Wilson v. County of Gloucester

256 F.R.D. 479, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 25336, 2009 WL 805179
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedMarch 30, 2009
DocketCivil Action No. 06-1368 (JEI/AMD)
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 256 F.R.D. 479 (Wilson v. County of Gloucester) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. County of Gloucester, 256 F.R.D. 479, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 25336, 2009 WL 805179 (D.N.J. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

IRENAS, Senior District Judge:

This suit is a proposed class action challenging the Gloucester County Department of Corrections’ policies and practices regarding the delousing and supervised showers of newly admitted pretrial detainees. Presently before the Court is Plaintiffs’ Motion to Certify the Class pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(b)(3), or alternatively, 23(b)(2).1 For the reasons stated herein, the Court will certify the class in two parts: the liability portion of the suit and the issue of injunctive relief will be certified under 23(b)(2); the portion of the suit seeking compensatory and punitive damages will be certified under 23(b)(3).

I.

The written policies at issue provide:

The rules of strip searches2 for new admission have been changed by law. The explanation is as follows: Indictables and non-indictables. EXPLANATION: In-dictables (felonies) will be showered and searched as past practice____Nonindicta-bles will be patted down, and given a supervised shower. There will be an officer present throughout the shower and he/she will not leave until the shower has been completed. A non-indietable will not spread his cheeks, open his mouth, lift up his testicles, etc., however in all cases, all inmate’s [sic] clothing will be searched as always.... Very close attention must be paid to charges upon admission. This rule does not apply to persons already incarcerated in the jail____
[After basic booking procedures, including photographing and fingerprinting] [t]he Processing Officer will then escort the in[483]*483mate to the appropriate strip search / shower room.
a) If the inmate’s charge is an indictable, the officer will conduct a thorough strip search ...
b) If the inmate’s charge is a non-indictable, the officer will conduct a supervised shower, checking the inmate’s clothing.
Prior to the shower the inmate will be deloused by the Processing Officer. The inmate will be sprayed over the entire body concentrating on the hairy body areas. The inmate will then sit on the shower room bench for a period of five minutes, then the inmate may take a shower.... If any foreign object is observed or exposed from any body orifice it will not be removed by the officer. The Processing Officer will notify the Booking Sergeant who will notify the medic for action to be taken.

(Madden Cert. Ex. 2 — -General Orders, Chapter 72, Section 8, “Search Procedures”; Madden Cert. Ex. 3 — General Orders, Chapter 72, Section 54, “Booking and Processing of Inmates”)(caps in original).3

While Defendant Balicki, Gloucester County’s Director of Correctional Services, testified that the practices at the Gloucester County Jail varied somewhat from the written policy — for example, he stated that a corrections officer does not watch pretrial detainees shower (Balicki Dep. at p. 138-39) — it is undisputed that all pretrial detainees are required to completely disrobe before a corrections officer of the same sex and the officer visually observes the detainee completely naked, at least during the officer’s application of the debusing spray to the detainee’s body.

Plaintiffs contend that the debusing and supervised showering of all inmates — -which undisputedly includes those admitted to the Gloucester County Jail4 on non-indictable charges — is unconstitutional. They propose the following class:

All persons who have been or will be placed into the custody of the Gloucester County Jail after being charged with non-indictable offenses (such as disorderly persons offenses, traffic infractions, and/or civil commitments) and were or will be strip searched upon their entry into the Gloucester County Jail pursuant to the policy, custom and practice of the Gloucester County Sheriffs Department and the County of Gloucester. The class period commences on March 22, 2004 and extends to the date on which the Gloucester County Sheriffs Department and/or the County of Gloucester are enjoined from, or otherwise cease, enforcing their unconstitutional policy, practice and custom of conducting strip searches absent reasonable suspicion. Specifically excluded from the class are Defendants and any and all of their respective affiliates, legal representatives, heirs, successors, employees or assignees.

(Amend.ComplY 17)5

The named Plaintiffs are Sandra King Wilson and Joseph DePietro.

[484]*484 Sandra Wilson

Wilson has been admitted to the Gloucester County Jail two times during the proposed class period.6

On September 26, 2005, Wilson was arrested in the Deptford Mall on suspicion of shoplifting merchandise worth less than $200.00. (Wilson Cert. ¶ 1) She was taken to the Gloucester County Jail and “strip searched” upon arrival. (Wilson Cert. If 2; Wilson Dep. at p. 112) Wilson testified that during her 2005 admission, she reported that she was currently taking Methadone and “anti-depression pills,” although she states she gave that information after she was searched. (Wilson Dep. at p. 131-34) Wilson stated that in connection with the 2005 arrest, she pleaded guilty to a violation of probation. (Id. at p. 113)

In August, 2006, Wilson was arrested in Mount Ephraim, Camden County. At the Mount Ephraim police station, Wilson was subjected to a pat search, during which she gave the searching officer the crack cocaine she possessed. (Wilson Dep. at p. 115) As a result, Wilson was charged with possession of a controlled substance. (Id.) According to Wilson, she was transported from the police station to the Camden County Jail. After serving seven days in Camden County Jail, she was then transported to Gloucester County Jail because she had outstanding warrants in Gloucester County.7 (Id. at 116)

Wilson testified that each of the times she was admitted to the Gloucester County Jail, the searches were “substantially similar” with “no remarkable differences” (Wilson Dep. at p. 140):

[T]he female officer took me into the ... laundry room____ They have you completely strip. They take each item of your clothes, shake it out, and then they tell you to lift up your head, shake it, lift up your arms, lift up each breast, bend over, cough____ They sprayed me with bug spray, put me in the shower, and gave me my clothes to get ready to go out into the population____[The female officer] leaves when you are ready to take a shower.

(Wilson Dep. at p. 72; see also Id. at p. 96)

Joseph DePietro

DePietro testified that he has been admitted to the Gloucester County Jail about a dozen times. (DePietro Dep. at 39) He only has a specific memory of one admission to the jail within the proposed class period.

In 2006, he was advised by letter that a warrant had been issued for his arrest for failure to pay child support. (Id. at p. 36) DePietro voluntarily contacted the detective assigned to his case and arranged to surrender himself. (Id. at p. 37)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
256 F.R.D. 479, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 25336, 2009 WL 805179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-county-of-gloucester-njd-2009.