Jason B. NICHOLAS, John Lewis, Philip Rabenbauer, Frank Solimine, Robert Pacini, Chester Flanders, Bennie Bates, Lymond Stephenson, Luis Mejia, Cecil Barrow, Dominic Deruggiero, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
Alvaro Sanchez, Plaintiff,
v.
Glenn S. GOORD, New York State Department of Correctional Services; Katherine Lapp, New York State Division of Criminal Justice Services; Medilabs, Inc.; Jessica Walsh, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 04-3887-PR.
United States Court of Appeals, Second Circuit.
Argued April 4, 2005.
Decided November 28, 2005.
COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED Alexander A. Reinert, Koob & Magoolaghan, New York, New York, for Plaintiffs-Appellants.
Gregory Klass, Assistant Solicitor General (Eliot Spitzer, Attorney General of the State of New York, and Michael Belohlavek, Deputy Solicitor General, on the brief), New York, New York, for Defendants-Appellees Goord and Lapp.
Ann Teresa McIntyre, Zichello & MacIntyre, LLP, New York, New York, for Defendants-Appellees Medilabs, Inc. and Walsh.
Beth Haroules (Arthur N. Eisenberg, on the brief), New York, New York, on submission, for Amicus Curiae New York Civil Liberties Union, in support of Plaintiffs-Appellants.
Gregory L. Diskant (Erik S. Hanson, on the brief), Patterson Belknap, Webb & Tyler LLP, New York, New York, on submission, for Amicus Curiae The Council for Responsible Genetics, in support of Plaintiffs-Appellants.
Timothy P. O'Toole (Todd Cox and Alison Flaum, on the brief), Washington, DC, on submission, for Amicus Curiae Public Defender Service for the District of Columbia, in support of Plaintiffs-Appellants.
Laura R. Johnson (Lawrence T. Hausman, on the brief), New York, New York, on submission, for Amicus Curiae The Legal Aid Society, in support of Plaintiffs-Appellants.
Susan L. Valle (Kevin L. Wright, President, on the brief), Albany, New York, on submission, for Amicus Curiae The District Attorneys Association of New York State, Inc., in support of Defendants-Appellees.
Before: WALKER, Chief Judge, LEVAL, Circuit Judge, and LYNCH, District Judge.*
Judges LEVAL and LYNCH join the opinion and concur in separate opinions.
JOHN M. WALKER, JR., Chief Judge.
Jason B. Nicholas, John Lewis, Philip Rabenbauer, Frank Solimine, Robert Pacini, Chester Flanders, Bennie Bates, Lymond Stephenson, Luis Mejia, Cecil Barrow, and Dominic DeRuggiero (collectively, "plaintiffs") appeal from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Kevin T. Duffy, Judge) granting defendants' motion to dismiss. Nicholas v. Goord, No. 01 Civ. 7891,
We affirm the district court's dismissal of plaintiffs' complaint, but rely on different reasoning. We hold that the constitutionality of New York's DNA statute is properly analyzed under the Fourth Amendment's "special needs" test; under that test, we find the statute constitutional.
BACKGROUND
I. Facts
Plaintiffs are felons convicted in New York who, at the time they brought this lawsuit, were incarcerated. They challenge the 1999 version of New York's DNA statute, which requires certain classes of convicted felons to provide DNA samples to be maintained in a state database. N.Y. Exec. Law § 995 et seq. (McKinney 1999).1 New York's law is similar to the numerous DNA-indexing statutes that have been established at both the state and federal levels; it (1) mandates the extraction of DNA samples from certain classes of convicted felons, id. § 995-c(3);2 (2) provides for DNA information obtained from those samples to be maintained in an index, or database, id.; (3) specifies that DNA samples will be analyzed only for markers "having value for law enforcement identification purposes," id. § 995-c(5);3 (4) allows for release of DNA records only in limited circumstances, id. § 995-c(6);4 (5) penalizes the unauthorized disclosure or use of DNA records, id. § 995-f; and (6) requires that an individual's DNA records be expunged if his conviction is reversed or if he is pardoned, id. § 995-c(9). All nine plaintiffs have provided blood samples for purposes of the DNA index.5
Suing under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, plaintiffs claim that New York's statute violates the Fourth Amendment, which prohibits unreasonable searches and seizures. See U.S. Const. amend. IV. They seek to have their DNA records expunged from New York's database as well as money damages.6 In addition to defendants-appellees Goord and Lapp ("State defendants"), plaintiffs named as defendants Medilabs, Inc., and its employee Jessica Walsh, who conducted DNA sampling for the state.7
II. Proceedings Below
On February 6, 2003, Magistrate Judge Gabriel W. Gorenstein issued a report recommending that the case be dismissed. Nicholas v. Goord, No. 01 Civ. 7891,
Following that doctrine, the magistrate judge conducted a two-part inquiry. He first asked whether New York's law served a "`special need, beyond the normal need for law enforcement.'" Id. In doing so, however, he declined to rely on the special need that we had identified in Marcotte, in part because that case preceded two significant intervening Supreme Court decisions concerning the special-needs test, see id. at *14, and in part because he was unconvinced that New York's DNA statute was meant to deter recidivism, the special need relied upon in Marcotte, see id. at *12. Ultimately, the magistrate judge concluded that the primary purpose of New York's DNA statute was "to maintain information available to solve future crimes," and deemed that purpose a special need. Id. at *13. The magistrate judge then applied a balancing test and found that the interests of the state in maintaining a database to aid in crime investigation outweighed the minimal intrusion on plaintiffs' privacy interests. The magistrate judge emphasized plaintiffs' greatly reduced expectation of privacy as prisoners, id. at *16-*17, and the "blanket approach" of the statute, which reduced the possibility of arbitrary conduct by the state, id. at *18.
The district court reached the same conclusion by a different route. The district court first expressed skepticism as to whether the Fourth Amendment even applied, noting that it was "not necessarily convinced that the Magistrate Judge was correct to so quickly dismiss the question," but ultimately decided, in the absence of any argument from the state, to assume that the Fourth Amendment did apply. Nicholas,
Instead of engaging in a special-needs inquiry, therefore, the district court proceeded directly to consider the statute under the traditional Fourth Amendment balancing test. After concluding that, in light of the totality of the circumstances, the state's significant interest in "having information readily available to aid criminal investigations" outweighed plaintiffs' minimal interest in not having to submit their DNA to indexing, the district court dismissed the complaint. Id. at *5-*6.
This appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
We review de novo a district court's grant of a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6).8 See, e.g., W. Mohegan Tribe & Nation v. Orange County,
I. The Applicability of the Fourth Amendment
As a preliminary matter, we reject the district court's sua sponte suggestion that the Fourth Amendment might not apply to New York's DNA statute because plaintiffs may not have a reasonable expectation of privacy in their DNA. See Nicholas,
Moreover, while we agree with the district court that fingerprinting and DNA indexing serve similar purposes, see Nicholas,
Finally, to the extent that the district court relied on Second Circuit cases holding that prisoners have a reduced expectation of privacy, see, e.g., Willis v. Artuz,
From this point, our analysis proceeds in two parts: We first decide which Fourth Amendment test to apply to New York's DNA statute, and then we analyze the statute's constitutionality under that test.
II. Special-Needs Test
A. Special-Needs or General Balancing Test?
To date, both state and federal DNA-indexing statutes have withstood Fourth Amendment challenges.9 See Sczubelek,
In Marcotte, we applied the special-needs test to the DNA-indexing requirement under Connecticut's sex-offender statute, which is similar to New York's statute.12 See Marcotte,
B. The Evolution of the Special-Needs Exception
The Fourth Amendment prohibits unreasonable searches and seizures. In the criminal-law context, a warrant and probable cause are usually required. See Mincey v. Arizona,
The special-needs exception, which developed against this backdrop of Fourth Amendment requirements, was first enunciated by Justice Blackmun in his T.L.O. concurrence, in which he clarified that exceptions to the usual warrant and probable-cause requirements were appropriate only where "special needs, beyond the normal need for law enforcement, make the warrant and probable-cause requirement impracticable." T.L.O.,
Warrantless searches that serve a special need and are based on individualized suspicion have been upheld by the Court several times. See, e.g., O'Connor v. Ortega,
Such searches, which have historically been treated as a "closely guarded category," Chandler v. Miller,
What unifies these cases, despite their varied contexts, is that in each instance, the Court found that the suspicionless-search regime at issue served some special need distinct from normal law-enforcement needs. In Martinez-Fuerte, for example, the Court "emphasized the difficulty of effectively containing illegal immigration at the border itself." Edmond,
Thus, although the special-needs exception was originally formulated in the context of warrantless searches, the evolution of the Court's Fourth Amendment jurisprudence suggests that the doctrine has increasingly become the test employed by the Court in suspicionless search cases. See also Chandler,
In 2001, the court decided Edmond, which concerned an Indianapolis checkpoint program "whose primary purpose [was] the discovery and interdiction of illegal narcotics."
The following year the Court decided Ferguson, in which the petitioners challenged a hospital program that tested their urine for cocaine use. See
Edmond and Ferguson are notable for two reasons. First, they indicate that searches conducted in the absence of individualized suspicion are subject to the special-needs test. While the special-needs exception was originally developed in relation to the Fourth Amendment's warrant requirement, cases like Edmond and Ferguson have increased the doctrine's importance in a subcategory of warrantless searches — suspicionless searches. See N.G. v. Connecticut,
Second, Edmond and Ferguson clarify what may qualify as a special need. Edmond asserts that a program serving a "general interest in crime control" will not suffice.
Our understanding of the special-needs doctrine and our reading of Edmond and Ferguson must, however, also take into account the Court's more recent decision in Illinois v. Lidster. That case concerned a highway checkpoint set up by police one week after a hit-and-run accident "at about the same time of night and at about the same place" as the accident; the checkpoint was "designed to obtain more information about the accident from the motoring public."
C. Analysis
With Edmond, Ferguson, and Lidster in mind, we now consider plaintiffs' contention that the district court erred in applying the traditional Fourth Amendment balancing test, rather than the special-needs test. Plaintiffs urge us to follow the methodology employed in Marcotte and to apply the more stringent special-needs test.22 Certainly, the Court's emphasis in its recent cases on applying the special-needs test to suspicionless searches strongly suggests, if it does not require, that we should continue to apply the special-needs test to DNA-indexing statutes as we did in Marcotte.
Defendants, however, maintain that a general Fourth Amendment balancing inquiry is more appropriate and argue that we should affirm the district court's approach. Defendants offer two primary reasons for departing from Marcotte, which we now consider.23
1. United States v. Knights
Defendants first contend that the Supreme Court's decision in United States v. Knights,
Courts that have relied upon Knights as justifying the application of a general balancing test to DNA-indexing statutes have emphasized Knights's status as a probationer and his knowledge of the probation search condition, which reduced his expectation of privacy. See, e.g., Sczubelek,
We are unwilling to leap to that conclusion. The Court's decision to employ a traditional balancing test in Knights must be viewed in context. In particular, we think it telling that the Court emphasized, from the very first paragraph of its opinion, that the search of Knights's apartment was "supported by reasonable suspicion." Knights,
The Court distinguished the "special needs" line of cases, but it did so cautiously, explaining that its departure from that framework was justified only by the combination of all of the circumstances present. Those circumstances included the reduced expectation of privacy held by Knights on account of the conditions of his probation. [They] also included, as the Court emphasized repeatedly, the fact that the search was supported by reasonable suspicion[.]
Kincade,
We thus reject defendants' argument that Knights justifies applying the traditional Fourth Amendment balancing test to New York's DNA statute. In light of the Court's emphasis in its recent Fourth Amendment cases on applying the special-needs test to suspicionless-search regimes, see, e.g., Chandler,
2. Reduced Expectation of Privacy
Defendants also contend that the searches conducted in Ferguson and Edmond are distinguishable from the search at issue in this case, and therefore those cases do not apply. Specifically, defendants argue that neither Edmond nor Ferguson involved a "class of individuals [that] has a diminished expectation of privacy," whereas this case involves prison inmates, who have a "substantially diminished expectation of privacy in their identifying information."25 See also Kincade,
The problem with this argument is that neither Ferguson nor Edmond rested upon the plaintiffs' undiminished expectation of privacy. Rather, the key to each case was the program's law-enforcement purpose. See Ferguson,
We therefore cannot agree with defendants' contention that a reduced expectation of privacy allows courts to dispense with the special-needs test in cases involving suspicionless-search regimes. Indeed, we view such logic with some concern, in light of the wide swath of the general public who at one point or another has had a reduced expectation of privacy. See, e.g., Lidster,
We therefore reaffirm the approach we took in Marcotte and conclude that plaintiffs' Fourth Amendment challenge to New York's DNA-indexing statute is properly analyzed under the special-needs test. Although courts have unanimously upheld DNA-indexing statutes whether they have applied the special-needs test or the general Fourth Amendment balancing test, the test applied continues to matter, especially since the reasons for adopting a particular test will inevitably have consequences in other search contexts. We therefore continue to hold suspicionless searches to the higher standard of review embodied in the special-needs inquiry.
III. Analysis Under the Special-Needs Test
A. Does New York's Statute Serve a Special Need?
In determining whether New York's DNA statute can be justified under the special-needs exception, we first ask what the statute's primary purpose is, mindful that it is the statute's immediate rather than ultimate objective that is relevant. See Ferguson,
Although we conclude that New York's statute likewise serves a special need, distinguishable from ordinary law-enforcement needs, we do not think that the immediate objective of the statute is to deter recidivism, although such deterrence may be a valuable byproduct.26 We instead agree with the magistrate judge that close examination of the statute reveals that its "primary purpose is to create a DNA database to assist in solving crimes should the investigation of such crimes permit resort to DNA testing of evidence." Report-Recommendation,
Significant also are those provisions of the New York statute authorizing release of DNA records. The statute allows DNA records to be released only (1) to law-enforcement agencies "upon submission of a DNA record in connection with the investigation of the commission of one or more crimes or to assist in the recovery or identification of specified human remains"; or (2) for "criminal defense purposes," where a defendant seeks access to "samples and analyses performed in connection with the case." Id. § 995-c(6).28 As the magistrate judge recognized, unless we think identification of human remains is the primary purpose of the statute (an unlikely prospect), the release provisions indicate that providing information to aid in investigations is the statute's immediate objective. See Report-Recommendation,
We therefore ask whether a DNA-indexing statute that aims to create a DNA-identification index to assist in solving crimes serves a special need, as that term has been defined by the Court in its recent cases. There can be little doubt that New York's statute serves a purpose related to law enforcement, but we do not think that fact automatically condemns the New York statute. In light of the distinction drawn by the Court in Lidster between "information-seeking" searches or seizures, which respond to "special law enforcement concerns,"
B. Special-Needs Balancing Test
Having concluded that New York's DNA statute serves a special need, we now weigh that special need against the privacy intrusion it effects to determine whether it is reasonable within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment. See O'Connor,
There can be little doubt that New York has a strong government interest in obtaining identifying information from convicted offenders and keeping a record of such information. See, e.g., Sczubelek,
Against these government interests, the court must weigh the intrusion on inmates, which is twofold. First, offenders are subject to a physical intrusion when they are required to provide the DNA sample, whether by blood sample or buccal cheek swab. We conclude that this physical intrusion is far outweighed by the government's strong interests in obtaining from plaintiffs the uniquely effective identifying information that DNA provides. The Supreme Court has long maintained that the intrusion effected by taking a blood sample, while subject to the Fourth Amendment, is minimal. See Skinner,
The second intrusion to which offenders are subject is the analysis and maintenance of their DNA information in New York's database. This intrusion may be viewed either as a search, see Skinner,
Although we acknowledge these concerns, we ultimately conclude that the intrusion into plaintiffs' privacy resulting from state's practice of analyzing and maintaining DNA records does not outweigh the government's strong interests. Although DNA indexing has the potential to be broadly revealing, the New York statute as written does not provide for sensitive information to be analyzed or kept in its database. Rather, it provides only for the analysis of identifying markers. N.Y. Exec. Law § 995-c(3), (5). The junk DNA that is extracted has, at present, no known function, except to accurately and uniquely establish identity. Although science may someday be able to unearth much more information about us through our junk DNA, that capability does not yet exist, and, more importantly, the New York statute prohibits such analysis. Id. The law provides that DNA records "shall be confidential," id. § 995-d(1), and criminally punishes (1) the intentional disclosure of DNA records to unauthorized individuals or entities, (2) the intentional use or receipt of DNA records for "purposes other than those authorized [by the statute]," and (3) knowingly tampering or attempting to tamper with any DNA sample or the collection container without lawful authority, id. § 995-f; 1999 N.Y. Laws, ch. 560, § 6 (amending the statute to include anti-tampering provision).30 Although plaintiffs and amici suggest that New York's statute could permit the state to use DNA for more harmful purposes than maintaining an identification database, those facts are not present here, and if they should arise, no doubt a different calculus under the special-needs analysis would result.
Given the limits imposed on the collection, analysis, and use of DNA information by the statute, we see the intrusion on privacy effected by the statute as similar to the intrusion wrought by the maintenance of fingerprint records.31 See Kincade,
We therefore conclude that New York's statute, which serves a special need beyond the normal need for law enforcement, is supported by strong government interests that outweigh the relatively minimal intrusion on plaintiffs' expectation of privacy. Moreover, we reject plaintiffs' argument that the state should be required to obtain a warrant before taking DNA samples. T.L.O.,
Relying on the special-needs test rather than the general balancing test employed by the district court, we hold that New York's DNA statute satisfies the Fourth Amendment. Accordingly, the district court properly granted defendants' motion to dismiss.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes:
Notes
The Honorable Gerard E. Lynch, of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, sitting by designation
The statute, originally enacted in 1994, at first applied only to individuals convicted after January 1, 1996. 1994 N.Y. Laws, ch. 737, §§ 1, 3. In 1999, the statute was amended to apply to persons already convicted of certain offenses who were still serving a sentence. 1999 N.Y. Laws, ch. 560, § 9. Plaintiffs, all of whom were convicted before 1996 and were serving their sentences in 1999, became subject to the statute at that time. References to the statute throughout this opinion are entirely to the 1999 version. The parties agree that subsequent amendments are not at issue
The 1999 statute applied only to certain felonies (e.g., assault, homicide, rape, incest, escape, attempted murder, kidnaping, arson, burglary)See N.Y. Exec. Law § 995(7).
DNA databases like New York's utilize "junk DNA," which does not (as far as we know) contain genetic informationSee United States v. Kincade,
Records may only be released (1) to law-enforcement agencies for identification of specified human remains or for identification purposes in criminal investigations, (2) to a defendant or his legal representative, or (3) after personally identifiable information has been removed, to authorized entities for the purpose of maintaining a population-statistics database. N.Y. Exec. Law § 995-c(6)
Although the statute originally required that DNA be extracted by blood sample,see 1994 N.Y. Laws, ch. 737, § 3, the statute was amended in 1999 to require only "a sample appropriate for DNA testing," 1999 N.Y. Laws, ch. 560, § 3. The state maintains that its "current normal practice ... is to [obtain DNA by taking] [b]uccal cheek swab[s]," but conceded at oral argument that plaintiffs have all had their blood drawn. We therefore confine our analysis to the extraction of plaintiffs' DNA via blood sample. In any event, even less intrusive measures of obtaining physiological data, such as cheek swabs, can constitute a search, since "[t]he ensuing chemical analysis of the sample" may also effect an "invasion of the [searchee's] privacy interests." Skinner v. Ry. Labor Executives' Ass'n,
At the time of filing, two plaintiffs had not yet had their blood drawn; they initially sought to bar the state from doing so. At oral argument, however, the parties informed the court that all nine plaintiffs have had their blood drawn for DNA-indexing purposes. We therefore understand that all plaintiffs now seek the same remedies
Private parties are subject to the Fourth Amendment if they act as agents of the stateSee Skinner,
Medilabs and Walsh submitted a motion for judgment on the pleadings, pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(c), but such a motion is evaluated under the same standard as a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismissSee Sheppard v. Beerman,
Courts have also upheld DNA-indexing statutes in the face of other constitutional challengesSee, e.g., Doe v. Moore,
Prior toKimler, the Tenth Circuit applied a general balancing test to Colorado's DNA statute. See Boling,
Indeed, it is not so clear that proponents of the general balancing test prevailed in the Ninth CircuitKincade was decided by eleven judges sitting en banc. Five judges voted to uphold the federal DNA statute under a general balancing test, and a sixth judge voted to uphold the statute under the special-needs exception. The five dissenters would have applied the special-needs test to strike down the statute. See Kincade,
Specifically, Connecticut's statute, Conn. Gen.Stat. § 54-102g, applies to persons convicted of certain offenses after October 1, 1994 and sentenced to incarceration, as well as those convicted before October 1, 1994 of certain offenses, but incarcerated at that timeMarcotte,
See United States v. Martinez-Fuerte,
See Bell v. Wolfish,
See Chandler,
See New York v. Burger,
See Earls,
See Lidster,
See Griffin v. Wisconsin,
The dissenters also recognized "a valid and important distinction between seizing a person to determine whether she has committed a crime and seizing a person to ask whether she has any information."Id. at 428,
At oral argument, plaintiffs argued thatLidster is inapplicable in this case because (1) Lidster concerned a seizure, and (2) the Court has treated suspicionless checkpoint seizures differently from suspicionless searches. We reject the argument. Plaintiffs are correct insofar as the Court, in a footnote in Ferguson, observed that it had historically distinguished between "seizure cases in which we have applied a balancing test," and cases involving searches of the body or the home, in which it had applied the special-needs test.
We find puzzling the Third Circuit's comment inSczubelek that the special-needs inquiry is less rigorous than the general balancing test. See
The district court also relied onBell v. Wolfish,
The probation order required that Knights, inter alia, submit his "person, property, place of residence, vehicle, personal effects, to search at any time, with or without a search warrant, warrant of arrest or reasonable cause."
At the time of filing, all plaintiffs were incarcerated. We discuss further below the fact that some plaintiffs have since been released
TheMarcotte court was not alone in relying on a deterrence rationale. See Kincade,
As of November 22, 2005, the website was currently available at http://criminal justice .state.ny.us/forensic /dnafaqs.htm
The statute also provides for release of DNA records for research and statistical purposes, but only "after personally identifiable information has been removed."Id. § 995-c(6)(c).
In this regard, we note that plaintiffs have submitted materials indicating that they were subject to blood tests when they first entered prisonSee JA at 49 ("The taking of a DNA sample involves a similar procedure to the one that was used on you when you first entered the system and a blood sample was taken from your arm by medical personnel.").
These offenses, previously misdemeanors, were made class E felonies in 1999. 1999 N.Y. Laws, ch. 560, § 5
The analogy we draw here between fingerprinting and DNA indexing is not inconsistent with our conclusion, in Part I,supra, that the two practices are dissimilar for purposes of determining whether the Fourth Amendment is implicated. We disagreed above, in light of Dionisio and Skinner, with the district court's suggestion that the physical intrusion caused by drawing blood could be considered identical to the state's practice of taking fingerprints. That conclusion, however, does not preclude us from finding that the state's purpose in keeping DNA records is comparable to the state's purpose in keeping fingerprints and photographs.
Thus, even though some plaintiffs are no longer prisoners, and may thus claim a greater expectation of privacy than they held while incarcerated, we still find that — in light of the fact that the state regularly maintains identifying records of former inmates — the privacy intrusion remains relatively minimal
LEVAL, Circuit Judge, concurring.
I concur in the majority's rejection of this challenge, brought by New York State prisoners convicted of felony offenses, to the taking of their DNA to assist in solving and prosecuting crimes. See N.Y. Exec. Law § 995 et seq. (McKinney, 1999). I write separately because I believe a few more words are in order to explain the somewhat confusing relationship among the various precedents of the Supreme Court. In my view, the model for analysis of the question is provided by Illinois v. Lidster,
I begin with Griffin v. Wisconsin,
Then, in Indianapolis v. Edmond,
Were Edmond and Ferguson the last word on the matter, it would be difficult to reconcile approval of the New York DNA Statute, whose purpose is to collect identifying evidence for use in criminal prosecution, with the broad rule of presumptive unconstitutionality announced in those cases. More recently, however, in Illinois v. Lidster, the Supreme Court signaled a departure from the rigidity of the Edmond/Ferguson proposition. Lidster upheld a programmatic seizure1 without warrant or individualized suspicion, done for the law-enforcement purpose of seeking information identifying the perpetrator of an unsolved crime.
The seizure in Lidster was a roadblock stopping motorists to ask for information regarding a hit-and-run-accident which resulted in the death of a cyclist. Lidster,
Following Lidster, the question remains when a search or seizure for law-enforcement purposes without warrant or individualized suspicion will be judged under the strict Edmond/Ferguson test, and when it will be judged under the more permissive reasonableness test found to apply in Lidster. While Lidster refrained from laying out explicit standards, the mode of analysis followed by the Supreme Court provides a guide to assess the justification of New York's DNA screening of the convicted prisoners who bring this challenge. Lidster indicates that before striking down a search or seizure not supported by a warrant or individualized suspicion, the Court should undertake an examination of all the circumstances in light of Fourth Amendment concerns and norms to determine whether departure from the rule of presumptive unconstitutionality is appropriate. If the Court finds that the circumstances do not call for rigid application of the requirement of a warrant or individualized suspicion, the Court must then consider the reasonableness of the search or seizure to determine whether it satisfies the Fourth Amendment.
Lidster began by cautioning against reading the earlier, broadly restrictive language too literally.
We concede that Edmond describes the law enforcement objective there in question as a "general interest in crime control," but it specifies that the phrase "general interest in crime control" does not refer to every "law enforcement" objective. We must read this and related general language in Edmond as we often read general language in judicial opinions — as referring in context to circumstances similar to the circumstances then before the Court and not referring to quite different circumstances that the Court was not then considering.
Lidster,
The Court then undertook a broad examination of all the circumstances in light of Fourth Amendment objectives to determine whether it was reasonable and appropriate, notwithstanding the law-enforcement purpose, to depart in those circumstances from the presumption of unconstitutionality asserted in Edmond and Ferguson. The Court rejected the application of the rigid rule of presumed unconstitutionality to the circumstances in favor of a test based on reasonableness. The factors which led the Court to reject the applicability of the more rigid rule of Edmond/Ferguson were the following.
First, the checkpoint stop differed significantly from the conventional model of search/seizure for law enforcement, which is generally directed against persons believed to be complicit in the crime. The police in Lidster were stopping all cars for a brief, polite inquiry, to ask motorists "for their help in providing information about a crime in all likelihood committed by others." Id. at 423,
In sum, the Court concluded, having examined the pertinent circumstances with reference to the Fourth Amendment's concerns, that it was appropriate for the constitutionality of that seizure to be evaluated on a basis of reasonableness, rather than under a presumption of unconstitutionality.
We face essentially the same type of question as in Lidster — whether this programmatic search, the taking of blood samples from New York State prisoners serving felony sentences in order to provide evidence solving future criminal cases — is subject to the customary blanket presumption of unconstitutionality for warrantless, suspicionless searches conducted for law-enforcement purposes. It is my understanding that we should approach the question as the Court did in Lidster — by examining all the surrounding circumstances to determine whether it is appropriate in Fourth Amendment terms to reject that presumption of unconstitutionality in favor of a test of reasonableness.
Examination of all the circumstances in light of the concerns of the Fourth Amendment supports the conclusion that the Edmond/Ferguson presumption of unconstitutionality has no appropriate role here. First, this search differs substantially from the usual law-enforcement circumstance where the search is motivated by information connecting the person or place searched with a particular known and unsolved crime. What is involved is the establishment of a database, akin to a fingerprint database, to assist in the future solution of crimes. The search is not motivated by suspicion that the person being searched was involved in any unsolved crime. Second, for the reason just given, rigid adherence to a requirement of a warrant and/or individualized suspicion would be incompatible with the success of the governmental objective. It would be impossible to establish such a database of important law-enforcement information enabling identification of the perpetrators of rapes, murders, and other violent crimes, if the data concerning any individual could not be obtained until the authorities possessed information supporting a reasonable suspicion of his involvement in the crime.
Third, the challenge was brought by prisoners serving felony terms, who do not enjoy the same full rights of privacy as the public at large. The administrative and penalogical concerns of operating a prison system inevitably result in a major diminution of the prisoners' privacy interest. Prisoners are routinely subject to searches of their persons and their cells without warrant, suspicion, or notice. See Hudson v. Palmer,
I do not mean to imply by this latter point that the Fourth Amendment offers no protection to convicted prisoners. The point is less extreme. It is merely that the privacy interest they enjoy is less broad than that of the ordinary person. As noted above, in Ferguson, the Supreme Court justified Griffin's toleration of a warrantless, suspicionless, routine search of probationers, conducted for the purpose of collecting information for law-enforcement purposes, on the ground that "probationers have a lesser expectation of privacy than the public at large." Ferguson,
Fourth, the extent of intrusion occasioned by this search is not great, either in terms of the inconvenience inflicted on the prisoner or the degree of intrusion into private matters. This factor is slightly more favorable to the parties objecting than was true in Lidster, where the only inconvenience inflicted was a brief traffic stop, and the only information sought was on a volunteered basis without direct questioning. Here, the subject prisoners have no choice whether to yield the information, and the procedure (at least in the cases of these plaintiffs) involved piercing the skin to draw a blood sample. The drawing of such a blood sample is, nonetheless, quite a minor intrusion, of the sort that ordinary citizens voluntarily submit to routinely for medical purposes. See Skinner v. Ry. Labor Executives' Ass'n,
Finally, the State objective is useful and valuable. For a very long time, law-enforcement authorities both state and federal have built up and maintained criminal identification files, consisting of fingerprint data and identifying photographs for use in solving crimes in the future. DNA statutes bring such crime databases up to date with contemporary (and infinitely more reliable) scientific methods of identification. The establishment of such databases not only increases the likelihood of identifying the perpetrators of violent offenses, but, as a very important corollary, reduces the likelihood of mistaken conviction of innocent persons. The importance of the objective, and the impossibility of achieving it if a warrant is required, surely tends to support rejection of the role of presumptive unconstitutionality. Nor would rejection of a rule of presumptive unconstitutionality lead to proliferation of such procedures to the detriment of the citizenry. The challenge considered here is brought by prisoners convicted of a felony, and their status as such plays a significant role in the reasoning justifying the search. A ruling exempting this search from the Edmond/Ferguson presumption of unconstitutionality would not result in a proliferation of mandatory DNA sampling of the public-at-large.
All of the factors pertinent to the goals of the Fourth Amendment favor rejection of the Edmond/Ferguson presumption of unconstitutionality. The conventional rule of presumptive unconstitutionality for law-enforcement-motivated searches not supported by a warrant or individualized suspicion should accordingly have no application here.
It does not necessarily follow that the search "is automatically, or even presumptively, constitutional." Lidster,
It simply means that we must judge its reasonableness, hence, its constitutionality, on the basis of the individual circumstances. . . . [I]n judging reasonableness, we look to the gravity of the public concerns served by the seizure, the degree to which the seizure advances the public interest, and the severity of the interference with individual liberty.
Id. at 426-27,
There is no difficulty concluding that the challenged searches conducted under the DNA Statute are reasonable and consistent with the Fourth Amendment. It is unnecessary for me to go through the factors that made the challenged searches reasonable. Such a discussion would largely duplicate what was said in the majority opinion and in the foregoing discussion explaining the rejection of the Edmond/Ferguson presumption of unconstitutionality.
In sum, I understand the teaching of Lidster as follows. When confronting a challenge to a law-enforcement motivated search or seizure not supported by a warrant or individualized suspicion, before striking it down on the basis of presumed unconstitutionality, the court should undertake, as in Lidster, an examination of all the circumstances to determine whether in light of Fourth Amendment concerns and norms it is appropriate to reject the Edmond/Ferguson rule of presumed unconstitutionality. If the court finds that the circumstances do not call for rigid application of the requirement of a warrant or individualized suspicion, the court would go on to consider the reasonableness of the pertinent search to determine whether it withstands the challenge on the basis of the Fourth Amendment.
Notes:
WhileLidster concerned a seizure rather than a search, the two can be closely analogized and are both subject to the same provisions of the Fourth Amendment. The New York DNA Statute seems to involve both a search and a seizure. In any event, there appears to be no difference for these purposes in the Fourth Amendment standards as between searches and seizures.
I recognize that the discussion inLidster of the gravity of the State's objective was in the portion of the opinion discussing the reasonableness of the stop, after the determination that the presumptive rule of unconstitutionality was not applicable. Lidster,
LYNCH, District Judge, concurring.
I fully join in Chief Judge Walker's thorough opinion for the court. Though reluctant to burden the record with still more writing, I add just a few words.
The genius of the common-law system of adjudication is that the decisions of courts constitute precedent, not the opinions by which courts attempt to explain those decisions. This principle does not excuse courts from giving the best reasoning they can to explain their outcomes, nor does it refute the insight that if a result cannot be adequately explained, it is probably wrong. Yet sometimes the consistent results of repeated judicial encounters with the same problem are more reliable than the analyses in the resulting opinions. This is particularly so when lower courts reify the "doctrines" or methodologies adopted by the Supreme Court in answering difficult questions of law.
This may be one of those situations. I am wholly confident in the correctness of the unanimous conclusion of the federal appellate courts upholding mandatory DNA sampling of convicted prisoners against Fourth Amendment challenges. I am less confident that either the "special needs" or "reasonableness" approaches that have divided the courts quite capture the reasons for this result.
Starting from the basics: the Fourth Amendment's text outlaws "unreasonable" searches and seizures. U.S. Const. amend. IV. It follows then that the ultimate question in assessing the constitutionality of searches and seizures is whether they are "reasonable." However, the text of the Amendment also references "warrants" and "probable cause," and while the text does not quite so command, the Supreme Court has long interpreted the Amendment as presumptively requiring, in the typical search scenario, a warrant supported by probable cause. See Henry v. United States,
I think it is reasonably clear what the warrant and probable-cause requirements of the Fourth Amendment are trying to prevent. Just as, under the Fifth Amendment, Americans are not required to explain or justify themselves to the authorities or prove their innocence of crime, they are not required to surrender their privacy to demonstrate that they are not guilty of carrying contraband, or to display their possessions to assure the authorities that they are not holding evidence of their guilt. Rather, it is only when the authorities have good reason to believe that evidence will be found (the probable cause requirement), ideally demonstrated in advance to a judicial officer (the warrant requirement), that the citizen's privacy can be invaded.
Experience has shown the wisdom of this approach. Categorical rules are helpful because an unbounded ad hoc judgment of the "reasonableness" of governmental action will often tempt judges to uphold actions that, particularly with the benefit of hindsight, prove valuable in accomplishing social goals. The Supreme Court has thus been wary of any ad hoc "reasonableness" review, lest these standards be whittled away even further by conclusions that in various circumstances it is "reasonable" to permit precisely what the Amendment seeks to prohibit. See Oliver v. United States,
One categorical rule that the Court has used to permit warrantless searches that seem "reasonable," or even searches without probable cause, is to define those searches as being justified by "special needs" of the Government. City of Indianapolis v. Edmond,
Nevertheless, drawing the line between crime control and civil governmental purposes, let alone a distinction between "ordinary law-enforcement needs" and "special" crime-control objectives, is difficult. Thus, the line is thin between law enforcement's looking for drunk drivers to protect the public, and looking for evidence of drunk driving to support a criminal prosecution.
Here, the obstacle to a "special needs" interpretation is that the only substantial reason to collect DNA samples from convicts is, in the broad sense, to enforce the criminal law and to obtain evidence that may one day be useful in solving past or future crimes. Thus, if "special needs" analysis is precluded whenever an intrusion into privacy serves a law enforcement rationale, the "special needs" doctrine could not apply here.
It seems to me that the "special needs" and "reasonableness" tests are both efforts to accomplish the same goal. "Reasonableness," the ultimate standard under the Fourth Amendment, is not the usual way of evaluating a search because we have some clear and sensible rules for evaluating ordinary searches and seizures which do not ordinarily allow judges simply to declare a search reasonable when those rules have not been followed. However, in certain circumstances, those rules do not appear to apply — not because the rules are inconvenient to follow, but because in such situations, the rules are not needed to prevent the mischief that they are designed to prevent. It is in those circumstances — circumstances of "special needs," if you will — that a more general standard of reasonableness is applied.
Without question, a blood test, and even a less intrusive cheek swab, for purposes of obtaining a DNA sample is a "search." Skinner v. Ry. Labor Executives Ass'n,
However, New York's statute, like those of every other state in the union, does not controvert these principles. It does not seek evidence to solve a particular crime, nor does it require prisoners to exonerate themselves by providing evidence that the state has no good reason to think will be there. Instead, New York requires all those who are convicted of certain crimes to provide information to be retained in a data base. See N.Y. Exec. Law § 995 et seq. (McKinney 1999). Having to provide such identifying information in the context of the criminal justice system is not at all unheard of. Although arrested persons may not ordinarily be interrogated without being given Miranda warnings, questions aimed at eliciting identifying or "pedigree" information is permitted without warnings, even though the answers to such questions may become evidence either of the particular crime for which the suspect was arrested, or of some past or future crime not yet under investigation. Pennsylvania v. Muniz,
It seems to me, therefore, that the question here is not the usual one that governs searches and seizures — i.e., has the government adequately justified utilizing an investigative method that invades privacy by showing that there is good reason to believe that evidence of crime will be found? Rather, it is whether the government has adequately justified requiring prisoners, who have been convicted of crime, to surrender information that is being sought not to solve a crime, but rather to maintain a data bank of information about people who have committed crimes in the past. Thus, while a blood test or cheek swab is, in the abstract, a "search," when carried out under these circumstances, the search does not implicate the concerns that motivate the Fourth Amendment's usual rules and presumptions. It is for that reason that I am content to call this a "special need," even though its purpose relates to the enforcement of the criminal law, and even though the context is somewhat distinct from the sorts of situations in which the Supreme Court has applied that term.
Application of that standard opens the door to a balancing test. It is noteworthy that the bulk of the court's opinion is devoted to explicating the relevant Supreme Court doctrines, developed in cases that are quite unlike this one, in order to decide what test to apply. With that resolved, it takes far fewer pages to conclude that the statute passes. Similarly, the split among appellate courts is over methodology, not ultimate conclusions. Although some judges have dissented, no court of appeals has invalidated a statute of this kind. I believe that the court's opinion offers a correct analysis, and I fully join it. I am even more confident, however, of the correctness of the decision we reach, which is consistent with the judgment of the legislatures of every state in the Union,2 and of every court of appeals that has addressed the issue.
