MEMORANDUM
Before the court for disposition is Magistrate Thomas M. Blewitt’s report and recommendation with regard to cross-motions for summary judgment filed by the parties to the present case. The Magistrate’s report recommends that summary judgment be granted to the defendants. The plaintiffs are Teresa Neumeyer and Larry Neumeyer and the defendants are Jeffery Beard, Secretary of the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections (“DOC”) and Kenneth Kyler, Superintendent of the State Correctional Institution at Hunting-don (“SCIH”). Plaintiffs have filed objections to the report and recommendation. For the reasons that follow, the objections will be overruled and the report and recommendation adopted.
Background 1
According to a policy of the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections (“DOC”), prison visitor vehicles parked on facility
On various dates, the plaintiffs visited Teresa Neumeyer’s father, Preston Pfeifly, at the SCIH. On May 28, 2001, and May 27, 2002, the plaintiffs’ vehicle was searched by SCIH corrections officers after it was parked on institutional property. Prior to the searches, Plaintiff Teresa Neumeyer had signed a “Consent To Search Vehicle” form, which gave her consent to having the vehicle searched.
There does not exist any information or allegations in any SCIH records or reports indicating that the plaintiffs have brought, or attempted to bring, unlawful contraband and illegal narcotics into SCIH or possessed the same in their vehicle. DOC policy does not require corrections officers to have a search warrant, probable cause or reasonable suspicion to search a vehicle on SCIH grounds as such vehicle searches are conducted only after obtaining the written consent of the owner or operator.
Not every prison visitor vehicle is searched as SCIH. There are no written standards as to how the searches are to be conducted; in general, they are conducted randomly as time and complement permit. The discovery of illegal narcotics in a prison visitor vehicle by SCIH corrections officers triggers notification of the Pennsylvania State Police.
Plaintiffs contend that having their vehicle subjected to search under these circumstances violates the Fourth Amendment. They have brought suit under 42 U.S. § 1983 seeking declaratory injunctive relief but not damages. Defendants have moved for summary judgment arguing that as there is no dispute that the plaintiffs consented to both searches, the proper analysis must be made under the First Amendment’s right of association and that conditioning visiting prisoners on the visitor agreeing to permit searching their vehicle when parked on state correctional institution property is constitutional. Plaintiffs have also filed a motion for summary judgment.
On November 20, 2003, Magistrate Thomas M. Blewitt issued a report and recommendation concluding that defendants’ motion for summary judgment should be granted and that plaintiffs motion for summary judgment should be denied. Plaintiffs have filed objections to the report and recommendation, bringing the case to its present posture.
Standard of review
In disposing of objections to a magistrate’s report and recommendation, the district court must make a
de novo
determination of those portions of the report to which objections are made. 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1)(C);
see also Henderson v. Carlson,
Discussion
In his R & R, the Magistrate concluded that searches of prison visitor vehicles do not infringe upon, or violate, their constitutional rights to privacy under the Fourth Amendment. Plaintiffs object to this conclusion and argue that “[pjermitting prison guards to rummage through vehicles without any written standards as to vehicle selection and search techniques is the precise evil the Fourth Amendment was designed to prevent.” Plaintiffs’ Brief, p. 2 (citations omitted). We disagree.
Visitors to prisons are not afforded the same Fourth Amendment protections as
Plaintiffs acknowledge that prison visitors may enjoy a reduced expectation of privacy as a result of entering prison property but argue that a “reasonable suspicion” standard must be met before a vehicle can be constitutionally searched. Plaintiffs, however, incorrectly rely on
Wiley v. Department of Justice,
Plaintiffs further argue that the Magistrate’s conclusion that a vehicle search is not an invasive search is clearly erroneous. We disagree. The Magistrate was comparing vehicle searches to strip and body cavity searches, the latter of which courts have recognized as “an embarrassing and humiliating experience.”
Spear,
Additionally, it is well-settled that there is not a constitutional right to visitation for convicted prisoners, their family and spouses.
3
See, e.g., Young v. Vaughn,
Accordingly, since there is neither a Constitutional nor a state statutory right to visit prison inmates, the Magistrate was correct to conclude that the search of plaintiffs’ vehicle should not be scrutinized under Fourth Amendment standards. 4
Plaintiffs further object to the Magistrate’s conclusion that this case should be analyzed under the reasonableness standard set forth in
Turner v. Safley,
In also analyzing the case under the reasonableness standard, the Magistrate sought to establish that, even if the plaintiffs had a fundamental right to visitation, the right was properly restricted by DOC policy. Plaintiff argues that, under this standard, it is clear that prison vehicle searches are not rationally related to prison security. We disagree. And while we need not analyze this issue as the searches are constitutional under the legitimate pe-nological standard, we will address it for
1)a rational connection between the prison decision and the governmental interest supported; 2) the existence of alternative means of exercising the abridged right; 3) the impact of an accommodation of the abridged right on prison resources; and 4) the absence of alternatives for exercising the right at de minimis cost to penological interests.
Young v. Vaughn,
Visitor vehicle searches are rationally related to the prison’s interest in maintaining security. “Visitors are a security risk, and deference should be to prison officials’ visitation decisions.” Id. Plaintiffs, themselves, acknowledge that “the presence of illegal narcotics inside a prison impairs security and endangers the lives of both inmates and staff.” Plaintiffs Brief (Doc. 39), p. 6. Vehicle searches help to uncover narcotics and other contraband in order to protect the staff, visitors and inmates. See Defendants’ brief (Doc. 24), p. 6.
Plaintiff argues that “common sense tells us that only the prison visitor, not the automobile, enters the facility to visit.” Plaintiffs Brief (Doc. 39), p. 7. The defendants have, however, pointed out that SCIH has inmates who live outside the prison walls and inmates who have outside prison work details. See Defendants’ brief (Doc. 24), Attachment # 1, ¶ 13. These inmates may have access to visitors’ vehicles parked at the prison. Id. Plaintiff finally complains that:
SCI-Huntingdon is located in a residential area yet prison officials only search vehicles located in their parking lot. It is simply not rational for the State to insist that prison visitor vehicles must be searched to safeguard the facility while automobiles and houses surrounding the prison (which no doubt contain firearms and other dangerous items) are never searched and are equally accessible to prisoners.
Plaintiffs Brief (Doc. 39), p. 7.
We disagree. We find that it is rational for prison officials to search visitors’ vehicles on prison property, after having duly notified the visitors that their vehicles may be searched and after having obtained the permission of the visitors for the search. We also find that it is rational for prison officials not to search private homes on private property, which are owned by individuals who are not seeking to enter the prison and have not given their consent to have their homes searched.
Accordingly, we find that there is a rational connection between visitor vehicle searches and prison security. Therefore, even if the “legitimate penological objectives standard” is not the correct standard to apply, the stricter “reasonableness standard” is also met.
Conclusion
For the reasons set forth above, petitioner’s objections to the Magistrate’s report and recommendation are overruled. Accordingly, petitioner’s motion for summary judgment will be denied and defendant’s motion for summary judgment will be granted. An appropriate order follows.
ORDER
AND NOW, to wit, this _ day of January 2004, it is hereby ORDERED as follows:
1) The plaintiffs’ objections (Doc. 38) to the magistrate’s report and recommendation are OVERRULED;
2) The magistrate’s report and recommendation (Doc. 35) is ADOPTED;
3) The plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment (Doc. 15) is DENIED;
4) The defendants’ motion for summary judgment (Doc. 22) is GRANTED;
5) The Clerk of Court is directed to close this case.
Notes
. The material facts are largely undisputed and are derived from the plaintiffs’ and defendants' briefs.
. The
Wiley
Court held that "[t]his case falls squarely under the
Ortega
decision and thus should be analyzed under the reasonable suspicion standard."
Id.
at 1350. In
Ortega,
“the Court addressed the appropriate Fourth Amendment standard for a search of a public employee's office by a public employer in areas in which the employee had a reasonable expectation of privacy.”
Id.
(citing
O’Connor
v.
Ortega,
. Plaintiffs argue that "[wjhether or not family members have a constitutional right of visitation should have no bearing in this case.” We disagree. It has a bearing on the case because of plaintiffs’ own argument that the Court should evaluate the constitutionality of prison visitor vehicle searches upon Fourth Amendment reasonableness standards. According to the plaintiff’s own argument, therefore, the court must determine whether the vehicle searches are entitled to protection under the Fourth Amendment. The plaintiffs’ vehicle was searched because they chose to visit an inmate: the vehicle is on the prison’s property; visitors are put on notice that their vehicles and personal property are subject to search by large signs posted at all entrances of the prison and before entering the visitors’ parking lot; and the plaintiffs consented to the vehicle search in exchange for permission to enter the prison to visit a prisoner. Plaintiffs' citation to
Overton v. Bazzetta,
539 U.S.
. Plaintiffs’ argument concerning the "special needs” doctrine is similarly misplaced. The "special needs” doctrine is an exception to the probable-cause requirement for overcoming the Fourth Amendment's prohibition on unreasonable searches.
New Jersey v. T.L.O.,
