SECTION I
AMENDED ORDER AND REASONS
Eugenie Boisfontaine went missing in Baton Rouge in 1997, Her battered and decomposing body was found three months later in a Louisiana bayou. The murder has never been solved.
Now, twenty years later, the search to find her killer is playing out on the Killing
The Sheriffs investigators attempted to link potential suspects to DNA evidence found near the body. Most of the individuals of interest to the investigation voluntarily provided the investigative team with DNA samples. Michael Schmidt—Eugenie’s ex-husband—did not.
Detective Sanchez found that refusal suspicious. He could not believe that Schmidt, if Schmidt was truly innocent, would not want to help locate Eugenie’s murderer. Further, the fact that Schmidt had the temerity to hire multiple criminal defense lawyers, including the former United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Louisiana, made Detective Sanchez all the more suspicious.
With Schmidt not cooperating, the investigators set out to obtain a DNA sample involuntarily.' They initially tried a subpoena. But when Schmidt’s legal team filed a motion to suppress, the investigators took another tack: they decided to surreptitiously tail Schmidt until he unknowingly left DNA in public. Whether they did so because" it made for good television is entirely unclear.
Members of the investigative team followed Schmidt’s Hummer through Jefferson Parish until he stopped at a strip mall and went into a shop. One of the officers jumped out of her unmarked chase vehicle and used a cotton swab on the Hummer’s door handle. The Sheriffs office then compared the DNA that was obtained with the DNA found near Eugenie’s body. The DNA did not rule Schmidt out as a potential suspect.
Schmidt believes that the officers’ conduct was unlawful. In particular, he objects that both (1) the swabbing of the car аnd (2) the DNA analysis constitute unconstitutional searches under the Fourth Amendment.' Schmidt' ■ also' argues that filming the process was a separate Fourth Amendment violation in and of itself. The Sheriff and his officers disagree.
The parties filed cross motipns
I.
A.
Summary judgment is proper when, after reviewing the pleadings, the discovery and disclosure materials on file, and any affidavits, the court determines that there is no genuine dispute of material fact. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 56. “[A] party seeking summary judgment always bears the initial rеsponsibility of informing the district court of the basis for its motion and identifying those portions of [the record] which it believes demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of- material fact.” Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
B.
Governmental officers sued in their individual capacity are entitled to qualified immunity insofar as their conduct “did not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.” Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
A plaintiff must make two showings to overcome a qualified immunity defense. First, the plaintiff must show that the officer’s conduct violated a constitutional right. See Heaney v. Roberts,
II.
The parties dispute the threshold issue of whether swabbing the door of Schmidt’s Hummer constituted a Fourth Amendment “search.” The Court concludes the swabbing was a search under the Fourth Amendment, but that a reasonable officer could conclude otherwise.
A.
Between Katz v. United States
Under the Katz apрroach, the officers here would not have performed a Fourth Amendment search. An individual has no reasonable expectation of privacy in the exterior of an automobile. See Cardwell v. Lewis,
Jones, however, altered (or at least clarified) Fourth Amendment doctrine. Specifically, Jones held that an individual need not invariably have a reasonable expeсtation of privacy before a governmental intrusion constitutes a Fourth Amendment search. See
In returning trеspass to the forefront of Fourth Amendment law, Jones prompts just as many questions as it answers. For example, not all trespasses constitute Fourth Amendment searches. See, e.g., Oliver v. United States,
Here, the search involved the physical touching of Schmidt’s Hummer in a public parking lot. The search, however, did not damage the Hummer in any way. Accordingly, this Court has to make two determinations when evaluating whether a Fourth Amendment search occurred:
• Does the trespass-trigger for Fourth Amendment coverage extend to a trespass to chattels?
• If so, wаs the physical touching a trespass to chattels even though the touching did not harm or otherwise affect the Hummer?
But was this a trespass to chatties? That is a trickier issue. As Justice Alito’s Jones concurrence explained, the elements of the tort have changed since the founding. “At common law, a suit for trespass to chattels could be maintained if there was a violar tion of the dignitary interest in the inviolability of chattels.”
The Court concludes that it should follow the view that an officеr need not cause damage before committing a trespass to chattels. Not only is that the view of the Second Restatement of Torts, see Restatement (Second) of Torts § 217,
The officers raise two main counter-arguments. Neither succeeds.
First, the officers point the Court to Cardwell’s conclusion that police did not viоlate the Fourth Amendment when they scraped paint off a car that was left in a public parking lot. See
Second, the officers also, analogize the swabbing to case, law permitting officers to examine garbage left on a street corner. See, e.g., California v. Greenwood,
The Court concludes that the undisputed facts of this case establish that the officers committed a trespass to chattels when they swabbed Schmidt’s Humrher. Under Jones that trespass also constituted a Fourth Amendment search. Thus, Schmidt is entitled to partial summary judgment in that the swabbing constituted á search, under the Fourth Amendment. The Court stresses that given the present procedural posture—the parties addressed only the threshold issue of whether the swabbing was a Fourth Amendment' search—the Court expresses no opinion on the search’s ultimate constitutionality.
B.
Nonetheless, the Court concludes that, under the second prong of the qualified immunity .analysis, .the officers are entitled to, qualified immunity. The law at the time of the swabbing did not clearly establish that the swabbing was a.Fourth Amendmеnt- search. Accordingly, the officers’ conduct did not violate clearly established constitutional law..
To be sure, the right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures is clearly, established. However, that “abstract rule[ ] give[s] officials little practical guidance as to the legality of particular conduct.” Kinney v. Weaver,
;On that point, the law is simply too unsettled after Jones for the Court to conclude that it -is “beyond debate,” al-Kidd,
For example, a reasonable officer could have concluded—-just as the Supreme Court has in the Fifth Amendment con
After all, Jones—notwithstanding Justice Alito’s observation that there “was no actual damage to the vehicle,” id. —is not necessarily dispositive of the question here as to whether a touching must cause harm before constituting a Fourth Amendment search. Jones involved the permanent (or at least semi-permanent) physical attachment of a GPS tracker to a car. By contrast here, police only briеfly touched Schmidt’s Hummer and the vehicle was not affected in any other way.
An officer could conclude that the difference between a temporary, imperceptible swabbing and a physical installation was material to the Fourth Amendment analysis. It is a simple matter of physics—Force = Mass x Acceleration
Because a rеasonable officer could fairly conclude that the swabbing of the door handle in a public parking lot did not constitute a Fourth Amendment search, the officers are entitled to qualified immunity with respect to the swabbing.
III.
In addition to challenging the door swabbing as an unconstitutional search under the Fourth Amendment, Schmidt also argues that the DNA analysis constituted a Fourth Amendment search.
But courts disagrеe on whether a DNA analysis constitutes a Fourth Amendment search. Compare United States v. Davis,
IV.
Finally, Schmidt argues that officers unсonstitutionally permitted the Discovery Channel to film the swabbing. In support, Schmidt relies on Wilson v. Layne’s holding that bringing news reporters into a home during a search violates the Fourth Amendment. See
Wilson, however, is distinguishable. The filmed swabbing at issue here took place in a public parking lot—not a home. See Wise v. City of Richfield, No. 02-4274,
V.
Accordingly,
IT IS ORDERED that Michael Schmidt’s motion for summary judgment is GRANTED IN PART. The swabbing of the Hummer door constituted a Fourth Amendment search. The remainder of Schmidt’s motion for summary judgment is DENIED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the officers’ motion for summary judgment is GRANTED IN PART. All federal claims against the officers in their individual capacities are DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE. The remainder of the officers’ summary judgment motion is DENIED.
Notes
. R. Doc. No. 16; R. Doc, No, 17.
. See
.
. See generally U.S. Const. Amend. IV ("The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated....” (emphasis added)).
. See United States v. Sweeney,
. The same is true of New York v. Class—another case that the officers attempt to rely on. See
. See also Lapsley v. Xtek, Inc.,
