Rupp v. Phillips , 15 F. App'x 694 ( 2001 )


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  •                                                                         F I L E D
    United States Court of Appeals
    Tenth Circuit
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    JUL 23 2001
    TENTH CIRCUIT
    PATRICK FISHER
    Clerk
    K. DANIEL RUPP,
    Plaintiff - Appellant,                   No. 99-3355
    v.                                            (D. Kansas)
    DAVID J. PHILLIPS, in his personal            (D.C. No. CIV-99-2101-WEA)
    capacity,
    Defendant - Appellee.
    ORDER AND JUDGMENT         *
    Before HENRY and MURPHY , Circuit Judges, and        MILLS , District Judge.    **
    Daniel Rupp is a former employee of David Phillips, the Federal Public
    Defender (“FPD”) in Wichita, Kansas.    Mr. Rupp brought this   Bivens action
    against Mr. Phillips, arguing that when Mr. Phillips terminated Mr. Rupp’s
    employment at the Wichita FPD office, he violated Mr. Rupp’s First Amendment
    *
    This order and judgment is not binding precedent, except under the
    doctrines of law of the case, res judicata, and collateral estoppel. The court
    generally disfavors the citation of orders and judgments; nevertheless, an order
    and judgment may be cited under the terms and conditions of 10th Cir. R. 36.3.
    **
    The Honorable Richard Mills, United States District Judge for the
    Central District of Illinois, sitting by designation.
    rights. The district court granted summary judgment to Mr. Phillips. We have
    jurisdiction pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
     and affirm the judgment of the district
    court.
    I. BACKGROUND
    The Federal Public Defender represents indigent defendants in the federal
    courts. As FPD for the District of Kansas, Mr. Phillips supervises an office that
    employs individuals with several types of skills (for example, investigators and
    legal counsel), and handles a variety of federal cases ranging from parole
    violations to capital crimes. In December of 1994, Mr. Rupp was hired by the
    FPD’s Wichita office as an investigator.
    Mr. Rupp is an avid gun collector and frequently visits gun shows.
    Sometime during 1997, Mr. Rupp met a vendor named Timothy Tobiason at one
    of these shows. Mr. Tobiason was selling books that described how to
    manufacture biological and chemical weapons of mass destruction. After
    conversing with Mr. Tobiason, Mr. Rupp learned that Mr. Tobiason “was very
    disgruntled with regard to how he had been treated by the government in business
    and in his personal life.” Aplt’s App. at 433.
    On June 6, 1998, Mr. Rupp attended another weekend gun show, where he
    again encountered Mr. Tobiason. Mr. Tobiason was now selling a book entitled
    -2-
    “Advanced Biological Weapons Design and Manufacture,” which contained
    instructions on how to culture and spread deadly diseases, as well as language
    threatening the government.    
    Id. at 432-36
    . Mr. Rupp talked with Mr. Tobiason,
    and became convinced that not only had Mr. Tobiason actually begun to
    manufacture chemical weapons, but that he had plans to use them against agents
    of the government. According to Mr. Rupp, Mr. Tobiason stated that the damage
    caused by “the Oklahoma City bombing would be nothing” compared to what he
    was prepared to do.   
    Id. at 437-38
    .
    Mr. Rupp feared that the commission of these crimes was imminent, so on
    the next business day (June 8, 1998), he contacted federal law enforcement agents
    to report Mr. Tobiason. Mr. Rupp described Mr. Tobiason’s activities and threats
    to Paul Vick, an FBI agent. Mr. Rupp and Agent Vick then discussed the
    possibility of Rupp being “a cooperating witness,” in which case Mr. Rupp might
    “volunteer to be wired” to record future conversations with Mr. Tobiason.   
    Id. at 237
    .
    Mr. Rupp then contacted Mr. Phillips, and told him about his encounter
    with Mr. Tobiason and his conversation with Agent Vick. According to Mr.
    Phillips, he commended Mr. Rupp for telling the FBI about Mr. Tobiason, but
    said Mr. Rupp should not be involved in any FBI investigation, and asked Mr.
    Rupp to contact Cindy McNorton, Mr. Rupp’s supervisor. After Mr. Rupp told
    -3-
    Ms. McNorton that he might “wear a wire” to tape Mr. Tobiason at an upcoming
    gun show, Ms. McNorton reported this to Mr. Phillips.   
    Id. at 208
    . Mr. Phillips
    instructed Ms. McNorton to tell Mr. Rupp that because of conflicts of interest
    between the FPD and FBI, “we can’t have him working undercover for the FBI.”
    
    Id. at 209
    . Ms. McNorton stated that Mr. Rupp then told her that “he would not
    sneak around her.” 
    Id. at 311
    .
    Mr. Rupp subsequently went back to Agent Vick to ask what the FBI would
    want from him. According to Mr. Rupp, Agent Vick stated that it would be
    illegal for the FPD to terminate him for cooperating with the FBI. Mr. Rupp then
    asked Ms. McNorton what he could do for the FBI. According to Mr. Rupp, Ms.
    McNorton told him he could not be a witness. However, Mr. Phillips claims Ms.
    McNorton’s response was much stronger; in his account, she told Mr. Rupp that
    he was “out” of the Mr. Tobiason investigation, that “there was nothing more that
    he could do on that case,” and that even if he was contacted again by Mr.
    Tobiason, he should discuss the situation with the FPD before resuming contact
    with the FBI. 
    Id. at 213
    .
    Throughout that summer, without informing his employer, Mr. Rupp
    continued to keep in touch with Agent Vick. At Agent Vick’s request, on June
    16, 1998, he wrote a letter to Mr. Tobiason, inquiring whether he would be at a
    Wichita gun show in September. Near the end of that month, Mr. Rupp received a
    -4-
    response from Mr. Tobiason, indicating that Mr. Tobiason would be at that
    September show. Mr. Rupp turned that letter over to Agent Vick, who asked him
    to attend the show and assess Mr. Tobiason’s “state of mind.”     
    Id. at 119
    .
    In September, Mr. Rupp mentioned to an FPD co-worker that he would be
    attending the upcoming gun show in order to “do a favor for the FBI.”      
    Id. at 439
    .
    The co-worker suggested that Mr. Rupp contact Ms. McNorton and tell her about
    this plan. Mr. Rupp did so on Sept. 10. Ms. McNorton then conferred with Mr.
    Phillips and Charles Dedmon, an FPD attorney from Topeka. According to Mr.
    Phillips, the three of them decided the FPD could no longer trust Mr. Rupp, as he
    had in their view chosen to be involved in the investigation after he had been
    instructed not to be, and after he said he would not be. They also decided that his
    actions “disrupted” the operation of the FPD office.    
    Id. at 335
    . As a result, Mr.
    Phillips terminated Mr. Rupp’s employment. The parties agree that following his
    termination, Mr. Rupp subsequently exhausted all the administrative remedies that
    were available to him, but was unable to regain his job. He then filed this suit
    against Mr. Phillips.
    The district court granted summary judgment in favor of Mr. Phillips. It
    assumed for the sake of the summary judgment motion that a       Bivens action could
    be maintained against Mr. Phillips, and then considered the question of whether
    Mr. Phillips had violated Mr. Rupp’s First Amendment rights. Citing      Cragg v.
    -5-
    City of Osawatomie, Kan. , 
    143 F.3d 1343
     (10th Cir. 1998)        , the court stated that
    that question was governed by the four part test set forth in     Pickering v. Board of
    Educ. , 
    391 U.S. 563
     (1968), and    Connick v. Myers , 
    461 U.S. 138
     (1983) (the
    “Pickering /Connick balancing test”).
    The court found that Mr. Rupp’s initial contact with the FBI, in which he
    reported his concerns regarding Mr. Tobiason, “clearly [involved] matters of
    public concern and an expression of free speech.” Aplt’s App. at 530 (Dist. Ct.
    Order, dated Oct. 19, 1999). However, it continued, Mr. Rupp
    was not reprimanded or terminated for this initial contact. Rather, he
    was praised for his efforts, but advised that he could no longer continue
    assisting the FBI in its investigation and work with the FPD’s office
    due to potential conflicts of interest, office disruption, and loss of
    credibility.
    Id. at 530-31. The court stated that Mr. Rupp “agreed to cease his involvement,”
    but in spite of this agreement, “continued to assist the FBI.”     Id. at 531.
    The court then found that Mr. Rupp’s continued involvement in the
    investigation was “unnecessary for the investigation” and thus “not, in this
    Court’s opinion, an expression of free speech protected by the First Amendment.”
    Id. In the alternative, even if Mr. Rupp’s involvement had been an activity
    protected by the First Amendment, the court found that “the FPD’s interest in
    restricting [Mr. Rupp’s] expression outweighs his constitutional rights.”        Id. at
    532. Applying the Pickering /Connick balancing test, it found that Mr. Phillips
    -6-
    had advanced “substantial evidence of disruption,” and shown that his decision to
    terminate Mr. Rupp “was not based on mere speculation, but on evidentiary
    support including his personal opinion and loss of trust, the opinion of [Mr.
    Rupp’s] immediate supervisor, and an attorney within the office.”       Id. at 535-36.
    The court concluded that Mr. Rupp’s actions “disobeying specific
    instructions” and “concealing his involvement until he knew his assistance would
    be discovered,” as well as “the nature of his position within the FPD and the
    knowledge of Mr. Mr. Tobiason concerning [Mr. Rupp’s] employment, render
    [Mr. Phillips’s] interest much greater than those of [Mr. Rupp] in continuing his
    role in the investigation.”   Id. at 537. It also ruled that even if Mr. Phillips had
    committed a constitutional violation, he enjoyed qualified immunity for his
    actions.
    II. DISCUSSION
    We review de novo the district court’s grant of summary judgment, viewing
    the record in the light most favorable to Mr. Rupp, as the party opposing summary
    judgment. See McKnight v. Kimberly Clark Corp.         , 
    149 F.3d 1125
    , 1128 (10th
    Cir. 1998). “In cases involving the First Amendment, the de novo standard is
    appropriate . . . for the further reason that . . . an appellate court has an obligation
    to make an independent examination of the whole record in order to make sure
    -7-
    that the judgment does not constitute a forbidden intrusion on the field of free
    expression.” Horstkoetter v. Dep’t of Public Safety   , 
    159 F.3d 1265
    , 1270 (10th
    Cir. 1998) (internal quotation marks omitted). Summary judgment is appropriate
    if there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to
    judgment as a matter of law.   See Celotex Corp. v. Catrett , 
    477 U.S. 317
    , 322
    (1986); Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c).
    On appeal, Mr. Rupp asserts three errors by the district court. First, he
    argues that the court was incorrect when it found that his continued contact with
    the FBI did not pertain to a matter of public concern, and thus was not protected
    by the First Amendment. Second, he argues that the district court’s balancing of
    the parties’ interests was mistaken, and that any disruption of FPD activities was
    outweighed by Mr. Rupp’s First Amendment interests in cooperating with the
    FBI. Finally, Mr. Rupp contends that because Mr. Phillips’ conduct violated
    clearly established law, the court should not have found Mr. Phillips qualifiedly
    immune from suit. We consider these arguments in turn.
    A. Speech on a Matter of Public Concern
    When acting as an employer, the government may constitutionally restrict
    the speech of its employees to a greater degree than when it acts in its general
    capacity as the sovereign. The Supreme Court has explained that:
    -8-
    Government agencies are charged by law with doing particular tasks.
    Agencies hire employees to help do those tasks as effectively and
    efficiently as possible. When [an employee] . . . begins to do or say
    things that detract from the agency’s effective operation, the
    government employer must have some power to restrain [him].
    Waters v. Churchill , 
    511 U.S. 661
    , 674-75 (1994). However, this power to
    restrain government employees’ First Amendment rights is not absolute. To
    determine whether Mr. Phillips’s actions have infringed upon Mr. Rupp’s freedom
    of speech and expression, we apply the    Pickering /Connick test. See Jantzen v.
    Hawkins , 
    188 F.3d 1247
    , 1257 (10th Cir. 1999).
    The test is as follows: (1) Does the speech in question involve a matter of
    public concern? If so, (2) we must weigh the employee’s interest in the
    expression against the government employer’s interest in regulating the speech of
    its employees so that it can carry on an efficient and effective workplace. These
    first two parts of the test are questions of law. If the employee prevails on both
    these questions, we proceed to the remaining two steps, which are questions of
    fact. In part (3), the employee must show the speech was a substantial factor
    driving the challenged governmental action. If the employee succeeds, (4) the
    employer, in order to prevail, must in turn show that it would have taken the same
    action against the employee even in the absence of the protected speech.   
    Id.
     ; see
    also Horstkoetter , 
    159 F.3d at 1271
    .
    -9-
    In the first part of the test, we must inquire whether Mr. Rupp’s actions
    constituted speech involving a matter of public concern. We have held that
    “[m]atters of public concern are those of interest to the community, whether for
    social, political, or other reasons.”     Lytle v. City of Haysville, Kan.   , 
    138 F.3d 857
    , 863 (10th Cir. 1998) (citing       Connick , 
    461 U.S. at 145-49
    ). It is absolutely
    clear, as both parties agree, that Mr. Rupp’s initial contact with the FBI was
    speech that involved a matter of public concern, and was protected by the First
    Amendment. The district court correctly found in favor of Mr. Rupp on this
    issue. Aplt’s App. at 530.
    However, the district court also found that Mr. Rupp’s subsequent
    involvement with the FBI was outside the protection of the First Amendment.
    Citing Curtis v. Oklahoma City Pub. Schools Bd. of Educ.          , 
    147 F.3d 1200
    , 1212
    (10th Cir. 1998), Mr. Rupp challenges this finding. In         Curtis , we noted that “‘[i]n
    deciding how to classify particular speech, courts focus on the motive of the
    speaker and attempt to determine whether the speech was calculated to redress
    personal grievances or whether it had a broader public purpose.’”            
    Id.
     (quoting
    Gardetto v. Mason , 
    100 F.3d 803
    , 812 (10th Cir. 1996)). Mr. Rupp argues that
    his continued cooperation with the FBI “was clearly a matter of grave public
    concern,” due to the seriousness of the crimes threatened by Mr. Tobiason, and
    was not motivated by personal grievances. Aplt’s Br. at 29. Mr. Rupp contends
    -10-
    that at the time Agent Vick asked him to write a letter to Mr. Tobiason, he
    understood Agent Vick to have implied that Mr. Rupp’s continued involvement
    was necessary to the investigation.    Id. at 30. This, Mr. Rupp proposes,
    demonstrates both that the FBI deemed the investigation to be a matter of public
    concern, and that he was not acting for merely personal reasons.
    In contrast, Mr. Phillips urges that although Mr. Rupp’s initial contact with
    the FBI may be called speech, his further cooperation may not, because he was
    neither “expressing his views” nor “commenting upon a matter of public
    concern.” Aple’s Br. at 22. In support of this contention, Mr. Phillips cites     Koch
    v. City of Hutchinson , 
    847 F.2d 1436
    , 1447 (10th Cir. 1988), for the proposition
    that Mr. Rupp’s cooperation was not speech relating to a matter of public concern
    because it was not intended to inform the public at large. In essence, Mr. Phillips
    would have us hold that, although initially informing a law enforcement agency
    about a possible crime may be protected speech, subsequent cooperation with the
    agency is not necessarily protected.
    Mr. Rupp’s conduct does not readily compare to that of employees in our
    previous Pickering /Connick cases. Where we have held that speech did not
    involve a matter of public concern, that speech has essentially involved matters
    that were not of general public interest because they related only to the internal
    operations of an employee’s workplace.       See , e.g. , Koch , 
    847 F.2d at
    1447-49
    -11-
    (fire investigation report was routine work product that was not intended to
    inform public); see also Connick , 
    461 U.S. at 146-47
     (holding that employee
    speech “upon matters only of personal interest” is unprotected). Mr. Rupp’s
    continued cooperation with the FBI cannot be characterized as having only been
    related to personal grievances or the routine internal operations of the FPD. But
    where we have held that employees’ speech did involve a matter of public
    concern, employees generally spoke in order to inform the public about some
    matter of public interest involving the workplace.         See , e.g. , Curtis , 
    147 F.3d at 1206, 1211-12
     (public school employee, whose job was to help public schools
    achieve “equity,” spoke on matter of public concern in discussing whether school
    district was meeting that goal);   Gardetto , 
    100 F.3d at 812-13
     (speech of public
    college employee discussing matters including questionable academic credentials
    of college president involved public concern). Mr. Rupp’s continued cooperation
    with the FBI did not reveal anything to the public about the FPD.          1
    However, as the district court correctly noted, any ambiguity as to the
    status of Mr. Rupp’s actions under the first part of the        Pickering /Connick test is
    of limited significance, because there is no uncertainty regarding the legal
    resolution of the second part of that test. As such, we will now turn to that
    1
    There is also some question as to whether Mr. Rupp’s later actions may
    be characterized as “speech.” See Horstkoetter, 
    159 F.3d at
    1272 n.3.
    -12-
    second part. See Horstkoetter , 
    159 F.3d at 1272-73
     (holding that “even assuming
    [a plaintiff] can survive the first hurdle,” he must also overcome the second
    before he can prevail).
    B. Balancing the interests of Mr. Rupp and the FPD
    With regard to the second part of the      Pickering /Connick test, the district
    court found that the interests of the FPD in regulating Mr. Rupp’s speech
    outweighed Mr. Rupp’s interest in that speech. Aplt’s App. at 530        . Mr. Rupp
    challenges this finding on several grounds. He states that his speech was a matter
    of serious, weighty public concern; that as a consequence, Mr. Phillips should be
    required to make a “stronger showing” of the necessity of a speech restriction;
    and that Mr. Phillips has failed to make this showing, as Mr. Rupp’s speech
    “caused no actual disruption to client services at the public defender’s office.”
    Aplt’s Br. at 37, 39.
    In order to establish the seriousness of the public concern with his speech,
    Mr. Rupp essentially equates the object of his speech with the object of the FBI
    investigation. He states that “[i]t is hard to imagine a more substantial public
    concern than the one in this case,” namely that of saving the lives potentially
    threatened by Mr. Tobiason, and that his speech “should be entitled to greater
    weight because he was acting at the request of the FBI trying to save lives.”
    -13-
    Aplt’s Br. at 37-38. Additionally, if his speech involved matters of public
    concern, Mr. Rupp argues that under      Cragg v. City of Osawatomie, Kan.   , 
    143 F.3d 1343
     (10th Cir. 1998), we should require Mr. Phillips to make a “stronger
    showing” of the necessity of infringing upon Mr. Rupp’s speech rights.       
    Id. at 1346
     (quoting Connick , 
    461 U.S. at 152
    ).
    Mr. Rupp also contends that his employer’s interests were not sufficiently
    weighty to justify his termination. Citing testimony by Mr. Phillips and Ms.
    McNorton, he argues that his cooperation with the FBI caused no real disruption
    in the FPD’s office. For instance, at one point in Ms. McNorton’s deposition, she
    stated that “[a]ny actual disruption that I can think of was pretty minor.” Aplt’s
    App. at 224; see also Aplt’s App. at 257-67 (deposition testimony of Mr.
    Phillips). In light of this testimony, Mr. Rupp argues that under   Wulf v. City of
    Wichita , 
    883 F.2d 842
     (10th Cir. 1989), Mr. Phillips’s concerns were “purely
    speculative,” and thus insufficient to outweigh Mr. Rupp’s interest in his speech.
    
    Id. at 862
     (internal quotation marks omitted).
    In response, Mr. Phillips proposes that not only was the FPD not required
    “to wait for speech actually to disrupt core operations before taking action,” but
    that contrary to Mr. Rupp’s statements, it had shown actual disruption. Aple’s Br.
    at 26 (quoting Moore v. City of Wynnewood , 
    57 F.3d 924
    , 934 (10th Cir. 1995)).
    For example, Mr. Phillips cites the deposition of Charles Dedmon, who stated that
    -14-
    the FPD’s office could not trust Mr. Rupp to perform his job function as a result
    of his contacts with the FBI; apparently, during the time Mr. Rupp was interacting
    with the Wichita FBI office regarding Mr. Tobiason, the Wichita FBI office and
    the Wichita FPD office were working on opposite sides of a capital case. Aplt’s
    App. at 335; see also Aplt’s App. at 293-94 (deposition of Cyd Gilman).
    Mr. Phillips further contends that Mr. Rupp was not terminated merely for
    speaking with the FBI, but for continuing to cooperate with the FBI after he had
    indicated to the FPD that he would not do so. In Mr. Phillips’s view, this
    increases the weight we should give to the FPD’s interest in regulating Mr.
    Rupp’s speech. He also argues that Mr. Rupp’s continued FBI cooperation was
    not weighty, i.e. that it was of limited public importance, because the FBI was
    capable of carrying on the investigation without him.
    After reviewing the record, we hold that under the    Pickering/Connick
    balancing test, the interests of the FPD outweigh those of Mr. Rupp. We cannot
    agree that Mr. Rupp’s continued cooperation with the FBI should be characterized
    as involving the most substantial of public concerns. Although the ultimate
    object of the FBI’s investigation was important, the    Pickering test asks us to
    balance not the general public concern with criminal investigations, but the
    specific public concern with Mr. Rupp’s continued participation in this particular
    investigation.
    -15-
    The FBI’s investigation of Mr. Tobiason had nothing to do with Mr.
    Phillips, or with wrongdoing at the FPD. While it is true that in        Moore , we held
    that “[w]histleblowing, of course, is not the only form of public employee speech
    that is protected,” we added that the government’s relative burden “in justifying a
    particular discharge varies depending upon the nature of the employee’s
    expression.” Moore , 
    57 F.3d at 933
     (quoting          Connick , 
    461 U.S. at 150
    ) (internal
    quotation marks omitted). In      Moore , the discharged employee “did not reveal any
    new information to the public about the operation of the police department” that
    employed him. 
    Id.
     We therefore held that the employee’s speech was “less
    important and less valuable to the public than is the speech often at issue in
    public employee speech cases.”        Id; cf. Cragg , 
    143 F.3d 1343
    , 1346-47 (10th Cir.
    1998) (participation in public political discourse “at the core” of speech protected
    by the First Amendment).
    We conclude that, as with the speech at issue in        Moore , Mr. Rupp’s
    continued cooperation with the FBI did not implicate the same level of public
    concern as the speech of employees who expose official wrongdoing, or who
    participate in protected political activity.     Mr. Rupp’s initial contact with the FBI
    did reveal new information to the public, and so may have been entitled to greater
    weight under the balancing test. But once Mr. Rupp had tipped the FBI, it was
    certainly capable of carrying out an investigation of Mr. Tobiason with or without
    -16-
    Mr. Rupp’s help. Indeed, Agent Vick testified to this fact.     See Aplt’s App. at
    247. Thus, even if we consider Mr. Rupp’s continued speech to the FBI to be the
    equivalent of speaking to the public at large, it cannot be deemed either as new or
    as irreplaceable as the most protected types of speech. For the purpose of
    Pickering /Connick balancing, Mr. Rupp’s choice to continue his undercover role
    in the Mr. Tobiason investigation did not imbue his speech with the utmost
    constitutional protection. As a result, Mr. Phillips’s burden is correspondingly
    less weighty.
    Objecting to this potential conclusion, Mr. Rupp cites    Robinson v. Balog ,
    
    160 F.3d 183
     (4th Cir. 1998), for the proposition that there will be “serious
    implications” if we hold that public employees may be fired “for assisting a . . .
    criminal investigation.”   
    Id. at 188
    . But the facts of that case are distinguishable.
    In Balog , the plaintiffs’ speech sought “to bring to light ‘actual or potential
    wrongdoing or breach of public trust’ on the part of government employees.”          
    Id.
    (quoting Connick , 
    461 U.S. at 148
    ). The employees who perpetrated the
    wrongdoing were the plaintiffs’ supervisors, and the supervisors disciplined the
    plaintiffs for trying to correct the wrongdoing. Because this was not Mr. Rupp’s
    -17-
    situation, a holding that his interests were of less than maximal weight in no way
    calls into question the interests of    employees in a case such as     Balog . 2
    We also hold that Mr. Phillips’s interests in regulating Mr. Rupp’s speech
    were substantial, and outweighed Mr. Rupp’s interest in his speech. As noted
    above, contrary to Mr. Rupp’s assertion, Mr. Phillips has introduced evidence that
    Mr. Rupp’s behavior created a disruption in the FPD office and disturbed its
    ability to carry out its mission.      See Aplt’s App. at 293-94, 335. This is
    consistent with the Supreme Court’s rule that an employer’s decision should be
    based on a reasonable interpretation of the evidence available to it.           See Waters ,
    
    511 U.S. at 676-77
    . Moreover, we agree with Mr. Phillips that an agency such as
    the FPD, which in a sense works against law enforcement agencies when it works
    on behalf of its clients, may legitimately have heightened concerns about its
    employees’ involvement with law enforcement.           See Rankin v. McPherson , 
    483 U.S. 378
    , 390 (1987) (“The burden of caution employees bear with respect to the
    2
    Mr. Rupp also contends that this holding will send “absolutely the wrong
    signal” to individuals contemplating future cooperation with the FBI, and possibly
    endanger lives. Aplt’s Br. at 49. We emphasize again that nothing in today’s
    decision discourages, much less prohibits, Mr. Rupp’s original contact with the
    FBI. As such, it is unlikely to cause significant avoidance and error costs. In
    addition, if there had been some indication that Mr. Rupp’s continued assistance
    with the investigation was imperative, our balancing assessment could well be
    different.
    -18-
    words they speak will vary with the extent of authority and public accountability
    the employee’s role entails.”).
    Finally, Mr. Rupp’s own statements reveal that he deliberately ignored the
    instructions of his supervisors. In his deposition, Mr. Rupp stated that although
    he had been told he would be fired if he continued to cooperate with the FBI, he
    did so anyway, because “knew” it “just had to be” illegal for the FPD to fire him
    on this basis. Mr. Rupp did not consult an attorney to verify this opinion. Aplt’s
    App. at 114-15.
    As we stated in Moore , “although government employers do not have a
    blanket license to retaliate against employees based on unfounded fears or
    speculation about the harmful effects of employee speech,” Mr. Phillips has gone
    beyond speculation and has “identified a reasonable basis” for his actions.
    Moore , 
    57 F.3d at 935
    . The disturbance caused by Mr. Rupp’s actions might have
    been outweighed if his speech had been of the utmost First Amendment
    importance. However, because it was not, we hold that the second part of the
    Pickering /Connick test clearly tips in favor of Mr. Phillips. As a result, we need
    not reach additional issues under that test.
    C. Mr. Phillips’s Immunity
    -19-
    Mr. Rupp also argues that the district court was incorrect in finding that
    Mr. Phillips enjoyed qualified immunity with respect to the termination. Because
    we have held that there was no constitutional violation, we have no reason to
    consider this issue.   See Moore , 
    57 F.3d at 935-36
     (concluding that, where the
    plaintiff failed to demonstrate that the defendant violated his First Amendment
    rights, the court need not reach the issue of qualified immunity).
    III. CONCLUSION
    For the reasons set forth above, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district
    court.
    Entered for the Court,
    Robert H. Henry
    Circuit Judge
    -20-