Johnson v. Government of the District of Columbia , 734 F.3d 1194 ( 2013 )


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  •  United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
    Argued September 13, 2013           Decided November 15, 2013
    No. 11-5115
    DIANNA JOHNSON, ET AL.,
    APPELLEES
    RUBBIYA MUHAMMED, ET AL.,
    APPELLANTS
    v.
    GOVERNMENT OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA AND TODD
    DILLARD, INDIVIDUALLY AND OFFICIALLY, UNITED STATES
    MARSHAL, D.C. SUPERIOR COURT,
    APPELLEES
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Columbia
    (No. 1:02-cv-02364)
    William Charles Cole Claiborne III argued the cause for
    appellants. With him on the briefs were Barrett S. Litt and Paul
    J. Estuar. Lynn E. Cunningham entered an appearance.
    Robin M. Meriweather, Assistant U.S. Attorney, argued the
    cause for appellee Todd Dillard. With her on the brief were
    Ronald C. Machen, Jr., U.S. Attorney, and R. Craig Lawrence
    and W. Mark Nebeker, Assistant U.S. Attorneys.
    2
    Stacy L. Anderson, Assistant Attorney General, Office of the
    Attorney General for the District of Columbia, argued the cause
    for appellee District of Columbia. With her on the brief were
    Irvin B. Nathan, Attorney General, Todd S. Kim, Solicitor
    General, and Donna M. Murasky, Deputy Solicitor General.
    Louis A. Kleiman entered an appearance.
    Before: ROGERS, TATEL, and GRIFFITH, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge TATEL.
    Opinion concurring in part and concurring in the judgment
    filed by Circuit Judge ROGERS.
    TATEL, Circuit Judge: Concerned that contraband poses
    significant dangers to inmates and employees, many penal
    institutions strip search incoming detainees. The appropriateness
    of these invasive procedures doubtless looks different from the
    perspective of detainees such as Appellants—women forced to
    endure strip searches while awaiting presentment hearings at the
    District of Columbia Superior Court. Alleging that such searches
    violate the Fourth Amendment and, where men are not similarly
    strip searched, the Fifth Amendment’s equal protection
    guarantee, these women filed this class action against the
    District of Columbia and the former United States Marshal for
    the Superior Court who administered the Superior Court
    cellblock. Because men and women at the cellblock are now
    strip searched only upon individualized reasonable suspicion, we
    have no occasion to consider whether the policies under which
    class members were strip searched may continue. Rather, the
    only question in this case is whether class members can recover
    damages from the District or from the former Superior Court
    Marshal. The district court granted summary judgment to the
    District, concluding that because the Superior Court Marshal in
    3
    charge of the cellblock was at all times a federal official acting
    under color of federal law, the city had no authority to prevent
    the strip searches. The district court also granted summary
    judgment to the Superior Court Marshal, finding him entitled to
    qualified immunity. We affirm both rulings.
    I.
    Under the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1988, Pub. L. No. 100-
    690, tit. VII, § 7608(a)(1), 102 Stat. 4181, 4512–15 (1988)
    (codified at 28 U.S.C. §§ 561–569), two United States Marshals
    serve the District of Columbia. The first, the U.S. Marshal for
    the District of Columbia, serves the U.S. District Court and this
    Court. 28 U.S.C. § 566(b). The second, the U.S. Marshal for the
    District of Columbia Superior Court, serves that court only. 28
    U.S.C. § 561(c). During the time of the events at issue in this
    case, Appellee, Todd Dillard, served as Superior Court Marshal.
    Sometime in the mid- to late-1990s, Dillard, concerned that
    detainees were bringing weapons, drugs, and other contraband
    into the cellblock, began requiring all incoming detainees to
    undergo a three-step search. Detainees first passed through metal
    detectors; they were then patted down by deputy marshals; and,
    finally, they were required to remove their clothing, squat, and
    cough to dislodge any hidden contraband. The parties refer to
    these “drop, squat, and cough” searches as strip searches. Given
    that “[t]he evidence of the non-movant is to be believed, and all
    justifiable inferences are to be drawn in his favor,” Anderson v.
    Liberty Lobby, Inc., 
    477 U.S. 242
    , 255 (1986), we infer from the
    evidence presented that despite Dillard’s facially gender-neutral
    policy, deputy marshals in fact subjected male detainees to strip
    searches only upon individualized reasonable suspicion. By
    contrast, all women were forced to drop, squat, and cough. This
    included female pre-presentment arrestees charged with non-
    violent, non-drug offenses. After completing the three-step
    4
    search process, female pre-presentment arrestees proceeded to
    interview rooms outside presentment courtrooms. Roughly
    eighty percent of female arrestees were released following these
    hearings.
    In 2002, a class of women detained and strip searched at the
    Superior Court cellblock filed this suit seeking damages and
    injunctive relief. After the United States Marshals Service halted
    strip searches without individualized reasonable suspicion, class
    members abandoned their claims for injunctive relief and filed
    an amended complaint in which they sought only monetary relief
    from the District of Columbia and Dillard, whom they sued in
    his personal and professional capacities. The District and Dillard
    separately moved to dismiss the complaint for failing to state
    any claims upon which relief could be granted. The district court
    denied both motions and certified two classes: a Fourth
    Amendment Class and a Fifth Amendment Class. The Fifth
    Amendment Class includes all female pre-presentment arrestees
    held at the Superior Court cellblock between December 2, 1999
    and April 25, 2003 and subjected to strip searches “under similar
    circumstances for which men arrestees were not.” See Johnson
    v. District of Columbia, 
    584 F. Supp. 2d 83
    , 86 (D.D.C. 2008).
    The Fourth Amendment Class includes all female pre-
    presentment arrestees who, during the same time period, were
    strip searched without individualized reasonable suspicion or
    probable cause and who were arrested for non-drug, non-violent
    offenses. See 
    id. Following class
    certification, the district court entered
    summary judgment in favor of the District. Believing that the
    Superior Court Marshal is a federal official who acted at all
    times under color of federal law, and that the District therefore
    had no choice but to turn pre-presentment arrestees over to the
    5
    Marshal, the court concluded that the District could not be held
    liable for any unconstitutional acts of the Marshal. 
    Id. at 90–93.
    After further discovery, the district court orally granted
    Dillard summary judgment on all claims against him in his
    professional capacity, finding that his status as a federal official
    left him beyond the reach of 42 U.S.C. § 1983. See Johnson v.
    District of Columbia, 
    780 F. Supp. 2d 62
    , 68 (D.D.C. 2011)
    (describing this holding). Several months later, the district court,
    finding Dillard entitled to qualified immunity, granted him
    summary judgment on all claims against him in his personal
    capacity. As for the claims of Fourth Amendment Class
    members, the district court, relying on our recent decision in
    Bame v. Dillard, 
    637 F.3d 380
    (D.C. Cir. 2011), where we
    rejected similar Fourth Amendment claims brought by male
    detainees against the very same Marshal Dillard, see 
    id. at 382,
    concluded that any Fourth Amendment rights Dillard might have
    violated were insufficiently clearly established at the time of the
    violation. 
    Johnson, 780 F. Supp. 2d at 73
    –75. As for the claims
    of Fifth Amendment Class members, the court, relying on
    Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 
    556 U.S. 662
    (2009), found no Equal
    Protection violation because nothing in the record indicated that
    Dillard intended to treat women differently from men. Johnson,
    
    at 780 F. Supp. 2d at 79
    –81.
    On appeal, class members press their claims against the
    District and Dillard, but only in his personal capacity. We
    review the district court’s grants of summary judgment de novo,
    viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to class
    members. See, e.g., Holcomb v. Powell, 
    433 F.3d 889
    , 895 (D.C.
    Cir. 2006). We first consider whether class members may hold
    the District liable for Dillard’s conduct. Then, taking the Fourth
    and Fifth Amendment claims separately, we consider whether
    Dillard is entitled to qualified immunity.
    6
    II.
    Members of both the Fourth and Fifth Amendment Classes
    seek to hold the District of Columbia liable under 42 U.S.C. §
    1983 for the Superior Court Marshal’s conduct. As the Supreme
    Court explained in Monell v. Department of Social Services, 
    436 U.S. 658
    (1978), municipalities can be held liable under section
    1983 only “when execution of a government’s policy or custom,
    whether made by its lawmakers or by those whose edicts or acts
    may fairly be said to represent official policy, inflicts the injury.”
    
    Id. at 694.
    Conceding that no express District policy gave rise to
    their injuries, class members offer two theories—the “organic
    theory” and the “entrustment theory”—to explain how the
    District might nonetheless be liable under section 1983 for
    Dillard’s conduct.
    Organic Theory
    According to this theory, the Superior Court Marshal’s
    Office is “part of the organic government of the District of
    Columbia just as much as the Mayor, City Council and Superior
    Court.” Appellants’ Br. 44 (emphasis omitted). Claiming that
    the Superior Court is best understood as a state court, not a
    federal court, class members argue that the Superior Court
    Marshal derives his authority from “the inherent powers of the
    Superior Court.” Appellants’ Br. 50. Insofar as the Superior
    Court Marshal “handles pre-presentment arrestees . . . as the
    policy maker for the District, by delegation from the
    policymaker, or pursuant to a widespread custom or practice in
    which the District of Columbia acquiesced,” Appellants’ Br. 44,
    class members urge us to find the District liable under section
    1983 for any unconstitutional acts of the Marshal.
    But we agree with the district court that the Superior Court
    Marshal is not a District official. Rather, the Superior Court
    7
    Marshal “logically and expressly derives” his authority from
    federal law, specifically the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1988. See
    
    Johnson, 584 F. Supp. 2d at 90
    . Pursuant to that Act, “[t]he
    President shall appoint, by and with the advice and consent of
    the Senate, a United States marshal for each judicial district of
    the United States and for the Superior Court of the District of
    Columbia.” 28 U.S.C. § 561(c). Like all other U.S. Marshals, the
    Superior Court Marshal “shall be an official of the Service and
    shall serve under the direction of the Director,” 
    id., who “shall
    supervise and direct the United States Marshals Service in the
    performance of its duties.” 28 U.S.C. § 561(g). Each U.S.
    Marshal serves a four year term unless he resigns or is removed
    by the President. 28 U.S.C. § 561(d). Thus, Dillard, as Superior
    Court Marshal, was appointed and confirmed through a federal
    process, served as part of a federal agency under the direction of
    a federal official, and at all times could have been removed by
    the President. Under these circumstances, Dillard was hardly as
    much “part of the organic government of the District of
    Columbia . . . as the Mayor.” Appellants’ Br. 44 (emphasis
    omitted).
    Acknowledging that the Superior Court Marshal qualifies as
    a federal official for purposes of appointment and removal, class
    members nonetheless argue that he derives no authority from
    federal law. But why would Congress create a U.S. Marshal’s
    office for a particular court and yet deny the holder of that office
    any federal authority? Class members have no answer, nor do
    we. Instead, class members find this bizarre result implicit in
    two provisions of the Anti-Drug Abuse Act. They first point to
    section 566(a), which outlines the “primary role and mission of
    the United States Marshals Service.” 28 U.S.C. § 566(a). Under
    this section, U.S. Marshals “provide for the security and . . .
    obey, execute, and enforce all orders of the United States
    District Courts, the United States Courts of Appeals, the Court
    8
    of International Trade, and the United States Tax Court, as
    provided by law.” 
    Id. As class
    members emphasize, this list does
    not include the Superior Court. Second, class members seize on
    the word “Federal” in section 566(e)(1), which authorizes the
    United States Marshals Service “to provide for the personal
    protection of Federal jurists, court officers, witnesses, and other
    threatened persons.” 28 U.S.C. § 566(e)(1). Class members
    argue that inclusion of the word “Federal” makes the entire
    subsection inapplicable to the Superior Court because, according
    to them, the Superior Court is equivalent to a state court. From
    these two provisions, class members conclude, “[T]he Act
    addresses the USMS’s role regarding the federal courts (as
    opposed to addressing at all the local D.C. Courts).” Appellants’
    Br. 48.
    Class members’ reliance on these provisions is misplaced.
    For one thing, section 566(a) lays out the “primary”—not
    “exclusive”—“role and mission of the United States Marshals
    Service.” Nothing in section 566(a) suggests that Congress
    intended to deprive the Superior Court Marshal of all federal
    authority within the court Congress designated that Marshal to
    serve. Moreover, given the dual federal/state status of Superior
    Court judges, Congress would have had to have used more
    specific language than “Federal jurist” to exclude them from
    section 566(e)(1)’s authorizations, especially given Congress’s
    decision to create the office of Superior Court Marshal. See
    United States v. Stewart, 
    104 F.3d 1377
    , 1391 (D.C. Cir. 1997)
    (noting that D.C. Superior Court judges are “Article I . . . judges,
    whom Congress intended to be analogous to state court judges”
    and holding that a federal statute “authorized [them] to act as
    federal committing magistrates”). In any event, the statutory
    scheme gives the District no power to exercise authority over or
    delegate authority to the Superior Court Marshal. Instead, the
    statute clearly says that the Superior Court Marshal serves at the
    9
    “direction” of the United States Marshals Service. See 28 U.S.C.
    § 561(c). Thus, any authority Dillard exercised as Superior
    Court Marshal, whether delegated by the United States Marshals
    Service or provided directly by statute, was federal in nature.
    Because Dillard, as Superior Court Marshal, was at all times
    a federal official acting under color of federal law, the organic
    theory provides no basis for finding the District liable under
    section 1983.
    Entrustment Theory
    Under this theory, the District exhibited deliberate
    indifference to Dillard’s unconstitutional conduct by continuing
    to send pre-presentment arrestees to the Superior Court cellblock
    despite knowing they would be strip searched there. Holding a
    municipality liable for its deliberate indifference requires more
    than “a showing of simple or even heightened negligence.”
    Board of County Commissioners v. Brown, 
    520 U.S. 397
    , 407
    (1997); see also City of Canton v. Harris, 
    489 U.S. 378
    , 390
    (1989) (requiring that plaintiffs show that the municipality’s
    policy was “so likely to result in the violation of constitutional
    rights,” and the need to change that policy “so obvious,” that
    policymakers “can reasonably be said to have been deliberately
    indifferent to the need”). To prevail on this theory, class
    members would have to show at least that the District had actual
    or constructive notice of unconstitutional strip search practices,
    as well as discretion to stop sending pre-presentment arrestees to
    the Superior Court Marshal. See Warren v. District of Columbia,
    
    353 F.3d 36
    , 36–39 (D.C. Cir. 2004) (“[F]aced with actual or
    constructive knowledge that its agents will probably violate
    constitutional rights, the city may not adopt a policy of
    inaction.”).
    10
    We agree with the district court that even assuming that the
    District had notice of the strip search practices and that those
    practices were unconstitutional, the District lacked the discretion
    necessary for class members to prevail. Given that Dillard was at
    all times acting under color of federal law, 
    see supra
    6–9, the
    District had no authority to prevent him from conducting strip
    searches of arrestees upon their arrival at the Superior Court.
    Relying on two circuit court decisions, one by this Court and one
    by the Sixth Circuit, see Warren, 
    353 F.3d 36
    ; Deaton v.
    Montgomery County, 
    989 F.2d 885
    (6th Cir. 1993), for the
    proposition that “[i]t does not matter if the transferor has no
    control over the facility in which it places its prisoners,”
    Appellants’ Br. 34, class members believe they can prevail even
    if Dillard was at all times a federal official acting under color of
    federal law. In each of the cited cases, however, the municipality
    had contracted to send its prisoners to a penal facility; even
    though the municipality exercised no direct control over policies
    and practices at the facility, it retained power to cancel the
    contract in the event of constitutional violations. See 
    Warren, 353 F.3d at 37
    ; 
    Deaton, 989 F.2d at 885
    . Here, by contrast,
    nothing in the record suggests that the District could have held
    presentment hearings somewhere other than the Superior Court.
    And although class members insist that the District had statutory
    authority to bypass the Superior Court Marshal and deliver pre-
    presentment arrestees directly to Superior Court judges, the
    statutory provisions class members rely on are ambiguous at
    best. Thus, the District’s failure to embrace class members’
    statutory interpretation hardly demonstrates “deliberate
    indifference to the rights” of arrestees. See 
    Canton, 489 U.S. at 388
    . Class members also claim that the District would lack
    authority to issue citations or release arrestees on bond if it had
    to deliver all arrestees to the Superior Court Marshal. But the
    Marshal exercises federal authority over persons actually
    delivered to the Superior Court for presentment, not over
    11
    everyone the Metropolitan Police Department detains. And
    while the District might issue citations for minor offenses such
    as traffic violations, arrestees have a right to a presentment
    hearing. See D.C. SUPERIOR CT. R. CRIM. P. 5(a); see also
    County of Riverside v. McLaughlin, 
    500 U.S. 44
    , 53 (1991)
    (“[W]arrantless arrests are permitted but persons arrested
    without a warrant must promptly be brought before a neutral
    magistrate for a judicial determination of probable cause.”
    (citing Gerstein v. Pugh, 
    420 U.S. 103
    , 114 (1975))).
    Because neither the organic nor the entrustment theory
    transforms the Superior Court Marshal into a District
    policymaker for purposes of section 1983, the District cannot be
    held liable for Dillard’s conduct. We thus turn to the question of
    Dillard’s liability.
    III.
    Relying on Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents, 
    403 U.S. 388
    (1971), Fourth and Fifth Amendment Class members bring
    constitutional tort claims against Dillard in his personal capacity.
    In response, Dillard argues that he is entitled to qualified
    immunity. While carrying out their official duties, federal
    officials enjoy qualified immunity from damages suits in order
    to “shield them from undue interference with their duties and
    from potentially disabling threats of liability.” Harlow v.
    Fitzgerald, 
    457 U.S. 800
    , 807 (1982). To overcome a claim of
    qualified immunity, plaintiffs must show both that an official
    “violated a constitutional right” and that “the right was clearly
    established” at the time of the violation. Saucier v. Katz, 
    533 U.S. 194
    , 200–01 (2001). The Supreme Court has made clear
    that courts may address the two stages of the qualified immunity
    analysis in either order. See Pearson v. Callahan, 
    555 U.S. 223
    ,
    236 (2009) (“The judges of the district courts and the courts of
    appeals should be permitted to exercise their sound discretion in
    12
    deciding which of the two prongs of the qualified immunity
    analysis should be addressed first in light of the circumstances in
    the particular case at hand.”). Grateful for that flexibility, we
    address the claims of the two classes in turn.
    The Fourth Amendment Class
    Fourth Amendment Class members urge us to find that “the
    Fourth Amendment prohibits blanket strip searches of
    [detainees] arrested on minor charges,” at least where no
    detainees were held in the general population and “there [is] no
    significant contraband problem.” Appellants’ Br. 17, 26–28.
    Like the district court, however, we have no need to reach the
    merits of this contested constitutional question in order to find
    Dillard entitled to qualified immunity. Under our decision in
    Bame v. Dillard, 
    637 F.3d 380
    , 384 (D.C. Cir. 2011), any Fourth
    Amendment right Dillard might have violated was insufficiently
    clearly established at the time. See 
    Pearson, 555 U.S. at 237
    (approving of addressing only the second stage of the qualified
    immunity analysis where “it is plain that a constitutional right is
    not clearly established but far from obvious whether in fact there
    is such a right”).
    In Bame, this Court, addressing only the “clearly
    established” stage of the qualified immunity analysis, found
    Dillard entitled to qualified immunity for Fourth Amendment
    claims brought by male plaintiffs—claims otherwise virtually
    indistinguishable from those brought by Fourth Amendment
    Class members in this case. Like class members, Bame plaintiffs
    were arrested for non-drug, non-violent offenses, held
    temporarily at “various police holding facilities,” brought to the
    Superior Court “to await disposition of the charges against
    them,” “strip searched upon arrival” at the Superior Court
    cellblock, placed together in holding cells, and released directly
    from the Superior Court cellblock without spending any time in
    13
    general jail populations. 
    Bame, 637 F.3d at 382
    –83. The strip
    searches at issue in Bame occurred in September 2002, near the
    end of the Fourth Amendment Class period. 
    Id. at 383.
    According to Bame plaintiffs, by the time Dillard had
    implemented the challenged policies, the circuits had reached a
    “consensus” that policies similar to Dillard’s violated the Fourth
    Amendment. See 
    Bame, 637 F.3d at 385
    . But in Bell v. Wolfish,
    
    441 U.S. 520
    (1979), the Supreme Court rejected a Fourth
    Amendment challenge to a penal strip search policy and
    instructed courts evaluating such challenges to “consider the
    scope of the particular intrusion, the manner in which it is
    conducted, the justification for initiating it, and the place in
    which it is conducted.” 
    Id. at 559.
    In Bame, we held that Dillard,
    balancing these factors, could reasonably have concluded that
    his strip search policy was constitutional. 
    Bame, 637 F.3d at 386
    (“Clearly, it was reasonable for Dillard, like the courts of appeal
    that reached the issue after 2002, to believe strip searching all
    male arrestees was consistent with the law as set forth in Bell
    [and United States Marshals Service policy statements].”).
    Although Bame plaintiffs, like class members here, emphasized
    that they were charged with minor non-drug, non-violent
    offenses, we noted that “[t]he policy that the Court categorically
    upheld in Bell applied to all inmates, including those charged
    with lesser offenses and even those charged with no wrongdoing
    at all who were being held as witnesses in protective custody.”
    
    Id. at 387
    (internal quotation marks omitted). Although Bame
    plaintiffs, like class members here, emphasized the short
    duration of their stay at the Superior Court cellblock, we
    responded that “[c]ontrary to the plaintiffs’ contention, nothing
    whatsoever in Bell suggests its holding is limited to overnight
    detention facilities.” 
    Id. Although Bame
    plaintiffs, like class
    members here, insisted that they never came into contact with
    detainees housed in general jail populations, we emphasized that
    14
    “Bell [nowhere] mention[ed], let alone rel[ied] upon,
    [intermingling with other detainees] as a reason for upholding
    the strip searches. In any event, arrestees held at the Superior
    Court were in fact commingled with other arrestees in holding
    cells; no one suggests each arrestee was put in a separate cell.”
    
    Id. And finally,
    although Bame plaintiffs, like class members
    here, challenged the sufficiency of Dillard’s contraband
    justification, we concluded that “the record here substantiates
    Dillard’s point that the Superior Court had a persistent problem
    with contraband being smuggled into the cellblock, the very
    reason for strip searches.” 
    Id. Fourth Amendment
    Class members attempt to distinguish
    Bame in three ways. First, they point to a consent agreement—
    the so-called Morgan Order—in which the District promised
    “not [to] conduct strip or squat searches of female police cases
    housed at the District of Columbia Detention Facility in the
    absence of a reasonable suspicion.” See Morgan v. Barry, 596 F.
    Supp. 897, 898 (D.D.C. 1984) (explaining the agreement)
    (internal quotation marks omitted). According to class members,
    this agreement, which protects only female arrestees and thus
    was not at issue in Bame, put Dillard on notice that strip
    searching class members would violate their Fourth Amendment
    rights. In the Morgan Order, however, the District never
    concedes that any particular strip search policies violate the
    Fourth Amendment. Moreover, the Morgan Order binds only
    the District and its agents at the District of Columbia Detention
    Facility, not Dillard, a federal official in charge of the Superior
    Court cellblock.
    Second, Fourth Amendment Class members claim that in
    Bame we addressed the constitutionality of strip searches
    without “individualized, reasonable suspicion” whereas they
    focus on “the right of arrestees, not entering general population,
    15
    to be free from strip searches prior to presentment to the court.”
    Appellants’ Br. 70. Contrary to class members’ assertion,
    however, in Bame we expressly rejected the notion that Bell
    limited penal strip searches to overnight, general population
    facilities. See 
    Bame, 637 F.3d at 387
    .
    Third, Fourth Amendment Class members argue that “any
    contraband problem that may have existed in the Superior Court
    cellblock had evaporated by 1999 or 2000,” Appellants’ Br. 29,
    and that the Superior Court Marshal’s failure to strip search all
    men belies the asserted effectiveness of strip searches. But in
    Bame we evaluated similar evidence of contraband and found
    that the Superior Court suffered from a “persistent problem with
    contraband” as late as 
    2002. 637 F.3d at 387
    . In any event, as the
    Supreme Court observed in Bell, a dearth of recovered
    contraband “may be more a testament to the effectiveness of this
    search technique as a deterrent.” 
    Bell, 441 U.S. at 559
    . And even
    if deputy marshals did not strip search all men, that hardly
    compels the conclusion that Dillard understood strip searches to
    be generally ineffective.
    Thus, like the district court, we see no daylight between the
    claims we rejected in Bame and the ones Fourth Amendment
    Class members press here. See 
    Johnson, 780 F. Supp. 2d at 74
    –
    75 (“[T]he claims addressed in Bame and the instant case cannot
    be distinguished in any meaningful way.”). Although class
    members obviously disagree with Bame, that decision is binding
    on us. As a result, Dillard is entitled to qualified immunity
    because the Fourth Amendment right he is accused of violating
    was not clearly established at the time of any violation.
    The Fifth Amendment Class
    Fifth Amendment Class members maintain that the strip
    search gender disparity violated the Fifth Amendment’s equal
    16
    protection guarantee. We resolve these claims, unlike the claims
    of the Fourth Amendment class, at the first stage of the qualified
    immunity analysis by examining whether Dillard violated class
    members’ Fifth Amendment rights.
    The parties agree that Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 
    556 U.S. 662
    (2009), controls this issue. In Iqbal, the Supreme Court
    addressed “[t]he factors necessary to establish a Bivens violation
    . . . [w]here the claim is invidious discrimination in
    contravention of the . . . Fifth Amendment[].” 
    Id. at 676.
    Because “purposeful discrimination requires more than ‘intent as
    volition or intent as awareness of consequences,’” 
    id. (quoting Personnel
    Administrator of Massachusetts v. Feeney, 
    442 U.S. 256
    , 279 (1979)), supervisors face no liability for mere
    “knowledge and acquiescence in their subordinates’ use of
    discriminatory criteria,” 
    id. at 677
    (internal quotation marks
    omitted). Instead, under Iqbal, plaintiffs must show that
    supervisors acted with discriminatory purpose. 
    Id. (“[P]urpose rather
    than knowledge is required . . . .”). “[T]he plaintiff must
    plausibly plead and eventually prove not only that the official’s
    subordinates violated the Constitution, but that the official by
    virtue of his own conduct and state of mind did so as well.”
    Dodds v. Richardson, 
    614 F.3d 1185
    , 1198 (10th Cir. 2010).
    Acknowledging that they “must prove Dillard intended to
    discriminate against women arrestees,” Fifth Amendment Class
    members argue that Dillard “intended a policy, formal or
    informal, of women-only strip searches.” Appellants’ Br. 52. For
    his part, Dillard insists that his policy throughout the class
    period required “every prisoner”—both male and female—to go
    through the strip search process upon arrival at the Superior
    Court cellblock. See, e.g., Dillard Bame Deposition 89:6–98:3.
    Although class members point to some evidence from which we
    might infer that Dillard knew deputies were implementing his
    17
    gender neutral policy in a gender imbalanced manner, plenty of
    other evidence suggests that Dillard was largely missing in
    action throughout the class period. But even assuming class
    members could show that Dillard knew what was going on at the
    cellblock, they have pointed to no evidence from which we
    could infer that Dillard himself intended to treat women
    differently from men. For instance, class members cite a former
    deputy marshal’s testimony that the practice in the cellblock was
    to strip search all female detainees but not all males because of
    certain “differences in the anatomy.” Shealey Deposition 158:8–
    162:22. But that same former deputy went on to testify that any
    disparate treatment did not reflect Dillard’s policy:
    “[Supervisors] put [no] emphasis on females. They basically
    [made] sure that everybody was thoroughly searched coming
    into that cell block, and that we had policies and procedures in
    place to conduct those searches to make sure that no contraband
    came into those cell blocks.” Shealey Deposition 164:7–13. This
    is hardly an isolated example. Indeed, class members cite no
    testimony by any subordinate indicating that the gender disparity
    resulted from Dillard’s instruction or intention.
    Class members also claim that the United States Marshals
    Service admitted in interrogatory responses in two other cases
    that despite Dillard’s assertions “the ‘more customized’ policy
    was to stop strip searching males and to continue strip searching
    females.” Appellants’ Br. 60. But these responses, both written
    by the same deputy marshal who testified that supervisors “put
    [no] emphasis on females,” describe the “practice” among
    deputies at the cellblock, not Dillard’s policies. Helton
    Interrogatory Response 4; Clifton Interrogatory Response 5.
    In a final effort to demonstrate discriminatory purpose, class
    members ask us to grant them an adverse inference from missing
    evidence. Specifically, they claim that although Dillard prepared
    18
    a written policy statement during the class period laying out
    Superior Court operating procedures, he failed to produce a copy
    during discovery. “Because defendant never acknowledged or
    produced Dillard’s written search policy,” class members assert,
    “plaintiffs are entitled to an adverse inference that the policy was
    to strip search all female prisoners but not males.” Appellants’
    Br. 58. Dillard, however, has not only consistently denied the
    existence of any undisclosed policy statement but has also
    maintained that he left behind all official documents at the end
    of his term as Superior Court Marshal because “they were
    government property.” Dillard Br. 65. Even assuming an
    undisclosed policy statement once existed, an adverse inference
    from missing evidence is appropriate only “if it is peculiarly
    within the power of one party to produce the evidence . . . . The
    party complaining of the missing evidence bears the burden of
    demonstrating that it is peculiarly in the opposing party’s
    control.” Czekalski v. LaHood, 
    589 F.3d 449
    , 455 (D.C. Cir.
    2009) (internal quotation marks omitted). Since class members
    nowhere dispute Dillard’s explanation for why he left behind all
    official documents, they have failed to show that the policy
    statement was ever “peculiarly within [Dillard’s] power . . . to
    produce” or “peculiarly in [Dillard’s] control.” 
    Id. We thus
    agree with the district court that “there is no
    circumstantial or direct evidence that Marshal Dillard
    purposefully directed that women and men be searched
    differently at the Superior Court cellblock.” Johnson, 780 F.
    Supp. 2d at 81. Under Iqbal, then, Dillard is entitled to qualified
    immunity because class members have failed to show that he
    violated their Fifth Amendment rights.
    19
    IV.
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm.
    So ordered.
    ROGERS, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and concurring
    in the judgment. I write principally because this court, as in ten
    other circuits, should “clearly establish[],” Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
    
    457 U.S. 800
    , 818–19 (1982), that indiscriminate strip searching
    of individuals awaiting presentment on non-violent, non-drug
    offenses who are not held in the general population is
    unconstitutional under the Fourth Amendment to the United
    States Constitution in the absence of reasonable suspicion an
    individual possesses contraband or weapons. See Bame v.
    Dillard, 
    637 F.3d 380
    , 388 (D.C. Cir. 2011) (Rogers, J.,
    dissenting).
    I.
    In the absence of en banc review, Bame, 
    637 F.3d 380
    , is
    the law of the circuit, see LaShawn A. v. Barry, 
    87 F.3d 1389
    ,
    1395 (D.C. Cir. 1996) (en banc). In Bame, the court applied the
    doctrine of constitutional avoidance and did not decide whether
    a Fourth Amendment violation occurred. See 
    Bame, 637 F.3d at 384
    (citing Pearson v. Callahan, 
    555 U.S. 223
    (2009)); cf.
    Op. at 12. Since Bame was decided the Supreme Court in
    Camreta v. Greene, ––– U.S. –––, 
    131 S. Ct. 2020
    (2011), has
    underscored the undesirability of the “flexibility,” Op. at 12,
    afforded to courts under Pearson v. Callahan to avoid deciding
    whether a constitutional violation has occurred where the
    defendant is entitled to qualified immunity. Not deciding the
    constitutional question “threatens to leave standards of official
    conduct permanently in limbo.” 
    Camreta, 131 S. Ct. at 2031
    .
    By proceeding directly to the immunity question, not only do
    “[c]ourts fail to clarify uncertain questions, fail to address novel
    claims, fail to give guidance to officials about how to comply
    with legal requirements,” 
    id., but the
    failure to decide
    constitutional questions “may frustrate ‘the development of
    constitutional precedent’ and the promotion of law-abiding
    behavior,” id. (quoting 
    Pearson, 555 U.S. at 237
    ).
    2
    Also since Bame, six Justices of the Supreme Court have
    expressed unease with the type of indiscriminate strip searching
    engaged in by the Superior Court Marshal’s Office that is
    challenged here and was challenged in Bame. See Florence v.
    Bd. of Chosen Freeholders of Cnty. of Burlington, ––– U.S. –––,
    
    132 S. Ct. 1510
    , 1523 (2012) (Roberts, CJ., concurring); 
    id. at 1524
    (Alito, J., concurring); 
    id. at 1525
    (Breyer, J., joined by
    Ginsburg, Sotomayor, and Kagan, JJ., dissenting). The Supreme
    Court’s expression of unease is not new, appearing even in the
    context of post-arraignment defendants held in the general
    prison population. See Bell v. Wolfish, 
    441 U.S. 520
    , 558 (1979)
    (“[T]his practice instinctively gives us the most pause.”).
    Nearly every other circuit court of appeals (and the District
    of Columbia’s highest court, see United States v. Scott, 
    987 A.2d 1180
    , 1196–97 (D.C. 2010)) has understood that the humiliating
    and essentially non-productive practice of strip searching pre-
    arraignment arrestees not held in the general population is an
    unreasonable search under the Fourth Amendment in the
    absence of reasonable suspicion. See 
    Bame, 637 F.3d at 391
    –92,
    395 (Rogers, J., dissenting) (citing cases from the First, Second,
    Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, Ninth, Tenth, and Eleventh
    Circuit Courts of Appeals); see Powell v. Barrett, 
    541 F.3d 1298
    , 1300–02 (11th Cir. 2008) (en banc); Bull v. City and Cnty.
    of San Francisco, 
    595 F.3d 964
    , 980–81 (9th Cir. 2010) (en
    banc). The Third Circuit has yet to address the issue, rejecting
    only a Fourth Amendment challenge to blanket strip searches
    upon arrestees admission to the general jail population. See
    Florence v. Bd. of Chosen Freeholders of Cnty. of Burlington,
    
    621 F.3d 296
    , 298–99, 311 (3d Cir. 2010). Evidence before the
    courts and in the instant case confirms that modern technology
    and law enforcement experience have shown that indiscriminate
    strip searching of non-violent, non-drug pre-arraignment
    arrestees after the use of metal detectors and patdowns to locate
    contraband rarely yields additional security benefits. See, e.g.,
    3
    Roberts v. State of R.I., 
    239 F.3d 107
    , 112 (1st Cir. 2001); see 
    id. (citing cf.
    Mary Beth G. v. City of Chicago, 
    723 F.3d 1263
    ,
    1272–73 (7th Cir. 1983)); Appellants’ Ex. 410 (compiling
    incident reports). Contrary court findings involve the prison
    environment where smuggling of contraband “is all too common
    an occurrence” and deference is due to the policy judgments of
    prison administrators. Bell v. 
    Wolfish, 441 U.S. at 559
    ; see also
    
    Florence, 621 F.3d at 310
    .
    Members of the Fourth Amendment class here were not
    being held in the general population with post-arraignment
    arrestees and strip searches in their circumstances illustrate one
    aspect of the Justices’ unease in 
    Florence, 132 S. Ct. at 1523
    ,
    1524, 1525. Applying the canon of constitutional avoidance in
    this circuit is unwarranted, particularly in view of the recurring
    court challenges to indiscriminate strip searching by the U.S.
    Marshals Service in the Nation’s Capital, the frequent situs of
    demonstrations as in Bame. See Helton v. United States, 191 F.
    Supp. 2d 179 (D.D.C. 2002); Clifton v. United States, No. 02-
    0578 (D.D.C. Mar. 26, 2002); see also Morgan v. Dist. of
    Columbia, No. 81-1419 (D.D.C. July 22, 1981), applied in
    Morgan v. Barry, 
    596 F. Supp. 897
    , 898–99 (D.D.C. 1984). The
    United States advises that the U.S. Marshals Service has
    abandoned the challenged strip searching policy and practice.
    See Appellee Dillard Br. 59 n.17; Op. at 2. This does not ensure
    that the practice will not be revived, much less provide guidance
    for new policies and practices, promote law-abiding behavior,
    or justify the court in not “clearly establish[ing]” that the Fourth
    Amendment rights of the appellant class were violated by the
    Superior Court Marshal. Joining the ten other circuit courts of
    appeals, I would hold that the indiscriminate strip searching of
    the Fourth Amendment class in the absence of reasonable
    suspicion violated the Fourth Amendment.
    4
    II.
    Otherwise, I generally agree that appellants’ claims fail.
    A. The Superior Court Marshal is a federal official who
    was acting under color of federal law, and the District of
    Columbia cannot be held liable for the challenged actions of
    Marshal Dillard. Op. at 9.
    Somewhat less persuasive is the District of Columbia’s
    suggestion that it “had no choice,” Appellee D.C. Br. 41, not to
    turn over to the Superior Court Marshal for presentment
    individuals arrested by the Metropolitan Police Department,
    regardless of whether the Marshal’s strip searching practices
    violated the Fourth Amendment rights of non-violent, non-drug
    pre-arraignment arrestees. The District of Columbia can sue as
    well as be sued, see D.C. Code § 1-102, and can seek the aid of
    the courts to protect individuals in its custody. Appellants point
    to the District of Columbia’s obligation to ensure the
    enforcement of the order in Morgan v. Barry, 
    596 F. Supp. 897
    ,
    898 (D.D.C. 1984), that barred its own officers from strip
    searching female arrestees housed at the District of Columbia
    Detention Facility in the absence of a “reasonable suspicion that
    a weapon, contraband or evidence of a crime are concealed on
    the person or in the clothing of the arrestee which the District [of
    Columbia] or its agents reasonably believe can only be
    discovered by a strip or squat search.” Cf. Washington v. United
    States, 
    594 A.2d 1050
    , 1052 (D.C. 1991) (quoting MPD Gen.
    Order 502.1, Processing Prisoners 3, § B(5) barring body cavity
    searches of arrestees by police officers). The District of
    Columbia did not seek such aid on behalf of the Fourth
    Amendment class, but at the time there was neither an
    outstanding order with respect to the Superior Court Marshal,
    nor a decision by this court (or the D.C. Court of Appeals),
    “clearly establish[ing]” that blanket strip searching of pre-
    5
    arraignment arrestees like the Fourth Amendment class is
    unreasonable and a violation of the Fourth Amendment.
    B. With regard to the constitutional challenges, because
    
    Bame, 637 F.3d at 386
    , is the law of the circuit Marshal Dillard
    is entitled to qualified immunity on the Fourth Amendment
    claims. Op. at 12. Given appellants’ agreement that Ashcroft v.
    Iqbal, 
    556 U.S. 662
    (2009), is controlling at the summary
    judgment stage of the proceedings, Op. at 16, the Fifth
    Amendment claims fail for lack of evidence of a constitutional
    violation. Op. at 18.
    In that regard, the court observes that Marshal Dillard was
    “largely missing in action throughout the class period.” Op. at
    16. Although Dillard agreed that there was no reason to treat
    male and female arrestees differently, see Dillard Dep. 77:1–7,
    on his watch his deputies indiscriminately strip searched only
    women. Op. at 3. Summary judgment presents no occasion for
    the court to weigh the evidence. See Anderson v. Liberty
    Lobby, Inc., 
    477 U.S. 242
    , 255 (1986). A reasonable jury could
    find that knowing acquiescence to continuing violations of a
    plaintiff’s Equal Protection rights by one’s deputies amounts to
    purposeful conduct and infer, in the absence of a legitimate non-
    invidious reason for treating women differently than men, a
    defendant’s discriminatory purpose. Cf. Vill. of Arlington
    Heights v. Metro. Hous. Dev. Corp., 
    429 U.S. 252
    , 266–67
    (1977); cf. also Primas v. Dist. of Columbia, 
    719 F.3d 693
    ,
    697–98 (D.C. Cir. 2013); Evans v. Sebelius, 
    716 F.3d 617
    ,
    620–22 (D.C. Cir. 2013). Dillard repeatedly swore, however,
    that he believed men and women were being strip searched in
    the same manner, see Dillard Dep. 96:10–97:8, 99:8–101:12,
    and the Fifth Amendment class fails to proffer evidence from
    which a reasonable jury could find that he had a women-only
    strip search policy or knew of the disparate treatment by his
    deputies. Op. at 16–18. Absent evidence that Dillard either had
    6
    a blanket policy for strip searching only female arrestees, or
    knew that his deputies were doing so indiscriminately and did
    nothing to stop them, a discriminatory purpose by Dillard cannot
    reasonably be inferred.