Lead Opinion
We must decide whether Ventura County Sheriff Bob Brooks and Deputy Karen Hanson are entitled to qualified immunity for conducting a strip search with a visual cavity inspection of Noelle Way during the booking process at a pre-trial detention facility on a misdemeanor charge of being under the influence of cocaine or methamphetamine in violation of California Health & Safety Code § 11550(a). This requires us first to decide whether a strip search with a visual cavity inspection can be justified based on Ventura County’s blanket strip-search policy allowing such a search for arrestees charged with any controlled substance offense before placement in the general jail population. The district court held that the search was unconstitutional, and we agree. However, it was not clearly established at the time of Way’s booking that strip searching persons arrested on drug charges is unreasonable. As the district court thought otherwise on this issue, we reverse.
I
On September 6, 2000, Ventura Police Officer Ortiz encountered Way at her work place, the Red Cove Bar, where she was a bartender. He observed that she had dilated pupils, a rapid pulse rate, a nervous attitude and rapid speech. Based on these observations, he suspected that she was under the influence of cocaine or methamphetamine, a misdemeanor violation of California Health & Safety Code § 11550(a), and arrested her at 2:10 A.M. A blood sample taken from Way at a hospital the night of the arrest revealed that the officer’s suspicion was incorrect.
Meanwhile, Ortiz took Way to Ventura County’s pretrial detention facility for booking. The booking policy of the Ventura County Sheriffs Department provided for a visual body cavity search of all persons arrested on fresh misdemeanor drug charges. The search must be performed by a deputy of the same sex as the detainee, and it involves no touching. The person arrested was to be searched immediately upon booking, without a waiting period for posting bail.
The search involved a visual inspection of Way’s unclothed body cavities, and it took place in a private room with only Hanson present. Hanson directed Way to remove all her clothing. She then directed Way to remove her tampon and to tear it and discard it in a wastebasket. Pursuant to the search policy, Way was required to “bend forward, spread the buttocks, and cough to allow for a visual inspection of the anal area” as well as to “spread her labia at the same time to allow a check of the vaginal area.” The search yielded no contraband, weapons or drugs.
The booking process lasted 26 minutes, from 3:10 A.M. to 3:36 A.M. Within 20 minutes after the completion of the body cavity search, Way learned the amount of her bail. She was placed in a holding cell with five or six other women, where she was allowed to make phone calls. She remained there for several hours. She then posted bail, and was released without entering the jail’s general population.
Way brought this civil rights action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against Brooks and Hanson, as well as the County of Ventura, alleging that they violated her civil rights under the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments by subjecting her to a body cavity search following her arrest. The parties both filed motions for summary judgment. The district court held that the search violated Way’s constitutional rights because individualized suspicion is required for arrestees who are not admitted to the general jail population. It denied qualified immunity to Brooks and Hanson on the basis of Giles v. Ackerman,
II
We analyze qualified immunity using the two-step inquiry set forth in Saucier v. Katz,
A
Brooks and Hanson argue that the visual body cavity search violated no constitutional rights because Sheriffs Department officials are entitled to deference on jail security matters, and their interest in securing this jail during the booking process outweighs Way’s right to be free from a compulsory visual inspection of her genitalia and anus. They also contend that the Sheriff Department’s strip search policy complies with state law as set out in California Penal Code § 4030.
We assess the constitutionality of a search by balancing “the need for the particular search against the invasion of personal rights that the search entails.” Bell v. Wolfish,
The scope of the intrusion here is indisputably a “frightening and humiliating” invasion, even when conducted “with all due courtesy.” Giles,
The parties agree that the search took place in a private room, behind closed
This leaves the question whether the intrusion was justified. We recognize the difficulty of operating a detention facility safely, the seriousness of the risk of smuggled weapons and contraband, and the deference we owe jail officials’ exercise of judgment in adopting and executing policies necessary to maintain institutional security. Wolfish,
Brooks and Hanson failed to show any link between their blanket strip search policy and legitimate security concerns for detainees such as Way. See Giles,
Brooks and Hanson maintain that all drug offenses inherently heighten security concerns because of the risk that persons arrested on drug charges will bring drugs with them. Perhaps with respect to other types of drug offenses — about which we express no opinion — but the record shows us nothing about this jail (or any other jail’s) experience with those arrested on § 11550(a) charges. We do not disagree that in some cases, the charge itself may give rise to reasonable suspicion; indeed, we so held in Thompson, where the felony charged was grand theft auto and the offense was “sufficiently associated with violence to justify a visual strip search.”
We cannot see how the charge of being under the influence of a drug necessarily poses a threat of concealing (and thereby using or trafficking) additional drugs in jail during the limited time between booking and bail, or booking and placement in the general population. If not, it was unreasonable to assume that Way harbored drugs in some cavity or other.
As there is no evidence that security concerns require strip searching all arrestees on all drug offenses before placement in the general jail population, and none that all persons arrested for being under the influence of a drug are likely to have concealed more drugs in a bodily cavity, the Sheriff Department’s blanket policy cannot be a proxy for reasonable suspicion. There was no individualized suspicion that Way concealed drugs in a bodily cavity. Therefore, subjecting her to a strip search with visual cavity inspection offended her constitutional right to be free of an unreasonable search.
B
Having determined that Way’s constitutional rights were violated, the remaining question is whether it was clearly established at the time of the search that the search was unconstitutional. See Saucier,
We had held prior to Way’s search that performing a strip search with visual cavity inspection before determining whether the person was eligible for release on his own recognizance could not be justified based on a blanket policy of subjecting all minor offense arrestees to a strip search, Ward,
The district court came to a different conclusion by analogy to the Tenth Circuit’s decision in Foote v. Spiegel,
We therefore conclude that subjecting Way to a strip search with visual cavity inspection during the booking process on a misdemeanor charge of being under the influence of a drug was not justified by the jail’s blanket policy of strip searching all those arrested on charges involving a controlled substance. Undocumented security needs of the jail facility do not outweigh the invasion of Way’s personal rights. Nor is such an intrusive search warranted solely on account of the nature of the charge in this case, as being under the influence of a drug does not necessarily indicate that the person has concealed more drugs in a body cavity. This said, a reasonable official in the position of Brooks and Hanson would not have understood that following the jail’s policy violated Way’s rights because the unconstitutionality of the search they conducted was not clearly established at the time.
AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART.
Notes
. Brooks and Hanson previously filed an appeal from the district court’s order denying qualified immunity, which we dismissed as premature because the court had not also determined whether Way’s constitutional rights were violated. Way v. County of Ventura,
. California Penal Code § 4030(a) provides:
The Legislature finds and declares that law enforcement policies and practices for conducting strip or body cavity searches of detained persons vary widely throughout California. Consequently, some people have been arbitrarily subjected to unnecessary strip and body cavity searches after arrests for minor misdemeanor and infraction offenses. Some present search practices violate state and federal constitutional rights to privacy and freedom from unreasonable searches and seizures.
It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this section to protect the state and federal constitutional rights of the people of California by establishing a statewide policy strictly limiting strip and body cavity searches. Subsection (f) provides that "[n]o person arrested and held in custody on a misdemeanor ... offense, except those involving weapons, controlled substances or violence ... shall be subjected to a strip search or visual body cavity search prior to placement in the general jail population” without "reasonable suspicion based on specific and articulable facts to believe such person is concealing a weapon or contraband, and a strip search will result in the discovery of the weapon or contraband.” To conduct such a search requires authorization of the supervising officer on duty, which "shall include the specific and articulable facts and circumstances upon which the reasonable suspicion determination was made by the supervisor.” Cal.Penal Code § 4030(f).
. Counsel suggested at oral argument that the facility had experienced difficulties since the district court’s ruling in this case, but the record contains no evidence of whatever they might be.
. We have no occasion to comment on any other kind of drug offense, which may have different characteristics that might lead to a different analysis on a different record. See, e.g., United States v. Gonzalez-Rincon,
. At argument, counsel suggested that LSD, for example, can be smuggled on postage stamps or the like that are not readily discoverable during a pat down search. However, there is no evidence to this effect in the record and it is not self-evident that cocaine or methamphetamine (which is what Way was suspected of being under the influence of) are routinely concealed in this way.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring:
I concur with all but part B of the well-written majority opinion. I depart from the majority because I believe that at the time of Way’s body cavity search, the Fourth Amendment principles governing blanket searches prohibited strip and body cavity blanket searches and required individualized reasonable suspicion based on specific and articulable facts before such a search could be conducted on a misdemeanor arrestee. I particularly disagree with the majority’s parsimonious approach to the analysis of our precedent, which focuses on the application of clearly established Fourth Amendment principles to each penal code section we have addressed and not on the well-established principles themselves. The fact of the matter is that Ventura County had an unconstitutional blanket strip search policy which permitted such searches based upon no specific, articulable facts at all — a policy we have repeatedly held unconstitutional. I cannot go so far as to say that under the circumstances the individual officers acted objectively unreasonably, however, only because reasonable officers in Brooks’ and Hanson’s position could have believed that the Ventura County Sheriffs Department policy comported with the Constitution. Therefore I concur in holding that the officers are entitled to qualified immunity.
I
I disagree that we can find clearly established law in this case only if we have previously addressed the constitutionality of a strip and body cavity search of a misdemeanor drug arrestee. To the contrary, a constitutional right may be clearly established when “[t]he reasoning, though not the holding” of a prior decision applies to a set of facts, Hope v. Pelzer,
The clearly established general Fourth Amendment principle of reasonableness, which we have applied to strip and body cavity searches of arrestees, see Thompson v. City of Los Angeles,
While the majority broadly asserts that we held in Thompson,
Departure from the standard of individualized reasonable suspicion in deference to the security concerns of prison officials, see Bell,
While it is generally the ease that “[i]f the law was clearly established, the immunity defense ordinarily should fail, since a reasonably competent public official should know the law governing his conduct,” Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
In this case, the Ventura County Sheriffs Department policy authorized the conduct in question. Officers Brooks and Hanson complied with that policy. In addition, California Penal Code § 4030(f) specifically exempts those arrested on misdemeanor “weapons, controlled substances or violence” charges from the general prohibition on strip and body cavity searches of persons arrested for misdemeanors. Because the policy and the state statute had not fallen into desuetude, Grossman,
