Nassau County and its named employees ( “Nassau County”) challenge an order of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Leonard D. Wexler, Judge). The court enjoined Nassau County from strip searching misdemeanor admittees to the Nassau County
I. BACKGROUND
As this case comes to us a second time, we offer an abbreviated version of the facts detailed in Shain v. Ellison,
In 1996, Shain sued Nassau County under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging that the blanket strip search policy violated the Fourth Amendment. He also asserted a number of state law tort claims. He sought money damages, a declaration that the policy was unconstitutional, and “an order enjoining such blanket strip searches and body cavity inspections and regulating the conditions and circumstances under which such searches and inspections can be conducted pursuant to guidelines to be set by the Cоurt.” At no point in front of the District Court did Shain aver a likelihood that in the future he might again be exposed to the policy.
Nassau County moved for summary judgment, contending, among other things, that the individual defendants were entitled to qualified immunity. Shain cross-moved for partial summary judgment challenging the constitutionality of the strip search policy. The District Court granted Shain partial summary judgment, concluding that under clearly established federal law, the strip search was unconstitutional and that, consequently, thе individual officers were not entitled to qualified immunity.
On appeal, we affirmed in part and remanded in part. Shain,
On remand, Shain argued that he possessed adequate standing because the official nature of the policy created the prospect that, were he to be subsequently arrested, he would agаin be treated in an unconstitutional manner. Without addressing the standing issue, the District Court granted an injunction:
Defendants Nassau County and all of its employees and agents are hereby enjoined from effectuating any blanket policy at the Nassau County Correctional Center whereby all individuals remanded to that institution are subject to a strip, visual body cavity, or any more invasive search, absent a reasonable suspicion that such individual is concealing weapons or other contraband.
Nassau County appeals, arguing that: (1) Shain lacks standing to seek injunctive relief, (2) the injunction violates the Prison Litigation Reform Act, 18 U.S.C. § 3626 et seq., and (3) the issue of injunctive relief has become moot because, in the interim, the County had officially endеd its blanket strip search policy. As explained below, we find that since Shain has not met his burden of demonstrating standing to seek injunctive relief, the federal courts lack subject matter jurisdiction over his claim for such relief.
II. DISCUSSION
A Standard of Review
We review a district court’s grant of a permanent injunction for abuse of discretion. S.C. Johnson & Son, Inc. v. Clorox Co.,
B. Standing
At this stage of the litigation, neither party contests the fact that Shain suffered an unconstitutional strip search
City of Los Angeles v. Lyons occupies much of this territory. There, the Supreme Court held that Lyons, who was placed in a chokehold by a Los Angeles police officer during a minor traffic stop, did not have stаnding to seek prospective injunctive relief barring police officers from indiscriminately using chokeholds. While past injury supplied a predicate for compensatory damages, it did not, according to the Court, supply one for prospective equitable relief since the fact that such practices had been used in the past did not translate into a real and immediate threat of future injury to Lyons. Lyons,
Similarly, Shain has not established — or even alleged before this aрpeal — -the likelihood of a future encounter with the Nassau County police likely to result in a subsequent unconstitutional strip search. At the time of his arrest in 1995, Shain was an attorney admitted to the bar. He had no criminal record and, indeed, had nеver been arrested outside the context of his contentious divorce proceedings. Although he makes the conclu-sory claim that, at the time his lawsuit was filed, he was not long removed from acrimonious divorce proceedings, he mаkes no claim of any ongoing marital discord that might give rise to the fear of a repeat encounter with police officers. In fact, in the year between his arrest and his lawsuit, Shain was not rearrested, nor does he allege that he had any further encounters with the police. Significantly, at the time of the lawsuit, he was no longer married to or living with his ex-wife. Finally, even if Shain were arrested again on a misdemeanor charge, it is entirely conjectural that he would be detained оvernight and remanded to the NCCC, as almost all misdemeanor arrestees are released on their own recognizance or on bail. These facts suggest to us that Shain was no more likely to be subject to misdemeanor arrest and detainment than any other citizen of Nassau County. As the Court stated in Lyons:
*216 Absent a sufficient likelihood that he will again be wronged in a similar way, Lyons is no more entitled to an injunction that any other citizen of Los Ange-les; and a federal court may not entertain a claim by any or all citizens who no more than assert that certain practices of law enforcement are unconstitutional.
Id. at 111,
Shain’s reliance on Deshami E. is misplaced. There, we held that a class of minors had standing to seek injunctive relief barring a squad of detectives from taking such minors into custody in the future and interrogating them without the benefit of counsel. Although we noted in Deshawn E. that appellants were objecting to an official governmental policy, we did not in any way suggest that the existence of an official policy, on its own, is sufficient to confer standing to sue on any individual who had previously been subjected to that policy. To the contrary, we explained that, unlike the plaintiff in Lyons, the class of minors in Deshawn E. had demonstrated a sufficient likelihood of future harm at the hands of New York’s police department based on allegations that statеments made during unlawful interrogations were used to enhance charges in ongoing proceedings and as leverage in plea negotiations. Deshawn E.,
III. CONCLUSION
For these reasons, we vacate the injunction and remand to the District Court with instruсtions to dismiss for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. We therefore do not reach appellant’s other claims on appeal.
Notes
. New York law generally provides that a misdemeanor arrestee, after being arraigned, must be relеased on his own recognizance or allowed to post bail. N.Y. Crim Proc. Law § 170.10(7) (Consol.2003). However, under New York family law, an arraigning magistrate has the discretion to remand the misdemeanor arrestee to the custody of the sheriff when the allеged offense is a family offense. N.Y. Fam. Ct. Act § 155 (Consol.2003).
. Shain had also initially filed claims of false arrest and imprisonment, abuse of process, malicious prosecution, and excessive force. The first three claims were dismissed by the District Court on Nassau County’s summary judgment motion while the excessive force claim went to trial. It was ultimately rejected by the jury. The court declared the strip search policy to be unconstitutional and awarded Shain $1 in nominal damages. Shain,
. We held that even though the Supreme Court, in Turner v. Safley,
