Luis W. Lebron v. Secretary of the Florida Department of Children and Families , 772 F.3d 1352 ( 2014 )


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  •                 Case: 14-10322     Date Filed: 12/03/2014     Page: 1 of 54
    [PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    ________________________
    No. 14-10322
    ________________________
    D.C. Docket No. 6:11-cv-01473-MSS-DAB
    LUIS W. LEBRON,
    Individually and as Class Representative,
    Plaintiff - Appellee,
    versus
    SECRETARY OF THE FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN AND
    FAMILIES,
    Defendant - Appellant.
    ________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Middle District of Florida
    ________________________
    (December 3, 2014)
    Before HULL and MARCUS, Circuit Judges, and TOTENBERG, * District Judge.
    MARCUS, Circuit Judge:
    A Florida statute mandates suspicionless drug testing of all applicants
    *
    Honorable Amy Totenberg, United States District Judge for the Northern District of Georgia,
    sitting by designation.
    Case: 14-10322     Date Filed: 12/03/2014   Page: 2 of 54
    seeking Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (“TANF”) benefits. See 
    Fla. Stat. § 414.0652
    . Luis Lebron sued the Secretary of the Florida Department of
    Children and Families (the “State”), claiming that the statute violates the Fourth
    Amendment’s prohibition against unreasonable searches and seizures, applied
    against the states through the Fourteenth Amendment. After we affirmed the entry
    of a preliminary injunction barring the application of the statute against Lebron, the
    State halted the drug-testing program. See Lebron v. Sec’y, Fla. Dep’t of Children
    & Families (Lebron I), 
    710 F.3d 1202
     (11th Cir. 2013). Since then, the district
    court granted final summary judgment to Lebron, declared § 414.0652
    unconstitutional, and permanently enjoined its enforcement.
    We affirm. On this record, the State has failed to meet its burden of
    establishing a substantial special need to drug test all TANF applicants without any
    suspicion. Even viewing the facts in the light most favorable to the nonmoving
    party, the State has not demonstrated a more prevalent, unique, or different drug
    problem among TANF applicants than in the general population. The ordinary
    government interests claimed in this case are nothing like the narrow category of
    special needs that justify blanket drug testing of railroad workers, certain federal
    Customs employees involved in drug interdiction or who carry firearms, or
    students who participate in extracurricular activities because those programs
    involve “surpassing safety interests,” Skinner v. Railway Labor Execs. Ass’n, 489
    2
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    54 U.S. 602
    , 634 (1989), or “close supervision of school children,” Vernonia Sch.
    Dist. 47J v. Acton, 
    515 U.S. 646
    , 655 (1995) (quoting New Jersey v. T.L.O., 
    469 U.S. 325
    , 339 (1985)).
    Moreover, as we held in Lebron I, the State cannot circumvent constitutional
    concerns by requiring that applicants consent to a drug test to receive TANF
    payments. When a government benefit is conditioned on suspicionless drug
    testing, the voluntariness of the program is properly viewed as a factor baked into
    the special needs reasonableness analysis, not as an exception to it.
    I.
    A.
    Congress created TANF in the Personal Responsibility and Work
    Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996, Pub. L. No. 104-193, 
    110 Stat. 2105
    .
    TANF provides federal block grants for state programs “that provide[] assistance
    to needy families with (or expecting) children and provide[] parents with job
    preparation, work, and support services to enable them to leave the program and
    become self-sufficient.” 
    42 U.S.C. § 602
    (a)(1)(A)(i). Florida began disbursing
    TANF benefits, including Temporary Cash Assistance, to families in 1996 through
    its Department of Children and Families (“DCF” or the “Department”). To apply
    for TANF benefits in Florida, an individual must complete an application and must
    satisfy a number of eligibility requirements. 
    Fla. Stat. § 414.095
    . Only expectant
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    mothers and families with children qualify. 
    Id.
     § 414.095(14)(a). In the
    application, an individual must disclose certain information, including medical
    history, immunization records, living arrangements, social security numbers,
    family income, employment history, and job-search activities. For families of two
    like Lebron and his son, the maximum Temporary Cash Assistance benefit
    currently is $241.00 per month. Id. § 414.095(10)(c). An individual generally
    may not receive TANF Temporary Cash Assistance for more than a lifetime
    cumulative total of 48 months. Id. § 414.105.
    Congress specified in the 1996 Act that states were not prohibited “from
    testing welfare recipients for use of controlled substances nor from sanctioning
    welfare recipients who test positive for use of controlled substances.” 21 U.S.C.
    § 862b. In 2011, Florida enacted a statute requiring suspicionless drug screening
    for all TANF applicants as a condition of eligibility. 
    Fla. Stat. § 414.0652
    . Under
    that law, applicants must provide a DCF-approved laboratory with a urine sample
    to be tested for Amphetamines, Methamphetamines, Cannabinoids (THC),
    Cocaine, Phencyclidine (PCP), Opiates, Barbiturates, Benzodiazepines,
    Methadone, and Propoxyphene. The statute does not require testing for alcohol.
    DCF must “[a]dvise each individual to be tested, before the test is conducted, that
    he or she may, but is not required to, advise the agent administering the test of any
    prescription or over-the-counter medication he or she is taking.” 
    Id.
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    § 414.0652(2)(d). Applicants bear the cost of testing, which during the period of
    the statute’s implementation generally ranged between $24 and $45. However, if
    an applicant tests negative for controlled substances, the Department increases the
    amount of TANF benefit to compensate for the testing expense. Id.
    § 414.0652(2)(a). State law provides that “[a] sample shall be collected with due
    regard to the privacy of the individual providing the sample, and in a manner
    reasonably calculated to prevent substitution or contamination of the sample.” Id.
    § 112.0455(8)(a).1 Notably, an applicant may arrange the timing of filing an
    application; after the State determines that the applicant has satisfied all non-drug
    testing eligibility factors (e.g., income, assets, etc.), the applicant must pass a drug
    test within ten days.
    Under § 414.0652, an individual who tests positive for controlled substances
    is ineligible for TANF benefits for one year, though those who fail drug tests may
    reapply for benefits after six months if they can document successful completion of
    a substance abuse treatment program and pass another drug test. Id.
    1
    State regulations further require “minimum precautions” to ensure the security of the urine
    specimen: “[t]he collection site person shall ask the individual to remove any unnecessary outer
    garments, such as a coat or jacket, and to empty all clothing pockets. . . . The individual may
    retain his or her wallet, provided that the collection site person shall check it for possible
    contaminants.” Fla. Admin. Code r. 59A-24.005(3)(c)(5). “The individual may provide his or
    her urine specimen in a stall or otherwise partitioned enclosure that allows for individual privacy.
    The collection site person shall remain in the restroom or area, but outside the stall or partitioned
    enclosure.” Id. r. 59A-24.005(3)(c)(7). In addition, if “a collection site person has reason to
    believe that a particular individual may alter or has altered or substituted a urine specimen,” and
    a higher level supervisor agrees, a second specimen shall be collected “under the direct
    observation of an observer of the same gender as the donor.” Id. r. 59A-24.005(3)(c)(13).
    5
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    §§ 414.0652(1)(b), (2)(j). A parent cannot receive benefits without passing a drug
    test, but the parent’s failure of a test does not affect a child’s eligibility to receive
    TANF benefits; instead, a protective payee would be designated to receive benefits
    for the child. Id. § 414.0652(3).
    The § 414.0652 drug-testing requirement went into effect on July 1, 2011,
    and was enforced until the district court entered a preliminary injunction on
    October 24, 2011. During that period, 4,046 TANF applicants submitted to drug
    testing. Only 108 -- 2.67% -- tested positive for drug use: 44 for cannabinoids
    (marijuana); 24 for benzodiazepines (e.g., Xanax); 10 for cocaine; 9 each for
    barbiturates and opiates; 10 for methadone; 3 for propoxyphene; 5 for
    amphetamines or methamphetamines; and 2 for PCP. 2 Throughout that period,
    2,306 additional applicants did not complete applications and submit drug-test
    results to DCF, even though they were otherwise eligible for TANF Temporary
    Cash Assistance.
    When he brought suit, Lebron had sole custody of his five-year-old son. A
    veteran of the United States Navy and a college student, Lebron was a thirty-five-
    year-old single-parent who lived with and cared for his disabled mother in
    Orlando, Florida. On July 16, 2011, Lebron applied to DCF for TANF benefits for
    himself and his son. Lebron initially signed a form agreeing to drug testing, but he
    2
    Some applicants tested positive for more than one drug.
    6
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    later revoked his consent and refused to take the test. If Lebron had passed a drug
    test and submitted the results, the Department determined, he and his son would
    have been eligible for TANF benefits. Without the test, however, the Department
    deemed him ineligible to receive TANF assistance and denied his application on
    August 25, 2011.
    B.
    On behalf of himself and a class of similarly situated persons, Lebron
    commenced this lawsuit in the United States District Court for the Middle District
    of Florida on September 6, 2011, against the Secretary of DCF in his official
    capacity. Lebron sought a declaration that requiring suspicionless drug testing for
    TANF eligibility under § 414.0652 violated the Fourth Amendment right to be free
    from unreasonable searches. Lebron also asked for a permanent injunction barring
    the enforcement of § 414.0652. Lebron filed a motion for a preliminary injunction
    with his complaint.
    On October 24, 2011, the district court preliminarily enjoined the State from
    requiring that Lebron submit to a suspicionless drug test pursuant to § 414.0652 as
    a condition for receiving TANF benefits until the case was resolved. Lebron v.
    Wilkins, 
    820 F. Supp. 2d 1273
    , 1293 (M.D. Fla. 2011). The court found that
    Lebron was substantially likely to succeed on the merits of his challenge, that he
    would suffer irreparable injury without an injunction, that his threatened injury
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    outweighed the possible injury to the State, and that an injunction would not
    disserve the public interest. See 
    id.
     at 1281 (citing Horton v. City of St. Augustine,
    Fla., 
    272 F.3d 1318
    , 1326 (11th Cir. 2001)). Because the State stipulated that it
    would apply the ruling to all similarly situated persons, the district court initially
    denied without prejudice Lebron’s motion for class certification. Shortly
    thereafter, though, out of concern that Lebron’s individual claim might become
    moot during the litigation, the district court certified a class of Florida TANF
    applicants.3 In response to the preliminary injunction, DCF suspended the
    § 414.0652 TANF drug-testing program statewide, approved all applications that
    had been pending based on drug testing, approved benefits for individuals who had
    tested positive, and reimbursed TANF applicants for drug tests to the extent they
    had not already received reimbursement. In total, the Department restored TANF
    Temporary Cash Assistance to approximately 1,727 families.
    The Secretary appealed the preliminary injunction, and a panel of this Court
    affirmed. Lebron I, 
    710 F.3d 1202
    . We found it undisputed that government-
    mandated drug testing is a Fourth Amendment “search.” 
    Id. at 1206
    . The Court
    3
    The certified class is composed of:
    All persons residing in Florida who applied for, are applying for, or will in the
    future apply for, Temporary Cash Assistance (“TCA”), Florida’s program to
    distribute Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (“TANF”) benefits, and who
    would, absent [the preliminary injunction], be subject to Defendant’s mandatory
    suspicionless drug testing as a result of 
    Fla. Stat. § 414.0652
    .
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    explained that, to qualify as a constitutionally reasonable search, § 414.0652 drug
    testing either must be based on individualized suspicion of wrongdoing, or must
    involve certain limited and exceptional circumstances, when the government
    shows substantial “special needs.” Id. at 1206-07 (quoting Skinner, 489 U.S. at
    619). Because this case did not involve either of the two exceptional
    circumstances recognized by the Supreme Court -- employees engaged in
    inherently dangerous jobs (such as railroad workers or federal Customs employees
    who are involved in drug interdiction or who carry firearms) and children in public
    schools -- we concluded that the district court did not abuse its discretion in
    determining that the State failed to establish a substantial special need justifying its
    TANF drug-testing requirement. The State’s claimed special need -- ensuring that
    the goals of TANF are not jeopardized by drug use -- rested on a presumption of an
    unlawful drug-use problem among Florida TANF recipients that the State had
    failed to support with concrete facts. Id. at 1212-13. The Court also rejected the
    State’s alternative claim that § 414.0652 drug testing was constitutionally
    permissible because TANF applicants gave their consent, citing “the Supreme
    Court’s long-standing admonition that the government ‘may not deny a benefit to a
    person on a basis that infringes his constitutionally protected interests.’” Id. at
    1217 (quoting Perry v. Sindermann, 
    408 U.S. 593
    , 597 (1972)). Ultimately, the
    Court held that the district court did not abuse its discretion in rejecting the State’s
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    consent argument due to the unconstitutional conditions doctrine. Id. at 1218. The
    State petitioned for rehearing en banc, which the Court denied.
    Meanwhile, the State had not sought a stay of the matter in the district court
    pending appeal, and both parties filed motions for summary judgment before we
    decided Lebron I. After we issued our opinion in the preliminary injunction
    matter, and after the completion of discovery, the district court entered an order
    granting final summary judgment in favor of Lebron and denying the State’s
    motion. The State argued in the district court that drug testing was
    constitutionally permissible because of three “special needs”: “(1) ensuring TANF
    participants’ job readiness; (2) ensuring the TANF program meets its child-welfare
    and family-stability goals; and (3) ensuring that public funds are used for their
    intended purposes and not to undermine public health.” Id. at 1291. Citing Lebron
    I, the district court concluded, however, that the State failed to show that TANF
    recipients fell within the “closely guarded category” for whom the Supreme Court
    has allowed suspicionless drug testing, and also failed to demonstrate that the
    statute was necessary to protect children because the TANF testing has no impact
    on the familial and custodial relationships of applicants. Id.
    Significantly, the district court also found that the only competent record
    evidence addressing drug use among the Florida TANF population came from a
    1998 study conducted by DCF that actually found a lower rate of drug usage
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    among TANF applicants than among current estimates of the population of Florida
    as a whole. Id. at 1293. The court deemed inadmissible or irrelevant other
    evidence proffered by the State concerning the rate of drug use among Florida’s
    TANF population. The district court concluded that “there simply is no competent
    evidence offered on this record of the sort of pervasive drug problem the State
    envisioned in the promulgation of this statute.” Id. at 1298. Finally, the court
    rejected the state’s consent argument, finding that consent under the statute was not
    voluntarily given. Id. Ultimately, because there was no set of circumstances under
    which § 414.0652 could be applied constitutionally, the court declared the statute
    facially unconstitutional and permanently enjoined the State from enforcing it. Id.
    at 1299. The State filed a timely notice of appeal of the district court’s final order,
    which we have jurisdiction to review under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    .
    II.
    We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of
    Lebron de novo, viewing all facts in the light most favorable to the State. Am.
    Fed’n of State, Cnty. & Mun. Emps. Council 79 v. Scott (AFSCME), 
    717 F.3d 851
    , 862 (11th Cir. 2013). We review evidentiary rulings, including the exclusion
    of evidence at summary judgment, for abuse of discretion. See Allison v. McGhan
    Med. Corp., 
    184 F.3d 1300
    , 1306 (11th Cir. 1999). Thus, we defer to the district
    court’s ruling unless it is “manifestly erroneous”: “Because the task of evaluating
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    the reliability of expert testimony is uniquely entrusted to the district court . . . we
    give the district court ‘considerable leeway’ in the execution of its duty.” Hendrix
    ex rel. G.P. v. Evenflo Co., 
    609 F.3d 1183
    , 1191 (11th Cir. 2010) (quoting Rink v.
    Cheminova, 
    400 F.3d 1286
    , 1291 (11th Cir. 2005)). Similarly, “[t]he ultimate
    decision as to the admissibility of lay opinion testimony is committed to the sound
    discretion of the district court and will not be overturned on appeal unless there is
    clear abuse of discretion.” United States v. Myers, 
    972 F.2d 1566
    , 1576-77 (11th
    Cir. 1992). “Evidence inadmissible at trial cannot be used to avoid summary
    judgment.” Chapman v. Procter & Gamble Distrib., LLC, 
    766 F.3d 1296
    , 1313
    (11th Cir. 2014) (quoting Corwin v. Walt Disney Co., 
    475 F.3d 1239
    , 1249 (11th
    Cir. 2007)).
    Under the “law of the case” doctrine, the “findings of fact and conclusions
    of law by an appellate court are generally binding in all subsequent proceedings in
    the same case in the trial court or on a later appeal.” Heathcoat v. Potts, 
    905 F.2d 367
    , 370 (11th Cir. 1990) (per curiam) (quoting Westbrook v. Zant, 
    743 F.2d 764
    ,
    768 (11th Cir. 1984)). This doctrine is limited to issues actually decided by the
    appellate court, and discussion in dicta “is neither the law of the case nor binding
    precedent.” Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co. v. Tanker Robert Watt Miller, 
    957 F.2d 1575
    , 1578 (11th Cir. 1992). Still, law of the case includes “things decided
    by necessary implication as well as those decided explicitly.” Wheeler v. City of
    12
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    Pleasant Grove, 
    746 F.2d 1437
    , 1440 (11th Cir. 1984) (per curiam) (quoting
    Dickinson v. Auto Ctr. Mfg. Co., 
    733 F.2d 1092
    , 1098 (5th Cir. 1983)). Our
    precedent recognizes three exceptions to the law of the case doctrine: “when (1) a
    subsequent trial produces substantially different evidence, (2) controlling authority
    has since made a contrary decision of law applicable to that issue, or (3) the prior
    decision was clearly erroneous and would work manifest injustice.” 
    Id.
     (quoting
    United States v. Robinson, 
    690 F.2d 869
    , 872 (11th Cir. 1982)). We enforce this
    judge-made doctrine in the interests of efficiency, finality and consistency:
    “[f]ailure to honor its commands can only result in chaos.” Litman v. Mass. Mut.
    Life Ins. Co., 
    825 F.2d 1506
    , 1511 (11th Cir. 1987) (en banc).
    In Lebron I, we reviewed the grant of a preliminary injunction on an
    undeveloped record and asked only whether the district court had abused its
    discretion in determining that Lebron was likely to succeed on the merits of his
    claim. See 710 F.3d at 1206. The Court was not asked, and did not decide, the
    ultimate constitutionality of § 414.0652. See id. at 1218 (Jordan, J., concurring).
    Still, in reaching its decision, Lebron I noted a number of legal principles that
    apply equally to the issues presently before us.
    III.
    “The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and
    effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated . . . .”
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    U.S. Const. amend. IV. The drug testing by urinalysis required under § 414.0652
    is undisputedly a Fourth Amendment search. Skinner, 489 U.S. at 617 (“Because
    it is clear that the collection and testing of urine intrudes upon expectations of
    privacy that society has long recognized as reasonable, . . . these intrusions must be
    deemed searches under the Fourth Amendment.”). The question is whether
    mandatory, suspicionless drug testing of all TANF applicants amounts to a
    reasonable search. While the Constitution generally prohibits government searches
    conducted without individualized suspicion, the Supreme Court has recognized
    exceptions in certain well-defined circumstances, including when the government
    has “special needs, beyond the normal need for law enforcement.” Chandler, 520
    U.S. at 313 (quoting Skinner, 489 U.S. at 619). The Secretary argues that the State
    has a “special need” for its drug-testing regime and, alternatively, that consent
    from TANF applicants renders the searches constitutionally valid. We are
    unpersuaded.
    A.
    The special needs doctrine recognizes that, “[i]n limited circumstances,
    where the privacy interests implicated by the search are minimal, and where an
    important governmental interest furthered by the intrusion would be placed in
    jeopardy by a requirement of individualized suspicion, a search may be reasonable
    despite the absence of such suspicion.” Skinner, 489 U.S. at 624. In determining
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    whether the State possesses a sufficiently substantial special need, “courts must
    undertake a context-specific inquiry, examining closely the competing private and
    public interests advanced by the parties.” Chandler, 520 U.S. at 314. The
    Supreme Court has permitted suspicionless drug testing only “where the asserted
    special need addresses a substantial concern for public safety or where the state is
    fulfilling its well-recognized role as the guardian and tutor of public school
    children.” Lebron I, 710 F.3d at 1210.
    In Skinner, federal regulations required blood and urine testing of railroad
    employees involved in train accidents, and also allowed railroads to conduct breath
    and urine tests of employees who violated safety rules. The regulations were
    adopted in response to evidence of drug and alcohol abuse by some rail employees,
    the enormous safety hazards posed by such abuse, and the documented link
    between impaired employees and train accidents. The Supreme Court upheld the
    testing program as justified by “surpassing safety interests” because drug testing
    could deter rail workers who might “cause great human loss before any signs of
    impairment become noticeable to supervisors.” Skinner, 489 U.S. at 634, 628.
    The program also allowed railroads to collect critical information about the causes
    of major train accidents. Suspicionless testing was necessary, according to the
    Court, because blanket searches after (unpredictable) accidents prevented
    employees from avoiding detection by planning drug use around a testing
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    schedule, and because waiting to establish suspicion about individuals after an
    accident “likely would result in the loss or deterioration of the evidence furnished
    by the tests.” Id. at 631.
    For similar reasons, the Supreme Court upheld drug testing of United States
    Customs Service employees who were directly involved in drug interdiction or
    were required to carry firearms. See Nat’l Treasury Emps. Union v. Von Raab,
    
    489 U.S. 656
     (1989). Noting that the program was intended “to deter drug use
    among those eligible for promotion to sensitive positions within the Service and to
    prevent the promotion of drug users to those positions,” the Court concluded that a
    substantial special need justified the search. 
    Id. at 666
    . Considering the hazardous
    and important work done by Customs employees, particularly their exposure to
    threats, bribes, and blackmail from drug traffickers, the Court held that “the
    Government has a compelling interest in ensuring that front-line interdiction
    personnel are physically fit, and have unimpeachable integrity and judgment.” 
    Id. at 670
    . Similarly, employees “who may use deadly force plainly discharge duties
    fraught with such risks of injury to others that even a momentary lapse of attention
    can have disastrous consequences.” 
    Id.
     (internal quotation marks omitted). “In
    light of the extraordinary safety and national security hazards that would attend the
    promotion of drug users to positions that require the carrying of firearms or the
    interdiction of controlled substances, the Service’s policy of deterring drug users
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    from seeking such promotions cannot be deemed unreasonable.” 
    Id. at 674
    .
    Outside the context of employees in especially hazardous occupations, the
    Supreme Court has recognized only one other circumstance giving rise to a
    substantial special need that justifies suspicionless drug testing: when testing “was
    undertaken in furtherance of the government’s responsibilities, under a public
    school system, as guardian and tutor of children entrusted to its care.” Vernonia,
    
    515 U.S. at 665
    . The Vernonia Court upheld a school board policy that required
    public school students to consent to suspicionless drug testing in order to
    participate in athletics. The Supreme Court highlighted the peculiar circumstances
    of public schools, where “[a] proper educational environment requires close
    supervision of schoolchildren, as well as the enforcement of rules against conduct
    that would be perfectly permissible if undertaken by an adult.” 
    Id. at 655
     (quoting
    T.L.O., 
    469 U.S. at 339
    ). As a result, “Fourth Amendment rights . . . are different
    in public schools than elsewhere; the ‘reasonableness’ inquiry cannot disregard the
    schools’ custodial and tutelary responsibility for children.” Id. at 656. The
    Supreme Court found that the school board had an important interest in deterring
    drug use among student athletes because they are at an age “when the physical,
    psychological, and addictive effects of drugs are most severe,” because “the effects
    of a drug-infested school are visited . . . upon the entire student body and faculty,
    as the education process is disrupted,” and because, with school athletics, “the risk
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    of immediate physical harm to the drug user or those with whom he is playing his
    sport is particularly high.” Id. at 661-62. The Court concluded that “a drug
    problem largely fueled by the ‘role model’ effect of athletes’ drug use, and of
    particular danger to athletes, is effectively addressed by making sure that athletes
    do not use drugs.” Id. at 663.
    On the other side of the scale, the Supreme Court found that student athletes
    had lower expectations of privacy because their activities typically involved
    dressing and showering in public locker rooms and submitting to mandatory
    preseason physical exams, as well as complying with other eligibility
    requirements. Id. at 657. “Somewhat like adults who choose to participate in a
    ‘closely regulated industry,’ students who voluntarily participate in school athletics
    have reason to expect intrusions upon normal rights and privileges, including
    privacy.” Id. Measured against the school board’s substantial need, the Court held
    that the invasion of privacy was not significant, and therefore that the “[p]olicy is
    reasonable and hence constitutional.” Id. at 665. Notably, however, the Court
    “caution[ed] against the assumption that suspicionless drug testing will readily
    pass constitutional muster in other contexts.” Id.
    After Vernonia, the Supreme Court also upheld a policy requiring drug tests
    for all public middle and high school students who participated in competitive
    extracurricular activities, including athletics but also the Academic Team, Future
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    Farmers of America, band, choir, and cheerleading. See Bd. of Educ. of Indep.
    Sch. Dist. No. 92 of Pottawatomie Cnty. v. Earls, 
    536 U.S. 822
    , 826 (2002). The
    Supreme Court interpreted Vernonia as “depend[ing] primarily upon the school’s
    custodial responsibility and authority,” 
    id. at 831
    , and explained that “[t]he health
    and safety risks identified in Vernonia apply with equal force” to the population of
    school children in Earls, particularly because the school district “presented specific
    evidence of drug use at [its] schools.” 
    Id. at 834
    . “Given the nationwide epidemic
    of drug use, and the evidence of increased drug use in Tecumseh schools, it was
    entirely reasonable for the School District to enact this particular drug testing
    policy.” 
    Id. at 836
    . Still, the Court “refuse[d] to fashion what would in effect be a
    constitutional quantum of drug use necessary to show a ‘drug problem,’”
    explaining that it “has not required a particularized or pervasive drug problem
    before allowing the government to conduct suspicionless drug testing” when
    circumstances otherwise create a necessarily immediate danger. 
    Id. at 835-36
    .
    By contrast, in Chandler the Supreme Court refused to recognize a special
    need justifying Georgia’s mandatory drug testing of candidates for designated state
    offices because the program did “not fit within the closely guarded category of
    constitutionally permissible suspicionless searches.” 520 U.S. at 308. Georgia
    claimed that suspicionless testing was justified by “the incompatibility of unlawful
    drug use with holding high state office,” particularly because “the use of illegal
    19
    Case: 14-10322      Date Filed: 12/03/2014    Page: 20 of 54
    drugs draws into question an official’s judgment and integrity; jeopardizes the
    discharge of public functions, including antidrug law enforcement efforts; and
    undermines public confidence and trust in elected officials.” Id. at 318. The
    Supreme Court found no “indication of a concrete danger demanding departure
    from the Fourth Amendment’s main rule.” Id. at 319. Unlike in Skinner and
    Vernonia, the Georgia “statute was not enacted . . . in response to any fear or
    suspicion of drug use by state officials.” Id. In addition, the scheme was not a
    credible deterrent of illegal drug use because candidates could schedule their own
    tests, which allowed them to time their drug use to avoid detection, and candidates
    for public office already “are subject to relentless scrutiny.” Id. at 320-21. The
    Supreme Court saw no significance to the message the State sought to send by
    testing politicians: “The need revealed . . . is symbolic, not ‘special,’ as that term
    draws meaning from our case law.” Id. at 322; see id. (“[I]f a need of the ‘set a
    good example’ genre were sufficient to overwhelm a Fourth Amendment
    objection, then the care this Court took to explain why the needs in Skinner, Von
    Raab, and Vernonia ranked as ‘special’ wasted many words in entirely
    unnecessary, perhaps even misleading, elaborations.”).
    These precedents establish and enforce the principle that “the proffered
    special need for drug testing must be substantial -- important enough to override
    the individual’s acknowledged privacy interest, sufficiently vital to suppress the
    20
    Case: 14-10322      Date Filed: 12/03/2014     Page: 21 of 54
    Fourth Amendment’s normal requirement of individualized suspicion.” Id. at 318.
    With that in mind, we turn to the application of the doctrine in this case. In the
    special needs balancing calculus, “[t]he first factor to be considered is the nature of
    the privacy interest upon which the search here at issue intrudes.” Vernonia, 
    515 U.S. at 654
    . However, as we explained in Lebron I, we need not weigh competing
    individual and governmental interests unless the State satisfies its burden of
    establishing a special need for its suspicionless drug-testing program. 
    710 F.3d 1214
     (citing T.L.O., 
    469 U.S. at 351
     (Blackmun, J., concurring in judgment)); see
    Chandler, 520 U.S. at 318 (declaring a suspicionless drug-testing program
    unreasonable when the state failed to show a substantial need, even though “if the
    ‘special needs’ showing had been made, the State could not be faulted for
    excessive intrusion”). The State argues that, by seeking TANF benefits, applicants
    voluntarily subject themselves to heightened regulation, and thus have limited
    legitimate expectations of privacy. Cf. Vernonia, 
    515 U.S. at 657
     (“By choosing to
    ‘go out for the team,’ [student-athletes] voluntarily subject themselves to a degree
    of regulation even higher than that imposed on students generally.”); Von Raab,
    
    489 U.S. at 671
     (“[T]hose who join our military or intelligence services . . . may
    expect intrusive inquiries into their physical fitness . . . .”).
    Of course, citizens do not abandon all hope of privacy by applying for
    government assistance. By virtue of poverty, TANF applicants are not stripped of
    21
    Case: 14-10322     Date Filed: 12/03/2014    Page: 22 of 54
    their legitimate expectations of privacy -- they are not employees in dangerous
    vocations or students subject to the parens patriae power of the state. And “the
    collection and testing of urine intrudes upon expectations of privacy that society
    has long recognized as reasonable.” Skinner, 
    489 U.S. at 617
    . But even if TANF
    applicants had reduced expectations of privacy -- and the record supports no such
    inference -- the State first must demonstrate a substantial special need.
    On this record the State has failed to meet its burden on the “core issue” of
    whether a special need justifies suspicionless searches of TANF applicants.
    Chandler, 520 U.S. at 318. The State argues that the following interests -- the
    same ones it invoked in Lebron I -- qualify as special needs sufficient to permit
    mandatory drug testing of TANF applicants: “(1) ensuring TANF participants’ job
    readiness; (2) ensuring the TANF program meets its child-welfare and family-
    stability goals; and (3) ensuring that public funds are used for their intended
    purposes and not to undermine public health.” Lebron, 990 F. Supp. 2d at 1291.
    Encouraging employability, protecting children, and conserving public funds are
    general -- and unquestionably legitimate -- public concerns. But empirical
    evidence indicates these needs are not specific to or special for TANF applicants,
    nor is drug testing essential to ensuring the success of the TANF program as a
    whole. The government’s stated needs are general concerns, proffered only at a
    high level of abstraction and without empirical evidence, and thus do not justify an
    22
    Case: 14-10322     Date Filed: 12/03/2014    Page: 23 of 54
    exception to the Fourth Amendment. The State claims, nevertheless, an interest in
    preparing TANF applicants for the workplace. But government generally wants its
    citizens to be able to find and keep jobs -- the State does not desire work-readiness
    only for the TANF population. Similarly, while it claims an interest in protecting
    children from drug use by TANF parents, the State has presented no evidence that
    children of TANF parents face a danger or harm from drug use that is different
    from the general threat to all children in all families. After all, the State
    acknowledges that drug use harms all individuals and families, but the State does
    not -- and cannot -- claim an entitlement to drug test all parents of all children.
    Nor do we see a special need from the State’s desire that government funds
    are spent wisely. An interest in fiscal responsibility inheres in all public programs,
    and the interest is real. See Lebron I, 710 F.3d at 1220-21 (Jordan, J., concurring)
    (“Every expenditure of state dollars, taxpayers hope, is for the purpose of
    achieving a desirable social goal. But that does not mean that a state is entitled to
    require warrantless and suspicionless drug testing of all recipients of state funds
    (e.g., college students receiving Bright Futures scholarships, see 
    Fla. Stat. § 1009.53
    ) to ensure that those funds are not being misused and that policy goals
    (e.g., the graduation of such students) are being achieved.”). “[T]he nature and
    immediacy of the governmental concern at issue here” is ordinary, not exceptional.
    Vernonia, 
    515 U.S. at 660
    ; cf. AFSCME, 717 F.3d at 876 (“The State’s abstract
    23
    Case: 14-10322     Date Filed: 12/03/2014    Page: 24 of 54
    reasons do not fit within the narrow scope that the Supreme Court has given to the
    special-needs exception . . . . [I]f those reasons could suffice, then there would
    never be any need to balance anything . . . .”). The State has presented no evidence
    demonstrating that drug testing saves a significant portion of TANF funds that
    would otherwise be spent on drugs. Indeed, the State has made no attempt to
    quantify even in a general way the amount of TANF money that is otherwise
    wasted on the purchase or use of drugs. Nor could it do so on the record that was
    presented to the district court. A government concern that a wholly undefined,
    albeit a very small, share of a program’s expenditures will be squandered cannot
    easily fit within the closely guarded category reserved for substantial special needs
    without exploding that carefully cultivated doctrine.
    We do not foreclose (nor could we) the possibility that government could
    establish a special need if a voluntary benefits program as a whole would be
    rendered ineffective without suspicionless searches. In the area of unconstitutional
    conditions, courts have considered the germaneness of an incursion on
    constitutional rights to the government’s legitimate objectives. See, e.g., Dolan v.
    City of Tigard, 
    512 U.S. 374
    , 386 (1994) (requiring that courts determine whether
    an “essential nexus” exists between the “legitimate state interest” and the condition
    imposed by the government). A similar germaneness analysis might justify a
    special need for suspicionless drug testing when essential to the implementation of
    24
    Case: 14-10322     Date Filed: 12/03/2014    Page: 25 of 54
    a voluntary government benefits program. Thus, for example, if the government
    sponsored experimental pharmaceutical trials, it might have a unique concern in
    drug testing participants to ensure drug interactions did not compromise the results
    or endanger participants. Similarly, if a state provided a free drug treatment
    program, it might have a special need to test participants to monitor progress and
    tailor treatment. In this case, and on this record, however, suspicionless drug
    testing of all TANF applicants comes nowhere near meeting this standard -- the
    State has not demonstrated that the TANF program as a whole has been
    compromised without suspicionless searches. Quite simply, we see no essential
    nexus between the legitimate state interest and the condition imposed. Put
    differently, the fit is not reasonably proportionated to the harms the State seeks to
    avoid.
    The State argues, nevertheless, that its broadly applicable interests are
    special because drug use concerns are particularly strong for TANF applicants, but
    it has not presented a persuasive theoretical or empirical account of a unique
    problem among TANF applicants. First, no concrete danger exists as a theoretical
    matter: we have no reason to think impoverished individuals are necessarily and
    inherently prone to drug use, or, for that matter, are more prone to drug use than
    the general population. Nor does the State give a reason to think that, if TANF
    applicants use drugs, that use is somehow different from drug use by the general
    25
    Case: 14-10322     Date Filed: 12/03/2014    Page: 26 of 54
    population. Without an obvious and palpable danger, the State makes an empirical
    claim that a drug-use problem exists among Florida TANF applicants. “While ‘[a]
    demonstrated problem of drug abuse, [is] not in all cases necessary to the validity
    of a testing regime,’ such evidence could ‘clarify’ and ‘substantiate’ the dangers
    presented by such drug use and whether those dangers were pertinent to the
    government’s asserted special need for drug testing.” Lebron I, 710 F.3d at 1212
    (alterations in original) (quoting Chandler, 520 U.S. at 319). Notably, however,
    the district court found an absence of any showing of pervasive drug use among
    the Florida TANF population on the summary judgment record: “Even considering
    the State’s evidence presented to date, the Court finds that there is no material
    dispute concerning whether drug use has been shown to be a ‘demonstrated
    problem’ among Florida TANF recipients.” Lebron, 990 F. Supp. 2d at 1293.
    Viewing all of the facts in the light most favorable to the State, we agree
    with the district court that the State has failed to establish a demonstrable or
    peculiar drug-use problem among TANF applicants. If anything, the evidence
    extant suggests quite the opposite: that rates of drug use in the TANF population
    are no greater than for those who receive other government benefits, or even for
    the general public. As we detail below, the evidence in the summary judgment
    record does not empirically demonstrate a TANF population drug-use problem.
    1.
    26
    Case: 14-10322      Date Filed: 12/03/2014      Page: 27 of 54
    Well before § 414.0652 was enacted, the State’s own DCF, at the direction
    of the Florida legislature, conducted a study -- dubbed the Demonstration Project --
    to test empirically whether TANF applicants were likely to abuse illegal drugs and
    whether that abuse affected employment opportunities. The study was conducted
    between January 1, 1999, through May 31, 2000, in select regions of the state by
    Dr. Robert E. Crew, a professor at Florida State University. The Demonstration
    Project first gave TANF applicants a written screening instrument to determine the
    probability that they abused drugs or alcohol.4 Based on the screening, any
    applicant that the DCF had reasonable cause to believe engaged in the use of
    illegal drugs was required to take a urine test. Applicants who failed the urine test
    were required to undergo treatment to receive benefits. In total, the Demonstration
    Project initially screened 8,797 individuals. Of those, 2,335 did not complete the
    application process, which the study concluded was “in line with the historical data
    on ‘non-application completers.’” The researchers rejected the notion that many of
    these drop-outs were drug users deterred by the testing and treatment requirements,
    because those who passed and those who failed at each stage of drug-use
    assessment dropped out at about the same rate. Of the 6,462 applicants who went
    through the initial screening procedure and followed through with their applicants,
    4
    The Demonstration Project used the Substance Abuse Subtle Screening Inventory, or SASSI,
    which was developed by psychologist Glen A. Miller in 1977 to differentiate between substance
    abusers and non-abusers, regardless of the test subject’s denial or deliberate deception.
    27
    Case: 14-10322     Date Filed: 12/03/2014    Page: 28 of 54
    1,447 were required to submit to urinalysis -- the remaining 76.6% demonstrated
    little or no evidence of a substance abuse problem based on the written screening.
    From the population that underwent the urinalysis testing, 335 failed. Ultimately,
    then, the study revealed that only 5.2% of those who completed their TANF
    applications tested positive for illegal use of a controlled substance (335 out of
    6,462). Notably, the researchers also found no evidence that TANF recipients who
    tested positive for illicit substances were any less likely to find work than those
    who tested negative.
    Data collected during the brief implementation of § 414.0652 suspicionless
    drug testing was altogether consistent with the Demonstration Project results.
    Preliminary numbers showed that only 2.67% of the TANF applicants who
    submitted to urinalyses under § 414.0652 tested positive for controlled substances -
    - 108 out of 4,046. Lebron, 990 F. Supp. 2d at 1286. The State argues that this
    number is artificially depressed because thousands of eligible TANF applicants
    failed to take the test and complete their application. As the district court pointed
    out, however, the State offers no way to tell how many incomplete applications
    came from drug users, and how many instead were cut short because applicants
    were deterred by other factors, including: the desire not to surrender Fourth
    Amendment rights; the inability to afford the test; or the difficulty finding a nearby
    testing location or securing transportation. Id. at 1294. And, as the Demonstration
    28
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    Project noted, historically a high number of applicants fail to complete their TANF
    applications, with or without a drug test requirement. The long and the short of it
    is that the district court fairly concluded on this record that the number of TANF
    applicants to test positive for illegal drugs during the brief operation of the
    program can only support the Demonstration Project findings of low rates of drug
    use. Whatever else can be said about these figures, they do not help the State meet
    its heavy burden of demonstrating a substantial special need.
    2.
    The district court found that no other competent evidence in the record
    showed elevated rates of drug use among the Florida TANF population. After
    careful review, we agree. The State points to testimony from expert and lay
    witnesses that the district court determined either would have been inadmissible at
    trial or irrelevant to the prevalence of drug usage among TANF applicants. The
    district court committed no manifest error with these rulings.
    To begin with, the district court did not abuse its considerable discretion in
    refusing to consider the expert testimony of Dr. Avram Mack. “[T]he deference
    that is the hallmark of abuse-of-discretion review requires that we not reverse an
    evidentiary decision of a district court unless the ruling is manifestly erroneous.”
    United States v. Frazier, 
    387 F.3d 1244
    , 1258 (11th Cir. 2004) (en banc) (quoting
    Gen. Elec. Co. v. Joiner, 
    522 U.S. 136
    , 142, 143 (1997)) (internal quotation marks
    29
    Case: 14-10322     Date Filed: 12/03/2014     Page: 30 of 54
    and citations omitted). Thus, the district court’s discretion is broad: “the abuse of
    discretion standard allows a range of choice for the district court, so long as that
    choice does not constitute a clear error of judgment.” Id. at 1259 (quoting Rasbury
    v. I.R.S., 
    24 F.3d 159
    , 168 (11th Cir. 1994)) (internal quotation marks omitted);
    see Joiner, 
    522 U.S. at 143
     (“On a motion for summary judgment, disputed issues
    of fact are resolved against the moving party -- here, petitioners. But the question
    of admissibility of expert testimony is not such an issue of fact, and is reviewable
    under the abuse-of-discretion standard.”).
    Federal Rule of Evidence 702 provides:
    A witness who is qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill,
    experience, training, or education may testify in the form of an
    opinion or otherwise if:
    (a) the expert's scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge
    will help the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a
    fact in issue;
    (b) the testimony is based on sufficient facts or data;
    (c) the testimony is the product of reliable principles and methods;
    and
    (d) the expert has reliably applied the principles and methods to the
    facts of the case.
    Fed. R. Evid. 702. Thus, before permitting expert testimony, trial courts must
    engage in a rigorous three-part inquiry, asking whether:
    (1) the expert is qualified to testify competently regarding the matters
    he intends to address; (2) the methodology by which the expert
    30
    Case: 14-10322     Date Filed: 12/03/2014    Page: 31 of 54
    reaches his conclusions is sufficiently reliable as determined by the
    sort of inquiry mandated in Daubert[v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals,
    Inc., 
    509 U.S. 579
     (1993)]; and (3) the testimony assists the trier of
    fact, through the application of scientific, technical, or specialized
    expertise, to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue.
    Frazier, 
    387 F.3d at 1260
     (quoting City of Tuscaloosa v. Harcros Chems., Inc., 
    158 F.3d 548
    , 562 (11th Cir. 1998)). As the proponent of the expert, plainly the State
    bears the burden of establishing qualification, reliability, and helpfulness. 
    Id.
    Before the district court, the State proffered expert testimony from Dr.
    Mack, a practicing psychiatrist and professor of clinical psychiatry at Georgetown
    University School of Medicine who practiced and taught in Washington, D.C., in a
    range of psychiatric and medical fields, including in the areas of drug use and
    related disorders. In a declaration and an expert report, Dr. Mack opined about the
    general detrimental effects of drug use on individuals, their families, and job
    performance, and also opined that drug use among TANF applicants and recipients
    is greater than among the general population. Specifically, Dr. Mack said in a
    declaration that, based on his expertise and study, it was his opinion that within the
    TANF population at least five percent of adults had a drug use disorder (compared
    with two percent in the general population) and twenty percent had used drugs
    within the past year (against approximately five percent of the general population).
    As for his testimony concerning rates of drug use in the Florida TANF
    population, the district court rejected Dr. Mack’s opinion, concluding that he was
    31
    Case: 14-10322      Date Filed: 12/03/2014   Page: 32 of 54
    not sufficiently qualified by background, training, or expertise to offer the opinions
    he presented. The district court explained that, while Dr. Mack had authored
    articles and books about drug-related issues, and taught about drug-related
    disorders, he had never studied, surveyed, or collected any information on the
    TANF population in any context, much less TANF applicants in Florida. Lebron,
    990 F. Supp. 2d at 1294. Indeed, there is no evidence in this record that Dr. Mack
    had conducted any studies about the prevalence of drug abuse among any discrete
    segments of the population. According to Dr. Mack’s testimony, his opinion was
    based solely on publications from other researchers. Id. But before an expert can
    properly rely on appropriate studies in the field, the proponent of the expert must
    establish that these studies are indeed the kinds of studies an expert in the field
    would rely on -- and the district court did not abuse its discretion in deciding that
    Dr. Mack was not an expert in the relevant field. See Fed. R. Evid. 703 (“If
    experts in the particular field would reasonably rely on those kinds of facts or data
    in forming an opinion on the subject, they need not be admissible for the opinion to
    be admitted.”).
    Expertise in one field does not qualify a witness to testify about others. See
    Increase Minority Participation by Affirmative Change Today of Nw. Fla., Inc. v.
    Firestone, 
    893 F.2d 1189
    , 1192, 1195 (11th Cir. 1990) (finding no abuse of
    discretion when a district court excluded expert testimony from a political scientist
    32
    Case: 14-10322     Date Filed: 12/03/2014    Page: 33 of 54
    who sought to offer a statistical opinion beyond his expertise); see also Dura Auto.
    Sys. of Ind., Inc. v. CTS Corp., 
    285 F.3d 609
    , 614 (7th Cir. 2002) (“A scientist,
    however well credentialed he may be, is not permitted to be the mouthpiece of a
    scientist in a different specialty.”). Dr. Mack has a background in clinical
    psychiatry and the treatment of drug abuse, not social science or statistics. But the
    crux of Dr. Mack’s testimony was a claim about the rates of drug use among the
    TANF population. A social scientist or statistician with experience in conducting
    surveys and parsing their results, and extrapolating conclusions about populations
    from limited samples of information, would be in a position to reliably draw such
    an inference; a clinical psychiatrist may not be. The State put forward precious
    little to suggest he was qualified “by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or
    education” to testify about rates of drug use across demographic groups,
    particularly among TANF applicants. Fed. R. Evid. 702. Dr. Mack admitted that
    he had never previously conducted any research regarding TANF or TANF in
    Florida and that he reached his opinion instead by relying on studies. Dr. Mack
    claimed no prior experience with or knowledge of drug use among Florida’s TANF
    population. He stated that he had not examined Lebron or any member of the
    putative class -- all past, present, or future TANF applicants who could be subject
    to § 414.0652. And Dr. Mack did not claim to have any background in studying
    the rates of drug use in any demographic group. Dr. Mack did not “propos[e] to
    33
    Case: 14-10322      Date Filed: 12/03/2014    Page: 34 of 54
    testify about matters growing naturally and directly out of research [he had]
    conducted independent of the litigation.” Fed. R. Evid. 702, Advisory Comm.
    Notes (2000 Amendments) (quoting Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals,
    Inc., 
    43 F.3d 1311
    , 1317 (9th Cir. 1995)). Instead, in an area that he did not
    otherwise specialize in, Dr. Mack “developed [his] opinions expressly for purposes
    of testifying.” 
    Id.
     The long and short of it is that the district court acted well
    within its discretion (nothing it did was manifestly erroneous) when it determined
    that Dr. Mack was not qualified by background, training, or expertise to opine
    about the degree of drug use in Florida’s TANF population.
    Nor did the district court abuse its considerable discretion in determining
    that Dr. Mack’s testimony about the general effects of drug use would not assist
    the trier of fact. As we’ve explained, the ills associated with drug use in the
    overall population (although well and generally understood) do not support a
    special need absent some particular concern about Florida TANF recipients. The
    court did not manifestly err in concluding that expert testimony about the effects of
    drug abuse on individuals, families, and employment prospects in the general
    population in no way would have helped the district court as the trier of fact.
    The State now argues that the underlying articles relied upon by Dr. Mack
    were separately admissible and provided independent support for the State’s
    argument that drug use in the TANF population exceeds rates in the general
    34
    Case: 14-10322     Date Filed: 12/03/2014    Page: 35 of 54
    population. To weigh against summary judgment, these reports must have been
    admissible at trial. But with Dr. Mack excluded, the State did not put forward a
    qualified expert to present them. See Fed. R. Evid. 803 (permitting the admission
    of statements “contained in a treatise, periodical, or pamphlet” when “the statement
    is called to the attention of an expert witness on cross-examination or relied on by
    the expert on direct examination” and when “the publication is established as a
    reliable authority by the expert’s admission or testimony, by another expert’s
    testimony, or by judicial notice”); Dartez v. Fibreboard Corp., 
    765 F.2d 456
    , 465
    (5th Cir. 1985) (admission of medical articles improper where plaintiff’s medical
    expert did not testify about the disputed articles); Williams Island Synagogue, Inc.
    v. City of Aventura, 
    329 F. Supp. 2d 1319
    , 1323 (S.D. Fla. 2004) (“[L]earned
    treatises are inadmissible as hearsay on summary judgment where no expert
    witness testimony supports the proposition asserted by way of the treatise.”); 4
    Christopher B. Mueller & Laird C. Kirkpatrick, Federal Evidence § 8:102 (4th ed.
    2014) (“[T]reatises must . . . be offered with expert testimony.”).
    Nevertheless, the State claims that the district court had the authority to take
    judicial notice of the articles because they contained legislative, not adjudicative
    facts. See Fed. R. Evid. 201, Advisory Comm. Notes (1972 Proposed Rules). But,
    notably, the State did not ask the district court to take judicial notice of the studies
    in its summary judgment filings, nor did it argue in the district court that these
    35
    Case: 14-10322      Date Filed: 12/03/2014   Page: 36 of 54
    studies amounted to legislative facts, nor finally did the district court take judicial
    notice. Ramirez v. Sec’y, U.S. Dep’t of Transp., 
    686 F.3d 1239
    , 1249 (11th Cir.
    2012) (“It is well-settled that we will generally refuse to consider arguments raised
    for the first time on appeal.”). Even, however, if the State had properly preserved
    this argument (and it did not), we would review a district court’s decision not to
    take judicial notice only for abuse of discretion. See Lodge v. Kondaur Capital
    Corp., 
    750 F.3d 1263
    , 1273 (11th Cir. 2014). On this record we can discern
    nothing indicating that the district court abused its ample discretion in not taking
    judicial notice of the studies.
    Having rejected Mack’s expertise, the district court was left with studies
    about which it could not readily determine methodological soundness or reliability,
    nor establish their relevance to the TANF population in Florida. For example,
    almost all of the key articles cited rely on data culled from surveys, either past
    versions of the National Survey on Drug and Health (formerly the National
    Household Survey on Drug Abuse) or other regional surveys. Significant
    methodological questions must be answered before the reliability of these reports
    can be assured, including whether surveys are a reliable method of determining
    rates of drug abuse in a population, whether the samples relied on are sufficiently
    large and unbiased, and whether the results can be extrapolated to the TANF
    population at issue in this case. On this record, however, we have no expert to tell
    36
    Case: 14-10322     Date Filed: 12/03/2014   Page: 37 of 54
    us anything about these important foundational problems.
    Moreover, none of the articles cited dealt specifically with the Florida TANF
    population, so their applicability to the case at hand is by no means self-evident.
    For example, as the district court noted, one of the studies involved single mothers
    receiving TANF benefits in Cook County, Illinois ten years ago. Lebron, 990 F.
    Supp. 2d at 1294. Another study looked at survey data from the TANF population
    of an unnamed California county in 2001. Without a qualified expert to comment
    on the extent to which these results can be extrapolated to the population at issue in
    this case -- a population with a different composition, in a different place, at a
    different time -- the reliability and relevance of these reports cannot readily be
    determined.
    In addition, some of these articles were referenced by the State at the
    preliminary injunction stage; at that early point in the proceeding, the district court
    found they did “not support the conclusion that drug abuse is a ‘concrete danger’
    among the class of citizens that the State seeks to drug test,” Lebron, 
    820 F. Supp. 2d at 1287
    , and our prior panel opinion held that “the district court did not err in
    rejecting, as irrelevant or non-persuasive, the reports concerning drug use in the
    welfare populations.” Lebron I, 710 F.3d at 1211 n.6.
    Although courts of appeals may at times take judicial notice of legislative
    facts sua sponte, see Landell v. Sorrell, 
    382 F.3d 91
    , 135 n.24 (2d Cir. 2004)
    37
    Case: 14-10322      Date Filed: 12/03/2014   Page: 38 of 54
    (noting that “appellate courts take judicial notice of legislative facts under
    appropriate circumstances,” especially on “straightforward questions” where the
    court does not “lack[] substantial experience or expertise”), the preceding
    considerations convince us that it would be inappropriate to do so here. We are
    hard-pressed to ascribe significance to these studies without an appropriately
    credentialed expert to vet them.
    3.
    The district court also disregarded as inadmissible or irrelevant testimony
    from three lay witnesses presented by the State. Michael Carroll and Peter Digre,
    both employees of DCF, submitted declarations in support of the contention that a
    drug problem exists in Florida’s TANF population. Carroll said that he had
    firsthand observed a strong correlation between drug use and employment, as well
    as drug use and poverty, and had observed drug use as a substantial barrier to
    employment for the population likely to participate in TANF. Carroll added that
    he had personally observed hundreds of TANF applicants who appeared to be
    under the influence of drugs, and that TANF recipients are more likely to use drugs
    than recipients of other government benefits. Digre said he had personally
    observed the harms of drug use in the TANF population, and a correlation between
    drug use and unemployability. The State also presented deposition testimony from
    Bruce Ferguson, an employee of a private, not-for-profit entity that helps
    38
    Case: 14-10322     Date Filed: 12/03/2014    Page: 39 of 54
    individuals receiving public assistance find work. Ferguson testified in a
    deposition that, as part of his job, he referred individuals to a substance abuse
    facility when they self-identified as having a drug problem, and that forty-two
    clients had self-disclosed a drug or alcohol problem during a ninety-day period.
    The district court found that the evidence submitted by the State from
    Carroll, Digre, and Ferguson was inadmissible and could not have been reduced to
    admissible evidence at trial. According to the court, the conclusory statements of
    Carroll and Digre about links between drug use and poverty or employability were
    incompetent as a matter of law: Carroll and Digre were not qualified as experts,
    and their opinions were offered without support from any relevant studies or
    empirical data. Moreover, Carroll’s claim that he had observed TANF applicants
    who appeared to be under the influence of drugs was not based on any expertise in
    assessing drug use by observation. Lebron 990 F. Supp. 2d at 1295-96. In
    addition, the district court explained, even if evidence from Carroll, Digre, and
    Ferguson was admissible, it would not have helped the State meet its burden of
    establishing a substantial special need. Carroll said he had observed drug use as a
    problem for employment among the population “likely” to participate in TANF,
    but this did not help the State establish an actual drug problem within the TANF
    population. Id. at 1296. Similarly, the district court noted that Ferguson’s
    testimony about self-reports of drug and alcohol abuse from individuals receiving
    39
    Case: 14-10322     Date Filed: 12/03/2014   Page: 40 of 54
    public assistance did not specify whether those who reported were TANF
    recipients or, indeed, whether they reported an alcohol problem, which would not
    affect an applicant’s TANF eligibility under § 414.0652, as opposed to a drug
    problem. Id. We review the district court’s ruling on the admissibility of lay
    testimony for clear abuse of discretion. See United States v. Jayyousi, 
    657 F.3d 1085
    , 1102 (11th Cir. 2011).
    The district court did not abuse its discretion in rejecting the testimony of the
    state’s lay witnesses. To be admissible, lay testimony must be (1) “rationally
    based on the perception of the witness,” (2) “helpful to a clear understanding of the
    witness’ testimony or the determination of a fact in issue,” and (3) “not based on
    scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge within the scope of Rule 702.”
    Fed. R. Evid. 701. This rule of evidence is designed to prevent parties from
    “proffering an expert in lay witness clothing” by ensuring that “testimony that is
    actually expert” passes the strictures of Rule 702. 
    Id.,
     Advisory Comm. Notes
    (2000 Amendments). While lay witnesses may testify about their own immediate
    perceptions, testimony that blurs into supposition and extrapolation crosses the line
    into expertise. See Williams v. Mast Biosurgery USA, Inc., 
    644 F.3d 1312
    , 1317-
    18 (11th Cir. 2011) (treating testimony as expert when it “is based on a hypothesis,
    not the experience of” the witness); United States v. Henderson, 
    409 F.3d 1293
    ,
    1300 (11th Cir. 2005) (“the ability to answer hypothetical questions is ‘[t]he
    40
    Case: 14-10322     Date Filed: 12/03/2014    Page: 41 of 54
    essential difference’ between expert and lay witnesses” (quoting Asplundh Mfg.
    Div. v. Benton Harbor Eng’g, 
    57 F.3d 1190
    , 1202 n.16 (3d Cir.1995)).
    In this case, the testimony of Carroll and Digre plainly was offered to
    support the broad claim that there is a particularly high rate of drug use in the
    Florida TANF population. This proposition is an inference well beyond what the
    witnesses had perceived in their day-to-day work; it is a conclusion that would
    require “specialized knowledge,” Fed. R. Evid. 701, and must be provided by an
    appropriately credentialed expert witness to be admissible. Broad statements
    asserting “a strong correlation” between “drug use and unemployability” and “drug
    use and poverty,” or claiming that “TANF recipients are more likely than
    recipients of other government benefits to use drugs” are beyond the realm of the
    lay witness. To support these claims, it seems to us that a witness would have to
    know, among other things, the rates of drug use, employment, and income across
    multiple populations and perform the sophisticated calculation of drawing
    correlations across these various factors. Carroll, Digre, and Ferguson, who had no
    training either in identifying the victims of drug abuse or studying the Florida
    TANF population, were not qualified by “knowledge, skill, experience, training, or
    education,” Fed. R. Evid. 702, to testify on these grounds, and their anecdotal
    observations could not support the sweeping claims for which they were offered.
    And, again, there is no expert to make anything of these claims.
    41
    Case: 14-10322     Date Filed: 12/03/2014    Page: 42 of 54
    Moreover, even if the testimony were allowable under Rule 701, nothing in
    the proffers from Carroll, Digre, and Ferguson support a special need for
    suspicionless testing. To begin with, general statements about the harms flowing
    from drug abuse, while undeniably true, do not inform this inquiry. Nor do their
    other statements demonstrate a drug problem among Florida TANF applicants
    greater than any problem found in the general population of Florida. First, Carroll
    declared that, in his more than twenty years with DCF, he had “personally
    observed hundreds of TANF applicants who appear to be under the influence of
    drugs,” had “frequently observed slurred speech, bloodshot eyes, inability to focus,
    and other similar symptoms that indicated to me the applicants were using drugs,”
    and in many instances had “personally detected the odor of marijuana on
    applicants.” This anecdotal observation comes nowhere close to supporting a
    population-wide trend. Observation of hundreds of drug users in twenty years (or
    “many instances” of smelling marijuana) may be entirely consistent with the five
    percent drug use figure found in the Demonstration Project; again, without a
    qualified expert, it is impossible to extrapolate these observations into conclusions
    about the Florida TANF population. Further, the symptoms Carroll identifies --
    slurred speech, bloodshot eyes, difficulty focusing -- could just as easily indicate
    alcohol intoxication, not drug use. And, again, this witness was not qualified by
    training, background, and expertise as an expert in discerning drug use or abuse.
    42
    Case: 14-10322       Date Filed: 12/03/2014       Page: 43 of 54
    The statements from Digre are even less revealing; he provides no evidence
    that would support an inference that drug use is more prevalent among the TANF
    population. Finally, Ferguson’s testimony that forty-two individuals receiving
    public assistance self-reported drug or alcohol problems says nothing about drug
    use in the TANF population: Ferguson did not identify which benefits programs
    the individuals participated in or whether drugs, and not alcohol, were behind the
    self reports.5 Thus, even if taken as true, none of the evidence from Carroll, Digre,
    or Ferguson helped the State meet its special needs burden. 6
    The State also argues that the Supreme Court in Earls relied on anecdotal
    evidence to establish a special need to drug test students: teachers had seen
    students who appeared to be on drugs and had heard students speaking openly
    about drug abuse. 
    536 U.S. at 834-35
    . This argument misses the mark because
    Earls involved public school children, a group especially entrusted to the
    5
    The district court also did not abuse its discretion in determining that Ferguson’s testimony was
    not only unhelpful to the State’s argument but also inadmissible hearsay. Ferguson’s testimony
    about the number of clients with disclosed drug or alcohol problems over a ninety day period
    was drawn from caseload information he had received in an e-mail from an undisclosed
    declarant. Since this declarant did not testify and the statement was offered for its truth, see
    Wright v. Farouk Sys., Inc., 
    701 F.3d 907
    , 910 (11th Cir. 2012), we conclude that the district
    court did not abuse its discretion in finding the statement to be hearsay.
    6
    Before the district court, the State also proffered a declaration from Patricia Brown, a systems
    analyst employed by DCF. Brown conducted a data-matching exercise that attempted to
    compare rates of drug use among Florida TANF, Medicaid, and SNAP (food stamps) recipients
    by cross-referencing records in the DCF’s files. The district court ruled that the evidence from
    Brown was inadmissible hearsay, and that it was irrelevant to the issue in the case because,
    among other reasons, it looked at rates of substance abuse and misuse, which did not
    differentiate alcohol from drug use. . The State does not challenge on appeal the district court’s
    decision to exclude evidence from Brown.
    43
    Case: 14-10322     Date Filed: 12/03/2014    Page: 44 of 54
    government’s care and demonstrably susceptible to harm from drug use. These
    powerful special circumstances are not found for Florida TANF applicants. The
    long and short of it is that, on this summary judgment record, the State has failed to
    demonstrate a peculiar problem of drug abuse among Florida TANF applicants that
    elevates the state’s concern from a general to a special interest.
    Moreover, even if the State could have established that an unusual rate of
    drug use among TANF applicants gave rise to a special need -- and this record
    supports no such determination -- the § 414.0652 drug-testing program is not well
    designed to identify or deter applicants whose drug use will affect employability,
    endanger children, or drain public funds. Notably, TANF applicants are given a
    ten-day window in which to take and pass a drug test once the State has confirmed
    that they are otherwise TANF-eligible. And the clock for the whole process does
    not start until the application is submitted -- a step the TANF applicant plainly
    controls. Thus, as in Chandler, the test date “is no secret”; “users of illegal drugs,
    save for those prohibitively addicted, could abstain for a pretest period sufficient to
    avoid detection.” 520 U.S. at 320.
    In short, the State has not met its core burden of establishing a substantial
    special need justifying suspicionless drug testing. The State has not shown
    elevated rates of drug use among TANF applicants. The State’s asserted interests
    in promoting work, protecting families, and saving public money are stated only at
    44
    Case: 14-10322     Date Filed: 12/03/2014    Page: 45 of 54
    the highest order of generality and are all-inclusive. In cases involving surpassing
    safety threats or public school students, the Supreme Court has carefully cordoned
    off a category reserved for exceptional circumstances. If the general government
    concerns raised in this case sufficed for special needs, the Supreme Court in
    Skinner, Von Raab, Vernonia, Earls, and Chandler spilled much ink in vain.
    B.
    Alternatively, the State argues, even if its suspicionless drug-testing regime
    otherwise would run afoul of the Fourth Amendment, all constitutional concerns
    are cured by the consent of TANF applicants because “a search conducted pursuant
    to a valid consent is constitutionally permissible.” Schneckloth v. Bustamonte,
    
    412 U.S. 218
    , 222 (1973). After all, TANF is a voluntary program. Applicants
    must sign a form consenting to the drug test and must follow through with the
    screening themselves. Lebron responds that, when “the State attempts to justify a
    search on the basis of . . . consent, the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments require
    that it demonstrate that the consent was in fact voluntarily given, and not the result
    of duress or coercion, express or implied.” 
    Id. at 248
    . The law of this case, and
    Eleventh Circuit precedent, lead us to reject the consent argument. Moreover,
    treating consent as a separate and dispositive inquiry -- rather than a component of
    the broader special-needs balancing test -- is not consonant with the Supreme
    Court’s approach to evaluating suspicionless drug-testing programs.
    45
    Case: 14-10322     Date Filed: 12/03/2014    Page: 46 of 54
    In Lebron I, the Court rejected the State’s argument that “the mandatory
    ‘consent,’ which Florida’s drug-testing statute makes a condition to the receipt of
    benefits, is of any constitutional significance.” 710 F.3d at 1214. The panel
    opinion explained that consent is invalid if it is “granted in submission to authority
    rather than as an understanding and intentional waiver of a constitutional right.”
    Id. (quoting Johnson v. United States, 
    333 U.S. 10
    , 13 (1948)). It concluded that,
    by conditioning TANF benefits on drug testing, “the State conveys a message that
    it has the unfettered lawful authority to require such drug testing -- period.” Id. at
    1215. We also concluded that, because Florida cannot conduct suspicionless drug
    tests of TANF applicants directly, “it cannot do so indirectly by conditioning the
    receipt of this government benefit on the applicant’s forced waiver of his Fourth
    Amendment right.” Id. at 1217. After all, government “may not deny a benefit to
    a person on a basis that infringes his constitutionally protected interests.” Perry,
    
    408 U.S. at 597
    ; accord Regan v. Taxation with Representation of Wash., 
    461 U.S. 540
    , 545 (1983) (“[T]he government may not deny a benefit to a person because he
    exercises a constitutional right.”); see Speiser v. Randall, 
    357 U.S. 513
    , 519 (1958)
    (striking down a state tax exemption denied to claimants who advocated overthrow
    of the government as unconstitutionally restricting freedom of speech). Under the
    law of the case doctrine, we are bound to the legal conclusion that the TANF
    program’s mandatory consent does not ensure the search is reasonable under the
    46
    Case: 14-10322      Date Filed: 12/03/2014    Page: 47 of 54
    Fourth Amendment. There is no indication that the law has changed since Lebron
    I was decided or that any of the substantive evidence considered by the district
    court altered this conclusion.
    Indeed, subsequent Eleventh Circuit law has echoed the conclusion reached
    in Lebron I. In AFSCME, Florida argued that mandatory drug testing of public
    employees was reasonable because employees consented to the testing rather than
    lose their jobs. As we explained, “[i]n effect, the State is offering its employees
    this Hobson’s choice: either they relinquish their Fourth Amendment rights and
    produce a urine sample which carries the potential for termination, or they accept
    termination immediately.” AFSCME, 717 F.3d at 873. We were not persuaded by
    the argument because employees’ submission to drug testing on pain of
    termination did not constitute consent under governing Supreme Court law. Id. at
    873-74.
    Again, no new material facts have emerged in the summary judgment record
    that alter the outcome under the legal principles laid out in Lebron I, or, for that
    matter, in AFSCME. The State says that deposition testimony from Lebron
    indicates that he freely signed the consent form and knew he could refuse the drug
    test, albeit at the expense of his TANF eligibility. This fact does not affect the
    result because “[s]urrendering to drug testing in order to remain eligible for a
    government benefit such as employment or welfare, whatever else it is, is not the
    47
    Case: 14-10322       Date Filed: 12/03/2014     Page: 48 of 54
    type of consent that automatically renders a search reasonable as a matter of law.”
    AFSCME, 717 F.3d at 875.
    We also see no merit to the State’s argument that two recent Supreme Court
    decisions regarding unconstitutional conditions abrogated our holding in Lebron I,
    or altered the conclusion drawn in AFSCME, concerning consent. Neither case
    called into question, much less clearly overruled, our earlier decisions -- instead,
    both cases involved significantly different constitutional rights and both held that
    government conditions were unconstitutional. See NLRB v. Datapoint Corp., 
    642 F.2d 123
    , 129 (5th Cir. Apr. 1981) (“Without a clearly contrary opinion of the
    Supreme Court or of this court sitting en banc, we cannot overrule a decision of a
    prior panel of this court.”). 7
    In Agency for International Development v. Alliance for Open Society
    International, Inc. (AID), 
    133 S. Ct. 2321
    , 2324 (2013), the Supreme Court
    addressed a condition in a federal foreign aid grant program requiring that
    nongovernment organizations have an explicit policy opposing prostitution and sex
    trafficking in order to receive funds to fight the global spread of HIV and AIDS.
    The Court held that the condition violated recipients’ freedom of speech by
    compelling them to “adopt a particular belief as a condition of funding.” 
    Id. at 2330
    . In so doing, the Court explained that in the First Amendment context
    7
    In Bonner v. City of Prichard, 
    661 F.2d 1206
    , 1209 (11th Cir. 1981) (en banc), we adopted as
    binding all Fifth Circuit precedent handed down before October 1, 1981.
    48
    Case: 14-10322    Date Filed: 12/03/2014     Page: 49 of 54
    funding conditions can be acceptable when they “define the limits of the
    government spending program,” but are impermissible when they “seek to leverage
    funding to regulate speech outside the contours of the program itself.” Id. at 2328.
    This case provides little help for the State. It arises in the context of the First
    Amendment, and in no way involved suspicionless drug testing; therefore the
    Court had no occasion to consider the special needs doctrine. Moreover, the Court
    noted that, in the First Amendment context, the recipient’s mere “recourse . . . to
    decline the funds” does not cure any funding condition of constitutional infirmity.
    Id. at 2329.
    Next, in Koontz v. St. Johns River Water Management District, 
    133 S. Ct. 2586
    , 2595 (2013), a property takings case, the Court applied its decades-old
    doctrine that the government can “condition approval of a [building] permit on the
    dedication of property to the public so long as there is a ‘nexus’ and ‘rough
    proportionality’ between the property that the government demands and the social
    costs of the applicant’s proposal” (quoting Dolan, 
    512 U.S. at
    391 and Nollan v.
    Cal. Coastal Comm’n, 
    483 U.S. 825
    , 837 (1987)). This case is equally unavailing.
    The Court recognized that takings cases “involve a special application” of the
    unconstitutional conditions doctrine, id. at 2594 (quoting Lingle v. Chevron U.S.A.
    Inc., 
    544 U.S. 528
    , 547 (2005)), far afield from the Fourth Amendment
    considerations at issue here. What’s more, the Court reaffirmed that “the
    49
    Case: 14-10322       Date Filed: 12/03/2014       Page: 50 of 54
    unconstitutional conditions doctrine forbids burdening the Constitution’s
    enumerated rights by coercively withholding benefits from those who exercise
    them.” Id. at 2595. These decisions in no way upset our construction of consent as
    framed in Lebron I, or, for that matter, in AFSCME. 8
    Moreover, we need not ask separately whether consent to a suspicionless
    drug test was valid when conditioned on receipt of a government benefit because,
    in this case, the unconstitutional conditions inquiry is baked into the special needs
    analysis. Under the analytical framework laid out in Lebron I, and, indeed, in
    AFSCME, when the government conducts suspicionless drug testing, consent
    exacted as a condition of receiving a benefit is a factor in the special needs
    analysis, not an alternative path around Fourth Amendment requirements. See
    AFSCME, 717 F.3d at 874 (“[C]onsent has already been adequately incorporated
    into the special-needs balancing test, which obliges us to evaluate whether an
    employee’s choice of profession necessarily diminishes her expectation of
    privacy.”); see also Vernonia, 
    515 U.S. at 657
     (“By choosing to ‘go out for the
    team,’ [student athletes] voluntarily subject themselves to a degree of regulation
    8
    We also see no merit to the State’s argument that Lebron I or AFSCME were affected by
    United States v. Yeary, 
    740 F.3d 569
     (11th Cir. 2014). In Yeary, a criminal defendant who had
    made specific threats to kill his girlfriend consented to warrantless entries and searches of his
    home to ensure he did not engage in illegal activity as a condition of pre-trial release, to which
    he had no entitlement. 
    Id. at 580-83
    . A majority of the Yeary panel held that the consent was
    valid to justify a search of the defendant’s home. 
    Id. at 583
    . This case from the criminal context
    hardly calls into question our holdings concerning the validity of consent to suspicionless drug
    testing from TANF applicants in Lebron I or government employees in AFSCME.
    50
    Case: 14-10322       Date Filed: 12/03/2014      Page: 51 of 54
    even higher than that imposed on students generally.”); Von Raab, 
    489 U.S. at 656
    (finding that employees’ choice of “certain forms of public employment may
    diminish privacy expectations even with respect to . . . personal searches”);
    Ferguson v. City of Charleston, 
    532 U.S. 67
    , 91 (2001) (Kennedy, J., concurring in
    the judgment) (“[C]onsent, and the circumstances in which it was given, bear upon
    the reasonableness of the whole special needs program.”).
    Treating consent as a separate and dispositive inquiry would eviscerate the
    Supreme Court’s carefully delineated special needs analysis in drug testing cases.
    After all, special needs balancing accounts for whether consent reduces an
    individual’s legitimate expectation of privacy. Tellingly, the drug-testing
    programs in Skinner, Von Raab, Vernonia, Chandler, and Earls all required
    consent, but the Supreme Court each time applied the same special needs
    reasonableness analysis: “the Supreme Court has never held that such drug testing
    regimes were constitutionally reasonable because of consent.” Lebron I, 710 F.3d
    at 1215. Allowing a government program that plainly fails the special needs
    balancing test to move forward solely on the basis of extracted consent would
    effect an end-run around the Supreme Court’s well-established approach to
    suspicionless drug-testing cases. 9 Consent to such a search is surely relevant, but it
    9
    In a footnote in its red brief, and again at oral argument, the State cited Ferguson v. City of
    Charleston, 
    532 U.S. 67
     (2001), for the proposition that consent is an independent inquiry from
    the special needs analysis. In that case, a public hospital adopted a policy to drug test urine
    51
    Case: 14-10322       Date Filed: 12/03/2014      Page: 52 of 54
    should be considered “through the prism of . . . special-needs balancing.”
    AFSCME, 717 F.3d at 875.
    Our conclusion is consistent with the decisions of our sister circuit courts
    of appeal, which “have also applied the special-needs balancing test, rather than
    treating consent as the sole determinant of a policy’s constitutionality, in cases
    where the government attempted to compel consent to drug testing as a condition
    for obtaining some privilege.” AFSCME, 717 F.3d at 876 (citing Joy v. Penn-
    Harris-Madison Sch. Corp., 
    212 F.3d 1052
    , 1055, 1067 (7th Cir. 2000)); see also,
    e.g., Miller v. Wilkes, 
    172 F.3d 574
    , 576, 577-82 (8th Cir. 1999) (upholding a
    school drug testing program after a full special needs analysis and not treating the
    samples from maternity patients and relay the results to law enforcement. Id. at 70-73. The
    Supreme Court held that the program was not justified under the special needs doctrine because
    “the immediate objective of the searches was to generate evidence for law enforcement
    purposes.” Id. at 83. However, the Court remanded for the lower court to determine whether
    “the searches were conducted with[] the informed consent of the patients.” Id. at 76. The State
    argues that such a remand would have been unnecessary if consent were not a dispositive factor
    independent of the special needs analysis. We are unpersuaded. First, as Justice Kennedy noted
    in his Ferguson concurrence, the lower court’s subsequent finding on consent could have been
    relevant as a factor that “[bore] upon the reasonableness of the whole special needs program,”
    rather than as a separate and dispositive inquiry. Id. at 91 (Kennedy, J., concurring in the
    judgment). Moreover, the circumstances of this case are quite different. Ferguson, like most
    Fourth Amendment cases, involved government searches carried out for law enforcement
    purposes. A long line of Supreme Court caselaw establishes that the constitutional infirmities of
    such searches can be cured by an individual’s consent. See, e.g., Fernandez v. California, 
    134 S. Ct. 1126
    , 1132 (2014); Schneckloth, 
    412 U.S. at 219
    ; Davis v. United States, 
    328 U.S. 582
    , 593-
    94 (1946). By contrast, in this case, as in the Supreme Court’s more specific line of special
    needs cases, suspicionless drug testing is used not for law enforcement but “to disqualify [an
    applicant] from eligibility for a particular benefit.” Ferguson, 
    532 U.S. at 78
    . As noted above,
    the Supreme Court’s approach to these cases has made clear that while consent is an important
    component of the special needs analysis, it is not a standalone trump card.
    52
    Case: 14-10322        Date Filed: 12/03/2014       Page: 53 of 54
    existence of consent forms as dispositive), vacated as moot, 
    172 F.3d at 582
    .
    “Simply put, we have no reason to conclude that the constitutional validity of a
    mandated drug testing regime is satisfied by the fact that a state requires the
    affected population to ‘consent’ to the testing in order to gain access or retain a
    desired benefit.” Lebron I, 710 F.3d at 1215. 10
    In the final analysis, the warrantless, suspicionless urinalysis drug testing of
    every Florida TANF applicant as a mandatory requirement for receiving
    Temporary Cash Assistance offends the Fourth Amendment. On this record, the
    State has not demonstrated a substantial special need to carry out the suspicionless
    10
    Because, as we see it, the consent inquiry is included within the special needs analysis here,
    the State’s reliance on unconstitutional conditions cases that arose in different contexts seems
    misplaced. In Rust v. Sullivan, 
    500 U.S. 173
     (1991), the Supreme Court upheld regulations
    prohibiting recipients of federal family planning funds from engaging in abortion-related
    activities. But Rust distinguished other unconstitutional conditions cases by holding that the
    government abortion restrictions did not deny anyone a benefit, 
    id. at 196
    ; in this case, of course,
    Lebron was denied TANF cash benefits when he exercised his constitutional right. Lebron I,
    710 F.3d at 1220 (Jordan, J., concurring). In Wyman v. James, 
    400 U.S. 309
     (1971), the
    Supreme Court held that state welfare workers could make home visits a mandatory condition of
    receiving Aid to Families with Dependent Children benefits. As we explained in Lebron I,
    though, the Supreme Court ruled that the visit did not amount to a search, and thus “never
    reached the question of whether, and under what conditions, a mandatory ‘consent’ could render
    an actual Fourth Amendment search reasonable.” 710 F.3d at 1216; see id. at 1216 n.10
    (“Wyman is further distinguishable as it was decided outside the context of drug testing and the
    Supreme Court has well-established precedent that governs the reasonableness of drug testing in
    the event a court is called upon to balance the competing government and individual privacy
    interests.”). By contrast, there is no question that submitting a urine sample is a search. See
    Skinner, 
    489 U.S. at 617
    . Moreover, the nature of the intrusion involved in this case is of a
    different order. The State here goes beyond a home visit; as the district court noted at the
    preliminary injunction stage, the drug testing involved here “necessarily entails intrusion into a
    highly personal and private bodily function, and the subsequent urinalysis . . . can reveal a host
    of private medical facts about the individual.” Lebron, 
    820 F. Supp. 2d at 1283
    . Finally,
    Wyman was decided over a decade before Skinner set forth the special needs doctrine for Fourth
    Amendment intrusions, so the Wyman Court had no opportunity to engage in the calculus we
    make today.
    53
    Case: 14-10322    Date Filed: 12/03/2014    Page: 54 of 54
    search -- we see no concrete danger, only generalized public interests. And the
    State cannot use consent of the kind exacted here -- where it is made a condition of
    receiving government benefits -- to wholly replace the special needs balancing
    analysis. We respect the State’s overarching and laudable desire to promote work,
    protect families, and conserve resources. But, above all else, we must enforce the
    Constitution and the limits it places on government. If we are to give meaning to
    the Fourth Amendment’s prohibition on blanket government searches, we must --
    and we do -- hold that § 414.0652 crosses the constitutional line.
    AFFIRMED.
    54
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 14-10322

Citation Numbers: 772 F.3d 1352, 96 Fed. R. Serv. 113, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 22815, 2014 WL 6782734

Judges: Hull, Marcus, Totenberg

Filed Date: 12/3/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024

Authorities (45)

william-daubert-joyce-daubert-individually-and-as-guardians-ad-litem-for , 43 F.3d 1311 ( 1995 )

Davis v. United States , 66 S. Ct. 1256 ( 1946 )

Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc. , 113 S. Ct. 2786 ( 1993 )

Ferguson v. City of Charleston , 121 S. Ct. 1281 ( 2001 )

Agency for Int'l Development v. Alliance for Open Society ... , 133 S. Ct. 2321 ( 2013 )

Fernandez v. California , 134 S. Ct. 1126 ( 2014 )

Johnson v. United States , 68 S. Ct. 367 ( 1948 )

Williams Island Synagogue, Inc. v. City of Aventura , 329 F. Supp. 2d 1319 ( 2004 )

Lebron v. Wilkins , 820 F. Supp. 2d 1273 ( 2011 )

pathe-miller-a-minor-by-and-through-his-parent-and-guardian-troy-miller , 172 F.3d 574 ( 1999 )

Tianna Joy, Steven Ward, Marci Stephens v. Penn-Harris-... , 212 F.3d 1052 ( 2000 )

Perry v. Sindermann , 92 S. Ct. 2694 ( 1972 )

National Treasury Employees Union v. Von Raab , 109 S. Ct. 1384 ( 1989 )

Board of Education of Independent School District No. 92 of ... , 122 S. Ct. 2559 ( 2002 )

Dura Automotive Systems of Indiana, Inc., Formerly Known as ... , 285 F.3d 609 ( 2002 )

In Re Billie Vester Rasbury, Debtor. Billie Vester Rasbury ... , 24 F.3d 159 ( 1994 )

General Electric Co. v. Joiner , 118 S. Ct. 512 ( 1997 )

Vernonia School District 47J v. Acton , 115 S. Ct. 2386 ( 1995 )

United States v. Richard Junior Frazier , 387 F.3d 1244 ( 2004 )

United States v. Carl Harold Myers , 972 F.2d 1566 ( 1992 )

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