Wise v. Ohio Department of Rehabilitation & Correction

647 N.E.2d 538, 97 Ohio App. 3d 741, 1994 Ohio App. LEXIS 4396
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 27, 1994
DocketNo. 94API01-52.
StatusPublished

This text of 647 N.E.2d 538 (Wise v. Ohio Department of Rehabilitation & Correction) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wise v. Ohio Department of Rehabilitation & Correction, 647 N.E.2d 538, 97 Ohio App. 3d 741, 1994 Ohio App. LEXIS 4396 (Ohio Ct. App. 1994).

Opinions

McCormac, Judge.

Christine Wise, plaintiff-appellant, commenced an action in the Court of Claims of Ohio seeking compensatory and punitive damages for an alleged illegal strip search conducted at the Chillicothe Correctional Institute on March 10,1991. By order of the Court of Claims, the issues of liability and damages were bifurcated. After trial of the liability issue was conducted, the court issued findings of fact and conclusions of law holding that (a) there was reasonable suspicion to conduct a search of plaintiff pursuant to R.C. 5120.421; (b) defendant had conducted a “strip search” and not a “body cavity search” of plaintiff; and (c) defendant had not unreasonably invaded plaintiffs privacy in conducting the search. Judgment was entered for defendant from which plaintiff has filed a timely notice of appeal asserting the following assignments of error:

“I. The Court erred by finding that the Defendant had the requisite reasonable suspicion authorizing a search pursuant to ORC § 5120.421.
“II. The Court erred by finding that visitors to a prison institution are subject to strip searches or body cavity searches, and that such searches are acceptable to a reasonable person and therefore are not an invasion of privacy.
“III. The Court erred by finding that the search conducted by defendants was a strip search and not a body cavity search, as each term is defined by ORC § 5120.421(D).”

Christine Wise, the wife of an inmate at the Chillicothe Correctional Institute, arrived to visit her husband on March 10, 1991. At that time, she was informed that she must submit to a strip search or she would not be allowed to visit her husband and that, if she refused to submit to the search, her visiting privileges would be suspended for ninety days. Based upon her desire to visit her husband and to • avoid suspension of her visiting privileges, she submitted to the search. No contraband was found.

The search was authorized by Warden Morris based upon an anonymous letter which he received on March 6, 1991. The letter was purportedly written by the wife of another inmate, who stated that she had personally observed plaintiff passing drugs to her inmate husband by use of small balloons, which her husband swallowed immediately. The author of the letter claimed that her reason for anonymity was fear of retaliation against her husband. Warden Morris testified *744 that the details of the letter concerning the method of transfer of drugs was one that he, through experience, knew was one of the main methods for smuggling drugs into a prison. In light of the desire by the Governor and him to have a drug-free prison, he ordered the search of plaintiff the next time she visited the prison, feeling that the anonymous letter provided sufficient reasonable suspicion to warrant a strip search. The trial court held that the anonymous letter was sufficient to provide reasonable suspicion for the warden to order the search in compliance with R.C. 5120.421.

The evidence at trial disclosed that plaintiff had once experienced a minor problem of allegedly bringing a tape cassette concealed in her Bible to the prison in violation of prison rules years ago while doing ministry work, and before her marriage to her inmate husband. There is no indication that the warden was aware of that violation if, in fact, it was a violation. Mr. Wise was not known by the warden to be a drug user or to be engaged in illicit drug trafficking. His record did contain the statement of possession of a single tablet of Motrin which, while not a drug of abuse, was possessed contrary to prison rules. However, it is doubtful that the warden was aware of that violation which had occurred a number of years before ordering the search. The trial court based its finding of reasonable suspicion solely upon the contents of the anonymous letter, which described the method of transfer of drugs and that plaintiff would continue to transfer drugs in a similar manner to her husband at her next visit.

• R.C. 5120.421 provides that in order to conduct a strip search:

“ * * * [T]he highest officer * * * shall expressly authorize the search on the basis of a reasonable suspicion, based on specific objective facts and reasonable inferences drawn from those facts in the light of experience, that a visitor proposed to be so searched possesses, and intends to convey or already has conveyed, a deadly weapon, dangerous ordnance, drug of abuse, or intoxicating liquor onto the grounds of the institution * *

Warden Morris testified that he authorized the search based upon the anonymous letter, as it was very specific in identifying plaintiff as the person who would bring drugs into the institution. He said that, based upon his many years of experience in corrections, the letter was extremely believable and contained detailed facts which led him to believe that the anonymous writer personally observed the instance which she described in the letter. He further indicated that anonymous tips were, in fact, common, since inmates within an institution would fear retaliation if their identities became known. He said that anonymous tips were often fruitful and that he felt the best means for determining whether the allegations were true was to order the strip search. On cross-examination, he acknowledged that some anonymous tips did not pan out.

*745 The legal issue posed in this assignment of error is whether an anonymous letter, even one which is detailed and facially believable, can provide the sole grounds for reasonable suspicion to comply with the requirements of R.C. 5120.421(D).

Because of the inherently offensive nature of a strip search, federal courts (e.g., Hunter v. Auger [C.A.8, 1982], 672 F.2d 668) have held that strip searches of prison visitors violate the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution if conducted without meeting the threshold standard of reasonable suspicion. The General Assembly of Ohio codified this approach when it adopted R.C. 5120.421(D). While a prison visitor is not entitled to the full protection afforded by a probable cause standard, this statute, nevertheless, mandates the lesser standard of reasonable suspicion. Regardless of the laudable purpose and necessity of preventing the smuggling of weapons or drugs into a prison, the state does not have the unfettered right to strip search a prison visitor, but must be able to articulate some credible evidence which would lead an objective observer to believe that “a deadly weapon, dangerous ordnance, drug of abuse, or intoxicating liquor” is being transported into the prison. The only fact that the warden possessed when he ordered the search was that he had received an anonymous letter accusing plaintiff of smuggling drugs into the prison and intending to continue to so smuggle them to her husband, and describing a method that the warden, through his experience, knew to be one used to smuggle drugs into the institution.

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Related

Hunter v. Auger
672 F.2d 668 (Eighth Circuit, 1982)

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Bluebook (online)
647 N.E.2d 538, 97 Ohio App. 3d 741, 1994 Ohio App. LEXIS 4396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wise-v-ohio-department-of-rehabilitation-correction-ohioctapp-1994.