Timm v. Gunter

917 F.2d 1093, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 18893, 55 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 40,405, 54 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 317, 1990 WL 161445
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedOctober 26, 1990
DocketNos. 89-2616, 89-2617, 90-1135 and 90-1189
StatusPublished
Cited by125 cases

This text of 917 F.2d 1093 (Timm v. Gunter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Timm v. Gunter, 917 F.2d 1093, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 18893, 55 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 40,405, 54 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 317, 1990 WL 161445 (8th Cir. 1990).

Opinions

BOWMAN, Circuit Judge.

This is a class action brought by inmates of the Nebraska State Penitentiary (hereinafter “NSP”). They complain that for the prison administrators to allow female guards to perform pat searches and to see them nude or partially nude violates their right to privacy. The female guards counter with equal employment claims. The decision of the District Court1 granting the inmates partial relief has left all the parties less than satisfied, and all appeal.2 We affirm in part and reverse in part.

I.

NSP is an all-male maximum security prison designed to house prisoners who have been classified as requiring medium or maximum security. Its population averages more than 600 inmates. Housing at NSP is comprised of four main housing units numbered 1-4 (hereinafter “Units 1-4”); a maximum security unit (hereinafter “Unit 5”); and a dormitory-style medium security unit (hereinafter “Unit 6”). There are approximately thirty-five staff supervisors and 215 guards at NSP.

Each of the housing units in Units 1-4 contains two control rooms, one for each two-story wing in the unit. There is always an officer on duty in the control room. Besides having visual access to the two-story wing, the control room officer is responsible for monitoring the two shower rooms on the wing. This is done through the use of two small windows which look into the shower rooms. One window looks into the lower shower room, one into the upper room. Monitoring of the shower rooms is performed by occasionally glancing through the windows.

Each unit in Units 1-4 has four shower rooms, with three shower heads in each. There are no curtains in the shower room, although there is a curtain separating the shower room from an outer vestibule, which opens into the hallway. There is no door between the vestibule and the hallway. The rooms are situated so that the vestibule cannot be viewed from the control rooms, and the showers cannot be viewed from the hall.

Each cell in Units 1-4 contains an unenclosed toilet that is located immediately inside the cell door. When the door is opened inward, the toilet is in direct view from the hall. The solid cell doors contain a small window approximately five feet from the ground.

At fixed times throughout the day, the staff checks all cells by looking through the windows in order to determine that all inmates are present. The staff is required to see “living flesh” during this procedure to ascertain that inmates are in their cells. If the guard cannot see the inmate through the window, the guard knocks on the door. If there is no response, the door is opened. The hallways are subject to patrolling at all times. Unannounced room checks and “shakedowns” are also performed.

Unit 5 consists of three galleries, which contain single-inmate cells. It is the most secure unit at NSP. Each cell contains a toilet in the rear of the cell, which is visible through the window on the cell door. Strip searches are performed routinely in the “bullpen” area of the unit, a secured area in the hallway enclosed by open bars. The bullpen is visible from the hallway.

There are five individual shower stalls in Unit 5, located in the galleries’ hallways. The shower heads are located on the wall opposite the cells, with a partial wall running parallel to the wall. The sides of each shower stall are open. Guards observe the showering inmates from approximately thirty feet away, through two sets of open bars.

[1097]*1097Unit 6 is a dormitory-style unit which houses only medium-custody inmates. It contains three open sleeping “bays,” with single beds arranged in rows in a large room. Inmates dress and undress next to their bed in the sleeping bay; there is no dressing screen available or permitted. The bathrooms in Unit 6 can be viewed from a window in a hallway. Toilets are visible from the window; some have partitions but none have doors. The showers in these bathrooms are visible from either the window or the doorway. Some of the showers have curtains; the prison plans to install curtains on all showers in Unit 6. The bays and bathrooms are subject to continual visual surveillance, counts, and shakedowns.

The outside recreation “yard” contains a urinal located under the guard tower, which is approximately thirty feet above the urinal. The urinal is screened on three sides by a waist-high wall. Inmates are also permitted to leave the yard to use the toilets in the housing units at certain times.

Pat searches are conducted routinely at NSP: during shakedowns, when inmates move between certain areas of the penitentiary, and when it is deemed necessary for security purposes. The pat searches performed at NSP are clothed searches of the body, and involve the guard running his or her hands over the inmate’s clothing. It takes approximately ten seconds to perform a pat search. Strip searches are performed when inmates enter and leave the visitors’ area, and at other times when deemed necessary. Strip searches are performed on a routine basis only in Unit 5.

In 1983, prison administrators opened all jobs at NSP to applicants on a sex-neutral basis. Female employees were allowed to conduct pat searches on the same basis as male employees, and were put in positions which allowed observation of inmates showering and using toilet facilities, but were not permitted to conduct strip searches.

This policy was challenged by two inmates in 1985. In Nielsen v. Gunter, No. CV83-L-682 (Mag. Neb. July 15, 1985), the Magistrate3 ruled that inmates be given access to showers not visible to female guards and that an inmate, when subject to a pat search, be allowed to demand that the search of his groin area be performed only by a male guard. The judgment of the Magistrate was affirmed by the District Court and no further appeal was taken.

In response to this ruling prison administrators developed a new policy which requires that female guards, before pat-searching an inmate, ask the inmate if he would prefer to be searched by a male guard. If the inmate so desires, the pat search is delayed until a male guard arrives. Female officers currently are not assigned to one-person posts as a result of this policy. The policy also excludes female officers from second-shift assignments, so that inmates have the option to shower without being viewed by female guards. Female guards are also not assigned to posts in Unit 5.

Seeking damages and injunctive relief, the inmates filed this suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1988) against the prison administrators, asserting a constitutional claim that their right of privacy was being violated as the result of being viewed while partially or totally nude while showering, using toilet facilities, dressing and undressing, and sleeping.4 This viewing occurs in the cells, the sleeping bays, the shower rooms, and the bathrooms. The inmates also claimed that the pat searches performed by female guards similarly violated their right of privacy. Finally, the plaintiffs alleged that, as a result of more privacy protections afforded female inmates at [1098]*1098the Nebraska Center for Women (hereinafter “NCW”), the female counterpart to NSP, their equal protection rights were violated.5

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Bluebook (online)
917 F.2d 1093, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 18893, 55 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 40,405, 54 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 317, 1990 WL 161445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/timm-v-gunter-ca8-1990.