Ricketts, the director of the Arizona Department of Corrections, and other prison officials (Ricketts) appeal the district court’s denial of their summary judgment motion. Ricketts contends that he is entitled to qualified immunity from suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 by Vaughan and other plaintiffs (Vaughan), all inmates at the Arizona State Prison at Florence (ASP), alleging that a series of digital rectal cavity searches violated their constitutional rights. Ricketts also suggests that the individual liability of particular defendants is before the court on this appeal. We find that the district court did not err in denying Ricketts’ claim of qualified immunity. The denial of summary judgment is AFFIRMED.
FACTS
Vaughan and approximately eighty inmates of the maximum security unit at ASP were subjected to a series of digital rectal cavity searches on the 15th, 22nd, and 23rd of March 1984. Vaughan alleges that correctional medical assistants untrained in involuntary rectal cavity searches conducted them on a table in an open hallway, within view of prison personnel and some inmates. He alleges that the conditions were unsanitary, that some inmates who resisted were forced to submit, and that those searching made no effort to determine whether any of the inmates had medical conditions that would make a digital rectal cavity probe medically inadvisable. Ricketts had ordered the searches in response to information that there were explosives in the maximum security unit; the March 15 searches recovered some gunpowder.
Vaughan filed suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging deprivation of rights under the fourth, eighth, and fourteenth amendments of the United States Constitution. Ricketts moved for summary judgment, claiming a qualified immunity from suit because the law governing body cavity searches of inmates was not clearly established as of March 1984. In its order denying Ricketts’ motion, the district court held that Supreme Court and Ninth Circuit decisions before March 1984 clearly established a “reasonable grounds” standard for initiation of digital body cavity searches of inmates. The court concluded that it was also clearly established that body cavity searches must be “reasonably conducted in order to withstand fourth amendment scrutiny.” Finally, the district court found that clearly established standards existed under the eighth and fourteenth amendments as well. The court thus refused to grant Ricketts qualified immunity on any of Vaughan’s claims.
ANALYSIS
We generally do not permit appeals from denials of summary judgment. The
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Supreme Court has held, however, that an interlocutory order denying qualified immunity is effectively unreviewable on appeal from final judgment, conclusively determines the issue in dispute, and is conceptually separate from the merits of the plaintiffs claim.
Mitchell v. Forsyth,
Government officials performing discretionary functions enjoy a qualified immunity from liability for civil damages so long as their conduct does not violate “clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.”
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
FOURTH AMENDMENT
To determine whether, at the time of the searches in March 1984, Vaughan enjoyed “clearly established ... constitutional [fourth amendment] rights of which a reasonable person would have known,”
Harlow,
Ricketts asserts that it was not clearly established that prisoners retain any fourth amendment rights. We disagree. By 1982, the majority of the circuits had considered the question, each holding that inmates retained some fourth amendment protection from unreasonable searches of their persons.
See Bonitz v. Fair,
In 1979, the Supreme Court held in
Bell v. Wolfish
that routine visual body cavity inspections of pretrial detainees must be reasonable under the fourth amendment.
requires a balancing of the need for the particular search against the invasion of personal rights that the search entails. Courts must consider the scope of the particular intrusion, the manner in which it is conducted, the justification for initiating it, and the place in which it is conducted.
Id.
at 559,
In
Ward,
this court held that
Wolfish
clearly established as of 1981 that the justi
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fication for initiating blanket strip searches of minor offense arrestees must be “reasonable.”
The Supreme Court in 1979 emphasized that any consideration of whether routine visual body cavity searches of inmates were reasonable involved an assessment of the manner in which the searches were conducted.
Wolfish,
We do not underestimate the degree to which these [visual] searches may invade the personal privacy of inmates. Nor do we doubt ... that on occasion a security guard may conduct the search in an abusive fashion. Such an abuse cannot be condoned. The searches must be conducted in a reasonable manner.
Id.
at 560,
Courts of appeals finding body cavity searches constitutional before the ASP searches in 1984 were careful to note that the manner in which the searches were conducted was reasonable.
Daughtery v. Harris,
Of course, any search should be conducted by prison officials under judicious circumstances .... The searches were here conducted according to the directives issued by the Bureau of Prisons ... and the examinations were carried out by trained para-professional medical assistants in a designated area and under sanitary conditions. Also, there was no attempt on the part of officials or medical personnel to humiliate or degrade the appellants.
Id.
at 295 (citations omitted) (emphasis added). In
United States v. Lilly,
The Sixth Circuit in 1983 found the strip search of a felony arrestee proper under
Wolfish
where the search was visual only, conducted in private by a same-sex attendant, and there was “no claim of offensive behavior ... beyond that inherent in the nature of the inspection itself.”
Dufrin v. Spreen,
In a case involving qualified immunity issues similar to those presented here, the First Circuit found that in light of the law prevailing in 1981, inmates had a clearly established fourth amendment right to be free from a body-cavity search conducted in an unreasonable manner.
Bonitz v. Fair,
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We hold that it was clearly established by 1984 that body cavity searches of inmates must be conducted in a reasonable manner, and that issues of privacy, hygiene, and the training of those conducting the searches are relevant to determining whether the manner of search was reasonable. It was also clear that the place in which the search was conducted must be considered in judging the search’s reasonableness.
Wolfish,
Vaughan alleges he was searched on a table in an open hallway, by medical assistants untrained in involuntary body cavity searches. The table was not sanitary, and the medical assistants did not wash their hands between searches. The area was clearly visible to other inmates and prison personnel, and some personnel made jokes and insulting comments. No official made an inspection of medical records to ensure that individual inmates did not have medical conditions that made the searches dangerous. Inmates who resisted were forced to submit. At least one inmate search repeated later in the medical unit was visible to female personnel. No reasonable officer could believe that such searches were conducted in a reasonable manner, and so Ricketts was not entitled to qualified immunity on Vaughan’s fourth amendment claim.
EIGHTH AMENDMENT
Clearly established law at the time of the searches in March of 1984 provided that “deliberate indifference to serious medical needs of prisoners constitutes the 'unnecessary and wanton infliction of pain’ ... proscribed by the Eighth Amendment” and its prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment.
Estelle v. Gamble,
Vaughan alleges that deliberate indifference to the inmates’ medical needs was shown by the lack of hygiene during the searches, by the lack of training of the searchers, by the failure to check inmates’ medical records before performing the searches, and by further rectal cavity searches made on inmates who were removed to the prison health unit after the searches in the hallway. At least one of the inmates removed to the health unit was subjected to a rectal probe by a female doctor with a metal clamp, even though he resisted, and his subsequent rectal bleeding was left unattended.
Taking all Vaughan’s allegations as true, Ricketts cannot claim that the prison officials enjoy qualified immunity from suit for eighth amendment violations. As required for an eighth amendment violation the searches as described show more than mere negligence. The manner in which Vaughan alleges the searches were conducted constitutes an unnecessary use of force showing a wanton disregard for the health and safety of the inmates.
Compare United States v. Caldwell,
Ricketts claims that it may be more difficult to show an eighth amendment violation in light of a prison security measure. In
Whitley v. Albers,
We find that a reasonable official would understand, under law clearly established in 1984, that the conditions and manner under which Vaughan alleges the searches were conducted constituted deliberate indifference to the inmates’ medical and safety needs. Ricketts was not entitled to sovereign immunity on Vaughan’s eighth amendment claim.
FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT
At the time of the searches in March of 1984, it was clearly established that the fourteenth amendment prohibited prison officials from treating prisoners in a fashion so “brutal” and “offensive to human dignity” as to “shock the conscience.”
Rochin v. California,
a court must look to such factors as the need for the application of force, the relationship between the need and the amount of force that was used, the extent of injury inflicted, and whether force was applied in a good faith effort to maintain or restore discipline or maliciously and sadistically for the very purpose of causing harm.
Id.
at 483 (quoting
Johnson v. Glick,
This standard was clearly established in 1984. Thus, in order for Vaughan to avert Rickett’s claim of qualified immunity under the fourteenth amendment, he must show that a reasonable prison official would have known that the digital rectal searches, conducted as alleged, were “maliciously and sadistically applied for the purpose of causing harm.” Under the facts as alleged by Vaughan, a reasonable prison official in 1984 would have understood that the searches were conducted in a brutal fashion that was not justified by a need for force. The extent of possible injury was great, and at least one inmate suffered significant injury. The joking and insults directed at the inmates support an inference that the force was maliciously and sadistically applied. Ricketts was not entitled to qualified immunity on Vaughan’s fourteenth amendment claim.
CONCLUSION
We AFFIRM the district court’s refusal to grant Ricketts qualified immunity from Vaughan’s claims under the fourth, eighth, and fourteenth amendments.
