MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER DISPOSING OF CROSS-MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGEMENT
Plaintiff Jamie Murcia was involved in an automobile accident in the City of New-burgh. When Newburgh Police Officer John Perez arrived at the scene of the accident, he arrested plaintiff because a Federal arrest warrant for a person with the same name was outstanding. Plaintiff was unable to convince either Newburgh police officers or their counterparts at the Orange County jail that he was not the man named in the arrest warrant. According to plaintiff, as a result, he was subjected to four separate strip searches— one in Newburgh and three at the Orange County Correctional Facility (“OCCF”)— before he was turned over to the Federal authorities, who recognized the error and released plaintiff.
Plaintiff brought this action in June of 2000 for violation of his civil rights, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, and for negligence. In November, 2001, Plaintiff sought leave of the Court to amend his complaint to include Defendant H. Frank Bigger, the Sheriff of Orange County. The Court granted this request. Plaintiff served an Amended Complaint in January, 2002.
*491 Plaintiff now moves for partial summary judgment against defendants County of Orange and Sheriff Frank Bigger (“defendants,” for the purpose of this motion) 1 pursuant to Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure on the grounds that the OCCF violated plaintiffs constitutional rights by strip searching him pursuant to an unconstitutional policy of strip searching all detainees upon arrival at the facility. Plaintiff also moves to strike certain affirmative defenses raised by defendants pursuant to Rule 12(f). Defendants oppose plaintiffs motion for summary judgment and cross-move for summary judgment on the claims alleging that the OCCF maintained an unconstitutional policy of strip searching all inmates upon arrival at the facility. 2
FACTS
Plaintiff was involved in a traffic accident in the City of Newburgh, New York. (Rule 56.1 Statement at ¶ 15, 16.) A New York State DMV check of plaintiffs driver’s license revealed that there was an outstanding warrant for his arrest from the State of Florida, for a federal charge of Bond Jumping. {Id. at ¶ 17; Perez Dep. at 42, Exh. H to Gersowitz Aff; Cert, of Lt. DiMarco.) Plaintiff was arrested and booked by City of Newburgh Police Officers. (Rule 56.1 Statement at ¶ 17.) On February 19, 1999, after arraignment before a Newburgh City Court Judge, plaintiff was remanded to the custody of the OCCF. {Id. at ¶ 19.)
Corrections Officers at the OCCF conducted a visual body search (or “hygiene check” as Sergeant Zappolo referred to it) of plaintiff upon his admission. {Id. at ¶ 26.) Sergeant Zappolo stated that the hygiene check was the routine procedure at the OCCF. (Zappolo Dep. at 11-12, Exh. I to Gersowitz Aff.) According to Sergeant Zappolo, hygiene checks of inmates include “a check of their personal artifacts, their clothing, jewelry, and a check of their body.” {Id. at 13.) “Body searches” consists of:
The lifting of their arms, checking under their arms. Opening their mouth, lifting up their tongue. Turning their head from side to side, looking in the inside of their ears. Bending their ears forward, looking behind their ears. Running their fingers through their hair. Lifting up their genitals. Turning around. Picking up both feet, to check the bottoms of their feet. Bending over and a visual check of the rectum.
{Id. at 13-14.) Sergeant Zappolo testified that this procedure was performed on every new inmate at the OCCF: “if they come into the facility, they’re searched.” {Id. at 14.)
The second strip search of Mr. Murcia occurred after he was placed in the bullpen with other inmates. According to defendants, while plaintiff was in the book *492 ing/reeeiving “bullpen” along with other inmates awaiting his assignment to a housing unit, Jail personnel smelled cigarette smoke coming from the bullpen area. (Zappolo Aff. at ¶ 5.) Because cigarettes are contraband in the OCCF, Officers asked the inmates who had been smoking the cigarette. (Id. at ¶ 6.) None of the inmates admitted to having any cigarettes, hence the Officers removed them from the bullpen and conducted body searches on all of them in order to find the contraband. (Id. at ¶¶ 7-8.)
On February 22, the U.S. Marshals came to pick up plaintiff. Plaintiff was strip searched again on this day. (Rule 56.1 Statement at ¶ 30.) Defendants claim that the U.S. Marshals conducted this third strip search of plaintiff. Plaintiff was released from the custody of the U.S. Marshals later that day after they discovered that he was not the Jamie Murcia who was wanted for Bond Jumping.
STANDARDS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(c), the court will grant summary judgment if the evidence offered shows that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the movants are entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
See Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477
U.S. 317,
DISCUSSION
I. The First Strip Search of Mr. Murcia Upon Arrival at the OCCF
A. At all relevant times, the OCCF had a policy of strip searching all new arrivals at the jail.
Plaintiff claims that the OCCF had an unconstitutional policy of strip searching every inmate who arrived at the facility. Plaintiff seeks summary judgment on his § 1983 claim relating to the first strip search he was subjected to at the OCCF.
Defendants respond that plaintiff offers no evidence to support his claim that the OCCF had a policy of strip searching all arriving inmates, noting that plaintiff did not depose Sheriff Bigger. Defendants acknowledge, however, that plaintiff has submitted the testimony of Sergeant Michael Zappolo in support of his claim that the OCCF had a blanket strip search policy in force at the time that plaintiff was admitted to the facility. Sergeant Zappolo stated that it was the Sheriffs Department’s policy to conduct visual body cavity searches of each and every person who entered the OCCF: “if they come into the facility, they’re searched.” (Zappolo Dep. at 14, Exh. I to Gersowitz Aff.) Defendants offer no contradictory evidence.
It is hard to read Defendants’ arguments with a straight face, given their history in front of this Court on this issue.
See Dodge v. County of Orange,
I therefore conclude that defendants maintained a blanket strip search policy for arriving inmates as a matter of undisputed fact.
B. Despite the existence of this policy, defendants are entitled to summary judgment dismissing plaintiffs claim under 4-2 U.S.C. § 198S.
Despite the existence of this policy, Sheriff Bigger asserts that he is not hable to plaintiff. He first asserts that the search of Murcia was constitutional, even if the policy was not, because Murcia was arrested for a felony. Second, he argues that he is entitled to qualified immunity because the constitutionality of strip searching newly-arrested felons without making a particularized assessment of the risk they pose was not sufficiently settled law to permit the imposition of liability.
(1) A policy of strip searching all new felony arrivals tvould be unconstitutional
Bigger’s first argument is that there was no constitutional violation, because to the extent OCCF’s on-arrival strip search policy reached accused felons, it was constitutional. I disagree.
The Second Circuit has held that blanket policies subjecting all newly-arrested misdemeanor detainees in a local correctional facility to visual body cavity searches are unconstitutional.
Shain v. Ellison,
Defendants first argue that this line of cases is no longer good law, because Supreme Court “impliedly” overruled
Weber
in
Turner v. Safley,
As this Court has noted several times before, the Second Circuit ruled long ago that
Weber
was not inconsistent with
Turner
because the former involved local jails and the latter dealt with prisons.
See Dodge v. County of Orange,
Furthermore, even adoption of a deferential posture to the decisions of jail ad
*494
ministrators, as required by
Turner,
does not dispense with the Fourth Amendment requirement that all searches, even searches of inmates, be reasonable. “Prison walls do not form a barrier separating prison inmates from the protections of the Constitution.”
Turner v. Safley,
Defendants’ next line of argument is different. They point out that the Second Circuit cases deal specifically with misdemeanor arrestees. Mr. Murcia, however, was arrested for a felony. Defendants argue that it is constitutionally permissible to strip search anyone brought into the facility on a felony charge.
The Second Circuit has never spoken to this issue. However, pronouncements by the United States Supreme Court in analogous contexts do not support OCCF’s position that reasonable suspicion to strip search accused felons upon arrival at the facility always exists.
In the context of Fourth Amendment searches and seizures, the Supreme Court has stated that the distinction between felonies and misdemeanors “is minor and often arbitrary.”
Tennessee v. Garner,
Coupling these words with the Second Circuit’s strong statements about constitutional protections for strip searches of accused misdemeanants, I conclude that the law in this Circuit does not countenance a policy mandating strip searches of all felony arrestees simply because they stand accused of felonies. The “individualized reasonable suspicion” rule should apply to accused felons as well as misdemeanants upon arrival at a local correctional facility. Of course, I do not expect the Court of Appeals to state that strip searches of newly-arrived felons should be the exception rather than the rule, as it did in
Shain. See Shain,
This conclusion comports with a post-
Turner
ruling in one other circuit. In
*495
Kennedy v. Los Angeles Police Dep’t.,
Defendants offer no evidence that would justify a policy for searching all felony detainees. They do not argue that the OCCF is frequently confronted with contraband smuggled into the facility. There is no testimony that unsuspecting arres-tees have typically secreted contraband or weapons in their bodies in the past, let alone that felony arrestees are responsible for a greater amount of contraband than misdemeanor arrestees. Defendants’ argument that the strip search of Mr. Murcia was constitutional as a matter of law, solely and simply because he was arrested for a felony, is unpersuasive.
See Kennedy,
supra.,
Because I disagree with defendants that a felony charge automatically provides reasonable suspicion to conduct a strip search, I also disagree with defendants’ argument that plaintiff lacks standing to sue because he was accused of a felony.
See Shain,
(2) Bigger Is Entitled to Qualified Immunity Because the Law On this Point Was Unsettled at the Time of the Search
Concluding that a constitutional violation has been established is only the first step in a two-step inquiry.
Saucier v. Katz,
*496
A government official making a policy decision is entitled to qualified immunity if the law was not clearly established at the time the determination was made.
Poe v. Leonard,
To the extent that Bigger’s sweeping policy of searching all new arrivals at OCCF swept newly arrested misdemeanor defendants into its ambit, it was clearly unconstitutional — if not when made, then at least by the time the last of the
Weber-Walsh-Wachtler
trilogy was decided in 1994.
Shain,
But insofar as the policy applied to accused felons, the law was not clear. If Bigger had promulgated a policy that mandated strip searching all new arrivals at OCCF who had been arrested for felonies, he would be entitled to qualified immunity, on the ground that the law relating to his officers’ conduct was and is unsettled. “[E]ven if the interest asserted by the plaintiff was clearly of a type generally protected by federal law, the defendant is entitled to [qualified] immunity as a matter of law if it was not clear at the time of the acts at issue that an exception did not permit those acts.”
Robison v. Via,
Of course, Bigger did not promulgate such a policy. His policy, which Zappolo and other corrections officers followed to the letter, was to strip search every new arrival at OCCF. Zappolo had no idea whether plaintiff had been arrested for a felony or a misdemeanor. He searched Murcia because he searched everyone, no questions asked. 5
So Bigger’s policy sweeps within its ambit searches that would be both constitutional (or at least arguably constitutional) and clearly unconstitutional if they had been conducted after individualized evaluation. The question before me — which appears to be of first impression — is whether Bigger can claim the benefits of qualified immunity to the extent the policy implicates searches of arriving felony arres-tees — searches, in other words, that were *497 not the subject of settled constitutional pronouncement.
I conclude that Bigger is entitled to qualified immunity in this situation.
In essence, plaintiff argues that Bigger cannot acquire qualified immunity by accident. Murcia happened to be an arrested felon, yes, but he correctly points out that his status played no part in the decision to strip search him. In other words, Murcia urges that Bigger cannot enjoy qualified immunity just because his officers might have had reasonable suspicion to conduct a strip search, when it is clear that in fact they did not have reasonable suspicion. They were not performing a discretionary act while under a reasonable misapprehension about the law; they were adhering to a non-discretionary policy of searching everyone.
Murcia’s argument is both clever and troubling. 6 Ultimately, however, it begs the question, which is whether a reasonable person in Bigger’s position would have known, by virtue of clearly established law, that a search of Murcia would violate his constitutional rights — not whether Sheriff Bigger should have acted differently in order to protect the clearly established constitutional rights of others. While I conclude that Murcia’s Fourth Amendment rights were indeed violated by the automatic on-arrival strip search, those rights were not clearly established at the time the search was conducted. The clearly established rights of others are, it seems to me, beside the point.
I reach this result with some misgivings. Only a few months ago, in
Hope v. Pelzer,
— U.S. —,
However, the Supreme Court has also held that the right allegedly violated must be defined at an appropriate level of specificity before a court can conclude that it was clearly established.
Wilson v. Layne,
I am especially troubled by the notion that Sheriff Bigger could be entitled to qualified immunity on these facts, because the blanket policy pursuant to which Murcia was unthinkingly strip searched should have been off the books years ago. The doctrine of qualified immunity is supposed to protect public officials from being sued for conduct that they could not have known was unlawful. Maintenance of OCCF’s blanket on-arrival strip search policy was unlawful and no reasonable law enforcement officer could have thought otherwise. But I fail to see why Murcia— who could not recover against Sheriff Bigger if OCCF had timely altered its policy to eliminate automatic strip searches of arriving misdemeanor defendants — should reap a windfall based on a knowing violation of someone else’s constitutional rights.
According to plaintiff, the County’s
Mo-nell
liability is predicated on its deliberate indifference to the existence of a clearly unconstitutional policy. In
Shain,
the Second Circuit stated that the illegality of the Nassau County sheriffs policy provided the necessary basis for attaching liability to the County.
Shain,
The Orange County defendants’ motion for summary judgment dismissing the First Cause of Action is granted to the extent it addresses the first of the three strip searches.
II. The Second Strip Search of Plaintiff (After Contraband Was Suspected in the Bullpen)
In Plaintiffs Memorandum of Law in Support of Summary Judgment, he states that “the facts establish that plaintiff was strip searched as a result of official policy without reasonable cause to conduct the searches.” (Id. at 5., emphasis added) However, the circumstances of the second strip search are markedly different from those of the first, and plaintiff cannot conflate them.
The undisputed facts reveal that the second strip search occurred because the unnamed corrections officers who were guarding the bullpen area smelled cigarette smoke. Cigarettes are contraband in the facility. No one in the bullpen would admit to having a cigarette, so all the occupants of that area were strip searched. Plaintiff alleges that this search, too was conducted pursuant to an unconstitutional “policy” of strip searching inmates without reasonable cause.
It is true, as plaintiff notes, that, “[p]rison walls do not form a barrier separating prison inmates from the protections of the Constitution.”
Turner v. Safley,
But plaintiff has not sued the corrections officers who conducted the second strip search on him. They are mentioned in the caption as John Doe defendants, but they have are neither been identified nor served, so they are not before the Court. The only persons Murcia has named and served with process — and hence, the only Orange County defendants in this action— are Sheriff Bigger and the County. Plaintiff does not contend that Sheriff Bigger was personally involved in strip searching him; he charges Bigger with making the policy pursuant to which he was searched. And he seeks to hold the County liable for the acts of its policy-maker, under Monell.
So plaintiff was required, in support of his motion for summary judgment, to establish the existence of some unconstitutional policy pursuant to which the second strip search was carried out. If he cannot establish that essential element of his claim, “there can be ‘no genuine issue as to any material fact,’ since a complete failure of proof concerning an essential element of the nonmoving party’s case necessarily renders all other facts immaterial.”
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
Plaintiff has not offered any evidence that would permit a reasonable trier of fact to conclude that the second strip search was conducted pursuant to any policy at all. Plaintiff states, in conclusory fashion, that OCCF maintained a policy of strip searching inmates without reasonable cause; but the only policy for which he offers evidence (through Officer Zappolo, his star witness) is the previously-discussed policy of searching every inmate upon arrival. The second strip search of Murcia at OCCF was not carried out pursuant to that policy; it was conducted after plaintiff had been in-processed. Plaintiff offers no evidence of a broader OCCF policy of strip searching inmates .without individualized reasonable suspicion after that initial search. Indeed, in his Reply Memorandum, plaintiff notes that his star witness, Officer Zappolo, “failed to indicate the terms of the policy, if any, that required cavity searches in such circumstances. In fact, he does not even state that such searches were done as a matter of policy. ” (Pl.’s Reply Br. at 8.)(emphasis added).
Of course, as Murcia points out, Defendants’ June 13, 2002 memorandum of law, filed prior to the Reply Memorandum cited above, asserts (without evidentiary support) that the second search was conducted pursuant to facility policy.
{See
Memo of Law at 17.) So perhaps there is some policy at OCCF that mandates strip searches of inmates who are present in areas where the- presence of contraband is detected. But on the present record I would only be guessing that such a policy exists, and if it does, I know nothing about its terms. Indeed, plaintiff does not pur
*500
port to know the policy’s terms; in a further reply memorandum of law prepared at the request of the Court, plaintiff admits “... the terms of this policy remain unknown and the policy itself has not been identified specifically.” Plaintiffs September 23, 2002 Memorandum at n. 3. Since I do not know what the policy is, I cannot possibly decide that it is unconstitutional - especially as many strip searches of inmates
are
constitutional.
See Bell v. Wolfish,
On this record, I cannot even make the first determination required in a qualified immunity analysis: whether plaintiffs allegations establish a constitutional violation.
Saucier,
The fact that plaintiffs motion is denied does not mean that I can grant defendants’ cross motion, either on the merits or on the ground of qualified immunity. A cross-movant bears the same obligation as the movant — to support its claim to summary judgment with specific evidence. Aside from the unsupported remark of counsel quoted above — and it should go without saying that counsel is not eompe-tent to testify — there is nothing in the record that would permit me to decide (1) whether there is a policy or (2) what the policy is. I simply cannot perform the Saucier analysis on this record. 7 Thus, defendants’ motion for summary judgment as to the second search is also denied.
III. The Third Search: Prior to his transfer to Federal Custody
Plaintiff claims that he was strip searched a third time before he was transferred to the custody of the U.S. Marshals. The Defendants contend that it was the U.S. Marshals who conducted this search, after plaintiff was transferred to their custody. Because there is an issue of fact about who conducted the third strip search, plaintiff has withdrawn his motion for summary judgment regarding that search.
However, unless plaintiff establishes at trial that the third search was not only conducted by OCCF officers, but was carried out pursuant to some unconstitutional policy promulgated by Sheriff Bigger— such as a policy of strip searching all departing inmates, or all inmates who are being transferred to other institutions — it appears to this Court that Sheriff Bigger and the County will be entitled to a directed verdict, for the reasons discussed above. I mention this so that no one will be under any misapprehension about Murcia’s burden at trial.
IV. Unidentified Claims Arising Under State Law
The above rulings deal only with the Federal claims in this action. However, in his complaint, plaintiff asserts that his First Cause of Action arises under the *501 Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution “and the Laws of the United States and the State of New York.” Plaintiff does not identify the laws of the State of New York on which he relies.
Art. I, Sec. 12 of the New York State Constitution parallels the Fourth Amendment in prohibiting unreasonable searches and seizures. A brief search of New York case law does not suggest that its protections extend beyond those of the Federal constitution in the area of strip searches of arrestees or prisoner.
8
All the New York cases I have found (none of which deals with a situation similar to plaintiffs) either follow
9
or assume without deciding
10
that the State law applicable to strip searches of persons arrested for crimes requires reasonable cause before a strip search can be conducted. Earlier this year, the New York Court of Appeals, in
People v. More,
However, the instant case is in an odd posture. The only named Orange County defendants are the Sheriff and the County. Sheriff Bigger did not conduct the search; he made the policy. There being no doctrine of qualified immunity under state law, Sheriff Bigger cannot be absolved of responsibility for the first strip search (which was conducted pursuant to his policy) on that ground.
Micalizzi v. Ciamarra,
I asked the parties to address questions of state law in supplemental briefs. Plaintiff responded with the following footnote:
Plaintiff withdraws these claims from consideration in this motion given that the New York State Constitution’s proscription regarding unreasonable searches and seizures is generally interpreted in concert with the Fourth Amendment requirements and prohibitions. It remains however, that enlargements of the Fourth Amendment’s pro *502 tections have been enacted under the New York Constitution where a compelling state interest has been shown. As such, Plaintiff does not wish to voluntarily withdraw these claims so as to retain an opportunity to perfect an appeal and an accompanying request for certification of the question (i.e., New York State’s own protections against cavity searches by government officials) to the Court of Appeals.
I assume that plaintiff refers to the New York Court of Appeals, not the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.
Plaintiff correctly (if obliquely) identifies the forum in which issues of New York constitutional law ought to be litigated— the courts of the State of New York. Of course, plaintiff has the ability to raise those issues in Federal court, but he has not only declined my invitation to address these issues on their merits but expressed a clear interest in having the issue decided in the proper forum. I am happy to oblige him. I decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over plaintiffs First Cause of Action to the extent it purports to arise under the Constitution and law of the State of New York, on the ground that these claims, by plaintiffs own admission, raise a novel issue of State law as to which the New York’s courts should speak in the first instance. 28 U.S.C. § 1367(c)(1).
V. The Motion to Strike Defendants’ Affirmative Defenses is Denied
Under Rule 12(f), “a court may order stricken from any pleading any insufficient defense or any redundant, immaterial, impertinent or scandalous matter.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(f). This action should not be taken lightly. However, it may be appropriate where the defense shown is totally insufficient as a matter of law.
Lipsky v. Commonwealth United Corp.,
Plaintiff moves to strike defendants’ defenses of reasonable suspicion, constitutional compliance, and good faith, all of which apply to the First Cause of Action. 11 Since issues of reasonable suspicion, constitutional compliance and qualified immunity are very much to be considered as we evaluate plaintiffs right to recover for the second and third strip searches, I deny plaintiffs motions to strike these affirmative defenses.
VI. Plaintiffs Second Cause of Action
Finally, Murcia pleads a second cause of action, in negligence. The parties have not briefed this issue, although it appears to the Court that the claim may be legally insufficient. I have no basis to address it at this time, although I will of course entertain a motion on the law made at the end of plaintiffs case.
This constitutes the decision and order of the Court.
Notes
. The City of Newburgh contests that Mr. Murcia was strip searched while in its custody. Because there is a clear issue of fact on this question, neither the plaintiff nor the City of Newburgh (or Officer Perez) has brought a summary judgment motion related to the strip search at the Newburgh police station.
. In a letter dated July 12, 2002, defendants asked that the Court consider their opposition to plaintiff’s summary judgment motion as a cross-motion for summary judgment because of plaintiffs “strong reliance on cases from the Ninth Circuit in furtherance of their motion for partial summary judgment against Orange County and Sheriff Bigger.” I granted defendants' request to convert their opposition into a cross-motion for summary judgment with respect to plaintiff's claims that he was strip searched upon arrival at the OCCF pursuant to an unconstitutional strip search policy. I also interpreted this letter as a motion for summary judgment based on Sheriff Bigger’s qualified immunity from claims based on this strip search.
. In this regard, the fact that Murcia was arrested for bail jumping is unenlightening. Whether that particular felony arrest gave rise to reasonable suspicion would depend, it seems to me, on the nature of the underlying crime. In Murcia’s case, the underlying charge was drug-related; while it appears that Officer Zappolo was unaware of that fact — and while it played no part in the decision to strip search Murcia — I recognize that a strip search of a bail jumping drug defendant might well be constitutionally compliant. It is not necessary for me to reach this issue, however, because I conclude that qualified immunity cloaks Bigger, and hence the County, from liability.
.
Kennedy
is generally cited as having been "impliedly overruled” by the United States Supreme Court in
Hunter v. Bryant,
. This is consistent with the state of the record in
Lee v. Perez,
. It has also been lurking in the background in my prior OCCF and City of Newburgh strip search cases. The issue was not squarely raised until now because the plaintiffs in all the other cases before me were arrested for misdemeanors, not felonies. Also, we have not yet gotten beyond general constitutional questions and into the particulars of specific searches in cases like
Dodge v. County of Orange, supra,
and
Maneely v. City of Newburgh,
. Just so it is clear, I am not denying Sheriff Bigger qualified immunity. The state of the record precludes me from reaching the question, because the state of the record precludes me from determining what Saucier identifies as the predicate issue — whether any constitutional violation was committed.
.In a recent decision, the Appellate Division, Fourth Department, asserted that the New York court of Appeals had interpreted the State Constitution to “impose) ] some limits on such searches [incident to a lawful arrest] not found under the Fourth Amendment, particularly in the area of minor traffic violations. ...”
People v. Taylor,
.
See, e.g., Young v. Coombe,
.
People v. Martinez,
. Sheriff Bigger has withdrawn his affirmative defense of lack of personal jurisdiction. (Def s. Mem. in Opp. to Pi’s Motion for Partial Summ. J. at 17.)
