The Court of Appeals' mandate -- holding unconstitutional a
policy of conducting routine strip-searches of all persons held at
the Arlington County, Va., Detention Center, and remanding the case
to the District Court for further proceedings -- is stayed
temporarily, pending consideration of the reapplication for a stay
by the full Court. While the burden on an applicant for a stay to
demonstrate the need for exercise of a Circuit Justice's equitable
power is heavier if (as here) the request for a stay has previously
been denied by another Member of this Court, the issues involved in
this case warrant the full Court's consideration. There is
substantial likelihood that the full Court will grant a stay
pending disposition of a petition for certiorari, in view of the
Court of Appeals' attempt to distinguish
Bell v. Wolfish,
441 U. S. 520,
which held that a requirement that pretrial detainees at a
federally operated detention facility submit to a strip-search was
not unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment, and which would appear
to control the result in this case.
JUSTICE REHNQUIST, Circuit Justice.
Applicants, a former Sheriff of Arlington County, Va., and a
Deputy Sheriff, ask that I stay the mandate of the United States
Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit remanding this case to the
District Court following the Court of Appeals' holding that a
policy of strip-searches implemented at the Arlington County
Detention Center is unconstitutional. This request was denied by
THE CHIEF JUSTICE, and a reapplication has been addressed to me.
For the reasons that follow, I have referred the reapplication to
the full Court at its next regularly scheduled Conference, and I
have temporarily stayed the mandate of the Court of Appeals pending
the Court's disposition of the stay request.
The events that prompted this suit began with respondent's
arrest on suspicion of driving while intoxicated following
Page 454 U. S. 1305
a two-car collision. Respondent failed several field tests for
intoxication, and she was taken by police cruiser to the Arlington
County Detention Center for administration of a breath analysis
examination. Respondent, an attorney, refused to take the test
until allowed to telephone a friend who was also an attorney. She
persisted in this demand despite being informed by the
investigating officer and a Magistrate before whom she appeared
that she had no right to contact an attorney under Virginia's
implied consent statute, Va.Code § 18.2-268 (1975 and Supp.1981).
The Magistrate issued two warrants against respondent, one for
driving while intoxicated and the other for refusing to submit to a
breath analysis test. [
Footnote
1] The Magistrate authorized respondent's release on her own
recognizance on the condition that a responsible person come to the
Detention Center to assume custody. The Magistrate's office did not
have a phone available for respondent's use, but she was informed
that she could make a call upon commitment to jail. The arresting
officer then transferred custody of respondent to applicant Carol
Sachtleben, a Deputy Sheriff.
Prior to respondent's arrest, applicant Clements, at that time
the Sheriff, had instituted a policy requiring deputies to conduct
visual strip-searches of all persons held at the Center in order to
discover whether weapons or contraband were being concealed. This
policy was adopted after the shooting of a deputy by a misdemeanant
who had not been strip-searched. Pursuant to this policy, applicant
Sachtleben first inventoried respondent's personal property and
then took her
Page 454 U. S. 1306
to a holding cell, where she conducted a visual strip-search.
[
Footnote 2] Respondent was
then allowed to call her friend, and eventually was released into
her friend's custody.
Respondent subsequently brought suit for damages and injunctive
relief under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging an assortment of
constitutional violations. She complained of (1) denial of the
assistance of counsel; (2) unjustified detention following
establishment of the conditions of release; and (3) the Sheriff's
policy of administering strip-searches of all persons held at the
Detention Center without reasonable cause to suspect concealment of
weapons or contraband. The complaint named as defendants the
arresting officer, a correctional officer at the Detention Center,
several Deputy Sheriffs (including applicant Sachtleben), three
Magistrates, the Commonwealth Attorney for Arlington County,
applicant Clements, the current Sheriff Gondles, and Arlington
County. Several claims were dismissed prior to trial, directed
verdicts were entered as to others in favor of the defendants, and
after post-trial briefing, the District Court entered judgment for
defendants on those claims that remained.
Logan v.
Shealy, 500 F.
Supp. 502 (ED Va.1980). In particular, the court held that the
policy of conducting strip-searches did not violate the Fourth
Amendment.
Id. at 506.
The Court of Appeals for the most part affirmed, but it reversed
on the issue of strip-searches.
Logan v. Shealy, 660 F.2d
1007 (CA4 1981). The court purported to rely on the standard for
judging the reasonableness of searches expressed in
Bell v.
Wolfish, 441 U. S. 520,
441 U. S. 559
(1979), which requires consideration of "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." The court concluded:
Page 454 U. S. 1307
"On the undisputed and stipulated evidence, Logan's strip search
bore no such discernible relationship to security needs at the
Detention Center that, when balanced against the ultimate invasion
of personal rights involved, it could reasonably be thought
justified. At no time would Logan or similar detainees be
intermingled with the general jail population; her offense, though
not a minor traffic offense, was nevertheless one not commonly
associated by its very nature with the possession of weapons or
contraband; there was no cause in her specific case to believe that
she might possess either; and when strip-searched, she had been at
the Detention Center for one and one-half hours without even a
pat-down search. An indiscriminate strip search policy routinely
applied to detainees such as Logan along with all other detainees
cannot be constitutionally justified simply on the basis of
administrative ease in attending to security considerations."
660 F.2d at 1013.
The court remanded with directions to enter a permanent
injunction against enforcement of the policy. [
Footnote 3] The court also reversed directed
verdicts in favor of applicants and remanded with instructions that
judgment be entered against them
"for all damages determined by a jury to have been
Page 454 U. S. 1308
proximately caused by the strip search, unless those defendants
can establish before a jury their respective defenses of good faith
immunity (or any others available to them) in accordance with [the
court's] opinion."
Id. at 1014. Applicants unsuccessfully sought a stay
from the Court of Appeals. A similar request was denied by the THE
CHIEF JUSTICE, and the present reapplication was delivered to me on
December 8, 1981. Without a stay, trial of the damages claims
against applicants will commence on December 9.
Applicants for a stay bear a heavy burden of demonstrating the
need for exercise of the equitable power conferred on a Circuit
Justice by 28 U.S.C. § 2101(f). That burden is heavier still if the
request for a stay has previously been denied by a Member of this
Court.
See, e.g., New York Times Co. v. Jascalevich,
439 U. S. 1331,
439 U. S.
1337 (1978) (MARSHALL, J., in chambers);
Republican
State Central Committee v. The Ripon Society, 409 U.
S. 1222,
409 U. S.
1227 (1972) (REHNQUIST, J., in chambers). While THE
CHIEF JUSTICE is not entitled to a presumption that, by virtue of
his office, he knows more law than the other Members of the Court,
it is presumed that he knows at least as much, and his denial of
relief "counsels circumspection."
Republican State Central
Committee, supra, at
409 U. S.
1227.
After consideration of the reapplication and the response, I
have concluded that the issues involved warrant consideration by
the full Court. This opportunity will arise at the next regularly
scheduled Conference on Friday, December 11. Nevertheless, that
date is several days in the distance and, more importantly, the
proceedings that applicants seek to stay will commence in the
interim in the absence of a stay. As a result, I think it is
incumbent on me to exercise my authority as Circuit Justice to
determine how the matter shall remain until it can be considered by
the full Court.
See Evans v. Atlantic Richfield Co., 429
U.S. 1334, 1335 (1976) (REHNQUIST, J., in chambers).
Page 454 U. S. 1309
In my view, the decision of the Court of Appeals is so at odds
with this Court's resolution of a similar issue in
Bell v.
Wolfish, supra, that its mandate ought to be stayed
temporarily pending consideration by the full Court.
Bell v.
Wolfish was a class action initiated by inmates of a federally
operated short-term detention facility challenging the
constitutionality of numerous conditions of confinement and related
administrative practices. The facility was primarily used to house
persons charged with a crime but not yet brought to trial. One of
the challenged practices was the requirement that inmates submit to
a strip-search and visual inspection of their body cavities after
every contact visit with someone from outside the institution. This
Court ultimately held that, under the circumstances, such searches
were not unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment. 441 U.S. at
441 U. S.
558-560. Rather, they were "reasonable responses . . .
to legitimate security concerns,"
id. at
441 U. S. 561,
and could be conducted in the absence of probable cause,
id. at
441 U. S.
560.
The Court of Appeals recited from
Bell v. Wolfish the
general standard by which searches are judged under the Fourth
Amendment, but it chose to ignore the Court's application of that
standard to the practice of conducting strip-searches of persons
detained after being charged with a crime. Respondent in this case
was arrested and charged by a Magistrate with driving while
intoxicated and unlawful refusal to submit to a breath analysis
examination. [
Footnote 4] The
Magistrate authorized her release from the Detention Center only
when a responsible individual arrived to take custody. Until that
time, respondent remained officially under arrest and subject to
those measures adopted for the maintenance of internal security at
the jail. Her position was no different, for constitutional
purposes, from the pretrial detainees in
Bell v. Wolfish.
If anything, the detainees in that case were subject to
Page 454 U. S. 1310
more onerous conditions, given the greater intrusiveness of a
body-cavity search. The Court nevertheless upheld such searches "in
the light of the central objective of prison administration,
safeguarding institutional security."
Id. at
441 U. S.
547.
The Court of Appeals gave little or no weight to that objective.
The clear import of its decision is that strip-searches may not be
conducted without probable cause to believe that the subject of the
search possesses weapons or contraband. No such requirement
attended the search policy upheld in
Bell v. Wolfish, and
indeed the Court expressly held that strip-searches need not be
conditioned on probable cause.
Id. at
441 U. S. 560.
Nor was the result in
Bell v. Wolfish predicated on a
showing that searches were limited to those persons whose alleged
offenses were "commonly associated by [their] very nature with the
possession of weapons or contraband." 660 F.2d at 1013. In short,
the Court of Appeals decision reads as if
Bell v. Wolfish
had never been decided. Much as that may have been the desire of
the lower court, the decision is authoritative precedent, and I
believe it clearly dictates a contrary result in this case.
In view of the Court of Appeals' attempt to distinguish a
decision of this Court which to me seems clearly applicable to the
case before it, I believe there is substantial likelihood that the
full Court will grant a stay pending disposition of the petition
for certiorari. A delay in the proceedings until the Court has an
opportunity to consider the application will not prejudice
respondent, and it will forestall the expense and effort of a trial
until the legal basis for further proceedings is clarified.
Accordingly, the mandate of the Court of Appeals is hereby stayed
temporarily, pending consideration of the application for a stay by
the full Court at the next regularly scheduled Conference.
[
Footnote 1]
Under Virginia law, driving while intoxicated is a Class 2
misdemeanor, punishable by imprisonment for up to six months and a
fine of $500. Va.Code §§ 18.2-270, 18.2-11 (1975). Unreasonable
refusal to submit to a breath analysis test is punishable as a
first offense by mandatory suspension of the driver's license for
90 days. Repeat offenses are punishable by imprisonment for six
months. § 18.2-268(n).
[
Footnote 2]
Respondent was asked to remove her clothing, one garment at a
time, to hand them to the deputy, and to turn around for visual
inspection. Respondent complied, and her clothes were immediately
returned to her.
[
Footnote 3]
The jurisdiction of the Court of Appeals to order the issuance
of a permanent injunction is, I think, open to serious question.
Although respondent has suffered an injury sufficient to establish
her standing to seek damages,
"[p]ast exposure to illegal conduct does not in itself show a
present case or controversy regarding injunctive relief . . . if
unaccompanied by any continuing, present adverse effects."
O'Shea v. Littleton, 414 U. S. 488,
414 U. S.
495-496 (1974). As
O'Shea makes clear, standing
to seek injunctive relief depends on a showing of "a real and
immediate threat of repeated injury."
Id. at
414 U. S. 496.
Respondent has not alleged that she anticipates being arrested
again and again subjected to a strip-search at the Arlington County
Detention Center. Even if she had made such an allegation, it would
"tak[e] us into the area of speculation and conjecture."
Id. at
414 U. S. 497.
See Rizzo v. Goode, 423 U. S. 362,
423 U. S.
371-373 (1976).
[
Footnote 4]
See n 1,
supra.