Pamela Laxton and Rebecca Warner filed this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 suit challenging the constitutionality of strip searches. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of all defendants. Ms. Laxton and Ms. Warner appeal, and we affirm.
I.
On January 24, 1991, Officer Ron Richmond and three other officers were instructed to locate Terry Todd for purposes of a probation check. Officer Richmond sighted Mr. Todd entering a grocеry store. Mr. Todd emerged accompanied by Ms. Laxton and Ms. Warner; all three then entered Ms. Warner’s ear. Officer Richmond observed Ms. Laxton, Ms. Warner, and Mr. Todd light and relight what appeared to be a marijuana pipe. When Ms. Warner started the engine, the officers ordered the three occupants out of the ear and told them to lean across the vehicle. Ms. Laxton placed the pipe between her body and the car as she bent over the hood, and when she straightened, the pipe fell out. An officer then pat searched Ms. Laxton. Upon request, Ms. Warner produced marijuana from her coat pocket. The officers arrested and handcuffed Ms. Laxton and Ms. Warner and then took them to the Grand County Sheriffs Office.
En route, Officer Richmond requested that female personnel be available to conduct strip searches. Robin Parker, a director of a local crisis center who assisted male officers in transporting female detainees, was present at the Grand County Sheriffs Office when Officer Richmond called for assistance. Upon Officer Richmond’s request, Ms. Parker remained at the sheriffs office to assist in the strip searches.
When plаintiffs arrived, Ms. Parker and Roxie Mallen, a dispatcher, performed the strip searches in a private room with no men present. The searches did not uncover any contraband. Grand County then charged Ms. Laxton and Ms. Warner with possession of marijuana, a misdemeanor, and released them.
Ms. Laxton and Ms. Warner sued Officer Richmond, Sheriff Nyland, Ms. Parker and Grand County for damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that the strip searches violated their First, Fourth, Fifth, Ninth, and Fourteenth Amendment rights. In response to the defendants’ motion for summary judgment, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of (1) Officer Richmond on the basis of qualified immunity; (2) Ms. Parker on the basis of common law immunity; and (3) Sheriff Nyland and Grand County because their failure to train officers in strip searches did not amount to deliberate indifference to plaintiffs’ constitutional rights. Ms. Laxton and Ms. Warner аppeal these three rulings. We affirm for the reasons set forth below.
II.
Immunity of Officer Richmond and Robin Parker
We review de novo the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Officer Richmond on the basis of qualified immunity and Ms. Parker on the basis of common law immunity.
See Powell v. Gallentine,
A. Officer Richmond
Government officials performing discretionary functions enjoy qualified immunity from civil damage suits if their conduct did
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not violate “clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reаsonable person would have known.”
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
On that date, it was clearly established in this circuit that a brief intermingling with the general jail population does not justify a strip search absent reasonable suspicion of drugs or contraband.
Hill v. Bogans,
The facts in the instant ease present a situation somewhere in the middle of this continuum. The evidence shows that Grand County had no intention of intermingling Ms. Laxton or Ms. Warner with its jail population. In fact, on the date in question, Grand County only temporarily detained female ar-restees. Given the nature of the offense for which Ms. Laxton and Ms. Warner were arrested, however, Officer Richmond had reasonable suspicion that they possessed additional drugs. We cannot find аny Tenth Circuit or Supreme Court authority which determines the constitutionality of a strip search under such circumstances. Without addressing the merits of the constitutional issue, we hold that it was not clearly established on the date in question that a strip search following an arrest for possession of marijuana, a misdemeanor for which there was no risk that the suspects would be intermingled with the general jail pоpulation, was unconstitutional. Accordingly, we conclude that Officer Richmond is entitled to qualified immunity.
B. Robin Parker
The district court granted summary judgment in favor of Ms. Parker based on a common law rule shielding private citizens from liability for “good faith” attempts to assist law enforcement officers. The district court noted that the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Wyatt v. Cole,
Only a defendant acting “under col- or of state law” may violate section 1983. A private individual may act “under color of state law” if exercising powers “traditionally exclusively reserved tо the state.”
Jackson v. Metropolitan Edison Co.,
*965 Because Ms. Parker assumed the role of a state actor when conducting the searches, she may be entitled to qualified immunity. In addressing this issue, we confront the following narrow quеstion: does a private individual who performs a unique government function at the request of a state official who enjoys qualified immunity also enjoy qualified immunity? We hold that she does.
Rodriques,
Where a private physician agrees to assist police in search procedures which police cannot reasonably, hygienically or safely perform, the physician is entitled to no less protection than the police would be if they could reasonably perform thе search.
Id. at 815. Ms. Parker, like Dr. Falkoff, was called upon by the state to perform an investigatory function. In Rodrigues, Dr. Fal-koffs medical training qualified him, as opposed to various state officials, to execute the search warrant and conduct the vaginal cavity search. Likewise, Ms. Parker, a female, could conduct the strip searches of two female detainees less intrusively than the malе officials present at the Grand County Sheriffs Office. While the court in Rodrigues emphasized that Dr. Falkoff acted pursuant to a facially valid search warrant, we believe there is no functional difference between a doctor executing a search warrant and Ms. Parker executing an officer’s ostensibly pressing request to conduct a strip search. In both cases, the state “requested” that а private citizen serve as its agent to carry out a task it was underqualified to perform itself. We therefore adopt the reasoning of Rod-rigues and hold that Ms. Parker is entitled to qualified immunity.
Plaintiffs argue that the Supreme Court’s decision in
Wyatt,
The Court in
Wyatt
decided a very narrow issue: qualified immunity is not “available for private defendants faced with § 1988 liability for invoking a state replevin, garnishment or attachment statute.”
Id.
at 168-69,
In reaching this conclusion, we follow the reasoning of the two circuits that have examined the scope of the
Wyatt
holding. In
Burrell v. Board of Trustees of Ga. Military College,
The Seventh Circuit, relying on the
Bur-rell
dichotomy, decided that
Wyatt
did not disrupt the
DeVargas/Frazier/Rodriques
line of cases.
Sherman v. Four County Counseling Center,
As discussed above, we view this case as analogous to Rodrigues and therefore conclude that it falls squarely within the group of cases that remains untouched by the Wyatt decision.
Our holding is also consistent with the public policy underpinnings of qualified immunity. The Court in Wyatt noted that the extension of qualified immunity to private individuals in state replevin, garnishment, or attachment proceedings would contravene the policy rationale supporting qualified immunity. The Court stated:
Qualified immunity strikes a balance between compensating those who have been injured by official conduct and рrotecting government’s ability to perform its traditional functions. Accordingly, we have recognized qualified immunity for government officials where it was necessary to preserve their ability to serve the public good....
Wyatt,
On the other hand, when private defendants fulfill a state official’s request to perform a governmental function, denial of qualified immunity would undermine its underlying purpose. In
Sherman,
for example, the private psychiatric facility accepted and cared for a state mental patient on an emergency basis. The Seventh Circuit concluded that denying qualified immunity under such circumstances would discourage similarly situated institutions from lending their services.
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Sherman,
Extending qualified immunity to physicians under the circumstances of this case not only benefits society by effectuating acceptable means to execute body cavity searches pursuant to a warrant issued on probable cause, it also benefits the party being searched by providing a safe means of conducting the search in a medically approved manner. Under the circumstances of this case, exposing private physicians to § 1983 liability without the shield of qualified immunity ... could deter them from assisting in the execution of valid warrants. A reluctance on the part of physicians to рerform body cavity searches could well signal a loss to society of a valuable crime detection procedure or result in these procedures having to be carried out by nonprofessionals, a situation which would be even more intrusive of the subject’s privacy.
Rodriques,
Ms. Parker served as Officer Richmond’s agent in carrying out an investigatory function unique to the government. If Ms. Parker, or others like her, are not permitted to raise the shield of qualified immunity, they might reject requests to aid state officials in performing governmental functions. This would clearly constrain state officials’ agility in performing such functions, frustrate the government’s investigatory power, and thereby limit the state’s ability to service the public good. We conclude that granting Ms. Parker qualified immunity is wholly consistent with Wyatt’s discussion of the policies embodied therein.
We have already determined that Officer Richmond is entitled qualified immunity for his role in the strip searches. It would be anomalous to deny Ms. Parker qualified immunity when Officer Richmond would have received immunity had he performed the search. We hold that a private individual who performs a government function pursuant to a state order or request is entitled to qualified immunity if a state official would have been entitled to such immunity had he perfоrmed the function himself. We believe that this holding is consistent with the Supreme Court’s decision in Wyatt and the policy rationale that has shaped the qualified immunity defense from its inception. Consequently, Ms. Parker is entitled to qualified immunity.
III.
Sheriff Nyland and Grand County
Ms. Laxton and Ms. Warner argued below that Sheriff Nyland and Grand County maintained a policy and custom of inadequately training officers in handling arrestees which caused the alleged unconstitutiоnal conduct. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of Sheriff Nyland and Grand County, concluding that neither were deliberately indifferent to any training needs. Ms. Laxton and Ms. Warner appeal this decision. After a de novo review, we affirm.
Plaintiffs argue that Grand County and Sheriff Nyland inadequately trained officers regarding the handling of arrestees and further claim that this inadequate training resulted in the allegedly unconstitutional strip searches. “[T]he inadequacy of police training may serve as the basis for § 1983 liability only where the failure to train amounts to deliberate indifference to the rights of persons with whom the police come into contact.”
City of Canton v. Harris,
Ms. Laxton and Ms. Warner have not met this burden. While plaintiffs argue that Grand County and Sheriff Nyland evinced deliberate indifference to plaintiffs’ right to be free from unconstitutional strip searches by failing to adequately train officers, the record suggests otherwise. Grand County had a well-established policy prohibiting war-rantless strip searches of temporary detainees. On the date in question, Grand County temporarily detained all female arrestees. In fact, since 1989, Grand County has not incarcerated any female arrestees. 1 Grand County officers were aware of these policies. Therefore, Officer Richmond actually violated rather than followed Grand County policy when he ordered a strip search of Ms. Lax-ton and Ms. Warner, two female arrestees who faced only temporary detention. Although there is little evidence in the record that Grand County trained officers for strip searches of female detainees, we conclude that Grand County and Sheriff Nyland were not deliberately indifferent to plaintiffs’ needs in failing to conduсt such training. Sheriff Nyland knew of no strip searches of females during his tenure. He therefore had little reason to believe that Officer Richmond or any other officer would perform strip searches of female detainees. Several Grand County employees corroborated this testimony. It would be unreasonable to conclude that Grand County or Sheriff Nyland “consciously” or “deliberately” disregarded an “obvious” need to train officers to conduct strip searches that clearly violated a policy which had been consistently followed for several years. We therefore conclude that Grand County and Sheriff Nyland were not deliberately indifferent to plaintiffs’ rights and affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Grand County and Sheriff Nyland.
IV.
We are not persuaded by any of plaintiffs’ other contentions. We AFFIRM the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Officer Richmond on the basis of qualified immunity. We AFFIRM the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Ms. Parker on the basis of qualified rather than common law immunity. We AFFIRM the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Grand County and Sheriff Nyland.
Notes
. Since 1989, Grand County has transported all female arrestees requiring incarceration to the San Juan County Jail. If the arrestee is a Grand Counly resident and non-violent in nature, Grand County will release rather than send her to the San Juan County Jail. ApltApp. at 99.
