possession of Drug Paraphernalia in the Second Degree, a class A misdemeanor; (d) § 221.05, Unlawful Possession of Marijuana, a violation; (e) § 221.10, Criminal Possession of Marijuana in the Fifth Degree, a class B misdemeanor; (f) § 221.15, Criminal Possession of Marijuana in the Fourth Degree, a class A misdemeanor; (g) § 221.35, Criminal Sale of Marijuana in the Fifth Degree, a class B misdemeanor; (h) § 221.40, Criminal Sale of Marijuana in the Fourth Degree, a class A misdemeanor; (i) § 265.01, Criminal Possession of a Weapon in the Fourth Degree, a class A misdemeanor; and (j) § 265.06, Unlawful Possession of a Weapon upon School Grounds, a violation. Also excluded from the class were those who were charged pursuant to the following New York City Administrative Code Sections: (a) § 10-131, Firearms; (b) § 10-133, Possession of Knives or Instruments; and (c) § 10-134, Prohibition on Sale of Certain Knives; and those who were charged pursuant to Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1192(4), Operating a Motor Vehicle while impaired by the use of a drug.
. Rule 24(a)(2), Fed.R.Civ.P., on "Intervention of Right,” states: "Upon timely application anyone shall be permitted to intervene in an action ... (2) when the applicant claims an interest relating to the property or transaction which is the subject of the action and the applicant is so situated that the disposition of the action may as a practical matter impair or impede the applicant's ability to protect that interest, unless the applicant’s interest is adequately protected by the existing parties.”
. In order to clarify that the McBean Settlement Class included only individuals strip-searched in accordance with the Prior Admission Policy and not those subjected to strip searches conducted after intake pursuant to other DOC policies, the Court amended the proposed class definition to include "pre-trial detainees who, during the class period [July 15, 1999 through July 22, 2002], were arraigned on certain misdemeanors, violations, and misdemeanor charges of civil contempt, and non-felony warrants regarding same, and who, after arraignment, were strip-searched in DOC jails pursuant to the standard new admission stiip search procedure." McBean I,
. Those conditions include a detainee’s violation of parole, his or her status as a state inmate, or an outstanding warrant for his or her arrest involving a felony offense. (Int.-Pl. R. 56.1 ¶ 40.)
. Like the intake searches conducted under the Prior Admission Policy, these searches require that the detainee disrobe so that a DOC officer can visually inspect the detainee’s mouth, armpits, oral cavity, ears, nose, knees, toes, and naval. (Int.-Pl. R. 56.1 ¶¶ 57, 94.) The officer also conducts a visual inspection of the detainee’s anus and genital cavities, while the inmate stands with his or her legs spread and body bent forward at the waist to ensure that no contraband is being secured in the area of the buttocks. (Id.)
. Defendants contend that the issue is simply whether a narcotics or weapons charge creates a reasonable suspicion of contraband concealment, and if it does, they assert that no liability can attach because the searching officer could have formed a reasonable suspicion necessary to justify the search, even if he did not do so at the time. For the reasons that follow, this argument is without merit.
. See supra note 1.
. The October 4, 2007, Stipulation and Order only addresses intake searches performed between July 23, 2002, and October 4, 2007. However, DOC does not contend that the searches conducted between July 15, 1999, and July 22, 2002, were performed any differently — indeed they were conducted under the same Prior Admission Policy — nor has DOC mounted any argument that facts (including the underlying charge) giving rise to reasonable suspicion were known to any of the searching officers, or to officers on whom the searching officers might be entitled to rely under United States v. Colon,
. Specifically, the issue is whether the fact that an individualized "reasonable suspicion ... [may be] based on the crime charged, the particular characteristics of the arrestee, and/or the circumstances of the arrest,” Weber,
. Accordingly, it is unnecessary to parse the narcotics and weapons charges at issue to decide whether each could, per se, constitute individualized suspicion that contraband was being secreted. As intervenor-plaintiffs point out, some of the charges relevant to the proposed classes involve only minor offenses relating to weapons, including unlawfully selling certain toy pistols to a minor and failing to pay a $10 annual renewal fee for an air pistol license. See N.Y.C. Admin. Code §§ 10-13 1(d),(g). Whether any of these charges could cause reasonable suspicion standing alone does not matter for purposes of establishing liability here, because the searching officers did not know tire specific charge(s) on which the detainees had been arraigned. Thus, in this analysis, no work is done by the applicable charge. The charge is merely category-creating in that it divides misdemeanants searched pursuant to the Prior Admission Policy into two classes — those with charges that excluded them from the prior class, and those who have already received relief under the prior settlement. For this reason, it is unnecessary to confront the argument, not raised by the defendants, of whether, with respect to both ease of concealment and the institutional risk, the sufficiency of a weapons-related charge might fare differently in the reasonable suspicion analysis than a narcotics-related charge.
. See, e.g., Sarnicola v. County of Westchester, 229 F.Supp.2d 259, 274-75 (S.D.N.Y.2002) (finding that “[a]n automatic justification for strip searches based on an arrest for a drug-related crime would be inconsistent with the legal concept of reasonable suspicion based on the totality of the circumstances”); Harriston v. Mead, No. 05 Civ.2058,
. Indeed, it bears noting that the DOC itself, upon reforming its policy, chose not to single out narcotics and weapon misdemeanants and instead implemented gown searches for nearly all misdemeanants, except those discussed at supra note 8.
. The parties have also agreed that intervenor-plaintiffs' counsel, Emery Celli Brinkckerhoff & Abady LLP, will serve as class counsel. {Id. § I.) The Court approves that appointment, finding that the services already provided by counsel in this matter amply demonstrate counsel's ability and determination to represent the class effectively.
18. According to the terms of the October 4, 2007, Stipulation and Order, “Drug or Weapon Charges” means the narcotics- and weapons-related charges listed in the June 21, 2005, Stipulation and Order of Class Action Settlement, see supra note 4, as well as "any [of] the following charges: § 205.20, Promoting Prison Contraband (2nd Degree); § 240.40, Appearance in Public Under the Influence of Narcotics or Drugs, other than Alcohol; § 265.10, Manufacture, Transport, Disposition & Defacement of Weapon and Dangerous Instrument and Appliances; § 265.35[3(c) ], Prohibited Use of Weapon; § 270.05, Possession or Sale of Noxious Mat[t]er; § 400.00, Firearms License Violations; VTL § 1193, Driving Impaired (3rd Offense); and VTL § 1192(1), Driving Impaired.”
. Defendants raise no objection in their papers to Daniel Velazquez serving as a class representative, and it is undisputed that Velazquez was arrested on January 4, 2002, for possession and sale of marijuana, and that he was arraigned the following day and admitted to the Manhattan Detention Center, a DOC facility. (Int.-Pl. R 56.1 11203; Def. R. 56.1 ¶ 70; Velazquez Decl. ¶ 12; New History NYSID Number Search of Daniel Velazquez, Ex. 106.)
. To the extent that it is necessary to determine whether any individual released defendants from any claims as a result of receiving payment as part of the McBean Settlement Class, that, too, is easily identifiable.
. Defendants' references to Korwek v. Hunt,
. The numerosity requirement would be satisfied in any event because while this is nominally a separate class, it is substantially identical to the Rule 23(b)(3) class of certain narcotics and weapons misdemeanants searched between July 23, 2002, and October 4, 2007 that defendants have already consented to certify. (Stipulation and Order 4, § 1(c), Oct. 4, 2007.)
. Defendants also make two other arguments that are without merit. First, they contend that the proposed class representatives, who admittedly were searched on specific dates during the class period, cannot represent plaintiffs who were searched on other dates during the class period. There is, however, no evidence anywhere in the record to support the claim that any aspect of the strip searches — including how they were conducted or upon whom — varied throughout the duration of the class period. Second, defendants argue that the claims of Arthur Wallace, among other named intervenor-plaintiffs, are not properly before this Court because they were set forth in the form of an addendum and as part of an intervention motion served on the defendants and submitted to Magistrate Judge Theodore H. Katz, but not thereafter re-served as part of a subsequent amended complaint. Even if Judge Katz did not explicitly approve this procedure on November 16, 2006, defendants have offered no explanation for how this failure deprived them of "the ability to properly frame the issues” (Def. Mem. at 87-88), particularly where there is no question that they were served with intervenor-plaintiffs’ allegations, and Judge Katz subsequently granted the intervention motions.
. Velazquez was arrested on January 4, 2002, for possession and sale of marijuana, and he was arraigned the following day and admitted to the Manhattan Detention Center. (Int.-Pl. R. 56.1 ¶ 203; Def. R. 56.1 ¶ 70; Velazquez Deck ¶ 12; New History NYSID Number Search of Daniel Velazquez, Ex. 106.) To the extent defendants can be understood to dispute Velazquez's adequacy to any extent, it is the contention that "[t]here is no way to independently verify!] the occurrence ... of any routine strip search performed at a DOC facility.” (Def. R. 56.1 ¶¶ 120, 204.) This statement is wholly insufficient to
. On this point, intervenor-plaintiffs and defendants appear to agree. (Int.-Pl. Reply Mem. at 48 & n.33.) Although this accord would appear to have few practical consequences, given that any claim eligible for the McBean Class Settlement, by definition, excludes the claim that would make recovery possible here, it appears that proposed class representative Kenneth Williams may — through a mistake in the administration of the prior settlement — be seeking to recover a second time for the same search. Williams submitted a claim as part of the McBe-an Settlement Class for a search conducted on January 19, 2002, in which he reported that he was "not sure” whether he had been arraigned on any of the excluded narcotics or weapons charges. (Nelson Deck Ex. I.) Williams may subsequently have received payment for the January 19, 2002, search — a detail on which this record is silent' — despite the fact it is now clear that Williams's claim involved a charge for misdemeanor narcotics possession (Int.-Pl. R. 56.1 ¶ 120), which should have rendered his claim ineligible for recovery as part of the McBean Settlement Class. If Williams recovered for the January 19, 2002, search, his claim relating to that search is extinguished on the basic principle that a plaintiff may not secure a double recovery. However, if, as should have happened, Williams received no payment because "official records established] that [he was not] a class member” (Class Notice at 5), Williams’s claim is preserved, and he may proceed as a class representative.
. On close examination, the Class Notice and Claim Form do not appear to have contemplated that some detainees would have both “class” claims and claims that were specifically excluded from the settlement. Indeed, the only fair way to read the Claim Form in particular is as a document that attempted to steer claimants into either filing a claim if the searches to which they were subjected did not involve certain narcotics- and weapons-related charges, or discarding the notice if the searches to which they were subjected did. While such an approach would have been sufficient to instruct those with only one type of claim as to how to exercise or preserve their rights, it is, in retrospect, unintelligible for those with both class and excluded claims.
. That only intake searches were being contemplated is further emphasized by the fact that within the context of the Shain opinion, the accent in the language falls not on the word "admitee” but on the word "post-arraignment.” In Wachtler v. County of Herkimer,
. Precisely when intervenor-plaintiffs introduced post-intake claims into the litigation is unclear. The complaint purporting to intervene in this litigation lacks any explicit mention of post-intake searches. While including broad language similar to that of the original plaintiffs' complaints {see Int.-Pl. Compl. ¶ 21), not a single intervenor-plaintiff alleged that he or she was subject to a post-intake strip search {see Int.-Pl. Compl. ¶¶ 38-58), and no allegations relevant to DOC's policies of post-intake searches are mentioned. Although at some point between moving to intervene as of right on February 18, 2004, and opposing the original plaintiffs’ request for class certification on April 15, 2004, intervenor-plaintiffs adopted the position that the original plaintiffs were "relinquishing” class members’ rights to pursue claims for post-intake searches, only in intervenor-plaintiffs’ First Amended Complaint, filed on April 7, 2005, approximately three years after this litigation commenced, is there a specific allegation that post-intake strip searches of pre-trial detainees already in DOC custody were “routine” and in violation of Shain. (Int.-Pl. Am. Compl. ¶ 59; see also Int.-Pl. Mem. Opp. PLApp. at 20, Apr. 15, 2004.)
. The physical injury requirement precludes prisoners from bringing federal civil actions "for mental or emotional injury suffered while in cus-lody without a prior showing of physical injury.” 42U.S.C. § 1997e(e).
