United States Court of Appeals
For the Eighth Circuit
___________________________
No. 14-1522
___________________________
Shannon M. Peters,
lllllllllllllllllllll Plaintiff - Appellant,
v.
Michelle Risdal; Lee Blanchard; Jonathan Hatfield; Carlos Lucero, Individually
and as Deputy Sheriffs/Jailers of Woodbury County, Iowa,
lllllllllllllllllllll Defendants - Appellees.
____________
Appeal from United States District Court
for the Northern District of Iowa - Sioux City
____________
Submitted: October 6, 2014
Filed: June 22, 2015
____________
Before LOKEN, BEAM, and COLLOTON, Circuit Judges.
____________
COLLOTON, Circuit Judge.
Sioux City police officers arrested Shannon Peters for violation of a no-contact
order and took her to the county jail. As the situation evolved, officers forcibly
removed her clothing and required her to wear a paper suit because of concern that she
might harm herself. Peters brought suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, claiming that she was
unreasonably “strip-searched” in violation of the Fourth Amendment.
The district court1 granted summary judgment in favor of the officers. The case
proceeded to trial on other claims, and a jury returned a verdict in favor of the officers.
Peters moved for a new trial, arguing that the district court should have instructed the
jury on her unreasonable search claim, and the court denied the motion. Peters
appeals the rulings on her Fourth Amendment search claim, and we affirm.
I.
As of May 2012, an Iowa court had entered an order requiring no contact
between Peters and her boyfriend. While the order was in effect, Sioux City police
officers stopped a speeding car that was driven by the boyfriend, and they found that
Peters was a passenger. Police arrested her for violating the no-contact order and
transported her to the Woodbury County Jail for booking.
Officers Michelle Risdal and Jonathan Hatfield were present at the booking
counter when Peters was received. A security video showed the officers attempting
to obtain information from Peters. After several minutes, Peters became agitated,
began shouting at the officers, and refused to answer the remainder of the booking
questions, including questions designed to determine whether she presented a risk of
harm to herself. Sergeant Lee Blanchard then directed the officers to terminate the
booking process, and Risdal escorted Peters to a holding cell.
Risdal entered the holding cell with Peters, and Hatfield and Blanchard
remained in the hallway. Blanchard then asked Risdal whether Peters had answered
questions designed to determine whether she presented a risk of suicide. Risdal
repeated the questions, and Peters refused to respond, instead yelling “[w]hy the fuck
would I want to hurt myself?”
1
The Honorable Mark W. Bennett, United States District Judge for the Northern
District of Iowa.
-2-
At the time of her arrest, Peters was wearing a bathing suit under a shirt and
sweat pants. After Peters’s response to the officers’ questioning, Risdal determined
that Peters presented a risk of harm to herself, and told Peters to remove her clothing.
Risdal says she was concerned that Peters could harm herself with the strings on her
swimsuit. Peters refused to comply with Risdal’s demand.
Blanchard looked into the cell and saw Peters facing Risdal in what he
perceived to be an aggressive manner. Blanchard and Hatfield then entered the cell
and told Peters to calm down and to follow Risdal’s instructions. Peters persisted in
her refusal to comply, and she shouted at Blanchard that he should not “get in [her]
face.” Blanchard then grabbed and turned Peters’s hand, causing Peters to fall face
down onto the bunk in the holding cell. Risdal and Hatfield assisted Blanchard in
restraining Peters. Another officer, Carlos Lucero, entered the cell and assisted as
well.
Peters continued to resist the officers, and Blanchard applied pressure with his
right thumb below Peters’s left ear in an effort to control her. The officers then placed
a paper suit over Peters, and Risdal removed Peters’s clothing. After Risdal removed
Peters’s clothing, the officers left Peters in the cell with the paper suit.
Peters sued the officers in the district court, alleging that she was subjected to
an unreasonable search, that her right to freedom of speech was violated, and that the
officers used excessive force. The district court granted summary judgment in favor
of the officers on the unreasonable search claim, concluding that the forced removal
of Peters’s clothing did not violate her rights, and that if it did, then the officers were
entitled to qualified immunity.
After a jury returned a verdict for the officers on Peters’s remaining claims,
Peters moved for a new trial, arguing as relevant here that the district court should
have instructed the jury on Peters’s unreasonable search claim. The district court
-3-
denied the motion, reasoning that the grant of summary judgment in favor of the
officers justified the decision not to submit the claim to the jury.
II.
Peters contends on appeal that the officers violated her Fourth Amendment
rights when they forcibly removed her clothing in the holding cell. The officers
maintain that the removal of Peters’s clothing was justified by concern for her safety,
given her displays of emotion and belligerence, and her refusal to answer questions
designed to determine whether she posed a risk of suicide. Peters rejoins that her
response to the officers’ questions—asking rhetorically why she would want to hurt
herself—should have been interpreted as a statement that she had no intention to harm
herself. Therefore, she contends, a reasonable jury could have concluded that the
officers had no reasonable grounds for their actions.
In assessing the reasonableness of the officers’ conduct in a detention setting,
we balance the need for the particular intrusion against the invasion of personal rights
that it entails. Bell v. Wolfish, 441 U.S. 520, 559 (1979). “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.
Concern for a detainee’s safety can justify requiring a detainee to undress and
change into a paper suit. Hill v. McKinley, 311 F.3d 899, 903 (8th Cir. 2002). The
officers here knew that Peters was visibly upset, and that she refused to respond to the
medical screening questions designed to determine whether she posed a threat of harm
to herself. A reasonable officer was not required to construe Peters’s retort—“Why
the fuck would I want to hurt myself?”—as a satisfactory declaration that she
presented no risk of harm to herself. A reasonable officer is not required to give the
most generous interpretation to a detainee’s profane non-response in the midst of a
jailhouse booking interview. Peters also refused to comply with Risdal’s instruction
-4-
to change into an orange jumpsuit while the male officers were outside the holding
cell, and she then acted aggressively toward the male officers when they entered.
Under the circumstances, we conclude that it was objectively reasonable for the
officers to believe that Peters presented a risk of harm to herself if she was permitted
to retain the strings on her clothing.
As for the scope of the intrusion, requiring a detainee to disrobe in the presence
of officers invades the privacy of the detainee to a significant degree. But in this case,
the officers caused the intrusion only after lesser measures failed, and they minimized
the intrusion. Peters was given more than one opportunity to answer the suicide
questions before the officers directed her to disrobe. After Peters refused to respond,
the officers gave her a chance to change into a jumpsuit in the presence of a female
officer alone. When Peters refused to comply with Risdal’s instruction to change into
the jumpsuit, she was given another opportunity to change on her own when
Blanchard and Hatfield entered the holding cell. Finally, when Peters became
aggressive toward Blanchard, the officers restrained her face down on her stomach
and covered her with a paper suit while Risdal removed her clothing. The manner in
which the intrusion was conducted thus limited the extent to which Peters’s body was
exposed to the officers.
The place of the action—a holding cell for detainees, removed from public
view—also supports the reasonableness of the officers’ conduct. “The expectations
of privacy of an individual taken into police custody ‘necessarily [are] of a diminished
scope.’” Maryland v. King, 133 S. Ct. 1958, 1978 (2013) (quoting Bell, 441 U.S. at
557). The intrusion here was conducted outside the presence of other inmates and
involved more than one officer only because Peters refused to cooperate with the
female officer who requested that Peters change clothes.
Balancing the considerations outlined in Bell, we agree with the district court
that the officers acted reasonably, and that Peters’s claim failed as a matter of law.
-5-
Because the district court correctly granted the motion for summary judgment, there
was no reason to instruct the jury on this claim, and the motion for a new trial was
properly denied.
* * *
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
______________________________
-6-