CA11: For the third time: administrative searches can’t be conducted like criminal raids

This court held 19 years ago that treating an administrative search like a criminal raid violated clearly established rights. It said so again in 2007. Now, for the third time, it is confronted with a SWAT-like swarming of barber shops looking for licensing violations, and this, too, violates clearly established rights. Berry v. Leslie, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 17782 (11th Cir. September 16, 2014):

It was a scene right out of a Hollywood movie. On August 21, 2010, after more than a month of planning, teams from the Orange County Sheriff’s Office descended on multiple target locations. They blocked the entrances and exits to the parking lots so no one could leave and no one could enter. With some team members dressed in ballistic vests and masks, and with guns drawn, the deputies rushed into their target destinations, handcuffed the stunned occupants-and demanded to see their barbers’ licenses. The Orange County Sheriff’s Office was providing muscle for the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation’s administrative inspection of barbershops to discover licensing violations.

We first held nineteen years ago that conducting a run-of-the-mill administrative inspection as though it is a criminal raid, when no indication exists that safety will be threatened by the inspection, violates clearly established Fourth Amendment rights. See Swint v. City of Wadley, 51 F.3d 988 (11th Cir. 1995). We reaffirmed that principle in 2007 when we held that other deputies of the very same Orange County Sheriff’s Office who participated in a similar warrantless criminal raid under the guise of executing an administrative inspection were not entitled to qualified immunity. See Bruce v. Beary, 498 F.3d 1232 (11th Cir. 2007). Today, we repeat that same message once again. We hope that the third time will be the charm.

See Forbes.com: Federal Appeals Court: No “Qualified Immunity” Defense For Officers Who Engaged In Blatantly Unconstitutional Raid by George Leef.

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