Two Rhode Island Department of Corrections (“DOC”) policies provide that all males committed to the state prison be subject to a strip search and a visual body cavity search
1
upon incarceration as a matter of routine procedure. Appellee Craig Roberts challenged these policies as unconstitutional. The district court agreed that the policies were unconstitutional, holding that this Court’s decision in
Swain v. Spinney,
BACKGROUND
On April 20, 1999, Roberts was a passenger in a car stopped for expired registration stickers. After a computer check revealed that Roberts was the subject of an “outstanding body attachment,” 2 the officers performed a pat-down frisk and placed him in custody. Although Roberts produced a September 1, 1998 order withdrawing the attachment, he was not released. Instead, he was transported to the Intake Services Center (“Intake”) at the Adult Correctional Institution (“ACI”) in Cranston, Rhode Island.
Upon reaching Intake, Roberts was photographed, fingerprinted, and asked to submit to a blood test, which he refused. Officers then performed a strip search and visual bodily cavity search, pursuant to two *109 DOC policies. 3 As part of the search, corrections officers inspected the inside of Roberts’ mouth and nose and the soles of his feet. Roberts was also ordered to spread his buttocks, at which time officers visually inspected his body cavity. At no time during the search did an officer touch Roberts. No contraband was found on Roberts’ person. Roberts was subjected to a second similar search the same day before being transferred and ultimately released from police custody.
Appellants argue that the strip and visual body cavity search is necessary because of the unique nature of the Intake facility. Unlike many jurisdictions, Rhode Island does not have regional facilities to house pretrial detainees prior to trial and sentencing. Intake acts as the receiving facility for all male inmates committed to the care and custody of the DOC, including those arrested on an outstanding warrant, ordered held without bail, or unable to post bail. 4 Because Rhode Island has a unified prison system, pretrial detainees held at Intake mix with the general prison population. Intake is itself considered a maximum security prison.
DISCUSSION
Both convicted prisoners and pretrial detainees retain constitutional rights despite their incarceration, including basic Fourth Amendment rights against unreasonable searches and seizures.
Bell,
In
Bell,
the Supreme Court specifically addressed a strip and visual body cavity search conducted of all inmates after every contact with an outside visitor.
Id.
at 558,
This Court held in
Swain
that, at least in the context of prisoners held in local jails for minor offenses, the
Bell
balance requires officers to have a reasonable suspicion that a particular detainee harbors contraband prior to conducting a strip or visual body cavity search.
Swain,
We begin with the “scope of the particular intrusion.”
Bell,
We next turn to the government interest at stake here, that is, the “justification for initiating” the search.
Bell,
The institutional security concerns in play here fall somewhere between those exhibited in Swain, which were insufficient to support a search, and those in Arruda and Bell, which made broad-based searches without individual suspicion reasonable. For the reasons detailed below, we think that the Rhode Island policies fall on the Sivain side of the constitutional line.
First, unlike in
Bell
or
Arruda,
Rhode Island does not limit its searches to prisoners who have had contact with outside visitors. Courts have given prisons far more leeway in conducting searches of inmates with outside contact than in searching everyone, simply because such visits often allow smuggling of contraband.
See Bell,
Second, although the Intake facility is maximum security, it is not a “prison within a prison” like that where Arruda was held.
Arruda,
*112
Third, courts have given prisons latitude to premise searches on the type of crime for which an inmate is convicted or arrested. The reasonable suspicion standard may be met simply by the fact that the inmate was charged with a violent felony.
See Dufrin v. Spreen,
Fourth, a policy of searching all inmates is more reasonable when the record indicates a “lengthy history of contraband problems.”
Arruda,
In short, although appellants have cited “institutional security” as a sufficient reason not to require reasonable suspicion for inmate body cavity searches, their only justification for this severe invasion is that Intake is a maximum security facility where arrestees mingle with the general population. Intermingling of inmates is a serious security concern that weighs in favor of the reasonableness, and constitutionality, of the search.
See Dobrowolskyj v. Jefferson County,
The
Bell
balancing test also instructs us to consider the place in which the search is conducted and the manner in which it is conducted.
CONCLUSION
“Bell
has not been read as holding that the security interests of a detention facility will always outweigh the privacy interests of the detainees.”
Dobrowolskyj,
Affirmed.
Notes
. A "strip search” involves a visual inspection of the naked body of an inmate. A "visual body cavity search” is a strip search that includes the visual examination of the anal and genital areas.
Security & Law Enforcement Employees v. Carey,
. Under R.I. Gen. Laws § 8-10-3.1(c)(8), a magistrate has the power to issue a "body attachment” upon the failure of a party to appear for a judicial proceeding. Such a writ allows officers to take the defendant into custody if the family court is not in session. See Roberts, slip. op. at 3.
. The first policy, Operational Memorandum 5.15.05-2 Part V.B. (dated June 15, 1984), provides (in relevant part) that:
Each new commitment's person, clothing, and personal belongings shall be thoroughly searched for contraband.
1. The commitment officer shall thoroughly search the inmate’s body to include examination of hair, arms, hands, ears, mouth, nose; visual examination of groin and rectum; toes and soles of feet.
(a)Any artificial limbs, dentures, or bandages shall be carefully examined.
2. The new commitment’s clothing and belongings shall be thoroughly searched to include examination of all pockets, cuffs, seams, hat bands, waistbands, zippers, and collars; all clothing shall be turned inside-out and linings checked; soles, heels, socks, and inside of all shoes shall be examined; the contents of any and all luggage, packages, bags, etc. shall be thoroughly examined.
The second policy, Policy and Procedure 9.14-1 Part III.B.2. (dated January 27, 1997), provides that:
a. Strip searches of inmates will always be conducted for objective purposes only and will always be carried out in an expeditious and efficient manner. They will never be done for punitive purposes or as a form of harassment.
(1) Strip searches shall be conducted under the direction of the Shift Supervisor or other Superior Officer, or as required by policy.
(2) Two Correctional Officers shall be assigned to conduct a strip search.
(3) Strip searches shall be conducted by officers of the same sex as the inmates being searched, except during emergencies.
(4)The following search plan shall be followed when conducting a strip search. The officer will examine:
(a) All pockets;
(b) Run fingers over linings, seams, collars, cuffs, waistbands and fly;
(c) Shoes, inside soles and heels;
(d) Socks, turning them inside out;
(e) False teeth, artificial limbs, plaster casts;
(f) Inmates will run their fingers through their hair. Officers will check for wigs and hairpieces;
(g) Inmates ears [sic] will be checked inside and out;
(h) The officer will look inside the inmate’s nose;
(i) Inmates will open their mouths, lift their tongues, and roll each lip, for the officer’s view;
(j) Inmates will lift their penises and testicles on the officer’s command to provide a clear view of the groin area;
(k) Inmates will then lift their feet so that the officer can clearly see between the toes and the soles;
(Z) Inmate’s hands will be visually inspected;
(m) Inmates will be required to bend over and spread the rectum to provide a clear view of the area.
. No inmate is sent to Intake without judicial authority, i.e., without an outstanding warrant or other judicial action. Most arrestees charged with minor offenses are committed briefly to local jails.
. Moreover, this assessment does not even account for the fact that in Roberts’ specific *112 case, the body attachment had been revoked and his incarceration was apparently unwarranted.
. Attached to the Affidavit of A.T. Wall II, the Interim Director of the Rhode Island DOC, are numerous incident reports of contraband discovery during the Intake admission process. With only one exception (where the inmate had hidden cocaine in his mouth), all the contraband was found in the inmate's clothing. Appellants have adduced no evidence of contraband that would not have been discovered without the visual body cavity search.
. The DOC policy provides for searches to be "conducted in a private area, away from pub-lie view.”
