Warney v. Monroe County ( 2009 )


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  •      08-0947-cv
    Warney v. Monroe County
    1                       UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    2
    3                             FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
    4
    5                               August Term, 2008
    6
    7   (Argued: June 1, 2009                   Decided: November 13, 2009)
    8
    9                               Docket No. 08-0947
    10
    11   - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -x
    12
    13   DOUGLAS WARNEY,
    14
    15                     Plaintiff-Appellee,
    16
    17               - v.-
    18
    19   MONROE COUNTY, LARRY BERNSTEIN, in his
    20   individual capacity, WENDY EVANS LEHMAN, in
    21   her individual capacity and MICHAEL C.
    22   GREEN, in his individual and official
    23   capacities,
    24
    25                     Defendants-Appellants,
    26
    27   CITY OF ROCHESTER, SANDRA ADAMS, in her
    28   individual capacity, EVELYN BEAUDRAULT, in
    29   her individual capacity, STEPHEN EDGETT, in
    30   his individual capacity, THOMAS JONES, in
    31   his individual capacity, ROBERT GARLAND, in
    32   his individual capacity, JOHN GROPP, in his
    33   individual capacity, JOHN DOE OFFICERS
    34   AND/OR DETECTIVES # 1-10, in their
    35   individual capacities and RICHARD ROE
    36   SUPERVISORS # 1-10, in their individual
    37   capacities,
    38
    39                     Defendants.
    40
    41   - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -x
    42
    1        Before:        JACOBS, Chief Judge, NEWMAN and POOLER,
    2                       Circuit Judges.
    3
    4        Appeal by prosecutors from denial of their motion for
    5    absolute or qualified immunity by the United States District
    6    Court for the Western District of New York (Larimer, J.) in
    7    a suit alleging that the exculpatory result of post-trial
    8    DNA testing, conducted by the district attorney’s office
    9    while defending habeas and other initiatives, was not timely
    10   disclosed to plaintiff Douglas Warney, who was in jail for a
    11   murder that the DNA testing ultimately showed he did not
    12   commit.   Because the testing was undertaken in connection
    13   with post-trial proceedings and was therefore integral to
    14   the advocacy function, we hold that the prosecutors enjoy
    15   absolute immunity under Imbler v. Pachtman, 
    424 U.S. 409
    ,
    16   430–31 (1976).   Reversed.
    17
    18                                MICHAEL E. DAVIS, Second Deputy
    19                                County Attorney, for DANIEL M.
    20                                De LAUS, JR., Monroe County
    21                                Attorney, Rochester, NY, for
    22                                Defendants-Appellants.
    23
    24                                DEBORAH L. CORNWALL, (Peter J.
    25                                Neufeld, Sarah Crowley, on the
    26                                brief), Cochran Neufeld &
    27                                Scheck, LLP, New York, NY, for
    28                                Plaintiff-Appellee.
    29
    30                                Steven A. Bender and Anthony J.
    2
    1                                 Servino, for Daniel M. Donovan,
    2                                 President of the District
    3                                 Attorneys Association of New
    4                                 York State, for amicus
    5                                 curiae District Attorneys
    6                                 Association of New York State,
    7                                 in support of Defendants-
    8                                 Appellants.
    9
    10
    11   DENNIS JACOBS, Chief Judge:
    12
    13       Three prosecutors of Monroe County appeal from denial
    14   of their motion for absolute or qualified immunity by the
    15   United States District Court for the Western District of New
    16   York (Larimer, J.) in a suit alleging that the exculpatory
    17   result of post-trial DNA testing, conducted by the district
    18   attorney’s office while defending habeas and other
    19   initiatives, was not timely disclosed to plaintiff, who was
    20   in jail for a murder that the DNA testing ultimately showed
    21   he did not commit.   Because the testing was undertaken in
    22   connection with post-trial proceedings and was therefore
    23   integral to the advocacy function, we hold that the
    24   prosecutors enjoy absolute immunity under Imbler v.
    25   Pachtman, 
    424 U.S. 409
    , 430–31 (1976).
    26       Plaintiff Douglas Warney was wrongfully convicted and
    27   jailed for ten years.   He sues a number of individuals (and
    28   government entities) for violating his constitutional
    3
    1    rights.    This appeal considers only issues bearing upon the
    2    liability and immunity of three Monroe County prosecutors
    3    for failing to disclose exculpatory DNA test results
    4    promptly.
    5        After Warney’s conviction, during the pendency of his
    6    federal habeas corpus petition and his appeal from a state-
    7    court decision denying him access to DNA evidence, the
    8    Monroe County District Attorney’s office arranged the DNA
    9    testing of crime scene evidence.    The results showed that
    10   all non-victim blood samples collected at the scene of the
    11   crime were from one man, who was not Warney.    Using the DNA
    12   results, the prosecutors identified the man who actually
    13   committed the murder, advised Warney’s counsel, interviewed
    14   the new suspect to confirm that Warney was not involved, and
    15   then achieved Warney’s exoneration.    Warney alleges that his
    16   constitutional rights were violated because at least 72 days
    17   elapsed between the date the prosecutors learned of the DNA
    18   test results and the date they informed Warney or his
    19   counsel.
    20       This appeal requires us to consider the scope of
    21   absolute prosecutorial immunity in the post-conviction
    22   context.
    4
    1
    2                               BACKGROUND
    3        We set out only the facts that bear upon the
    4    disposition of this appeal.    Since this is an interlocutory
    5    appeal from the denial of a motion to dismiss, we accept as
    6    true all well-pled factual allegations, and draw all
    7    reasonable inferences in the plaintiff’s favor.     See
    8    Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 
    129 S. Ct. 1937
    , 1949 (2009) (citing Bell
    9    Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 
    550 U.S. 544
    , 555 (2007)).
    10       A.   The Murder.   In January 1996, William Beason was
    11   found dead in his ransacked apartment on Chili Avenue in
    12   Rochester, New York by officers of the Rochester Police
    13   Department (“RPD”).    In Beason’s bathroom, they found a
    14   bloodstained knife, a bloody towel, and a bloody tissue.
    15   The RPD lifted several fingerprints from two pornographic
    16   videotape boxes found in the bedroom, and one partial print
    17   from the knife.   The autopsy showed nineteen stab wounds to
    18   Beason’s neck and chest, all of them consistent with the
    19   bloody knife found in the bathroom, and defensive wounds on
    20   Beason’s left hand.    Blood evidence was collected from his
    21   fingernails.   Thus it appeared that Beason died after a
    22   violent struggle, and that the perpetrator was cut and had
    5
    1    gone into the bathroom to clean blood off himself with the
    2    towel and the tissue.
    3        After Beason’s murder was reported in the press,
    4    Douglas Warney called the RPD “Crimestoppers hotline” and
    5    referenced the murder.    Warney had an IQ of 68, an eighth-
    6    grade education, and full-blown AIDS.    (Complaint ¶ 37.)     It
    7    is not clear what Warney said, but he alleges that he said
    8    that he “knew of” Beason.1   An RPD officer went to Warney’s
    9    apartment to speak to him.    The complaint alleges that the
    10   RPD was aware that Warney had made numerous crank calls to
    11   the police (for which he had received psychiatric
    12   assistance), and this officer in particular had responded to
    13   Warney’s complaints about drug activity in his apartment
    14   building.   (Id. ¶ 39.)   Warney told this officer that he was
    15   concerned about his name being brought up in connection with
    16   the murder of a “William” on Chili Avenue.
    17       Two days later, RPD detectives picked up Warney at his
    18   apartment and brought him to the police station.    They put
    19   him in a small office and interrogated him, using
    1
    Beason and Warney had a “passing acquaintance.”
    (Complaint ¶¶ 37–38.) On occasion, Beason had hired Warney
    to clean his house and shovel snow from his driveway. (Id.)
    6
    1    “escalating coercive tactics” including verbal abuse, and
    2    physical and other threats, “in order to force him to admit
    3    that he committed the murder.”        (Id. ¶ 47.)    After initial
    4    denials, Warney eventually “yielded to [the] coercive
    5    tactics and provided at least four wildly different versions
    6    of events to the police.”       (Id. ¶¶ 50-51.)2
    7            In an ensuing typewritten “confession,” the detectives
    8    included numerous non-public facts about the murder known
    9    only to the police and the real killer, facts which (it is
    10   now known) Warney could not possibly have known.          (Id. ¶
    11   52.)3       According to the complaint, there were
    2
    In the first version, Warney implicated his cousin.
    In the second, Warney added that he and his cousin went
    together to Beason’s home. In the third, Warney and his
    cousin together stabbed Beason. In the fourth, reflected in
    the typewritten statement, his cousin was no longer present,
    and Warney confessed to murdering Beason alone. (Complaint
    ¶ 51.)
    3
    These facts included: (1) Beason was cooking
    barbeque chicken and mashed potatoes at the time he was
    killed; (2) Beason was wearing a red and white striped
    nightshirt; (3) Beason was stabbed more than fifteen times
    with a twelve-inch serrated knife; (4) Beason’s throat was
    slit; (5) Beason’s body was found on his bed and his eyes
    were open; (6) the assailant cut himself and bled in the
    apartment; (7) the assailant wiped his wound with tissue
    paper, which he discarded in the toilet; (8) the assailant
    put intensive care lotion on his wound; and (9) the back
    door and basement door were locked and the front door of the
    house locks automatically. (Complaint ¶ 53.) The complaint
    alleges that the detectives “deliberately failed to disclose
    7
    1   “inconsistencies” in Warney’s statement that rendered it
    2   wholly implausible.4
    3       Warney signed the confession and initialed minor
    4   changes less than four hours after he had been picked up.5
    5   According to the complaint, after Warney’s “confession” the
    6   police performed no further investigation other than trying
    7   to determine whether Warney’s cousin could have been an
    8   accomplice.   Notably, the latent fingerprint collected from
    9   a pornographic videotape box was not run through the
    to the prosecutor and to defense counsel the material
    exculpatory fact that they fed the non-public details of the
    crime to Mr. Warney.” (Id. ¶ 67.)
    4
    The inconsistencies are that: (1) Warney’s
    confession says that he killed Beason downstairs, and
    dragged him up to the bedroom; (2) Warney’s statement said
    he drove his brother’s Chevrolet to Beason’s house, even
    though Warney’s brother does not own a car; and (3) Warney’s
    hands had no cuts or bruises, even though his confession
    says he got cut and bled at the scene. (Complaint ¶ 62.)
    5
    At 5:30 p.m., the detectives took Warney to the
    “Public Safety Building,” and placed him in a secured
    interview room to “elicit further false confessions and
    corroborate the [initial] falsified confession.” (Complaint
    ¶ 57.) In this second “confession,” Warney was said to have
    volunteered another detail mentioned in the crime scene
    reports–-that pornographic video tapes featuring a white
    male and Hispanic male were found in Beason’s bedroom--and
    that he and Beason had watched the tape together before the
    murder. (Id. ¶ 58.)
    8
    1    statewide database.6    (Id. ¶ 63.)
    2        B.     The Trial.   Certain blood evidence at the scene was
    3    found to exclude both Warney and Beason; so Warney was
    4    charged both as a principal and an accomplice.     At trial,
    5    however, the prosecution’s only theory was that Warney
    6    committed the murder alone, and the prosecution’s case
    7    rested “almost exclusively” on Warney’s confession.
    8    (Complaint ¶¶ 79-80.)
    9        At trial, a chemist testified that the blood on the
    10   murder weapon was consistent with the victim’s Type O, but
    11   inconsistent with Warney’s Type A; and the bloodstains on
    12   the towel and tissue belonged neither to Beason nor Warney.
    13   (It fit neither of their “enzyme types.”) (Complaint ¶ 74.)
    14   Of three latent prints from the pornographic videotape
    15   boxes, two belonged to Beason, and the third was
    16   unidentified, meaning it belonged to neither Beason nor
    17   Warney.7   A second fingerprint specialist examined a partial
    18   print from the murder weapon, and found only “three points
    6
    If the fingerprint had been run, as it later was, it
    would have matched a man named Eldred Johnson. Johnson’s
    fingerprints were in the database as of January 1996 (due to
    crimes he committed in 1994). (Complaint ¶¶ 63, 77.)
    7
    The unidentified print later matched Eldred Johnson.
    See supra note 6.
    9
    1    of comparison,” but concluded that Warney was a possible
    2    source of the print.      (He also specifically excluded
    3    Beason.)    (Id. ¶ 78.)
    4        Warney testified to his innocence and about the threats
    5    from the police that made him confess.
    6        On February 12, 1997, the jury convicted Warney of two
    7    counts of second-degree murder.       On February 27, he was
    8    sentenced to 25 years to life.        The judgment was affirmed on
    9    appeal, People v. Warney, 
    299 A.D.2d 956
    , 
    750 N.Y.S.2d 731
    10   (4th Dep’t 2002), and became final when the New York Court
    11   of Appeals denied leave to appeal on March 4, 2003, 99
    
    12 N.Y.2d 633
    , 
    790 N.E.2d 289
     (2003).
    13       C.     Post-Conviction Proceedings.     In May 2004, Warney
    14   filed a federal habeas corpus petition under 
    28 U.S.C. § 15
       2254 in the United States District Court for the Western
    16   District of New York, Warney v. McGinnis, No. 04-cv-6202(L)
    17   (filed May 4, 2004), a filing of which we take judicial
    18   notice.    Warney thereafter began seeking access to
    19   biological evidence from the murder scene in order to
    20   conduct DNA testing that he believed would exonerate him.
    21   Warney’s attorney requested access to the evidence so as to
    22   perform DNA testing at his own expense, but the Monroe
    10
    1    County District Attorney’s office refused consent.
    2    (Complaint ¶ 91.)
    3        In October 2004, Warney moved under New York State’s
    4    post-conviction statute, N.Y. Crim. Proc. Law 440.30(1-a)
    5    (McKinney 2004) (the “440 motion”), seeking access to the
    6    blood evidence found at the crime scene.     The 440 motion
    7    sought access to, inter alia, blood found on the murder
    8    weapon (which had been tested already), and blood found on
    9    the victim’s fingernails (which had not been tested before).
    10       The Monroe County District Attorney’s Office,
    11   represented by District Attorney Michael C. Green and
    12   Assistant District Attorney Wendy Evans Lehman, opposed the
    13   440 motion, both in writing and at a hearing on November 15,
    14   2004 before New York State Supreme Court Justice Francis A.
    15   Affronti.   (Complaint ¶ 93.)    At the hearing, the District
    16   Attorney’s office argued that Warney had not established due
    17   diligence, and that the reasons underlying his request for
    18   access to the blood evidence were speculative.     (Id.)
    19       The 440 motion was denied in an order issued December
    20   15, 2004, on the grounds that DNA testing “would not provide
    21   evidence which is significantly different from that
    22   submitted to the jury which convicted [Warney],” and that
    11
    1    the request was based on “conjecture . . . too speculative
    2    and improbable.”   (Id. ¶ 94.)        Warney appealed to the
    3    Appellate Division.
    4        D. DNA Testing and Exoneration.         In February 2005,
    5    while the Monroe County District Attorney’s office was
    6    opposing Warney’s appeal from the denial of his 440 motion,
    7    and while Warney’s federal habeas petition was still
    8    pending, Second District Attorney Larry Bernstein submitted
    9    for DNA testing the blood evidence that was the subject of
    10   Warney’s 440 motion–-a total of seven samples, including the
    11   blood found under the victim’s fingernails and on the murder
    12   weapon.   Bernstein did so with the authorization of the
    13   District Attorney, and without informing the state or
    14   federal court, Warney, or Warney’s attorney.8        (Id. ¶ 95.)
    15       Warney alleges that, “[u]pon information and belief,
    16   defendants Green, Bernstein, Lehman, and others in the DA’s
    17   office received a verbal report of the DNA test results from
    18   the Monroe County Public Safety Laboratory as early as
    19   2005.”    (Id. ¶ 97 (emphasis added)).       The complaint does not
    20   say when in 2005 the alleged verbal report was received, or
    8
    At oral argument, Warney’s counsel maintained that
    the DNA testing was destructive, such that once tested, the
    blood samples could not be retested.
    12
    1    what it contained other than that it was “exculpatory.”
    2    (Id.)
    3        On February 17, 2006, approximately one year after
    4    submitting the evidence to be tested, the District
    5    Attorney’s office received a written laboratory report
    6    showing that each of the seven blood samples submitted
    7    matched a single profile of a man who was neither Beason nor
    8    Warney.   The results of the testing were not immediately
    9    disclosed to Warney or his lawyer.
    10       Two weeks later, on March 2, 2006, the prosecutors
    11   learned more: a search of the FBI’s Combined DNA Indexing
    12   System (CODIS) database matched the profile to a man named
    13   Eldred Johnson, who had been convicted of murder, as well as
    14   several slashings and burglaries, and who was then serving a
    15   life sentence in Utica, New York.
    16       The district attorneys took the additional step of
    17   ordering examination of the unidentified fingerprint found
    18   on the pornographic videotape box.   On March 24, 2006, an
    19   evidence technician from the RPD determined that the
    20   fingerprint also matched Eldred Johnson.
    21       The DNA testing results and the fingerprint match were
    22   disclosed to Warney for the first time on May 1, 2006, when
    13
    1    Monroe County attorneys informed Warney’s counsel that
    2    Warney had been excluded as the source of the blood
    3    evidence, though they did not advise that all the previously
    4    unidentified blood was from the same man.     From February 17,
    5    2006 to May 1, 2006 is a period of 72 days.
    6        On May 11, 2006, the District Attorney’s office
    7    interviewed Eldred Johnson, who promptly confessed to the
    8    murder of Beason.   Johnson said that he had acted alone, and
    9    did not know Douglas Warney.    The next day, the District
    10   Attorney’s office informed Warney’s counsel of Johnson’s
    11   confession.   Four business days after the confession (May
    12   16, 2006), on application of the Monroe County District
    13   Attorney’s office, Warney’s murder conviction was vacated.
    14       In vacating Warney’s conviction, Justice Van Strydonck
    15   pointed out that the inconsistencies in the blood evidence,
    16   (i.e., the presence of a third source of blood) was known at
    17   the time of trial: “the ‘newly found evidence’ is not the
    18   fact that a third person’s blood was found at the scene . .
    19   . [or] that Mr. Warney’s confession was inconsistent in many
    20   important ways with the facts developed by the police and
    21   the prosecutor’s office.   Those inconsistencies were known
    22   by the defense and argued to the jury.    Rather the newly
    14
    1    discovered evidence is the confession of Mr. Eldred
    2    Johnson.”
    3        Warney was released from prison, and Eldred Johnson
    4    later pleaded guilty to the Beason murder.
    5        E. This Lawsuit.   Warney filed suit under 42 U.S.C.
    6    § 1983 against numerous defendants, including the City of
    7    Rochester; Monroe County; various police officers and
    8    detectives; and three prosecutors in the Monroe County
    9    District Attorney’s office: Michael Green,9 Larry Bernstein,
    10   and Wendy Evans Lehman.
    11       The complaint initially pleaded three claims relating
    12   to the prosecutors: (1) a due process claim for bad faith
    13   denial of post-conviction access to biological evidence and
    14   DNA testing (Count VI, which has since been withdrawn as to
    15   the individual prosecutors); (2) a due process claim for
    16   failing to promptly disclose material exculpatory evidence
    17   (Count VII, which is at issue on this appeal); and (3)
    18   a claim against Monroe County (Count IX, under Monell v.
    19   Department of Social Services, 
    436 U.S. 658
     (1978)), for
    20   having a custom or policy of withholding biological evidence
    9
    The complaint named Green in both his individual
    capacity and his official capacity as District Attorney.
    15
    1    in bad faith, and failing to promptly disclose exculpatory
    2    information.
    3         Defendants Green, Bernstein, and Evans Lehman, and
    4    Monroe County moved to dismiss all counts against them on
    5    grounds of absolute prosecutorial immunity, qualified
    6    immunity, and failure to state a claim under Monell.10    By
    7    Decision and Order dated February 11, 2008, the district
    8    court denied the defendants’ motion to dismiss in all
    9    respects.11    In summary, the district court concluded that
    10   the prosecutors were acting in an “investigative” capacity
    11   when they submitted the DNA evidence for testing and when
    12   they later withheld the results, and they were therefore not
    13   entitled to absolute immunity under Imbler, 
    424 U.S. at
    14   430–31.   The court further concluded that the prosecutors
    15   were not entitled to qualified immunity because reasonable
    16   prosecutors should have known that failing to disclose
    17   compelling exculpatory information for a period of at least
    10
    As to the Monell claim, Monroe County urged that
    the claim related only to acts undertaken by the District
    Attorney in his prosecutorial capacity, and in that capacity
    a District Attorney acts as an agent of the State of New
    York, not as an agent of a particular county.
    11
    However, the court did dismiss all claims against
    Green in his official capacity because it found such claims
    were subsumed by the Monell claim against Monroe County.
    16
    1    72 days violated a clearly established, substantive due
    2    process right.
    3        The prosecutors and Monroe County appeal.
    4
    5                             DISCUSSION
    6        When a district court denies immunity on a Rule
    7    12(b)(6) motion to dismiss, “we review the district court’s
    8    denial de novo, accepting as true the material facts alleged
    9    in the complaint and drawing all reasonable inferences in
    10   plaintiffs’ favor.”   Johnson v. Newburgh Enlarged School
    11   Dist., 
    239 F.3d 246
    , 250 (2d Cir. 2001).
    12       We have jurisdiction to review a denial of qualified
    13   immunity under the collateral order doctrine if the denial
    14   “‘turns on an issue of law.’”        Iqbal, 
    129 S. Ct. at
    1946
    15   (quoting Mitchell v. Forsyth, 
    472 U.S. 511
    , 530 (1985)).
    16                                   I
    17       The Supreme Court first acknowledged the absolute
    18   immunity of prosecutors to § 1983 suits in Imbler v.
    19   Pachtman, 
    424 U.S. 409
     (1976).        The Court relied on a common
    20   law tradition of prosecutorial immunity, as well as strong
    21   policy considerations that supported extending immunity to
    22   the § 1983 context: “A prosecutor is duty bound to exercise
    17
    1    his best judgment both in deciding which suits to bring and
    2    in conducting them in court.    The public trust of the
    3    prosecutor’s office would suffer if he were constrained in
    4    making every decision by the consequences in terms of his
    5    own potential liability in a suit for damages.”    Imbler, 424
    6    U.S. at 424–25.
    7        Imbler defined the scope of prosecutorial immunity not
    8    by the identity of the actor, but by reference to the
    9    “function” performed.   Id. at 430.   Those acts that are
    10   “intimately associated with the judicial phase of the
    11   criminal process” would be shielded by absolute immunity,
    12   but not “those aspects of the prosecutor’s responsibility
    13   that cast him in the role of an administrator or
    14   investigative officer rather than that of advocate.”      Id. at
    15   430-31.
    16       Thus, to establish immunity, the “ultimate question” is
    17   “whether the prosecutors have carried their burden of
    18   establishing that they were functioning as ‘advocates’ when
    19   they engaged in the challenged conduct.”    Doe v. Phillips,
    20   
    81 F.3d 1204
    , 1209 (2d Cir. 1996).    “A prosecutor’s
    21   administrative duties and those investigatory functions that
    22   do not relate to an advocate’s preparation for the
    18
    1    initiation of a prosecution or for judicial proceedings are
    2    not entitled to absolute immunity.”   Buckley v. Fitzsimmons,
    3    
    509 U.S. 259
    , 273 (1993); see also Parkinson v. Cozzolino,
    4    
    238 F.3d 145
    , 150 (2d Cir. 2001) (“The cases thus draw a
    5    line between the investigative and administrative functions
    6    of prosecutors, which are not protected by absolute
    7    immunity, and the advocacy functions of prosecutors, which
    8    are so protected.”).
    9        Drawing this line between “advocacy” and
    10   “investigative” functions is vexed, perhaps no more so than
    11   in the post-conviction context.12   For once a conviction
    12   becomes final, there is no longer a pending adversarial
    13   criminal proceeding; the “judicial phase” is technically
    14   finished.   Yet, by the nature of their office, prosecutors
    15   will necessarily remain involved in criminal cases: opposing
    16   civil habeas petitions (or other forms of collateral
    17   relief); amending restitution orders; pursuing parole
    18   violations; or resolving disputes over a prisoner’s
    19   projected release date.   These functions may be somewhat
    12
    Imbler specifically avoided the post-conviction
    context. See Imbler, 
    424 U.S. at 431
     (“We hold only that in
    initiating a prosecution and in presenting the State’s case,
    the prosecutor is immune from a civil suit for damages under
    § 1983.” (emphases added)).
    19
    1    administrative, and may not always relate to in-court
    2    advocacy, yet often they are integral to an ongoing
    3    “judicial phase” of a prosecution.
    4        Confronted with questions about the scope of absolute
    5    prosecutorial immunity post-conviction, federal appellate
    6    courts have stressed different aspects of the analysis, and
    7    come to apparently conflicting results.   Compare Houston v.
    8    Partee, 
    978 F.2d 362
    , 366 (7th Cir. 1992) (no absolute
    9    immunity where prosecutors were “not personally prosecuting
    10   the appeal” in post-conviction proceedings), with Carter v.
    11   Burch, 
    34 F.3d 257
    , 263 (4th Cir. 1994) (absolute immunity
    12   where prosecutor “was handling the post-conviction motions
    13   and the initial direct appeal . . . [and thus] still
    14   functioning as an advocate for the State”).   Most recently,
    15   the Third and Sixth Circuits have suggested that absolute
    16   immunity should extend to post-conviction conduct so long as
    17   the prosecutor can show that an advocacy function was being
    18   performed.   See Yarris v. County of Delaware, 
    465 F.3d 129
    ,
    19   137 (3d Cir. 2006) (“After a conviction is obtained, the
    20   challenged action must be shown by the prosecutor to be part
    21   of the prosecutor’s continuing personal involvement as the
    22   state’s advocate in adversarial post-conviction proceedings
    20
    1    to be encompassed within that prosecutor’s absolute immunity
    2    from suit.”); Spurlock v. Thompson, 
    330 F.3d 791
    , 799 (6th
    3    Cir. 2003) (“[a]bsolute immunity applies to the adversarial
    4    acts of prosecutors during post-conviction proceedings . . .
    5    where the prosecutor is personally involved . . . and
    6    continues his role as an advocate,” but “where the role as
    7    advocate has not yet begun . . . or where it has concluded,
    8    absolute immunity does not apply.”).
    9        Our Court has not addressed the scope of immunity
    10   enjoyed by prosecutors in collateral proceedings; but we
    11   have held that absolute immunity extends to actions taken
    12   while working on direct appeals.      Parkinson, 
    238 F.3d at
    13   151–52.   As we wrote in Parkinson:
    14             We now join these courts in holding that
    15             absolute immunity covers prosecutors’
    16             actions after the date of conviction
    17             while a direct appeal is pending. We
    18             express no opinion as to when such
    19             immunity ends; the prosecutors’ actions
    20             in this case occurred while [the
    21             defendant’s] direct appeal was pending,
    22             and we have little difficulty extending
    23             absolute immunity that far. [FN 5]
    24
    25             [FN 5] Specifically, because the facts of
    26             this case do not raise the issue, we do
    27             not decide whether absolute immunity
    28             extends to collateral proceedings, such
    29             as habeas petitions.
    30
    31   
    238 F.3d at
    152 & n.5.
    21
    1                                  II
    2        On the facts of this case, we must now decide whether,
    3    and how, absolute immunity extends to prosecutors working on
    4    post-conviction collateral proceedings.   We see no
    5    principled reason to withhold absolute immunity for work
    6    performed in defending a conviction from collateral attack.
    7        As we noted in Parkinson, there is language from some
    8    Supreme Court decisions to the effect that “absolute
    9    immunity appl[ies] to ‘acts undertaken by a prosecutor in
    10   preparing for the initiation of judicial proceedings or for
    11   trial.’”   
    238 F.3d at 151
     (quoting Buckley, 
    509 U.S. at
    12   273).   But “[s]uch language . . . does not serve to
    13   delineate the endpoint of immunity. Rather, it simply
    14   underscores the fact that absolute immunity does not apply
    15   to the investigatory duties of a prosecutor, that is, it
    16   serves to establish the starting point of such immunity.”
    17   
    Id.
     (emphases in original).
    18       Although a collateral attack is technically a separate,
    19   civil proceeding, a prosecutor defending a post-conviction
    20   petition remains the state’s advocate in an adversarial
    21   proceeding that is an integral part of the criminal justice
    22
    1    system.13    The considerations that militate in favor of
    2    absolute immunity for work done at trial or on appeal are
    3    just as relevant in the context of a collateral proceeding.
    4    A post-conviction petition often presents the same kinds of
    5    legal issues as the underlying criminal case, requires the
    6    same kinds of legal judgments, and calls upon the same kinds
    7    of advocacy skills and measures.    Often the same prosecutor
    8    who conducted the trial will oppose the post-conviction
    9    challenge.
    10        Several courts have already held, or suggested, that
    11   absolute immunity shields work performed by prosecutors
    12   opposing habeas petitions.    See, e.g., Spurlock, 
    330 F.3d at
    13   799 (“Absolute immunity applies to the adversarial acts of
    14   prosecutors during post-conviction proceedings, including
    15   direct appeals, habeas corpus proceedings, and parole
    16   proceedings, where the prosecutor is personally involved in
    17   the subsequent proceedings and continues his role as an
    18   advocate.”); Summers v. Sjogren, 
    667 F. Supp. 1432
    , 1434 (D.
    
    19 Utah 1987
    ) (a prosecutor who allegedly filed false documents
    13
    See U.S. Const. art. II, § 9, cl. 2 (“The privilege
    of the writ of habeas corpus shall not be suspended, unless
    when in cases of rebellion or invasion the public safety may
    require it.”).
    23
    1    in opposition to a habeas petition “does not lose immunity
    2    merely because she was acting in a post-conviction
    3    setting”).   We join these courts in holding that absolute
    4    immunity shields work performed during a post-conviction
    5    collateral attack, at least insofar as the challenged
    6    actions are part of the prosecutor’s role as an advocate for
    7    the state.
    8                                 III
    9        Having established that absolute prosecutorial immunity
    10   may extend to advocacy work performed in the post-conviction
    11   context, we must determine whether such immunity is
    12   warranted in this case.
    13       The answer depends in part on whether one looks at the
    14   prosecutors’ discrete actions, or at their role and function
    15   in an ongoing proceeding.   If one focuses on the DNA
    16   testing, the prosecutors’ conduct might be classified as
    17   investigative; if one focuses on the act of delaying
    18   disclosure, the prosecutors’ conduct might be classified as
    19   administrative, or possibly investigative; if one focuses on
    20   the opposition to Warney’s 440 motion and habeas petition,
    21   the prosecutors’ conduct might be classified as pure
    22   advocacy.
    24
    1        The district court, which focused on the testing and
    2    the delay in disclosure, declined to extend absolute
    3    immunity because it considered the prosecutors’ actions to
    4    be “investigatory . . . no different than [] law enforcement
    5    officials’ acts in obtaining and allegedly suppressing
    6    favorable evidence.”
    7        Warney does not complain that the prosecutors ordered
    8    the testing; after all, that testing is what led to his
    9    release.   Nor is Warney complaining (here) about the denial
    10   of access to test the DNA for himself.14   Nor is he
    11   complaining of non-disclosure of the test results--
    12   disclosure was made.   Warney’s narrow focus is
    13   (understandably) on the specific act that caused his harm:
    14   the failure to disclose the DNA results promptly.
    15       For the following reasons, we conclude that it is
    16   unhelpful to ascertain the prosecutors’ functional role by
    17   isolating each specific act done or not done; rather, a
    18   prosecutor’s function depends chiefly on whether there is
    14
    Warney voluntarily withdrew his claim relating to
    bad-faith denial of access to evidence. Its validity would,
    in any event, be called into question by the Supreme Court’s
    recent decision in District Attorney’s Office for the Third
    Judicial District v. Osborne, 
    129 S. Ct. 2308
    , 2322 (2009)
    (finding no substantive due process right to DNA evidence
    post-conviction).
    25
    1    pending or in preparation a court proceeding in which the
    2    prosecutor acts as an advocate.
    3        Unless the DNA testing is considered with reference to
    4    context, it is impossible to classify functionally.     If the
    5    testing inculpated Warney, it would be a potent tool of the
    6    advocacy; if it exculpated Warney, it might be deemed
    7    administrative, in the sense that it would entail
    8    disclosure; if it inculpated someone else, it would be
    9    investigative, at least to the extent that it might identify
    10   the real killer.   But the steps taken here--testing,
    11   disclosure, and even the delay in making disclosure, as well
    12   as the identification of the real killer–-were integral to
    13   and subsumed in the advocacy functions being performed in
    14   connection with Warney’s post-conviction initiatives.     The
    15   decisions made by the prosecutors in this case--whether to
    16   test for potentially inculpatory (or exculpatory)
    17   information, how and when to disclose or use that
    18   information, and whether to seek to vacate Warney’s
    19   conviction--were exercises of legal judgment made in the
    20   “judicial phase” of proceedings integral to the criminal
    21   justice process.
    22       The DNA testing obviously would have bearing on the
    26
    1    advocacy work of deciding whether to oppose Warney’s
    2    initiatives.     A prosecutor has an affirmative obligation,
    3    before filing an opposition, to ensure that the petition
    4    should in fact be opposed.     See Fed. R. Civ. P. 11(b) (“By
    5    presenting to the court a pleading . . . an attorney . . .
    6    certifies that to the best of the person’s knowledge . . .
    7    the factual contentions have evidentiary support.”).     The
    8    proper and useful focus for ascertaining the function being
    9    served by a prosecutor’s act is therefore on the pendency of
    10   court proceedings that engage a prosecutor as an advocate
    11   for the state.
    12       The Supreme Court recently taught us that a prosecutor
    13   enjoys absolute immunity even when doing an administrative
    14   act if the act is done in the performance of an advocacy
    15   function.   Van de Kamp v. Goldstein, 
    129 S. Ct. 855
     (2009).
    16   In Van de Kamp, the plaintiff had won habeas relief because
    17   the government failed to disclose at trial, as required by
    18   Giglio v. United States, 
    405 U.S. 150
     (1972), that a
    19   jailhouse informant had previously received reduced
    20   sentences for providing favorable testimony.     In a § 1983
    21   suit, the plaintiff alleged that the Los Angeles County
    22   District Attorney (and other prosecutors) failed to
    27
    1    establish information-sharing systems concerning jailhouse
    2    informants, and failed to train prosecutors on how to share
    3    such information.   The Ninth Circuit denied the prosecutors
    4    absolute immunity, on the theory that the alleged failures
    5    were more “administrative” than “prosecutorial.”
    6    See Goldstein v. Long Beach, 
    481 F.3d 1170
    , 1171–72 (9th
    7    Cir. 2007).   In reversing, the Supreme Court held that the
    8    “administrative” tasks at issue (establishing information-
    9    sharing systems and training attorneys on how to share
    10   information) were “‘intimately associated with the judicial
    11   phase of the criminal process.’”   Van de Kamp, 129 S. Ct. at
    12   864 (quoting Imbler, 
    424 U.S. at 430
    ).   The Court explained:
    13            Here, unlike with other claims related to
    14            administrative decisions, an individual
    15            prosecutor’s error in the plaintiff’s
    16            specific criminal trial constitutes an
    17            essential element of the plaintiff’s
    18            claim. The administrative obligations at
    19            issue here are thus unlike administrative
    20            duties concerning, for example, workplace
    21            hiring, payroll administration, the
    22            maintenance of physical facilities, and
    23            the like. Moreover, the types of
    24            activities on which Goldstein’s claims
    25            focus necessarily require legal knowledge
    26            and the exercise of related discretion,
    27            e.g., in determining what information
    28            should be included in the training or the
    29            supervision or the information-system
    30            management. And in that sense also
    31            Goldstein’s claims are unlike claims of,
    32            say, unlawful discrimination in hiring
    28
    1             employees. Given these features of the
    2             case before us, we believe absolute
    3             immunity must follow.
    4
    5    Id. at 862.    Just as the administrative act in Goldstein was
    6    integral to an advocacy function, we conclude that the
    7    prosecutors’ actions here--which could be seen as
    8    administrative or investigative--were also integral to the
    9    overarching advocacy function of dealing with post-trial
    10   initiatives challenging an underlying criminal conviction:
    11   they “require[d] legal knowledge and the exercise of related
    12   discretion.”    Id.
    13       If the conduct challenged by Warney had occurred during
    14   Warney’s trial, that is, if the prosecutors had tested all
    15   the evidence, and then sat on the exculpatory results for at
    16   least 72 days, they may well have violated Brady v.
    
    17 Maryland, 373
     U.S. 83 (1963); but they would be absolutely
    18   immune from personal liability.     See, e.g., Jones v.
    19   Shankland, 
    800 F.2d 77
    , 80 (6th Cir. 1986) (a prosecutor’s
    20   “non-disclosure of exculpatory information [is] certainly
    21   entitled to absolute immunity”).     The reason that is so is
    22   that the disclosure of evidence to opposing counsel is an
    23   advocacy function.
    24       The disclosure decision in this case is advocacy
    29
    1   notwithstanding that the evidence would likely terminate the
    2   ongoing post-conviction proceedings in favor of the
    3   petitioner.   The advocacy function of a prosecutor includes
    4   seeking exoneration and confessing error to correct an
    5   erroneous conviction.   Thus prosecutors are under a
    6   continuing ethical obligation to disclose exculpatory
    7   information discovered post-conviction. 15   Any narrower
    15
    Rule 3.8 of the American Bar Association Model Rules
    of Professional Conduct reads:
    (g) When a prosecutor knows of new,
    credible and material evidence creating a
    reasonable likelihood that a convicted
    defendant did not commit an offense of
    which the defendant was convicted, the
    prosecutor shall:
    (1) promptly disclose that evidence to an
    appropriate court or authority, and
    (2) if the conviction was obtained in the
    prosecutor’s jurisdiction,
    (i) promptly disclose that evidence
    to the defendant unless a court
    authorizes delay, and
    (ii) undertake further
    investigation, or make reasonable efforts
    to cause an investigation, to determine
    whether the defendant was convicted of an
    offense that the defendant did not
    commit.
    (h) When a prosecutor knows of clear and
    convincing evidence establishing that a
    30
    1    conception of a prosecutor’s role would be truly alarming.
    2        The prosecutors are therefore entitled to absolute
    3    immunity in this lawsuit.    On the facts of this case, we
    4    need not, and do not, decide whether absolute immunity
    5    extends to prosecutorial conduct regarding DNA evidence,
    6    occurring after a prisoner’s appeals and collateral attacks
    7    have been exhausted.    Moreover, because we extend absolute
    8    immunity in this case, we do not address the prosecutors’
    9    alternative argument that they are entitled to qualified
    10   immunity.
    11                                   IV
    12       Affording absolute immunity in this context, with the
    13   resulting dismissal of Warney’s claim against the
    14   prosecutors, does not deprecate the duty of prosecutors to
    15   prevent unjust imprisonment.     Indeed, absolute immunity is
    16   afforded in part because we conclude that the duty is a part
    17   of the prosecutor’s advocacy function.        This outcome affords
    18   no incentive for concealment.        A civil law suit is not a
    19   necessary enforcement mechanism for ensuring that
    defendant in the prosecutor’s
    jurisdiction was convicted of an offense
    that the defendant did not commit, the
    prosecutor shall seek to remedy the
    conviction.
    31
    1    prosecutors disclose exculpatory information promptly.
    2    Prosecutors remain ethically bound to disclose exculpatory
    3    information, and, in extreme cases of intentional
    4    suppression, prosecutors may be subject to criminal
    5    liability.   See Imbler, 
    424 U.S. at
    428–29 (“We emphasize
    6    that the immunity of prosecutors from liability in suits
    7    under § 1983 does not leave the public powerless to deter
    8    misconduct or to punish that which occurs.     This Court has
    9    never suggested that the policy considerations which compel
    10   civil immunity for certain governmental officials also place
    11   them beyond the reach of the criminal law.”).
    12       Moreover, the availability of absolute immunity in this
    13   context will likely encourage prosecutors in the future to
    14   seek exculpatory information post-trial.     Absolute immunity
    15   of prosecutors is grounded in the fear that the “public
    16   trust of the prosecutor’s office would suffer if [the
    17   prosecutor] were constrained in making every decision by the
    18   consequences in terms of his own potential liability in a
    19   suit for damages.”   Imbler, 
    424 U.S. at 424-25
    ; see also
    20   Kalina v. Fletcher, 
    522 U.S. 118
    , 125 (1997) (“[I]t is the
    21   interest in protecting the proper functioning of the office,
    22   rather than the interest in protecting its occupant, that is
    32
    1    of primary importance.”).      “ To be sure, this immunity does
    2    leave the genuinely wronged defendant without civil redress
    3    against a prosecutor whose malicious or dishonest action
    4    deprives him of liberty.    But the alternative of qualifying
    5    a prosecutor’s immunity would disserve the broader public
    6    interest. It would prevent the vigorous and fearless
    7    performance of the prosecutor’s duty that is essential to
    8    the proper functioning of the criminal justice system.”
    9    Imbler, 
    424 U.S. at
    427-28 .     Prosecutors facing tough
    10   choices as to whether or not to seek exculpatory information
    11   post-conviction should not have to fear personal liability
    12   in the event that issues are raised later as to the
    13   evaluation and disclosure of what is learned during the
    14   pendency of post-conviction proceedings.      Such a peril would
    15   be an incentive to avoid exculpatory inquiries.
    16                                    V
    17       Finally, Monroe County argues that Warney’s claim
    18   against it should have been dismissed because the claim
    19   relates solely to actions undertaken by the Monroe County
    20   prosecutors in their “prosecutorial” capacity, and
    21   prosecutors acting in that capacity are agents of the State
    22   of New York, not agents of the particular county.      See,
    33
    1    e.g., Baez v. Hennessy, 
    853 F.2d 73
    , 77 (2d Cir. 1988).
    2    Alternatively, Monroe County argues that Warney has failed
    3    to identify an underlying constitutional deprivation to
    4    support a claim under Monell, 
    436 U.S. 658
    .
    5        Unlike the order denying immunity, the order denying
    6    Monroe County’s motion to dismiss is not immediately
    7    appealable pursuant to the collateral order doctrine.        See
    8    Coopers & Lybrand v. Livesay, 
    437 U.S. 463
    , 468 (1978)
    9    (under the collateral order doctrine, an appellate court may
    10   not exercise jurisdiction where an order does not
    11   “conclusively determine the disputed question”).    Monroe
    12   County asks us to exercise pendent appellate jurisdiction;
    13   but in this Circuit we exercise pendent appellate
    14   jurisdiction only “over an independent but related question
    15   that is ‘inextricably intertwined’ with the [appealable
    16   issue] or is ‘necessary to ensure meaningful review’ of that
    17   issue.”   Kaluczky v. City of White Plains, 
    57 F.3d 202
    , 207
    18   (2d Cir. 1995) (quoting Swint v. Chambers County Comm’n, 514
    
    19 U.S. 35
    , 51 (1995)).   The elements of a Monell claim, and
    20   the extent to which prosecutors in New York are agents of
    21   the state (as opposed to a county) are not inextricably
    22   intertwined with the question of absolute immunity.     We
    34
    1   therefore decline to exercise pendent appellate jurisdiction
    2   over these issues at this time.
    3
    4                            CONCLUSION
    5       For the foregoing reasons, the order of the district
    6   court insofar as it denied absolute immunity to the three
    7   Monroe County prosecutors is reversed, and the case is
    8   remanded for further proceedings consistent with this
    9   opinion.
    35
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 08-0947-cv

Filed Date: 11/13/2009

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/3/2016

Authorities (24)

Jane Doe v. Francis D. Phillips, Ii, Gerald D. D'amelia, Jr. , 81 F.3d 1204 ( 1996 )

donald-parkinson-v-beth-cozzolino-columbia-county-district-attorney-and , 238 F.3d 145 ( 2001 )

nicholas-yarris-v-county-of-delaware-barry-gross-esquire-william-h-ryan , 465 F.3d 129 ( 2006 )

stephen-kaluczky-v-city-of-white-plains-and-the-city-of-white-plains-new , 57 F.3d 202 ( 1995 )

timothy-johnson-sr-and-luaine-sims-on-behalf-of-their-minor-son-tj-v , 239 F.3d 246 ( 2001 )

william-padua-baez-v-richard-a-hennessy-jr-individually-and-in-his , 853 F.2d 73 ( 1988 )

People v. Warney , 750 N.Y.S.2d 731 ( 2002 )

Robert Spurlock Ronnie Marshall v. Tommy P. Thompson , 330 F.3d 791 ( 2003 )

William Douglas Carter v. William T. Burch Vernon Beamer, ... , 34 F.3d 257 ( 1994 )

Harllel B. Jones v. Robert Shankland , 800 F.2d 77 ( 1986 )

thomas-lee-goldstein-v-city-of-long-beach-county-of-los-angeles-john-henry , 481 F.3d 1170 ( 2007 )

Elton Houston and Robert Brown v. Cecil A. Partee, Cook ... , 978 F.3d 362 ( 1992 )

Monell v. New York City Dept. of Social Servs. , 98 S. Ct. 2018 ( 1978 )

Coopers & Lybrand v. Livesay , 98 S. Ct. 2454 ( 1978 )

Imbler v. Pachtman , 96 S. Ct. 984 ( 1976 )

Giglio v. United States , 92 S. Ct. 763 ( 1972 )

Mitchell v. Forsyth , 105 S. Ct. 2806 ( 1985 )

Buckley v. Fitzsimmons , 113 S. Ct. 2606 ( 1993 )

Kalina v. Fletcher , 118 S. Ct. 502 ( 1997 )

Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly , 127 S. Ct. 1955 ( 2007 )

View All Authorities »