KRAVITCH, Senior Circuit Judge, dissenting, in which HATCHETT,
Chief Judge, and BARKETT, Circuit Judge, join:
I fully agree that government officials acting within their
discretionary authority should be shielded from liability for
violating rights of which a reasonable person would not have
known. The majority and I differ only as to whether the
schoolhouse Fourth Amendment standard announced by the Supreme
Court in New Jersey v. T.L.O., 469 U.S. 325 (1985), would lead a
reasonable person to understand that the conduct in this case was
prohibited. The majority finds qualified immunity by
characterizing the Supreme Court's test as too general to guide
any teacher, unless subsequent controlling precedent has applied
it to virtually identical facts. In my view, stating that a
constitutional test is general or that factually similar
precedent is lacking bypasses the fundamental inquiry set out by
the Supreme Court: determining whether the governing
constitutional standard provides sufficient guidance, given the
facts of the case, “that a reasonable official would understand
that what he is doing violates [a constitutional] right.”
Anderson v. Creighton, 483 U.S. 635, 640 (1987). Because I
believe that T.L.O. sufficiently forewarns teachers that strip
searching eight-year-olds in pursuit of a few dollars violates
the Fourth Amendment, I respectfully dissent.
Qualified immunity balances the competing concerns present
in civil rights suits. Immunity serves the public “'need to
protect officials who are required to exercise their discretion
and the related public interest in encouraging the vigorous
1
exercise of official authority.'” Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 457 U.S.
800, 807 (1982) (quoting Butz v. Economou, 438 U.S. 478, 506
(1978)). Taken too far, however, immunity can undermine the
purpose of section 1983 altogether, giving officials license to
violate the most basic and longstanding constitutional rights.
Qualified immunity accommodates these interests by protecting
those who act in reasonable reliance upon established legal
principles but permitting liability for clearly unconstitutional
conduct. Thus, immunity attaches only when official “conduct
does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional
rights of which a reasonable person would have known.” Harlow,
457 U.S. at 818.
Interpreting the term “clearly established,” the Supreme
Court has warned courts not to base liability upon expansive
legal truisms or to ignore material factual differences between
present cases and precedent establishing the asserted
constitutional right. In Anderson, the Court emphasized that a
right is not clearly established unless “[t]he contours of the
right [are] sufficiently clear that a reasonable official would
understand that what he is doing violates that right.” 483 U.S.
at 640.1 We since have stated that “[g]eneral propositions have
little to do with . . . qualified immunity.” Muhammad v.
1
We have explained that “the law must have earlier been
developed in such a concrete and factually defined context to
make it obvious to all reasonable government actors, in the
defendant's place, that 'what he is doing' violates federal law.”
Lassiter v. Alabama A&M Univ., Bd. of Trustees, 28 F.3d 1146,
1149 (11th Cir. 1994) (en banc).
2
Wainwright, 839 F.2d 1422, 1424 (11th Cir. 1987). Thus,
qualified immunity applies where the plaintiff can identify only
unworkable abstractions from prior case law and cannot show how
those principles would be applied later to different facts.2
Neither the Supreme Court nor this court, however, require
factual identity between prior and subsequent cases, for that
would create absolute immunity.3
I review these principles because the majority has taken a
rigid approach to their application in the present case. Our
various formulations of the “clearly established” test -- that
prior cases must be factually similar to the case at bar, that
general abstractions are unhelpful -- represent a shorthand way
of saying that the clarity of a constitutional right (and,
therefore, official liability) depends upon the interplay of the
legal standard and the factual context to which the plaintiff
2
For example, if the present case had arisen prior to
T.L.O., a teacher would have had no reasonable way of knowing
when she could search a given student, because the Fourth
Amendment had been haphazardly applied to schools. Some courts
had held that it permitted searches only upon probable cause, see
State v. Mora, 330 So.2d 900 (La.), cert. denied, 429 U.S. 1004
(1976); others had held that school children enjoyed no Fourth
Amendment protection, as school officials acted in loco parentis.
See In re Donaldson, 75 Cal. Rptr. 220 (Dist. Ct. App. 1969).
3
See Anderson, 483 U.S. at 640 (“This is not to say that an
official action is protected by qualified immunity unless the
very action in question has previously been held unlawful, but it
is to say that in the light of pre-existing law the unlawfulness
must be apparent.”) (citations omitted); Adams v. St. Lucie
County Sheriff's Dept., 962 F.2d 1563, 1575 (11th Cir. 1992)
(Edmondson, J., dissenting), approved en banc, 998 F.2d 923 (11th
Cir. 1993) (“The facts [of prior precedent] need not be the same
as the facts of the immediate case. But they do need to be
materially similar.”).
3
alleges it applies. But it is not enough simply to label pre-
existing law “general,” or to identify factual distinctions in
relevant precedent. Instead, a court must determine whether the
generality of a rule casts doubt on its application to the
present case or whether factual distinctions from prior precedent
are “material,” that is, they make the legal rule inapplicable in
the later case or suggest that the present conduct is
permissible.4 By contrast, the majority today, declaring T.L.O.
both general and factually distinguishable, abandons further
analysis. This, I believe, is error.
As the Supreme Court recently reaffirmed, the search for
specific rules in factually concrete cases should not overshadow
the purpose of such a search -- determining whether the
government actor had fair warning that his/her conduct was
unconstitutional. In United States v. Lanier, 117 S. Ct. 1219
(1997), the Court unanimously held that: (1) civil rights
liability requires only “fair warning” of constitutional rights,
117 S. Ct. at 1224-27; and (2) neither prior Supreme Court
precedent nor factually similar precedent is necessary to provide
such warning. The Court confirmed that decisional law generally,
not only from the Supreme Court, can establish a right. Id. at
4
For example, in Hartsfield v. Lemacks, 50 F.3d 950 (11th
Cir. 1995), we rejected a qualified immunity defense in the face
of a broad constitutional test. On the facts of that case, we
held the police clearly failed to make “reasonable efforts” to
avoid erroneous execution of a search warrant, thereby violating
the Fourth Amendment.
4
1226-27.5 More importantly for present purposes, the Court
stressed that rights founded on general statements of law may be
enforced against government actors. It observed that “notable
factual distinctions” between prior cases and later ones did not
require automatic immunity:
[G]eneral statements of the law are not inherently
incapable of giving fair and clear warning, and . . . a
general constitutional rule already identified in the
decisional law may apply with obvious clarity to the
specific conduct in question, even though “the very
action in question has [not] previously been held
unlawful”. . . .
Id. at 1227 (quoting Anderson, 483 U.S. at 640). The purpose of
factual specificity is to warn government officials when a
constitutional test does not, by its own terms, apply to present
actions. Thus, it is necessary only when “an earlier case
expressly leaves open whether a general rule applies to the
5
I note the tension between the Court's reasoning and the
majority's suggestion, ante at 13 n.2, that only the Supreme
Court, Eleventh Circuit, or the highest court of the state can
“clearly establish” the law. Compare Courson v. McMillan, 939
F.2d 1479, 1497-98 (11th Cir. 1991) (only in-circuit precedent
relevant) and Hansen v. Soldenwagner, 19 F.3d 573, 578 n.6 (11th
Cir. 1994) (same) with Lanier, 117 S. Ct. at 1226-27 (“Although
the Sixth Circuit was concerned . . . that disparate decisions in
various Circuits might leave the law insufficiently certain even
on a point widely considered, such a circumstance may be taken
into account in deciding whether the warning is fair enough,
without any need for a categorical rule that decisions of the
Courts of Appeals and other courts are inadequate as a matter of
law to provide it.”); Elder v. Holloway, 114 S. Ct. 1019, 1023
(1994) (“A court engaging in review of a qualified immunity
judgment should . . . use its full knowledge of its own and other
relevant precedents.”) (internal alterations and quotations
omitted) and Greason v. Kemp, 891 F.2d 829, 833 (11th Cir. 1990)
("we look to the law established by the Supreme Court, the courts
of appeals, and the district courts.").
5
particular type of conduct at issue. . . .” Id.6
Lanier is consistent both with prior Supreme Court precedent
and the policy underlying qualified immunity. The Court has
always required only that the “unlawfulness must be apparent,”
Anderson, 483 U.S. at 640, so actors “reasonably can anticipate
when their conduct may give rise to liability. . . .” Davis v.
Scherer, 468 U.S. 183, 195 (1984). Further, excepting all
unconstitutional conduct governed by “general” constitutional
standards would vitiate the balance struck by qualified immunity,
as officials in clear violation of broad rules would escape
liability.
Thus, we cannot dismiss T.L.O. by attaching the appellation
“general” to the test it announces or by pointing to the absence
of prior factually similar cases. In T.L.O., the Supreme Court
noted lower courts' conflicting views regarding the application
of the Fourth Amendment to schools, 469 U.S. at 332 n.2, and
squarely addressed the issues before us today: when a search by a
school official is authorized, and how intrusive a search the
6
The majority dismisses Lanier as irrelevant to the instant
case. I cannot agree. Although it concedes that "general
principles of law can provide clear warning," ante at 16 n.3
(emphasis omitted), the majority is unwilling to accept T.L.O.'s
guidance in the absence of its application to "facts materially
similar to those of this school search." Id. at 17. Likewise, it
reasons that "school officials cannot be required to construe
general legal formulations that have not once been applied to a
specific set of facts by any binding judicial authority." Id. at
18-19. I believe this analysis ignores Lanier's intent and,
indeed, the Court's intent throughout its qualified immunity
jurisprudence. Lanier and its precursors make liable those who
violate established constitutional norms, even ones with a short
pedigree in the decisional law.
6
Fourth Amendment tolerates. As the majority recounts, the Court
adopted a test born of the Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1 (1968),
“reasonableness” standard, but did not leave us with
reasonableness alone. It announced a two-pronged test: first,
the search must be justified at its inception, that is, “there
are reasonable grounds for suspecting that the search will turn
up evidence that the student has violated or is violating either
the law or the rules of the school,” 469 U.S. at 342; and second,
the search must be permissible in scope, that is, “the measures
adopted are reasonably related to the objectives of the search
and not excessively intrusive in light of the age and sex of the
student and the nature of the infraction.” Id.7
This standard obviously can establish the law for certain
factual situations. For example, if school rules disallow
chewing gum on campus, would the Fourth Amendment permit a strip
search by a male teacher of a young girl reasonably suspected of
bubblegum possession? Plainly not. See, e.g., Cornfield v.
Consolidated High Sch. Dist. No. 230, 991 F.2d 1316, 1320 (7th
Cir. 1993) (“A nude search of a student by an administrator or
teacher of the opposite sex would obviously violate [the T.L.O.]
standard. Moreover, a highly intrusive search in response to a
minor infraction would similarly not comport with . . . T.L.O.”).
Indeed, as the teachers' counsel conceded at oral argument,
7
Given the case's history and its comprehensive test, I
disagree with the conclusion, ante at 22, “that T.L.O. did not
attempt to establish clearly the contours of a Fourth Amendment
right as applied to the wide variety of school settings different
from those involved in T.L.O.”
7
certain schoolhouse searches violate the Fourth Amendment as a
matter of common sense. Thus, the question before our court, and
incompletely answered by the majority, is whether the T.L.O.
standard suggests “with obvious clarity,” Lanier, 117 S. Ct. at
1227, that a strip search of schoolchildren for seven dollars is
unconstitutional.
T.L.O., although not crystalline, is -- simply on the facts
of the case before us -- a bright line. Herring and Sirmon
lacked even arguable reasonable suspicion to strip search Jenkins
and McKenzie.8 The teachers offer the following evidence as
creating reasonable suspicion to search: (1) several students
implicated the plaintiffs and they accused one another; (2)
McKenzie earlier had gone to the restroom; (3) the money was not
found in the backpack or the students' shoes and socks; and (4)
historically, other children had been caught with money in their
apparel. All of these justifications are specious. First,
8
My discussion is confined to the strip searches. I concede
that the initial search of McKenzie's backpack was justified at
its inception and reasonable in scope. Ashley Estell's report
that Jenkins put the money in McKenzie's backpack gave reasonable
suspicion to suspect that searching the backpack would turn up
evidence of the theft. See C.B. By and Through Breeding v.
Driscoll, 82 F.3d 383, 388 (11th Cir. 1996). Moreover, the
backpack search, performed by the teacher and confined to the
place identified as containing the contraband, was not excessive.
Further, although the search of the students' shoes and socks may
have been questionable, qualified immunity is appropriate,
because T.L.O. does not clearly prohibit such a search. See Wynn
v. Board of Educ. of Vestavia Hills, 508 So.2d 1170 (Ala. 1987)
(search of shoes and socks for $6 justified at inception where
two students searched were only ones in room when theft occurred;
concluding, without discussion, that search “was not excessively
intrusive”).
8
Herring and Sirmon knew only of Ashley Estell's accusation9 and
the mutual finger-pointing by Jenkins, McKenzie, and Jamerson.
Estell's testimony proved untrustworthy when the backpack search
revealed nothing, leaving only the students' completely
contradictory allegations. This testimony might be at the outer
bounds of reasonable suspicion for one search, but it is not so
for two.10 Second, McKenzie's trip to the bathroom, although
relevant to suspicion, was not communicated to Herring or Sirmon
prior to the strip search.11 Third, appellees' suggestion that
the lack of evidence in the backpack or the students' shoes and
9
The majority's statement, ante at 3, that “[s]everal
students subsequently implicated” the girls is misleading because
it does not speak to Herring and Sirmon's knowledge. Fannin
testified that two other students, Micquael Scales and Jennifer
Simmons, accused Jenkins, but only after Fannin left Herring and
Sirmon in the hall with the girls and Jamerson. Fannin did not
relate this information until Sirmon returned to the classroom
while Herring conducted the first strip search.
10
Even though Jamerson had implicated himself as the thief
(by stating that he hid the money behind a filing cabinet), the
teachers conducted a second strip search of the two girls. This
was wholly unreasonable, especially in view of the fact that
Jenkins stated that she saw Jamerson open the victim's purse, the
girls had never stolen anything before, and Jamerson had a
history of theft.
11
There is a conflict in the record on this point, so I
presume in favor of the plaintiffs. Herring claimed that Fannin
told her of McKenzie's trip and suggested to Herring that money
might be hidden in McKenzie's clothes. Herring then allegedly
replied that she would take the girls to the bathroom and have
them check their clothes. Fannin contradicts this account.
Herring claimed the interchange occurred while the girls were
putting their shoes and socks back on, but Fannin said she left
the hall at that point. Fannin also had no knowledge that
Herring might take the girls to the bathroom, but presumed they
would go to the office, in accordance with policy. Further,
Herring's testimony is unreliable because she changed her story,
telling Principal Nelson that Jamerson, not Fannin, informed her
that McKenzie went to the bathroom.
9
socks permitted the strip search is dubious, as it rests on the
questionable premise that more intrusive searches can be
predicated upon prior unrevealing searches. T.L.O. makes clear
that such bootstrapping is impermissible; there, the Court
validated the escalating search only because additional evidence
continued to emerge. See 469 U.S. at 347 (discovery of rolling
papers "justified further exploration of T.L.O.'s purse”;
evidence of drug dealing justified expansion of search to
separate zippered compartment; discovery of "list of people who
owe me money" justified reading letters found in zippered
compartment). Finally, there is no evidence that Herring or
Sirmon knew about prior instances of other students concealing
money in their clothing.12 Thus, because arguable reasonable
suspicion was missing, qualified immunity is inappropriate.13
12
Appellees point to clothing searches in other schools, and
to searches of shoes and socks allegedly conducted by Nelson, but
Herring and Sirmon were unaware of these incidents when they
conducted the strip search. Further, it is not clear that, on
summary judgment, we can assume that Nelson's searches ever
occurred, as the Department of Education's Incident Report found
that, in prior school theft incidents, no one had ever been
required to remove any article of clothing.
13
I believe that the majority errs by failing to consider
whether there was reasonable suspicion to initiate each of the
bathroom searches and by treating the searches as a single search
justified at its inception. Ante at 19 n.4. Each search was
separate in time and place and several different people conducted
them. For instance, the backpack search was performed solely by
Fannin in her classroom, and was not revealed to Herring or
Sirmon, who conducted the later bathroom searches.
Further, I differ with the majority's apparent contention
that T.L.O. requires only a one-time assessment of reasonable
suspicion where searches are escalating in nature. Id. T.L.O. in
fact commands a contrary conclusion -- it condoned an escalating
search only where discovered evidence created suspicion to look
elsewhere.
10
In addition, the scope of the strip search far exceeded what
T.L.O. allows. To evaluate the scope of a search, T.L.O. directs
us to consider several factors: whether there was a reasonable
relationship between the means by which a student is searched and
the objectives for that search; the intrusiveness of the search
in light of the student's age and sex; and the intrusiveness of
the search in light of the nature of the alleged infraction.
Admittedly, age and sex are not particularly instructive in the
present case.14 Nevertheless, this does not render T.L.O.
unclear for qualified immunity purposes. Our cases confirm that
a balancing test may establish the law for a specific set of
14
Sex is irrelevant because the students were of the same
gender as their searchers; however, the suggestion that T.L.O. is
unclear because it does not explain “whether the search of a boy
or girl is more or less reasonable,” ante at 16, only confuses
the issue. Gender is a concern, obviously, when searches are
conducted by members of the opposite sex. As for age, the T.L.O.
Court did not explain whether older or younger students can be
searched more freely. See Cornfield, 991 F.2d at 1321
(discussing issue).
I cannot subscribe to the majority's view, ante at 19 n.4,
that this search was reasonable in scope because eight-year-olds
are prepubescent and frequently require assistance in the
bathroom. Physical maturity is an elusive and, in my view,
unworkable constitutional standard and is by no means the only
consideration relevant to intrusiveness. See generally Steven F.
Shatz et al., The Strip Search of Children and the Fourth
Amendment, 26 U.S.F.L. REV. 1 (1991) (child's ability to consent,
propensity to commit crime, and degree of body autonomy determine
intrusiveness). Moreover, there is nothing in this record to
support the majority's factual premises, and pediatric literature
suggests that they are questionable. See Marcia E. Herman-
Giddens et al., Secondary Sexual Characteristics and Menses in
Young Girls Seen in Office Practice: A Study from the Pediatric
Research Office Settings Network, 99 PEDIATRICS 505 (1997) (noting
that girls often develop pubertal characteristics by age 8,
depending on racial and ethnic background); Sally Squires, Bed-
Wetting a Common Inconvenience, WASH. POST, Apr. 8, 1997, at Z17
("Most children are toilet-trained sufficiently to stay dry
during the day by age 3 or 4. . . .").
11
facts when the “balancing would lead to the inevitable conclusion
that the [particular conduct] was unlawful.” Dartland v.
Metropolitan Dade County, 866 F.2d 1321, 1323 (11th Cir. 1989).
Because the type of search employed here was not reasonably
related to its objectives and was excessive in light of the
nature of the infraction, the T.L.O. balance inevitably marks
Herring and Sirmon's conduct as unconstitutional, thereby clearly
establishing the law.15
The strip searches were not reasonably related to their
objectives because they were excessively intrusive and unlikely
to turn up evidence, and because other reasonable, minimally
intrusive options were available.
It is axiomatic that a strip search represents a
serious intrusion upon personal rights. In Mary Beth
G. [v. City of Chicago, 723 F.2d 1263, 1272 (7th Cir.
1983)], the court referred to strip searches as
“demeaning, dehumanizing, undignified, humiliating,
terrifying, unpleasant, embarrassing, repulsive,
signifying degradation and submission.”
Justice v. City of Peachtree City, 961 F.2d 188, 192 (11th Cir.
1992).16 Thus, for a strip search to be reasonably related in
15
The majority notes that Justice Stevens objected to
T.L.O.'s lack of clarity, ante at 20 n.5; he also realized,
however, that its test would lead to some inescapable
conclusions: “One thing is clear under any standard--the shocking
strip searches that are described in some cases have no place in
the schoolhouse. To the extent that deeply intrusive searches are
ever reasonable outside the custodial context, it surely must
only be to prevent imminent, and serious harm.” 469 U.S. at 382
n.25 (Stevens, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part)
(emphasis added) (citations omitted).
16
Although decided after the events at issue in the present
case, Justice's treatment of strip searches merely confirms their
self-evidently intrusive character.
12
scope to the objectives for which it was undertaken, the
objectives must be weighty,17 and the search must be necessary to
locate the suspected evidence. See Terry, 392 U.S. at 29-30
(search must be “confined in scope to an intrusion reasonably
designed to discover” items sought and “confined . . . strictly
to what was minimally necessary” to locate those items). Here,
acting only on the discredited testimony of one student and the
contradictory allegations of the three suspects (exacerbated by
threats that the police would be called to investigate), the
teachers launched a full-scale strip search of two eight-year-
olds, foregoing several reasonable, yet minimally intrusive,
intermediate steps.
Fannin never questioned whether the money was truly stolen.
She did not inquire whether the money might have been spent or
misplaced, nor did she ask how Estell knew that Jenkins took the
money. Fannin also did not search Jenkins's bag. Further,
Herring took over the situation without asking any questions, and
promptly ordered a search of the students' shoes and socks,
followed by a strip search, even though there was absolutely no
17
See Cornfield, 991 F.2d at 1321 ("[A]s the intrusiveness
of the search of a student intensifies, so too does the standard
of Fourth Amendment reasonableness. What may constitute
reasonable suspicion for a search of a locker or even a pocket or
pocketbook may fall well short of reasonableness for a nude
search."). A sliding scale of reasonableness is inherent in the
Fourth Amendment. Terry, for example, teaches that "[t]he scope
of the search must be 'strictly tied to and justified by' the
circumstances which rendered its initiation permissible." 392
U.S. at 19. See also, e.g., United States v. McMurray, 747 F.2d
1417, 1420 (11th Cir. 1984) (in customs context, as intrusiveness
increases, suspicion necessary to justify search must increase).
13
evidence that the girls might have the money in their
underclothing. Thus, because there was not even reasonable
suspicion to believe that the girls possessed contraband, because
the teachers ignored less intrusive means, and because the
personal invasion was extreme, the first strip search was
necessarily disproportionate to its justification. The second
strip search was even more blatantly unconstitutional, as no one
could reasonably argue that it was necessary after the fruitless
prior search.
Finally, the nature of the infraction here -- a small theft
-- is insufficient as a matter of law to permit a strip search.
T.L.O. directs us to consider the nature of the infraction
because, although keeping order in the school is important, it is
not determinative. Students' privacy rights must be weighed in
the balance. Strip searching a student is permissible only in
extraordinary cases, and only to prevent imminent harm.18 For
example, if school administrators have reasonable suspicion that
a student is carrying a gun on his/her person and a “pat-down”
confirms this suspicion, a strip search by an administrator of
the same sex, strictly limited to finding the weapon, would be
permissible. The theft of $7, although morally reprehensible,
poses no threat of physical danger to other students and cannot,
18
See Justice, 961 F.2d at 193 (collecting cases; noting
that threat of harm was only permissible reason in case law for
strip search of arrestee).
14
therefore, serve as the basis for a search of this magnitude.19
As the Seventh Circuit, faced with a qualified immunity
defense following a school strip search, explained:
It does not require a constitutional scholar to
conclude that a nude search of a thirteen-year-old
child is an invasion of constitutional rights of some
magnitude. More than that: it is a violation of any
known principle of human decency. Apart from any
constitutional readings and rulings, simple common
sense would indicate that the conduct of the school
officials in permitting such a nude search was not only
unlawful but outrageous under “settled indisputable
principles of law.”
Doe v. Renfrow, 631 F.2d 91, 92-93 (7th Cir. 1980) (citation
omitted), cert. denied, 451 U.S. 1022 (1981). Because Herring
and Sirmon flagrantly ignored common sense and, crucially, the
Constitution, I would reverse the district court's order granting
qualified immunity.
19
See, e.g., Oliver by Hines v. McClung, 919 F. Supp. 1206,
1216-19 (N.D. Ind. 1995) (strip search of seventh graders for
$4.50 unconstitutionally unreasonable); State ex rel. Galford v.
Mark Anthony B., 433 S.E.2d 41, 49 (W. Va. 1993) (strip search
for $100 unconstitutionally unreasonable in scope because no
threat of danger); Bellnier v. Lund, 438 F. Supp. 47, 53-54
(N.D.N.Y. 1977) (strip search for stolen $3 unconstitutionally
unreasonable, given unparticularized suspicion and “relatively
slight danger of the conduct involved”).
15