Respondents, pretrial detainees at the Los Angeles County
Central Jail, brought a class action in Federal District Court
against the County Sheriff and other officials, challenging, on due
process grounds, the jail's policy of denying pretrial detainees
contact visits with their spouses, relatives, children, and
friends, and the jail's practice of conducting random, irregular
"shakedown" searches of cells while the detainees were away at
meals, recreation, or other activities. The District Court
sustained the challenges, and ordered that low risk detainees
incarcerated for more than a month be allowed contact visits, and
that all detainees be allowed to watch searches of their cells if
they are in the area when the searches are conducted. The Court of
Appeals affirmed.
Held:
1. Where it is alleged that a pretrial detainee has been
deprived of liberty without due process, the dispositive inquiry is
whether the challenged practice or policy constitutes punishment or
is reasonably related to a legitimate governmental objective.
Bell v. Wolfish, 441 U. S. 520. In
considering whether a specific practice or policy is "reasonably
related" to security interests, courts should play a very limited
role, since such considerations are peculiarly within the province
and professional expertise of corrections officials.
Id.
at
441 U. S.
540-541, n. 23. Pp.
468 U. S.
583-585.
2. Here, the Central Jail's blanket prohibition on contact
visits is an entirely reasonable, nonpunitive response to
legitimate security concerns, consistent with the Fourteenth
Amendment. Contact visits invite a host of security problems. They
open a detention facility to the introduction of drugs, weapons,
and other contraband. Moreover, to expose to others those detainees
who, as is often the case, are awaiting trial for serious, violent
offenses or have prior convictions carries with it the risks that
the safety of innocent individuals will be jeopardized. Totally
disallowing contact visits is not excessive in relation to the
security and other interests at stake. There are many
justifications for denying contact visits entirely, rather than
attempting the difficult task of establishing a program of limited
visits such as that imposed here. Nothing in the Constitution
requires that detainees be allowed contact visits; responsible,
experienced administrators have determined, in their sound
Page 468 U. S. 577
discretion, that such visits will jeopardize the security of the
facility and other persons. Pp.
468 U. S.
585-589.
3. The Central Jail's practice of conducting random, irregular
"shakedown" searches of cells in the absence of the cell occupants
is also a reasonable response by the jail officials to legitimate
security concerns.
Bell v. Wolfish, supra. This is also a
matter lodged in the sound discretion of those officials. Pp.
468 U. S.
589-591.
710 F.2d 572, reversed.
BURGER, C.J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
WHITE, POWELL, REHNQUIST, and O'CONNOR, JJ., joined. BLACKMUN, J.,
filed an opinion concurring in the judgment,
post, p.
468 U. S. 592.
MARSHALL, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which BRENNAN and
STEVENS, JJ., joined,
post, p.
468 U. S.
596.
CHIEF JUSTICE BURGER delivered the opinion of the Court.
We granted certiorari to decide whether pretrial detainees have
a right guaranteed by the United States Constitution to contact
visits and to observe shakedown searches of their cells by prison
officials.
I
Los Angeles County Central Jail is one of seven principal
facilities operated by the Sheriff of Los Angeles County. The
three-story jail complex, located in downtown Los Angeles, is the
largest jail in the country, with a capacity of over 5,000 inmates.
It is the primary facility in Los Angeles County for male pretrial
detainees, the vast majority of
Page 468 U. S. 578
whom remain at the facility at most a few days or weeks while
they await trial.
In 1975, respondents, pretrial detainees at Central Jail,
brought a class action under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983, 1985,
against the County Sheriff, certain administrators of Central Jail,
and the County Board of Supervisors, challenging various policies
and practices of the jail and conditions of their confinement. Only
respondents' challenges to the policy of the jail denying pretrial
detainees contact visits with their spouses, relatives, children,
and friends, and to the jail's practice of permitting irregularly
scheduled shakedown searches of individual cells in the absence of
the cell occupants are before this Court. [
Footnote 1] The District Court sustained both of these
challenges.
Rutherford v. Pitchess, 457 F.
Supp. 104 (CD Cal.1978).
The District Court agreed with respondents that
"the ability of a man to embrace his wife and his children from
time to time during the weeks or months while he is awaiting trial
is a matter of great importance to him,"
id. at 110, yet it recognized that "unrestricted
contact visitation would add greatly" to security problems at the
jail.
Ibid. The court ultimately concluded, however, that
the danger of permitting low security risk inmates to have
"physical contact with their loved ones" was not sufficiently great
to warrant deprivation of such contact.
Ibid. Striking
what it believed was a "reasonable balance" between the twin
considerations of prison
Page 468 U. S. 579
security and the constitutional rights of the inmates, the court
tentatively proposed to order contact visitation for those inmates
who "have received other than high risk classification," and who
have been incarcerated for more than two weeks.
Ibid.
With respect to the cell searches, the District Court concluded
that allowing inmates to watch from a distance while their cells
are searched would allay inmate concerns that their personal
property will be unnecessarily confiscated or destroyed. The court
concluded that
"[f]uture shakedowns should be made while the respective inmates
remain outside their cells but near enough to observe the process
and raise or answer any relevant inquiry."
Id. at 116. The District Court viewed both of its
proposed orders as "the least restrictive alternatives consistent
with the purpose of [respondents'] incarceration."
Id. at
108.
The District Court withheld judgment on all of respondents'
complaints pending further evidentiary hearings. In its
supplemental memorandum following the additional hearings, the
court acknowledged that "many factors strongly militate against the
allowing of contact visits," App. to Pet. for Cert. 32, not the
least of which being that
"establishment of any program of contact visits [would] increase
the importation of narcotics into [the] jail, despite all
safeguards and precautions."
Id. at 31. The court again emphasized that, if all or
most of the inmates were allowed contact visits, a "great burden"
would be imposed on the jail authorities and the public.
Ibid. Modification of existing visiting areas, if not
additional facilities, would be necessary. New procedures for
processing visitors -- possibly including interviews, personal
searches, and searches of all packages carried by the visitors --
would be required. Strip searches of inmates following contact
visits would be needed.
The court found that the "hardship" on detainees of being unable
to "embrace their loved ones" for only a few days or a few weeks
could not justify imposition of these substantial
Page 468 U. S. 580
burdens.
Id. at 32. However, the court believed, the
factors rendering contact visitation impracticable for detainees
incarcerated for short periods are considerably less compelling
when detention is prolonged.
The court reasoned that "the scope, burden and dangers of [a]
program [of contact visitation] would be substantially diminished"
were contact visitation limited to detainees "who have been in
uninterrupted custody for a month or more
and who are not
determined to be drug-oriented or escape risks," and a ceiling
imposed on the total number of contact visits that the jail must
provide.
Id. at 33 (emphasis added). With these
limitations, the court suggested, a contact visitation program
would require only "[m]odest alteration" of the existing facility.
Ibid. Alternatively, the court said, the Sheriff could
build or occupy a new facility for contact visits and transport
inmates back and forth, as necessary.
The District Court also reaffirmed in the supplemental
memorandum its earlier conclusion that inmates should be allowed to
observe cell searches. The court believed that the interests of the
inmates "in protecting their meager possessions outweigh[ed] the
small increase in the burden upon the [petitioners]."
Id.
at 36. [
Footnote 2]
On appeal, the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit remanded
the case to the District Court for consideration in light of our
intervening decision in
Bell v.
Wolfish, 441 U.S.
Page 468 U. S. 581
520 (1979), noting, among other things, that we rejected in
Wolfish the suggestion that existence of less restrictive
means for achievement of security objectives is proof of an
exaggerated response to security concerns. App. to Pet. for Cert.
17.
The District Court on remand reaffirmed its prior orders,
"[finding] nothing in
Bell v. Wolfish that render[ed]
inappropriate any of the . . . challenged orders."
Id. at
24. Although the court acknowledged that the Central Jail
authorities were not "consciously motivated by a desire to punish,"
it reiterated its belief that the practices and policies in
question were "excessive" in relation to the underlying security
objectives.
Id. at 25. It characterized petitioners'
rejection of all proposals for contact visitation as an
"overreaction,"
id. at 26, which "stem[med] from an
unreasonable fixation upon security,"
id. at 25.
The District Court conceded that
Wolfish invalidated a
similar order requiring that detainees be allowed to observe
searches of their cells, but it went on to identify several factors
that it thought distinguished its order from that in
Wolfish. [
Footnote
3]
On petitioner's second appeal, the Court of Appeals affirmed the
District Court's orders requiring that certain of the detainees be
allowed contact visits and that inmates be allowed to watch
searches of their cells. [
Footnote
4]
Rutherford v.
Page 468 U. S. 582
Pitchess, 710 F.2d 572 (1983). The Court of Appeals
held that the District Court's order on contact visitation "fits
harmoniously within [the] pattern" of federal cases following
Wolfish
"recogniz[ing] the important security interests of the [penal]
institution, but at the same time recogniz[ing] the psychological
and punitive effects which the prolonged loss of contact visitation
has upon detainees. . . ."
710 F.2d at 577. It suggested that a blanket prohibition of
contact visits for all detainees would be an "unreasonable,
exaggerated response to security concerns."
Ibid.
The Court of Appeals also rejected petitioners' contention that
Wolfish precluded an order that pretrial detainees be
permitted to observe cell searches. The Court of Appeals, as had
the District Court, identified "significant differences" between
the order invalidated in
Wolfish and that entered by the
District Court. [
Footnote
5]
We granted certiorari because of both the importance of the
issue to the administration of detention facilities and the
conflict among the Federal Courts of Appeals. [
Footnote 6] 464 U.S. 959 (1983). We reverse.
Page 468 U. S. 583
II
The administration of seven separate jail facilities for a
metropolitan area of more than seven million people is a task of
monumental proportions. Housed in these facilities annually are
200,000 persons awaiting trial and confined because they are unable
to meet the requirements for release on bail. Generalizations are
of little value, but no one familiar with even the barest outline
of the problems of the administration of a prison or jail, or with
the administration of criminal justice, could fail to be aware of
the ease with which one can obtain release on bail or personal
recognizance. The very fact of nonrelease pending trial thus is a
significant factor bearing on the security measures that are
imperative to proper administration of a detention facility.
Four Terms ago, in
Bell v. Wolfish, 441 U.
S. 520 (1979), we considered for the first time, in
light of these security concerns, the scope of constitutional
protection that must be accorded pretrial detainees. The
respondents in
Wolfish challenged numerous conditions of
their confinement at the pretrial detention facility in New York
City and various policies and practices of that institution. We
held that, where it is alleged that a pretrial detainee has been
deprived of liberty without due process, the dispositive inquiry is
whether the challenged condition, practice, or policy constitutes
punishment,
"[f]or under the Due Process Clause, a detainee must not be
punished prior to an adjudication of guilt in accordance with due
process of law."
Id. at
441 U. S. 535
(footnote omitted).
Page 468 U. S. 584
In addressing the particular challenges in
Wolfish, we
carefully outlined the principles to be applied in evaluating the
constitutionality of conditions of pretrial detention.
Specifically, we observed that
"[a] court must decide whether the disability is imposed for the
purpose of punishment or whether it is but an incident of some
other legitimate governmental purpose."
Id. at
441 U. S. 538
(citation omitted). Absent proof of intent to punish, we noted,
this determination
"generally will turn on 'whether an alternative purpose to which
[the restriction] may rationally be connected is assignable for it,
and whether it appears excessive in relation to the alternative
purpose assigned [to it].'"
Ibid. (quoting
Kennedy v. Mendoza-Martinez,
372 U. S. 144,
372 U. S.
168-169 (1963)). We concluded:
"[I]f a particular condition or restriction of pretrial
detention is reasonably related to a legitimate governmental
objective, it does not, without more, amount to 'punishment.'
Conversely, if a restriction or condition is not reasonably related
to a legitimate goal -- if it is arbitrary or purposeless -- a
court permissibly may infer that the purpose of the governmental
action is punishment that may not constitutionally be inflicted
upon detainees
qua detainees."
441 U.S. at
441 U. S. 539
(footnote and citation omitted).
In setting forth these guidelines, we reaffirmed the very
limited role that courts should play in the administration of
detention facilities. In assessing whether a specific restriction
is "reasonably related" to security interests, we said, courts
should
"heed our warning that"
"[s]uch considerations are peculiarly within the province and
professional expertise of corrections officials, and, in the
absence of substantial evidence in the record to indicate that the
officials have exaggerated their response to these considerations,
courts should ordinarily defer to their expert judgment
Page 468 U. S. 585
in such matters."
Id. at 540-541, n. 23 (quoting
Pell v.
Procunier, 417 U. S. 817,
417 U. S. 827
(1974)). We also cautioned:
"[P]rison administrators [are to be] accorded wide-ranging
deference in the adoption and execution of policies and practices
that in their judgment are needed to preserve internal order and
discipline and to maintain institutional security."
441 U.S. at
441 U. S. 547
(citing cases). The principles articulated in
Wolfish
govern resolution of this case.
III
A
Petitioners' first contention is that it was error to conclude
that even low-risk detainees incarcerated for more than a month are
constitutionally entitled to contact visits from friends and
relatives. Petitioners maintain, as they have throughout these
proceedings that, in the interest of institutional and public
security, it is within their discretion as officials of a detention
facility to impose an absolute prohibition on contact visits.
[
Footnote 7] The District Court
did not find, nor did the Court of Appeals suggest, that the
purpose of petitioners' policy of denying contact visitation is to
punish the inmates. To the contrary, the District Court found that
petitioners are
Page 468 U. S. 586
fully cognizant of the possible value of contact visitation, and
it commended petitioners for their conscientious efforts to
accommodate the large numbers of inmates at Central Jail.
The question before us, therefore, is narrow: whether the
prohibition of contact visits is reasonably related to legitimate
governmental objectives. More particularly, because there is no
dispute that internal security of detention facilities is a
legitimate governmental interest, [
Footnote 8] our inquiry is simply whether petitioners'
blanket prohibition on contact visits at Central Jail is reasonably
related to the security of that facility.
That there is a valid, rational connection between a ban on
contact visits and internal security of a detention facility is too
obvious to warrant extended discussion. The District Court
acknowledged as much. Contact visits invite a host of security
problems. They open the institution to the introduction of drugs,
weapons, and other contraband. Visitors can easily conceal guns,
knives, drugs, or other contraband in countless ways, and pass them
to an inmate unnoticed by even the most vigilant observers. And
these items can readily be slipped from the clothing of an innocent
child, or transferred by other visitors permitted close contact
with inmates.
Contact visitation poses other dangers for a detention facility,
as well. Detainees -- by definition persons unable to meet bail --
often are awaiting trial for serious, violent offenses, and many
have prior criminal convictions. Exposure of this type person to
others, whether family, friends, or jail administrators,
necessarily carries with it risks that the safety of innocent
individuals will be jeopardized in various ways. They
Page 468 U. S. 587
may, for example, be taken as hostages or become innocent pawns
in escape attempts. It is no answer, of course, that we deal here
with restrictions on pretrial detainees, rather than convicted
criminals. For, as we observed in
Wolfish, in this
context, "[t]here is no basis for concluding that pretrial
detainees pose any lesser security risk than convicted inmates."
441 U.S. at
441 U. S. 546,
n. 28. Indeed, we said, "it may be that, in certain circumstances,
[detainees] present a greater risk to jail security and order."
Ibid.
The District Court and Court of Appeals held that totally
disallowing contact visits is excessive in relation to the security
and other interests at stake. We reject this characterization.
There are many justifications for denying contact visits entirely,
rather than attempting the difficult task of establishing a program
of limited visitation such as that imposed here. It is not
unreasonable to assume, for instance, that low security risk
detainees would be enlisted to help obtain contraband or weapons by
their fellow inmates who are denied contact visits. Additionally,
identification of those inmates who have propensities for violence,
escape, or drug smuggling is a difficult, if not impossible, task,
and the chances of mistaken identification are substantial. The
burdens of identifying candidates for contact visitation -- glossed
over by the District Court -- are made even more difficult by the
brevity of detention and the constantly changing nature of the
inmate population. Or a complete prohibition could reasonably be
thought necessary because selectively allowing contact visits to
some -- even if feasible -- could well create tension between those
allowed contact visits and those not.
In
Wolfish, we sustained against a Fourth Amendment
challenge the practice of conducting routine body cavity searches
following contact visits, even though there had been only one
reported attempt to smuggle contraband into the facility in a body
cavity. 441 U.S. at
441 U. S.
558-560. The purpose of the cavity searches in
Wolfish was to discover and deter smuggling of weapons and
contraband, which was found to be
Page 468 U. S. 588
a byproduct of contact visits. Given the security demands and
the need to protect not only other inmates but also the facility's
personnel, we did not regard full body cavity searches as
excessive. Petitioners' flat prohibition on contact visits cannot
be considered a more excessive response to the same security
objectives.
See id. at
441 U. S.
559-560, n. 40. In any event, we have emphasized that we
are unwilling to substitute our judgment on these difficult and
sensitive matters of institutional administration and security for
that of "the persons who are actually charged with and trained in
the running,"
id. at
441 U. S. 562,
of such facilities. [
Footnote
9] In sum, we conclude that petitioners' blanket prohibition is
an entirely reasonable, nonpunitive response to the legitimate
security concerns identified, consistent with the Fourteenth
Amendment.
The District Court acknowledged that "many factors strongly
militate against the allowing of contact visits." App. to Pet. for
Cert. 32. The court appears to have accepted petitioners' testimony
that contact visits significantly increase the possibility that
there will be breaches of security and that the safety of others
will be placed in jeopardy. It noted that, "despite all safeguards
and precautions,"
id. at 31, any program of contact
visitation would inevitably increase importation of narcotics into
the jail. We can take judicial notice that the unauthorized use of
narcotics is a problem that plagues virtually every penal and
detention
Page 468 U. S. 589
center in the country. While explicitly acknowledging the
security risks that inhere in even a limited program of contact
visitation, the District Court nonetheless invalidated petitioners'
practice of denying contact visitation.
On this record, we must conclude that the District Court simply
misperceived the limited scope of judicial inquiry under
Wolfish. When the District Court found that many factors
counseled against contact visits, its inquiry should have ended.
The court's further "balancing" resulted in an impermissible
substitution of its view on the proper administration of Central
Jail for that of the experienced administrators of that facility.
Here, as in
Wolfish,
"[i]t is plain from [the] opinions that the lower courts simply
disagreed with the judgment of [the jail] officials about the
extent of the security interests affected and the means required to
further those interests."
441 U.S. at
441 U. S.
554.
In rejecting the District Court's order, we do not in any sense
denigrate the importance of visits from family or friends to the
detainee. Nor do we intend to suggest that contact visits might not
be a factor contributing to the ultimate reintegration of the
detainee into society. We hold only that the Constitution does not
require that detainees be allowed contact visits when responsible,
experienced administrators have determined, in their sound
discretion, that such visits will jeopardize the security of the
facility.
B
It has been the petitioners' practice, as it is of all such
facilities, to conduct irregular or random "shakedown" searches of
the cells of detainees while the detainees are away at meals,
recreation, or other activities. Respondents do not dispute the
need for these searches; they challenge the searches only to the
extent that detainees are not permitted to observe them.
Petitioners respond that their method of conducting cell
searches is a security measure virtually identical to that
challenged
Page 468 U. S. 590
in
Wolfish. See 441 U.S. at
441 U. S.
555-557. [
Footnote
10] We agree. The Court described the practice in
Wolfish as follows:
"The MCC staff conducts unannounced searches of inmate living
areas at irregular intervals. These searches generally are formal
unit 'shakedowns' during which all inmates are cleared of the
residential units and a team of guards searches each room. . . .
[I]nmates [are] not permitted to watch the searches."
Id. at 555. The search practices described are
essentially identical to those employed at Central Jail,
see n 1,
supra.
Respondents attempt to distinguish
Wolfish principally
on the ground that the District Court's order invalidated in
Wolfish rested on the Fourth Amendment, while the District
Court's order here was predicated on its holding that searches in
the absence of the detainees violate their rights under the Due
Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. We did hold in
Wolfish that the room search rule challenged did not
violate the Fourth Amendment. But we also explicitly rejected the
contention that the room search rule, including the feature of the
rule prohibiting observation of the searches by the detainees,
violated the detainees' due process rights:
"Nor do we think that the four MCC security restrictions and
practices described in Part III,
supra, [one of which was
the rule permitting room searches in the absence of the detainees]
constitute 'punishment' in violation
Page 468 U. S. 591
of the rights of pretrial detainees under the Due Process Clause
of the Fifth Amendment."
441 U.S. at
441 U. S.
560-561 (footnote omitted). We held that all of the
restrictions "were reasonable responses by [the] officials to
legitimate security concerns."
Id. at
441 U. S.
561.
Thus, contrary to respondents' suggestion, we have previously
considered not only a Fourth Amendment challenge but also a due
process challenge to a room search procedure almost identical to
that used at Central Jail, and we sustained the practice on both
scores. We have no reason to reconsider that issue; the identical
arguments made by respondents here were advanced by the respondents
in
Wolfish. The security concerns that we held justified
the same restriction in
Wolfish, see id. at
441 U. S. 555,
n. 36, are no less compelling here. [
Footnote 11] Moreover, we could not have been clearer in
our holding in
Wolfish that this is a matter lodged in the
sound discretion of the institutional officials. We reaffirm
that
"proper deference to the informed discretion of prison
authorities demands that they, and not the courts, make the
difficult judgments which reconcile conflicting claims affecting
the security of the institution, the welfare of the prison staff,
and the property rights of the detainees."
Id. at
441 U. S. 557,
n. 38. [
Footnote 12]
Page 468 U. S. 592
Accordingly, the judgment of the Court of Appeals is
reversed.
It is so ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
When respondents instituted this suit, contact visits were not
generally allowed. However, all detainees at Central Jail were
allowed unmonitored noncontact visits each day between the hours of
8:30 a.m. and 8:30 p.m. It is estimated that there were over 63,000
such visits each month in an air-conditioned visiting area that
accommodates 228 visitors at once. Privacy partitions separated
each individual visiting location from the others, and clear glass
panels separated the inmates from the visitors, who visit over
telephones.
Under the search procedures in effect, searches of cells for
contraband and other impermissible items were conducted irregularly
while the inmates were away from the cells.
[
Footnote 2]
The District Court ordered that petitioners
"make available a contact visit once each week to each pretrial
detainee that has been held in the jail for one month or more, and
concerning whom there is no indication of drug or escape
propensities; provided, however, that no more than fifteen hundred
such visits need be allowed in any one week."
App. to Pet. for Cert. 38. Its order further directed that
"[i]nmates . . . in the general area when a 'shakedown'
inspection of their cells is undertaken . . . be permitted to be
sufficiently proximate to their respective cells that they may
observe the process and respond to such questions or make such
requests as circumstances may indicate."
Id. at 40.
[
Footnote 3]
Unlike the cell search procedure ordered in
Wolfish,
said the court, the procedure it ordered would not allow inmates to
frustrate the search by "
distracting personnel and moving
contraband from one room to another ahead of the search team.'"
App. to Pet. for Cert. 27 (quoting Wolfish, 441 U.S. at
441 U. S.
555). Second, the Court of Appeals in Wolfish
had failed to specify the constitutional provision it relied upon
to invalidate the cell search rule under review in that case. In
contrast, the District Court noted, it had specifically found that
a refusal to allow inmates to observe cell searches violates the
Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
[
Footnote 4]
The Court of Appeals reversed the third order -- not in issue
here -- which had directed jail officials to reinstall the
transparent windows in the cells from which they had been
removed.
[
Footnote 5]
The District Court in this case, said the Court of Appeals, had
addressed the concerns of the jail officials -- ignored by the
District Court in
Wolfish -- that inmates could frustrate
search efforts by distracting personnel and relocating contraband
ahead of the search team. The District Court order here allowed
officials to remove inmates from their cells, detain them in a
dayroom while a cell row is searched, and bring them in
individually to observe only the search of their respective cells.
Additionally, while the order in
Wolfish had rested
exclusively on the District Court's conclusion that the searches
were "unreasonable" under the Fourth Amendment, the District
Court's order in this case was based "largely" upon the Fourteenth
Amendment's guarantee of due process.
[
Footnote 6]
At least five Circuits have held that pretrial detainees are not
constitutionally entitled to contact visits.
See Jordan v.
Wolke, 615 F.2d 749 (CA7 1980);
Ramos v. Lamm, 639
F.2d 559 (CA10 1980),
cert. denied, 450 U.S. 1041 (1981);
Inmates of Allegheny County Jail v. Pierce, 612 F.2d 754
(CA3 1979);
Feeley v. Sampson, 570 F.2d 364 (CA1 1978);
Ozendine v. Williams, 509 F.2d 1405 (CA4 1975) (per
curiam). The Ninth Circuit in this case, and the Second and Fifth
Circuits have held that the Constitution does require contact
visits for detainees, at least in certain contexts.
See Marcera
v. Chinlund, 595 F.2d 1231 (CA2),
vacated and remanded sub
nom. Lombard v. Marcera, 442 U.S. 915 (1979);
Jones v.
Diamond, 636 F.2d 1364 (CA5),
cert. granted sub nom.
Ledbetter v. Jones, 452 U.S. 959,
cert. dism'd, 453
U.S. 950 (1981).
Cf. West v. Infante, 707 F.2d 58 (CA2
1983) (per curiam);
Campbell v. McGruder, 188 U.S.App.D.C.
258, 580 F.2d 521 (1978).
[
Footnote 7]
We did not have occasion to address specifically the issue of
contact visitation in
Wolfish. We did suggest, however,
that prohibiting contact visitation might well represent a
permissible alternative to the admittedly intrusive body cavity
searches there challenged. 441 U.S. at
441 U. S.
559-560, n. 40. We subsequently vacated and remanded for
consideration in light of
Wolfish a Second Circuit
decision holding that the denial of contact visits was
unconstitutional.
Marcera v. Chinlund, 595 F.2d 1231,
vacated and remanded sub nom. Lombard v. Marcera, 442 U.S.
915 (1979). The issue was presented for review in
Jones v.
Diamond, supra. However, that case was ultimately dismissed
pursuant to this Court's Rule 53. 453 U.S. 950 (1981).
[
Footnote 8]
In
Wolfish itself, we characterized the maintenance of
security, internal order, and discipline as "essential goals,"
which at times require the "limitation or retraction of . . .
retained constitutional rights." 441 U.S. at
441 U. S. 546.
Government, we said,
"must be able to take steps to maintain security and order at
[an] institution and make certain no weapons or illicit drugs reach
detainees."
Id. at
441 U. S. 540.
See also Pell v. Procunier, 417 U.
S. 817,
417 U. S. 823
(1974).
[
Footnote 9]
The reasonableness of petitioners' blanket prohibition is
underscored by the costs -- financial and otherwise -- of the
alternative response ordered by the District Court. Jail personnel,
whom the District Court recognized are now free from the
"complicated, expensive, and time-consuming process[es]" of
interviewing, searching, and processing visitors, App. to Pet. for
Cert. 31, would have to be reassigned to perform these tasks,
perhaps requiring the hiring of additional personnel. Intrusive
strip searches after contact visits would be necessary. Finally, as
the District Court noted, at the very least, "modest" improvements
of existing facilities would be required to accommodate a contact
visitation program if the county did not purchase or build a new
facility elsewhere. These are substantial costs that a facility's
administrators might reasonably attempt to avoid.
[
Footnote 10]
Petitioners also note that the District Court's order in this
case is indistinguishable in any material respect from that
invalidated in
Wolfish. This is essentially correct,
although the order here is more limited in that it requires only
that those detainees in the general vicinity of their cells at the
time of the shakedowns, not all detainees, be allowed to observe
the search of their cells. In this context, however, where
deference to institutional administrators is the touchstone and
administrators are not required to employ the least restrictive
means available, these are not differences of constitutional
magnitude.
[
Footnote 11]
The District Court and Court of Appeals also sought to
distinguish the order here from that entered in
Wolfish on
the ground that the order in this case accommodated the
institutional concern that inmates not distract personnel during
the search and succeed in moving contraband before guards arrive at
a particular cell. This factual distinction is without legal
significance. In effect, the order here merely attempts to impose
on officials the least restrictive means available for
accomplishment of their security objectives. We reaffirm that
administrative officials are not obliged to adopt the least
restrictive means to meet their legitimate objectives.
Wolfish, 441 U.S. at
441 U. S. 542,
n. 25.
[
Footnote 12]
To the extent that respondents' brief in this Court can be read
to raise a procedural due process challenge to petitioners'
cell-search procedure -- a claim not made in
Wolfish -- we
reject the challenge. The governmental interests in conducting the
search in the absence of the detainees,
see, e.g., Wolfish,
supra, at
441 U. S.
555-556, and n. 36 -- a complex undertaking under
optimal conditions in a 5,000-inmate institution -- exceed whatever
possessory interests of the detainees might be implicated by the
search. Moreover, we believe that the risks of erroneous
deprivations of property under petitioners' procedure are
minimal.
JUSTICE BLACKMUN, concurring in the judgment.
I agree with the Court that neither the contact visitation
policy nor the cell-search policy at issue in this case violates
respondents' due process rights under the Fourteenth Amendment. I
write separately, however, because I do not believe that the Court
adequately has addressed the gravamen of respondents'
constitutional claims.
1. I disagree with the Court's treatment of the contact
visitation issue chiefly because, in my view, the Court has invoked
principles of judicial deference to administrative judgment that
have no place in the present litigation. As the Court made clear in
Bell v. Wolfish, 441 U. S. 520
(1979), and as it reaffirms here, a pretrial detainee who
challenges conditions of confinement on the ground that they amount
to punishment in violation of the Due Process Clause must show that
the conditions are the product of punitive intent.
See id.
at
441 U. S.
538-539, and nn.19 and 20, and
ante at
468 U. S. 584.
When a detainee attempts to demonstrate the existence of punitive
intent, either through direct proof of motive or through a
demonstration that the challenged conditions are not "reasonably
related to a legitimate governmental objective," 441 U.S. at
441 U. S. 539,
he necessarily is calling into question the good faith of prison
administrators. Under those circumstances, it seems to me to be
somewhat perverse to insist that a court assessing the rationality
of a particular administrative practice
Page 468 U. S. 593
must accord prison administrators
"'wide-ranging deference in the adoption and execution of
policies and practices that, in their judgment, are needed to
preserve internal order and discipline and to maintain
institutional security.'"
Ante at
468 U. S. 585,
quoting
Bell v. Wolfish, 441 U.S. at
441 U. S. 547.
Such a requirement boils down to a command that, when a court is
confronted with a charge of administrative bad faith, it must
evaluate the charge by assuming administrative good faith.
When a constitutional challenge to prison conditions necessarily
places the good faith of prison administrators at issue, I regard
it as improper to make the plaintiff prove his case twice by
requiring a court to defer to administrators' putative professional
judgment. Instead, I think it sufficient to rest on the substantive
due process standard announced in
Bell v. Wolfish itself:
absent direct proof of punitive intent, "a court permissibly may
infer that the purpose of [a challenged] governmental action is
punishment" if, but only if, the action "is not reasonably related
to a legitimate goal."
Id. at
441 U. S. 539.
The requirement that prison policies be reasonably related to a
legitimate goal is hardly a stringent one, and, for many of the
reasons given by the Court,
ante at
468 U. S.
586-587, I have no doubt that the requirement has been
met on the record presented here. I therefore am mystified by the
Court's insistence on invoking principles of judicial deference,
since those principles are not only inappropriate, but entirely
unnecessary to the result in this case.
More generally, I am concerned about the Court's apparent
willingness to substitute the rhetoric of judicial deference for
meaningful scrutiny of constitutional claims in the prison setting.
See Rhodes v. Chapman, 452 U. S. 337,
452 U. S. 369
(1981) (opinion concurring in judgment). Courts unquestionably
should be reluctant to second-guess prison administrators' opinions
about the need for security measures; when constitutional standards
look in whole or in part to the effectiveness of administrative
practices, good faith administrative
Page 468 U. S. 594
judgments are entitled to substantial weight. The fact that
particular measures advance prison security, however, does not make
them
ipso facto constitutional.
Cf. Bell v.
Wolfish, 441 U.S. at
441 U. S. 539,
n. 20. I recognize that constitutional challenges to prison
conditions, like similarly expansive challenges to the workings of
other institutions, pose a danger of excessive judicial
intervention. At the same time, however, careless invocations of
"deference" run the risk of returning us to the passivity of
several decades ago, when the then-prevailing barbarism and squalor
of many prisons were met with a judicial blind eye and a "hands off
" approach. As we recognized in
Bell v. Wolfish, the fact
that initial responsibility for the Nation's prisons is vested in
prison administrators "does not mean that constitutional rights are
not to be scrupulously observed."
Id. at
441 U. S. 562.
It is only because I am satisfied that the contact visitation
policy satisfies this standard under the Due Process Clause that I
join the Court's judgment.
2. The Court's treatment of the cell-search policy misconstrues
respondents' claim. The Court assumes that respondents are
challenging their exclusion from cell searches on substantive due
process grounds, and hence that the decision in
Bell v.
Wolfish is dispositive.
Ante at
468 U. S.
590-591. It is quite clear, however, that respondents
are challenging the cell search policy on procedural due process
grounds.
See Tr. of Oral Arg. 38 ("[T]his is a procedural
due process issue . . . rather than [an issue of] freedom from
punishment as a matter of substantive due process"); Brief for
Respondents 33-36. In essence, respondents are arguing that cell
searches result in the deprivation of their personal property, and
that the process due them under the Fourteenth Amendment includes
an opportunity to observe cell searches in order to minimize
erroneous deprivations. Because the Court did not address a
procedural due process claim in
Bell v. Wolfish, something
more must be said to support the judgment in this case.
Page 468 U. S. 595
Under
Mathews v. Eldridge, 424 U.
S. 319 (1976), the adequacy of governmental procedures
that accompany deprivations of property normally depends on a
balance of three factors: the private interest that will be
affected by the official action, the risk that the existing
procedures will result in an erroneous deprivation and the probable
value of additional procedural safeguards, and the governmental
interest in relying on the challenged procedures.
Id. at
424 U. S. 335.
Here, I do not dispute that the private interests at stake in cell
searches are potentially significant.
See Hudson v. Palmer,
ante at
468 U. S. 521,
468 U. S.
524-525 (opinion of the Court),
468 U. S.
553-554 (STEVENS, J., concurring in part and dissenting
in part). Nor is it possible to maintain that a pretrial detainee's
presence never would contribute to the avoidance of erroneous
deprivations. We noted in
Bell v. Wolfish that the
"prevent[ion of] theft or misuse by those conducting the search"
was a "conceivable beneficial effect" of allowing detainees to
observe cell searches, 441 U.S. at
441 U. S. 557,
and the District Judge in this case witnessed a search in which a
prisoner was able to prevent the mistaken seizure of two magazines
from his cell by explaining why they complied with prison
regulations. App. to Pet. for Cert. 36.
The countervailing governmental interests in conducting cell
searches outside the presence of pretrial detainees, however, are
substantial enough to persuade me that the Court of Appeals erred
in its due process determination. First, there is no reason to
think that "friction between the inmates and security guards,"
Bell v. Wolfish, 441 U.S. at
441 U. S. 555,
is any less likely to result from the presence of detainees here
than it was in
Bell v. Wolfish itself. Second, and more
significant, detainees may well learn where to hide contraband if
they are allowed to watch searches of their cells. As a result,
although the requirement of a detainee's presence during the course
of a search may not prevent the seizure of contraband during the
search itself,
cf. Calero-Toledo v. Pearson Yacht Leasing
Co., 416 U. S. 663,
416 U. S. 679
(1974), it may
Page 468 U. S. 596
frustrate future searches of the same detainee's cell. Quite
apart from security concerns, moreover, there undoubtedly are
"administrative burdens [entailed by] the additional or substitute
procedural requirement."
Mathews v. Eldridge, 424 U.S. at
424 U. S. 335.
For example, as petitioners point out, the jail now would be
required to dedicate an increased number of guards to the task of
accompanying each detainee from a holding area to his cell while
the search is being conducted. Just as different exigencies have
excused the requirement of predeprivation hearings in other
contexts,
see, e.g., Commissioner v. Shapiro, 424 U.
S. 614,
424 U. S.
629-630, and n. 12 (1976);
Calero-Toledo, 416
U.S. at
416 U. S.
676-680;
Phillips v. Commissioner, 283 U.
S. 589,
283 U. S.
596-597 (1931);
North American Cold Storage Co. v.
Chicago, 211 U. S. 306,
211 U. S.
315-316 (1908), so do these considerations tip the
balance against a
de facto predeprivation "hearing" for
pretrial detainees here. It is for this reason that I join the
judgment of the Court.
JUSTICE MARSHALL, with whom JUSTICE BRENNAN and JUSTICE STEVENS
join, dissenting.
This case marks the fourth time in recent years that the Court
has turned a deaf ear to inmates' claims that the conditions of
their confinement violate the Federal Constitution.
See Rhodes
v. Chapman, 452 U. S. 337
(1981);
Bell v. Wolfish, 441 U. S. 520
(1979);
Hudson v. Palmer, ante, p.
468 U. S. 517.
Guided by an unwarranted confidence in the good faith and
"expertise" of prison administrators and by a pinched conception of
the meaning of the Due Process Clauses and the Eighth Amendment, a
majority of the Court increasingly appears willing to sanction any
prison condition for which the majority can imagine a colorable
rationale, no matter how oppressive or ill-justified that condition
is in fact. So, here, the Court upholds two policies in force at
the Los Angeles County Central Jail. Under one, a pretrial detainee
is not permitted any physical contact with members of his
family,
Page 468 U. S. 597
regardless of how long he is incarcerated pending his trial or
how slight is the risk that he will abuse a visitation privilege.
Under the other, detainees are not allowed to observe searches of
their cells, despite the fact that such searches frequently result
in arbitrary destruction or confiscation of the detainees'
property. In my view, neither of these policies comports with the
Constitution.
I
In
Bell v. Wolfish, supra, the Court established a set
of principles defining constitutionally permissible treatment of
incarcerated persons who have not been convicted of crimes. In the
years since
Wolfish, I have not abandoned my view that the
Court's decision in that case was fundamentally misconceived.
See 441 U.S. at
441 U. S.
563-579 (MARSHALL, J., dissenting). However, even if I
thought the doctrine enunciated in
Wolfish was defensible,
I could not abide the manner in which the majority construes and
applies that doctrine to dispose of respondents' challenge to the
jail's rule against contact visitation.
One of the premises of the principal holding in
Wolfish
was that the plaintiffs' claims did not implicate any "fundamental
liberty interests" such as those
"delineated in . . .
Roe v. Wade, 410 U. S.
113 (1973);
Eisenstadt v. Baird, 405 U. S.
438 (1972);
Stanley v. Illinois, 405 U. S.
645 (1972);
Griswold v. Connecticut,
381 U. S.
479 (1965); [and]
Meyer v. Nebraska,
262 U. S.
390 (1923)."
Id. at
441 U. S.
534-535. Aside from the right not to be punished prior
to adjudication of guilt, the only general interest that could be
asserted by the plaintiffs in
Wolfish, the Court
contended, was a "desire to be free from discomfort."
Id.
at
441 U. S. 534.
[
Footnote 2/1] The comparatively
unimportant
Page 468 U. S. 598
nature of that interest made it possible for the Court to adopt
a deferential legal standard: "a particular condition or
restriction of pretrial detention" passes muster under the Due
Process Clause as long as it "is reasonably related to a legitimate
governmental objective,"
id. at
441 U. S.
539.
The Court today reiterates and relies on the foregoing test.
Ante at
468 U. S. 586.
In so doing, however, the Court ignores a crucial difference
between the interests at stake in
Wolfish and in this
case. Unlike the
Wolfish plaintiffs, respondents can and
do point to a fundamental right abridged by the jail's policy --
namely, their freedom to engage in and prevent the deterioration of
their relationships with their families.
The importance of the right asserted by respondents was
acknowledged by the District Court.
"[T]he ability of a man to embrace his wife and his children
from time to time during the weeks or months while he is awaiting
trial,"
the court found, "is a matter of great importance to him."
Rutherford v. Pitchess, 457 F.
Supp. 104, 110 (1978). [
Footnote
2/2] Denial of contact visitation, the court concluded, is
"very traumatic treatment." App. to Pet. for Cert. 25. Substantial
evidence in the record supports the District Court's findings.
William Nagel, an expert in the field of corrections, testified
that contact visitation was crucial in allowing prisoners to
maintain their familial bonds. Tr. 4174-4175. Similarly, Dr. Terry
Kupers, a psychiatrist, testified that denial of contact visitation
contributes to the breakup of prisoners' marriages and generally
threatens their mental health.
Id. at 4647-4651.
Page 468 U. S. 599
The secondary literature buttresses these assertions, [
Footnote 2/3] as do the conclusions reached
by other courts. [
Footnote 2/4]
The significant injury to familial relations wrought by the
jail's policy of denying contact visitation means that that policy
must be tested against a legal standard more constraining than the
rule announced in
Wolfish. Our cases leave no doubt that
persons' freedom to enter into, maintain, and cultivate familial
relations is entitled to constitutional protection.
E.g.,
Santosky v. Kramer, 455 U. S. 745,
455 U. S. 753
(1982). Among the relationships that we have expressly shielded
from state interference are bonds between spouses,
see Zablocki
v. Redhail, 434 U. S. 374
(1978), and between parents and their children,
see Wisconsin
v. Yoder, 406 U. S. 205
(1972);
Stanley v. Illinois, supra. The special status of
these relationships in our constitutional scheme derives from
several considerations: the fact that traditionally they have been
regarded as sacrosanct, [
Footnote
2/5] the important role they have played in fostering diversity
and pluralism in our culture, [
Footnote
2/6] and their centrality to the emotional life of many
persons. [
Footnote 2/7]
Determination of exactly how the doctrine established in the
aforementioned cases bears upon a ban on contact visitation
Page 468 U. S. 600
by pretrial detainees would be difficult. On the one hand, it
could be argued that the "withdrawal or limitation of many
privileges and rights" that necessarily accompanies incarceration,
Price v. Johnston, 334 U. S. 266,
334 U. S. 285
(1948), combined with the fact that the inmates' familial bonds are
not altogether severed by such a ban, means that something less
than a "compelling" government interest would suffice to legitimate
the impairment of the inmates' rights. [
Footnote 2/8] On the other hand, two factors suggest
that only a very important public purpose could sustain the policy.
First, even persons lawfully incarcerated after being convicted of
crimes retain important constitutional rights; [
Footnote 2/9] presumptively innocent persons surely
are entitled to no less. [
Footnote
2/10] Second, we have previously insisted upon very persuasive
justifications for government regulations that significantly, but
not prohibitively, interfered with the exercise of familial rights;
[
Footnote 2/11] arguably, a
similarly stringent test should control here. However, a sensitive
balancing of these competing considerations is unnecessary to
resolve the case before us. At a minimum,
Page 468 U. S. 601
petitioners, to prevail, should be required to show that the
jail's policy materially advances a substantial government
interest. Petitioners have not made and, on this record, could not
make such a demonstration. [
Footnote
2/12]
It should be emphasized that what petitioners must defend is not
their reluctance to allow
unlimited contact visitation,
but rather their refusal to adopt the specific reforms ordered by
the lower courts. The District Court's order, it should be
recalled, was carefully circumscribed:
"Commencing not more than ninety days following the date of this
order, the defendants will make available a contact visit once each
week to each pretrial detainee that has been held in the jail for
one month or more, and concerning whom there is no indication of
drug or escape propensities; provided, however, that no more than
fifteen hundred such visits need be allowed in any one week. In the
event that the number of requested visits in any week exceeds
fifteen hundred, or such higher number as the Sheriff voluntarily
undertakes to accommodate, a reasonable system of rotation or other
priorities may be maintained. The lengths of such visits shall
remain in the discretion of the Sheriff."
App. to Pet. for Cert. 38. Petitioners object to this order, and
defend their current rule prohibiting all contact between inmates
and their families, on two main grounds. Neither of the proffered
justifications survives scrutiny.
First, petitioners contend that a ban on contact visitation is
necessary to prevent the introduction into the jail of drugs
Page 468 U. S. 602
and weapons. It must be admitted that this is a legitimate and
important goal. However, petitioners fail to show that its
realization would be materially impaired by adoption of the reforms
ordered by the District Court. Indeed, evidence adduced at trial
establishes the contrary. Several witnesses testified that security
procedures could be implemented that would make importation of
contraband very difficult. Among the precautions effectively used
at other institutions are: searches of prisoners before and after
visits; dressing of prisoners in special clothes for visitation;
examination of prisoners and visitors with metal detectors and
fluoroscopes; exclusion of parcels from the visiting area;
rejection of visitors who do not comply with visiting rules; and
continuous observation of the visiting area by guards.
E.g., Tr. 4164-4166, 4232, 4576-4577. [
Footnote 2/13] Mr. Nagel testified that these
procedures would "prevent everything except the most extreme
methods of introducing drugs into the institution."
Id. at
4170. Further protection against the transmission of contraband
from visitors to inmates is provided by the District Court's
restriction of its order to inmates who have been classified as low
risk. In short, there is no reason to think that compliance with
the lower courts' directive would result in more than a negligible
increase in the flow of drugs or weapons into the jail. [
Footnote 2/14]
Second, petitioners contend that allowance of contact visitation
would endanger innocent visitors who are placed in near proximity
to dangerous detainees. Again, though the
Page 468 U. S. 603
importance of the objective is apparent, the nexus between it
and the jail's current policy is not. As indicated above, the
District Court's order applies only to detainees who are unlikely
to try to escape. And security measures could be employed by
petitioners that would make it very difficult for inmates to hurt
or take advantage of visitors.
See supra at
468 U. S. 602.
Finally, the administrators of other institutions that have long
permitted contact visits between inmates and their families
testified at trial that violent incidents resulting from such
visitation are rare, apparently because inmates value their
visitation privileges so highly. [
Footnote 2/15]
The majority seeks to shore up petitioners' two arguments with
miscellaneous subsidiary claims. In an effort to discredit the
limitations on the District Court's order, the majority argues that
determination of which inmates have a sufficiently low propensity
to misbehave would be difficult and time-consuming, especially in
light of "the brevity of detention and the constantly changing
nature of the inmate population."
Ante at
468 U. S. 587.
This contention is rebutted by the District Court's finding that,
after an inmate has been incarcerated for a month, jail officials
have considerable information regarding his background and behavior
patterns, and by evidence in the record that the jail already has a
classification system that, with some modification and improvement,
could be used to evaluate detainees' propensities for escape and
drug abuse. App. to Pet. for Cert. 33. [
Footnote 2/16] Next, the majority contends that
compliance with the District
Page 468 U. S. 604
Court's order would be expensive.
Ante at
468 U. S. 588,
n. 9. Again, the District Court's findings are decisive; the court
found that only "modest" changes in the jail facilities would be
required. App. to Pet. for Cert. 33. More fundamentally, a desire
to run a jail as cheaply as possible is not a legitimate reason for
abridging the constitutional rights of its occupants. Finally, the
majority suggests that the District Court's order might cause some
dissension in the jail, because inmates denied visitation
privileges would resent those granted such privileges.
Ante at
468 U. S. 587.
There is no evidence whatsoever in the record to support this
speculative observation.
In sum, neither petitioners nor the majority have shown that
permitting low-risk pretrial detainees who have been incarcerated
for more than a month occasionally to have contact visits with
their spouses and children would frustrate the achievement of any
substantial state interest. [
Footnote
2/17] Because such visitation would significantly alleviate the
adverse impact of the jail's current policies upon respondents'
familial rights, its deprivation violates the Due Process
Clause.
II
The majority brusquely rejects respondents' challenge to the
jail's policy of refusing to permit detainees to observe
Page 468 U. S. 605
searches of their cells on the ground that respondents' claim is
foreclosed by the decision in
Wolfish. If respondents'
claim were indeed identical to that presented by the
Wolfish plaintiffs, I would vote to affirm on this issue
for the reasons stated in my dissenting opinion in
Wolfish. See 441 U.S. at
441 U. S. 576.
In fact, however, the two cases differ in a crucial respect, and
that difference provides an independent ground for sustaining the
judgment below.
The Court in
Wolfish held that the policy adopted by
the Metropolitan Correctional Center of not allowing pretrial
detainees to observe searches of their cells did not violate the
Fourth Amendment and did not constitute punishment violative of the
Due Process Clause.
Id. at
441 U. S.
556-557,
441 U. S.
560-561. Respondents in this case make a quite different
claim. They assert that the Central Jail's policy of searching
cells and confiscating or destroying personal possessions found
therein, without allowing inmates to observe those searches,
deprives inmates of property without due process of law. On the
record before us, I think respondents' claim is meritorious.
One of the purposes of the Due Process Clause is to reduce the
incidence of error in deprivations of life, liberty, or property.
See Fuentes v. Shevin, 407 U. S. 67,
407 U. S. 80-81
(1972). One of the ways such error can be reduced, in turn, is by
allowing persons whose interests may be affected adversely by
government decisions to participate in those decisions. In
Mathews v. Eldridge, 424 U. S. 319
(1976), the Court identified a complex of considerations that are
helpful in determining whether the Constitution mandates such
participation in particular contexts:
"[I]dentification of the specific dictates of due process
generally requires consideration of three distinct factors: first,
the private interest that will be affected by the official action;
second, the risk of an erroneous deprivation of such interest
through the procedures used, and the probable value, if any, of
additional or substitute procedural
Page 468 U. S. 606
safeguards; and finally, the Government's interest, including
the function involved and the fiscal and administrative burdens
that the additional or substitute procedural requirement would
entail."
Id. at
424 U. S.
335.
Application of these factors to the facts of the instant case
provides strong support for the judgment of the courts below. As
the District Court aptly observed, the private interests affected
by the jail's cell-search procedure are important.
"The possessions that a man is allowed to keep in his cell are
meager indeed, being limited to things like a few pictures,
magazines, cigarettes, candy bars, and perhaps an extra pair of
socks. Nonetheless, these items are cherished by the inmates."
App. to Pet. for Cert. 27-28. [
Footnote 2/18] Next, the District Court found that the
risk, under the jail's current policy, that inmates' possessions
will be destroyed unnecessarily is substantial. Unannounced
shakedown searches inevitably are somewhat hasty, and the officers
conducting them have significant discretion in deciding what to
leave and what to confiscate.
Id. at 28. If allowed to
observe the process, inmates can persuade the officers to preserve
possessions that would otherwise be destroyed.
Ibid.
[
Footnote 2/19] Finally, to allow
detainees to witness searches of their cells
Page 468 U. S. 607
would impose only slight burdens on the jail officials. In
response to the District Court's original order, petitioners
developed alternative methods of conducting shakedown searches,
each of which made it possible for inmates to be present. One of
those procedures, known as "Method C," proved to be no less
effectual, no more time-consuming, and only slightly more expensive
than the practice challenged by respondents. [
Footnote 2/20] The demonstrated feasibility
[
Footnote 2/21] and minor cost of
this option renders indefensible, in my view, petitioners'
insistence that detainees not be permitted to observe cell
searches.
In sum, this seems a classic instance in which an "established
state procedure," as distinguished from "a random and
Page 468 U. S. 608
unauthorized act by a state employee," has the effect of causing
unnecessary deprivations of private property.
Compare Logan v.
Zimmerman Brush Co., 455 U. S. 422,
455 U. S.
435-436 (1982),
with Hudson v. Palmer, ante p.
468 U. S. 517,
and Parratt v. Taylor, 451 U. S. 527,
451 U. S. 541
(1981). In view of the ease with which petitioners could implement
an alternative procedure that would reduce the incidence of wanton
destruction of inmates' possessions, I would affirm the judgment of
the courts below that the jail's current practice violates the Due
Process Clause. [
Footnote
2/22]
I respectfully dissent.
[
Footnote 2/1]
The
Wolfish plaintiffs did assert various other rights
in challenging specific conditions in their prison.
See,
e.g., 441 U.S. at
441 U. S.
548-552 (First Amendment);
id. at
441 U. S.
555-557 (Fourth Amendment). But the Court did not
consider those particular interests in formulating its general
standard (on which the Court relies today) for determining the
constitutionality, under the Due Process Clause, of the treatment
of pretrial detainees.
See id. at
441 U. S. 530,
441 U. S.
534-535.
[
Footnote 2/2]
It should be stressed that, while most of the jail inmates are
detained for only brief periods of time (and thus are not covered
by the District Court's order), some are detained for very
substantial periods. For example, plaintiffs Rutherford and Taylor
were held in the jail pending their trials for 38 months and 32
months, respectively. App. 53.
[
Footnote 2/3]
See, e.g., Zemans & Cavan, Marital Relationships of
Prisoners, 49 J.Crim.L., C. & P. S. 50 (1958); Note, On
Prisoners and Parenting: Preserving the Tie that Binds, 87 Yale
L.J. 1408, 1416, 1424 (1978).
[
Footnote 2/4]
See Jones v. Diamond, 636 F.2d 1364, 1377 (CA5),
cert. granted sub nom. Ledbetter v. Jones, 452 U.S. 959,
cert. dism'd, 453 U.S. 950 (1981);
Boudin v.
Thomas, 533 F.
Supp. 786, 792-793 (SDNY 1982) (pointing out,
inter
alia, that, when an inmate's child is too young to talk,
denial of contact visitation is the equivalent of denial of any
visitation whatsoever);
Rhem v. Malcolm, 371 F.
Supp. 594, 602-603 (SDNY),
aff'd, 507 F.2d 333 (CA2
1974).
[
Footnote 2/5]
See Bellotti v. Baird, 443 U.
S. 622,
443 U. S. 638
(1979) (plurality opinion);
Meyer v. Nebraska,
262 U. S. 390,
262 U. S. 402
(1923).
[
Footnote 2/6]
See Moore v. East Cleveland, 431 U.
S. 494,
431 U. S. 506
(1977) (plurality opinion);
Pierce v. Society of Sisters,
268 U. S. 510,
268 U. S. 535
(1925).
[
Footnote 2/7]
See Smith v. Organization of Foster Families,
431 U. S. 816,
431 U. S. 844
(1977);
Stanley v. Illinois, 405 U.
S. 645,
405 U. S. 652
(1972).
[
Footnote 2/8]
Cf. Schall v. Martin, 467 U. S. 253,
467 U. S. 291,
n. 15 (1984) (MARSHALL, J., dissenting) (suggesting a test under
which "the strength of the state interest needed to legitimate a
statute [would depend] upon the
degree to which the
statute encroaches upon fundamental rights") (emphasis in original;
citation omitted);
Bell v. Wolfish, 441 U.
S. 520,
441 U. S.
569-571 (1979) (MARSHALL, J., dissenting).
[
Footnote 2/9]
See, e.g., Procunier v. Martinez, 416 U.
S. 396 (1974) (freedom of speech);
Lee v.
Washington, 390 U. S. 333
(1968) (per curiam) (equal protection of the laws);
cf. Wolff
v. McDonnell, 418 U. S. 539,
418 U. S.
555-556 (1974) ("There is no iron curtain drawn between
the Constitution and the prisons of this country").
[
Footnote 2/10]
Cf. Bell v. Wolfish, supra, at
441 U. S. 535,
n. 16 (pretrial detainees, unlike sentenced inmates, may not be
punished).
[
Footnote 2/11]
See, e.g., Zablocki v. Redhail, 434 U.
S. 374,
434 U. S. 387
(1978) (invalidating a statute that, as applied to most persons,
seriously intruded upon, but did not abrogate, the right to marry);
Cleveland Board of Education v. LaFleur, 414 U.
S. 632,
414 U. S. 640
(1974) (striking down administrative regulations that imposed a
"heavy burden" on teachers' right to have children).
[
Footnote 2/12]
Respondents contend that, even if this case were controlled by
the standard enunciated in
Wolfish, they should prevail,
because petitioners have not advanced even a "legitimate
governmental objective" in support of the jail's policy. Because of
the manner in which I approach the case, I need not address
respondents' argument on this score.
[
Footnote 2/13]
The majority implies that the intrusiveness of some of these
measures provides an additional justification for petitioners'
refusal to allow any contact visitation.
See ante at
468 U. S. 588,
n. 9. It is possible that some inmates or visitors might decide to
forgo visitation rather than submit to such procedures, but surely
the choice should be left to them.
[
Footnote 2/14]
It should be pointed out that drugs and weapons enter the jail
in significant quantities through several other routes.
See Tr. 3307, 4526-4527;
cf. id. at 4589-4590,
4624-4625 (describing similar problems at other institutions). It
would thus be a mistake to think that the jail is currently free of
contraband, and that the small amounts that might enter the
facility through contact visitation would infect the facility for
the first time.
[
Footnote 2/15]
For example, Arnett Gaston, Warden of the New York City Men's
House of Detention (Riker's Island), testified that significant
physical confrontations have been largely absent from his facility.
Id. at 4368. Lloyd Patterson, Superintendent of Deuel
Vocational Institution for 10 years, testified that he could recall
only three or four incidents during that period.
Id. at
4589. Mr. Nagel, drawing on his 11 years of experience in the New
Jersey prison system and visits to more than 350 other
institutions, corroborated those observations.
Id. at
4167-4168.
[
Footnote 2/16]
Lieutenant Thomas Lonergan testified at trial that, at present,
the identities and backgrounds of 70% of the inmates are
ascertained within three weeks of their admission.
Id. at
4450-4451.
[
Footnote 2/17]
The feasibility of the limited contact visitation program
ordered by the District Court is further suggested by the number of
other institutions that have similar programs. Approximately 80% of
the inmates in the California prison system are permitted contact
visitation.
Id. at 4587. It appears that the current
policy of the Federal Bureau of Prisons is to allow visitation
privileges to both convicted inmates and pretrial detainees.
See id. at 1955. In New York City, all except identifiably
dangerous pretrial detainees are permitted contact visits with
their families.
Id. at 4339, 4362. (Indeed, the agency
that oversees the operation of the city's detention facilities has
filed a brief contending that contact visitation is feasible, and
that its denial must be deemed punitive. Brief for New York City
Board of Correction as
Amicus Curiae 9-29.)
[
Footnote 2/18]
Cf. Hudson v. Palmer, ante at
468 U. S. 542
(STEVENS, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part) ("Personal
letters, snapshots of family members, a souvenir, a deck of cards,
a hobby kit, perhaps a diary or a training manual for an apprentice
in a new trade, or even a Bible -- a variety of inexpensive items
may enable a prisoner to maintain contact with some part of his
past and an eye to the possibility of a better future").
[
Footnote 2/19]
This last finding is based in part on the District Court Judge's
visit to the jail:
"My own limited observation, as is mentioned in my memorandum of
February 15, 1979, revealed an instance upon which the opportunity
for a prisoner to make a plea or an explanation on his own behalf
resulted in saving his property from confiscation. It was obvious
that this fact meant a good deal to him, and I believe that the
incident justifies a significant generalization."
App. to Pet. for Cert. 28;
see id. at 36.
[
Footnote 2/20]
The District Court described this procedure, and compared it
with the jail's present policy, as follows:
"Method A involved searching all of the cells in a row while the
inmates remained in the day room, which is the manner in which
searches currently are conducted. In Method C, the men occupying a
particular cell were brought from the day room and stood outside
their cell while it was being searched. When such search was
completed, the men were locked in their cell and the remaining
cells were searched successively in the same manner. Methods B and
D are so unsatisfactory and expensive that no further comment
concerning them is indicated."
"According to the statistics reported by the defendants, Methods
A and C take substantially the same amount of time, and C is
slightly more expensive, due to the need to utilize a few more
deputies to escort the prisoners and to insure against assault upon
the deputies that are engaged in searching the cell."
Id. at 35-36;
see Tr. 4122-4143 (testimony of
Deputy Sheriff Lombardi).
[
Footnote 2/21]
In their brief, petitioners object to Method C on one ground
they did not press below. Relying on a single comment made at trial
by Deputy Sheriff Lombardi, petitioners contend that detainees, if
allowed to observe cell searches, would learn where they could hide
contraband with impunity.
Id. at 4116. Deputy Lombardi
offered no substantiation for her prediction, and indeed, when
summarizing petitioners' objections to Method C, did not consider
this point important enough even to mention.
See id. at
4132-4133. Especially in the absence of any finding on this issue
by the District Court, petitioners' bald contention seems to me
entitled to little weight.
[
Footnote 2/22]
Cf. Hudson v. Palmer, ante at
468 U. S. 541,
n. 4 (STEVENS, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part)
(observing that the holding of the Court in
Hudson does
not cover "cases in which it is contended that the established
prison procedures themselves create an unreasonable risk that
prisoners will be unjustifiably deprived of their property").