Anilao v. Spota ( 2022 )


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  • 19-3949-cv
    Anilao v. Spota
    UNITED STATES COURT
    OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
    August Term, 2020
    (Argued: December 4, 2020             Decided: March 9, 2022)
    Docket No. 19-3949-cv
    _____________________________________
    JULIET ANILAO, HARRIET AVILA, MARK DELA CRUZ,
    CLAUDINE GAMAIO, ELMER JACINTO, JENNIFER LAMPA,
    RIZZA MAULION, THERESA RAMOS, RANIER SICHON, AND
    JAMES MILLENA,
    Plaintiffs-Counter-Defendants-Appellants,
    FELIX Q. VINLUAN,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    THOMAS J. SPOTA, III, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS DISTRICT
    ATTORNEY OF SUFFOLK COUNTY, OFFICE OF THE DISTRICT
    ATTORNEY OF SUFFOLK COUNTY, LEONARD LATO, INDIVIDUALLY
    AND AS AN ASSISTANT DISTRICT ATTORNEY OF SUFFOLK COUNTY,
    COUNTY OF SUFFOLK, KARLA LATO, AS ADMINISTRATOR OF THE
    ESTATE OF LEONARD LATO,
    Defendants-Appellees,
    SUSAN O’CONNOR, NANCY FITZGERALD,
    SENTOSA CARE, LLC, AVALON GARDENS REHABILITATION
    19-3949-cv
    Anilao v. Spota
    AND HEALTH CARE CENTER, PROMPT NURSING EMPLOYMENT
    AGENCY, LLC, FRANCRIS LUYUN, BENT PHILIPSON,
    BERISH RUBINSTEIN,
    Defendants-Counter-Claimants. *
    _____________________________________
    Before:
    SACK, CHIN, and LOHIER, Circuit Judges.
    Ten nurses and their former attorney filed claims under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
     as well as common-law claims of false arrest and malicious prosecution
    under New York law against the defendants, including the District Attorney
    of Suffolk County and one of his bureau chiefs. The two principal questions
    presented on appeal are whether the individual defendants were entitled to
    absolute immunity for the actions they undertook as prosecutors, and
    whether there was any admissible evidence showing that they violated the
    plaintiffs’ constitutional rights during the investigative phase of the case.
    Because we agree with the United States District Court for the Eastern District
    of New York (Bianco, J.) that the defendants were entitled to absolute
    immunity from claims arising from the prosecutorial phase of the case and to
    summary judgment on the remaining claims arising from the investigative
    phase of the prosecution, we AFFIRM.
    Judge Chin dissents in a separate opinion.
    STEPHEN L. O’BRIEN, O’Brien & O’Brien, LLP,
    Nesconset, NY, for Defendant-Appellee Thomas J.
    Spota, III.
    BRIAN C. MITCHELL, Assistant County Attorney,
    Suffolk County Attorney’s Office, Hauppauge, NY,
    for Defendants-Appellees County of Suffolk and Karla
    Lato, as Administrator of the Estate of Leonard Lato.
    *   The Clerk of Court is directed to amend the caption as set forth above.
    2
    19-3949-cv
    Anilao v. Spota
    OSCAR MICHELEN, Cuomo LLC, Mineola, NY, for
    Plaintiff-Appellant Felix Vinluan.
    PAULA SCHWARTZ FROME (James O. Druker, on the
    brief), Kase & Druker, Esqs., Garden City, NY, for
    Plaintiffs-Counter-Defendants-Appellants Juliet Anilao,
    Harriet Avila, Mark Dela Cruz, Claudine Gamaio,
    Elmer Jacinto, Jennifer Lampa, Rizza Maulion,
    Theresa Ramos, Ranier Sichon, and James Millena.
    LOHIER, Circuit Judge:
    Ten nurses and their former attorney, Felix Vinluan, filed claims under
    
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
     as well as common-law claims of false arrest and malicious
    prosecution under New York law against the defendants — the County of
    Suffolk, the Office of the District Attorney of Suffolk County (the “DA’s
    Office”), Thomas J. Spota, III, the District Attorney of Suffolk County, and
    Leonard Lato, an Assistant District Attorney who was at all relevant times the
    Chief of the Insurance Crimes Bureau at the DA’s Office. The plaintiffs allege
    that Spota and Lato improperly prosecuted them for child endangerment,
    endangerment of a physically disabled person, and related charges by
    fabricating evidence and engaging in other improper conduct before a grand
    jury, in violation of the plaintiffs’ federal constitutional rights and New York
    state law. The state prosecution ended only when a New York state appellate
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    Anilao v. Spota
    court concluded that the plaintiffs were being “threatened with prosecution
    for crimes for which they cannot be constitutionally tried.” Matter of Vinluan
    v. Doyle, 
    873 N.Y.S.2d 72
    , 83 (2d Dep’t 2009). The United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of New York (Bianco, J.) found that Spota and Lato
    were entitled to absolute immunity for starting the criminal prosecution and
    presenting the case to the grand jury, and it dismissed the plaintiffs’ claims
    arising from any alleged misconduct during that prosecutorial stage. Anilao
    v. Spota, 
    774 F. Supp. 2d 457
    , 466–68 (E.D.N.Y. 2011) (“Anilao I”). The District
    Court later granted summary judgment in favor of the prosecutors and the
    DA’s Office as to the remaining claims after concluding that there was
    insufficient evidence that Spota or Lato had violated the plaintiffs’
    constitutional rights during the investigative phase of the criminal
    proceedings. Anilao v. Spota, 
    340 F. Supp. 3d 224
    , 250 (E.D.N.Y. 2018)
    (“Anilao II”). And “given the absence of any underlying constitutional
    violation in the investigative stage,” the court concluded, “no municipal
    liability can exist against Suffolk County as a matter of law.” 
    Id. at 251
    .
    For the reasons that follow, we affirm the District Court’s judgment.
    Although Spota and Lato may have unlawfully penalized the plaintiffs for
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    Anilao v. Spota
    exercising the right to quit their jobs on the advice of counsel, under our
    precedent both of them are entitled to absolute immunity for their actions
    during the judicial phase of the criminal process. As for the plaintiffs’ claim
    that Spota and Lato fabricated evidence during the investigative phase of the
    criminal process, we agree with the District Court that there was insufficient
    admissible evidence of fabrication to defeat summary judgment. We
    therefore affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    Sentosa Care, LLC (“Sentosa”) 1 operates health care facilities
    throughout New York and recruited the nurse plaintiffs from the Philippines
    to work in various Sentosa nursing home facilities on Long Island, New York.
    Each nurse signed an employment contract that required the nurses to work
    for at least three years or face a $25,000 penalty. When they arrived in New
    York, the nurses learned that they would be working for an employment
    agency, not Sentosa, and that the agency had assigned them to work at
    1Sentosa, Avalon Gardens Rehabilitation and Health Care Center, Prompt Nursing
    Employment Agency LLC, Francris Luyun, Bent Philipson, Berish Rubinstein, Susan
    O’Connor, and Nancy Fitzgerald were originally defendants in this case, but they
    are not parties to this appeal.
    5
    19-3949-cv
    Anilao v. Spota
    Avalon Gardens Rehabilitation and Health Center (“Avalon”), a nursing
    home for both adults and children.
    Following a relatively brief stint at Avalon, the nurses began to
    complain about their working and living conditions — longer than expected
    work shifts, overcrowded and substandard housing, lower insurance benefits
    and pay, and less vacation time than their contracts provided. The nurses
    also voiced their concerns to the Philippine Consulate in New York, which
    referred them to Vinluan, an immigration and employment attorney, for
    advice. After speaking with the nurses and evaluating the facts, Vinluan
    concluded that Sentosa had breached its contracts with the nurses and
    advised them that they were free to resign from their positions without legal
    repercussion once their shifts ended. Based on Vinluan’s advice, on April 7,
    2006, all ten nurses resigned either after their shift was over or in advance of
    their next shift.
    Soon after the nurses resigned, Sentosa filed a complaint with the New
    York State Department of Education, which licenses and regulates nurses.
    The company also filed a complaint in Nassau County Supreme Court to
    enjoin the nurses and Vinluan from speaking to other nurses about resigning.
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    Anilao v. Spota
    It even filed a complaint with the Suffolk County Police Department. None of
    Sentosa’s complaints led to any action against the plaintiffs, however, and on
    September 28, 2006, the Department of Education closed the case after
    determining that the nurses had not engaged in any professional misconduct
    or deprived any patient of nursing care.
    Unfazed, Sentosa continued its campaign against the plaintiffs. It
    finally found a receptive audience in Spota. Not long after representatives of
    Sentosa met with Spota to urge the DA’s Office to file criminal charges
    against the nurses for imperiling the health and safety of Avalon’s patients,
    Spota assigned the criminal investigation to Lato. Lato then quickly
    interviewed the plaintiffs, as well as other witnesses, like Francris Luyun, the
    head of Sentosa’s recruitment agency.
    In defense of the plaintiffs, who were now plainly the targets of a
    criminal investigation, Vinluan presented Lato with “significant exculpatory
    information.” App’x 55. Among other things, Vinluan pointed to the fact
    that the Department of Education and the New York State Supreme Court
    had declined to act against the nurses. He also provided “information . . .
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    Anilao v. Spota
    that,” contrary to Sentosa’s assertion, “none of the Nurse Plaintiffs had ceased
    work during a shift.” App’x 55.
    Lato was unpersuaded by Vinluan’s arguments and presented several
    witnesses to a grand jury in Suffolk County. Among the witnesses were
    several Sentosa employees, an investigator in the DA’s Office, a nurse who
    had also resigned but who is not a party to this appeal, and a nurse who filled
    in at Avalon immediately after the nurse plaintiffs resigned. The grand jury
    returned an indictment charging the nurses and Vinluan with (1) conspiracy
    in the sixth degree, in violation of New York Penal Law (N.Y.P.L.) §§ 105.00
    and 105.20; (2) endangering the welfare of a child, in violation of N.Y.P.L. §§
    260.10(1) and 20.00; and (3) endangering the welfare of a physically disabled
    person, in violation of N.Y.P.L. §§ 260.25 and 20.00. Vinluan was also charged
    with criminal solicitation in the fifth degree, in violation of N.Y.P.L. § 100.00.
    In response, the nurses and Vinluan moved in New York State
    Supreme Court in Suffolk County to, among other things, dismiss the charges
    against them. All of them insisted that their conduct was not criminal and
    that, in any event, the indictment was not supported by sufficient evidence.
    They also argued that the prosecution violated their constitutional rights. The
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    Anilao v. Spota
    nurses claimed that the prosecution violated their rights under the Thirteenth
    Amendment of the federal Constitution, which, with one exception not
    relevant here, prohibits any form of involuntary or forced labor without pay.
    Vinluan argued that the prosecution against him violated his First
    Amendment rights to free speech and to association in connection with
    providing counsel to his clients.
    The state court rejected the plaintiffs’ claims of insufficient evidence,
    holding that “the evidence [was] legally sufficient to support [all] the charges
    contained in the indictment” and “that each count of the indictment properly
    charges these defendants with a crime . . . .” App’x 814. 2 The court also
    rejected the plaintiffs’ constitutional arguments. With respect to the nurses’
    constitutional challenge, the state court concluded that “[t]here is absolutely
    no evidence to suggest that this prosecution in any way violates the rights of
    any of these defendants under the Thirteenth Amendment to the United
    2 The state court also explained that “[i]n the context of a Grand Jury proceeding,
    legal sufficiency means prima facie proof of the crimes charged,” a standard
    significantly lower than the proof beyond a reasonable doubt required at a criminal
    trial. App’x 814–15. “Under these standards of review,” the court said, “there was
    ample evidence before the Grand Jury to support all counts of the indictment
    against [the nurses and Vinluan].” App’x 815.
    9
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    States Constitution.” App’x 815. As for Vinluan’s First Amendment
    challenge, the court determined, there was “no basis to disturb” the grand
    jury’s finding that there was “sufficient evidence that [Vinluan] had entered
    into an agreement to perform an act which would endanger the welfare of
    children and disabled persons and that an overt act was committed in
    furtherance of that agreement.” App’x 819.
    Having failed to persuade the state court to dismiss the indictment
    against them, the plaintiffs petitioned the New York Appellate Division,
    Second Department for a writ of prohibition. See 
    N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 7803
    (2). In
    January 2009 the Appellate Division granted the writ, which we describe
    further below, after finding that the prosecution of the nurses and of Vinluan
    “constitute[d] an impermissible infringement upon [their] constitutional
    rights . . . and that the issuance of a writ of prohibition to halt these
    prosecutions is the appropriate remedy in this matter.” Vinluan, 
    873 N.Y.S.2d at 75
    . In its decision granting the writ, the Appellate Division explained that
    the nurses had not committed a crime by ending their employment at will,
    since they had “resigned after the completion of their shifts, when the
    pediatric patients at Avalon Gardens were under the care of other nurses and
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    staff members,” 
    id.,
     and that Vinluan’s good faith legal advice was likewise
    protected from prosecution under the First and Fourteenth Amendments, 
    id.
    at 82–83. But the Appellate Division also explicitly acknowledged that “the
    [New York] Penal Law provisions relating to the endangerment of children
    and the physically disabled . . . do not on their face infringe upon Thirteenth
    Amendment rights by making the failure to perform labor or services an
    element of a crime,” and that under “exceptional circumstance[s],”
    restrictions of an individual’s Thirteenth Amendment rights may be
    warranted. 
    Id.
     at 80–81. The problem with the prosecution, the court
    explained, was that the “District Attorney proffer[ed] no reason why this
    [was] an ‘extreme case.’” 
    Id. at 81
    .
    The plaintiffs started this federal litigation in 2010. The complaint
    alleges, among other things, that Spota and Lato acted in concert with Sentosa
    to secure an indictment that they knew violated the plaintiffs’ constitutional
    rights and that they lacked probable cause to bring in the first instance. In
    particular, the complaint asserts that “the Grand Jury was not properly
    charged as to the law,” was “falsely informed that one or more of the nurses
    had resigned and left the facility before completing his or her shift,” and was
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    Anilao v. Spota
    “not informed that the Education Department had previously determined
    that the Nurse Plaintiffs had not violated the very regulations which they
    were indicted for violating.” App’x 56. The complaint also alleges that at
    Sentosa’s behest, Spota and Lato sought to punish the nurses for resigning
    from their employment at Avalon and discourage others from doing the
    same. Finally, the complaint claims that the County is liable under the
    principles of municipal liability announced in Monell v. Department of Social
    Services, 
    436 U.S. 658
     (1978).
    The defendants filed a motion to dismiss the complaint under Rule
    12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The District Court granted
    the motion in part as to any claims arising from Spota and Lato’s actions
    during the non-investigative, prosecutorial phase of their case against the
    plaintiffs, including the selection of charges, the initiation of the prosecution,
    and the presentation of testimony and evidence to the grand jury. As to those
    claims, the District Court concluded, Spota and Lato were entitled to absolute
    immunity from suit. See Anilao I, 
    774 F. Supp. 2d at
    479–81.
    But the District Court declined to dismiss on absolute immunity
    grounds the plaintiffs’ claims arising from any alleged prosecutorial
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    misconduct by Spota or Lato during the investigative phase of the case,
    finding instead that the defendants were at most entitled only to qualified
    immunity. 
    Id. at 477, 482
    . For that reason, to the extent that the complaint
    plausibly alleged that Spota and Lato had violated the plaintiffs’
    constitutional rights during the investigative phase, the District Court
    decided that the case would have to proceed past the pleading stage to
    discovery and summary judgment. See 
    id. at 485, 493
    . After discovery,
    however, the District Court granted summary judgment in favor of the
    defendants because “there [wa]s simply no evidence in the record that [Spota
    and Lato] engaged in any constitutional wrongdoing in the investigative
    stage of the case,” Anilao II, 340 F. Supp. 3d at 234. This was so even though
    the District Court had previously recognized (in Anilao I) that the case
    involved the “highly unusual set of circumstances in which the police not
    only lacked involvement in the investigation of [the plaintiffs] but also had
    expressly declined to investigate” them. Anilao I, 
    774 F. Supp. 2d at 481
    . The
    District Court then also dismissed the Monell claim against the County
    because there was no underlying constitutional violation. Anilao II, 340 F.
    Supp. 3d at 251.
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    This appeal followed.
    DISCUSSION
    The two questions presented on appeal are whether Spota and Lato
    were entitled to absolute immunity for the actions they undertook as
    prosecutors, and whether there was any evidence showing that they violated
    the plaintiffs’ constitutional rights during the investigative phase of the
    prosecution, a phase with respect to which they are entitled at most only to
    qualified immunity. We address each question in turn.
    I
    The doctrine of absolute immunity applies broadly to shield a
    prosecutor from liability for money damages (but not injunctive relief) in a
    § 1983 lawsuit, even when the result may be that a wronged plaintiff is left
    without an immediate remedy. 3 See Imbler v. Pachtman, 
    424 U.S. 409
    , 427
    (1976). Our cases make clear that prosecutors enjoy “absolute immunity from
    3Recognizing that it would be unjust to allow prosecutorial misconduct to go
    unpunished and that absolute immunity does not render the public powerless, we
    have pointed to other methods, such as criminal and professional sanctions, to deter
    and redress wrongdoing. See Schloss v. Bouse, 
    876 F.2d 287
    , 292 (2d Cir. 1989); see
    also Imbler, 
    424 U.S. at
    429 & n.29.
    14
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    Anilao v. Spota
    § 1983 liability for those prosecutorial activities intimately associated with the
    judicial phase of the criminal process.” 4 Barr v. Abrams, 
    810 F.2d 358
    , 361 (2d
    Cir. 1987) (quotation marks omitted). The immunity covers “virtually all acts,
    regardless of motivation, associated with [the prosecutor’s] function as an
    advocate.” Hill v. City of New York, 
    45 F.3d 643
    , 661 (2d Cir. 1995) (quoting
    Dory v. Ryan, 
    25 F.3d 81
    , 83 (2d Cir. 1994)). For example, a prosecutor enjoys
    absolute immunity when determining which offenses to charge, initiating a
    prosecution, presenting a case to a grand jury, and preparing for trial. See id.;
    Imbler, 
    424 U.S. at 431
     (concluding that a prosecutor is absolutely immune
    from a § 1983 suit for damages based on his “initiating a prosecution and . . .
    presenting the State’s case”). For that reason, we have held that absolute
    immunity extends even to a prosecutor who “conspir[es] to present false
    evidence at a criminal trial. The fact that such a conspiracy is certainly not
    something that is properly within the role of a prosecutor is immaterial,
    4To be clear, § 1983 itself does not mention absolute prosecutorial immunity (or, for
    that matter, any immunity). It is a judicially created doctrine that has developed
    over time.
    15
    19-3949-cv
    Anilao v. Spota
    because the immunity attaches to his function, not to the manner in which he
    performed it.” Dory, 
    25 F.3d at 83
     (cleaned up).
    “Thus, unless a prosecutor proceeds in the clear absence of all
    jurisdiction, absolute immunity [from § 1983 liability] exists for those
    prosecutorial activities intimately associated with the judicial phase of the
    criminal process.” Barr, 
    810 F.2d at 361
     (emphasis added); see Shmueli v. City
    of New York, 
    424 F.3d 231
    , 237 (2d Cir. 2005). “Conversely, where a
    prosecutor acts without any colorable claim of authority, he loses the absolute
    immunity he would otherwise enjoy” and is left with only qualified
    immunity as a potential shield. Barr, 
    810 F.2d at 361
     (emphasis added); see
    Shmueli, 
    424 F.3d at 237
    . “[A] limitation upon the immunity,” Chief Judge
    Hand explained, “[is] that the official’s act must have been within the scope of
    his powers,” but this does not mean that “to exercise a power dishonestly is
    necessarily to overstep its bounds.” Gregoire v. Biddle, 
    177 F.2d 579
    , 581 (2d
    Cir. 1949) (L. Hand, C.J.). Instead, “[w]hat is meant by saying that the officer
    must be acting within his power cannot be more than that the occasion must
    16
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    Anilao v. Spota
    be such as would have justified the act, if he had been using his power for any
    of the purposes on whose account it was vested in him.” 
    Id.
    A narrow limitation to the scope of absolute immunity in § 1983 actions
    thus exists where the defect is jurisdictional — that is, where the prosecutor
    acted well outside the scope of authority, rather than where the defect relates,
    as here, to the prosecutor’s motivation or the reasonableness of his official
    action. The jurisdictional defect must be clear and obvious. “In considering
    whether a given prosecution was clearly beyond the scope of that jurisdiction,
    or whether instead there was at least a colorable claim of authority, . . . we
    inquire whether” any relevant criminal statute exists that “may have
    authorized prosecution for the charged conduct.” Shmueli, 
    424 F.3d at 237
    ;
    see, e.g., Lerwill v. Joslin, 
    712 F.2d 435
    , 440 (10th Cir. 1983) (prosecutor who
    initiates prosecution under statutes he is not authorized to invoke is afforded
    absolute immunity if he “is arguably empowered to prosecute the alleged
    17
    19-3949-cv
    Anilao v. Spota
    conduct under some statute” and “the statute he incorrectly invokes also
    arguably applies to the criminal defendant’s alleged conduct”). 5
    So “[e]ven if a prosecutor may lose his absolute immunity for
    prosecutorial acts for which he has no colorable claim of authority,” it is not
    lost “immediately upon crossing the technical bounds of the power conferred
    on him by local law,” or “simply because he acted in excess of his authority.”
    Lerwill, 
    712 F.2d at 439
    ; see Ashleman v. Pope, 
    793 F.2d 1072
    , 1076–77 (9th
    Cir. 1986) (en banc) (unanimously holding that prosecutor was entitled to
    absolute immunity after overruling prior Ninth Circuit holding that
    prosecutor who “files charges he or she knows to be baseless . . . is acting
    outside the scope of his or her authority and thus lacks immunity” (quotation
    marks omitted)). Instead, “absolute immunity must be denied” only where
    there is both the absence of all authority (because, for example, no statute
    authorizes the prosecutor’s conduct) and the absence of any doubt that the
    5 If the laws authorize prosecution for the charged crimes, a prosecutor may still be
    liable if he “has intertwined his exercise of authorized prosecutorial discretion with
    other, unauthorized conduct.” Bernard v. County of Suffolk, 
    356 F.3d 495
    , 504 (2d
    Cir. 2004). Cited examples in which officials act clearly outside the scope of their
    powers include charging decisions that are accompanied by unauthorized demands
    for a bribe, sexual favors, the defendant’s performance of a religious act, or the like.
    See 
    id.
     Presumably no statute would authorize those acts under any circumstances.
    18
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    Anilao v. Spota
    challenged action falls well outside the scope of prosecutorial authority.
    Bernard v. County of Suffolk, 
    356 F.3d 495
    , 504 (2d Cir. 2004). In the vast
    majority of cases “the laws do authorize prosecution for the charged crimes,”
    
    id.
     (emphasis added), and if the charging decision or other act is within the
    prosecutor’s jurisdiction as a judicial officer, then absolute immunity attaches
    to their actions “regardless of any allegations” that their “actions were
    undertaken with an improper state of mind or improper motive,” Shmueli,
    
    424 F.3d at 237
    . Prosecutors thus have absolute immunity in a § 1983 action
    even if it turns out that “state law did not empower [them] to bring the
    charges,” so long as “they have at least a semblance of jurisdiction” that does
    not run far afield of their job description. Barr, 810 F.3d at 361 (declining to
    adopt “a holding that a prosecutor is without absolute immunity the moment
    he strays beyond his jurisdictional limits,” because doing so would “do
    violence to [the] spirit” of the doctrine).
    These governing principles of law are well established and are not
    questioned by the parties on appeal — so much so that the plaintiffs
    recognize that the doctrine of absolute immunity creates a “formidable
    obstacle” to their cause of action. Appellants’ Br. at 29 (quotation marks
    19
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    Anilao v. Spota
    omitted). Nevertheless, the plaintiffs contend that the very narrow exception
    to absolute immunity for prosecutorial acts that we have just described
    applies to the facts of this case. We disagree.
    We start with our decision in Barr. There the plaintiff had been
    questioned by the State prosecutor’s office as part of an investigation into
    alleged violations of state securities law. The plaintiff refused to answer any
    questions and invoked his Fifth Amendment right to remain silent. See 
    810 F.2d at
    359–60. In response, the prosecutors charged the plaintiff with
    criminal contempt in violation of New York’s penal law. See 
    id. at 360
    . The
    contempt charge was eventually dismissed in state court on the ground that
    the plaintiff had merely exercised his Fifth Amendment right. 
    Id.
     The
    plaintiff then filed a § 1983 civil damages action against the prosecutors,
    which the district court dismissed. On appeal, we held that the prosecutors
    were entitled to absolute immunity because they were broadly authorized by
    statute to pursue criminal contempt charges — even though they had
    trampled the plaintiff’s Fifth Amendment rights. Id. at 362.
    Likewise, in Bernard we considered whether county prosecutors were
    entitled to absolute immunity for their politically motivated investigation and
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    Anilao v. Spota
    prosecution of the plaintiffs without probable cause. See 
    356 F.3d at
    497–98.
    The plaintiffs alleged that the prosecutors had sought indictments without
    probable cause and “knowingly present[ed] false evidence to, while at the
    same time withholding exculpatory evidence from, the various grand juries
    that returned the[] flawed indictments.” 
    Id. at 503
    . We held that even in the
    absence of probable cause, “as long as a prosecutor acts with colorable
    authority, absolute immunity shields his performance of advocative functions
    regardless of motivation.” 
    Id. at 498, 505
    ; see also 
    id. at 503
     (collecting cases
    in which prosecutors were absolutely immune for initiating prosecutions
    without probable cause and/or presenting false evidence to a grand jury). 6 In
    doing so, we reaffirmed the principle that “[w]here, as in this case, a
    prosecutor’s charging decisions are not accompanied by any . . . unauthorized
    demands,” such as for a bribe or sexual favors, “the fact that improper
    motives may influence his authorized discretion cannot deprive him of
    6We therefore reversed the decision of the district court in Bernard, which had
    denied the defendants’ motion to dismiss as to the advocative misconduct claim on
    the ground that an improper political motive could take prosecutorial decisions and
    the prosecutor’s conduct before the grand jury outside the scope of official functions
    shielded by absolute prosecutorial immunity. 
    356 F.3d at 505
    .
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    Anilao v. Spota
    absolute immunity.” 
    Id. at 504
    ; see Dorman v. Higgins, 
    821 F.2d 133
    , 139 (2d
    Cir. 1987) (holding that “absolute immunity spares the official any scrutiny of
    his motives” so that allegations of “bad faith or . . . malice [cannot] defeat[ ] a
    claim of absolute immunity”).
    In Shmueli, decided a year after Bernard, we held that absolute
    immunity applied to protect local prosecutors who engaged in conduct that, if
    it occurred, was nothing short of outrageous. The plaintiff alleged that two
    New York County Assistant District Attorneys maliciously prosecuted her for
    aggravated harassment of her former domestic partner “despite knowing that
    the charges against her were false and that [she] was innocent” of those
    charges. 
    424 F.3d at 233
    . The plaintiff also alleged that the prosecutors made
    several threatening phone calls to her home during the prosecution. 
    Id.
     at
    233–34. The district court rejected the prosecutors’ defense of absolute
    immunity because they acted “without clear jurisdiction and without any
    colorable claim of authority.” 
    Id. at 235
    . We reversed, holding that the
    district court had improperly “equat[ed] an allegedly improper prosecutorial
    state of mind with a lack of prosecutorial jurisdiction.” 
    Id.
     Absolute
    immunity, we explained, shielded the prosecutors’ conduct because the
    22
    19-3949-cv
    Anilao v. Spota
    indictment contained allegations that, even if completely false, could
    authorize the prosecutors to prosecute Shmueli under the New York Penal
    Law prohibiting aggravated harassment in the second degree. 
    Id.
     at 238–39. 7
    The prosecutors’ “jurisdiction . . . to prosecute Shmueli,” we said, “depended
    on the authority conferred by the New York statutes” — no more, no less. 
    Id. at 238
    .
    We have extended absolute immunity to prosecutorial misconduct that
    was arguably more reprehensible than the conduct in Shmueli. See, e.g.,
    Pinaud v. County of Suffolk, 
    52 F.3d 1139
    , 1148 (2d Cir. 1995) (granting
    7
    Our sister circuits have similarly held that a prosecutor who initiates a prosecution
    with improper motives and without probable cause is absolutely immune from a
    claim for damages in a § 1983 action, even where the prosecutor’s alleged
    misconduct during the judicial stage was reprehensible and violated the plaintiffs’
    constitutional rights. See, e.g., Jones v. Cummings, 
    998 F.3d 782
    , 784–85, 788 (7th
    Cir. 2021) (prosecutors alleged to have maliciously filed untimely amendment to
    plaintiff’s criminal charges, which increased his term of imprisonment by several
    decades); Sample v. City of Woodbury, 
    836 F.3d 913
    , 915–16 (8th Cir. 2016) (city
    prosecutors filed criminal charges against plaintiff despite conflict of interest that
    arose because they represented the alleged victim in other domestic civil actions);
    Kulwicki v. Dawson, 
    969 F.2d 1454
    , 1464 (3d Cir. 1992) (prosecutor entitled to
    absolute immunity after bringing baseless conspiracy and attempted infant
    trafficking charges against political rival who merely tried to help family through
    adoption process); Ashleman, 
    793 F.2d at
    1076–77 (prosecutor allegedly conspired
    with judge to predetermine outcome of a judicial proceeding); Lerwill, 
    712 F.2d at 43637
     (city prosecutor initiated prosecution based on state felony statute, which he
    had no authority to enforce).
    23
    19-3949-cv
    Anilao v. Spota
    absolute immunity to prosecutors who improperly sought to increase
    plaintiff’s bail; made false representations to prompt a plea agreement which
    they later breached; manufactured a bail jumping charge; lied to the Bureau
    of Prisons; and unnecessarily transferring plaintiff from county to state jail);
    Dory, 
    25 F.3d at 83
     (granting absolute immunity to prosecutor who allegedly
    participated in a conspiracy to present false evidence at trial).
    The lessons and holdings of Barr, Bernard, and Shmueli are hard to
    escape in this case. There is no dispute on appeal that the District Attorney
    was authorized by statute to prosecute the plaintiffs for endangering children
    and physically disabled persons, for conspiring to do the same, and for
    soliciting others to do so. 8 Neither the dissent nor the plaintiffs propose that
    8
    The dissent suggests that the indictment does not charge any criminal objectives of
    the conspiracy. Respectfully, the suggestion is wrong, as it rests on the indictment’s
    most innocuous allegations and sidesteps the indictment’s most serious allegations
    of criminal endangerment, which, under New York law and contrary to the dissent’s
    view, requires only the threat of harm, not actual harm. See People v. Hitchcock, 
    98 N.Y.2d 586
    , 589 (2002) (“Under Penal Law § 60.10(1), a person endangers the welfare
    of a child when ‘[h]e knowingly acts in a manner likely to be injurious to the
    physical, mental or moral welfare of a child less than seventeen years old.’”); see,
    e.g., App’x 1405 (“The defendants pursued their objective without regard to the
    consequences that their pursuit would have on Avalon Gardens’ pediatric patients.
    The defendants agreed that the defendant nurses, including all the available nurses
    who cared for children on ventilators, would resign without giving Avalon Gardens
    notice. The defendants did so knowing that their resignations and the prior
    24
    19-3949-cv
    Anilao v. Spota
    the state Supreme Court of Suffolk County lacked jurisdiction over the
    offense. Instead, the plaintiffs submit only that the prosecutors in this case
    had no power to act as they did — not because they lacked the statutory
    authority to do so, but because their conduct violated the nurses’ rights under
    resignations at other Sentosa Care facilities would render it difficult for Avalon
    Gardens to find, in a timely manner, skilled replacement nurses for Avalon Gardens’
    pediatric patients, particularly the terminally ill JB, the child NL and the ventilated
    children NC, BC, TM and TT.”). It is not enough to criticize, as the dissent does, the
    manner in which the prosecutors performed their “quintessential prosecutorial
    functions” of evaluating the evidence and initiating a criminal prosecution.
    Shmueli, 
    424 F.3d at 237
    . As we have already noted, absolute immunity “attaches to
    [the prosecutor’s] function” or task, “not the manner in which he performed it.”
    Dory, 
    25 F.3d at 83
     (quoting Barrett v. United States, 
    798 F.2d 565
    , 573 (2d Cir.
    1986)); see also Buckley v. Fitzsimmons, 
    509 U.S. 259
    , 273 (1993) (explaining that a
    prosecutor’s “professional evaluation of the evidence” is protected by absolute
    immunity); Bernard, 
    356 F.3d at 505
    . And “whether a given prosecution was clearly
    beyond the scope of the prosecutor’s jurisdiction” or function, “and so whether
    absolute immunity applies, depends on “whether the pertinent statutes may have
    authorized prosecution for the charged conduct.” Shmueli, 
    424 F.3d at 237
    . In this
    case, even the Appellate Division acknowledged that, under New York law, “an
    employee’s abandonment of his or her post in an ‘extreme case’ may constitute an
    exceptional circumstance which warrants infringement upon the right to freely leave
    employment.” Vinluan, 
    873 N.Y.S.2d at 81
    . There can be no serious dispute under
    New York law that the claim of child endangerment was at least a colorable one that
    the prosecutors had authority to charge.
    25
    19-3949-cv
    Anilao v. Spota
    the Thirteenth Amendment and Vinluan’s rights under the First Amendment.
    See Appellants’ Br. at 33, 42.
    In advancing their argument, the plaintiffs take their cue from the state
    appellate court’s earlier conclusion in this case that “no facts suggesting an
    imminent threat to the well being of the children have been alleged.”
    Vinluan, 
    873 N.Y.S.2d at 82
    . They also argue that Spota and Lato knew or
    should have known at the outset of the case that their prosecution of the
    plaintiffs was constitutionally infirm. But fundamentally, in our view, these
    arguments relate to the existence or absence of probable cause — not, as Barr,
    Bernard, and Shmueli instruct us to consider, the defendants’ statutory
    authority to pursue the prosecution in the first place. As already noted,
    under our precedent absolute immunity shields Spota and Lato for their
    prosecutorial and advocative conduct even in the absence of probable cause
    and even if their conduct was entirely politically motivated. See, e.g.,
    Shmueli, 
    424 F.3d at
    237–38 (improper motive does not factor into absolute
    immunity analysis); 9 accord Bernard, 
    356 F.3d at 505
    ; see also Buckley v.
    9
    As we stated in Shmueli:
    26
    19-3949-cv
    Anilao v. Spota
    Fitzsimmons, 
    509 U.S. 259
    , 274 n.5 (1993) (explaining that a prosecutor’s
    entitlement “to absolute immunity for the malicious prosecution of someone
    whom he lacked probable cause to indict” is rooted in the common-law). 10
    The Appellate Division’s issuance of a writ of prohibition complicates
    but does not change our decision. The writ, rarely used, applies only to end a
    prosecution, not to undo what the prosecution has already done. United
    States v. Hoffman, 
    71 U.S. 158
    , 161–62 (1867) (“[T]he only effect of a writ of
    prohibition is to suspend all action, and to prevent any further proceeding in
    [A] defense of absolute immunity from a claim for damages must be upheld
    against a § 1983 claim that the prosecutor commenced and continued a
    prosecution that was within his jurisdiction but did so for purposes of
    retaliation, or for purely political reasons. A prosecutor is also entitled to
    absolute immunity despite allegations of his knowing use of perjured
    testimony and the deliberate withholding of exculpatory information.
    Although such conduct would be reprehensible, it does not make the
    prosecutor amenable to a civil suit for damages. In sum, the nature of absolute
    immunity is such that it accords protection from any judicial scrutiny of the
    motive for and reasonableness of official action. These principles are not
    affected by allegations that improperly motivated prosecutions were
    commenced or continued pursuant to a conspiracy.
    
    424 F.3d at
    237–38 (cleaned up).
    10The plaintiffs also allege that Lato made false statements and selectively allowed
    hearsay testimony to be presented when it benefitted him during the grand jury
    presentation, but in view of the precedent described above, the doctrine of absolute
    immunity clearly also protects his conduct against a claim of damages under § 1983.
    See Hill, 45 F.3d at 662.
    27
    19-3949-cv
    Anilao v. Spota
    the prohibited direction.”). Under New York law, the prohibition lies “only
    when there is a clear legal right” to such relief, and, as relevant here, when the
    judicial officer “exceeds its authorized powers in a proceeding over which it
    has jurisdiction.” Matter of State of New York v. King, 
    36 N.Y.2d 59
    , 62
    (1975). By issuing the writ here, the Appellate Division ended the
    prosecution, stopping it from proceeding any further. But in this case, it did
    so because the prosecutors had violated the plaintiffs’ rights based on the
    specific facts of the case and thus exceeded the jurisdiction conferred upon
    them by statute. See Vinluan, 
    873 N.Y.S.2d at
    81–82. As we have seen,
    however, not even exceeding prosecutorial authority, let alone misusing it, is
    enough to lift the immunity under federal law, which requires the clear and
    obvious absence of any authority under any set of facts. Here, the Appellate
    Division did not suggest that the prosecutors were incapable of properly
    28
    19-3949-cv
    Anilao v. Spota
    charging the plaintiffs under any set of facts or that they acted clearly and
    obviously outside of all jurisdictional bounds. 11
    This case is practically indistinguishable from Barr, in which the state
    court issued a writ of prohibition and dismissed criminal contempt charges
    against the plaintiffs, but made clear that “contempt, if properly charged, in
    the context of the facts of this case is an underlying act of continuous
    concealment directly related to the securities fraud investigation, and
    therefore is within the jurisdiction of the Attorney General.” Barr, 
    810 F.2d at 362
     (emphasis added). Similarly, the Appellate Division here noted that the
    criminal laws relating to the endangerment of children “do not on their face
    infringe upon Thirteenth Amendment rights.” Vinluan, 
    873 N.Y.S.2d at 82
    (emphasis added). The Appellate Division also reaffirmed an attorney’s right
    “to provide legal advice within the bounds of the law,” 
    id.
     (emphasis added),
    11Although a writ may issue where an officer acts “without jurisdiction in a matter
    over which it has no power over the subject matter,” Matter of State of New York, 
    36 N.Y.2d at 62
    , the plaintiffs do not contend on appeal that the Appellate Division, in
    issuing the writ, expressly found that the prosecutors acted “without jurisdiction.”
    We therefore conclude that they have abandoned the argument on appeal. LoSacco
    v. City of Middletown, 
    71 F.3d 88
    , 92–93 (2d Cir. 1995). And in any event, we agree
    with the District Court that the Appellate Division found only that “the prosecution
    would be an excess in power.” Vinluan, 
    873 N.Y.S.2d at 78
    ; Anilao I, 
    774 F. Supp. 2d at 486
    .
    29
    19-3949-cv
    Anilao v. Spota
    including Vinluan’s right to do so “under the circumstances of th[e] case.” Id.
    at 82. But it did not suggest that a lawyer in Vinluan’s position could never
    be prosecuted for advising a client to commit a crime. The Appellate
    Division, in other words, recognized that the prosecutors had the general
    authority to charge the plaintiffs under New York law, even though the
    federal Constitution prevented them from doing so under the particular facts
    of the case. See id. at 81–82.
    The plaintiffs urge us to adopt a new rule under which absolute
    immunity would no longer apply to cases “where a prosecution is
    unconstitutional” from the start, where the unconstitutional nature of the
    prosecution “was evident or should have been evident to the prosecutor from
    the facts and the law, and where the prosecution is based upon evidence
    deliberately fabricated by the prosecutors.” Appellants’ Br. at 33. In inviting
    us to alter our approach to absolute immunity, the plaintiffs turn our
    attention to Fields v. Wharrie, 
    740 F.3d 1107
     (7th Cir. 2014). There, the
    Seventh Circuit held that a prosecutor “acting pre-prosecution as an
    investigator” was not entitled to absolute immunity because he “fabricate[d]
    evidence” and eventually “introduce[d] the fabricated evidence at trial.” 
    Id.
    30
    19-3949-cv
    Anilao v. Spota
    at 1113. “A prosecutor cannot retroactively immunize himself from conduct,”
    the Seventh Circuit said, “by perfecting his wrongdoing through introducing
    the fabricated evidence at trial.” 
    Id. at 1114
    . Fields makes clear that a
    prosecutor’s action in the investigative stage of a case is not spared from
    liability simply because the results of his investigative work are presented at
    trial. See 
    id.
     (citing Zahrey v. Coffey, 
    221 F.3d 342
    , 354 (2d Cir. 2000)).
    Our view, and the District Court’s, is consistent with Fields. After all,
    the District Court determined that Spota and Lato were absolutely immune
    for their conduct as advocates during the judicial phase (initiating the
    prosecution, using allegedly perjured testimony during the grand jury, and
    making allegedly false statements to the grand jury), but held, as in Fields,
    that they were not immune for their conduct during the investigative stage of
    the prosecution. And Barr and Shmueli prevent us from accepting the
    plaintiffs’ invitation to further extend the exception to absolute immunity
    beyond Fields, to situations in which prosecutors during the advocacy phase
    bring charges they know violate an individual’s constitutional rights. See
    Barr, 
    810 F.2d at 361
    ; see also Shmueli, 
    424 F.3d at 238
     (prosecutors are
    afforded absolute immunity for bringing charges that they knew were false
    31
    19-3949-cv
    Anilao v. Spota
    because a contrary ruling would “confuse[] jurisdiction with state of mind”).
    Because the “postarraignment events” described above “consisted only of the
    prosecution” of the plaintiffs “in a court of competent jurisdiction on charges
    that were within the [prosecutors’] authority to bring,” the prosecutors “are
    entitled to absolute immunity against” the plaintiffs’ “claims for damages for
    those events.” Shmueli, 
    424 F.3d at 239
    . The evidence that “the charges were
    brought for improper purposes do[es] not deprive” the prosecutors of that
    immunity. 
    Id.
    We therefore affirm the District Court’s dismissal of the claims arising
    from the defendants’ actions taken in their role as advocates during the
    judicial phase of the prosecution. In doing so, “[w]e recognize, as Chief Judge
    Hand pointed out, that sometimes such immunity deprives a plaintiff of
    compensation that [she] undoubtedly merits.” Van de Kamp v. Goldstein,
    
    555 U.S. 335
    , 348 (2009). “Especially in cases, such as the present one, in
    which a plaintiff plausibly alleges disgraceful behavior by district attorneys,
    the application of this doctrine is more than disquieting.” Pinaud v. County
    of Suffolk, 
    52 F.3d 1139
    , 1147 (2d Cir. 1995). “[B]ut the impediments to the
    fair, efficient functioning of a prosecutorial office that liability could create
    32
    19-3949-cv
    Anilao v. Spota
    lead us to find that [immunity] must apply here.” Van de Kamp, 
    555 U.S. at 348
    .
    II
    The District Court concluded from the pleadings that Spota and Lato
    were not entitled to absolute immunity for their conduct during the
    investigative stage of the prosecution, and that the plaintiffs had stated a
    claim for relief that was plausible on its face under § 1983. Anilao I, 
    774 F. Supp. 2d at 485, 513
    . The defendants do not challenge either conclusion on
    appeal, and the first conclusion in any event follows from our prior decisions.
    See Zahrey, 
    221 F.3d at
    346–47; see also Buckley, 
    509 U.S. at 273
    . But the
    plaintiffs do challenge the District Court’s grant of summary judgment in the
    defendants’ favor. We therefore turn to whether there is a genuine factual
    issue about whether Spota and Lato violated the plaintiffs’ constitutional
    rights during their investigation.
    We review a grant of summary judgment de novo. See Rivera v.
    Rochester Genesee Reg’l Transp. Auth., 
    743 F.3d 11
    , 19 (2d Cir. 2014).
    “Summary judgment is appropriate only where, construing all the evidence
    in the light most favorable to the non-movant and drawing all reasonable
    33
    19-3949-cv
    Anilao v. Spota
    inferences in that party’s favor, there is no genuine issue as to any material
    fact and . . . the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” 
    Id.
    (quotation marks omitted). The nonmoving party “must do more than
    simply show that there is some metaphysical doubt as to the material facts”
    and “must come forward with specific facts showing that there is a genuine
    issue for trial.” Caldarola v. Calabrese, 
    298 F.3d 156
    , 160 (2d Cir. 2002)
    (quotation marks omitted). The non-movant cannot rely on conclusory
    allegations or denials and must provide “concrete particulars” to show that a
    trial is needed. R.G. Grp., Inc. v. Horn & Hardart Co., 
    751 F.2d 69
    , 77 (2d Cir.
    1984) (quotation marks omitted).
    The District Court held that “Lato and Spota are entitled to summary
    judgment because . . . no rational jury could find that they knowingly
    fabricated evidence during the investigation, or otherwise violated plaintiffs’
    constitutional rights in the investigative phase of this case.” Anilao II, 340 F.
    Supp. 3d at 250. Upon review of the record, we agree and affirm the District
    Court’s grant of summary judgment.
    On appeal, the plaintiffs, like our dissenting colleague, emphasize that
    there is at least a factual dispute as to whether Lato conspired with Sentosa to
    34
    19-3949-cv
    Anilao v. Spota
    fabricate evidence to present to the grand jury, and in particular whether Lato
    conspired with Luyun to testify falsely against Vinluan before the grand jury.
    The plaintiffs highlight that Lato had been provided a Philippines-based
    advertisement showing that Vinluan was an immigration attorney, not a
    nurse recruiter, see App’x 1554–55, but that Lato nevertheless prodded Luyun
    to falsely testify that he had seen an advertisement that Vinluan was
    recruiting nurses to the United States, see App’x 654. Because Lato admitted
    that he met with all the witnesses who testified in the grand jury proceedings,
    the plaintiffs insist that Lato must have met with Luyun and conspired with
    him to lie to the grand jury.
    This is, in our view, little more than speculation. As such it poses no
    bar to summary judgment in the defendants’ favor. Speculation aside, the
    plaintiffs fail to point to any admissible evidence that could lead a reasonable
    juror to conclude that Lato (or Spota) conspired with Luyun to fabricate
    evidence. 12 They had every opportunity to develop the record and to uncover
    12
    Relying on Morse v. Fusto, 
    804 F.3d 538
     (2d Cir. 2015), our dissenting colleague
    points to Lato’s failure to disclose to the grand jury the Department of Education’s
    findings in favor of the plaintiffs, the state court’s denial of a preliminary injunction,
    and the Nassau County Police Department’s decision not to take any action against
    35
    19-3949-cv
    Anilao v. Spota
    the plaintiffs. With respect, Lato’s decision not to present evidence — also available
    to the plaintiffs at the time of the grand jury proceeding — of agency or judicial
    action or inaction does not come close to the defendant’s egregious conduct in
    Morse. There the defendants actively “creat[ed] false or fraudulently altered
    documents,” and we described the “constitutional violation” as the affirmative
    “manipulation of data to create false or misleading documents, knowing that such
    information was false or misleading at the time,” and then deliberately presenting
    the false documents, with the fake facts, to the grand jury. 
    Id.
     at 549–50 (quotation
    marks omitted) (emphasis in original). Neither the dissent nor the plaintiffs
    describe any similar fabrication of evidence on Lato’s part, characterizing Lato’s
    conduct instead as a wrongful refusal to disclose potentially exculpatory evidence to
    the grand jury. To be sure, Lato’s decision not to present that evidence is far less
    than ideal in a world where we expect far more from prosecutors in our country; it
    would, for example, undoubtedly have violated the internal guidance that regulates
    the conduct of federal prosecutors. See U.S. Department of Justice, Justice Manual,
    Title 9, Chapter 11, § 9-11-233 (although not required to do so under federal law,
    “when a prosecutor conducting a grand jury inquiry is personally aware of
    substantial evidence that directly negates the guilt of a subject of the investigation,
    the prosecutor must present or otherwise disclose such evidence to the grand jury
    before seeking an indictment against such a person”). On the other hand, the
    plaintiffs had a right under New York law, upon waiving immunity, to testify before
    the grand jury and to present the same exculpatory evidence that was available to
    them. See People v. Mitchell, 
    82 N.Y.2d 509
    , 513–14 (1993) (citing 
    N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 190.50
    )). None sought to enforce that right. Ultimately, the dissent’s view ignores
    that the core function of the grand jury in New York is to determine if the charges
    are sufficiently supported by evidence to warrant a trial of the charge. See People v.
    Calbud, Inc., 
    49 N.Y.2d 389
    , 394 (1980). Trial, not the grand jury proceeding, is the
    crucible to air and test the full and final contentions of the parties for or against guilt
    in New York. Although, like our dissenting colleague, we might wish that the rule
    were otherwise and even share his palpable sense of unfairness, the reality is that a
    prosecutor in New York usually has no obligation to present to the grand jury
    evidence that is exculpatory. See People v. Hemphill, 
    35 N.Y.3d 1035
    , 1036 (2020)
    (“Contrary to defendant’s claim that the indictment should be dismissed based on
    the prosecutor’s failure to alert the grand jury to exculpatory evidence that
    implicated another, the People were not obligated to present evidence that someone
    else was initially identified as the shooter.”), cert. granted sub nom. on other
    grounds, Hemphill v. New York, 
    141 S. Ct. 2510
     (2021). New York law clearly
    36
    19-3949-cv
    Anilao v. Spota
    that evidence if it existed. But during Lato’s deposition, for example, when
    given the chance to explore the alleged plot, they declined to question Lato
    about his meeting with Luyun. Answers to those questions might have
    yielded some firm evidence of the existence of a conspiracy between the two
    men, such as whether they ever discussed the contradictory newspaper
    advertisements about Vinluan.
    The plaintiffs separately rely on the plotline that the police refused to
    investigate the nurses despite having been urged to do so by Spota and Lato.
    At best, however, this implies that Spota and Lato had a very weak and
    decidedly unappealing case against the nurses, not that they conspired with
    Luyun to fabricate evidence to present to the grand jury, or that they
    otherwise clearly violated the plaintiffs’ constitutional rights during the
    investigation.
    We briefly respond to the dissent’s suggestion that racial prejudice
    triggered and infects this entire litigation. Our dissenting colleague
    understandably focuses a great deal of attention on the reprehensible conduct
    permitted Lato to withhold from the grand jury the information that the dissent, like
    the plaintiffs, claim he was obliged to disclose to that body.
    37
    19-3949-cv
    Anilao v. Spota
    of Sentosa, which may well have been motivated to kickstart the case and to
    prompt the criminal prosecution in part because the nurses were Filipino
    rather than “White and American citizens.” Dissenting Op. at 24. As the
    dissent observes, Sentosa has been “found to have violated the rights of
    Filipino nurses” it employed, and it recently agreed to pay $3 million to a
    class of Filipino nurses in settlement. 
    Id.
     at 25–26. But the immediate issue
    before us involves the conduct and immunity of the prosecutors, not Sentosa.
    As to that issue, not even the dissent proposes that the prosecutors were
    directly motivated by racial animus, and the plaintiffs’ amended complaint
    likewise does not allege that the prosecution against them was prompted by
    race or national origin discrimination. Nevertheless, our colleague asserts
    that “[w]hatever their motivation” for proceeding with the investigation and
    ultimately prosecuting the plaintiffs, the prosecutors — Spota and Lato —
    were “complicit in Sentosa’s effort to deter its Filipino nurses from pursuing
    their rights.” 
    Id. at 26
    . That may be true, but the dissent hedges on whether
    their complicity was itself racially motivated in the way that Sentosa’s
    initiating campaign may have been. At best, asserts the dissent, “there is
    enough to put the issue” of whether “race played a part in the prosecutors’
    38
    19-3949-cv
    Anilao v. Spota
    actions” “to a jury,” even if it means that the plaintiffs must resort to a “cat’s
    paw” theory of manipulation and control usually reserved for Title VII cases.
    
    Id.
     at 27 n.12.
    Whatever its other faults, 13 the most glaring problem with the dissent’s
    view is that it is not shared by the plaintiffs, who have never embraced it at
    any point in this hard-fought and well-counseled litigation — not in the
    complaint, not on summary judgment, not even on appeal. “Few principles
    are better established in our Circuit than the rule that ‘arguments not made in
    an appellant’s opening brief are waived even if the appellant pursued those
    arguments in the district court.’” New York v. Dep’t of Justice, 
    964 F.3d 150
    ,
    13Although our dissenting colleague suggests that Spota and Lato acted with racial
    animus, the plaintiffs have repeatedly emphasized that, at worse, Spota and Lato
    were politically motivated to pursue the charges against them. See Appellants’ Br.
    at 42; Oral Arg. Tr. at 5–6. They have not once mentioned that the defendants were
    motivated by racial or national origin animus. And we are bound by our prior
    holding in Bernard that “racially invidious or partisan prosecutions, pursued
    without probable cause, are reprehensible, but such motives do not necessarily
    remove conduct from the protection of absolute immunity.” Bernard, 
    356 F.3d at 504
    . To be sure, the dissent raises strong, even compelling policy concerns that, in
    our view, counsel in favor of significantly curtailing the doctrine of absolute
    prosecutorial immunity, perhaps across the board, and certainly as it relates to
    racially invidious prosecutions. But precedent – Barr, Bernard, Shmueli – limits the
    ability of this panel in the present case to modify or abrogate the doctrine. We are
    bound by these decisions absent overruling by the Court in banc, an intervening
    decision from the Supreme Court, or an act of Congress.
    39
    19-3949-cv
    Anilao v. Spota
    166 (2d Cir. 2020) (Katzmann, C.J., dissenting from denial of reh’g en banc)
    (quoting JP Morgan Chase Bank v. Altos Hornos de Mexico, S.A. de C.V., 
    412 F.3d 418
    , 428 (2d Cir. 2005)). However attractive it might be to us, reaching
    the dissent’s desired result based on legal arguments that the plaintiffs have
    never advanced would veer us far from “the normal rules of appellate
    litigation.” 
    Id.
     As Justice Ginsburg recently wrote for a unanimous Supreme
    Court in United States v. Sineneng-Smith, 
    140 S. Ct. 1575
     (2020), “in our
    adversarial system of adjudication, we follow the principle of party
    presentation. [I]n both civil and criminal cases, in the first instance and on
    appeal, we rely on the parties to frame the issues for decision and assign to
    courts the role of neutral arbiter of matters the parties present.” 
    Id. at 1579
    (cleaned up). Even putting aside the principle of party presentation for a
    moment, Bernard binds us to the rule that “[t]he appropriate inquiry . . . is not
    whether authorized acts are performed with a good or bad motive, but
    whether the acts at issue are beyond the prosecutor’s authority.” 
    356 F.3d at 504
     (emphasis in original). For the reasons already explained, the prosecutors
    acted within their authority to charge the plaintiffs under New York law.
    40
    19-3949-cv
    Anilao v. Spota
    III
    Finally, we turn to the County’s liability under Monell v. Department
    of Social Services, 
    436 U.S. 658
     (1978).
    “Monell does not provide a separate cause of action for the failure by
    the government to train its employees; it extends liability to a municipal
    organization where that organization’s failure to train, or the policies or
    customs that it has sanctioned, led to an independent constitutional
    violation.” Segal v. City of New York, 
    459 F.3d 207
    , 219 (2d Cir. 2006). In
    other words, a Monell claim cannot succeed without an independent
    constitutional violation. See 
    id.
     “[I]nherent in the principle that a
    municipality can be liable under § 1983 only where its policies are the moving
    force [behind] the constitutional violation, is the concept that the plaintiff
    must show a direct causal link between a municipal policy or custom and the
    alleged constitutional deprivation.” Outlaw v. City of Hartford, 
    884 F.3d 351
    ,
    373 (2d Cir. 2018) (cleaned up). “[I]f the challenged action is directed by an
    official with final policymaking authority, . . . the municipality may be liable
    even in the absence of a broader policy.” Mandell v. County of Suffolk, 
    316 F.3d 368
    , 385 (2d Cir. 2003) (quotation marks omitted). As more directly
    41
    19-3949-cv
    Anilao v. Spota
    relevant here, we have held that “the actions of county prosecutors in New
    York are generally controlled by municipal policymakers for purposes of
    Monell, with a narrow exception . . . being the decision of whether, and on
    what charges, to prosecute.” Bellamy v. City of New York, 
    914 F.3d 727
    , 758–
    59 (2d Cir. 2019) (quotation marks omitted). Under the narrow exception that
    we noted in Bellamy, a district attorney in New York “is not an officer or
    employee of the municipality but is instead a quasi-judicial officer acting for
    the state in criminal matters.” Ying Jing Gan v. City of New York, 
    996 F.2d 522
    , 535–36 (2d Cir. 1993) (quotation marks omitted).
    With these principles in mind, we reject the plaintiffs’ first claim that
    the County is liable for the individual defendants’ conduct, including the
    fabrication of evidence, during the investigative stage. As discussed above,
    there was no evidence of a constitutional violation by the DA’s Office at that
    stage, and we agree with the District Court that “the absence of any
    underlying constitutional violation arising from the conduct of Spota or Lato
    in the investigative stage” means that “no municipal liability can exist against
    Suffolk County” based on that conduct. Anilao II, 340 F. Supp. 3d at 251; see
    Askins v. Doe No. 1, 
    727 F.3d 248
    , 253–54 (2d Cir. 2013).
    42
    19-3949-cv
    Anilao v. Spota
    The plaintiffs separately also claim that the County is liable under
    Monell for Spota’s alleged administrative mismanagement of the DA’s Office.
    But we agree with the District Court that the plaintiffs have not provided the
    “direct causal link” we require under these circumstances between Spota’s
    alleged mismanagement and the alleged misconduct and constitutional
    deprivations involving the plaintiffs. Outlaw, 884 F.3d at 373; see Anilao II,
    340 F. Supp. 3d at 251 n.36. To the extent the plaintiffs’ claim centers on
    Spota’s decision to prosecute the case rather than his management of the DA’s
    Office, the claim fails because, in making that decision, Spota was clearly
    acting for New York State in a criminal matter, not for the County. See Ying
    Jing Gan, 
    996 F.2d at 536
    . 14
    14 To the extent the County suggests that it cannot be liable for Spota’s and Lato’s
    conduct during the judicial phase because of their absolute immunity, that
    argument is squarely foreclosed by our precedent. See Pinaud, 
    52 F.3d at 1153
    (“Since municipalities do not enjoy immunity from suit — either absolute or
    qualified — under § 1983, [the plaintiff’s] malicious prosecution claim against the
    County of Suffolk is not barred by prosecutorial immunity.” (quotation marks
    omitted)); see also Askins, 727 F.3d at 254 (“[T]he entitlement of the individual
    municipal actors to qualified immunity because at the time of their actions there was
    no clear law or precedent warning them that their conduct would violate federal law
    is also irrelevant to the liability of the municipality.”).
    43
    19-3949-cv
    Anilao v. Spota
    We therefore affirm the District Court’s grant of summary judgment in
    the County’s favor.
    CONCLUSION
    We have considered the plaintiffs’ remaining arguments and conclude
    that they are without merit. For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the
    judgment of the District Court.
    44
    CHIN, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    In this case, the Suffolk County District Attorney's Office (the "DA's
    Office") brought criminal charges against ten nurses and their lawyer for "patient
    abandonment" because the nurses resigned their positions at a nursing home to
    protest their work conditions and the lawyer advised them of their rights and
    filed a discrimination claim on their behalf with the Department of Justice. The
    Appellate Division, Second Department, took the extraordinary step of issuing a
    writ of prohibition to bar the DA's Office from pursuing the charges, recognizing
    that the nurses and their attorney were "threatened with prosecution for crimes
    for which they [could not] constitutionally be tried." Vinluan v. Doyle, 
    873 N.Y.S.2d 72
    , 83 (2d Dep't 2009) (Eng, J.). Indeed, as the Second Department held,
    "these criminal prosecutions constitute[d] an impermissible infringement upon
    the constitutional rights of these nurses and their attorney." 
    Id. at 75
    .
    Yet, the district court held that the nurses and their lawyer were
    precluded from pursuing civil rights claims against the prosecutors because they
    acted within their jurisdiction and were therefore protected by the doctrines of
    absolute and qualified immunity. This Court now affirms. In my view,
    however, the complaint plausibly alleged, as the Second Department found, that
    the nurses and their lawyer could not be prosecuted for the charged conduct and
    thus the immunities do not apply. In the extraordinary circumstances presented
    here, where the prosecutors were "proceeding . . . 'without or in excess of
    jurisdiction,'" Vinluan, 
    873 N.Y.S.2d at 77
     (quoting 
    N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 7803
    (2)), they
    were not protected by absolute or qualified immunity. Accordingly, I
    respectfully dissent.
    I.
    The ten nurses were recruited in the Philippines to work at nursing
    homes in New York operated by Sentosa Care, LLC ("Sentosa"). After arriving in
    the United States, they commenced employment at the Avalon Gardens
    Rehabilitation and Health Care Center ("Avalon Gardens"), a 353-bed private
    nursing facility on Long Island. The nurses soon concluded that Sentosa had
    breached certain promises it had made to them and that Sentosa was treating
    them in an unfair and discriminatory manner. They contacted the Philippine
    Consulate, which referred them to Vincent Q. Vinluan, an attorney based in New
    York. Vinluan advised them that, in his view, Sentosa had breached its contract
    with them and that they could resign to protest their poor work conditions, but
    that they should not do so until after completing their shifts. He filed a claim of
    2
    discrimination on their behalf with the immigrant and employee rights office of
    the Civil Rights Division in the Department of Justice in Washington, D.C. The
    next day, after completing their shifts and each giving notice of 8 to 72 hours, the
    nurses resigned. See Vinluan, 
    873 N.Y.S.2d at 76
    .
    Sentosa complained to various authorities. In April 2006, it filed a
    complaint with the Suffolk County Police Department, which declined to take
    action after investigating the matter. Sentosa also brought suit against the nurses
    and Vinluan in the Supreme Court of the State of New York, Nassau County,
    seeking a preliminary injunction. The court denied the motion in July 2006,
    finding that Sentosa had failed to establish a likelihood of success on the merits.
    And the Office of Professional Discipline of the State Education Department
    ("DOE"), the entity with licensing jurisdiction over the nurses, investigated and
    concluded that the nurses' "conduct did not constitute patient abandonment"; it
    closed the investigation in October 2006 without taking any disciplinary action.
    App'x at 1280.
    Sentosa then turned to the DA's Office and was able to obtain a
    personal meeting with then-Suffolk County District Attorney Thomas J. Spota
    3
    III. 1 Although it was clear that the nurses had not engaged in "patient
    abandonment" -- the Suffolk County Police Department and DOE had declined
    to take action against them, and the state court had determined that Sentosa had
    not shown a likelihood of success on the merits of its claims of patient
    abandonment -- the DA's Office indicted the ten nurses and their lawyer,
    criminally charging them with endangering the welfare of patients and
    conspiracy to do the same, and also charging Vinluan with criminal solicitation.
    The nurses and Vinluan brought an Article 78 proceeding in state
    court seeking a writ of prohibition to stop the prosecutions. On January 13, 2009,
    the Second Department granted the writ -- prohibiting the DA's Office from
    proceeding with the prosecutions. See Vinluan, 
    873 N.Y.S.2d at 83
    .
    Thereafter, the nurses and Vinluan brought this action below against
    the County of Suffolk (the "County"), Spota, and former Assistant District
    Attorney Leonard Lato, 2 seeking damages pursuant to 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
     for
    1      Spota was convicted in December 2019 in the Eastern District of New York on
    unrelated charges of conspiracy, obstruction of justice, and witness tampering. On
    August 10, 2021, he was sentenced to five years imprisonment. He was then denied bail
    pending appeal on October 15, 2021.
    2      Lato died in 2018. See Robert Brodsky, Officials: Leonard Lato, Defense Attorney,
    Ex-prosecutor, Found Dead, Newsday (Sept. 19, 2018), https://www.newsday.com/long-
    island/defense-attorney-leonard-lato-dies-1.21104324.
    4
    violation of their constitutional rights. The district court dismissed the claims,
    first granting in part defendants' motion to dismiss and second granting their
    motion for summary judgment, holding that Spota and Lato both were protected
    by absolute immunity to the extent they were acting as prosecutors and by
    qualified immunity to the extent they were acting as investigators.
    This appeal followed.
    II.
    I address first the issue of absolute immunity.
    I agree with the majority that prosecutors enjoy broad absolute
    immunity from liability for "prosecutorial activities intimately associated with
    the judicial phase of the criminal process." Barr v. Abrams, 
    810 F.2d 358
    , 361 (2d
    Cir. 1987). I acknowledge that this protection extends to "virtually all acts,
    regardless of motivation, associated with [the prosecutor's] function as an
    advocate." Hill v. City of New York, 
    45 F.3d 653
    , 661 (2d Cir. 1995) (internal
    quotation marks omitted). Still, the rule is not without exception. As this Court
    has explained:
    A [prosecutor] engaged in advocative functions will be denied
    absolute immunity only if he acts without any colorable claim of
    authority. The appropriate inquiry, thus, is not whether authorized
    acts are performed with a good or bad motive, but whether the acts at
    5
    issue are beyond the prosecutor's authority. Accordingly, where a
    prosecutor is sued under § 1983 for constitutional abuse of his
    discretion to initiate prosecutions, a court will begin by considering
    whether relevant statutes authorize prosecution for the charged
    conduct. If they do not, absolute immunity must be denied. But if
    the laws do authorize prosecution for the charged crimes, a court
    will further consider whether the [prosecutor] has intertwined his
    exercise of authorized prosecutorial discretion with other,
    unauthorized conduct. For example, where a prosecutor has linked
    his authorized discretion to initiate or drop criminal charges to an
    unauthorized demand for a bribe, sexual favors, or the defendant's
    performance of a religious act, absolute immunity has been denied.
    Bernard v. County of Suffolk, 
    356 F.3d 495
    , 504 (2d Cir. 2004) (internal quotation
    marks and citations omitted). Hence, "where a prosecutor acts without any
    colorable claim of authority, he loses the absolute immunity he would otherwise
    enjoy." Barr, 
    810 F.2d at 361
    ; accord Shmueli v. City of New York, 
    424 F.3d 231
    , 237
    (2d Cir. 2005).
    Here, the question is whether plaintiffs plausibly alleged in their
    complaint that Spota and Lato proceeded without any colorable claim of
    authority. I believe they did.
    As a threshold matter, what does it mean for a prosecutor to act
    "without any colorable claim of authority?" I do not think that all a prosecutor
    need do, to be absolutely immune, is to cite a criminal statute and assert that a
    defendant violated it. That is what the majority essentially suggests, as it
    6
    observes that "[t]here is no dispute on appeal that the District Attorney was
    authorized by statute to prosecute the plaintiffs for endangering children and
    physically disabled persons, for conspiring to do the same, and for soliciting
    others to do so." Maj. Op. at 24. The mere invocation of a statute should not be
    enough. If that were the case, the exception would be illusory, and no plaintiff
    could ever invoke it. Under this reasoning, as long as a prosecutor charged the
    violation of a statute that fell within the prosecutor's jurisdiction, the prosecutor
    would always be absolutely immune -- even if there was absolutely no factual or
    legal basis for the charge.
    The indictment here charged the nurses and Vinluan with
    conspiracy in the sixth degree, 3 five counts of endangering the welfare of a
    child, 4 and six counts of endangering the welfare of a physically disabled
    person, 5 and it also charged Vinluan with criminal solicitation in the fifth
    3      A person commits the offense when "with intent that conduct constituting a
    crime be performed, he agrees with one or more persons to engage in or cause the
    performance of such conduct." 
    N.Y. Penal Law § 105.00
    .
    4      A person commits the offense when he "knowingly acts in a manner likely to be
    injurious to the physical, mental or moral welfare of a child less than seventeen years
    old." 
    Id.
     § 260.10(1).
    5      A person commits the offense when he "knowingly acts in a manner likely to be
    injurious to the physical, mental or moral welfare of a person who is unable to care for
    himself or herself because of physical disability, mental disease or defect." Id. § 260.25.
    7
    degree. 6 I agree that Spota and Lato had authority to prosecute these types of
    crimes. But in my view, the DA's Office did not have colorable authority to
    prosecute the nurses or Vinluan for the charged conduct. It was beyond the
    prosecutors' authority to criminally charge the nurses for resigning to protest
    what they believed to be discriminatory work conditions or their lawyer for
    giving them legal advice and filing a charge of discrimination on their behalf.
    Additionally, the bringing of these charges was beyond the
    prosecutors' authority, see Bernard, 
    356 F.3d at 504
    , for as a factual matter the
    indictment charged only legally permissible conduct. For example, the
    indictment alleged that:
    14.   It was the conspiracy's objective to obtain for the Avalon
    Gardens' nurses alternative employment and a release from their
    three-year commitment to Sentosa Care without incurring a
    financial penalty of $25,000.
    15.   In pursuit of their objective, the defendant [Vinluan] and the
    defendant nurses sought to establish that Sentosa Care had breached
    the contracts and had discriminated against the nurses.
    App'x at 1404-05. These were not criminal objectives.
    6     A person commits the offense when "with intent that another person engage in
    conduct constituting a crime, he solicits, requests, commands, importunes or otherwise
    attempts to cause such other person to engage in such conduct." 
    Id.
     § 100.00.
    8
    The indictment charged three "overt acts" in furtherance of this
    purported criminal conspiracy:
    ●      Vinluan asked the nurses to bring a claim against Avalon
    Gardens and Sentosa for discrimination and they agreed to bring the claim;
    ●      Vinluan, on the nurses' behalf, filed a claim of discrimination
    with the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice against Avalon
    Gardens and Sentosa; and
    ●      The ten nurses submitted their resignation letters to Avalon
    Gardens.
    These were not, by any stretch of the imagination, criminal acts. 7
    Moreover, while the charges were premised on the claim of patient
    7       The majority suggests that I have pointed only to "the indictment's most
    innocuous allegations and sidestep[ped]" altogether "the indictment's serious
    allegations of criminal endangerment." Maj. Op. at 24 n.8. Not so. Paragraphs 14 and
    15 of the indictment quoted above are the heart of the conspiracy charged in Count One,
    identifying the "conspiracy's objective" and the actions taken by the defendants "[i]n
    pursuit of their objective." App'x at 1404-05. The three overt acts cited above are the
    only overt acts alleged in the conspiracy count. Moreover, the endangerment counts do
    not add any specific factual allegations, but instead rely on the facts alleged in the
    paragraphs of the indictment identified above. While it is true, as the majority notes,
    that the indictment contains language tracking the endangerment statute, the critical
    factual allegation is that the nurses resigned their positions -- conduct that is simply not
    criminal. And while the indictment also charges that the nurse defendants resigned
    "knowing that their resignations and the prior resignations at other Sentosa Care
    facilities would render it difficult for Avalon Gardens to find, in a timely manner,
    9
    abandonment, DOE -- the agency with licensing jurisdiction over the nurses --
    had concluded otherwise, finding that there was no basis even to discipline the
    nurses, much less criminally charge them. The Suffolk County Police
    Department had also declined to take action, and the Suffolk County Supreme
    Court had concluded that Sentosa had not established a likelihood of success on
    the merits of its claim of patient abandonment. The DA's Office knew all this --
    and still proceeded to charge the nurses and Vinluan.
    The indictment's charge of patient abandonment was specious. The
    indictment did not allege that the nurses walked out during a shift or that any
    patients were actually harmed, or threatened with harm, by the nurses'
    resignations, nor could it have. As the Second Department explained:
    The nurses did not abandon their posts in the middle of their shifts.
    Rather, they resigned after the completion of their shifts, when the
    pediatric patients at Avalon Gardens were under the care of other
    nurses and staff members. Moreover, . . . coverage [for the patients]
    was indeed obtained, and no facts suggesting an imminent threat to
    the well being of the children have been alleged. Indeed, the fact
    that no children were deprived of nursing care played a large role in
    [DOE]'s decision to clear the nurses of professional misconduct.
    skilled replacement nurses," id. at 1405, it cannot be criminal for an employee to resign
    merely because she knows her employer will have difficulty finding a replacement.
    10
    Vinluan, 
    873 N.Y.S.2d at 81-82
    . Even assuming that a nurse could criminally
    endanger her patients simply by resigning from her job, the acts charged in the
    indictment did not come close to constituting criminal conduct.
    The indictment of Vinluan is particularly outrageous. Surely a
    prosecutor has no colorable authority to bring charges against a lawyer for
    giving legal advice to clients and for filing a claim of discrimination on their
    behalf. As the Second Department held, "[a]s charged in the indictment, it is
    clear that Vinluan's criminal liability is predicated upon the exercise of ordinarily
    protected First Amendment rights." 
    Id. at 82
    . The court observed unequivocally
    that the prosecution of Vinluan was "an assault on the adversarial system of
    justice upon which our society, governed by the rule of law rather than
    individuals, depends." 
    Id. at 83
    ; see also 
    id. at 82
     ("It cannot be doubted that an
    attorney has a constitutional right to provide legal advice to his clients within the
    bounds of the law.") (collecting cases). I agree.
    The majority observes that the Second Department's decision
    "complicates" the decision. Maj. Op. at 27. It does more than that; it dispels any
    doubt as to whether the prosecutors had colorable authority to criminally charge
    the nurses and their lawyer. As the Second Department concluded, the
    11
    prosecutors did not. While the court's opinion focused on the constitutionality of
    the prosecutions, the court squarely held that the conduct of the nurses and their
    lawyer was not proscribed by the relevant statutes. See Vinluan, 
    873 N.Y.S.2d at 82-83
     ("[S]ince the nurses' conduct in resigning cannot, under the circumstances
    of this case, subject them to criminal prosecution, we cannot agree that Vinluan
    advised the nurses to commit a crime.").
    New York law provides for a writ of prohibition "to prevent a body
    or officer acting in a judicial or quasi-judicial capacity from proceeding, or
    threatening to proceed, 'without or in excess of jurisdiction.'" 
    Id. at 77
     (quoting
    C.P.L.R. § 7803(2)); see also id. (providing that an Article 78 proceeding may be
    commenced to determine "whether [a] body or officer proceeded . . . without or in
    excess of jurisdiction" (emphasis added)). By granting the writ, the Second
    Department made clear that Spota and Lato had no colorable authority to bring
    these charges. And while the majority seeks to distinguish the Second
    Department's decision on the basis that a writ of prohibition is used only to end a
    prosecution and "not to undo what the prosecution has already done," Maj. Op.
    at 27, the Second Department's reasoning applies with equal force here. Spota
    and Lato did not have authority to commence the prosecution, and "the relevant
    12
    statutes [did not] authorize prosecution for the charged conduct." Bernard, 
    356 F.3d at 504
    .
    Finally, I note that the issue of absolute immunity arose on
    defendants' Rule 12(b)(6) motion. At a minimum, based on the circumstances
    described above and viewing all facts in the light most favorable to plaintiffs,
    plaintiffs plausibly alleged that the exception to absolute immunity applies here
    and they should have been allowed to proceed with their claims. As the majority
    acknowledges, the writ of prohibition is "rarely used." Maj. Op. at 27. The fact
    that the Second Department took the extraordinary step of issuing the writ here
    is most telling.
    The majority cites a number of cases barring claims against
    prosecutors based on absolute immunity, and, indeed, there are many of them.
    What sets this case apart, however, is the Second Department's decision holding
    that the prosecutors were "proceeding . . . 'without or in excess of jurisdiction,'"
    Vinluan, 
    873 N.Y.S.2d at 77
     (quoting 
    N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 7803
    (2)) -- holding that Spota
    and Lato had no colorable authority to indict the ten nurses for resigning to
    13
    protest work conditions and their lawyer for filing a claim of discrimination on
    their behalf. I would permit the claim to proceed. 8
    III.
    I turn to the question of qualified immunity.
    Where a prosecutor acts in an investigative capacity, he enjoys only
    qualified -- as opposed to absolute -- immunity from suit. See Zahrey v. Coffey,
    
    221 F.3d 342
    , 346 (2d Cir. 2000). "Qualified immunity protects a public official
    from liability for conduct that 'does not violate clearly established statutory or
    constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.'" 
    Id. at 347
     (quoting Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 
    457 U.S. 800
    , 818 (1982)); see Horn v. Stephenson,
    
    11 F.4th 163
    , 168-69 (2d Cir. 2021). Qualified immunity turns on "the objective
    legal reasonableness of the action," Pearson v. Callahan, 
    555 U.S. 223
    , 244 (2009)
    (internal quotation marks omitted), and as the Supreme Court has repeatedly
    observed, "qualified immunity protects 'all but the plainly incompetent or those
    8      The cases cited by the majority, see, e.g., Shmueli, 
    424 F.3d at 233, 235, 238-39
    ,
    emphasize that motivation is irrelevant to the question of absolute immunity. I do not
    take issue with that point. My concern is, as the Second Department concluded, that the
    prosecutors here simply did not have authority to charge plaintiffs for the conduct in
    question.
    14
    who knowingly violate the law.'" Ziglar v. Abassi, 137 S. Ct 1843, 1867 (2017)
    (quoting Malley v. Briggs, 
    475 U.S. 335
    , 341 (1986)).
    This Court recognizes a constitutional "right not to be deprived of
    liberty as a result of the fabrication of evidence by a government officer acting in
    an investigating capacity." Zahrey, 
    221 F.3d at 344
    . We have explained that
    evidence may be fabricated not just through use of false statements, but also
    through "omissions that are both material and made knowingly." Morse v. Fusto,
    
    804 F.3d 538
    , 547 (2d Cir. 2015), cert. denied, 
    137 S. Ct. 126
     (2016).
    In Morse, we upheld a jury's award of more than $7 million in
    compensatory and punitive damages against a prosecutor and an investigator for
    denying a dentist his right to a fair trial in a Medicaid fraud prosecution. 
    Id. at 541, 544
    . The jury found that the defendants had falsified billing summaries by
    omitting material information, they did so knowingly and as part of their
    investigation, and the "evidence was material to the grand jury's decision to
    indict." 
    Id. at 543, 548
     (internal quotation marks omitted). While we recognized
    that prosecutors have no obligation to present exculpatory evidence to a grand
    jury, 
    id. at 547
    , we nonetheless held that the defendants were not protected by
    qualified immunity:
    15
    [F]alse information likely to influence a jury's decision violates the
    accused's constitutional right to a fair trial, because to hold
    otherwise, works an unacceptable corruption of the truth-seeking
    function of the trial process. Information may be false if material
    omissions render an otherwise true statement false. For
    example, . . . we [have] affirmed a verdict against a police officer
    who was found to have misrepresented the evidence to the
    prosecutors, or failed to provide the prosecutor with material
    evidence or information, or gave testimony to the Grand Jury that
    was false or contained material omissions, while knowing that he was
    making a material misrepresentation or omission by giving false
    testimony. . . . [T]he integrity of the judicial process can be
    unlawfully compromised by a government official's submission of
    information to a jury that implicates the accused based in part on
    material omissions.
    
    Id. at 548
     (cleaned up). We rejected the defendants' attempt to distinguish
    between the obligations of prosecutors and those of police officers, as well as
    their attempt to distinguish between "affirmative misrepresentations and
    misleading omissions." 
    Id.
     9
    9      The majority contends that the conduct here "does not come close to the
    defendant's egregious conduct in Morse." Maj. Op. at 36 n.12. Morse, however, squarely
    involved omissions in the evidence. There, "the jury found that by making material
    omissions in the billing summaries, the defendants in effect falsified them, and they did
    so knowingly and as part of their investigation." 804 F.3d at 548; see also id. at 547 ("We
    conclude that the omissions in this case were properly considered under the rubric of
    Zahrey, under which government officials may be held liable for fabricating evidence
    through false statements or omissions that are both material and made knowingly.");
    accord Ashley v. City of New York, 
    992 F.3d 128
    , 143 (2d Cir. 2021) ("The fabrication
    element requires only that the defendant knowingly make a false statement or
    omission.") (citing Morse, 804 F.3d at 547). While there are, of course, differences
    between the conduct here and the conduct in Morse, in my view there was enough for
    the matter to go to a jury.
    16
    In my view, in this case plaintiffs presented sufficient evidence to
    raise genuine issues of fact as to whether Spota and Lato compromised the
    integrity of the judicial process by knowingly submitting false evidence or
    information to the grand jury that implicated the nurses and Vinluan, including
    through material omissions. The omitted information was highly relevant to the
    grand jury's decision to indict. Morse, 804 F.3d at 548; see also Ricciuti v. N.Y.C.
    Transit Auth., 
    124 F.3d 123
    , 130 (2d Cir. 1997) (denying qualified immunity to
    police officers where a reasonable jury could find they "violated the plaintiffs'
    clearly established constitutional rights by conspiring to fabricate and forward to
    prosecutors a known false confession almost certain to influence a jury's
    verdict"). 10
    For example, Lato did not tell the grand jury of DOE's "decision to
    clear the nurses of professional misconduct." Vinluan, 
    873 N.Y.S.2d at 81-82
    .
    DOE concluded that "the nurses' conduct did not constitute patient
    abandonment." App'x at 1280. Yet, Lato repeatedly referred to the nurses "who
    10      The majority emphasizes that "a prosecutor in New York usually has no
    obligation to present to the grand jury evidence that is exculpatory." Maj. Op. at 36
    n.12. Of course, I do not disagree. My concern here is with the nature and extent of the
    prosecutor's omissions -- as discussed below, they were so extensive and so material as
    to seriously compromise the truth-seeking function of the process.
    17
    walked out without notice." Id. at 380; see also id. at 378 (Lato: "On April 7 of
    [2006], all of the nurses who cared for the children in the pediatric area, without
    notice, they just came in and said we are out of here."). In fact, each nurse gave
    between 8 to 72 hours' notice. See Vinluan, 
    873 N.Y.S.2d at 76
    . Abandonment, of
    course, was the critical issue for the grand jury, and in his preliminary remarks to
    the grand jurors, Lato explained that "[t]he only focus to determine whether
    criminal charges have to be filed is nurses abandoning patients." Id. at 377, 379-
    80. He specifically referred to DOE and its definition of "abandonment" --
    without disclosing that DOE had found that there was no abandonment. Id. at
    381-82. Lato did not merely omit this critical information, but he presented
    evidence that he knew was squarely contradicted by the omissions.
    Likewise, Lato also withheld from the grand jury the Nassau County
    Supreme Court's ruling that Sentosa had failed to show a likelihood of success on
    the merits of its claims of patient abandonment. In fact, Lato called Sentosa's
    lawyer to elicit that she had sued the nurses and Vinluan on Sentosa's behalf.
    And yet he did not ask her about the state court's decision some seven months
    earlier denying Sentosa's motion for a preliminary injunction.
    18
    Similarly, although Lato spent pages of transcript eliciting testimony
    from multiple witnesses about the acute conditions of the children, including the
    death of one child, he withheld from the grand jury that, as the Second
    Department found, "coverage [for the children] was indeed obtained," and "no
    children were deprived of nursing care." Vinluan, 
    873 N.Y.S.2d at 81-82
    .
    In his preliminary remarks, Lato explained that "the Education Law
    says that if a medical professional, doctor or nurse, walks out in the middle of a
    shift, that would be abandonment." App'x at 381. Whether the nurses walked
    out during a shift, while perhaps not dispositive, see id. at 381-82, was obviously
    an important factual question. At one point later in the grand jury proceedings, a
    grand juror asked Lato a question about a witness's testimony, specifically
    whether the nurses "walked out" during a shift:
    GRAND JUROR: [The witness] used the term "walked out" several
    times which seems to indicate they walked out in the middle of their
    shifts. I would like to know if they did in fact walk off the job
    during their shift.
    Id. at 434. Lato refused to answer the question. Id. And although the witness, an
    investigator with the DA's Office, was recalled to answer certain questions, Lato
    chose not to ask him whether the investigator knew or had been told that the
    nurses had walked out during a shift. See id. at 426-32. In fact, as Lato knew (or
    19
    should have known), none of the nurses walked out during a shift. See Vinluan,
    
    873 N.Y.S.2d at 81-82
     ("The nurses did not abandon their posts in the middle of
    their shifts. Rather, they resigned after the completion of their shifts, when the
    pediatric patients at Avalon Gardens were under the care of other nurses and
    staff members.").
    While supervisors and others with personal knowledge of what
    happened when the nurses resigned were called to testify in the grand jury, Lato
    withheld from the grand jurors evidence that the nurses did not walk out during
    a shift. To the contrary, he permitted one witness to testify that at a different
    facility (Brookhaven) the night before, "nine Filipino nurses" resigned at the same
    time, three of them during their shifts [JA 649], and that at Avalon Gardens "nine
    nurses did the same thing, that they handed [in] their resignation similar to the
    resignation[s] . . . in Brookhaven." App'x at 649-50. In fact, one of the nurses,
    Theresa Ramos, completed her shift at 7 p.m. and then stayed an extra four hours
    until 11 p.m. to ensure there was coverage -- and still she was indicted.
    At his deposition in this case, Lato explained that he withheld the
    information about DOE's determination because it was hearsay, "misleading,"
    and "legally inadmissible." Sealed App'x at 432-33. Reports of a government
    20
    agency, however, are admissible under New York's common law rule providing
    a hearsay exception for "official written statements, often called the official
    entries or public document rule." Consol. Midland Corp. v. Columbia Pharm. Corp.,
    
    345 N.Y.S.2d 105
    , 106 (2d Dep't 1973) (internal quotation marks omitted); accord
    Richards v. Robin, 
    165 N.Y.S. 780
    , 784 (1st Dep't 1917). To the extent there was any
    doubt, Lato could have called a witness from DOE to lay a foundation for
    admitting the report.
    In contrast to his withholding of DOE's highly relevant
    determination, Lato permitted Francis Luyun, the CEO of Sentosa, to testify to
    rank hearsay: Luyun told the grand jurors that Vinluan was "trying to recruit his
    own nurses also to send here in the United States," App'x at 654, and that his
    knowledge was based on statements purportedly made to him by unidentified
    nurses. Moreover, plaintiffs presented evidence to show that Luyun's testimony
    was fabricated and that Lato knew it was false. Luyun testified in the grand jury
    that he knew Vinluan was trying to recruit nurses in the Philippines "[b]ecause
    it's in the newspaper ads he says he's promising them that he can give them a job
    with good benefits." App'x at 654. Yet, plaintiffs presented evidence to show
    that Lato knew, based on his investigation into Vinluan's business, that Vinluan
    21
    was an immigration lawyer and not a nursing recruiter. Lato had in his files, for
    example, a copy of Vinluan's advertisement in a Philippines newspaper offering
    his services not as a recruiter but as an immigration attorney for individuals
    seeking to work in the United States. And when a grand juror asked Lato if
    Luyun knew "of any of the nurses that left and went to work for Vinluan's
    organization," Lato responded "[y]es." App'x at 658. No details of the new
    employment were provided, and although Lato knew that some or all of the
    nurses had obtained new employment, it does not appear that he asked his
    investigators to contact the new employers to determine whether they were
    connected to Vinluan. Moreover, Lato permitted Luyun to testify as he did even
    though the Nassau County Supreme Court had ruled six months earlier that
    Sentosa had no likelihood of success on the merits of its claim that Vinluan had
    interfered with its contractual relationship with the nurses. A reasonable
    prosecutor would have known of this ruling.
    Taken together, all of these omissions unlawfully compromised the
    integrity of the judicial process by implicating the nurses and the lawyer based in
    part on material omissions. See Morse, 804 F.3d at 548.
    22
    Finally, Lato's actions must be considered against the larger context:
    the DA's Office indicted ten Filipino nurses who believed they were being
    unfairly treated for resigning their jobs. The prosecutors indicted the nurses'
    lawyer for giving them legal advice, and for filing a claim of discrimination on
    their behalf. They did so even though the agency with licensing authority
    cleared the nurses of any professional misconduct. And the prosecutors indicted
    the nurses even though they gave notice of their resignation, arrangements were
    made for coverage, they did not "walk out" during their shifts, and no patients
    were jeopardized. As the Second Department concluded in taking the
    extraordinary step of granting a writ of prohibition, this prosecution never
    should have been brought.
    The qualified immunity doctrine protects all but the "plainly
    incompetent." Ziglar, 137 S. Ct. at 1867. This is one of the rare cases where the
    government officials indeed were "plainly incompetent." In my view, a jury
    could very well find on this record that no reasonable prosecutor would have
    indicted the ten nurses and their lawyer in the circumstances here or omitted the
    material information discussed above.
    23
    Beyond plain incompetence, the record also suggests bad faith.
    While Lato was the lead prosecutor on the case, the record contains ample
    evidence that Spota was intimately involved. Lato testified at his deposition that
    "I went through everything with Mr. Spota, how I saw the case, the complaints of
    the nurses and the complaints of everyone else." App'x at 1373. Lato "was to
    report to [Spota] on this," and while Lato was "running" the investigation, Spota
    was "ultimately in charge." Id. at 1364, 1368-69. Spota reviewed and edited a
    draft of the indictment, even though it was "unusual" for him to do so. Id. at
    1379-80. Moreover, at the request of Howard Fensterman, Sentosa's attorney,
    Spota personally met with Sentosa's representatives to discuss the matter. Id. at
    1340-42. And both Spota and Lato went to lunch with the representatives of
    Sentosa. Id. at 1369. Hence, triable issues of fact exist as to whether Spota is
    protected by qualified immunity. See Arteaga v. State of New York, 
    72 N.Y.2d 212
    ,
    216 (1988) (New York law grants government officials qualified immunity on
    state law claims, including false arrest claims, if their actions entail "making
    decisions of a judicial nature," unless "there is bad faith or the action taken is
    without a reasonable basis."); see also Lore v. City of Syracuse, 
    670 F.3d 127
    , 166 (2d
    Cir. 2012) ("In contrast to the federal standard, which is objectively reasonable
    24
    reliance on existing law, the New York standard for entitlement to qualified
    immunity has both objective and subjective components." (internal quotation
    marks and citations omitted)).
    Finally, the district court dismissed the claims against the County
    because it rejected the claims against Spota and Lato. As I would vacate the
    dismissal of the claims against Spota and Lato, I would also vacate the dismissal
    of the claims against the County.
    *****
    The ten nurses and their lawyer were subjected to an outrageous
    criminal prosecution, and I cannot help but think that race and national origin
    were a factor. Sentosa employs many Filipino nurses, not just the ten plaintiffs,
    and, in pursuing these criminal charges, it clearly was sending a message to its
    Filipino nurses and others in the Philippines thinking of coming to the United
    States that they dare not challenge their work conditions. 11 It is hard to imagine
    that the ten nurses would have been prosecuted for resigning their jobs if they
    had been White and American citizens. See Vinluan, 
    873 N.Y.S.2d at
    81
    11      At one point, Bent Philipson, one of the owners of Sentosa, told the grand jury
    that these nurses "were all brought over from the Philippines," and now that nurses
    were quitting, "we have to make sure this thing doesn't happen anywhere else." App'x
    at 458.
    25
    ("Accordingly, the prosecution has the practical effect of exposing the nurses to
    criminal penalty for exercising their right to leave their employment at will. The
    imposition of such a limitation upon the nurses' ability to freely exercise their
    right to resign from the service of an employer who allegedly failed to fulfill the
    promises and commitments made to them is the antithesis of the free and
    voluntary system of labor envisioned by the framers of the Thirteenth
    Amendment."). 12
    Significantly, while we must assume for purposes of this appeal that
    the nurses were indeed treated in a discriminatory manner as they alleged
    below, see App'x at 1169-70 (in letter to Avalon Gardens, nurses complained of
    discrepancies in pay and hours and asked to be "treated with fairness and
    respect"), Sentosa has in fact been found to have violated the rights of Filipino
    12      The issue of the exploitation of Filipino nurses has been the subject of attention.
    See generally Heather McAdams, Liquidated Damages or Human Trafficking? How A Recent
    Eastern District Of New York Decision Could Impact The Nationwide Nursing Shortage, 169
    Univ. Pa. L. Rev. Online 1 (2020) (discussing how predatory staffing agencies exploit
    Filipino nurses and offer labor contracts that enable human trafficking-like conditions);
    Dan Papscun, Filipino Nurses Win $1.56 Million in Trafficking Victims Case, Bloomberg
    Law (June 1, 2021), https://www.bloomberglaw.com/bloomberglawnews/%20daily-
    labor-report/XBRBTCH8000000?bna_news_filter=daily-labor-report; see also Paulina
    Cachero, From AIDS to COVID-19, America’s Medical System has a Long History of Relying
    on Filipino Nurses to Fight on the Frontlines, Time (May 30, 2021),
    https://time.com/6051754/history-filipino-nurses-us/.
    26
    nurses. A group of Filipino nurses successfully sued Sentosa in the Eastern
    District of New York for violations of the Trafficking Victims Protection Act, 
    18 U.S.C. § 1589
     et seq. and for breach of contract. The district court denied Sentosa's
    motion to dismiss the complaint, see Paguirigan v. Prompt Nursing Empl. Agency
    LLC, 
    286 F. Supp. 3d 430
     (E.D.N.Y. 2017), and thereafter granted summary
    judgment in favor of plaintiffs on liability, see Paguirigan v. Prompt Nursing Empl.
    Agency LLC, No. 17-CV-1302, 
    2019 WL 4647648
    , at *1, *21 (E.D.N.Y. Sept. 24,
    2019), aff'd in part and appeal dismissed in part, 
    827 F. App'x 116
     (2d Cir. 2020)
    (summary order). The district awarded compensatory damages of $1,559,099.79.
    See Paguirigan v. Prompt Nursing Empl. Agency LLC, No. 17-CV-1302, 
    2021 WL 2206738
    , at *1, *8 (E.D.N.Y. June 1, 2021). And recently, the court preliminary
    approved a class action settlement pursuant to which Sentosa will pay $3 million
    to the nurses in the class. See Order Granting Preliminary Approval of Class
    Action Settlement, Paguirigan v. Prompt Nursing Empl. Agency LLC (E.D.N.Y. Nov.
    22, 2021) (No. 17-1302).
    27
    For whatever their motivation, the prosecutors were complicit in
    Sentosa's effort to deter its Filipino nurses from pursuing their rights. 13 One of
    the grand jurors even asked Lato during the grand jury whether Sentosa was
    13      The majority contends that my dissent "hedges on whether [the prosecutors']
    complicity was itself racially motivated in the way that Sentosa's initiating campaign
    may have been." Maj. Op. at 38. That race played a part in the prosecutors' actions is, in
    my view, certainly plausible. "[C]lever men may easily conceal their motivations,"
    Robinson v. 12 Lofts Realty, Inc., 
    610 F.2d 1032
    , 1043 (2d Cir. 1979) (internal quotation
    marks omitted), and here, where there is, as the majority seems to acknowledge, a
    "palpable sense of unfairness," Maj. Op. at 36 n.12, there is enough to put the issue to a
    jury. See Tyler v. Bethlehem Steel Corp., 
    958 F.2d 1176
    , 1187 (2d Cir. 1992) (noting that
    even if there is no "smoking gun," "a thick cloud of smoke" is enough to require
    defendant to "convince the factfinder that, despite the smoke, there is no fire") (cleaned
    up). In addition, even assuming the prosecutors did not act out of a discriminatory
    motive, they may have been manipulated into taking action by parties with such a
    motive. Cf. Vasquez v. Empress Ambulance Serv., Inc., 
    835 F.3d 267
    , 271-73 (2d Cir. 2016)
    (adopting a "cat's paw" theory of liability that may be used to support a Title VII claim
    for retaliation). While the majority argues that plaintiffs "never embraced" race as a
    motivating factor, Maj. Op. at 39, plaintiffs' briefs on appeal and their amended
    complaint below contained repeated references to the nurses being Filipino, the nurses
    being from the Philippines, the unfair treatment of Filipino nurses, and the violation of
    the nurses' civil rights under the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments. Indeed,
    plaintiffs' reply brief explicitly argues that "the Sentosa Defendants demonstrated that
    their purpose in contacting the District Attorney[] and their insistence on a prosecution
    was to intimidate the Filipino and other foreign nurses remaining in their employ."
    Appellants' Reply Br. at 9. Moreover, we have the discretion to consider an issue not
    raised below "when we think it is necessary to remedy an obvious injustice." United
    States v. Stillwell, 
    986 F.3d 196
    , 200 (2d Cir. 2021). Finally, while the majority emphasizes
    that motivation is not relevant to the question of absolute immunity, Maj. Op. at 39 n.13,
    it may be relevant to the question of qualified immunity. See Ziglar, 137 S. Ct. at 1867
    ("qualified immunity protects 'all but the plainly incompetent or those who knowingly
    violate the law'") (citation omitted).
    28
    "using the District Attorney as a bargaining chip" to prevent nurses from leaving
    despite poor work conditions:
    GRAND JUROR: Does [Philipson] plan on going back to the
    Philippines and doing anymore recruiting?
    LATO:        Why would that --
    GRAND JUROR: Because if he's using the District Attorney as a
    bargaining chip.
    LATO :       If he's using --
    GRAND JUROR: I'm just saying now, during contracts, if he's
    going to say, listen, if you fail to show up there could be criminal
    charges against you.
    LATO:        I can't ask him that question because it's not pertinent. I
    understand what you are saying. That's the type of thing that would
    pre-suppose there is some type of arrangement between the District
    Attorney's office and him. I'll have to have Tom Spota testify, which
    is not going to happen, you know. So.
    App'x at 483-84. Of course the question was pertinent.
    The nurses and their lawyer should be permitted to pursue their
    claims for damages on the merits. I dissent.
    29
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 19-3949

Filed Date: 3/9/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/9/2022

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