In this аppeal by the City of Lynn (“City”), we consider whether an established City policy, permitting forcible, warrantless entries of private residences to enforce involuntary civil commitment orders, violates the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution. The district court granted summary judgment for plaintiff Mary McCabe, admin-istratrix of the estate of Ruchla Zinger, a Holocaust survivor who died in her Lynn home during a tragic attempt by City police to execute an involuntary commitment order which had been issued against her. For the reasons discussed in this opinion, we conclude that the challenged City policy came within an exception to the Fourth Amendment warrant requirement.
I
BACKGROUND
Ms. Zinger, a 64-year-old Lynn, Massachusetts, resident with a history of mental illness and psychiatric hospitalization, as well as severe obesity and high blood pressure, resisted all attempts at communication and intervention by family members. She refused to be examined by a doctor after threatening her former husband with physical harm and upsetting her downstairs neighbors by causing loud and violent disturbances in her apartment, thereby prompting her family to initiate eviction proceedings against her. 1 Subsequently, on September 6, 1989, a licensed psychiatrist, Dr. Jakov Barden, signed an application [hereinafter: “pink paper”] for a ten-day involuntary commitment of Ms. Zinger pursuant to Mass.Gen.Laws Ann. ch. 123, § 12(a), based exclusively on the reports of family members and neighbors as to Ms. Zinger’s physical and behavioral symptoms.
The next morning, Constable Kenneth Jackson, who had been unsuccessful in previous attempts to serve Ms. Zinger with an eviction notice, and was scheduled to execute a judgment of eviction against her at 1:00 p.m. that afternoon, learned that the pink paper had been issued against Ms. Zinger the night before, and contacted the Lynn police department. The constable informed the Lynn police, based on his experience with Ms. Zinger, that he believed she would resist committal. The constable and the Lynn police officers arranged to meet at the Zinger apartment building at 1:00 p.m., to execute the pink paper and the eviction order.
Three Lynn police officers and the constable arrived at the Zinger apartmеnt building at the appointed hour, accompanied by a crew from the Life-Line Ambulance Service, which had been engaged to restrain Ms. Zinger as necessary, physically remove her from the apartment, and transport her to the hospital. After receiving no response to their knocks, the officers kicked in the outside apartment-house door and proceeded upstairs to the Zinger apartment. The officers knocked and announced their presence, received no response, and began to kick in the Zinger apartment door. Ms. Zinger began screaming “Why are you kicking in my door?” then cracked it open. Identifying themselves as police, the officers told her that they were going to bring her under medical care, to which she responded: “No doctors!” When she began to close the door, the officers shoved their way inside. Later, while the officers were forcibly removing her from the apartment, Ms. Zinger suffered a cardio-respiratory arrest and died. 2
*543
After McCabe, as administratrix, instituted this civil rights action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the City, amongst others,
3
in September 1992, an amended complaint alleged an established City policy permitting police officers to execute pink papers by means of forcible, warrantless entries into private residences absent demonstrable exigent circumstances, and that this City policy proximately caused an actionable deprivation of Ms. Zinger’s Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable searches.'
4
After hearing, the district court granted the McCabe cross-motion for summary judgment against the City on the issue of liability.
McCabe v. City of Lynn,
II
DISCUSSION
A. District Court Opinion
The district court found that the City policy violated the Fourth Amendment, for the following reasons. The City’s own policy expert attested that the City did not require its officers to obtain a search warrant before effecting a warrantless entry of a residence to execute a pink paper, leaving it instead to the discretion of the officers whether and when such a warrantless entry was necessary. Id. at 58. The district court noted thаt warrantless, nonconsensual entries into private residences are presumptively “unreasonable” under the Fourth Amendment, absent exigent circumstances. Id. at 58-59. Although imminent threats to the lives and safety of the police officers, or members of the public, often give rise to exigent circumstances justifying an immediate warrantless entry, the court found that “the Lynn police acted with leisure in arranging a convenient time” to serve the pink paper upon Ms. Zinger, thereby belying any contention that “ ‘some real[,] immediate or serious consequences [would occur] if [the officers] postponed action to get a warrant.’ ” Id. at 59, 62 (citation omitted).
The district court nonetheless recognized that even absent exigent circumstances the warrant requirement may not be applicable in certain regulatory contexts wherein war-rantless search procedures serve as invaluable “administrative tool[s]” and are “far less invasive” than searches directed at discovering evidence of crime. Id. at 59-60. The court identified two factors which weighed against a ruling that the challenged City policy came within this special regulatory category. First, unlike a judicial officer, the licensed medical-psychiatric physicians authorized to issue pink papers under Mass. Gen.Laws Ann. ch. 123, § 12(a), are “not *544 qualified to determine whether probable cause exists.” Id. at 61. Second, “the agents of the doctors in this case are police officers with guns and batons, not hospital orderlies and nurses,” so that “[t]here is no therapeutic relationship which a warrant mechanism would disrupt.” Id.
B. Standard of Review
We review a grant of summary judgment
de novo,
to determine whether “the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c);
see Velez-Gomez v. SMA Life Assurance Co.,
C. Applicable Law
A municipal liability claim under § 1983 requires proof that the municipality maintained a policy or custom which caused, or was the moving force behind, a deprivation of constitutional rights.
See, e.g., Oklahoma City v. Tuttle,
The Fourth Amendment applies not only to governmental searches and seizures in criminal investigations, but also in various
civil
proceedings.
See Soldal v. Cook County, III.,
The fundamental inquiry under the Fourth Amendment is whether a particular search or search procedure is “reasonable” in the circumstances.
See Cady v. Dombrowski
First, a warrantless entry and search of a residence may be “reasonable,” in Fourth Amendment terms, if the government can demonstrate certain exceptional types of “exigent circumstances”: (1) “hot pursuit” of a felon into a residence; (2) imminent destruction of evidence within the residence; (3) a threatened and potentially successful escape by a suspect from inside the residence; or (4) an imminent threat to the life or safety of members of the public, the police officers, or a person located within the residence.
See United States v. Tibolt,
Second, a residential search pursuant to an established warrantless search
procedure
may be reasonable if conducted in furtherance of an important administrative or regulatory purpose, or “special need,” which would be undermined
systemically
by an impracticable warrant or probable-cause requirement.
Griffin v. Wisconsin,
D. Alleged “Deprivation”
Turning to the initial hurdle confronting McCabe under § 1983,
see Monell,
Although the parties devote considerable attention to whether there remains a genuine factual dispute regarding the substance of the challenged City “policy,” we consider its essential features clear enough; that is, the policy permits warrantless residential searches, without requiring “exigent circumstances,” in order to effect an involuntary commitment pursuant to a properly issued pink paper. Of course, the City argues that every entry is per se “exigent” since a pink paper can only issue upon an expert medical finding that the subject presently poses a “likеlihood of serious harm” to herself or others, which in turn provides the police with reasonable cause to believe that an immediate, forcible entry for the purpose of detaining the resistant subject is necessary to avert the “serious harm” identified in the pink paper.
On the other hand, McCabe contends that these remote medical-psychiatric “emergency” determinations do not equate with constitutionally cognizable “exigent circumstances,” because they do not turn on the executing officer’s fact-specific, on-the-scene assessment as to the immediacy of any puta-five threat the subject may pose to herself or others. McCabe stresses that during the several hours which were allowed to elapse before the pink paper was executed upon Ms. Zinger, the officers would have had ample time to obtain a search warrant. And McCabe points out that none of the four recognized “exigent circumstances,” see supra p. 545, was plainly present immediately before the forcible policy entry.
As these claims reflect the lеgal gloss placed on the record evidence, rather than a genuine factual dispute concerning the substance of the City policy, we need not enter the skirmish over the distinctions between “emergencies” and “exigent circumstances.” The City policy, as evidenced by the actual conduct of its police officers,
8
falls squarely within a recognized class of
systemic
“special need” searches which are conducted without warrant's in furtherance of important administrative purposes. Again, the fundamental concern of Fourth Amendment jurisprudence in general, and in “special need” search cases as well, is whether an established search procedure is “reasonable” in light of the actual circumstances in the particular case.
See Cady,
1. State’s “Administrative”Interest
(a) Parens Patriae and Police Power
The legitimacy of the State’s
parens patriae
and “police power” interests in ensuring that “dangerous” mentally ill persons not harm themselves or others is beyond dispute.
See Rogers v. Okin,
We therefore inquire whether these residential search procedures are appropriately tailored to the legitimate and important interests at stake; in other words, whether the procedures are reasonably designed to ensure accurate identification and prompt detention of recalcitrant and “dangerous” mentally ill persons who require immediate temporary commitment.
See id.
at 341,
The application for temporary hospitalization, signed by Dr. Barden, expressly referenced Mass.Gen.Laws Ann. ch. 123, § 12(a), which authorizes four categories of involuntary commitment procedures:
(1) a qualified physician, psychologist, or psychiatric nurse who has personally examined a person, and who has reason to believe that the person would create a “likelihood of serious harm,” may sign a “pink paper” authorizing law enforcement officials to restrain that person to permit hospitalization for up to a ten-day period;
(2) in an “emergency situation,” a qualified physician, psychologist, or psychiatric nurse may sign a pink paper, even when the alleged mentally ill person refuses to submit to a medical exami *548 nation, if the “facts and circumstances” suggest that the person would create a “likelihood of serious harm”;
(3) in an “emergency situation,” a police officer may restrain a person he believes creates a “likelihood of serious harm,” if no qualified physician, psychologist, or psychiatric nurse is available to sign a pink paper; or
(4) at any time, any person may apply to the district or juvenile courts for a commitment order, and after a hearing, the court may issue a warrant for the apprehension and appearance of the person who creates a “likelihood of serious harm.”
Mass.Gen.Laws Ann. ch. 123, § 12(a);
see infra
Appendix, for text;
see generally Rockwell v. Cape Cod Hosp.,
The pink paper was bаsed on Dr. Barden’s expert opinion that Ms. Zinger “require[d] hospitalization so as to avoid the likelihood of serious harm by reason of mental illness.” Dr. Barden described the particular grounds for concluding that immediate hospitalization was required:
[Patient] has a [history] of mental illness and she was hospitalized at Danvers [State] Hospital couple of years ago. [Patient] is very angry and hostile; she is very impulsive and explosive. She made threats to harm her ex-husband. [Patient] is dangerous to others.
The involuntary commitment application, and the Massachusetts statute, define “likelihood of serious harm” — the governing criterion for commitment — as:
(1) a substantial risk of physical harm to the person [herjself as manifested by evidence of, threats of, or attempts at, suicide or serious bodily harm; (2) a substantial risk of physical harm to other persons as manifested by evidence of homicidal or other violent behavior or evidence that others are placed in reasonable fear of violent behavior and serious physical harm to them; or (3) a very substantial risk of physical impairmеnt or injury to the person [her]self as manifested by evidence that such person’s judgment is so affected that [s]he is unable to protect [herjself in the community and that reasonable provision for h[er] protection is not available in the community.
Mass.Gen.Laws Ann. eh. 123, § 1;
see Rogers,
The statutory definition of “likelihood of serious harm,” particularly its requirement that there be objective medical indicia of “dangerousness,” effectively “constitutes a codified set of ‘exigent circumstances’ which are constitutional under the Fourth Amendment.”
Moore v. Wyoming Medical Ctr.,
Finally, the specific focus and overall context of the Massachusetts statute implicitly circumscribe the category 2 search procedure within narrow bounds. A police officer is permitted to enter a residence without a *549 warrant for the exclusive purpose of detaining a recalcitrant and dangerous mentally ill person pursuant to a duly issued pink paper, but may not engage in a generalized search. As the officers in the instant case did not exceed these bounds, we conclude that Mass. Gen.Laws Ann. ch. 123, § 12(a), and consequently the City policy in pursuance of the statutory design, see supra pps. 546-47, are appropriately tailored to serve the legitimate and important State and municipal interest in ensuring that dangerous mentally ill persons not cause physical harm to themselves or others.
(b) Practicality of Warrant Requirement
The determination that there exists a legitimate and substantial governmental interest in conducting a warrantless search in certain circumstances satisfies only the threshold inquiry under the reasonableness test. For an administrative search procedure tо survive constitutional challenge under the “special need” exception, it must also appear that the burdens of complying with a warrant requirement are likely to defeat the important governmental purposes the warrantless search procedure was designed to serve.
In assessing whether the public', interest demands creation of a general exception to the Fourth Amendment’s warrant requirement, the question is not whether the public interest justifies the type of search in question, but whether the authority to search should be evidenced by a warrant, which in turn depends in part upon whether the burden of obtaining a warrant is likely to frustrate the governmental purpose behind the search.
Camara,
Compliance with a warrant requirement in the context of these temporary, involuntary commitments for medical-psychiatric examination would entail critical delays in safeguarding the mentally ill person, and others, without affording commensurate privacy protections to the subject. Category 2 searches foster important governmental interests largely because the inhеrent imprecision in predicting the timing of any outbreak of “dangerousness” on the part of the recalcitrant, mentally ill person,
see Moore,
In this particular case, of course, McCabe points to the undisputed evidence that the police officers waited several hours before executing the pink paper, thus demonstrating little concern that Ms. Zinger might exhibit the sort of sudden onset of “dangerousness” alluded to in the assessment made by Dr. Barden. Although this argument might hold sway were the constitutionality of the war-rantless entry dependent on an ad hoc, on-the-scene “exigent circumstances” determination made by the police, it is no rejoinder to the claimed “reasonableness” of a “special need” search procedure policy, which must focus not on the particular case but on the essential systemic attributes of the search procedure itself:
The dissent argues that in this case the police had ample time to seсure an arrest warrant, rendering invalid any claim that complying with traditional fourth amendment requirements was impracticable. That viewpoint distorts Griffin’s “impracticability” prong. In Griffin, the Court inquired into the systemic impracticability of compelling those involved in implementation of a probation regime to obtain warrants. The impracticability of obtaining a warrant in the particular case did not enter into the equation; indeed, Justice Blaekmun argued unsuccessfully for much the same sort of particularized inquiry.... Whether it was feasible for the police to obtain a warrant in this particular case is irrelevant for the purpose at hand.
Cardona,
More importantly by far, however, the additional burdens imposed on the City and State by a universal warrant requirement in category 2 searches seem to us “undue” and “unreasonable” when viewed in relation to the minimal additional protection afforded by a requirement that a pink paper be screened by a magistrate before it is executed. The district court ruled that the Fourth Amendment warrant requirement was violated notwithstanding compliance with the “pink paper” procedure under Mass.Gen.Laws Ann. ch. 123, § 12(a), because the issuing physician “is not qualified to determine whether probable cause exists.”
McCabe,
A pink paper is issued or withheld principally on the strength of expert medical-psychiatric assessments (i.e., diagnoses and prognoses founded on the available evidence), whereas judicial officers normally are called upon to make judgments as to whether there is “probable cause” for an arrest or search. As the Second Circuit has pointed out:
“[T]he initial inquiry in a civil commitment proceeding is very different from the central issue in either a delinquency proceeding or a criminal prosecution. In the latter cases the basic issue is a straightforward factual question — did the accused commit the act alleged? There may be factual issues to resolve in a commitment procеeding, but the factual aspects represent only the beginning of the inquiry. Whether the individual is mentally ill and dangerous to either himself or others and is in need of confined therapy turns on the meaning of the facts which must be interpreted by expert psychiatrists and psychologists.”
Project Release v. Prevost,
*551 To be sure, judicial oversight might provide some preliminary insulation against obvious abuse; for example, by screening out patently unreliable information utilized by a physician in formulating a diagnosis or prognosis, which can be a matter of particular concern in category 2 cases where the physician has not examined the patient and must rely on secondhand reports as to the subject’s physical, emotional and behavioral symptoms. On the other hand, the statutory mechanism itself affords reasonable safe-' guards against such concerns: a pink paper can be authorized only by a licensed psychiatric physician, see Mass.Gen.Laws Ann. ch. 123, §§ 1, 12(a), whose extensive education and specialized experience and training should enable the psychiatric physician more reliably to parse such lay reports, especially those provided by family members, with the requisite professional skepticism. 12 Though this safeguard is by no means foolproof, we think it would be the exceptional case in which an expert evaluation was based on patently insufficient or unreliable information. Further, to the degree that judicial factfinding were thought to be necessary as a general rule, in order to ferret out latent unreliability in the foundational evidence (e.g., possible ulterior family motives or antipathy toward the patient) upon which expert psychiatric evaluations are based, the resulting delays in implementing involuntary commitment orders could have far more serious consequences for the mentally ill, their families, and members of the public. Finally, such a detailed factfinding mission would greatly exceed any “screening” function normally undertaken by judicial officers in reviewing search warrant applications.
We discern no sufficient justification for superimposing such a judicial factfinding mechanism upon the evaluation made by the licensed psychiatric physician in the involuntary commitment context, especially since it promises no corresponding systemic benefit to offset the systemic delays in executing pink papers in emergent circumstances.
See Griffin,
2. The Interests of the Mentally III
Next, we consider the extent to which the category 2 search procedure infringes legitimate Fourth Amendment interests of the mentally ill.
See T.L.O.,
(a) Civil Context
Although the Fourth Amendment is implicated in a variety of civil proceedings,
Soldal,
(b) Impartiality of Decisionmaker
Finally, it is most significant in the present context that the official decision to initiate an involuntary “category 2” commitment rests with a licensed psychiatric physician, not with law enforcement officials.
See Steagald,
The role of the licensed physician under Massachusetts law is to provide a neutral, objective assessment of the “dangerousness” and “likelihood of serious risk” criteria upon which the involuntary commitment deсision depends. A physician’s ethical responsibilities likewise require that appropriate medical-psychiatric criteria be utilized in assessing the condition of the subject person.
Cf., e.g., Griffin,
The district court nonetheless struck down the City policy because “the agents of the doctors in this case are police officers with guns and batons, not hospital orderlies and nurses,” so that “[t]here is no therapeutic relationship which a warrant mechanism would disrupt.”
McCabe,
[W]e fаil to see any constitutional significance in the fact that police officers, rather than “administrative” agents, are permitted to conduct the § 415-a5 inspection. The significance respondent alleges lies in the role of police officers as enforcers of the penal laws and in the officers’ power to arrest for offenses other than violations of the administrative scheme. It is, however, important to note that state police officers, like those in New York, have numerous duties in addition to those associated with traditional police work.... As a practical matter, many States do not have the resources to assign the enforcement of a particular administrative scheme to a specialized agency. So long as a regulatory scheme is properly administrative, it is not rendered illegal by the fact that the inspecting officer has the power to arrest individuals for violations other than those created by the scheme itself. In sum, we decline to impose upon the States the burden of requiring the enforcement of their regulatory statutes to be carried out by specialized agents.
Burger,
We conclude that these considerations, on balance, favor a limited “special need” exception to the warrant requirement in the particular setting presented in this case. Accordingly, we hold that the Fourth Amendment is not infringed by the challenged City policy, which authorizes warrantless entries of residences by the police for the sole purpose of executing a properly issued category 2 pink paper within a reasonable time after its issuance.
Ill
CONCLUSION
We retrace the bounds of our ruling. We do not suggest that the factors we have discussed,
see
Section II.D, alone or in combination invariably provide adequate support for a “special need” excеption to the warrant requirement. The balancing test for determining whether an administrative procedure
*554
comes within the “special need” exception is designedly fact-specific, and must be calibrated anew in assessing the reasonableness of each administrative search procedure to which it is applied. Nor, of course, do we suggest that all comparable state involuntary commitment statutes, or any other provision of Mass.Gen.Laws Ann. ch. 123, or other categories of searches authorized under chapter 123, section 12(a), necessarily satisfy the Fourth Amendment.
See, e.g., Wyman,
Since the challenged City policy comports with the “special need” exception to the Fourth Amendment warrant requirement, the City is entitled to summary judgment. We intimate no viewpoint concerning any other aspect of these proceedings, including the McCabe claims against the individual police officers, the constable, and the ambulance crew, which claims were dismissed, without prejudice. See supra note 3.
The district court judgment is reversed and the case is remanded to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion; costs to appellant.
APPENDIX
Chapter 123, Section 12:
(a) Any physician who is licensed pursuant to section two of chapter one hundred and twelve or qualified psychiatric nurse mental health clinical specialist authorized to practice as such under regulations promulgated pursuant to the provisions of section eighty B of said chapter one hundred and twelve or a qualified psychologist licensed pursuant to sections one hundred and eighteen to one hundred and twenty-nine, inclusive of said chapter one hundred and twelve, who аfter examining a person has reason to believe that failure to hospitalize such person would create a likelihood of serious harm by reason of mental illness may restrain or authorize the restraint of such person and apply for the hospitalization of such person for a ten day period at a public facility or at a private facility authorized for such purposes by the department.
If an examination is not possible because of the emergency nature of the case and because of the refusal of the person to consent to such examination, the physician, qualified psychologist or qualified psychiatric nurse mental health clinical specialist on the basis of the facts and circumstances may determine that hospitalization is necessary and may apply therefore.
In an emergency situation, if a physician, qualified psychologist or qualified psychiatric nurse mental health clinical specialist is not available, a police officer, who believes that failure to hospitalize a person wоuld create a likelihood of serious harm by reason of mental illness may restrain such person and apply for the hospitalization of such person for a ten day period at a public facility or a private facility authorized for such purpose by the department. An application for hospitalization shall state the reasons for the restraint of such person and any other relevant information which may assist the admitting physician or physicians. Whenever practicable, prior to transporting such person, the applicant shall telephone or otherwise communicate with a facility to describe the circumstances and known clinical history and to determine whether the facility is the proper facility to receive such person and also to give notice of any restraint to be used and to determine whether such restraint is necessary.
(e) Any person may make application to a district court justice or a justice of the juvenile court department for a ten day commitment to a facility of a mentally ill person whom thе failure to confine would cause a likelihood of serious harm. After hearing such evidence as he may consider *555 sufficient, a district court justice or a justice of the juvenile court department may issue a warrant for the apprehension and appearance before him of the alleged mentally ill person, if in his judgment the condition or conduct of such person makes such action necessary or proper. Following apprehension, the court shall have the person examined by a physician designated to have the authority to admit to a facility or examined by a qualified psychologist in accordance with the regulations of the department. If said physician or qualified psychologist reports that the failure to hospitalize the person would create a likelihood of serious harm by reason of mental illness, the court may order the person committed to a facility for a period not to exceed ten days, but the superintendent may discharge him at any time within the ten day period.
Notes
. Ms. Zinger's former husband and their children owned the building in which Ms. Zinger’s apartment was located.
. The only constitutional violation McCabe attributes to the City is the forcible warrantless entry. In her cross-motion for summary judgment, McCabe did not press her "excessive force” claim that a City policy authorized or caused the police actions utilized to restrain Ms. Zinger. See infra note 4. We now summarize *543 the allegations against the individual officers in order to provide additional context.
After the officers pushed their way into her apartment and Ms. Zinger began screaming, the officers forced her to the floor on her stomach and handcuffed her hands behind her back. She lost control of her bladder. The ambulance crew refused to carry her down the stairs, asserting that she was too heavy. The officers then placed her in a sitting position. With one officer gripping her ankles and another holding her under her handcuffed arms, she was carried to the stairs, then dragged down one step at a time while still in a sitting position. At the bottom, the ambulance crew strapped her onto the stretcher, face down. By this time she had stopped screaming and the officers noticed that her hands appeared blue and she was bleeding from her mouth. Ms. Zinger was pronounced dead on arrival at the hospital.
. The judgment appealed from is nonetheless "final” as to all parties and claims. See Fed. R.Civ.P. 54(b); 28 U.S.C. § 1291. The original ten-count complaint named as defendants, the City, the dispatching police supervisor and the three individual police officers who executed the pink paper (in their official and individual capacities), the constable, the ambulance company, the ambulance crew, Dr. Barden, and the Tri-City Mental Health and Retardation Center where Dr. Barden worked. In addition to her claims under § 1983, McCabe alleged common-law assault and battery, and negligence. In June 1993, McCabe settled all claims against the doctor and the hospital. In February 1995, after a jury returned verdicts against the City and Life-Line Ambulance, the claims against the four police officers, the constable, and the ambulance crew were dismissed, without prejudice, by stipulation.
. By contrast, the initial complaint had alleged a City policy permitting the use of excessive force, and a failure to train or supervise officers, in executing involuntary commitment seizures.
. "[A] [felony] arrest warrant founded on probable cause implicitly carries with it the limited authority to enter a dwelling in which the suspect lives when there is reason to believe the suspect is within.”
Payton v. New York,
.
See, e.g., Project Release v. Prevost,
.
See Moore v. Wyoming Medical Ctr.,
Moreover, the absence of any authority for the McCabe contention — that the warrantless "forcible entry” phase of an involuntаry commitment should be treated differently than the committal "seizure” itself — arguably indicates that a constitutional foundation is lacking.
See Cardona,
. Contrary to McCabe’s contention, we need not decide whether the City waived the argument that its police officers’ actions were not undertaken pursuant to City policy, and that it is therefore not liable under
Monell,
. Thus, a "mental illness" determination alone is insufficient to support an involuntary commitment order; the State must also show that the person subjected to involuntary commitment is "dangcrous.”
See O’Connor v. Donaldson,
. There is no record evidence that the challenged City policy required officers to execute pink papers within a specified time. In all events, however, wc do not think the several hours that elapsed between the issuance and execution of this pink paper, which enabled the constable and police to coordinate their actions, can be considered so inordinate as to call into question the emergent nature of Ms. Zinger's mental-health-rclatcd dangerousness. Whereas *550 delay might belie "exigent circumstances," were that the warrant exception primarily relied upon by the City, no such rigid time constraints can bе imposed in a particular “special need” case as a precondition to the validity of the systemic search procedure itself. Nonetheless, we express no opinion as to whether, iri another ease, inordinate delay in issuing and executing a pink paper might tend to undermine a predicate finding that the subject posed a real "likelihood of serious harm” at the time the finding was made.
. It is largely irrelevant whether the "likelihood of serious harm” criterion in Mass.Gen.Laws Ann. ch. 123, § 12(a), approximates the "probable cause” inquiry appropriate in the search war *551 rant context. The "probable cause” inquiry often is jettisoned in civil administrative searches:
"[Wjhcrc a careful balancing of governmental and private interests suggests that the public interest is best served by a Fourth Amendment standard of reasonableness that stops short of probable cause, we have not hesitated to adopt such a standard.” We have concluded, for example, that the appropriate standard for administrative searches is not probable cause in its traditional meaning. Instead, an administrative warrant can be obtained if there is a showing that reasonable legislative or administrative standards for conducting an inspection arc satisfied.
O'Connor,
. The other statutory safeguards would not forestall improper warrantless entries of a subject's residence.
See Cardona,
. Although there is no evidence that Dr. Barden had been Ms. Zinger’s regular physician, the challenged City policy is to be evaluated in light of its systemic traits and purposes.
Cf. Cardona,
