J W v. A.C. Roper , 904 F.3d 1248 ( 2018 )


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  •               Case: 15-14669     Date Filed: 09/24/2018   Page: 1 of 57
    [PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    ________________________
    No. 15-14669
    ________________________
    D.C. Docket No. 2:10-cv-03314-AKK
    J W,
    by and through his next friend, Tammy Williams,
    G S,
    by and through her next friend, LaTonya Stearnes,
    P S,
    by and through her next friend, LaTonya Stearnes,
    T L P,
    by and through her next friend, Tarra Pritchett,
    T A P,
    by and through her next friend, Barbara Pettaway, individually, et al.,
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,
    versus
    BIRMINGHAM BOARD OF EDUCATION, et al.,
    Defendants,
    A. C. ROPER,
    in his individual and official capacity as Chief of the
    Birmingham Police Department,
    J. NEVITT, Officer,
    in his individual capacity,
    A. CLARK,
    Officer, in his individual capacity,
    R. TARRANT,
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    Officer, in his individual capacity,
    M. BENSON,
    Officer, in her individual capacity,
    D. HENDERSON,
    Officer, in his individual capacity,
    S. SMITH,
    Officer, in his individual capacity,
    Defendants-Appellants.
    ________________________
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Alabama
    ________________________
    (September 24, 2018)
    Before ED CARNES, Chief Judge, JORDAN, Circuit Judge, and LAMBERTH, *
    District Judge.
    PER CURIAM:
    Student Resource Officers employed by the Birmingham Police Department
    and stationed at schools have the authority to use Freeze +P, an incapacitating
    chemical spray, on students under certain circumstances. A number of
    Birmingham high school students who were sprayed with or exposed to Freeze +P
    in 2009, 2010, and 2011 filed a civil rights lawsuit under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
     against
    the Birmingham Board of Education; A.C. Roper, the Chief of the BPD; and the
    SROs who used the spray against them or in their vicinity. Asserting individual
    *
    Honorable Royce C. Lamberth, United States District Judge for the District of
    Columbia, sitting by designation.
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    and class-based claims, they alleged that the SROs used excessive force in
    violation of the Fourth Amendment by spraying them and by failing to adequately
    decontaminate them. They also claimed that the constitutional violations were the
    result of a policy or custom of the Birmingham Police Department. They
    requested damages as well as declaratory and injunctive relief.
    Following a 12-day bench trial, the district court issued a comprehensive
    120-page order on September 30, 2015, with detailed findings of fact and
    conclusions of law. See J.W. v. Birmingham Bd. of Educ., 
    143 F. Supp. 3d 1118
    (N.D. Ala. 2015). As summarized below, the district court granted the students
    relief on most of their claims.
    With respect to the individual claims, the district court found in favor of two
    students, K.B. and B.J., on their excessive force allegations against the SROs who
    sprayed them with Freeze +P, and awarded each of them $5,000 in damages.
    Because those rulings have not been appealed, we do not discuss or address the use
    of Freeze +P on any of the students except to discuss the availability of class-based
    declaratory and injunctive relief.
    The district court also found in favor of six students—G.S., B.D., T.L.P.,
    T.A.P., K.B., and B.J.—and against the SROs who failed to adequately
    decontaminate them after the use of Freeze +P, and awarded each of them $5,000
    in damages. The SROs found liable on the decontamination claims now appeal,
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    arguing that they are entitled to qualified immunity on the students’ Fourth
    Amendment claims.
    On the class claims, the district court concluded that the Fourth Amendment
    violations occurred pursuant to a policy or custom of the BPD, and ruled that
    declaratory and injunctive relief was warranted. Rather than issue a permanent
    injunction, however, the court ordered the parties to meet and confer to devise a
    training and procedure plan to improve the policies related to the use of chemical
    spray in Birmingham schools. In so doing, the court set out a number of “general
    practices” (which we detail later) to guide the parties in their formulation of the
    plan. The parties complied with the court’s order and submitted a proposed plan
    (with some disagreements) in December of 2015. As of today, the court has not
    entered a final judgment or permanent injunction.
    Chief Roper appeals the rulings on the class claims. He contends that these
    claims should have been dismissed for lack of standing, that they alternatively fail
    on the merits, that the district court should have decertified the class, and that the
    court’s mandatory injunction (the “general practices” provided to the parties for the
    formulation of the proposed training and procedure plan) is contrary to the
    principles of federal-state comity.
    It has taken us a long time following oral argument to go through the record
    in this complex case, including the lengthy trial transcript and documentary
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    evidence, to evaluate and analyze the parties’ competing arguments. Having
    completed our review, we commend the district court for its thorough work and
    analysis in this difficult case. We conclude that the September 30 order is final
    and appealable under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
     pursuant to our decision in United States v.
    Alabama, 
    828 F.2d 1532
    , 1536 (11th Cir. 1987), superseded by statute on other
    grounds as recognized by Lussier v. Dugger, 
    904 F.2d 661
    , 664 (11th Cir. 1990);
    that assuming the SROs in question violated the Fourth Amendment by failing to
    adequately decontaminate the students exposed to Freeze +P, they are entitled to
    qualified immunity because the relevant law was not clearly established at the time
    of their conduct in 2009, 2010, and 2011; that the class-based claim for declaratory
    and injunctive relief with respect to the use of Freeze +P fails for lack of standing;
    and that the class-based claim for declaratory and injunctive relief with respect to
    the decontamination policy also fails for lack of standing.
    I.      APPELLATE JURISDICTION
    The district court ruled on September 30, 2015, that the plaintiffs, as a class,
    were entitled to injunctive relief on their spraying and decontamination claims.
    But it declined to issue an injunction at that time, and directed the parties to “meet
    and confer, engage in fruitful discussions and compromise, and develop and jointly
    submit” a single training and procedure plan with respect to the use of pepper
    spray. See D.E. 282 at 118. On the issue of spraying, the court stated that the plan
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    had to “address the current deficiencies and form a template for [SROs’] use of
    Freeze +P going forward.” 
    Id.
     at 118–19. The court also provided a number of
    “general practices” to guide the parties in their drafting of the decontamination
    aspect of the plan:
    (1) unless doing so would endanger the student, officer, or bystanders,
    after an [SRO] sprays a student with Freeze +P and has secured the
    student, the officer must provide the student with an opportunity to
    decontaminate with water, either in the form of a shower, washing at a
    sink, or using an eye wash station; (2) because of the lingering
    exposure from contaminated clothing, at all times, Chief Roper must
    maintain at each school where the B.P.D. allows [SROs] to spray
    students with Freeze +P a sufficient number (as agreed by the parties)
    of sweat suits in varying sizes, and must allow the student to change
    out of his or her contaminated clothes; (3) the [SRO] must then place
    the student in front of a fan; (4) Chief Roper must ensure that [SROs]
    have available sealable plastic and/or garbage bags that an affected
    student can use to store her contaminated clothing; and (5) Chief
    Roper must replace each sweat suit a student uses so that the total
    number available at the start of each week is always the same as the
    initial number agreed on by the parties.
    
    Id.
     at 119–20. Finally, “because of Freeze +P’s impact on nearby students and to
    generally educate students about its effects,” the court also directed the parties to
    “jointly draft,” by the same date, “a one-page flyer that is to be posted prominently
    on each high school’s central bulletin boards or to be disseminated electronically to
    each enrolled student that, among other things, outlines the effects of Freeze +P
    and the suggested methods to use to obtain relief in the event a student is exposed
    to Freeze +P.” 
    Id.
     at 119–20.
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    The court indicated that it would issue an order and judgment after
    November 15, 2015. Id. at 120. The court later extended the deadline to
    December 15, 2015, which is when the parties submitted their joint plan. See D.E.
    295; D.E. 309. The court has not entered a final judgment or issued an injunction.
    And, as far as we can tell, the record does not show that the parties have drafted or
    posted the flyer ordered by the district court.
    Given the lack of a final judgment or permanent injunction, the first question
    we confront is jurisdictional. Is the district court’s order of September 30, 2015,
    appealable as a “final” order under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    , or as an injunction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1292
    (a)(1)? Exercising plenary review, see, e.g., Williams v. Chatman,
    
    510 F.3d 1290
    , 1293 (11th Cir. 2007), we conclude that the September 30 order is
    final under § 1291, and as a result we need not address whether it is also
    appealable as an injunction under § 1292(a)(1).
    Generally speaking, an order must be “final” to be appealable. See 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    ; see also Carson v. Am. Brands, Inc., 
    450 U.S. 79
    , 83 (1981) (“The
    first Judiciary Act . . . established the general principle that only final decisions of
    the federal district courts would be reviewable on appeal.”). An order, however,
    does not have to be the last one issued for it to be final under § 1291. See
    Alabama, 
    828 F.2d at 1536
    . Because finality is “frequently so close a question that
    decision of that issue either way can be supported with equally forceful
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    arguments,” Gillespie v. U.S. Steel Corp., 
    379 U.S. 148
    , 152 (1964), we disdain a
    formalistic test and employ a pragmatic approach, which is “essential to the
    achievement of the ‘just, speedy, and inexpensive determination of every action,’”
    Alabama, 
    828 F.2d at 1537
     (quoting Brown Shoe Co. v. United States, 
    370 U.S. 294
    , 306 (1962)).
    A district court order in a § 1983 case requiring one or more of the parties to
    submit a remedial plan, without more, is not final. See id. at 1538. But such an
    order is immediately appealable when it “contains other injunctive relief” or “when
    the content of the plan to be submitted has already been substantially prescribed by
    the district court.” Id. (holding that a district court order requiring the submission
    of a remedial desegregation plan was final under § 1291 because it “substantially
    prescribed” the requirements of the plan—the order resolved every issue, gave
    detailed instructions, and “le[ft] [the] defendants with little flexibility” in drafting
    the plan); accord Groseclose v. Dutton, 
    788 F.2d 356
    , 358–61 (6th Cir. 1986);
    Spates v. Manson, 
    619 F.2d 204
    , 209 (2d Cir. 1980).
    The September 30 order “substantially prescribed” the requirements of the
    training and procedure plan the parties were directed to jointly submit, and is
    therefore appealable under § 1291. In its order, the district court made detailed
    factual findings about the challenged conduct, concluded that the constitutional
    rights of certain students had been violated, and specified the amount of damages
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    that those students were entitled to. The court also ruled that class-based
    injunctive relief was warranted as to the students’ spraying and decontamination
    claims. Although it declined to issue permanent injunctive relief, the court ordered
    the parties to meet, confer, and submit a proposed training and procedure plan that
    would remedy the constitutional problems identified in its order. Significantly, the
    court listed a series of “general practices” (quoted earlier) to guide the parties in
    formulating the decontamination aspect of the plan. For example, the SROs have
    to provide each student they spray “with an opportunity to decontaminate with
    water, either in the form of a shower, washing at a sink, or using an eye wash
    station.” D.E. 282 at 119. Chief Roper, for his part, has to provide sufficient
    sweat suits at each high school for students who are exposed to Freeze +P, and
    must ensure that the SROs “have available sealable plastic and/or garbage bags
    that an affected student can use to store her contaminated clothing.” Id. And, as
    noted above, the parties are also required to create a one-page flyer for students
    that explains the effects of Freeze +P and details how to obtain relief after
    exposure. Id. at 120.
    On balance, we are satisfied that the September 30 order, in practical terms,
    is final under our precedent. See Alabama, 828 F.3d at 1537–38; Morales v.
    Turman, 
    535 F.2d 864
    , 867 n.6 (5th Cir. 1976), rev’d on other grounds, 
    430 U.S. 322
     (1977). We therefore turn to the merits.
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    II.   QUALIFIED IMMUNITY
    We first take up the qualified immunity appeal of the SROs who were held
    individually liable on the decontamination claims. See, e.g., Vaughan v. Cox, 
    343 F.3d 1323
    , 1333 (11th Cir. 2003) (explaining that a defendant can assert “a
    qualified immunity defense at trial”); Alexander v. Fulton County, 
    207 F.3d 1303
    ,
    1320 (11th Cir. 2000) (reviewing denial of qualified immunity after trial),
    overruled on other grounds by Manders v. Lee, 
    338 F.3d 1304
     (11th Cir. 2003) (en
    banc). As noted earlier, the district court found in favor of six of the students on
    their decontamination claims and awarded them $5,000 each in damages. The
    court ruled that certain SROs violated the clearly established Fourth Amendment
    rights of these students by failing to adequately decontaminate them after spraying
    them with Freeze +P. See D.E. 282 at 65 n.54, 76. We review de novo the court’s
    qualified immunity ruling. Harris v. Bd. of Educ., 
    105 F.3d 591
    , 595 (11th Cir.
    1997).
    To provide context for the district court’s rulings, and for the parties’
    arguments, we set out the evidence presented at trial concerning Freeze +P and
    decontamination. We then return to the court’s specific findings concerning the
    SROs and the six students.
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    A.     Trial Evidence About Freeze +P and BPD’s Decontamination Procedures
    Freeze +P is a chemical designed to temporarily incapacitate a person by
    causing pain and intense tissue irritation (burning of the eyes, skin, mouth, and
    airway, tearing, reflexive closing of the eyes, coughing, gagging, and difficulty
    breathing). According to one of the defense experts, Freeze +P works because it
    results in “severe pain.” D.E. 282 at 31.
    The material safety data sheet for Freeze +P describes emergency and first
    aid procedures for exposure to the spray as follows:
    EYES: Flush eyes with large quantities of water to speed recovery.
    Face subject into wind or forced air source such as fans or air
    conditioning outlet. Wash face with mild soap.
    SKIN CONTACT: Remove contaminated clothing. Wash affected
    area with soap and water to avoid transfer to more sensitive areas.
    Burning sensation with skin contact in most areas. Use no creams
    or salves. Persons with preexisting skin disorders may be more
    susceptible to the effects of this agent.
    INHALATION: Irritant, stimulation of facial nerves causes feeling
    of restricted airway. No danger exists for asphyxiation. Remove
    persons to fresh air.
    INGESTION: Severe burning heartburn sensation may cause
    nausea. Seek medical attention if nausea persists.
    D.E. 282 at 37.
    Training materials from Aerko International, the manufacturer of Freeze +P,
    say the following about proper treatment for those exposed to the spray:
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    While there are no medical practitioners on the staff of
    Aerko International, the following regimen is suggested based on
    documents of the United States Chemical Warfare Service and our
    experience overseeing hundreds of exposures, both intentional
    during training or accidental as a result of production mishaps.
    A wash may be prepared utilizing approximately 100 to 120
    grams of sodium bisulfate in four gallons of cool water. Subjects
    experience some relief when splashing this solution on [a]ffected
    areas.
    When running water is available, a softly flowing stream
    from a hose should be applied to the face and eyes. Copious
    amount[s] of cool water will give some relief.
    After initial treatment with water or wash, the subject should
    be moved to fresh air and faced into the wind. The time to
    recovery is directly proportionate to the speed of the air stream.
    Fans or air conditioning outlets provide an excellent source of
    relief. In the event running water or the [s]odium [b]isulfate
    solution is not available[,] excellent field treatment results may be
    obtained by placing the subject in the front section of a vehicle and
    directing the air conditioning vent into his face.
    D.E. 282 at 37–38.
    In 2006, prior to the incidents in question, the BPD published rules and
    regulations concerning what police officers (including SROs) should do after they
    use a chemical spray like Freeze +P. These rules and regulations explain, in
    relevant part, that chemical spray “is primarily an inflammatory agent” which
    causes the “[i]nvoluntary closing of the eyes,” the “[s]welling of the mucous
    membranes, which results in shallow breathing ability,” and “[i]ntense burning on
    sensitive parts of the body.” Plaintiff’s Ex. 3 at 3 (Birmingham Police Department,
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    Chemical Spray Subject Restraint: Non-Deadly Use of Force, Revision 5 (Feb. 10,
    2006)). According to the rules and regulations, the “effects of chemical spray will
    begin to lessen in 10–15 minutes with all effects disappearing in approximately 45
    minutes, with no treatment being administered.” 
    Id.
     SROs and other police
    officers are instructed that following the use of chemical spray, “the officer will
    ensure that the subject receives adequate decontamination as soon as practical.
    The officer should supply immediate medical attention if requested by the subject.”
    
    Id.
     In addition, “Birmingham Fire and Rescue will be called and will determine
    whether or not the subject needs further medical attention or hospital treatment.”
    Id. at 4.
    BPD training materials state that the effects of chemical spray “are
    temporary,” that eyes can open in 10–20 minutes after treatment with “[c]ool air or
    water,” that respiratory effects diminish in 10–30 minutes, and that effects on the
    skin may persist for 45–60 minutes and “up to hours” for some “sensitive
    subjects.” D.E. 282 at 32. Chief Roper explained that SROs and other BPD
    officers are required to undertake “adequate” decontamination efforts—which can
    be water, time, and/or air—and to notify Birmingham Fire and Rescue. See id. at
    38. One of the defense experts, however, testified that if he were sprayed with a
    chemical, his “first choice method of decontamination would be to wash with
    copious amounts of water and soap, and if neither were available, he would want
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    access to a fan.” Id. at 39. That same expert also opined that SROs should provide
    students who are intentionally sprayed with water to decontaminate as soon as the
    situation is safe. Id. One of the high school principals testified that in the school
    setting it would not be difficult for an SRO to take a student exposed to chemical
    spray to a location like a chemistry lab to wash or flush his or her face. See id. at
    74.
    The district court found that all BPD officers are trained on the
    Department’s rules and regulations at the police academy and receive periodic
    retraining in various forms. See id. at 25. The court also found that training for
    cadets at the police academy includes “describing the chemical components of
    Freeze +P, reviewing the Chemical Policy, spraying the cadets with Freeze +P in
    an outdoor environment, and answering cadet questions. Cadets are instructed to
    wash their faces with warm, soapy water 30 minutes to an hour after exposure.”
    Id. at 30. “Although cadets are personally instructed to use warm soapy water for
    their own exposure, [they] are trained that the appropriate methods for
    decontaminating an individual sprayed with Freeze +P are time, air, and calling
    Birmingham Fire and Rescue.” Id.
    B.    The District Court’s Qualified Immunity Ruling
    The district court, citing Fourteenth Amendment decontamination cases such
    as Danley v. Allen, 
    540 F.3d 1298
    , 1304 (11th Cir. 2008), overruled on other
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    grounds as recognized by Randall v. Scott, 
    610 F.3d 701
     (11th Cir. 2010), based its
    Fourth Amendment ruling on several subsidiary conclusions: (1) an officer’s
    failure to decontaminate a person after subjecting him or her to chemical spray,
    absent extenuating circumstances or lack of feasibility, is a violation of the Fourth
    Amendment; (2) students who are sprayed with chemical spray should receive
    access to copious amounts of water and soap; and (3) time and/or air alone are
    inadequate decontamination measures. See 
    id.
     at 73–75.
    The district court considered the SROs’ decontamination efforts wholly
    inadequate as to the six students sprayed and found that in most cases the officers
    “did absolutely nothing other than call Birmingham Fire and Rescue.” See id. at
    71. The SROs, the court found, did not give the students access to any airflow
    and/or give them an opportunity to wash their faces or shower, and did not provide
    them with clothes that were not contaminated with Freeze +P. See id. at 9 (SRO
    Anthony Clark/G.S.), 11 (SRO Jeremiah Nevitt/T.L.P.), 14 (SRO Douglas
    Henderson/B.D.), 17 (SRO Silburn Smith/K.B.), 20–21 (SRO Marion
    Benson/B.J.), and 23 (SRO Ricky Tarrant/T.A.P.). Even when the SRO in
    question tried to provide some assistance to the student—such as in the cases of
    B.D. and T.A.P.—the court found those efforts to be constitutionally insufficient.
    See id. at 72.
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    C.    Qualified Immunity Analysis
    In actions brought under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    , the doctrine of qualified
    immunity offers complete protection for government officials whose conduct “does
    not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a
    reasonable person would have known.” White v. Pauly, 
    137 S. Ct. 548
    , 551 (2017)
    (citations and internal quotation marks omitted). To be entitled to qualified
    immunity, an official must first show that he was acting within his discretionary
    authority when the allegedly wrongful acts occurred. See Gray ex rel. Alexander v.
    Bostic, 
    458 F.3d 1295
    , 1303 (11th Cir. 2006). Once the defendant makes that
    initial showing, the burden shifts to the plaintiff to demonstrate that qualified
    immunity should not be granted. See 
    id.
     The plaintiff must show (1) that the
    defendant violated one of his constitutional rights, and (2) that the right was clearly
    established at the time of the wrongful conduct. See Valderrama v. Rousseau, 
    780 F.3d 1108
    , 1112 (11th Cir. 2015).
    There is no dispute in this case that the SROs were acting in their
    discretionary authority in the moments following their deployment of Freeze +P.
    So the question is whether the district court properly denied qualified immunity to
    the SROs for failing to adequately decontaminate the six students who were
    awarded damages. For the reasons that follow, we conclude that the district court
    erred in denying the SROs qualified immunity.
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    The SROs argue that the students improperly asserted their decontamination
    claims under the Fourth Amendment. As the SROs see it, the students should have
    proceeded under the Fourteenth Amendment because they were arrestees and/or
    pre-trial detainees after they were sprayed. See Appellants’ Br. at 31–32. The
    students respond that the Fourth Amendment provides the correct framework to
    analyze their excessive force claims because the inadequate decontamination
    occurred during the process of arrest, “moments after the seizure began[,] . . . prior
    to any formal booking, and before pretrial detention began.” Appellees’ Br. at 23.
    Generally, the Fourth Amendment protects against the use of excessive force
    during investigatory stops and arrests, while the Fourteenth Amendment guards
    against the use of excessive force against arrestees and pretrial detainees. See, e.g.,
    Graham v. Connor, 
    490 U.S. 386
    , 387 (1989); Cottrell v. Caldwell, 
    85 F.3d 1480
    ,
    1490 (11th Cir. 1996). Although the Supreme Court has held that “all claims that
    law enforcement officers have used excessive force . . . in the course of an arrest,
    investigatory stop, or other ‘seizure’ of a free citizen should be analyzed under the
    Fourth Amendment,” Graham, 
    490 U.S. at 395
    , neither we nor the Supreme Court
    has decided whether the Fourth Amendment continues to provide individuals with
    protection from excessive force beyond the point at which an arrest ends and
    pretrial detention begins, let alone in the school context, see 
    id.
     at 395 n.10; Wright
    v. Whiddon, 
    951 F.2d 297
    , 300 (11th Cir. 1992); see also Kinglsey v. Hendrickson,
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    135 S. Ct. 2466
    , 2479 (2015) (Alito, J., dissenting) (“[W]e should decide whether a
    pretrial detainee can bring a Fourth Amendment claim based on the use of
    excessive force . . . .”).
    We need not decide whether the Fourth Amendment or the Fourteenth
    Amendment governs the students’ decontamination claims to resolve the SROs’
    qualified immunity arguments. Assuming that those claims are properly brought
    under the Fourth Amendment, and that the SROs violated the Fourth Amendment
    by not adequately decontaminating the students, the relevant law was not clearly
    established at the time of the SROs’ conduct. See Fils v. City of Aventura, 
    647 F.3d 1272
    , 1287 (11th Cir. 2011) (“[I]f the law was not clearly established, we
    need not decide if the Defendants actually violated the Plaintiffs’ rights[.]”).
    To determine whether a right is clearly established, we ask whether it would
    be clear to a reasonable officer that his conduct was unlawful in the situation he
    confronted. See Vinyard v. Wilson, 
    311 F.3d 1340
    , 1350 (11th Cir. 2002)
    (recognizing that “fair and clear notice” is the cornerstone of the qualified
    immunity analysis). There are various ways to evaluate whether a right is clearly
    established. See 
    id.
     at 1350–53. First, the plaintiff can point to a materially similar
    case decided at the time of the relevant conduct by the Supreme Court, the
    Eleventh Circuit, or the relevant state supreme court. The first method looks at the
    relevant case law at the time of the alleged violation that would have made it
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    obvious to the officer that his actions violated federal law. See Gaines v.
    Wardynski, 
    871 F.3d 1203
    , 1208 (11th Cir. 2017). The prior case law need not be
    directly on point, but “existing precedent must have placed the statutory or
    constitutional question beyond debate.” White, 137 S. Ct. at 551 (citations and
    internal quotation marks omitted). Second, the plaintiff can identify a broader,
    clearly established principle that should govern the novel facts of the situation. See
    Gaines, 871 F.3d at 1208. Third, the plaintiff can show that the conduct at issue so
    obviously violated the Constitution that prior case law is unnecessary. See id. The
    plaintiff must establish that the conduct “lies so obviously at the core of what the
    alleged constitutional amendment prohibits that the unlawfulness of the conduct
    was readily apparent to the officer, notwithstanding the lack of fact-specific case
    law.” See Fils, 
    647 F.3d at 1291
    . This third method, often referred to as the
    “obvious clarity” scenario, is a “narrow exception” to the “normal rule that only
    case law and specific factual scenarios can clearly establish a violation.” 
    Id.
    The students argue that they had a Fourth Amendment right to be adequately
    decontaminated after they were sprayed with Freeze +P and that this right was
    clearly established at the time of the SROs’ conduct in 2009, 2010, and 2011. See,
    e.g., Appellees’ Br. at 46 (referring to the “right to be free from the excessive force
    of [an officer’s] fail[ure] to decontaminate”). But the Supreme Court has told us
    “not to define clearly established law at a high level of generality” because the
    19
    Case: 15-14669       Date Filed: 09/24/2018      Page: 20 of 57
    “dispositive question is whether the violative nature of particular conduct is
    clearly established.” Mullenix v. Luna, 
    136 S. Ct. 305
    , 308 (2015) (citations and
    internal quotation marks omitted). As a result, the “inquiry must be undertaken in
    light of the specific context of the case, not as a broad general proposition. Such
    specificity is especially important in the Fourth Amendment context, where the
    [Supreme] Court has recognized that [i]t is sometimes difficult for an officer to
    determine how the relevant legal doctrine, here excessive force, will apply to the
    factual situation the officer confronts.” 
    Id.
     (citations and internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    The question for us, therefore, is whether the “state of the law” in 2009,
    2010, and 2011 “gave the [SROs] fair warning that their . . . treatment of [the
    students]” as to decontamination “was unconstitutional.” Hope v. Pelzer, 
    536 U.S. 730
    , 741 (2002). The students rely on our 2008 decision in Danley to argue that
    their right to adequate decontamination was clearly established. 1
    Mr. Danley was a pre-trial detainee who was arrested for driving under the
    influence and taken to jail, where he was ultimately pepper sprayed for failing to
    1
    The students also cite to an unpublished Fourteenth Amendment case, Nasseri v. City of
    Athens, 373 F. App’x 15 (11th Cir. 2010)—where qualified immunity was denied to officers who
    kept a pretrial detainee confined to a poorly-ventilated space after he was pepper sprayed—to
    bolster their qualified immunity argument. See Appellees’ Br. at 46–47. Unpublished cases,
    however, do not serve as binding precedent, see 11th Cir. R. 36-2, and cannot be relied upon to
    define clearly established law, see Gilmore v. Hodges, 
    738 F.3d 266
    , 277 (11th Cir. 2013)
    (“[W]e look only to binding precedent—holdings of cases drawn from the United States
    Supreme Court, this Court, or the highest court of the state where the events took place.”).
    20
    Case: 15-14669     Date Filed: 09/24/2018   Page: 21 of 57
    comply with certain commands. See 
    540 F.3d at 1303
    . He alleged in his
    complaint that, after spraying him, the officers placed him in a small, poorly-
    ventilated cell, prevented him from washing off the pepper spray for approximately
    20 minutes, mocked him as he begged for help, and then gave him insufficient time
    to shower. See 
    id. at 1304
    . He also alleged that he was ultimately put in a group
    cell, where other detainees complained that their eyes were burning due to the
    residue on him. See 
    id.
     After suffering for 12–13 hours, he was released and able
    to see a doctor for treatment. See 
    id. at 1305
    .
    We held in Danley that the district court correctly denied the officers’
    motion to dismiss the complaint on qualified immunity grounds because Mr.
    Danley had alleged sufficient facts to make out a violation of his Fourteenth
    Amendment right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment. Using a multi-
    factor test to apply the “shocks the conscience” standard, we concluded that once
    Mr. Danley was disabled due to the pepper spray, “the use of force in the form of
    extended confinement in the small, poorly ventilated pepper spray-filled cell, when
    there were other readily available alternatives, was excessive.” 
    Id.
     at 1308–09.
    We also concluded that Mr. Danley had sufficiently alleged that the officers acted
    maliciously and sadistically for the purpose of causing harm. According to the
    complaint, the officers mocked Mr. Danley while he was suffering from the effects
    of the pepper spray and did not give him enough time to shower (they gave him
    21
    Case: 15-14669      Date Filed: 09/24/2018    Page: 22 of 57
    two minutes when the jail policy dictated that the shower should be fifteen
    minutes). See 
    id.
     at 1309–10.
    As relevant here, we also held in Danley that the district court properly
    denied the officers’ motion to dismiss Mr. Danley’s Eighth Amendment claim for
    deliberate indifference to his serious medical needs. 
    Id.
     at 1310–13. Mr. Danley
    was not merely suing based on the immediate effects of pepper spray, and had
    sufficiently alleged that he suffered chemical conjunctivitis and bronchospasms
    due to the effects of prolonged exposure to pepper spray without adequate
    decontamination (e.g., the delay in allowing him a shower and the inadequate
    length of the shower). 
    Id. at 1310
    . We said, in part, that “[if] a shower is the only
    treatment that is required, then an adequate shower is required.” 
    Id. at 1311
    . And
    we concluded that the officers were not entitled to qualified immunity for the
    Eighth Amendment deliberate indifference claim: “This is a case in which general
    legal principles announced by our decisions in this area of law are enough to make
    the right violated clearly established. . . . Danley alleged both a serious medical
    need and the jailers’ deliberate indifference to it.” 
    Id. at 1313
    .
    Danley certainly holds that, under certain circumstances in a prison setting,
    an officer violates the Fourteenth Amendment if he does not timely and adequately
    decontaminate (or provide timely and adequate decontamination services to) a
    prisoner who is suffering from the prolonged effects of an incapacitating chemical
    22
    Case: 15-14669     Date Filed: 09/24/2018    Page: 23 of 57
    spray. For a couple of reasons, however, we do not believe that Danley provided
    fair and clear notice to the SROs that their decontamination efforts (or lack thereof)
    violated the students’ Fourth Amendment rights.
    The first reason is legal in nature. Danley did not set out the minimum
    decontamination procedures that the Constitution requires an officer to pursue or
    provide for all persons in custody (including those in a school setting) after the use
    of chemical spray. Although the “ultimate touchstone of the Fourth Amendment is
    reasonableness,” Kentucky v. King, 
    563 U.S. 452
    , 459 (2011) (citation and internal
    quotation marks omitted), the students here, beyond alleging that the SROs’
    decontamination efforts were constitutionally lacking, have not attempted to
    explain why the additional steps that they want taken are a Fourth Amendment
    requirement, see Appellees’ Br. at 46 (referring only to the “right to be free from
    the excessive force of [an officer’s] fail[ure] to decontaminate”). And, as we
    explain below, the record developed at trial shows that the paramedics who
    examined the students chose not to administer any treatment and in two cases told
    the students not to wash with water.
    The second reason why Danley does not provide adequate notice is more
    factual than legal. The students here, after being sprayed with Freeze +P, felt like
    their faces, eyes, and noses were burning, and they experienced trouble breathing.
    See, e.g., D.E. 282 at 31–32. But, as the students recognize, see Appellees’ Br. at
    23
    Case: 15-14669     Date Filed: 09/24/2018   Page: 24 of 57
    43, what happened to Mr. Danley is more severe than what they experienced after
    being subjected to Freeze +P, and the conduct of the SROs here is different than
    what the officers in Danley were alleged to have done. On this record, those
    differences matter for purposes of qualified immunity. See, e.g., Hadley v.
    Gutierrez, 
    526 F.3d 1324
    , 1332 (11th Cir. 2008) (“For a right to be ‘clearly
    established,’ previous case law must have developed it in a concrete factual context
    so as to make it obvious to a reasonable government actor that his actions violate
    federal law.”).
    Starting with SRO Nevitt and T.L.P., the Freeze +P hit T.L.P. in the mouth
    and caused her to cough, but did not affect her eyes, her nose, or her breathing.
    SRO Nevitt took T.L.P. to the assistant principal’s office, which had air
    conditioning, and called the paramedics. At the office T.L.P. was not in pain, see
    D.E. 304 at 161, and when they arrived, the paramedics asked her a few questions
    but did not provide any treatment. SRO Nevitt then transported T.L.P. to family
    court. Given the limited impact of Freeze +P on T.L.P., her lack of pain at the
    office, and the paramedics’ decision not to provide treatment, SRO Nevitt would
    not have been placed on notice by Danley that his conduct violated the Fourth
    Amendment.
    As for the remaining SROs, we agree with the district court that they did not
    give the students an opportunity to wash or shower—as indicated (or at the very
    24
    Case: 15-14669     Date Filed: 09/24/2018    Page: 25 of 57
    least suggested) by Aerko International’s safety data sheet and as permitted by the
    BPD’s rules and regulations—and did not provide them with clothes that were
    uncontaminated. And, like the district court, we are troubled by the fact that some
    of these SROs (SRO Smith/K.B., SRO Henderson/B.D., SRO Benson/B.J.) drove
    the students away from school with the windows of their police cars rolled up,
    thereby denying them an additional source of air which could have helped speed up
    the decontamination process.
    Nevertheless, we conclude that SROs Clark, Henderson, Smith, Benson and
    Tarrant are entitled to qualified immunity. First, as we understand the record, the
    students were exposed to fresh air or air conditioning in an office or in the school
    building after the spraying. See D.E. 282 at 8 & D.E. 296 at 148 (G.S.); D.E. 282
    at 13 (B.D.); D.E. 296 at 110 (K.B.); D.E. 298 at 184 (T.A.P.); D.E. 282 at 20
    (B.J.). Second, the students were seen shortly afterwards by paramedics. In each
    and every case, these independent medical professionals who evaluated the
    students chose not to provide them with any treatment. See D.E. 282 at 8 (G.S.),
    13 (B.D.), 16 (K.B.), 22 (T.A.P.); D.E. 305 at 156 (B.J.). Indeed, in a couple of
    cases, the paramedics told the students that putting water on their faces would
    make their burning symptoms worse. See D.E. 282 at 8 (G.S.), 16–17 (K.B.). On
    this record, the SROs were entitled to rely, at least in part, on the independent
    medical judgment of the paramedics, and their failure to use all of the
    25
    Case: 15-14669     Date Filed: 09/24/2018    Page: 26 of 57
    decontamination options listed in Aerko International’s materials and/or in the
    BPD’s training materials did not make any Fourth Amendment violation apparent.
    Cf. Taylor v. Threadgill, 
    221 F.3d 1254
    , 1259 (11th Cir. 2000) (explaining, in a
    Fourteenth Amendment case involving the alleged denial of medical care to a
    pretrial detainee, that “failure to follow procedures does not, by itself, rise to the
    level of deliberate indifference because doing so is at most a form of negligence”).
    The district court, we think, understandably determined that the SROs did
    not engage in best practices, and that they could have done more for the students in
    their decontamination efforts. But assuming that their failure to go further violated
    the Fourth Amendment, the rights of the students to be decontaminated to the
    degree demanded were not clearly established under the circumstances presented.
    Alternatively, the students argue that the SROs’ conduct was “so far beyond
    the hazy border between excessive and acceptable force” that they had to have
    known that they were violating the Constitution even in the absence of “fact-
    specific case law.” Vinyard, 
    311 F.3d at
    1355 & n.18. Although we empathize
    with the students, two of whom vomited after being sprayed with Freeze +P, we
    are not persuaded by their argument.
    The students’ complaint is that the SROs did not do enough to
    decontaminate them. Again, we agree with them, and with the district court, that
    the SROs did not do all that they could have done. They did not, for example,
    26
    Case: 15-14669     Date Filed: 09/24/2018   Page: 27 of 57
    provide the students with access to water to wash or shower. But it is not fair to
    characterize the SROs’ conduct as the complete failure to take any
    decontamination action at all. The SROs provided the students with some fresh air
    or air conditioning following the use of Freeze +P, and the students were seen by
    paramedics who chose not to administer treatment (and who on two occasions told
    the students not to put water on their faces). For purposes of qualified immunity, it
    is not insignificant that the methods used by the SROs—passage of time, exposure
    to fresh air, and evaluation by paramedics—were at least partially consistent with
    their training and, at least to some degree, with the instructions provided by Aerko
    International, the manufacturer of Freeze +P. Again, assuming that the SROs fell
    short of the Fourth Amendment minimum, they were not faced with an “obvious
    clarity” scenario.
    Recognizing that cases from other lower federal courts cannot create clearly
    established law for qualified immunity purposes, we note, as well, that the other
    chemical spray cases we have found—mostly in the prisoner/denial of medical care
    context—have arisen in different factual scenarios and do not set out definitive or
    minimum constitutional standards for the decontamination of those who suffer
    from exposure. So, even if we could look outside the Eleventh Circuit and the
    Alabama Supreme Court, the published case law would not have provided the
    SROs with “obvious clarity” about the purported unconstitutionality of their
    27
    Case: 15-14669      Date Filed: 09/24/2018    Page: 28 of 57
    conduct. See, e.g., Iko v. Shreve, 
    535 F.3d 225
    , 241–43 (4th Cir. 2008); Clement v.
    Gomez, 
    298 F.3d 898
    , 904–06 (9th Cir. 2002).
    III.   CLASS-BASED CLAIMS
    As relevant here, K.B. asserted two claims for injunctive relief under § 1983
    against Chief Roper, in his official capacity, on behalf of herself and a class of “all
    current [and] future high school students” of Birmingham schools. See D.E. 188 at
    4, 56–59. The first class claim was that Chief Roper violated the Fourth
    Amendment rights of K.B. and the class by promulgating unconstitutional use-of-
    spray and decontamination policies. See id. at 56–57; D.E. 246 at 7–8. The
    second class claim was that Chief Roper failed to train and monitor the SROs’ use
    of chemical spray. See D.E. 188 at 58–59. The class was certified before trial, see
    D.E. 187, and after trial the district court ruled that the class was entitled to
    injunctive relief, see D.E. 282 at 118–20.
    The district court concluded that Chief Roper’s actions rendered the City of
    Birmingham liable on both aspects of the policy/custom claim, but not as to the
    failure-to-train claim. See id. at 98–109. As to the failure-to-train claim, the court
    rejected the use-of-spray portion and concluded that the decontamination portion
    28
    Case: 15-14669       Date Filed: 09/24/2018        Page: 29 of 57
    was subsumed by K.B.’s policy/custom claim because the SROs were trained
    pursuant to an unconstitutional policy. See id. at 109–13. 2
    Several facts, according to the district court, supported standing for the class
    claims: school attendance was mandatory; the SROs acted pursuant to BPD
    policy; and the SROs subjected the students to the spray for engaging in “a variety
    of normal adolescent behavior.” See id. at 93. The court, guided by our decisions
    in Church v. City of Huntsville, 
    30 F.3d 1332
     (11th Cir. 1994), and 31 Foster
    Children v. Bush, 
    329 F.3d 1255
     (11th Cir. 2003), rejected Chief Roper’s argument
    that City of Los Angeles v. Lyons, 
    461 U.S. 95
     (1983), precluded injunctive relief.
    See, e.g., D.E. 282 at 113–16.
    Chief Roper argues that the district court should have dismissed the class
    policy/custom claims for lack of standing. Exercising plenary review, see, e.g.,
    Ga. Latino All. for Human Rights v. Governor of Ga., 
    691 F.3d 1250
    , 1257 (11th
    Cir. 2012), and for the reasons that follow, we agree as to the spraying claim and
    the decontamination claim. 3
    2
    The students have not appealed the adverse ruling on the failure-to-train claim.
    3
    The district court concluded that under cases like City of St. Louis v. Praprotnik, 
    485 U.S. 112
    , 113 (1988), Chief Roper was the final policy maker of the BPD for municipal liability
    purposes. See D.E. 282 at 94. Because that ruling is not challenged on appeal, we do not
    address it further.
    29
    Case: 15-14669     Date Filed: 09/24/2018    Page: 30 of 57
    A.    Article III Standing Requirements
    Article III standing is a prerequisite to a federal court’s exercise of subject-
    matter jurisdiction. See Susan B. Anthony List v. Driehaus, 
    134 S. Ct. 2334
    , 2341
    (2014). To have standing, a plaintiff must show that he suffered an injury, that
    there is a sufficient causal connection between the injury and the conduct
    complained of, and that there is a likelihood that the injury will be redressed by a
    favorable legal decision. See 
    id.
     Because standing “is not dispensed in gross,” a
    “plaintiff must demonstrate standing for each claim and for each form of relief that
    is sought.” Town of Chester, N.Y. v. Laroe Estates, 
    137 S. Ct. 1645
    , 1650 (2017)
    (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
    “A party has standing to seek injunctive relief only if the party alleges, and
    ultimately proves, a real and immediate—as opposed to a merely conjectural or
    hypothetical—threat of future injury.” Church, 
    30 F.3d at 1337
    . Past wrongs
    serve as evidence of whether there is a real and immediate threat of future injury,
    but “past exposure to illegal conduct does not demonstrate a present case or
    controversy if unaccompanied by any continuing, present adverse effects.” 
    Id.
    (quoting Lyons, 
    461 U.S. at 102
    ).
    Whether a future injury is likely to occur in part depends on whether the
    misconduct alleged is authorized by or part of a government policy. See, e.g., 31
    Foster Children, 
    329 F.3d at 1266
    . When alleged misconduct is “authorized or
    30
    Case: 15-14669      Date Filed: 09/24/2018    Page: 31 of 57
    part of a policy, it is significantly more likely that the injury will occur again.” 
    Id.
    On the other hand, if future injury is based on the occurrence of a random or
    unauthorized act, then the injury is “too speculative” for standing purposes. 
    Id.
    In assessing whether a future injury is likely to occur, we consider whether
    the plaintiff is likely to have another encounter with a government officer due to
    the same conduct that caused the past injury. See, e.g., Honig v. Doe, 
    484 U.S. 305
    , 320 (1988). “We generally have been unwilling to assume that the party
    seeking relief will repeat the type of misconduct that would once again place him
    or her at risk of that injury.” 
    Id. at 319
    . This hesitation, however, does not apply
    in circumstances where the plaintiff is unable to control or prevent the behavior
    that prompted the alleged misconduct. See 
    id. at 320
     (“It is respondent Smith’s
    very inability to conform his conduct to socially acceptable norms that renders him
    ‘handicapped’ within the meaning of the EHA.”). In those situations, it is
    reasonable to expect that the individual will engage in the misconduct. See 
    id.
    We have explained that “[i]ndividual standing requirements must be met by
    anyone attempting to represent [her] own interest or those of a class.” Lynch v.
    Baxley, 
    744 F.2d 1452
    , 1456 (11th Cir. 1984). That means K.B. must establish
    standing to proceed with her claim for class-based relief, even though she is no
    longer a student at a high school in Birmingham. See County of Riverside v.
    McLaughlin, 
    500 U.S. 44
    , 51–52 (1991) (considering whether the named plaintiffs
    31
    Case: 15-14669         Date Filed: 09/24/2018        Page: 32 of 57
    had standing based on the allegations in their complaint, even though their claims
    had since been rendered moot by the time of their appeal). 4
    B.     Standing for the Spraying Claim
    For a number of reasons, we conclude that K.B. did not have standing to
    seek declaratory and injunctive relief on her use-of-spray claim. K.B. did not
    demonstrate that there was a real and immediate threat that she would be subjected
    to excessive force by the SROs because of the BPD’s use-of-spray policy. We
    discuss Lyons and then turn to the evidence before the district court.
    In Lyons, Los Angeles police had employed a chokehold on Lyons even
    though he did not resist the initial stop. See 
    461 U.S. at
    97–98. Lyons alleged that
    the City of Los Angeles routinely authorized and encouraged this method of
    control, and sought, in addition to damages, injunctive relief barring the use of
    chokeholds except in situations where the subject reasonably appeared to threaten
    the use of deadly force. His complaint alleged that at least ten chokehold-related
    deaths had occurred, and by the time the case reached the Supreme Court there had
    4
    As the district court correctly explained, see D.E. 282 at 81–82, the fact that K.B. is no
    longer a student does not mean that the class-based claims for injunctive relief disappear. K.B.
    was a student at the time suit was filed, and at the time the class was certified. That her own
    claims for injunctive relief have become moot does not doom the claims of the class. See, e.g.,
    McLaughlin, 
    500 U.S. at 51
     (“It is true, of course, that the claims of the named plaintiffs have
    since been rendered moot[.] . . . Our cases leave no doubt, however, that by obtaining class
    certification plaintiffs preserved the merits of the controversy for our review.”); Sosna v. Iowa,
    
    419 U.S. 393
    , 401 (1975) (“Although the controversy is no longer alive as to appellant Sosna, it
    remains very much alive for the class of persons she has been certified to represent.”).
    32
    Case: 15-14669     Date Filed: 09/24/2018     Page: 33 of 57
    been another five such deaths. The district court granted Lyons a preliminary
    injunction preventing the Los Angeles police from using chokeholds under
    circumstances in which there was a threat of death or serious bodily injury. See 
    id.
    at 95–100.
    Citing a number of its prior decisions, the Supreme Court reversed the
    district court’s preliminary injunction and held that Lyons “failed to demonstrate a
    case or controversy with the City that would justify the equitable relief sought.”
    Id. at 105. The Supreme Court explained: “In order to establish an actual
    controversy . . . Lyons would have had not only to allege that he would have
    another encounter with the police but also to make the incredible assertion either,
    (1) that all police officers in Los Angeles always choke any citizen with whom
    they happen to have an encounter . . . or, (2) that the City ordered or authorized
    police officers to act in such a manner.” Id. at 105–06.
    Although Lyons asserted that he may be subject to a chokehold again, the
    Supreme Court rejected the notion that the “odds” that he would be stopped again
    for a traffic infraction, and also subjected to a chokehold without provocation,
    sufficed to “make out a federal case for equitable relief”: “[I]t may be that among
    the countless encounters between the police and the citizens of a great city like Los
    Angeles, there will be certain instances in which strangleholds will be illegally
    applied and injury and death unconstitutionally inflicted on the victim. As we have
    33
    Case: 15-14669     Date Filed: 09/24/2018     Page: 34 of 57
    said, however, it is no more than conjecture to suggest that in every instance of a
    traffic stop, arrest, or other encounter . . . the police will act unconstitutionally and
    inflict injury without provocation or legal excuse.” Id. at 108. Because nothing in
    the policy of the Los Angeles police “suggest[ed] that . . . chokeholds . . . are
    authorized absent some resistance or other provocation by the arrestee or other
    suspect,” the Supreme Court concluded that Lyons had not established a “real and
    immediate threat” that he would be stopped and choked again. Id. at 105, 110.
    Chemical spray can be properly deployed under the Fourth Amendment
    when the subject uses or threatens force, physically resists, or attempts to flee.
    See, e.g., Vinyard, 
    311 F.3d at 1348
     (“Pepper spray is generally of limited
    intrusiveness and it is designed to disable a suspect without causing permanent
    physical injury.”) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). It cannot, of
    course, be used indiscriminately or without cause on students (or for that matter, on
    anyone else), see, e.g., Brown v. City of Huntsville, 
    608 F.3d 724
    , 738–39 (11th
    Cir. 2010) (officer violated Fourth Amendment by using pepper spray on driver
    whose offense was playing music too loudly and was not threatening or attempting
    to flee), but its use is not always unconstitutional in the school setting, cf. Gray,
    
    458 F.3d at 1307
     (“Every reasonable officer would have known that handcuffing a
    compliant nine-year-old child for purely punitive purposes is unreasonable.”).
    Indeed, the district court ruled that the use of Freeze +P against some of the
    34
    Case: 15-14669   Date Filed: 09/24/2018   Page: 35 of 57
    students did not constitute excessive force. See D.E. 282 at 55 (B.D.), 56 (T.A.P.
    and T.L.P.).
    At the time of the events in question in this case, the BPD’s policies
    provided that SROs could use chemical spray as a means of control when a subject
    demonstrated defensive resistance (a Level IV category of resistance), such as
    pulling away or pushing away; engaged in active aggression (a Level V category of
    resistance), such as challenging, punching, kicking, and grabbing; or used lethal
    force (a Level VI category of resistance), which included the use of firearms,
    knives, or any force that the officer believes could cause serious bodily injury or
    death. See id. at 26 (Revision 9 to BPD’s Use of Force Policy, Procedure No. 113–
    3). And Chief Roper testified that at that earlier time SROs had the discretion to
    use chemical spray for lesser behavior, such as passive resistance (a Level III
    category of resistance), which includes dead weight; and verbal non-compliance (a
    Level II category of resistance), which includes blank stares, clenching of fists, and
    tightening of jaws. See id. at 26–27.
    By the time of trial, however, the BPD had revised its policies concerning
    the use of control mechanisms. Significantly, the revised policy, which became
    effective in 2012, required SROs to consider a number of specific factors when
    determining the appropriate amount of control for a given situation, including the
    seriousness of the crime committed by the subject; the subject’s size, age, and
    35
    Case: 15-14669      Date Filed: 09/24/2018   Page: 36 of 57
    weight; the apparent physical ability of the subject; the number of subjects present;
    the weapons possessed or available to the subject; the subject’s known history of
    violence; the presence of innocent or potential victims; and the possible destruction
    of evidence. See id. at 27–28 (summarizing Revision 10 to BPD, Use of Force
    Rules and Regulations, No. 113–3); see also id. at 29 (“[C]hemical spray may be
    used in an arrest situation where the weapon’s use offers the possibility of
    lessening the likelihood of physical injury to the arresting officer, citizens on the
    scene, and/or the suspect.”) (quoting BPD, Chemical Spray Subject Restraint:
    Non-Deadly Use of Force, Revision 5 (Feb. 10, 2006)).
    The request for declaratory and injunctive relief has to be assessed in light of
    the revised BPD policies that were in place at the time of trial, see Kerr v. City of
    West Palm Beach, 
    875 F.2d 1546
    , 1549 n.8 (11th Cir. 1989), and those policies—
    which permit the use of chemical spray across a broad range of scenarios—are not
    facially unconstitutional. For example, to the extent they permit the use of Freeze
    +P on subjects who are trying to use force or weapons against an officer (or
    others), the policies conform to the Fourth Amendment. See generally Brown, 
    608 F.3d at
    738–39 (surveying Eleventh Circuit cases on the use of chemical spray).
    K.B., therefore, could not establish standing for injunctive relief merely by
    showing that SROs will use Freeze +P on students in Birmingham schools
    pursuant to the BPD’s policies. She had to show a sufficient likelihood (a “real
    36
    Case: 15-14669      Date Filed: 09/24/2018    Page: 37 of 57
    and immediate threat” in the words of Lyons) that the SROs would use Freeze +P
    on her in an unconstitutional way due to or because of the BPD’s policies. See
    Church, 
    30 F.3d at 1337
     (explaining the Supreme Court’s reasoning in Lyons). We
    conclude that she did not meet her burden.
    The circumstances here, we think, are very much like those in Kerr, a case
    involving plaintiffs who had been seriously injured when bitten by police dogs in
    the course of their arrests by West Palm Beach police officers. We affirmed the
    district court’s denial of declaratory and injunctive relief under Lyons because the
    police department’s use of canines was not facially unconstitutional and
    “encompassed a broad range of action.” Kerr, 
    875 F.2d at 1553
    . Although that
    policy might “permit unconstitutional seizures in some circumstances, [it] d[id] not
    require its officers to act unconstitutionally.” 
    Id. at 1554
    . “[S]uch general
    policies,” we said, “are not unconstitutional on their face; [the plaintiffs] therefore
    have no standing to seek injunctive or declaratory relief against the policy’s
    continued usage.” 
    Id.
    The district court here found a pattern of incidents in which SROs used
    pepper spray in response to students who did not pose an immediate threat, see
    D.E. 282 at 101, and pointed to 11 examples of students who were sprayed solely
    for verbal noncompliance, see 
    id.
     at 99–100, 115, but the evidence at trial
    demonstrated that SROs generally considered on a continuum the level of control
    37
    Case: 15-14669      Date Filed: 09/24/2018    Page: 38 of 57
    they could impose based on the circumstances presented and factors indicating that
    a more dangerous situation was developing. See D.E. 299 at 160; D.E. 304 at 173,
    178; D.E. 305 at 57–58. This evidence was in line with the policies in place at the
    time of the incidents and was more clearly emphasized in the policy revisions that
    came later and were in place at the time of trial. See Pl. Ex. 1 at 3 (recognizing
    that, depending on the “dynamics of a situation,” varying degrees of control are
    justified); Pl. Ex. 2 at 11 (stating that “each officer/citizen confrontation should
    flow in a logical and legal consequence of cause and effect”).
    Under Lyons “there is no per se rule denying standing to prevent
    probabilistic injuries,” Florida State Conference of N.A.A.C.P. v. Browning, 
    522 F.3d 1153
    , 1162 (11th Cir. 2008), but here the likelihood of future constitutional
    injury from spraying is too speculative. At trial, there was no evidence that many
    Birmingham students who were disciplined by SROs would be sprayed with
    Freeze +P. Nor did the evidence show that many such uses of Freeze +P would be
    unconstitutional. The evidence, in fact, demonstrated that the use of chemical
    spray in Birmingham high schools had been infrequent. At the time of trial the
    eight high schools in Birmingham served approximately 7,000 to 8,000 students a
    year, and there were a total of only 16 SROs stationed in all eight high schools.
    See D.E. 298 at 160–61; D.E. 299 at 186; D.E. 303 at 221. The use-of-force
    reports and other evidence indicated that from 2006 to 2014 SROs used chemical
    38
    Case: 15-14669       Date Filed: 09/24/2018       Page: 39 of 57
    spray approximately 110 times, impacting roughly 199 students, out of an
    estimated total of 70,676 students enrolled during that eight-year timespan. See
    D.E. 282 at 31; DE 298 at 160–61. So during that eight-year period the spray was
    deployed an average of only 1.7 times a year at each school. One of the students’
    experts testified that a Birmingham student has a 0.4%, or 4 out of a 1000, chance
    of being intentionally sprayed. See D.E. 298 at 160–61.5
    Allegations of intentional chemical spraying that also constitutes excessive
    force were even more rare. In the eight years from 2006 to 2014, there were only
    16 complaints alleging that spraying had constituted excessive force because it was
    an improper use of Freeze +P. See D.E. 83-5 at 9. The record is silent about
    exactly how many of those actually involved—instead of only were claimed to
    involve—the improper use of Freeze +P. If we use as a barometer the 11 times
    that SROs sprayed students with Freeze +P solely for verbal non-compliance, see
    D.E. 282 at 115, then out of the 70,676 students there is only a .016%, or 1.6 out of
    10,000, chance of being unconstitutionally sprayed. And the probability of being
    unconstitutionally sprayed may even be smaller than that. Of the six instances that
    were litigated at trial, the district court concluded that excessive force was used in
    5
    We note that the expert testified that a Birmingham student has a “.004 percent” chance
    of being intentionally sprayed. We recognize, however, that the expert misspoke—he must have
    meant to say that there is a 0.4% chance, or four-tenths of one percent chance. The expert
    testified that there had been 70,676 total students between 2006 and 2014 of which 298 were
    intentionally sprayed. See D.E. 298 at 160–61. If you divide 298 by 70,676, the result is .004 or
    4 out of 1000. It is not .004% or 4 out of 100,000.
    39
    Case: 15-14669     Date Filed: 09/24/2018    Page: 40 of 57
    only two of them: one against K.B. and the other against B.J. (who was not a
    plaintiff for the class claims). See D.E. 282 at 2, 4, 58. Two students out of 70,676
    would mean that there is only a .003%, or 3 out of 100,000, chance of being
    unconstitutionally sprayed. Either way, those miniscule probabilities mean that the
    likelihood of future injury is far too speculative to support standing.
    We do not suggest that Freeze +P will never be used against a student in an
    unconstitutional way by any SRO in the future, and we do not minimize the
    discomfort or pain (however temporary) suffered by students who are sprayed.
    The record, though, does not show that the probability of future instances of
    unconstitutional spraying is sufficient to provide standing to obtain declaratory and
    injunctive relief. See 31 Foster Children, 
    329 F.3d at 1266
     (“As Lyons illustrates,
    future injury that depends on either the random or unauthorized acts of a third
    party is too speculative to satisfy standing requirements.”).
    The district court concluded that standing for injunctive relief existed in part
    due to the involuntary nature of the students’ position. The court reasoned that the
    students were in the same position as the plaintiffs in 31 Foster Children and
    Church, and the students echo that rationale on appeal. See D.E. 282 at 86–94;
    Appellees’ Br. at 36–38, 38 n.9.
    We disagree. The plaintiffs in 31 Foster Children and Church could not
    avoid exposure to the conduct they challenged because their own behavior or
    40
    Case: 15-14669     Date Filed: 09/24/2018    Page: 41 of 57
    situation, which drove the challenged conduct, was involuntary. “[F]or reasons
    beyond [their] control” they were “unable to avoid repeating the conduct that led”
    to their injuries. See Church, 
    30 F.3d at 1338
    . In 31 Foster Children, the plaintiffs
    were foster care children who were in the state’s custody involuntarily and would
    be until they were adopted or reached the age of majority. See 
    329 F.3d at 1266
    .
    Because they were legally required to be in the state foster care system, the
    children could not “avoid exposure to the . . . challenged conduct,” which consisted
    of “alleged systematic deficiencies” and the resulting harms. See 
    id.
     The same
    type of involuntariness was present in Church, where we recognized that the
    plaintiffs’ homelessness was an involuntary status and the City of Huntsville’s
    alleged policy of harassment and arrest was incited by that homelessness. See 
    30 F.3d at
    1338–39. The plaintiffs in those two cases could expect to be future
    victims of more of the same harms they had alleged because they faced those
    harms due to circumstances they could not change.
    Although we recognize that school attendance in Alabama is mandatory, see
    
    Ala. Code § 16
    –28–3, and that Birmingham students attend schools where SROs
    are present, the students have not explained how they are likely to be
    unconstitutionally sprayed with Freeze +P simply because of their status as
    students, cf. Lyons, 
    461 U.S. at 108
     (“[I]t is no more than conjecture to suggest that
    in every instance of a traffic stop, arrest, or other encounter between the police and
    41
    Case: 15-14669      Date Filed: 09/24/2018    Page: 42 of 57
    a citizen, the police will act unconstitutionally and inflict injury without
    provocation or legal excuse.”). Students may misbehave or act defiantly from time
    to time, but they can control their own behavior. Cf. Lynch, 
    744 F.2d at
    1456–57
    & 1457 n.7 (concluding that the plaintiff had standing because he suffered from an
    involuntary mental condition that made it likely that he would be incarcerated
    again and subjected to an allegedly unconstitutional policy). As a result, we
    conclude that K.B. did not have standing to bring her class claim for declaratory
    and injunctive relief as to the use-of-spray policy.
    C.     Standing for the Decontamination Claim
    K.B.’s class-based claim against Chief Roper also alleged that he violated
    the Fourth Amendment rights of K.B. and the class by promulgating
    unconstitutional decontamination policies. Although the district court focused its
    standing analysis primarily on K.B.’s spraying claim, we also address whether
    K.B. can seek class-based relief for her claim that Chief Roper’s decontamination
    policies are unconstitutional.
    Our holding that K.B. lacks standing under Lyons to pursue relief on the
    spraying claim compels the conclusion that she also lacks standing to pursue class-
    based relief on her decontamination claim. The probability that a student will be
    decontaminated (properly or improperly) hinges on the likelihood of being sprayed
    or exposed to the spray; if a student is not sprayed or otherwise exposed to the
    42
    Case: 15-14669        Date Filed: 09/24/2018        Page: 43 of 57
    spray, then there will be no need for decontamination. The record indicates that a
    total of 70,676 students were enrolled in the eight Birmingham high schools during
    the eight-year time span between 2006 and 2014. And out of those 70,676
    students, 1,250 of them were exposed to the spray — intentionally or
    unintentionally — during that time period. Even if we assume that every one of
    those 1,250 students was improperly decontaminated — unlikely as that seems —
    there is still only a 1.77% chance (1,250 ÷ 70,676) that a given student would be
    exposed to spray and improperly decontaminated.
    A 1.77% chance is not enough under Lyons. To state the same thing from a
    different direction, a 1.77% chance of being improperly decontaminated means
    there is a 98.23% chance of not being improperly decontaminated (because not
    sprayed at all).6 In addition, the odds of being improperly decontaminated depend
    6
    The dissent notes that standing does not depend on the merits of K.B.’s claim, and that
    we must accept her contention that the decontamination measures are constitutionally
    inadequate. Dissenting Op. at 1. We agree and do accept her contention by assuming that the
    officers improperly decontaminated all of the 1,250 students who were sprayed or otherwise
    exposed to it. (We do not reach the issue of whether the officers’ decontamination measures are
    constitutionally adequate because we have concluded that qualified immunity is proper on the
    ground that the law was not clearly established.)
    The dissent also sees support for its position in the Lyons decision or some extraordinary
    variation of its facts, one in which every police officer applied a chokehold to every citizen the
    officer encountered, no matter what. Dissenting Op. at 2. But in the real world, the Supreme
    Court held that the plaintiff in Lyons lacked standing because police officers in Los Angeles did
    not chokehold every citizen they encountered and the city had no policy ordering or authorizing
    them to do so. See Lyons, 
    461 U.S. at
    105–06 (“In order to establish an actual controversy in this
    case, Lyons would have had not only to allege that he would have another encounter with the
    police but also to make the incredible assertion either, (1) that all police officers in Los Angeles
    always choke any citizen with whom they happen to have an encounter, whether for the purpose
    43
    Case: 15-14669        Date Filed: 09/24/2018        Page: 44 of 57
    not only on the acts of the misbehaving students that lead to the spraying, but on
    the intentional acts of the SROs (spraying students and then improperly
    decontaminating them). And because the 1.77% figure also encompasses students
    who are inadvertently exposed to the spray when an officer intentionally sprays
    another student, it also depends to some extent on the random act of being in the
    vicinity of a misbehaving student who is the target of the spraying. “As Lyons
    illustrates, future injury that depends on either the random or unauthorized acts of a
    third party is too speculative to satisfy standing requirements.” 31 Foster
    Children, 
    329 F.3d at 1266
    .
    Our dissenting colleague contends that we are improperly framing the
    standing inquiry as a quantitative one rather than a qualitative one, and that if we
    properly framed it as qualitative one the 1.77% figure is somehow not unlikely
    enough to defeat K.B.’s standing argument. Dissenting Op. at 2–3. To support
    that position, the dissent quotes one sentence from our Browning opinion: “How
    likely is enough is necessarily a qualitative judgment . . . .” 
    522 F.3d at 1161
    . To
    begin with, Browning explained that a “qualitative judgment” focuses the standing
    inquiry on whether the future injury is “probabilistic in nature.” 
    Id. at 1162
    . And
    of arrest, issuing a citation or for questioning or, (2) that the City ordered or authorized police
    officers to act in such manner.”). Likewise, in this case, the SROs did not pepper spray and
    improperly decontaminate every student they encountered, nor were they ordered or authorized
    to do so. Instead of supporting the dissent’s position in this case, Lyons runs counter to it.
    44
    Case: 15-14669       Date Filed: 09/24/2018        Page: 45 of 57
    it illustrated what that meant by citing a case in which “there [was] every
    likelihood” and “it [was] highly likely” that the plaintiff would be injured in the
    future. 
    Id. at 1162
     (quoting Lynch, 
    744 F.2d at 1457
    ). A 1.77% chance is not in
    “every likelihood” or “highly likely.” 7
    The dissent admits that Browning is “not controlling because of its different
    facts,” Dissenting Op. at 4, and a deeper dive into Browning’s standing analysis
    shows why. Browning involved a group of organizational plaintiffs which worked
    to increase voter registration for racial and ethnic minorities. 
    522 F.3d at 1158
    .
    The organizational plaintiffs challenged a state voter registration law, which
    required a person registering to vote for the first time in the state to disclose on the
    registration application her driver’s license number or the last four digits of her
    social security number, and that number had to match up with the number for the
    voter contained in the state driver’s license database or the Social Security
    Administration’s database. 
    Id. at 1155, 1158
    . We determined that the “odds that
    7
    The dissent adds to its reliance on Browning a “see also” citation to a Ninth Circuit
    decision. See Sample v. Johnson, 
    771 F.2d 1335
    , 1343 (9th Cir. 1985). But the Sample decision
    actually contradicts the dissent’s position, as the very language the dissent quotes from shows:
    “[B]ecause the conceptions of probability that have arisen in jurisprudence and in other branches
    of learning have far from achieved a perfect congruence, we prefer to describe ‘probability’
    qualitatively, as requiring a very significant possibility, and not quantitatively, as mandating a
    ‘greater than fifty percent’ likelihood.” 
    Id.
     (emphasis added) (citation omitted). And the court
    used those terms in discussing whether the test for standing “should be one of more likely than
    not, i.e. in instances reducible to percentages . . . or whether the test should be one where
    probability, in the strict sense, is not required, but merely some significant possibility.” 
    Id.
     A
    1.77% chance that a future injury will occur is not “a very significant possibility” or “some
    significant possibility,” which is what the Ninth Circuit required in Sample. And using the label
    “qualitative” does not change that.
    45
    Case: 15-14669      Date Filed: 09/24/2018    Page: 46 of 57
    any given application [would] be rejected because of a mismatch” was one percent.
    Id. at 1163. In considering standing, we stated that the organizational plaintiffs
    had to show only that “at least one member face[d] a realistic danger of having his
    or her application rejected due to a mistaken mismatch” to establish standing Id.
    (emphasis added).
    We concluded that the organizational plaintiffs in Browning had established
    standing because it was nearly certain that at least one member would have her
    voter registration application rejected because of an inevitable error in transcribing
    numbers. Id. (“Given that the [organizational plaintiffs] collectively claim around
    20,000 members state-wide, it is highly unlikely — even with only a one percent
    chance of rejection for any given individual — that not a single member will have
    his or her application rejected due to a mismatch.”). The dissent in this case
    highlights that one percent error rate to argue that standing exists in this case,
    Dissenting Op. at 4–6, but that figure does not tell the whole story. Applying that
    error rate in Browning, we hypothesized that if “200 individuals among the 20,000
    members of the [organizational plaintiffs were] first-time registrants and thus
    subject to the [law’s] matching requirement,” then the probability of at least one
    member being rejected was 87%. Id. at 1163 n.13. (And using the two percent
    error rate applicable to Latinos and African-Americans, the “likelihood that at least
    one person . . . [would] fail to match increase[d] to over ninety-eight percent.” Id.)
    46
    Case: 15-14669       Date Filed: 09/24/2018       Page: 47 of 57
    So the chance that at least one member of the organizations would be harmed was
    not one percent, but at least 87%. An 87% probability of injury unquestionably
    qualifies as “highly likely.” Id. at 1162.
    The core distinction is that Browning is an association or organization case,
    while this case is a class action. All that an association must do to establish the
    injury element of standing is show a realistic danger that at least one member of
    the association will suffer future injury unless relief is granted. Id. at 1163. By
    contrast, the Supreme Court has stated that whether a suit is a class action “adds
    nothing to the question of standing, for even named plaintiffs who represent a class
    must allege and show that they personally have been injured.” Spokeo, Inc. v.
    Robins, 578 U.S. __, 
    136 S. Ct. 1540
    , 1547 n.6 (2016) (quotation marks omitted);
    see also City of Hialeah v. Rojas, 
    311 F.3d 1096
    , 1101 (11th Cir. 2002) (“This
    Court requires that a plaintiff who wishes to bring a lawsuit on behalf of a class of
    individuals . . . must . . . have standing to bring the claim. . . .”) (quotation marks
    omitted). 8 And because K.B. sought injunctive relief, she was required to
    “allege[], and ultimately prove[], a real and immediate — as opposed to a merely
    conjectural or hypothetical — threat of future injury” to her. Church, 
    30 F.3d at
    8
    As stated above, K.B. is no longer a student, but we still examine whether she, as the
    named plaintiff, had standing to represent the class. See McLaughlin, 
    500 U.S. at
    51–52
    (considering whether the named plaintiffs had standing based on the allegations in their
    complaint, even though their claims had since been rendered moot by the time of their appeal).
    47
    Case: 15-14669     Date Filed: 09/24/2018    Page: 48 of 57
    1337 (class action); see also Lyons, 
    461 U.S. at 102
     (stating that a claim for
    injunctive relief requires the plaintiff to show that she is “immediately in danger of
    sustaining some direct injury as the result of the challenged official conduct and
    the . . . threat of injury must be both real and immediate, not conjectural or
    hypothetical”) (quotation marks omitted); Lynch, 
    744 F.2d at 1457
     (concluding in a
    class action that the named plaintiff had standing where it was “highly likely” that
    he would suffer future injury). A 1.77% claim that K.B. would be sprayed and
    improperly decontaminated is closer to “highly unlikely” than to “highly likely.”
    Finally, insofar as Browning’s standing analysis is relevant to this case,
    Browning was guided by how the Lyons Court had relied on several factors to deny
    standing. 
    522 F.3d at 1162
    . First, it pointed out, “the [Lyons] Court noted that for
    the threatened injury to occur, a sequence of individually improbable events would
    have to occur:” (1) Lyons would have had to do something to cause another
    encounter with the police, (2) the city “would have had to have authorized all
    police officers to use choke holds unnecessarily,” (3) the officers “in that specific
    encounter would have had to use a choke hold,” and (4) “the use in that situation
    would have to have been unnecessary.” 
    Id.
     “Second, the threatened injury in
    Lyons was predicated on the plaintiff first doing something that at least would give
    an officer probable cause to detain or arrest him.” 
    Id.
     And third, “there was an
    48
    Case: 15-14669        Date Filed: 09/24/2018       Page: 49 of 57
    adequate remedy at law for the threatened injury in Lyons, namely a damages suit
    against the [c]ity and police.” 
    Id.
    Those three factors support the denial of standing in this case. As for the
    first factor, the likelihood of improper decontamination depends on a similar
    “sequence of individually improbable events”: (1) the students would have to do
    something to cause an encounter with the officers, (2) the officers must be
    authorized to decontaminate the students improperly, (3) the officers in that
    specific encounter would have to decontaminate the students improperly (we
    assume that this factor favors the students), and (4) the improper decontamination
    would have to be unnecessary. See 
    id. at 1162
     (“Each event’s occurrence [in
    Lyons] was spatially and temporally indeterminate, as opposed to being fixed to
    either occur or not occur at some time and place. This open-endedness and the
    number of independent events needed to bring about the alleged injury combined
    to cast the injury into the realm of conjecture and speculation.”).9 About the
    second and third factors, as in Lyons the threatened injury here (improper
    9
    In contrast, we explained in Browning that the injuries to the organizational plaintiffs
    were “foreseeable and the expected results of unconscious and largely unavoidable human errors
    in transcription” and that, “unlike in Lyons, the chain of events leading to the eventual injury
    does not begin with an assumption that someone will commit an illegal act; the chain begins
    when people try to register to vote.” 
    Id.
     at 1163–64. And we were careful to distinguish Lyons
    by stating that the “odds of an injury occurring in this case does not depend on conjecture about
    how individuals will intentionally act in the future.” 
    Id. at 1163
     (quotation marks omitted). But
    in this case the odds of being improperly decontaminated do depend on the SROs’ intentional
    acts and the students’ intentional, unauthorized acts (as well as the acts or decisions of students
    that put them in the vicinity of a student who is intentionally sprayed).
    49
    Case: 15-14669       Date Filed: 09/24/2018       Page: 50 of 57
    decontamination) is based on a student behaving in a way that warrants spraying or
    on the chance of being in the vicinity of a student who does. And if a student is
    unlawfully sprayed or unlawfully decontaminated (or both) then she may pursue a
    damages action against the city and the officer, as this case illustrates. 10
    From a quantitative and qualitative perspective, K.B. does not have standing
    to pursue her decontamination claim. A 1.77% chance of being improperly
    decontaminated is not enough to establish standing. That low likelihood reflects
    the qualitative fact that K.B.’s standing claim depends on open ended, independent,
    and unpredictable events that “cast the injury into the realm of conjecture and
    speculation.” 
    Id.
    IV.     CONCLUSION
    The district court’s order of September 30, 2015, is final under our decision
    in Alabama, 
    828 F.2d at
    1537–38, because it contained extensive findings of fact
    and conclusions of law concerning the alleged constitutional violations, and
    because it provided specific directions for the parties to follow in submitting a
    10
    The dissent also relies on the Fourth Circuit’s decision in Kenny v. Wilson, 
    885 F.3d 280
     (4th Cir. 2018), to support its argument that K.B.’s standing to pursue her decontamination
    claim does not depend on conjecture about how students and officers will act in the future. That
    court held that students had standing to challenge on vagueness grounds a law which prohibited
    causing a disturbance in school and a disorderly conduct law. 
    Id. at 284
    . But that decision relied
    partly on considerations unique to vagueness challenges (such as deprivation of notice and
    arbitrary enforcement) that are not present here. 
    Id. at 284, 288
    .
    50
    Case: 15-14669     Date Filed: 09/24/2018    Page: 51 of 57
    remedial plan for class-based injunctive relief. We therefore have jurisdiction to
    entertain the appeal.
    The six SROs who were held individually liable on the students’ § 1983
    Fourth Amendment decontamination claims are entitled to qualified immunity, and
    we therefore reverse the judgments entered against them.
    Because the named plaintiff for the class lacks standing under Lyons, 
    461 U.S. at
    107–10, and Kerr, 
    875 F.2d at
    1554–55, to seek declaratory and injunctive
    relief for the spraying claim, and also lacks standing under Lyons to pursue
    injunctive relief for the decontamination claim, we reverse in full the district
    court’s order providing equitable relief and requiring the parties to take any action.
    REVERSED.
    51
    Case: 15-14669     Date Filed: 09/24/2018     Page: 52 of 57
    JORDAN, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
    With one exception, I concur in and join the majority’s opinion.            My
    disagreement concerns the plaintiffs’ standing to pursue class-based injunctive
    relief on the claim that the decontamination protocol of the Birmingham Police
    Department is unconstitutional. As I see things, there is a substantial likelihood
    that students in Birmingham high schools will—assuming the validity of the
    plaintiffs’ claim—be improperly decontaminated in the future, and I would hold
    that the plaintiffs have standing to seek an injunction.
    For purposes of standing, we must accept the plaintiffs’ claim that the
    Constitution requires SROs to decontaminate all students exposed to chemical
    spray by providing access to water, ventilation, and a clean change of clothes—and
    that SROs were not and are not doing all of these things due to the BPD’s
    unconstitutional decontamination protocol. See Warth v. Seldin, 
    422 U.S. 490
    , 500
    (1975) (“Standing in no way depends on the merits of the plaintiff’s contention that
    particular conduct is illegal[.]”). In contrast to the spraying claim, the adequacy of
    the decontamination protocol is not dependent on the constitutional validity of the
    use of Freeze +P in the first instance.
    I generally agree with the majority that the likelihood that a student will
    need to be decontaminated hinges on the likelihood of being sprayed or being
    exposed secondarily to spray. We know, however, that students will continue to
    52
    Case: 15-14669     Date Filed: 09/24/2018    Page: 53 of 57
    encounter SROs at school. See, e.g., D.E. 299 at 186 (discussing the number of
    SROs stationed at Birmingham high schools). And we also know that SROs will
    continue to use Freeze +P on students, which means that SROs will necessarily
    have to engage in decontamination efforts that will presumably be dictated by the
    BPD’s protocol. It is therefore inevitable that, absent an injunction, SROs will
    continue to decontaminate students in an allegedly unconstitutional manner. The
    inadequate and allegedly unconstitutional decontamination protocol is akin to an
    unconstitutional policy that requires police officers to apply a chokehold to all
    citizens that they encounter. Cf. City of Los Angeles v. Lyons, 461 U.S 95, 105–06
    (1983) (“To establish an actual controversy in this case, Lyons would have had . . .
    to allege (1) that all police officers in Los Angeles always choke any citizen with
    whom they encounter . . . or (2) that the city ordered or authorized police officers
    to act in such a manner.”).
    The majority holds that a 1.77% likelihood of being sprayed (and of having
    to be decontaminated) is insufficient as a matter of law to satisfy Lyons, 461 U.S at
    108.   I am not convinced.       Although tempting, it is unsound to reduce the
    “substantial likelihood” requirement for seeking injunctive relief to a purely
    quantitative (i.e., mathematical) analysis. Indeed, we have held that standing exists
    to prevent probabilistic injuries so long as those injuries are substantially likely to
    come to pass, and have framed the inquiry as qualitative: “How likely is enough [to
    53
    Case: 15-14669     Date Filed: 09/24/2018    Page: 54 of 57
    satisfy the substantial likelihood of future injury requirement] is necessarily a
    qualitative judgment[.]” Fla. State Conf. of N.A.A.C.P. v. Browning, 
    522 F.3d 1153
    , 1162 (11th Cir. 2008). See also Sample v. Johnson, 
    771 F.2d 1335
    , 1343
    (9th Cir. 1985) (“[B]ecause the conceptions of probability that have arisen in
    jurisprudence and in other branches of learning have far from achieved a perfect
    congruence, we prefer to describe ‘probability’ qualitatively, as requiring a very
    significant possibility, and not quantitatively, as mandating a ‘greater than fifty
    percent’ likelihood.”) (internal citation omitted).
    Using the statistics presented at trial, on average about 138 Birmingham
    high school students have been sprayed or exposed to spray every year from 2006-
    2014—some without having done anything wrong—and have therefore been
    subject to allegedly unconstitutional decontamination efforts due to the BPD’s
    protocol. See D.E. 298 at 164, 168. “Past behavior is the best predictor of future
    behavior,” Cordova v. Aragon, 
    569 F.3d 1183
    , 1205 (10th Cir. 2009) (O’Brien, J.,
    concurring in part and dissenting in part), and those yearly instances of injury over
    an eight-year period constitute a fair predictor of future harm. After all, “what’s
    past is prologue.” William Shakespeare, The Tempest, act 2, sc. 1 (1611). Cf.
    Melendres v. Arpaio, 
    695 F.3d 990
    , 998 (9th Cir. 2012) (holding that Latino
    plaintiffs had standing to pursue class-based injunctive relief on their claim that the
    defendants had a practice, based on racial profiling, of detaining persons on
    54
    Case: 15-14669   Date Filed: 09/24/2018   Page: 55 of 57
    suspicion of being unlawfully in the United: “[A]lthough . . . the likelihood of a
    future stop of a particular individual plaintiff may not be ‘high,’ we are not
    convinced that the district court erred in determining that future injury was
    nevertheless ‘sufficiently likely,’ given the defendants’ stated policy and
    practice.”).
    Though not controlling because of its different facts, our decision in
    Browning is informative.        In that case, organizations representing minority
    interests challenged a Florida voter registration statute which required each
    applicant to disclose specific identifying information that was then verified with
    information maintained by the state. 
    522 F.3d at 1156
    . If the information provided
    did not match, the applicant would not be registered to vote unless certain
    corrective measures were timely taken. The organizations alleged that the voter
    registration procedure left applicants with too little time to fix the matching error
    before voter rolls closed in advance of an upcoming election, and sued to enjoin
    enforcement of the statute. 
    Id. at 1157
    .
    With respect to the standing of the organizations, we first explained that
    “there is no per se rule denying standing to prevent probabilistic injuries.” 
    Id. at 1162
    . Then, recognizing that there was a mere one-percent chance that any given
    applicant would be rejected due to mismatched information, 
    id. at 1163
    , we
    affirmed the district court’s ruling that the organizations had standing to seek
    55
    Case: 15-14669     Date Filed: 09/24/2018   Page: 56 of 57
    injunctive relief, even though they had not identified any specific applicants whose
    registrations were rejected. “Given that the NAACP and SVREP collectively
    claim around 20,000 members state-wide, it is highly unlikely—even with only a
    one percent chance of rejection for any given individual—that not a single member
    will have his or her application rejected due to a mismatch.” 
    Id.
     We distinguished
    the insufficient threat of future injury in Lyons because the odds of an injury
    occurring due to the registration statute did not depend on conjecture about how
    individuals would intentionally act in the future. “[T]he injuries are foreseeable
    and the expected results of unconscious and largely unavoidable human errors in
    transcription.”   
    Id. at 1163
    .   In addition, the chain of events “leading to the
    eventual injury” did “not begin with an assumption that someone will commit an
    illegal act.” 
    Id. at 1164
    .
    The same, I submit, is true here. As explained above, the decontamination
    claim does not depend on conjecture about how students or SROs will intentionally
    act in the future. SROs can constitutionally use Freeze +P on students under
    certain circumstances, but not all of their deployments of spray have been
    appropriate. See D.E. 282 at 52 (“[T]he court concludes that there was simply no
    reason for Officer Smith to spray K.B. with Freeze +P. . . . No justifiable basis
    existed for Officer Benson to spray B.J. with Freeze +P.”). But regardless of how
    a student has behaved, or whether an SRO has properly chosen to spray a student,
    56
    Case: 15-14669     Date Filed: 09/24/2018   Page: 57 of 57
    decontamination of some kind will be necessary after Freeze +P is used, and SROs
    will resort to and follow the BPD’s allegedly unconstitutional protocol. Cf. Lyons,
    
    461 U.S. at 106
     (explaining that a plaintiff could seek an injunction against police
    misconduct where the government “ordered or authorized police officers” to
    enforce an unconstitutional policy); Kenny v. Wilson, 
    885 F.3d 280
    , 290 (4th Cir.
    2018) (rejecting argument that students lacked standing under Lyons to challenge
    “disturbing schools” and “disorderly conduct” laws in part because they alleged
    “that there will be future encounters with officers at school and that the statutes in
    question authorize defendants to violate their rights to due process and free
    speech”).
    In my view, there is a substantial likelihood that, absent an injunction, SROs
    will continue to decontaminate Birmingham high school students in an allegedly
    unconstitutional manner. I would therefore hold that the plaintiffs have standing to
    pursue class-based injunctive relief with respect to their decontamination claim.
    57
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 15-14669

Citation Numbers: 904 F.3d 1248

Filed Date: 9/24/2018

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

Authorities (46)

Cordova v. Aragon , 569 F.3d 1183 ( 2009 )

Cottrell v. Caldwell , 85 F.3d 1480 ( 1996 )

Williams v. Chatman , 510 F.3d 1290 ( 2007 )

Danley v. Allen , 540 F.3d 1298 ( 2008 )

Dorna F. Kerr v. City of West Palm Beach , 875 F.2d 1546 ( 1989 )

Alexander v. Fulton County , 207 F.3d 1303 ( 2000 )

City of Hialeah, Florida v. Eterio Rojas , 311 F.3d 1096 ( 2002 )

Florida State Conference of the National Ass'n for the ... , 522 F.3d 1153 ( 2008 )

Brown v. City of Huntsville, Ala. , 608 F.3d 724 ( 2010 )

Joe Church, Gregory Jacobs, Michael Dooly, and Frank Chisom ... , 30 F.3d 1332 ( 1994 )

united-states-of-america-john-f-knight-jr-individually-and-on-behalf , 828 F.2d 1532 ( 1987 )

Hadley v. Gutierrez , 526 F.3d 1324 ( 2008 )

Laquarius Gray v. Antonio Bostic , 458 F.3d 1295 ( 2006 )

Vaughan v. Cox , 343 F.3d 1323 ( 2003 )

Foster Children v. Jeb Bush, Kathleen Kearney, Chuck Bates, ... , 329 F.3d 1255 ( 2003 )

Willie Santonio Manders v. Thurman Lee , 338 F.3d 1304 ( 2003 )

Fils v. City of Aventura , 647 F.3d 1272 ( 2011 )

Terri Vinyard v. Steve Wilson , 311 F.3d 1340 ( 2002 )

Harris v. Board of Education , 105 F.3d 591 ( 1997 )

maurice-g-lussier-v-richard-dugger-as-secretary-of-the-department-of , 904 F.2d 661 ( 1990 )

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