Kennedy v. Ridgefield , 411 F.3d 1134 ( 2005 )


Menu:
  •                   FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    KIMBERLY KENNEDY, individually          
    and in her capacity as personal
    representative of the estate and as
    guardian for her children aka
    Kimberly Gorton; JAY D.
    KENNEDY, aka JD Kennedy; KEITH                No. 03-35333
    TEUFEL; TERA TEUFEL,
    Plaintiffs-Appellees,          D.C. No.
    CV-01-05631-JKA
    v.                            OPINION
    RIDGEFIELD CITY OF, a municipal
    corporation and political
    subdivision of the State of WA;
    NOEL SHIELDS,
    Defendants-Appellants.
    
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Western District of Washington
    J. Kelley Arnold, Magistrate Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted
    September 17, 2004—Seattle, Washington
    Filed June 23, 2005
    Before: James R. Browning, A. Wallace Tashima, and
    Jay S. Bybee, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion by Judge Browning;
    Partial Concurrence and Partial Dissent by Judge Bybee
    7471
    KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD                  7475
    COUNSEL
    Ray P. Cox, Forsberg & Umlauf, Seattle, Washington, for the
    defendant-appellant.
    John R. Connelly, Jr., Darrell L. Cochran and Lincoln C.
    Beauregard, Gordon Thomas Honeywell Malanca Peterson &
    Daheim, Tacoma, Washington, for the plaintiff-appellee.
    OPINION
    BROWNING, Circuit Judge:
    Defendant Noel Shields appeals the district court’s ruling
    that he is not entitled to summary judgment against Plaintiff
    Kimberly Kennedy’s 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
     claim. He argues that
    his alleged conduct did not violate Plaintiff’s clearly estab-
    lished constitutional rights. We disagree, and conclude the
    district court correctly determined that Shields is not entitled
    to qualified immunity. Accordingly, we affirm the decision
    below.
    I.   Introduction
    Kimberly Kennedy’s § 1983 action against Ridgefield City
    and Ridgefield Police Officer Noel Shields stems from events
    occurring on September 24, 1998, when a thirteen year-old
    neighbor, Michael Burns, shot and killed her husband Jay
    Kennedy and severely wounded her.
    On September 6, 1998, Kennedy called the Ridgefield
    Police Department (“RPD”) and alleged that Michael Burns
    7476                KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD
    had molested Kennedy’s nine-year-old daughter, Tera Teufel.
    RPD Officer Shields responded to the call.
    Kennedy claims to have warned Shields of Michael Burns’s
    violent tendencies at the September 6 meeting. Kennedy
    insists that during their initial meeting, she told Shields that
    the Burns family was unstable and that she had seen a lot of
    violence in their home. She alleges that she went on to
    describe several violent incidents involving Angela Burns,
    Michael’s mother. Kennedy also claims she informed Shields
    that Michael Burns had been involved in a number of violent
    incidents, including fights at school, lighting a cat on fire,
    breaking into his girlfriend’s house and attacking her with a
    baseball bat, and throwing rocks at a building in downtown
    Ridgefield.
    Kennedy also alleges that during the September 6 meeting,
    Shields assured her that she would be given notice prior to
    any police contact with the Burns family about her allega-
    tions. Shields stated that he could not recall whether Kennedy
    asked to be notified prior to any contact by the authorities
    with the Burns family.
    Shields forwarded his report to the Child Abuse and Inter-
    vention Center (“CAIC”) following the September 6 meeting.
    It is undisputed that Shields had no contact with Kennedy
    between the September 6 meeting and September 24, the
    night of the shooting.
    Kennedy alleges that on several occasions, she inquired
    into the status of the investigation of Michael Burns and
    reminded officers to notify her prior to any contact with the
    Burns family. She learned that Michael Burns had been inves-
    tigated for sending death threats to a classmate, but that the
    investigation concluded that he was not responsible. Kennedy
    asserts that she expressed concerns about her safety and told
    the CAIC officer handling the investigation that she was anx-
    ious to have the investigation started.
    KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD                  7477
    On September 24, 1998, Kennedy called both Shields and
    the CAIC to inquire into the progress of the investigation.
    Kennedy left a message for Shields. The content of this mes-
    sage is disputed. Shields stated that when he arrived at work
    on September 24, there was a message from Kennedy inquir-
    ing about his contact with Angela Burns and the status of the
    molestation case. Shields’s account clearly contradicts Kenne-
    dy’s repeated testimony that she asked the RPD and CAIC to
    notify her prior to any contact with the Burns family. After
    receiving Kennedy’s message, Shields called the CAIC to
    inquire into the status of the investigation. The officer respon-
    sible for the case was out so Shields left a message.
    Shields decided to drive to the Kennedy house and inform
    Kennedy personally that he called the CAIC but did not know
    the status of the case. Shields stated that he did not call Ken-
    nedy before driving to her house. On the way to the Kennedy
    house, Shields changed his mind and decided to go to the
    Burns’s residence first. He reasoned that it was on the way,
    and he could thus determine whether the Burns family had
    been contacted and so inform Kennedy. Shields talked to
    Angela Burns and informed her of Kennedy’s allegations.
    After speaking with Angela Burns, Shields proceeded to
    the Kennedy house. When he arrived, Shields told Kennedy
    that he had informed Angela Burns of the molestation allega-
    tions. Kennedy became upset and asked Shields why he had
    contacted the Burns family prior to notifying her and told
    Shields that she was in fear for her safety. Kennedy alleges
    that Shields assured her that the police would patrol the area
    around her and Michael’s house to keep an eye on him.
    After Shields left, Kennedy called a friend because she was
    very frightened of what Michael and Angela Burns’s reaction
    would be. According to Kennedy, Shields told her Angela
    Burns was very angry after their conversation and Angela and
    Michael Burns began yelling at one another. Kennedy also
    alleges that her husband decided to stay the night at home
    7478                 KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD
    because Shields had promised to patrol the premises. They
    planned to lock the doors to the house and leave town early
    the next morning. Kennedy also stated that she did not call
    911 that night because she relied upon Shields’s promise to
    patrol the area.
    Early on the morning of September 25, 1998, Michael
    Burns broke into the Kennedy house and shot Jay and Kim-
    berly Kennedy while they slept. Jay Kennedy died as a result
    of his injuries. Michael Burns was convicted of the premedi-
    tated murder of Jay Kennedy and attempted premeditated
    murder of Kimberly Kennedy.
    Kennedy brought a lawsuit against Shields and Ridgefield
    City, among others, in Clark County Superior Court asserting
    several state causes of action and a claim under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
     and the Fourteenth Amendment. The case was
    removed to the United States District Court for the Western
    District of Washington. On March 13, 2003, Shields and
    Ridgefield City moved for summary judgment. The court
    granted summary judgment to the defendants on all state law
    claims and to Ridgefield City on Kennedy’s § 1983 “failure
    to train” claim.
    The court denied Shields’s motion for summary judgment
    based on qualified immunity. The district court concluded that
    viewing the facts in a light most favorable to plaintiffs, “a jury
    could find that Officer Shields unreasonably created a false
    sense of security in plaintiffs by agreeing to give plaintiffs
    advanced notice of advising the Burns family of the allegation
    that Michael Burns sexually molested Tera Teufel, and assur-
    ing the plaintiffs of a neighborhood patrol.” Order, p. 4-5.
    This interlocutory appeal followed.
    II.   Analysis
    This case presents two legal issues. First, we must consider
    whether this Court has jurisdiction over Shields’s interlocu-
    KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD                  7479
    tory appeal concerning his qualified immunity defense. If so,
    we must then determine whether Shields is entitled to quali-
    fied immunity under the facts of this case.
    We review de novo an interlocutory appeal from the denial
    of summary judgment based on qualified immunity. Wilkins
    v. City of Oakland, 
    350 F.3d 949
    , 954 (9th Cir. 2003). In
    reviewing a summary judgment order in a § 1983 action
    where the district court determines that “the defendant’s
    alleged conduct violated the plaintiff’s clearly established
    constitutional rights . . . we resolve all factual disputes in
    favor of the plaintiff . . . .” Cunningham v. City of Wenatchee,
    
    345 F.3d 802
    , 807 (9th Cir. 2003).
    A. Jurisdiction over Qualified Immunity Claims on
    Interlocutory Appeal
    In response to Shields’s interlocutory appeal, Kennedy
    argues first that this Court lacks jurisdiction. We disagree, and
    conclude that we have jurisdiction to determine whether the
    trial court erred in holding that Shields was not entitled to
    qualified immunity.
    [1] As a general rule, interlocutory appeals from determina-
    tions of qualified immunity are permissible. In Mitchell v.
    Forsyth, 
    472 U.S. 511
     (1985), the Supreme Court held that
    the denial of a defendant’s motion for summary judgment is
    immediately appealable where the defendant is a public offi-
    cial asserting the defense of qualified immunity and the issue
    appealed concerns whether the facts demonstrated a violation
    of clearly established law.
    [2] Kennedy correctly notes that the Court created an
    exception to this general rule in Johnson v. Jones, 
    515 U.S. 304
     (1995). There, the Court held that “a defendant, entitled
    to invoke a qualified immunity defense, may not appeal a dis-
    trict court’s summary judgment order insofar as that order
    determines whether or not the pretrial record sets forth a ‘gen-
    7480                 KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD
    uine’ issue of facts for trial.” 
    Id. at 319-20
    . In ruling against
    Shields’s motion for summary judgment based on his claim of
    qualified immunity, the trial court stated:
    Viewed in a light most favorable to plaintiffs, a jury
    could find that Officer Shields unreasonably created
    a false sense of security in plaintiffs by agreeing to
    give plaintiffs advance notice of advising the Burns
    family of the allegation that Michael Burns had sex-
    ually molested Tera Teufal, and assuring the plain-
    tiffs of a neighborhood patrol. . . . In essence there
    is a question of fact as to whether or not there was
    justifiable reliance by plaintiffs on the alleged prom-
    ises by Shields.
    Order at 4-5. Thus, the trial court’s order observes that issues
    of fact remain.
    This does not, however, suffice to deprive us of jurisdiction
    under Johnson. In a subsequent case, the Supreme Court
    explained:
    Denial of summary judgment often includes a deter-
    mination that there are controverted issues of mate-
    rial fact, see Fed. Rule Civ. Proc. 56, and Johnson
    surely does not mean that every such denial of sum-
    mary judgment is nonappealable. Johnson held, sim-
    ply, that determinations of evidentiary sufficiency at
    summary judgment are not immediately appealable
    merely because they happen to arise in a qualified-
    immunity case. . . . Johnson reaffirmed that sum-
    mary judgment determinations are appealable when
    they resolve a dispute concerning an ‘abstract issu[e]
    of law’ relating to qualified immunity . . . typically,
    the issue whether the federal right allegedly
    infringed was ‘clearly established.’
    Behrens v. Pelletier, 
    516 U.S. 299
    , 312-13 (1996). See also
    Knox v. Southwest Airlines, 
    124 F.3d 1103
    , 1107 (9th Cir.
    KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD                   7481
    1997) (“[W]e have jurisdiction over an interlocutory appeal
    from the denial of qualified immunity where the appeal
    focuses on whether the defendants violated a clearly estab-
    lished law given the undisputed facts, while we do not have
    jurisdiction over an interlocutory appeal that focuses on
    whether there is a genuine dispute about the underlying
    facts.”).
    Unlike the appeal in Johnson, we are not asked or required
    to look at the sufficiency of the evidence in support of the fac-
    tual claims made by the parties, i.e., Shields’s contention that
    he did not create a false sense of security and Plaintiff’s insis-
    tence that he did. See Johnson, 
    515 U.S. at 313
     (holding that
    some orders denying summary judgment, “though entered in
    a ‘qualified immunity’ case, determine[ ] only a question of
    ‘evidence sufficiency,’ i.e., which facts a party may, or may
    not, be able to prove at trial. This kind of order, we conclude,
    is not appealable.”).
    [3] Here, while the trial court concluded that issues of fact
    remain, those disputed facts are not the basis of Shields’s
    interlocutory appeal of the denial of qualified immunity.
    Rather, Shields’s appeal contends that even after resolving the
    issues of fact in Plaintiff’s favor, the Plaintiff will not have
    demonstrated that Shields violated a clearly established con-
    stitutional right. Because this question represents an “abstract
    issue of law relating to qualified immunity” it falls within our
    jurisdiction on interlocutory appeal.
    Assuming the facts as alleged by Plaintiff, we must deter-
    mine whether the Defendant violated Plaintiff’s constitutional
    rights and whether those rights were clearly established. If
    Shields’s conduct did not violate Plaintiff’s clearly estab-
    lished constitutional rights, he is entitled to qualified immu-
    nity. We now turn to those questions.
    B.   Application of Qualified Immunity to Officer Shields
    We conclude that Shields’s conduct, as alleged by Plaintiff,
    violated her constitutional rights. Furthermore, we conclude
    7482                 KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD
    that the constitutional rights violated by Shields’s alleged con-
    duct were clearly established at that time.
    In Saucier v. Katz, 
    533 U.S. 194
    , 201 (2001), the Supreme
    Court established a two-prong analysis for qualified immunity
    cases. First, a court must determine whether the facts alleged
    (resolving all disputes of fact in favor of the party asserting
    the injury) show that the officer’s conduct violated a constitu-
    tional right. “Taken in the light most favorable to the party
    asserting the injury, do the facts alleged show the officer’s
    conduct violated a constitutional right? This must be the ini-
    tial inquiry.” Saucier, 533 U.S. at 201. If the court determines
    that the conduct did not violate a constitutional right, the
    inquiry is over and the officer is entitled to qualified immu-
    nity.
    If, however, the court determines that the conduct did vio-
    late a constitutional right, the second prong under Saucier
    requires the court to determine whether the violated right was
    “clearly established.” A right is clearly established if the
    “contours of the right [are] sufficiently clear that a reasonable
    official would understand that what he is doing violates that
    right.” Id. (citing Anderson v. Creighton, 
    483 U.S. 635
    , 640
    (1987)). Even if the violated right is clearly established, the
    Saucier Court recognized that it may be difficult for a police
    officer to determine how to apply the relevant legal doctrine
    to the particular circumstances he or she faces. The Saucier
    Court therefore held that if the officer makes a mistake in
    applying the relevant legal doctrine, he or she is not precluded
    from claiming qualified immunity so long as the mistake is
    reasonable. That is, if “the officer’s mistake as to what the
    law requires is reasonable . . . the officer is entitled to the
    immunity defense.” 533 U.S. at 205. We now take up those
    questions.
    1. First Prong: Did           Shields     Violate    Kennedy’s
    Constitutional Rights?
    [4] The Plaintiff alleges that the Defendant violated her
    14th Amendment right to substantive due process under the
    KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD                  7483
    “state-created danger” doctrine. In DeShaney v. Winnebago
    County Dep’t of Soc. Serv., 
    489 U.S. 189
    , 196 (1989), the
    Supreme Court held that the Due Process Clause “is phrased
    as a limitation on the State’s power to act, not as a guarantee
    of certain minimal levels of safety and security.” Since the
    Due Process Clause does not require the state to provide its
    citizens with a minimum level of security, it follows that the
    state cannot be held liable for failing to do so. 
    Id. at 196-97
    .
    Two exceptions to DeShaney exist. Under the “special rela-
    tionship” doctrine, the state can be held liable for a third
    party’s harm where the state has custody over the plaintiff.
    Under this exception, “ ‘when the State takes a person into its
    custody and holds him there against his will, the Constitution
    imposes some responsibility for [that person’s] safety and
    general well-being.’ ” Wang v. Reno, 
    81 F.3d 808
    , 818 (9th
    Cir. 1996) (quoting DeShaney, 
    489 U.S. at 199-200
    ). Here,
    Plaintiff does not allege that Shields ever had custody over
    her or her husband; consequently, this exception is inapplica-
    ble.
    [5] The “state-created danger” doctrine represents the sec-
    ond recognized exception to DeShaney’s rule against holding
    state officials liable for private violence. Under this theory,
    plaintiffs can recover “when a state officer’s conduct places
    a person in peril in deliberate indifference to their safety.”
    Penilla v. City of Huntington Park, 
    115 F.3d 707
    , 709 (9th
    Cir. 1997). This Circuit first recognized liability based on
    state created danger in Wood v. Ostrander, 
    879 F.2d 583
     (9th
    Cir. 1989). In Wood, a state trooper determined that the driver
    of an automobile was intoxicated, arrested the driver and
    impounded the car. The officer left Wood, a passenger in the
    car, stranded late at night in a high-crime area. Wood
    accepted a ride from a passing car and was subsequently
    raped. This Court held that Wood could claim § 1983 liability,
    since there was a genuine issue of fact “that [the trooper]
    acted with deliberate indifference to Wood’s interest in per-
    sonal security under the fourteenth amendment.” Id. at 588.
    7484                KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD
    Since Wood, this Circuit has held state officials liable for
    the creation of danger in a variety of circumstances. In L.W.
    v. Grubbs, 
    974 F.2d 119
    , 120 (9th Cir. 1992), this Court
    found that state employees could be liable for the rape of a
    registered nurse assigned to work alone in the medical clinic
    of a medium-security custodial institution with a violent sex
    offender. In Munger v. City of Glasgow, 
    227 F.3d 1082
     (9th
    Cir. 2000), this Court found that police officers could be held
    liable for ejecting a visibly drunk patron from a bar on a bit-
    terly cold night.
    [6] To find an officer liable under the “state-created dan-
    ger” theory, a plaintiff must show that the officer’s actions
    created or increased the danger facing him or her. Second, the
    plaintiff must demonstrate that the state official acted with
    deliberate indifference to a known or obvious danger. Inter-
    preting the facts in a manner most favorable to Plaintiff, we
    conclude that Shields did in fact augment the danger Plaintiff
    and her husband faced and acted with deliberate indifference
    to a known or obvious danger. Plaintiff has therefore demon-
    strated that her constitutional rights were violated and so sat-
    isfied the first prong under Saucier.
    a. Danger Affirmatively Created or Increased Due to
    State Action
    [7] First, Shields’s affirmative actions placed the Kennedy
    family in a situation of danger greater than they would have
    faced had he not acted at all. Shields does not dispute that the
    revelation to Michael Burns’s mother of the allegations of
    sexual abuse against Michael Burns triggered his actions
    against Plaintiff and her husband. In revealing the existence
    of allegations against Michael to Angela Burns after having
    promised Kennedy that he would notify her first, Shields cre-
    ated a situation of heightened danger. It was inevitable that
    Michael Burns would eventually learn of the allegations made
    against him, and he would likely infer who had made them.
    If Kennedy had received the prior warning officer Shields
    KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD                  7485
    promised her, she and her family could have taken additional
    precautions. Instead, they relied on Shields’s promise of
    advance notification and so considered additional precautions
    unnecessary.
    [8] Moreover, Shields further augmented this danger by
    offering false assurances that the police would patrol the Ken-
    nedy’s neighborhood the night of the shooting. Misrepresenta-
    tion of the risk faced by a plaintiff can contribute to a finding
    of state-created danger. See Grubbs, 
    974 F.2d at 121
     (“The
    Defendants also enhanced L.W.’s vulnerability to attack by
    misrepresenting to her the risks attending her work.”). Plain-
    tiff alleges that she and her husband based their decision to
    remain at home that night and leave in the morning in reliance
    on Shields’s assurances that the neighborhood would be
    patrolled. Defendant’s affirmative promise of a police patrol
    thus influenced Plaintiff’s assessment of the risk she and her
    family faced.
    b.   Deliberate Indifference
    Second, resolving all factual disputes in Plaintiff’s favor,
    Shields acted with deliberate indifference. “ ‘[D]eliberate
    indifference’ is a stringent standard of fault, requiring proof
    that a municipal actor disregarded a known or obvious conse-
    quence of his actions.” Bryan County v. Brown, 
    520 U.S. 397
    ,
    410 (1997). See also Christie v. Iopa, 
    176 F.3d 1231
    , 1240
    (9th Cir. 1999). Here, Plaintiff has alleged that the conse-
    quences of Shields’s actions were obvious: first, that once
    informed of the allegations against him, Michael Burns would
    attempt to harm the Kennedy family; and second, that having
    been assured by Shields’s promise to provide police protec-
    tion, the Kennedy family would rely upon that promise.
    [9] Resolving factual disputes in Kennedy’s favor, the
    record supports her assertion that Shields should have recog-
    nized the obvious consequences of his actions. Most signifi-
    cantly, Plaintiff specifically asked Shields to give her advance
    7486                 KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD
    notification because she feared for the safety of her family. In
    addition, Plaintiff herself had previously informed Shields of
    Michael Burns’s violent tendencies, including an incident in
    which Michael Burns had broken into a girlfriend’s home.
    Shields also knew of a separate investigation in which school
    authorities suspected (albeit erroneously) that Michael Burns
    sent death threats to another student. Finally, on the night of
    the attack, Plaintiff informed Shields directly that he had
    placed her family in danger by informing the Burns family of
    the allegations against Michael prior to notifying the Kennedy
    family. Under these circumstances, the obvious consequence
    of informing Angela Burns prior to the Kennedy family and
    of falsely assuring the Kennedy family of police protection
    was to increase the risk the Kennedy family faced from
    Michael Burns.
    2. Second Prong: Was the Right Violated Clearly
    Established?
    When all the factual issues are resolved in Plaintiff’s favor,
    we find Shields’s alleged conduct violated Kennedy’s consti-
    tutional rights. We turn to the second prong of the Saucier
    test, and consider whether the constitutional right violated by
    Shields’s conduct was “clearly established” in September
    1998. We conclude for the reasons set out below that it was.
    To determine whether a right is clearly established, the
    reviewing court’s inquiry must consider whether a reasonable
    officer would recognize that his conduct violates that right
    under the circumstances and in light of the law that existed at
    that time. As the Supreme Court explained:
    For a constitutional right to be clearly established, its
    contours must be sufficiently clear that a reasonable
    official would understand that what he is doing vio-
    lates that right. This is not to say that an official
    action is protected by qualified immunity unless the
    very action in question has previously been held
    KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD                      7487
    unlawful . . . but it is to say that in the light of pre-
    existing law the unlawfulness must be apparent.
    Hope v. Pelzer, 
    536 U.S. 730
    , 739 (2002) (citing Anderson v.
    Creighton, 
    483 U.S. 635
    , 640 (1987) (internal citations omit-
    ted); see also Flores v. Morgan Hill Unified Sch. Dist., 
    324 F.3d 1130
    , 1136-37 (9th Cir. 2003) (“In order to find that the
    law was clearly established . . . we need not find a prior case
    with identical, or even ‘materially similar’ facts.”). Thus, the
    alleged conduct need not explicitly have been previously
    deemed unconstitutional, but existing case law must make it
    clear that the conduct violated constitutional norms. More-
    over, “[t]he plaintiff bears the burden of showing that the
    right at issue was clearly established under this second
    prong.” Sorrels v. McKee, 
    290 F.3d 965
    , 969 (9th Cir. 2002).
    In September of 1998, it was clearly established that state
    officials could be held liable where they affirmatively and
    with deliberate indifference placed an individual in danger. In
    1989, this Court recognized the theory of state-created danger
    in Wood. However, it is not enough to claim that a constitu-
    tional right was clearly established in its broad outlines. First,
    “the right allegedly violated must be defined at the appropri-
    ate level of specificity before a court can determine if it was
    clearly established.” Wilson v. Layne, 
    526 U.S. 603
    , 615
    (1999). The appropriate level of specificity must take into
    account the actual circumstances of the case, for the inquiry
    into whether the right is clearly established “must be
    undertaken in light of the specific context of the case, not as
    a broad general proposition.” Saucier, 533 U.S. at 201. In
    Saucier, the Court rejected the idea that the plaintiff could
    defeat the defendant’s claim of qualified immunity merely by
    demonstrating that use of force violates the Fourth Amend-
    ment if it is excessive under objective standards of reason-
    ableness.
    [10] Kennedy may not defeat Shields’s claim of qualified
    immunity merely by demonstrating that police actions vio-
    7488                KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD
    lated the Fourteenth Amendment if they affirmatively created
    or enlarged danger facing a plaintiff and did so with deliberate
    indifference. To satisfy her burden and demonstrate that
    Shields violated a clearly established constitutional right,
    Plaintiff must go further. “The salient question . . . . is
    whether the state of the law [at the time of the alleged wrong]
    gave respondents fair warning that their alleged treatment of
    [the petitioner] was unconstitutional.” Hope, 
    536 U.S. at 741
    .
    That is, Kennedy must demonstrate, based on the state of the
    law in 1998, that Shields was on notice that informing Angela
    Burns of Kennedy’s allegations prior to warning the Kennedy
    family and falsely promising a police patrol that evening
    would violate Kennedy’s constitutional rights. Resolving all
    factual disputes in her favor, we conclude that Kennedy has
    met this burden. Consequently, we hold that Shields is not
    entitled to have his motion for summary judgment on the
    basis of qualified immunity.
    [11] Both of Kennedy’s claims against Shields amount to
    verbal promises that were relied upon and then not kept. This
    Court has previously held officers liable under a state-created
    danger doctrine where they falsely induce reliance by promis-
    ing additional protection or warnings. In Grubbs, 
    974 F.2d 119
    , a registered nurse working at a medium security custo-
    dial institution was raped and terrorized by a young male
    inmate. The nurse brought a § 1983 claim against her supervi-
    sors. According to the plaintiff, her employer had told her she
    would not be working alone with violent sex offenders. Not-
    withstanding that representation, her employer subsequently
    allowed an inmate prone to violence against women to work
    with her unsupervised. The plaintiff, relying upon that repre-
    sentation, did not take all the precautions she might otherwise
    have taken, and was subsequently raped.
    [12] The Grubbs Court recognized that cognizable state-
    created harm claims may arise where state officials induce
    reliance by means of verbal promises that are later broken. In
    Grubbs, the plaintiff obviously recognized that she faced
    KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD                  7489
    some risk, because she was working in a custodial institution
    with male offenders. She did not realize, however, that the
    defendants would place her in close unsupervised proximity
    with an individual with a history of violence against women.
    It was in part because the conduct of the defendants increased
    the risk she faced without her knowledge that the Grubbs
    Court found them to have violated her constitutional rights.
    “Defendants . . . enhanced L.W.’s vulnerability to attack by
    misrepresenting to her the risks attending her work.” Id. at
    121. Thus, the Grubbs Court concluded that officials may be
    held liable where they claim to offer protection they do not
    provide and so misrepresent the risk posed by third-parties to
    a plaintiff. Consequently, Shields’s conduct violated Plain-
    tiff’s clearly established constitutional right.
    Like the plaintiff in Grubbs, Kennedy was aware of the
    underlying risk, yet reasonably underestimated it based on
    Shields’s representations. His alleged conduct both increased
    and misrepresented the risk that Michael Burns posed to Ken-
    nedy and her family. Shields purportedly told Kennedy that he
    would warn her before telling the Burns family of the allega-
    tions against Michael Burns, and then failed to do so. Further-
    more, Kennedy has also alleged that Shields falsely told her
    that he would patrol her neighborhood the night the allega-
    tions against Michael Burns were revealed to his family. If
    either or both of these allegations were proved at trial, a jury
    could reasonably find Kennedy relied upon such promises of
    additional protection in evaluating the risks Michael Burns
    posed to her family. Furthermore, under the circumstances
    alleged by Plaintiff, Shields would have acted unreasonably in
    promising prior notification and additional police protection,
    inducing reliance, and then failing to perform.
    III.   CONCLUSION
    Under Behrens v. Pelletier, 
    516 U.S. 299
    , 312-13 (1996),
    we have jurisdiction to hear Shields’s interlocutory appeal
    regarding qualified immunity. We conclude that Shields
    7490                KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD
    unreasonably violated Kennedy’s clearly established constitu-
    tional right. Under the state-created danger doctrine, a police
    officer may be liable for actions that create or augment known
    or obvious dangers. Here, Shields’s actions both increased
    and misrepresented the risk Plaintiff faced. Under Grubbs,
    increasing and misrepresenting a known risk may give rise to
    § 1983 liability. This doctrine was clearly established by the
    time the events of this case took place. Accordingly, the trial
    court’s denial of Shields’s motion for summary judgment
    based on qualified immunity is hereby
    AFFIRMED.
    BYBEE, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dissenting in
    part:
    I vigorously part company with the majority’s conclusion
    that Shields created the danger Kennedy faced and then acted
    with deliberate indifference, thereby violating her rights under
    the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The
    majority’s conclusion is unsupported by the record and our
    own case law. The majority concludes that in the fifteen min-
    utes between the time Officer Shields contacted Angela Burns
    and the time he advised Kim Kennedy of the contact, he
    deprived Kennedy of her due process rights. In so doing, the
    majority not only mangles the state-created danger doctrine,
    it holds that its new rule was so clearly established that Offi-
    cer Shields should have known he was violating the Constitu-
    tion and, thus, has forfeited his qualified immunity.
    We have never before recognized a state-created danger
    cause of action on facts remotely analogous to these. In the
    sixteen years since we invented the state-created danger
    exception to DeShaney, we have approved it on fewer than
    five occasions. In these cases we have narrowly construed the
    exception to encompass only claims in which the govern-
    KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD                        7491
    ment’s act was directed toward a specific plaintiff, rather than
    the public at large; the government acted affirmatively, rather
    than simply failed to act; the government’s act caused the
    harm, rather than merely increased the risk; and the govern-
    ment’s action constituted deliberate indifference to the known
    or obvious danger, rather than mere negligence, or even gross
    negligence. Ignoring these elements, the majority today
    extends the state-created danger doctrine to a situation in
    which it cannot be said with any measure of confidence either
    that the government’s act caused the plaintiff’s harm or that
    the government acted with the requisite level of culpability.
    Even if I thought Officer Shields had violated our state-
    created danger gloss on the Due Process Clause, the violation
    was surely not so obvious that he should have known at the
    time that he was violating Kennedy’s constitutional rights.
    Consequently, even assuming a constitutional violation, I
    would hold that Officer Shields is nonetheless entitled to
    qualified immunity. I respectfully dissent.1
    I.   BACKGROUND
    The facts of this case are undeniably tragic. As outlined in
    Kennedy’s complaint, her deposition testimony, and as deter-
    mined by the district court, these facts show that on Septem-
    ber 6, 1998 Kennedy filed a complaint with the City of
    Ridgefield Police Department (“RPD”) accusing her neigh-
    bor, Michael Burns, of sexually molesting her nine-year-old
    daughter. Officer Shields was dispatched to Kennedy’s home
    to record the complaint.
    Kennedy recalls talking with Officer Shields about the
    instability of the Burns family. She alleges that she informed
    Shields that the Burns family “had bad tempers” and that
    Michael was in trouble all the time, including one unfruitful
    1
    Although I dissent on the merits, I agree with the majority’s conclusion
    that we have jurisdiction to hear this interlocutory appeal.
    7492                 KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD
    investigation for allegedly sending a death threat to a class-
    mate; he also once threw rocks at his stepfather’s building. On
    another occasion, Michael reportedly lit a cat on fire, and later
    unlawfully entered his girlfriend’s house “and went after her
    with a baseball bat” after she broke up with him. On the basis
    of this alleged misconduct, Kennedy requested prior notifica-
    tion before the Burns family was informed of her allegations.
    Following her initial complaint, Kennedy repeatedly con-
    tacted RPD — at least six times during the eighteen days fol-
    lowing her complaint — regarding the status of the
    investigation. On September 24, Kennedy called Officer
    Shields directly to determine whether the Burns family was
    aware of her allegations. Unable to reach Shields by phone,
    she left a message. In response to her inquiry, Shields pro-
    ceeded to the Burns’ home to ascertain whether the family
    had been notified. Shields was greeted by Angela Burns
    (Michael Burns’s mother) and Shields asked her whether she
    had received a phone call or visit from the Child Abuse and
    Intervention Center (“CAIC”). Angela Burns inquired as to
    the reason for his question, and Shields advised Angela of the
    allegations.
    Immediately following this meeting, Shields drove directly
    to Kennedy’s residence — located approximately one block
    away — and informed her that Angela Burns had been noti-
    fied of her allegations. Kennedy alleges that she expressed
    fear regarding Michael Burns’s possible reaction. She further
    alleges that, in response to her expressions, Officer Shields
    promised to increase surveillance in the area that night to
    watch for Michael. After discussing the matter with her hus-
    band, Kennedy chose to remain in her home that evening and
    leave town the following morning. Michael Burns entered the
    Kennedy home that night, shot and killed Jay Kennedy and
    seriously wounded Kim Kennedy. She now brings this action
    against Officer Shields, claiming that his conduct violated her
    rights under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
    Amendment.
    KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD                  7493
    II.    SAUCIER TWO-STEP
    The Court’s opinion in Saucier v. Katz, 
    533 U.S. 194
    (2001), as the majority notes, provides the framework for our
    analysis of this § 1983 suit. Under this framework, if a defen-
    dant claims qualified immunity, we must make two distinct
    inquiries: a “constitutional inquiry” and a “qualified immunity
    inquiry.” See Estate of Ford v. Ramirez-Palmer, 
    301 F.3d 1043
    , 1049 (9th Cir. 2002).
    Officer Shields claims that he is entitled to qualified immu-
    nity from Kennedy’s suit. Accordingly, Saucier instructs that
    we must first determine whether, “[t]aken in the light most
    favorable to the party asserting the injury . . . the facts alleged
    show the officer’s conduct violated a constitutional right.”
    Saucier, 533 U.S. at 201. “[I]f a violation could be made out
    on a favorable view of the parties’ submissions, the next,
    sequential step is to ask whether the right was clearly estab-
    lished . . . in light of the specific context of the case” such that
    “it would be clear to a reasonable officer that his conduct was
    unlawful in the situation he confronted.” Id. at 201-02 (citing
    Wilson v. Layne, 
    526 U.S. 603
    , 615 (1999)).
    The majority concludes that Kennedy’s allegations permit
    a jury to find that Officer Shields’s conduct deprived her of
    due process as guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment on
    the theory that Shields affirmatively created the danger that
    injured her and took her husband’s life. The majority holds,
    in addition, that Officer Shields is not entitled to qualified
    immunity for this violation. I disagree on both accounts. To
    explain my disagreement on the first point, it is worth briefly
    outlining our court’s gloss on DeShaney and the Fourteenth
    Amendment’s Due Process Clause.
    A.   State-Created Danger Doctrine
    As the majority observes, the state-created danger doctrine
    is said to trace its jurisprudential pedigree to the Supreme
    7494                  KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD
    Court’s opinion in DeShaney, perhaps best known for Justice
    Blackmun’s exclamation, “Poor Joshua!” DeShaney v. Winne-
    bago County Dep’t of Soc. Serv., 
    489 U.S. 189
    , 213 (1989)
    (Blackmun, J. dissenting). Declining to find a due process
    violation where local officials failed to adequately respond to
    complaints that four-year-old Joshua was being abused by his
    father, the Court held that the Constitution does not require
    the state to protect the life, liberty, and property of its citizens
    against invasion by private actors. Rather, the Due Process
    Clause “is phrased as a limitation on the State’s power to act,
    not as a guarantee of certain minimal levels of safety and
    security.” 
    Id. at 195
    . The Court observed,
    Like its counterpart in the Fifth Amendment, the
    Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment
    was intended to prevent government from abusing its
    power, or employing it as an instrument of oppres-
    sion[.] Its purpose was to protect the people from the
    State, not to ensure that the State protected them
    from each other. The Framers were content to leave
    the extent of governmental obligation in the latter
    area to the democratic political processes. Consistent
    with these principles, our cases have recognized that
    the Due Process Clauses generally confer no affir-
    mative right to governmental aid, even where such
    aid may be necessary to secure life, liberty, or prop-
    erty interests of which the government itself may not
    deprive the individual. . . . [I]t follows that the State
    cannot be held liable under the Clause for injuries
    that could have been averted had it chosen to provide
    them.
    
    Id. at 196-97
     (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
    We have noted two distinct exceptions to the general rule
    that the state has no affirmative duty to protect persons from
    violence inflicted by private actors: (1) the “special relation-
    ship” exception, stemming from a custodial relationship
    KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD                  7495
    between the state and the victim; and (2) the “danger cre-
    ation” exception, stemming from “affirmative conduct on the
    part of the state in placing the plaintiff in danger.” L.W. v.
    Grubbs, 
    974 F.2d 119
    , 121 (9th Cir. 1992) (“Grubbs I”). The
    former emanates from explicit language in DeShaney itself.
    DeShaney, 
    489 U.S. at 199-200
     (“[W]hen the State takes a
    person into its custody and holds him there against his will,
    the Constitution imposes upon it a corresponding duty to
    assume some responsibility for his safety and general well-
    being”). The latter, more amorphous, doctrine of “state-
    created danger” was developed by lower courts in response to
    the Court’s observation, in DeShaney, that Winnebago
    County neither helped to create the dangers that Joshua faced
    nor rendered him more vulnerable to those dangers.
    DeShaney, 
    489 U.S. at 201
     (“While the State may have been
    aware of the dangers that Joshua faced . . . it played no part
    in their creation, nor did it do anything to render him any
    more vulnerable to them.”).
    1.   Ninth Circuit Cases
    Four months after DeShaney, we established the state-
    created danger theory, recognizing a cognizable due process
    violation where the plaintiff alleged that she was raped after
    a state trooper impounded the vehicle in which she was rid-
    ing, ejected her from the vehicle, and left her stranded in a
    high-crime area in the middle of the night. Wood v. Ost-
    rander, 
    879 F.2d 583
     (9th Cir. 1989). In holding that Wood
    raised a triable issue of fact as to whether Trooper Ostrander’s
    conduct violated her substantive due process rights, we drew
    a distinction between facts demonstrating that police action
    created the danger to the person and facts demonstrating a
    danger that existed without police action. Wood, 
    879 F.2d at 589-90
    . Relying on Deshaney, we held that a substantive due
    process claim could be stated when police create the danger
    to an individual. We reasoned that “[t]he fact that Ostrander
    arrested [the driver], impounded his car, and apparently
    stranded Wood in a high-crime area at 2:30 a.m. distinguished
    7496                 KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD
    Wood from the general public and triggered a duty of the
    police to afford her some measure of peace and safety.” 
    Id. at 590
    . Reversing the district court’s summary judgment for
    defendants, we concluded that the plaintiff’s allegations dem-
    onstrated “an assertion of government power which . . . tends
    to show a disregard for [her] safety amounting to deliberate
    indifference.” 
    Id. at 588
    .
    We further defined the contours of the state-created danger
    theory in Grubbs I, in which a registered nurse employed by
    the state of Oregon at a medium-security custodial institution
    brought suit against state prison officials after she was bat-
    tered, kidnaped, robbed and raped by an inmate with known
    violent propensities. 
    974 F.2d at 120
    . The plaintiff alleged
    that she was led to believe that she would not have to work
    alone with residents who were known violent sex offenders.
    
    Id.
     Finding a cognizable due process violation, we empha-
    sized that the state had knowledge of the inmate’s dangerous
    propensities, and it affirmatively assigned him a job in which
    he would work alone with the plaintiff. 
    Id. at 121
    . We con-
    cluded that the defendants, like the officer in Wood, “used
    their authority as state correctional officers to create an oppor-
    tunity for [the inmate] to assault [the plaintiff] that would not
    otherwise have existed.” 
    Id.
     (emphasis added). We further
    observed that the defendants “enhanced [the plaintiff’s] vul-
    nerability to attack by misrepresenting to her the risks attend-
    ing her work;” namely, by leading her to believe that she
    would not be assigned to work alone with any inmates who
    were known violent sex offenders. 
    Id.
    Contrary to the majority’s suggestion, the “enhanced vul-
    nerability” that ensued from the state’s misrepresentation of
    the risks that the nurse would face in her employment did not,
    by itself, give rise to the due process violation recognized in
    Grubbs I. Maj. Op. at 7485, 7489. Indeed, under DeShaney,
    it is, at the very least, questionable whether a state’s failure
    to fully apprise an individual of the risks attending her
    employment can ever constitute an affirmative exercise of
    KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD                  7497
    state power sufficient to give rise to a due process violation.
    See DeShaney, 
    489 U.S. at 201-02
     (suggesting that the affir-
    mative exercise of state power, as opposed to mere inaction,
    is the minimum threshold requirement necessary to establish
    a due process violation, and declining to find such affirmative
    exercise even in the context of an elaborate and exclusive sys-
    tem of child-protection services). Rather, Grubbs I more accu-
    rately stands for the proposition that in order to state a claim
    based on state-created danger the state must affirmatively play
    a part in creating the danger. See Grubbs I, 
    974 F.2d at 121
    (“The ‘danger creation’ basis for a claim . . . necessarily
    involves affirmative conduct on the part of the state in placing
    the plaintiff in danger.”). See also Munger v. City of Glasgow
    Police Dept., 
    227 F.3d 1082
    , 1086 (9th Cir. 2000) (noting that
    the court in a state-created danger case “must determine
    whether [the state] did in fact affirmatively place [the plain-
    tiff] in danger”).
    On appeal from our remand of Grubbs I to the district
    court, we addressed the level of culpability required to prevail
    under a state-created danger theory. See L.W. v. Grubbs, 
    92 F.3d 894
     (9th Cir. 1996) (“Grubbs II”). Explicitly rejecting a
    “gross negligence” standard, we held that “the plaintiff must
    show that the state official participated in creating a danger-
    ous situation, and acted with deliberate indifference to the
    known or obvious danger in subjecting the plaintiff to it.” 
    Id. at 900
     (emphasis added). See also Wood, 
    879 F.2d at 588
    .
    In an effort to further demarcate the outer-bounds of the
    state-created danger doctrine, our subsequent cases have only
    highlighted the requirement that, at a minimum, a state-
    created danger due process claim must have as its basis the
    affirmative exercise of state power creating a risk which, but
    for the state’s affirmative action, would not have existed. For
    instance, in Penilla v. City of Huntington Park, 
    115 F.3d 707
    ,
    710 (9th Cir. 1997), we found a due process violation where
    police officers responded to a 911 call, “examined [the plain-
    tiff], found him to be in grave need of medical care, canceled
    7498                 KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD
    the request for paramedics, broke the lock and door jamb on
    the front door of [the plaintiff’s] residence, moved him inside
    the house, locked the door, and left.” 
    Id. at 708
    . Under these
    circumstances, we determined that the state created a danger
    to the plaintiff which, but for its affirmative unlawful acts,
    would not have existed. Likewise, in Munger, we found a
    cognizable due process violation where police officers ejected
    the plaintiff from a bar late at night when the outside tempera-
    tures were subfreezing. 227 F.3d at 1087. Although the offi-
    cers knew that the plaintiff was intoxicated and was wearing
    only a t-shirt and jeans, they prevented him from driving his
    truck or reentering the bar. Id. at 1086-87. Presented with
    these facts, we held that the state affirmatively acted to place
    the plaintiff in danger that would not have existed without
    state action. Id. at 1087.
    In those cases where we have declined to find a cognizable
    due process violation, we have generally emphasized the
    unforeseeable nature of the plaintiff’s injuries, that the danger
    facing the plaintiff existed independent of state action, or the
    absence of the requisite mental state. For instance, in Huffman
    v. County of Los Angeles, 
    147 F.3d 1054
    , 1061 (9th Cir.
    1998), we declined to find municipal liability under § 1983
    where the plaintiff was shot during a barroom brawl with an
    off-duty deputy employed by the Los Angeles County Sher-
    iff’s Department. Finding the risk to the plaintiff an unfore-
    seeable consequence of a county policy requiring off-duty
    officers to carry a firearm, we held that “the danger-creation
    plaintiff must demonstrate, at the very least, that the state
    acted affirmatively, and with deliberate indifference, in creat-
    ing a foreseeable danger to the plaintiff, leading to the depri-
    vation of the plaintiff’s constitutional rights.” Id. See also
    Lawrence v. United States, 
    340 F.3d 952
    , 957 (9th Cir. 2003)
    (citing Wood, Penilla and Munger, and observing that “in
    each of the cases in which we have applied the danger-
    creation exception, ultimate injury to the plaintiff was fore-
    seeable.”). Similarly, in Lawrence, 
    340 F.3d at 954
    , we
    declined to find a Fifth Amendment violation in a Bivens
    KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD                         7499
    action where a juvenile plaintiff alleged that she was sexually
    abused by a convicted drug offender participating in the Fed-
    eral Witness Security Program; the plaintiff alleged that the
    offender could not have obtained employment at a group
    home where she was a resident but for the assistance of fed-
    eral officers. Although we found it foreseeable that a con-
    victed drug offender might attempt to distribute illegal drugs
    to children with whom he came into contact, we found the
    plaintiff’s injuries an unforeseeable consequence of the offi-
    cial action. 
    Id. at 957
    .
    Finally, in Nicholas v. Wallenstein, 
    266 F.3d 1083
     (9th Cir.
    2001), we declined to find that a county jail commander acted
    with deliberate indifference to the known or obvious dangers
    facing his employees when he disclosed their identities as per-
    sons who had been involved in the restraint and removal of
    a deceased prisoner. The deceased prisoner’s family and
    friends believed that personnel connected with the jail were
    responsible for his death, and, upon learning their identities,
    harassed and assaulted the employees. 
    Id. at 1085-86
    . Citing
    Wood, the employees contended that their supervisors demon-
    strated deliberate indifference by not promptly notifying them
    of the release of the records containing their identities and by
    not taking steps to protect them from dangers that ultimately
    became apparent. 
    Id. at 1087
    . We affirmed the district court’s
    grant of summary judgment for defendants, reasoning that the
    jail authorities could not have reasonably concluded that the
    prisoner’s family and friends would be likely to engage in
    open violence.2
    2
    There may be some latent dispute regarding whether the “proximate
    cause” requirement noted in Huffman, 
    147 F.3d at 1061
    , and Lawrence,
    
    340 F.3d at 954
    , is in addition to, or a mere rephrasing of, the requirement
    that the danger to the plaintiff must have been “known or obvious” and the
    state actor must have acted with deliberate indifference to the danger. See,
    e.g., Grubbs II, 
    92 F.3d at 899-900
    . Nonetheless, for purposes of the
    instant case, the relevance of Huffman, Lawrence and Wallenstein derives
    simply from their recognition that traditional causation principles are not
    wholly suspended in the context of a constitutional tort suit premised on
    state-created danger.
    7500                 KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD
    2.   Factors for Analysis
    As our cases illustrate, we typically consider a number of
    factors in determining whether the plaintiff has successfully
    stated a due process violation: (1) whether the act was
    directed toward a specific plaintiff or the public at large, see,
    e.g., Wood, 
    879 F.2d at 590
     (reasoning that the state’s action
    “distinguish[ed] [the plaintiff] from the general public and
    trigger[ed] a duty of the police to afford her some measure of
    peace and safety”); cf. Huffman, 
    147 F.3d at
    1061 & n.4
    (expressing doubt as to whether the plaintiff must show that
    “the danger created by a state official is directed toward a par-
    ticular plaintiff, as opposed to being directed toward the gen-
    eral public”); (2) whether the government acted affirmatively
    or simply failed to act, see, e.g., Grubbs I, 
    974 F.2d at 121
    (requiring “affirmative conduct on the part of the state in plac-
    ing the plaintiff in danger”); Munger, 227 F.3d at 1086
    (phrasing the inquiry as “whether [the state] did in fact affir-
    matively place [the plaintiff] in danger”); (3) whether the gov-
    ernment’s act caused the harm, see, e.g., Grubbs I, 
    974 F.2d at 121
     (finding state-created danger where the state’s action
    “create[d] an opportunity for [the inmate] to assault [the
    plaintiff] that would not otherwise have existed” (emphasis
    added)); Penilla, 
    115 F.3d at 708
     (same); Munger, 227 F.3d
    at 1087 (same); and (4) whether the government acted with
    the requisite culpability, see, e.g., Grubbs II, 
    92 F.3d at
    899-
    900 (requiring the plaintiff to show that the state official
    “acted with deliberate indifference to the known or obvious
    danger” (emphasis added)). Cf. Armijo v. Wagon Mound Pub.
    Sch., 
    159 F.3d 1253
    , 1264 (10th Cir. 1998) (adding a fifth fac-
    tor which considers whether the government completely
    removed all of the plaintiff’s protection); Russell v. Gregoire,
    
    124 F.3d 1079
    , 1093 n.10 (9th Cir. 1997) (stating, in dicta,
    that “a state has no general duty to protect individuals against
    potential harm by third parties unless the state creates the dan-
    ger and removes the individual’s ability to protect himself”
    (citations omitted)) . These factors closely parallel those used
    by other circuits recognizing the doctrine. See, e.g., Uhlrig v.
    KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD                  7501
    Harder, 
    64 F.3d 567
    , 573 (10th Cir. 1995) (requiring the
    plaintiff to show that (1) he “was a member of a limited and
    specifically definable group; (2) Defendants’ conduct put
    [him] and the other members of that group at substantial risk
    of serious, immediate and proximate harm; (3) the risk was
    obvious or known; (4) Defendants acted recklessly in con-
    scious disregard of that risk; and (5) such conduct, when
    viewed in total, is conscience shocking.”). My disagreement
    with the majority’s findings and conclusions centers on the
    second, third and fourth factors.
    While the Supreme Court has yet to recognize the state-
    created danger doctrine, and the circuit courts have yet to con-
    struct a unified approach either to the state-created danger
    inquiry or to the role that causation principles should play in
    the analysis, each court recognizing the theory has required,
    at a minimum, a showing that the government’s act was the
    “but-for cause” that put the plaintiff in a position of danger
    she would not otherwise have faced. See, e.g., Carlton v. Cle-
    burne County, 
    93 F.3d 505
    , 508 (8th Cir. 1996) (collecting
    cases and noting that in each case where a cognizable due
    process violation was found “the individuals would not have
    been in harm’s way but for the government’s affirmative
    actions.”); Reed v. Gardner, 
    986 F.2d 1122
    , 1126 (7th Cir.
    1993) (finding the evidence sufficient to support summary
    judgment for police officers where “without state interven-
    tion, the same danger would exist”); Salas v. Carpenter, 
    980 F.2d 299
    , 309-10 (5th Cir. 1992) (holding the City not liable
    for declining assistance from a SWAT team and taking a hard
    line with a hostage taker); Jackson v. City of Joliet, 
    715 F.2d 1200
    , 1204-05 (7th Cir. 1983) (holding officers not liable
    because they “did not create but merely failed to avert dan-
    ger” by not rescuing victims more promptly from a burning
    car). We have never recognized a state-created danger where
    the state was merely a “proximate cause” rather than the
    cause-in-fact of the plaintiff’s injuries. We have not imported
    common law tort principles to this doctrine. As the Court
    observed in DeShaney, “It may well be that, by voluntarily
    7502                    KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD
    undertaking to protect [the plaintiff] against a danger it con-
    cededly played no part in creating, the State acquired a duty
    under state tort law to provide him with adequate protection
    against that danger. . . . But the claim here is based on the Due
    Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, which, as we
    have said many times, does not transform every tort commit-
    ted by a state actor into a constitutional violation.” 
    489 U.S. at 201-02
     (citations omitted). In short, our cases, as well as
    those of our sister circuits, demand that the state’s affirmative
    act must, at the very least, be the cause-in-fact of the plain-
    tiff’s injury.
    My motive for further belaboring the federal reports with
    a dissent stems primarily from my conviction that Kennedy
    has not alleged facts sufficient to support a due process viola-
    tion, and her case against Officer Shields sounds in negli-
    gence, albeit negligence with tragic consequences. The
    majority has run afoul of our own cases and the Court’s cau-
    tion in DeShaney. I address these issues more fully below.
    B.     Constitutional Inquiry
    The majority finds fault of constitutional magnitude with
    two of Officer Shields’s actions: (1) notifying Angela Burns
    of Kennedy’s allegations prior to informing Kennedy that he
    was about to do so; and (2) promising to increase police sur-
    veillance on the night of the shooting. Maj. Op. at 7489. Nei-
    ther of these will support a due process violation.
    1.    Notification
    The majority concludes that Officer Shields in fact “aug-
    ment[ed] the danger Plaintiff and her husband faced” by
    revealing the existence of allegations against Michael to
    Angela Burns after having promised Kennedy that she would
    be notified first. Maj. Op. at 7484.3 The majority asserts that,
    3
    Kennedy did not specify how much advance warning she desired, but
    she insists that she expected to be notified before the Burns were informed
    of her allegations.
    KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD                 7503
    had she received prior warning, she and her family would
    have had the opportunity to take additional precautions. Id. at
    7484-85. The majority reaches this conclusion despite the fact
    that the Kennedys made a conscious choice to remain in their
    home for approximately eight hours after they were informed
    of the contact. Nonetheless, in light of the information Ken-
    nedy communicated to Officer Shields regarding Michael’s
    past misbehavior, the majority holds that “the obvious conse-
    quence of informing Angela Burns prior to the Kennedy fam-
    ily and of falsely assuring the Kennedy family of police
    protection was to increase the risk the Kennedy family faced
    from Michael Burns.” Id. at 7486.
    Nothing in the record supports the claim that Shields’s act
    of notifying Angela Burns of the allegations increased the risk
    facing the Kennedy family. Notifying Michael Burns was an
    inevitable consequence of Kennedy’s allegations of child
    molestation. At some point either the police or CAIC was
    going to have to talk with the Burns about the allegations.
    Kim Kennedy not only knew this, she contacted police at least
    six times to find out if the Burns had been contacted. Kennedy
    was anxious because she feared what Michael might do, and
    she knew that he would have to be informed.
    Pursuant to an inter-local agreement, after Kennedy made
    her initial complaint to the Ridgefield Police Department
    (“RPD”), the task of investigating the complaint was per-
    formed solely by a separate law enforcement unit, the Child
    Abuse Intervention Center (“CAIC”). As her only direct con-
    tact, prior to the shooting, had been with Officer Shields and
    the RPD, Kennedy had absolutely no way of ensuring that she
    received notification before CAIC made contact with the
    Burns family regarding her allegations. Indeed, Officer
    Shields represented her best chance of receiving prompt noti-
    fication of any contact with the Burns. By Kennedy’s own
    testimony, Officer Shields informed her immediately after
    contact was made, at approximately 4:30 in the afternoon.
    7504                 KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD
    The majority’s holding that Shields’s conduct “increase[d]
    the risk” facing the Kennedy family ignores the fact that the
    Kennedys were already exposed to a very real risk of danger
    of which they were aware. Id. at 7486. Contrary to the majori-
    ty’s holding, the real danger facing the Kennedy family more
    accurately stemmed from the likelihood that either the police
    or CAIC would contact the Burns without informing Ken-
    nedy. Consequently, the danger facing the Kennedy family
    existed apart from any action or conduct by Officer Shields.
    Rather than increase the risk facing the Kennedy family,
    Shields’s prompt notification appears to have given Kennedy
    her best chance for escape.
    Yet, even assuming that we could disregard these obstacles
    to find some increased risk attributable to Officer Shields, this
    would not suffice to support a constitutional violation. To find
    a cognizable due process violation we must find more than a
    mere increase in the risk facing the plaintiff. See, e.g., Huff-
    man, 
    147 F.3d at 1061
     (“The danger-creation exception to
    DeShaney does not create a broad rule that makes state offi-
    cials liable under the Fourteenth Amendment whenever they
    increase the risk of some harm to members of the public.”).
    We must determine that Officer Shields “used [his] authority
    . . . to create an opportunity for [Burns] to assault [the plain-
    tiff] that would not otherwise have existed.” Grubbs I, 
    974 F.2d at 121
     (emphasis added). In other words, we must con-
    clude, at a minimum, that, but for the state’s action, the dan-
    gerous situation facing Kennedy would not have existed. Here
    we cannot do so for the same reasons that we cannot deter-
    mine that the state “increased” the risk facing Kennedy: the
    danger that Michael Burns would learn of Kennedy’s accusa-
    tions existed independent of any action attributable to Officer
    Shields.
    An additional obstacle to the majority’s conclusion stems
    from the requisite level of culpability necessary to establish a
    due process violation premised on state-created danger. In
    order to find a due process violation, we must determine that
    KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD                  7505
    the shooting was a known or an obvious consequence of Offi-
    cer Shields’s action, and that Officer Shields “acted with
    deliberate indifference to the known or obvious danger in
    subjecting the plaintiff to it.” Grubbs II, 
    92 F.3d at 899-900
    (emphasis added). See also Wood, 
    879 F.2d at 588
    . The
    majority fails to explain how Officer Shields’s conduct meets
    this stringent culpability requirement. Rather, the majority
    simply asserts that “Shields should have recognized the obvi-
    ous consequences of his actions.” Maj. Op. at 7485. Even if
    Officer Shields knew of Michael Burns’s propensities — the
    allegations that he had threatened a classmate, tortured a cat,
    and assaulted his girlfriend — Shields could not have antici-
    pated as an “obvious consequence” that Michael would enter
    the Kennedys’ home to murder Jay and assault Kim.
    The majority’s conclusion sounds in negligence. Negli-
    gence, even gross negligence, is insufficient to establish a due
    process violation based on state-created danger. See Grubbs
    II, 
    92 F.3d at 898
    . See also DeShaney, 
    489 U.S. at 201-02
    .
    Instead, the deliberate indifference standard that we quoted
    with approval in Grubbs II requires a showing that the “ ‘de-
    fendant recognizes the unreasonable risk and actually intends
    to expose the plaintiff to such risks without regard to the con-
    sequences to the plaintiff.’ ” Grubbs II, 
    92 F.3d at 899
     (quot-
    ing Uhlrig, 
    64 F.3d at
    573 n.8). Phrased another way, the
    defendant must “have actual knowledge of, or willfully
    ignore, impending harm,” meaning “the defendant knows that
    something is going to happen but ignores the risk and exposes
    someone to it.” Grubbs II, 
    92 F.3d at 900
     (emphasis in origi-
    nal).
    The specific instances of misconduct communicated by
    Kennedy were not sufficient to put Officer Shields on notice
    that Michael Burns might attempt to murder members of the
    Kennedy family. Michael’s previous misconduct included dis-
    turbing juvenile violence, but had never included threats or
    assault with a firearm. Indeed, the record suggests that both
    Shields and Kennedy failed to appreciate the extent of the
    7506                KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD
    danger that Michael posed. Under these circumstances, it can-
    not be said that Officer Shields had “actual knowledge of, or
    willfully ignore[d], impending harm.” 
    Id.
    Even assuming, however, that Shields recognized the risk,
    his actions can hardly be said to demonstrate an intent to
    expose Kennedy to this risk without regard to the conse-
    quences. Kennedy contacted police no fewer than six times
    after her initial complaint, each time inquiring as to whether
    the Burns had been notified of her allegations. However mis-
    guided, Shields’s actions appear to have been motivated by a
    desire to promptly notify Kennedy of any contact that CAIC
    had made with the Burns. The brevity of the majority’s analy-
    sis on this point stems from the fact that there is simply no
    evidence to suggest an intent to expose Kennedy to a known
    or obvious risk, without regard to the consequences that
    would follow. Without the requisite mental state, there can be
    no constitutional violation premised on state-created danger.
    See, e.g., Grubbs II, 
    92 F.3d at 898
    ; Wood, 
    879 F.2d at 588
    .
    When one considers the alternative course of conduct
    which could have spared Shields from the outcome today, the
    artificiality of the majority’s analysis is apparent. Under the
    majority’s theory, Shields would face no liability if he simply
    reversed the order in which he visited the residence of the
    plaintiff and her would-be assailant. Or if he had simply cal-
    led Kim Kennedy from his cell phone while standing at the
    doorstep of the Burns’ home, his action, under the majority’s
    view, would have been blameless. Yet, by driving to the
    Burns’ residence and then immediately to the Kennedys’,
    Shields crossed the majority’s new constitutional line in the
    sand. According to the majority, this flipflop of no more than
    fifteen minutes is of constitutional magnitude. I cannot agree.
    Rather, I would hold that Kennedy failed to state a constitu-
    tional violation arising from the prompt notification that she
    received regarding Shields’s contact with Angela Burns.
    KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD                    7507
    2.   Promised Police Surveillance
    Officer Shields’s assurances of an increased police patrol
    on the evening of the shooting similarly fail to provide a basis
    for a due process violation. Notably, Kennedy does not claim
    that the RPD failed to patrol the area on the evening of the
    shooting. Rather, she appears to contend that Officer Shields’s
    assurances falsely led her to believe that it was safe to remain
    in her home. Kennedy was in a far better position to ascertain
    the extent of the risk she and her family faced as a result of
    Michael Burns’s knowledge of her accusations. Yet, the
    majority asserts that a jury could find in her favor solely on
    the basis of Shields’s alleged misrepresentation of “the risk
    that Michael Burns posed to Kennedy and her family.” Maj.
    Op. at 7489 (“If either . . . of these allegations were proved
    at trial, a jury could reasonably find Kennedy relied upon
    such promises of additional protection in evaluating the risks
    that Michael Burns posed to her family.”) (emphasis added).
    I have been unable to locate a single case in which a mere
    misrepresentation of the extent of danger posed to a plaintiff
    is sufficient to state a claim under the Fourteenth Amendment.
    Grubbs I provides no support for this assertion. On the con-
    trary, the court in Grubbs I relied on the state’s misrepresenta-
    tion merely as a means for bolstering its conclusion that the
    state’s affirmative act of directly placing the plaintiff in a dan-
    gerous situation — namely, assigning her to work alone with
    a known violent sex offender — created a risk that would not
    otherwise have existed. See Grubbs I, 
    974 F.2d at 121
    . See
    also Munger, 227 F.3d at 1086 (noting that the court in a
    state-created danger case “must determine whether [the state]
    did in fact affirmatively place [the plaintiff] in danger”). Ken-
    nedy’s allegations cannot be elevated to meet this threshold
    requirement simply because she asserts that she remained in
    her home based on Officer Shields’s misrepresentation of the
    risk that she and her family faced.
    The majority today holds that an officer’s mere awareness
    of a danger to the victim and his expression of intent to help
    7508                 KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD
    are sufficient to establish a due process violation. This conclu-
    sion belies the central lesson of DeShaney. In DeShaney, the
    county was undoubtedly aware of the danger facing Joshua:
    authorities were repeatedly informed that he was a probable
    victim of physical abuse over a period of two years, during
    which time he was treated by emergency room doctors for
    suspicious injuries on at least three occasions; social workers
    assigned to his case likewise reported numerous suspicious
    injuries. The county unequivocally expressed its desire to help
    Joshua, attempting on multiple occasions to intervene. A
    Child Protection Team was assembled to assess Joshua’s situ-
    ation, interview the father, and recommend action, and a case
    worker was assigned to monitor his home environment for six
    months. DeShaney, 
    489 U.S. at 192-93
    . Indeed, Winnebago
    County’s knowledge of Joshua DeShaney’s plight and its
    expressions of intent to help him were far greater than the
    City of Ridgefield’s knowledge of Kennedy’s plight and its
    expressions of intent to help her. See Balistreri v. Pacifica
    Police Dep’t., 
    901 F.2d 696
    , 700 (9th Cir. 1990) (citing
    DeShaney and declining to find a due process violation where
    the plaintiff’s allegations amounted to the assertion that “state
    actors knew of her plight and affirmatively committed to pro-
    tect her”). We are not permitted to circumvent the Court’s rul-
    ing in DeShaney simply by redefining the cause of action as
    one premised on a “state-created danger.” The City of Ridge-
    field did not create Michael Burns’s violent reaction any more
    than Winnebago County created the violent beatings that
    resulted in brain damage so severe that Joshua DeShaney “is
    expected to spend the rest of his life confined to an institution
    for the profoundly retarded.” See DeShaney, 
    489 U.S. at 193
    .
    The majority’s new rule comes perilously close to adopting
    for the Due Process Clause the tort principle that if police
    undertake to perform a service not mandated by the Constitu-
    tion, then adequate performance of the service voluntarily
    assumed is constitutionally required. It is anomalous to
    impose liability for failing in an effort not required by the
    Constitution. See, e.g., DeShaney, 
    489 U.S. at 201-02
    ;
    KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD                  7509
    Andrews v. Wilkins, 
    934 F.2d 1267
    , 1270-71 (D.C. Cir. 1991).
    More troubling in my view, however, is the potential for per-
    verse incentives; if liability is the logical result of anything
    less than complete success, police will naturally be hesitant to
    respond at all when faced with a situation such as Kennedy’s.
    The result is less police protection, not more. This conse-
    quence is dangerous and, I believe, unnecessary.
    In sum, I would hold that Kennedy failed to establish a due
    process violation arising from Officer Shields’s actions either
    in notifying the Burns of her allegations prior to warning her,
    or offering to increase surveillance on the evening of the
    shooting. Accordingly, I would hold that she failed to estab-
    lish a cognizable due process violation premised on state-
    created danger.
    C.   Qualified Immunity Inquiry
    Even assuming, as the majority maintains, that Kennedy
    has established a due process violation premised on state-
    created danger, in order to bind this case over for trial we
    must determine that the constitutional right at issue was
    “clearly established” at the time of the events in question. We
    must hold that a “reasonable official” in Officer Shields’s
    position “would understand that what he is doing violates that
    right,” Saucier, 533 U.S. at 202, keeping in mind that “offi-
    cials will not be liable for mere mistakes in judgment,
    whether the mistake is one of fact or one of law.” Butz v.
    Economou, 
    438 U.S. 478
    , 507 (1978). Indeed, “[e]ven defen-
    dants who violate constitutional rights enjoy a qualified
    immunity that protects them from liability for damages unless
    it is further demonstrated that their conduct was unreasonable
    under the applicable standard.” Davis v. Scherer, 
    468 U.S. 183
    , 190 (1984). As the Court has repeatedly emphasized,
    “the qualified immunity defense . . . provides ample protec-
    tion to all but the plainly incompetent or those who knowingly
    violate the law.” Malley v. Briggs, 
    475 U.S. 335
    , 342 (1986).
    See also Burns v. Reed, 
    500 U.S. 478
    , 494-95 (1991). Particu-
    7510                 KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD
    larly in a context where the potential for liability may chill
    lawful and socially desirable behavior at the edge of the “for-
    bidden zone,” qualified immunity ensures that “officials can
    act without fear of harassing litigation” and “can anticipate
    when their conduct may give rise to liability for damages.”
    Davis, 
    468 U.S. at 195
    .
    Imbued with notions of “reasonableness” and “fair warn-
    ing,” the “concern of the immunity inquiry is to acknowledge
    that reasonable mistakes can be made as to the legal con-
    straints on particular [official] conduct.” Saucier, 533 U.S. at
    205. The central dispositive inquiry essential to finding a right
    “clearly established” is “whether it would be clear to a reason-
    able officer that his conduct was unlawful in the situation he
    confronted.” Id. at 202. Importantly, our analysis must
    acknowledge and evaluate the specific context of the situation
    confronted by the official. Id. See also Brosseau v. Haugen,
    ___ U.S. ___, ___, 
    125 S.Ct. 596
    , 599 (2004) (“It is important
    to emphasize that this inquiry ‘must be undertaken in light of
    the specific context of the case, not as a broad general propo-
    sition.’ ” (quoting Saucier, 533 U.S. at 201)). With this per-
    spective in mind, I would hold that Officer Shields is entitled
    to qualified immunity.
    Citing only our decision in Grubbs I, the majority holds
    that “Shields was on notice that informing Angela Burns of
    Kennedy’s allegations prior to warning the Kennedy family
    and falsely promising a police patrol that evening would vio-
    late Kennedy’s constitutional rights.” Maj. Op. at 7488.
    Grubbs I did not even begin the heavy lifting necessary to
    sustain the majority’s conclusions in this case.
    While perhaps superficially similar on some level, several
    key facts that were present in Grubbs I are missing from this
    case. The prison nurse who was battered, kidnaped, robbed
    and raped by an inmate in Grubbs I was led to believe that she
    would not have to work alone with residents who were known
    violent sex offenders. 
    974 F.2d at 120
    . Grubbs I, thus,
    KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD                   7511
    involved a plaintiff who was completely unaware of the risks
    she faced and a state defendant fully apprised of the danger.
    Kennedy, on the other hand, possessed superior knowledge of
    the danger she faced from Michael Burns, and Officer Shields
    never assured her that the danger of which she was aware no
    longer existed. Even according to Kennedy’s own testimony,
    Shields merely offered to increase surveillance in the neigh-
    borhood on the evening of the shooting.
    Grubbs I also involved affirmative conduct, on the part of
    the state, which created a risk that otherwise would not have
    existed. We concluded that, by assigning the nurse to work
    alone with a sexually violent prisoner, the defendants “used
    their authority as state correctional officers to create an oppor-
    tunity for [the inmate] to assault [the plaintiff] that would not
    otherwise have existed.” 
    Id. at 121
     (emphasis added). The
    same cannot be said of Kennedy’s complaint; indeed, the
    record suggests precisely the opposite. As reflected in Kenne-
    dy’s repeated calls to the RPD, the danger facing her family
    stemmed from the probability that CAIC would begin the
    investigation without ever communicating as much to her.
    This risk existed apart from any action attributable to Officer
    Shields. In short, I cannot join the majority’s holding that
    Grubbs I put Officer Shields on notice that by responding to
    Kennedy’s phone message, informing Angela Burns of Ken-
    nedy’s allegations, immediately notifying Kennedy of as
    much and offering to increase surveillance in the neighbor-
    hood, he was acting with deliberate indifference to a known
    or obvious danger.
    No case of which I am aware, either in our circuit or any
    other, has found a cognizable due process violation on facts
    remotely analogous to these. On the contrary, in the case clos-
    est to this one, we concluded that the plaintiff could not estab-
    lish a due process violation. See Nicholas v. Wallenstein, 
    266 F.3d 1083
     (9th Cir. 2001). The facts of Wallenstein are strik-
    ingly similar: A state officer released the plaintiffs’ identities
    to an angry group of family and friends; plaintiffs were imme-
    7512                KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD
    diately harassed and assaulted. 
    Id. at 1084-85
    . The plaintiffs
    argued that the release “was done with deliberate indifference
    to the danger to them and that this indifference continued in
    the refusal of the defendants to afford them protection from
    the danger.” 
    Id.
     We concluded that “[a]t the moment [the state
    official] released the incident reports he knew that the crowd
    to whom he was releasing them believed that personnel con-
    nected with the jail had killed” the deceased prisoner and that
    the release of this information “would excite the crowd.” 
    Id. at 1087
    . Yet, when presented with these facts, only three
    years ago, we held that the “plaintiffs failed to produce evi-
    dence that would create a triable issue of material fact show-
    ing that the danger was known or obvious to the defendants.”
    
    Id. at 1085
    . What we stated there bears repeating here:
    “Knowing that the crowd was angry was not knowing that
    they would take criminal measures to make the jailors or their
    health helpers pay.” 
    Id. at 1087
    .
    Moreover, since we first recognized the state-created dan-
    ger doctrine, we have always drawn a sharp distinction
    between facts demonstrating that police action created the
    danger to the person and facts demonstrating a danger that
    existed without police action. See Wood, 
    879 F.2d at 589-90
    .
    In addition, since Grubbs II we have required plaintiffs to
    meet a stringent culpability requirement designed to prevent
    the imposition of § 1983 liability for negligent conduct, even
    grossly negligent conduct. 
    92 F.3d at 899-900
    . And since Huf-
    fman, 
    147 F.3d at 1061
    , and Lawrence, 
    340 F.3d at 957
    , we
    have emphasized that the requisite culpability must relate to
    consequences which were foreseeable. The majority’s conclu-
    sion in this case does not simply whittle away at these
    requirements; it completely reinvents them.
    Consequently, I cannot envision how it “would be clear to
    a reasonable officer that his conduct was unlawful” in the sit-
    uation at issue in this case. Saucier, 533, U.S. at 202. Assum-
    ing arguendo that Kennedy’s allegations are sufficient to state
    a constitutional violation, I would hold that, taking into
    KENNEDY v. RIDGEFIELD                  7513
    account the “specific context of th[is] case,” the right was not
    clearly established at the time Officer Shields acted, and
    Shields is thus entitled to qualified immunity. Id. at 201.
    There is no way Shields could have anticipated that his fifteen
    minute delay in notifying Kennedy of his contact with Angela
    Burns or his assurance of additional police surveillance would
    operate to deprive her of her rights under the Due Process
    Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Even if he had read
    Grubbs I — but especially if he had read Wallenstein — Offi-
    cer Shields could not have known that his conduct would vio-
    late clearly established constitutional rights. See Meyers v.
    Redwood City, 
    400 F.3d 765
    , 774 (9th Cir. 2005) (“Even with
    a copy of Harris in their back pockets, the officers could not
    have determined at what point in the middle of this messy
    repossession they deprived Meyers of her property without
    due process of law.”). At the very least, after Saucier, the
    court should have declared a constitutional violation but
    granted qualified immunity in this case.
    III.    CONCLUSION
    Given the tragic circumstances in which this case arises, the
    Court’s instruction in DeShaney seems especially apt: “Judges
    and lawyers, like other humans, are moved by natural sympa-
    thy in a case like this” to find a way for Kennedy and her fam-
    ily “to receive adequate compensation for the grievous harm
    inflicted upon them. But before yielding to that impulse, it is
    well to remember once again that the harm was inflicted not
    by the State,” but by Michael Burns. 
    489 U.S. at 202-03
    . The
    people of Washington may prefer, and are free to adopt, a sys-
    tem of tort liability which would place upon the State and its
    officials the responsibility for situations such as the present
    one. “But they should not have it thrust upon them by this
    [c]ourt’s expansion of the Due Process Clause of the Four-
    teenth Amendment.” 
    Id. at 203
    .
    I respectfully dissent.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 03-35333

Citation Numbers: 411 F.3d 1134

Filed Date: 6/22/2005

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

Authorities (37)

gregg-d-uhlrig-of-the-estate-of-stephanie-uhlrig-deceased-gregg-d , 64 F.3d 567 ( 1995 )

Armijo Ex Rel. Chavez v. Wagon Mound Public Schools , 159 F.3d 1253 ( 1998 )

L.W. v. Dee Grubbs Thomas Nelson Marlin Hutton Richard Hill , 92 F.3d 894 ( 1996 )

dora-salas-individually-and-as-representative-of-the-estate-of-obo-juanita , 980 F.2d 299 ( 1992 )

richard-reed-individually-and-as-administrator-of-the-decedents-estates , 986 F.2d 1122 ( 1993 )

james-r-jackson-individually-and-as-administrator-of-the-estates-of , 715 F.2d 1200 ( 1983 )

97-cal-daily-op-serv-4285-97-daily-journal-dar-7173-maria-penilla , 115 F.3d 707 ( 1997 )

Gerald A. Huffman Gunilla Lukse v. County of Los Angeles ... , 147 F.3d 1054 ( 1998 )

tammy-nicholas-sheryl-allbert-jonathan-t-dutczak-david-l-harding-abraham , 266 F.3d 1083 ( 2001 )

kely-wilkins-individually-and-as-the-successor-in-interest-to-decedent , 350 F.3d 949 ( 2003 )

Estate of Jeffrey Ford v. Ramirez-Palmer , 301 F.3d 1043 ( 2002 )

Jena Balistreri v. Pacifica Police Department Al Olsen, ... , 901 F.2d 696 ( 1990 )

96-cal-daily-op-serv-2570-96-daily-journal-dar-4282-wang-zong-xiao , 81 F.3d 808 ( 1996 )

alana-flores-f-f-a-minor-by-and-through-guardian-ad-litem-jd-a , 324 F.3d 1130 ( 2003 )

jessica-lawrence-v-united-states-of-america-matt-hanrahan-timothy-m , 340 F.3d 952 ( 2003 )

Henry H. Cunningham v. City of Wenatchee, and Robert R. ... , 345 F.3d 802 ( 2003 )

99-cal-daily-op-serv-4076-1999-daily-journal-dar-5209-roger-christie , 176 F.3d 1231 ( 1999 )

elizabeth-meyers-millie-rovetta-v-redwood-city-a-municipal-entity , 400 F.3d 765 ( 2005 )

97-cal-daily-op-serv-7137-97-daily-journal-dar-11517-willie , 124 F.3d 1079 ( 1997 )

Ed Knox, an Individual v. Southwest Airlines, a Texas ... , 124 F.3d 1103 ( 1997 )

View All Authorities »