Reed Dempsey v. Bucknell University , 834 F.3d 457 ( 2016 )


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  •                                       PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    _____________
    No. 15-1328
    _____________
    REED C. DEMPSEY;
    SHELLEY DEMPSEY
    v.
    BUCKNELL UNIVERSITY; JOHN C. BRAVMAN;
    LEWIS A. MARARRA; DANIEL C. REMLEY;
    AMY A. BADAL; LINDA LOCHER; KARI M. CONRAD;
    MICHAEL SMYER; CHIEF JASON FRIEDBURG;
    OFFICER JULIE HOLTZAPPLE;
    OFFICER DARRELL FISHER;
    OFFICER ROBERT ULMER;
    OFFICER JAMES MIDDLETON; OFFICER JED RISHEL;
    DETECTIVE JEFFREY ETTINGER;
    CAPTAIN DOUGLAS LAUVER; ANTHONY J. VOCI, JR.
    Reed C. Dempsey,
    Appellant
    _______________
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Middle District of Pennsylvania
    (District Court No. 4-11-cv-01679)
    District Judge: Honorable Matthew W. Brann
    _______________
    Argued: January 26, 2016
    Before: VANASKIE, SHWARTZ, and KRAUSE, Circuit
    Judges
    (Opinion Filed: August 22, 2016)
    _______________
    Dennis E. Boyle, Esq. [ARGUED]
    Kenneth E. Raleigh, Esq.
    Fox Rothschild
    1030 15th Street, N.W.
    Suite 360 East
    Washington, DC 20005
    Counsel for Appellants
    Amy C. Foerster, Esq.
    Bucknell University
    217A Marts Hall
    Lewisburg, PA 17837
    James A. Keller, Esq. [ARGUED]
    Saul Ewing
    1500 Market Street
    Centre Square West, 38th Floor
    Philadelphia, PA 19102
    2
    Cory S. Winter, Esq.
    Saul Ewing
    Two North Second Street
    Penn National Insurance Tower, 7th Floor
    Harrisburg, PA 17101
    Counsel for Appellees
    _______________
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    ______________
    KRAUSE, Circuit Judge.
    Reed Dempsey brought a civil rights action under 42
    U.S.C. § 1983 against Bucknell University, Bucknell
    University Public Safety (“BUPS”)1 officers, and Bucknell
    University officials (collectively, the “Bucknell Defendants”)
    claiming violations of his Fourth Amendment right to be free
    from unlawful search and seizure. Because we agree with the
    District Court that, even taking into account certain facts
    recklessly omitted from the affidavit of probable cause, a
    reasonable jury could not find a lack of probable cause, we
    will affirm the District Court’s grant of summary judgment in
    favor of the Bucknell Defendants.
    I.    Background
    1
    Although Bucknell University is a private institution,
    BUPS officers are sworn police officers pursuant to 22 Pa.
    Cons. Stat. § 501. For this reason, their official actions are
    taken “under color of state authority” for purposes of § 1983.
    Henderson v. Fisher, 
    631 F.2d 1115
    , 1118-19 (3d Cir. 1980).
    3
    A.     Factual History
    On Sunday, September 5, 2010, BUPS officer Julie
    Holtzapple received a phone call from the father of a
    nineteen-year-old        Bucknell      undergraduate,       Kelly
    Stefanowicz, reporting that she had been assaulted by a
    fellow student, Reed Dempsey, on campus in the early hours
    of that day. Officer Holtzapple requested that Stefanowicz
    come to the BUPS office to speak with her and other officers
    about the incident, which Stefanowicz did. In that interview,
    Stefanowicz gave a detailed account of the incident. She
    explained that, after a night out during which both she and
    Dempsey had consumed alcohol, the two began playfully
    “wrestling,” first in Kelly’s room, then in the hallway of their
    shared residence hall, and finally in Dempsey’s room, where
    other students were gathered. J.A. 322. When the other
    students left the two alone, Dempsey “picked [Stefanowicz]
    up and . . . put [her] on the futon” in his room, got on top of
    her, and put her hands over her head. J.A. 322. Stefanowicz
    told the officers that Dempsey “was . . . getting off to it” and
    that “he was . . . hard to it.” J.A. 327. She stated that they
    then struggled on the futon, and she “br[oke] free from him”
    and ran into the hall where other students were gathered. J.A.
    322. Stefanowicz explained that when she entered the hall,
    she was laughing because she was out of breath and “in
    shock,” but that when Dempsey caught up to her in the hall
    she “five-starred [i.e., slapped,] him right across the face” and
    told him to “leave [her] alone” in front of the other students.
    J.A.322, 324. She reported that as she was walking away
    from him, he grabbed both of her arms, causing her to fall,
    and “tackled” her to the ground, where she struggled,
    sustaining large scrapes and bruises to her face and shoulder,
    which were visible to the officers who interviewed her. J.A.
    4
    324. She told the officers that she also had marks and bruises
    in several other places, including her “inner thigh,” “butt,”
    and “boobs,” as a result of the incident. J.A. 324-25.
    Stefanowicz also recounted in this interview that after
    she had returned to her room, her resident advisor (“R.A.”), a
    fellow Bucknell undergraduate, came by her room, asked her
    if she was going to file a report, and “kind of just . . .
    laughed.” J.A. 325. She then showed the interviewing
    officers three text messages that she had received from
    Dempsey after the incident: one at 2:43 AM that read,
    “Sorry…I’m bleeding in several places and bruises all
    over…but that was unnecessary on my part”; one at 3:35 AM
    that read, “I honestly feel horrible…I’m so sorry”; and one at
    5:11 PM that read, “Are you alright?” J.A. 335. Following
    the interview, Stefanowicz went to a nearby hospital for a
    medical examination in which staff noted injuries to her
    “head,” “chest,” and “right lower extremity” and took
    photographs documenting these injuries. J.A. 851.
    That same day, another BUPS officer contacted
    Dempsey, who agreed to meet for an interview regarding the
    incident. Dempsey gave the interviewing officers a written
    statement he had prepared, as well as an oral interview.2 As
    reflected in the incident report, Dempsey told the officers that
    after a night out with friends, he returned to his residence hall,
    that he and Stefanowicz “started wrestling around in
    [Dempsey’s] room,” as they had done in the past, and that “it
    started to get more intense and Stefanowicz punched him in
    2
    The record on appeal contains neither a copy of this
    written statement nor a transcript of the interview. The only
    documentation of these statements appears in a summary
    entered into the BUPS incident report.
    5
    the groin.” J.A. 268. According to Dempsey, although his
    roommate, Wade Payson-Denney, and his roommate’s friend,
    Gabriela Ors, were in the room with them “pretty much the
    whole time,” there was a period of “about a minute” during
    which he and Stefanowicz were alone in the room, and “that
    is when he got punched in the groin.” J.A. 268. Dempsey
    stated that Stefanowicz then got up and went into the hallway,
    and he followed her and “asked her to come back and she
    wouldn’t so he caught up to her and . . . placed his arms
    around her and gave her a bear hug,” causing the two of them
    to fall forward. J.A. 268. Dempsey explained that at that
    time he expressed concern “that he hurt her and that he would
    be in trouble,” and Stefanowicz told him “she was not going
    to press charges or get him in trouble.” J.A. 268. Dempsey
    reported, however, that “[a]fter everything started to die
    down . . . Stefanowicz would walk by him and either slap or
    punch him in the back to try and get him going again.” J.A.
    268-69. Dempsey stated that at that point, he “went back to
    his room and stayed there the rest of the night.” J.A. 269.
    Following the leads from Stefanowicz’s and
    Dempsey’s interviews, BUPS obtained written statements
    from a number of people who had witnessed parts of what
    occurred first-hand or had spoken to Stefanowicz or Dempsey
    soon after the incident. These included, among others, fellow
    Bucknell undergraduates Morgan Slade, Demitri Carahalios,
    Wade Payson-Denney, Gabriela Ors, Kristen Brundage,
    Gregory Fast, Raina Masand, Andrew Watts, Rebecca
    Neubauer, and Stefanowicz’s R.A., Michael Sena. BUPS
    also obtained a written statement from Stefanowicz
    recounting the incident.
    Based on this evidence, on September 7, 2010, BUPS
    filed a criminal complaint, accompanied by an affidavit of
    6
    probable cause signed by Officer Holtzapple, charging
    Dempsey with simple assault, harassment, and disorderly
    conduct in violation of Pennsylvania law. On the basis of that
    complaint and affidavit, the magistrate issued a warrant, and
    Dempsey was arraigned that same day. The affidavit
    provided the following distillation of the results of the BUPS
    officers’ investigation into the incident3:
    On Sunday, September 5, 2010 at
    approximately 1957 hours, Officer Darrel
    Fisher, Officer Robert Ulmer and Officer Jule
    Holtzapple, all are officer’s currently with the
    Bucknell University Department of Public
    Safety/ Police Department, spoke with Kelly
    Stefanowicz.
    Kelly Stefanowicz interview is as follows:
    On Sunday, September 5, 2010, at
    approximately 0200 hours, Kelly walked home
    with two of her friends, Morgan Slade and
    Demitri Carahalios, to her room, 166 Smith
    Hall, Bucknell University, Lewisburg Pa.
    17837.
    Before entering her room, Kelly had pointed at
    Reed Dempsey. Reed then proceeded into
    Kelly’s room and hung out with Kelly, Morgan,
    and Dimitri. Kelly stated that Reed and she
    began to wrestle playfully in her room. Kelly
    3
    The affidavit is reprinted without typographical
    corrections.
    7
    stated she was not intimidated by Reed at this
    time and believed wrestling to be playful.
    Kelly stated that after a short time Reed had
    picked her up and carried her over his shoulder.
    Reed Dempsey carried Kelly Stefanowicz into
    his room, which is Smith 138, Bucknell
    University, Lewisburg Pa. 17837.
    Two people were in Reed’s room at this time,
    roommate Wade Payson-Denny and Gregory
    Fast. Kelly stated that Reed put her down from
    carrying her and sat her on his lap. Reed would
    not release Kelly from his lap and held her
    down, making her sit on his lap.
    Kelly stated shortly after this happened, both
    Wade Payson-Denny and Gregory Fast left
    Reed Dempsey room. Reed’s room door shut
    automatically, after both men left the room.
    Kelly stated that at this time she no longer felt
    safe around Reed. Kelly stated that Reed’s
    behavior had turned instantly. It was at this
    time that Reed picked Kelly up from sitting on
    his lap and threw her onto a futon in the room.
    Reed laid on top of Kelly keeping her from
    sitting up. Kelly stated she attempted to push
    Reed off of her. He grabbed both of Kelly’s
    hands and held them forcefully above her head.
    Kelly stated that Reed’s penis was now erect
    under his clothes. He was on top of her and
    pinning her to the futon. Kelly believes that
    Reed was excited and that he was in total
    8
    control of her. Kelly began to yell at Reed “to
    get off of me” and “just stop it.” She was in
    fear of getting raped by Reed. Kelly was able
    to release one of her hands and slapped Reed
    across the face. Kelly and Reed then rolled off
    of the futon, falling to the floor.
    It was at this time that Kelly fell to the ground
    and landed on top of Reed. Kelly was able to
    get off of the ground, open the closed door, and
    run out into the hallway.
    As she was walking away from Reed, and
    ignoring him, as he was calling for her to come
    back into his room. Kelly stated that people in
    the hallway were laughing at Reed and making
    fun of him because Kelly had turned him down
    in his room.
    Reed next grabbed Kelly’s arm and began to
    pull on it. Kelly attempted to get away from
    Reed by pulling away from him. Reed then
    grabbed both of Kelly’s arms and held them
    behind him. Reed then fell onto Kelly, causing
    her to fall to the floor, landing on the left side of
    her face and also her right shoulder. Reed then
    stood up. Kelly then proceeded to her room,
    166 Smith Hall, Bucknell University, to end this
    encounter.
    Kelly displayed text messages from Reed
    following this incident. Text messages were
    sent at 0243 hours, 0335 hours, and 0511 hours.
    Photographs were taken of messages on phone
    9
    from Reed. These messages related to remorse
    for this incident and he was checking on her
    welfare.
    Kelly Stefanowicz wants to proceed with
    criminal charges in this case. Medical treatment
    was obtained at Evangelical Community
    Hospital, 1 Hospital Drive, Lewisburg Pa.
    17837. Photographs and medical report will be
    obtained on Wednesday, September 8, 2010.
    J.A. 452-53.
    After Dempsey’s initial arraignment, BUPS officers
    continued to investigate the case. In her September 5
    interview, Stefanowicz had told the officers that she was
    aware of an earlier incident between Rebecca Neubauer,
    another Bucknell undergraduate, and Dempsey, where
    Neubauer was “extremely intoxicated” and Dempsey “t[ook]
    advantage of her.” J.A. 324. Following up on this
    information, Officer Holtzapple interviewed Neubauer on
    September 8. In that interview and a written statement,
    Neubauer indicated that Stefanowicz’s version of events was
    not the “full story” and that she had “nothing to speak about
    that would be relevant to Kelly’s incident.” J.A. 275.
    On September 9, BUPS officers conducted a second
    interview with Stefanowicz in which she discussed in greater
    detail the sexual component of the alleged assault against her.
    The following day, BUPS officers filed a second criminal
    complaint adding indecent assault and false imprisonment
    charges against Dempsey. The affidavit of probable cause
    was substantially the same.
    10
    After Dempsey’s arraignment on the additional
    charges, BUPS officers continued to gather information
    related to the allegations, including a second statement by
    Gregory Fast. Specifically, the BUPS incident report reflects
    that following his written statement on September 5, Fast
    gave an interview on September 12 in which he stated that he
    saw Dempsey and Stefanowicz “on a futon wrestling” and
    that Stefanowicz “appeared as if she was trying to pin
    Dempsey.” J.A. 284. The incident report also suggests,
    based on this statement, that Fast may have entered the room
    while Dempsey and Stefanowicz were alone.
    On October 29, 2010, the District Attorney of Union
    County, Pennsylvania, Peter Johnson, withdrew all the
    charges against Dempsey. In a statement reported by a local
    news outlet, Johnson explained that “[t]he nature of the
    alleged crime and the surrounding circumstances make it
    difficult to prove what happened beyond a reasonable doubt.”
    J.A. 535.4
    B.     Procedural History
    On September 6, 2011, nearly a year after the incident,
    Dempsey and his mother, Shelley Dempsey, brought suit
    against the Bucknell Defendants in the United States District
    Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania under 42
    U.S.C. § 1983. In their 18-count complaint, the Dempseys
    4
    Prior to the withdrawal of the criminal charges,
    Stefanowicz and Dempsey initiated student conduct
    proceedings against each other pursuant to Bucknell
    University’s internal procedures. As a result of those
    proceedings, both were found guilty of disorderly conduct.
    11
    asserted claims of false arrest, malicious prosecution, false
    imprisonment, supervisory liability, and violations of Title
    IX, as well as accompanying civil conspiracy and state law
    tort and breach of contract claims against the Bucknell
    Defendants. The District Court dismissed nine of these
    claims and then, after discovery, granted summary judgment
    to the Bucknell Defendants on the remaining claims.5
    Dempsey v. Bucknell Univ., 
    76 F. Supp. 3d 565
    , 570 (M.D.
    Pa. 2015), amended in part, No. 4:11-CV-1679, 
    2015 WL 999101
    (M.D. Pa. Mar. 6, 2015).
    On appeal, Dempsey contends that the District Court
    erred in granting summary judgment on his false arrest,
    malicious prosecution, false imprisonment, and supervisory
    liability claims. Specifically, he argues that although the
    District Court properly determined that Officer Holtzapple
    recklessly omitted information from the affidavit of probable
    cause supporting the criminal complaint against Dempsey, the
    District Court incorrectly concluded that the omitted
    5
    In the same complaint, the Dempseys also brought a
    claim of defamation against Anthony Voci, an attorney acting
    on behalf of the Stefanowiczs, based on statements he made
    to the media and to Bucknell University officials. The
    District Court denied summary judgment on that claim, but
    determined that “[t]he claims against the Bucknell Defendants
    and Defendant Voci do not raise the same legal questions, nor
    do they depend upon proof of the same facts.” Dempsey v.
    Bucknell Univ., No. 4:11-CV-1679, 
    2015 WL 999101
    , at *2
    (M.D. Pa. Mar. 6, 2015). Accordingly, the District Court
    entered a final judgment pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 54(d) as
    to the claims against the Bucknell Defendants only, and thus
    those are the only claims we may consider in this appeal.
    12
    information was not material to the probable cause
    determination. Because none of Dempsey’s four claims
    survives if there was probable cause for the charges against
    him, our conclusion on that question is dispositive of this
    appeal.
    II.   Jurisdiction & Standard of Review
    The District Court had jurisdiction over Dempsey’s
    § 1983 claims pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1331, and we have
    jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. Our review of the
    District Court’s grant of summary judgment is plenary.
    Reedy v. Evanson, 
    615 F.3d 197
    , 210 (3d Cir. 2010). We will
    affirm the District Court only if we conclude “there is no
    genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is
    entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P.
    56(a). We must view the facts in the light most favorable to
    Dempsey, and he “is entitled to every reasonable inference
    that can be drawn from the record.” Merkle v. Upper Dublin
    Sch. Dist., 
    211 F.3d 782
    , 788 (3d Cir. 2000). We do not
    weigh the evidence; rather, we determine “whether the
    evidence of record is such that a reasonable jury could return
    a verdict for the nonmoving party.” 
    Reedy, 615 F.3d at 210
    .
    Thus, in this case, summary judgment is only appropriate if
    “a reasonable jury could not find a lack of probable cause.”
    See Montgomery v. De Simone, 
    159 F.3d 120
    , 124 (3d Cir.
    1998) (citing Deary v. Three Un-Named Police Officers, 
    746 F.2d 185
    , 191 (3d Cir. 1984)).
    13
    III.   Discussion
    A.     Legal Standards
    Before turning to the facts of the case at hand, we
    address the legal standards governing our inquiry: probable
    cause and the procedure district courts are expected to use
    when reviewing a probable cause determination underlying a
    warrant.
    1.     Probable Cause
    The Fourth Amendment prohibits police from making
    an arrest except “upon probable cause, supported by Oath or
    affirmation.” U.S. Const. amend. IV. Far from demanding
    proof of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, “[p]robable cause
    exists if there is a ‘fair probability’ that the person committed
    the crime at issue.” Wilson v. Russo, 
    212 F.3d 781
    , 789 (3d
    Cir. 2000) (quoting Sherwood v. Mulvihill, 
    113 F.3d 396
    , 401
    (3d Cir. 1997)). Put another way, “probable cause to arrest
    exists when the facts and circumstances within the arresting
    officer’s knowledge are sufficient in themselves to warrant a
    reasonable person to believe that an offense has been or is
    being committed by the person to be arrested.” Orsatti v. N.J.
    State Police, 
    71 F.3d 480
    , 483 (3d Cir. 1995). The probable
    cause standard thus provides individuals protection “against
    unreasonable searches and seizures,” U.S. Const. amend. IV,
    while simultaneously enabling investigating officers to act
    quickly—before necessarily obtaining evidence sufficient to
    prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt—to effect an arrest.
    “[T]he standard does not require that officers correctly
    resolve conflicting evidence or that their determinations of
    credibility, were, in retrospect, accurate.” Wright v. City of
    Phila., 
    409 F.3d 595
    , 603 (3d Cir. 2005).
    14
    As the Supreme Court has observed, “[i]n dealing with
    probable cause, . . . as the very name implies, we deal with
    probabilities. These are not technical; they are the factual and
    practical considerations of everyday life on which reasonable
    and prudent men, not legal technicians, act.” Illinois v. Gates,
    
    462 U.S. 213
    , 231 (1983) (quoting Brinegar v. United States,
    
    338 U.S. 160
    , 175 (1949) (alteration in original)). For this
    reason, the Court has eschewed “any rigid demand that
    specific ‘tests’ be satisfied” and has instead prescribed a
    “totality-of-the-circumstances approach” to the probable
    cause determination. 
    Id. at 230-31.
    That determination is
    necessarily fact-intensive, and it will usually be appropriate
    for a jury to determine whether probable cause existed. See
    
    Sherwood, 113 F.3d at 401
    (“Typically, the existence of
    probable cause in a section 1983 action is a question of fact.”
    (citing Groman v. Twp. of Manalapan, 
    47 F.3d 628
    , 635 (3d
    Cir. 1995))). Nevertheless, summary judgment may be
    granted on the question of probable cause if a court concludes
    that “the evidence, viewed most favorably to [the nonmoving
    party], reasonably would not support a contrary factual
    finding.” Id.6
    6
    We are satisfied that the District Court correctly
    identified and applied this high standard in reaching its
    decision, but we note that its citation of the standard for
    qualified immunity in the same discussion gives us pause.
    The qualified immunity standard inverts the standard
    applicable here, providing instead that “there can be no
    liability on the part of the arresting officer unless ‘no
    reasonably competent officer’ would conclude that probable
    cause existed.” 
    Dempsey, 76 F. Supp. 3d at 577
    (quoting
    Malley v. Briggs, 
    475 U.S. 335
    , 341 (1986)). Where, as in
    15
    There is a tension inherent in evaluating probable
    cause at the summary judgment stage. On the one hand, the
    summary judgment standard asks whether there is a “genuine
    dispute as to any material fact,” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a), viewing
    the evidence “in the light most favorable to the non-moving
    party,” 
    Reedy, 615 F.3d at 210
    . On the other hand, the
    probable cause standard by definition allows for the existence
    of conflicting, even irreconcilable, evidence. See, e.g.,
    
    Wright, 409 F.3d at 603
    . In his brief on appeal, Dempsey
    urges us to resolve this tension by omitting from our
    consideration of probable cause any facts unfavorable to him
    that conflict with favorable facts. For example, as will be
    discussed further below, witness statements indicated that the
    time Dempsey and Stefanowicz were alone together was
    anywhere between one minute and ten minutes, but Dempsey
    argues that “in the light most favorable to Mr. Dempsey, the
    pair were alone for only one minute.” Appellant’s Br. 36-37.
    We reject Dempsey’s proposed approach. While it is
    axiomatic that at the summary judgment stage, we view the
    facts in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, it
    does not follow that we exclude from the probable cause
    analysis unfavorable facts an officer otherwise would have
    been able to consider. Instead, we view all such facts and
    assess whether any reasonable jury could conclude that those
    facts, considered in their totality in the light most favorable to
    the nonmoving party, did not demonstrate a “fair probability”
    this case, the defendants have not pressed qualified immunity,
    that standard should play no role in a district court’s
    determination of whether no reasonable jury could find a lack
    of probable cause such that summary judgment in favor of the
    defendant officers is appropriate.
    16
    that a crime occurred. Only then would the existence of
    conflicting evidence rise to the level of a “genuine dispute as
    to any material fact” such that summary judgment would be
    inappropriate. Thus, where the question is one of probable
    cause, the summary judgment standard must tolerate
    conflicting evidence to the extent it is permitted by the
    probable cause standard.
    2.      Reviewing a Probable Cause
    Determination
    Dempsey contends that the affidavit sworn by Officer
    Holtzapple reflected a false version of events and that an
    accurate affidavit would not establish probable cause. To
    prevail on this claim, Dempsey must make two showings:
    first, that the officer, with at least a reckless disregard for the
    truth, “made false statements or omissions that create[d] a
    falsehood in applying for a warrant,” and second, that those
    assertions or omissions were “material, or necessary, to the
    finding of probable cause.” 
    Wilson, 212 F.3d at 786-87
    (quoting 
    Sherwood, 113 F.3d at 399
    ).
    An officer seeking a warrant on the basis of probable
    cause must follow a two-step process. First, the officer
    swears to an affidavit containing a summary of the events that
    she believes give rise to probable cause. In doing so, the
    officer “is not free to disregard plainly exculpatory evidence,
    even if substantial inculpatory evidence (standing by itself)
    suggests that probable cause exists.” 
    Id. at 790
    (quoting
    Kuehl v. Burtis, 
    173 F.3d 646
    , 650 (8th Cir. 1999)). Second,
    the officer presents the affidavit to a neutral magistrate, who
    conducts his own independent review of the evidence to
    determine whether it does, in fact, establish probable cause,
    and, if so, issues a warrant.
    17
    In this way, our system protects the public from the
    harm caused by criminals as well as the harm that would
    result if no process were required to obtain a warrant; it
    allows officers to pursue leads zealously while also ensuring
    that an arrest warrant will issue only if “a neutral and
    detached magistrate” agrees with the officer that probable
    cause exists. 
    Id. at 787
    (“[A]n uninterested party is
    presumably better suited to review and evaluate the facts than
    an officer pursuing a lead.”); see United States v. Leon, 
    468 U.S. 897
    , 913-14 (1984) (“[T]he detached scrutiny of a
    neutral magistrate . . . is a more reliable safeguard [against
    Fourth Amendment violations] than the hurried judgment of a
    law enforcement officer . . . .”) (quoting United States v.
    Chadwick, 
    433 U.S. 1
    , 9 (1977)). If, however, the officer
    does not provide the neutral magistrate with an accurate
    affidavit of probable cause, the protection afforded by the
    magistrate’s review is lost; the magistrate will be unable to
    assess the circumstances for probable cause because he will
    not know what those circumstances actually are.
    In light of the far-reaching and lasting consequences
    associated with merely being arrested,7 there is a critical need
    for faithful adherence to the process for establishing the
    existence of probable cause. Many settings in which
    allegations of criminal conduct arise will involve
    circumstances that make credibility determinations delicate
    7
    For a recent scholarly work discussing the wide-
    ranging effects of an arrest, arising both inside and outside the
    criminal justice system, see Eisha Jain, Arrests As Regulation,
    67 Stan. L. Rev. 809, 844 (2015) (noting as one example that
    “[a]rrested students whose identities are disclosed may be
    subject to lasting stigma”).
    18
    and difficult.      Those circumstances may include the
    involvement of alcohol, activities at unusual hours, and pre-
    existing relationships between alleged victims and alleged
    perpetrators residing in the same community—or even under
    the same roof.        These considerations underscore how
    important it is, where exigencies do not require an immediate
    arrest, that officers undertake a careful investigation before
    making the serious decision to file a criminal complaint and
    that they include in the affidavit all information “‘any
    reasonable person would know that a judge would want to
    know’ in making a probable cause determination.” 
    Reedy, 615 F.3d at 213
    (quoting 
    Wilson, 212 F.3d at 783
    ).
    Nevertheless,      in     reviewing   probable     cause
    determinations made by law enforcement, the role of the
    courts is not that of the much-maligned “Monday morning
    quarterback” whose critiques are made possible only by the
    benefits of hindsight. Rather, federal courts review the record
    to ensure that the proper procedure for determining probable
    cause was followed. If it was not, the court itself must
    engage that procedure and determine whether probable cause
    existed in spite of that failure. As we have described in prior
    cases, in conducting this analysis, the district court must
    identify any improperly asserted or omitted facts and, if it
    determines there were reckless misrepresentations or
    omissions, “excise the offending inaccuracies and insert the
    facts recklessly omitted” from the affidavit and assess
    whether the reconstructed affidavit would establish probable
    cause. 
    Wilson, 212 F.3d at 789
    . If it would, the plaintiff’s
    claim fails because “even if there had not been omissions and
    misrepresentations” in the affidavit presented to the
    magistrate judge, there would have been probable cause for
    the charges against the plaintiff. 
    Id. 19 Where
    there are improperly omitted or included facts,
    we have previously instructed district courts to perform
    literal, word-by-word reconstructions of challenged affidavits.
    See 
    id. (discussing “reconstructive
    surgery required by our
    jurisprudence”); 
    Reedy, 615 F.3d at 215
    (noting “[t]he
    District Court’s approach was correct” where it
    “reconstructed the Affidavit” being challenged).           This
    reconstruction requirement facilitates review of the district
    court’s determination as to the existence of probable cause.
    Recognizing, however, that our instruction has not been
    interpreted consistently as an explicit requirement, we now
    clarify that when a court determines that information was
    asserted or omitted in an affidavit of probable cause with at
    least reckless disregard for the truth, it must perform a word-
    by-word reconstruction of the affidavit. 8
    In this case, although the District Court conducted the
    required two-step analysis for reviewing the probable cause
    determination, it did not perform a word-by-word
    reconstruction of the affidavit, or at least did not include any
    8
    We recognize an exception to this requirement: There
    may be instances in which reconstruction of the entirety of an
    affidavit may be impracticable, e.g., as a result of the
    affidavit’s extraordinary length. See, e.g., Lavin v. N.Y.
    News, Inc., 
    757 F.2d 1416
    , 1417 (3d Cir. 1985) (discussing
    165-page affidavit detailing results of an investigation of an
    organized crime operation). Where an affidavit is so long that
    a word-by-word reconstruction would do more to distract
    from than to clarify the court’s holding, the court should
    instead identify with particularity the evidence that should be
    deleted or inserted and specify where precisely in the affidavit
    any alterations should appear.
    20
    such reconstruction in its decision. For efficiency’s sake and
    illustrative purposes, we will conduct this reconstruction
    ourselves in this case rather than remand for the District
    Court to perform it in the first instance.
    B.     Analysis
    We turn now to the merits of Dempsey’s argument that
    the District Court erred in determining that although the
    officer recklessly omitted information from the affidavit of
    probable cause, there was nevertheless probable cause for the
    charges against Dempsey.          We follow the three-step
    procedure we described in Wilson and Reedy. First, we assess
    the evidence the plaintiff asserts was recklessly omitted from
    the affidavit. Next, we reconstruct an affidavit that includes
    any recklessly omitted information. And finally, we assess
    the materiality of the omitted information to the probable
    cause determination.
    21
    1.     Reckless Omissions
    To determine whether information was recklessly
    omitted, we ask whether the officer withheld “a fact in his
    ken that ‘[a]ny reasonable person would have known that this
    was the kind of thing the judge would wish to know.’”
    
    Wilson, 212 F.3d at 788
    (quoting United States v. Jacobs, 
    986 F.2d 1231
    , 1235 (8th Cir. 1993)). In doing so, we exercise
    “scrupulous neutrality”; we do not engage the “deliberately
    slanted perspective” we must use to make the ultimate
    determination as to whether summary judgment is
    appropriate. 
    Reedy, 615 F.3d at 214
    n.24.
    Inherent in this inquiry are two requirements. First,
    the officer must have knowledge of the information alleged to
    have been recklessly omitted. For this reason, we look only
    to the information available to the officer at the time of the
    swearing of the affidavit of probable cause. Second, the
    information must be relevant9 to the existence of probable
    9
    Although we use the term “relevant,” the
    recklessness inquiry could be understood to assess whether
    omitted information is “material,” as District Judge Louis H.
    Pollak astutely observed in dissent in 
    Wilson. 212 F.3d at 797
    (Pollak, J., dissenting) (“It is . . . puzzling that the court
    appears to conclude both (1) that it would be unreasonable to
    keep the information from the judge, which would seem to
    suggest that it could make a difference to a probable cause
    inquiry, and (2) that it would be unreasonable to conclude that
    the information would have made a difference to probable
    cause.”). The Wilson majority, however, concluded the
    recklessness inquiry asks only whether the omitted fact bears
    on probable cause such that it should be presented to the
    magistrate and does not answer the next question as to
    22
    cause. The relevance requirement “ensures that a police
    officer does not ‘make unilateral decisions about the
    materiality of information’” by enabling a magistrate to
    decide independently, on the basis of an affidavit containing
    all relevant information, whether the circumstances give rise
    to probable cause. 
    Id. at 213
    (quoting 
    Wilson, 212 F.3d at 787
    ). At the same time, however, it recognizes that for
    practical reasons courts simply “cannot demand that police
    whether it is material to, i.e., whether it would alter, the
    magistrate’s ultimate determination as to the existence of
    probable cause. The Wilson approach is consistent with the
    requirement that a neutral magistrate, not an officer, make the
    ultimate probable cause determination: Even though the
    magistrate may agree with an officer that certain evidence is
    not material to probable cause, the officer must include that
    evidence if a reasonable person would know that it could
    affect the probable cause determination—a lower threshold of
    materiality. While the concept of materiality is applicable in
    both inquiries, the benchmark for materiality is different; at
    the first step, the recklessness inquiry, we consider whether
    the officer withheld “a fact in his ken that ‘[a]ny reasonable
    person would have known that this was the kind of thing the
    judge would wish to know,’” 
    Wilson, 212 F.3d at 788
    (quoting 
    Jacobs, 986 F.2d at 1235
    ), while at the second step,
    the probable cause inquiry, we consider whether any such
    omissions were “necessary[] to the finding of probable
    cause,” id. (quoting 
    Sherwood, 113 F.3d at 399
    ). Thus, for
    ease of reference we describe the recklessness inquiry as one
    that examines the relevance of the omitted information.
    23
    officers relate the entire history of events leading up to a
    warrant application.” 
    Wilson, 212 F.3d at 787
    .10
    In his brief on appeal, Dempsey contends the
    following information was recklessly omitted from the
    affidavit of probable cause11:
    10
    Indeed, in many cases it is not only appropriate but
    desirable for officers to provide the magistrate with a distilled
    version of the circumstances giving rise to probable cause.
    Our decision in this case does not call into question the
    common practice of relating those circumstances “in
    substance and in part,” rather than in their entirety, in an
    affidavit of probable cause.
    11
    Dempsey’s brief on appeal provides his version of a
    reconstructed affidavit, as well as supporting discussion, from
    which we draw the information he contends was recklessly
    omitted. As we will explain, however, we cannot wholly
    accept Dempsey’s version of the reconstructed affidavit. One
    reason for this is that his affidavit, in some places, does not
    accurately represent the witness statements as they appear in
    the record. For example, in two places in his brief, Dempsey
    indicates that Kristen Brundage stated she heard “laughing
    screams” from Dempsey’s room, supporting his argument
    that the evidence reflected that the events in the room were
    clearly playful, Appellant’s Br. 17, 32; in fact she stated she
    heard “laughing, screams, and crashing” from the room, J.A.
    824, lending some support for Stefanowicz’s assertion that
    the interaction went from “playful” to “scary” while the two
    were alone, J.A. 322. In another example, Dempsey’s
    reconstructed affidavit states that “he and Kelly moved from
    his room to the hallway, when Kelly punched him in the
    24
    (1) statements from Morgan Slade, Demitri
    Carahalios, Wade Payson-Denney, Gabriela
    Ors, Kristen Brundage, Gregory Fast, and Raina
    Masand indicating Dempsey and Stefanowicz’s
    interactions prior to the time they were alone in
    the room together were playful and consensual
    and that they had engaged in similar activities
    before;
    (2) Gregory Fast’s statement indicating that he
    observed Dempsey and Stefanowicz during the
    time Stefanowicz alleged they were alone in the
    room and saw Stefanowicz pinning Dempsey to
    the futon, not the opposite;
    groin,” suggesting Stefanowicz punched him in the groin in
    the hallway. Appellant’s Br. 33-34. In his original statement
    to officers, however, Dempsey indicated that Stefanowicz
    punched him in the groin while the two were alone in the
    room and then left the room and entered the hallway. J.A.
    268.
    We will presume that any misrepresentations of record
    evidence (in both of the above-cited instances, as a result of a
    misplaced comma) were inadvertent, but we urge counsel to
    exercise the same level of care that we have urged upon the
    law enforcement officers who investigate allegations of
    criminal conduct. Of course, we conduct our analysis based
    on the evidence reflected in the record itself.
    25
    (3) Dempsey’s statement to BUPS officers that
    he and Stefanowicz were alone together for
    “about a minute,” J.A. 268;
    (4) Kristen Brundage’s statement that while she
    was in the hallway and Dempsey and
    Stefanowicz were alone in Dempsey’s room,
    she heard “laughing, screams, and crashing”
    coming from the room, J.A. 824; and the fact
    that none of the witnesses who were in the hall
    heard Stefanowicz yelling at Dempsey in the
    room to “get off” her and “stop,” as
    Stefanowicz had believed they would have, J.A.
    324;
    (5) statements from Kristen Brundage and
    Gregory Fast indicating Stefanowicz was
    laughing after leaving Dempsey’s room and that
    the two were still playfully wrestling; Kristen
    Brundage’s statement that “the playfighting
    went too far” and “[e]verytime Reed would
    walk away, Kelly would chase after him,
    insulting him and egging him on,” J.A. 825;
    Gregory Fast’s statement that the two had
    agreed to stop play wrestling when “Kelly
    slapped Reed in the face” and that “Reed
    contained Kelly and brought her to the ground
    even though she struggled and was hitting him,”
    J.A. 438; and the R.A.’s statement that
    Stefanowicz was being aggressive toward
    Dempsey by, e.g., yelling profanities at him,
    and that it took physical effort to keep her away
    from Dempsey;
    26
    (6) Dempsey’s statement that he did not intend
    to tackle Stefanowicz;
    (7) Dempsey’s statement that he was acting in
    self-defense when he fell on Stefanowicz;
    (8) Stefanowicz’s statements to Andrew Watts,
    Raina Masand, and Kristen Brundage
    expressing remorse for her role in escalating the
    encounter and her request to her R.A. that he
    not file a report;
    (9) Dempsey’s willingness to meet with officers
    regarding the incident;
    (10) Stefanowicz’s failure to state to any
    witness prior to her first interview with BUPS
    officers that Dempsey’s “penis was erect” while
    they were on the futon, Appellant’s Br. 32;
    (11) Rebecca Neubauer’s statement that
    “[a]nything that Kelly brings up” regarding an
    alleged sexual encounter between Neubauer and
    Dempsey “is not relevant at all to
    [Stefanowicz’s] situation and incidence [sic],”
    J.A. 857.
    The District Court concluded that the witness
    statements indicating that Stefanowicz and Dempsey were
    light-hearted and playful prior to being alone in the room and
    had engaged in similar activities before (Paragraph (1)); that
    Stefanowicz was laughing when they came back onto the hall
    (Paragraph (5)); and that she, and not Dempsey, was the
    aggressor in the hall (Paragraph (6)) were recklessly omitted
    27
    because they are relevant evidence of how the events reported
    in the affidavit unfolded and of Dempsey’s state of mind. In
    addition, Dempsey urges that his statement that he and
    Stefanowicz were alone together for only “about a minute”
    (Paragraph (3)), reports from witnesses in the hall as to what
    they did and did not hear from the room when Stefanowicz
    and Dempsey were alone together (Paragraph (4)), and
    Stefanowicz’s expressions of remorse to her friends and her
    action in asking her R.A. not to file a report (Paragraph (8))
    are pieces of information a reasonable person would know a
    magistrate would want to know given their relevance to
    Stefanowicz’s allegations of assault and the circumstances in
    which she sustained injuries.12
    After careful review, we agree that, in the context of
    this case and the allegations that were included in the
    affidavit, the information in these paragraphs was relevant to
    the probable cause determination and thus should be included
    in a reconstructed affidavit for purposes of a materiality
    analysis.     In so concluding, we emphasize that our
    determination as to the relevance of these statements is
    necessarily specific to the record before us, informed both by
    the facts of the case and the allegations set forth in the
    affidavit of probable cause, and does not indicate that there
    are categories of statements that as a rule must be included.
    Rather, we ask in the context of a given case whether “any
    reasonable person would know that a judge would want to
    12
    The Bucknell Defendants seem to agree that the time
    the two were alone is relevant. See Appellee’s Br. 12 n.2
    (“[T]he amount of time Reed and Ms. Stefanowicz spent
    alone in Reed’s bedroom is of course relevant . . . .”).
    28
    know” a particular statement in making a probable cause
    determination, 
    Wilson, 212 F.3d at 783
    ,13 and in the context
    of this case, answer in the affirmative as to Paragraphs (1),
    (3), (4), (5), (6), and (8).
    We are not so persuaded as to the remaining pieces of
    information cited by Dempsey. Some of that information
    simply was not known to Officer Holtzapple, or any other
    officer, prior to either instance in which she swore the
    affidavit of probable cause. For example, Gregory Fast’s
    statement indicating that he entered the room during the time
    Stefanowicz alleged she and Dempsey were alone together
    and saw Stefanowicz pinning Dempsey to the futon
    (Paragraph (2)) was received on September 12, after both
    affidavits of probable cause had been sworn. J.A. 284. In his
    September 5 statement, Fast stated only that he saw them
    “playfully wrestling on the futon” but then left the room and
    did not see them emerge for “10-minutes give-or-take.” J.A.
    438. Likewise, while Dempsey told police on September 5
    13
    Moreover, and as is clear from our discussion in
    footnote 
    9, supra
    , at this point in our analysis we do not
    assess whether the recklessly omitted information was in fact
    material to probable cause when considered in combination
    with the other evidence reflected in the affidavit. Nor does a
    determination that information was recklessly omitted
    necessarily mean that an officer acted in bad faith. To the
    contrary, as officers engage “in the often competitive
    enterprise of ferreting out crime,” 
    Wilson, 212 F.3d at 787
    (quoting Johnson v. United States, 
    333 U.S. 10
    , 14 (1948)),
    and draw on their own experience and expertise to assess
    witnesses and evidence in an investigation, they may at times
    omit information recklessly but in good faith.
    29
    that he did not intend to injure Stefanowicz, the record on
    appeal reflects that he did not claim he was acting in self-
    defense (Paragraph (7)) until his deposition in 2013, at which
    time he stated that she “hit [him] in the genitals” while the
    two were in the hall and “[t]o avoid her doing so again, [he]
    reached [his] arms around her as she kind of turned around,”
    resulting in both falling to the ground. J.A. 798-99. Thus, we
    will not include either of these statements in the reconstructed
    affidavit.
    Some of this information was not recklessly omitted
    because it is not information “‘any reasonable person would
    know that a judge would want to know’ in making a probable
    cause determination.” 
    Reedy, 615 F.3d at 213
    (quoting
    
    Wilson, 212 F.3d at 783
    ).          For instance, Dempsey’s
    cooperation with law enforcement (Paragraph (9)) is not
    relevant because cooperation may merely reflect a person’s
    erroneous belief that he has not committed a crime, see Heien
    v. North Carolina, 
    135 S. Ct. 530
    , 540 (2014) (discussing the
    “well-known maxim, ‘[i]gnorance of the law is no
    excuse[]’”), or may stem from savvy or hubris rather than a
    “clean conscience,” United States v. Fisher, 
    364 F.3d 970
    ,
    973 (8th Cir. 2004) (concluding “cooperation did not negate
    the risk,” established by other evidence, that suspect was
    armed).
    In addition, the fact that Stefanowicz does not appear
    to have told anyone prior to her first interview with police
    that Dempsey’s “penis was erect,” Appellant’s Br. 32, while
    he pinned her to the futon (Paragraph (10)) was not recklessly
    omitted because it has limited significance in view of
    statements Stefanowicz did make, according to two witnesses.
    Although it is true that the record does not reflect that
    Stefanowicz used those precise words prior to her interview
    30
    with police, it does reflect that she told Raina Masand
    immediately after the incident that “Reed pushed her onto the
    ground and tried to take advantage of her.” J.A. 435. Kristen
    Brundage also reported that Stefanowicz told her immediately
    after the incident that “Reed had tried to ‘take advantage of
    her.’”    J.A. 825.      These statements are sufficient to
    demonstrate that Stefanowicz’s first report of the incident
    described the assault as having a sexual dimension. We
    therefore will not include this information in the
    reconstructed affidavit.
    Similarly, Rebecca Neubauer’s statement (Paragraph
    (11)) was not recklessly omitted because it has no relevance
    to the probable cause determination.            Rather than
    contradicting Stefanowicz’s statement that something had
    occurred between Dempsey and Neubauer, Neubauer’s
    statement appears to confirm there had been some interaction
    and to add only that, according to Neubauer, Stefanowicz did
    not know the whole story and Neubauer considered it “not
    relevant at all.” J.A. 857. Because it is not relevant, this
    statement also will not be included in the reconstructed
    affidavit.
    2.     Reconstructed Affidavit for
    Materiality Analysis
    In the normal course, the next step of our analysis
    would be to reconstruct the affidavit, including the recklessly
    omitted information, so that we may proceed with a
    materiality analysis. In some cases, however, there will be
    other information in the record that gives context to or affects
    the weight to be accorded the recklessly omitted information,
    such that it also should be considered by the reviewing court
    in determining materiality.
    31
    We faced such a situation in United States v. Frost,
    where we evaluated an affidavit of probable cause underlying
    a search warrant for a suitcase. 
    999 F.2d 737
    (3d Cir. 1993).
    The criminal defendant there alleged that the affidavit
    recklessly omitted the fact that a drug-sniffing dog had not
    gone into alert upon sniffing the suitcase. 
    Id. at 743.
    The
    officer who swore the affidavit testified, however, that he
    believed the dog’s failure to alert was a “neutral factor” in the
    probable cause analysis because drug couriers often use
    “scent masking” techniques to avoid detection. 
    Id. Without deciding
    whether the omission of that information was
    reckless, we concluded that “the relevant issue [was] whether
    the . . . affidavit would have provided probable cause if it had
    disclosed the information concerning the dog’s sniffing of the
    suitcase, including the information about ‘scent masking’ that
    [the officer] knew and would have included to enable the
    magistrate to evaluate the dog’s failure to alert. Only an
    evaluation of the affidavit so supplemented will reveal
    whether there is a causal connection between [the officer’s]
    failure to disclose and [probable cause].” 
    Id. at 743.
    Frost
    teaches that where additional information in the record bears
    on the materiality of the recklessly omitted information to
    probable cause, that additional information also should be
    included the reconstructed affidavit.
    Such is the case here. For example, with regard to the
    witness statements indicating that the two were playful before
    and after being alone together and that Stefanowicz was the
    aggressor in the hall (Paragraphs (5) and (6)), it is also
    relevant to the probable cause determination that Stefanowicz
    herself told officers she was laughing when she reentered the
    hall from Dempsey’s room and that it was because she “was
    in shock,” J.A. 322, and that while Gregory Fast reported that
    32
    Dempsey fell on Stefanowicz while trying to “contain her,”
    i.e., to keep her from hitting him again, Dempsey had
    reported to officers that “he asked her to come back” when
    she left the room and when she wouldn’t, “he caught up to her
    and . . . placed his arms around her and gave her a bear hug,”
    causing the two to fall forward, J.A. 268. With regard to the
    statements pertaining to the time the two were alone
    (Paragraphs (3) and (4)), it is also relevant that Gregory Fast
    stated that he believed it was about ten minutes between when
    he left the room and when the two exited. Because this
    information bears on the weight a magistrate would accord
    the recklessly omitted statements in making the ultimate
    determination as to probable cause, we will also include this
    information in the reconstructed affidavit.
    An affidavit reconstructed to include both the
    recklessly omitted information and the other information that
    gives it context would read as follows:
    On Sunday, September 5, 2010 at
    approximately 1957 hours, Officer Darrel
    Fisher, Officer Robert Ulmer and Officer Jule
    Holtzapple, all are officer’s currently with the
    Bucknell University Department of Public
    Safety/ Police Department, spoke with Kelly
    Stefanowicz.
    [The investigation revealed evidence] as
    follows:
    On Sunday, September 5, 2010, at
    approximately 0200 hours, Kelly walked home
    with two of her friends, Morgan Slade and
    Demitri Carahalios, to her room, 166 Smith
    33
    Hall, Bucknell University, Lewisburg Pa.
    17837.
    Before entering her room, Kelly had pointed at
    Reed Dempsey. Reed then proceeded into
    Kelly’s room and hung out with Kelly, Morgan,
    and Dimitri. Kelly stated that Reed and she
    began to wrestle playfully in her room. Kelly
    stated she was not intimidated by Reed at this
    time and believed wrestling to be playful.
    [Witnesses stated that they had play wrestled
    before.]
    Kelly stated that after a short time Reed had
    picked her up and carried her over his shoulder.
    Reed Dempsey carried Kelly Stefanowicz into
    his room, which is Smith 138, Bucknell
    University, Lewisburg Pa. 17837. [Witness
    Kristen Brundage stated that she saw Reed
    carrying Kelly, who was laughing and hitting
    him on the butt with a shoe.]
    Two people were in Reed’s room at this time,
    roommate Wade Payson-Denny and Gregory
    Fast. Kelly stated that Reed put her down from
    carrying her and sat her on his lap. Reed would
    not release Kelly from his lap and held her
    down, making her sit on his lap. [Witness
    Gabriela Ors recounted being in Reed’s
    room for about ten minutes, and that the
    situation never seemed violent. Witness
    Wade Payson-Denney said that he saw Kelly
    and Reed in the room jokingly wrestling on
    the floor.]
    34
    Kelly stated shortly after this happened, both
    Wade Payson-Denny and Gregory Fast left
    Reed Dempsey room. Reed’s room door shut
    automatically, after both men left the room.
    Kelly stated that at this time she no longer felt
    safe around Reed. Kelly stated that Reed’s
    behavior had turned instantly. It was at this
    time that Reed picked Kelly up from sitting on
    his lap and threw her onto a futon in the room.
    Reed laid on top of Kelly keeping her from
    sitting up. Kelly stated she attempted to push
    Reed off of her. He grabbed both of Kelly’s
    hands and held them forcefully above her head.
    Kelly stated that Reed’s penis was now erect
    under his clothes. He was on top of her and
    pinning her to the futon. Kelly believes that
    Reed was excited and that he was in total
    control of her. Kelly began to yell at Reed “to
    get off of me” and “just stop it.” She was in
    fear of getting raped by Reed. Kelly was able
    to release one of her hands and slapped Reed
    across the face. Kelly and Reed then rolled off
    of the futon, falling to the floor. [Although
    Kelly stated she believed people must have
    heard her, no witnesses reported hearing
    these exact words.            Witness Kristin
    Brundage stated, however, that when Kelly
    and Reed were alone in the room she heard
    “laughing, screams, and crashing.” Reed
    stated he believed they were alone in the
    room for about a minute, while Gregory
    35
    Fast’s statement indicates they were alone
    for about ten minutes.]
    It was at this time that Kelly fell to the ground
    and landed on top of Reed. Kelly was able to
    get off of the ground, open the closed door, and
    run out into the hallway. [Although Reed’s
    story corroborated Kelly’s that she left the
    room before him, other witnesses in the hall
    indicated that the two “came out wrestling.
    It seemed like play wrestling, with laughing
    and goofy insults.” Kelly stated that she was
    laughing when she came onto the hall
    because she “was in shock.”]
    As she was walking away from Reed, and
    ignoring him, as he was calling for her to come
    back into his room. Kelly stated that people in
    the hallway were laughing at Reed and making
    fun of him because Kelly had turned him down
    in his room.
    Reed next grabbed Kelly’s arm and began to
    pull on it. Kelly attempted to get away from
    Reed by pulling away from him. Reed then
    grabbed both of Kelly’s arms and held them
    behind him. Reed then fell onto Kelly, causing
    her to fall to the floor, landing on the left side of
    her face and also her right shoulder. Reed then
    stood up. [Witness Gregory Fast reported
    that after a mutual agreement to stop play
    wrestling Kelly slapped Reed in the face, and
    only then did Reed fall on Kelly in an
    attempt to contain her. Reed, however, did
    36
    not report that she slapped him and he was
    trying to contain her when he fell on her,
    stating instead that he asked her to come
    back after she left his room and placed his
    arms around her and gave her a bear hug,
    accidentally falling on her.]       Kelly then
    proceeded to her room, 166 Smith Hall,
    Bucknell University, to end this encounter.
    [Witness Kristen Brundage stated, however,
    that “every time Reed would walk away,
    Kelly would chase after him, insulting him
    and egging him on.” R.A. Michael Sena
    reported that when he came onto the hall,
    after the fall, Kelly was yelling profanities at
    Reed and it took some effort on the R.A.’s
    part to contain her. He also reported that
    Kelly told him that she and Reed were just
    playing around and asked him not to file a
    report that night.]
    Kelly displayed text messages from Reed
    following this incident. Text messages were
    sent at 0243 hours, 0335 hours, and 0511 hours.
    Photographs were taken of messages on phone
    from Reed. These messages related to remorse
    for this incident and he was checking on her
    welfare. [Kelly also expressed remorse for
    her role in escalating the encounter to
    Witnesses Andrew Watts, Raina Masand,
    and Kristen Brundage.]
    Kelly Stefanowicz wants to proceed with
    criminal charges in this case. Medical treatment
    was obtained at Evangelical Community
    37
    Hospital, 1 Hospital Drive, Lewisburg Pa.
    17837. Photographs and medical report will be
    obtained on Wednesday, September 8, 2010.
    3.     Materiality
    We turn now to the question whether the recklessly
    omitted statements, considered in the context of the affidavit
    as a whole, were omissions “material, or necessary, to the
    finding of probable cause.” 
    Wilson, 212 F.3d at 787
    (quoting
    
    Sherwood, 113 F.3d at 399
    ). To affirm the District Court’s
    grant of summary judgment, we must conclude that “no
    reasonable jury could find facts that would lead to the
    conclusion” that the reconstructed affidavit “lacked probable
    cause.” 
    Id. at 792.
    Dempsey was charged with simple assault,
    harassment, disorderly conduct, indecent assault, and false
    imprisonment. Because probable cause exists where there is
    merely a “fair probability” that the arrestee committed a
    crime, we need not identify “the same type of specific
    evidence of each element of [an] offense as would be needed
    to support a conviction.” Adams v. Williams, 
    407 U.S. 143
    ,
    149 (1972). In light of the fact that Dempsey has pressed his
    malicious prosecution claim on appeal, however, we will
    assess whether any reasonable jury could find a lack of
    probable cause as to any of the five crimes charged against
    him, bearing in mind that although false arrest or
    imprisonment claims will necessarily fail if probable cause
    existed for any one of the crimes charged against the arrestee,
    “probable cause on one charge does not foreclose a malicious
    prosecution cause of action” based on additional charges for
    which there was no probable cause. Johnson v. Knorr, 
    477 F.3d 75
    , 83 (3d Cir. 2007) (emphasis added). In the case of
    38
    prosecution, unlike arrest, unfounded charges “almost surely
    will place an additional burden on the defendant,” and thus
    we must consider probable cause as to each of the charges.
    
    Id. at 84.
    In assessing whether the reconstructed affidavit
    establishes probable cause, we also must bear in mind our
    Circuit’s rule that statements of a victim witness are typically
    sufficient to establish probable cause in the absence of
    “[i]ndependent exculpatory evidence or substantial evidence
    of [a] witness’s own unreliability” that “outweigh[s]” the
    probable cause that otherwise exists. 
    Wilson, 212 F.3d at 790
    ; Sharrar v. Felsing, 
    128 F.3d 810
    , 818 (3d Cir. 1997)
    (“When a police officer has received a reliable identification
    by a victim of his or her attacker, the police have probable
    cause to arrest.”). Applying this principle, we have held that
    no reasonable jury could find a lack of probable cause where
    a victim identified the arrestee in a photo array, but other
    evidence suggested the perpetrator was significantly taller
    than the arrestee, a different victim did not identify the
    arrestee, and another witness claimed to have seen the
    arrestee at the time of the crime, 
    Wilson, 212 F.3d at 791-92
    ,
    and where a victim first identified a different person as her
    assailant before changing her story to identify the arrestee,
    
    Sharrar, 128 F.3d at 818-19
    . Thus, some “unreliability or
    exculpatory evidence” will not “fatally undermine[]”
    probable cause otherwise established. 
    Wilson, 212 F.3d at 790
    .14
    14
    Dempsey cites a Sixth Circuit case, Wesley v.
    Campbell, which declared that “[i]t is well-settled that
    evidence contradicting even part of a witness’s allegations
    seriously undermines their reliability and can defeat probable
    39
    With these principles in mind, we turn to the
    reconstructed affidavit.
    a.     Evidence Supporting Probable
    Cause
    We first address Dempsey’s threshold argument that
    the evidence cited by the District Court—Stefanowicz’s
    multiple statements and Raina Masand’s statement
    corroborating in large part her version of events; the
    photographs of Stefanowicz’s injuries, taken immediately
    following the incident and the next day during the medical
    examination; and the text messages sent by Dempsey to
    Stefanowicz in the hours following the incident—does not
    give rise to probable cause that he committed the crimes of
    simple assault, harassment, disorderly conduct, indecent
    assault, and false imprisonment.
    First, Dempsey argues that Stefanowicz’s multiple
    statements, as well as Raina Masand’s corroborating
    statement, are “prior inconsistent statements” and that a jury
    should have been allowed to decide whether Stefanowicz
    “merely added detail or, in fact, changed her story.”
    cause.” 
    779 F.3d 421
    , 435 (6th Cir. 2015). As should be
    clear from our discussion of Sharrar v. Felsing and Wilson v.
    Russo, this statement from the Sixth Circuit does not reflect
    the law of our Circuit. Furthermore, Wesley involved a set of
    facts in which there was no physical evidence of alleged
    repeated abuse and there were myriad reasons to believe that
    the victim witness was thoroughly unreliable; it is far from
    clear that Wesley would dictate the result Dempsey advocates
    on the facts presented in this case.
    40
    Appellant’s Br. 40. We disagree. The fact that Stefanowicz
    gave multiple accounts of the incident is, without more, not
    exculpatory; she did so at the request of law enforcement
    officers, suggesting that Stefanowicz was simply acting as a
    cooperative witness, not that she was seeking opportunities to
    change her story to implicate Dempsey in more serious
    offenses. Furthermore, Dempsey has pointed us to no
    specific inconsistencies in Stefanowicz’s statements to law
    enforcement and her friends, other than those we have already
    addressed and concluded were not inconsistencies at all. 
    See supra
    Part III.B.1 (addressing Dempsey’s argument that
    Stefanowicz did not describe the incident as having a sexual
    dimension until she related her version of events to BUPS
    officers).
    Second, Dempsey asserts that the photographs “proved
    only that Ms. Stefanowicz was injured in some way” and, in
    any event, “do not depict injuries consistent with the vicious
    attack Kelly alleged.” Appellant’s Br. 41. We again
    disagree.    Stefanowicz described an assault in which
    Dempsey aggressively touched her, including pinching and
    punching, first during play wrestling and then against her
    wishes while the two were alone and, in the hallway,
    “tackled” her, leading to injuries to her face and shoulder.
    J.A. 324. The photographs taken during the medical
    examination revealed injuries to Stefanowicz’s “chest” and
    “right lower extremity.” J.A. 851; S.A. 42-47. Furthermore,
    the record clearly reflects that the injuries to her face and
    shoulder were sustained as a result of her falling in the
    hallway: Pictures documenting those injuries were taken
    immediately after the incident, S.A. 1-6, and Raina Masand,
    Kristen Brundage, and R.A. Michael Sena all reported
    41
    observing injuries to Stefanowicz’s face at that time. This
    evidence is consistent with Stefanowicz’s allegations.
    Finally, Dempsey contends that while his text
    messages to Stefanowicz “could demonstrate remorse, they
    just as logically show an attempt to diffuse a heated situation
    between friends.” Appellant’s Br. 42. Even assuming we
    agree with Dempsey that his text messages could be
    understood that way, they nevertheless demonstrate that at the
    very least, he was a party to what he viewed as a “heated
    situation.”
    Mindful that the question we must ask at this stage is
    whether “a reasonable jury could not find a lack of probable
    cause,” 
    Montgomery, 159 F.3d at 124
    , i.e., that the evidence
    gives rise to a “fair probability” that Dempsey committed the
    crimes alleged, 
    Wilson, 212 F.3d at 789
    (quoting 
    Sherwood, 113 F.3d at 401
    ), we conclude that Stefanowicz’s and
    Masand’s statements, the documented injuries, and the text
    messages establish probable cause, and that no reasonable
    jury could come to a contrary conclusion.
    b.     Evidence Undermining
    Probable Cause
    Having determined that inculpatory evidence, reflected
    in the reconstructed affidavit, gives rise to probable cause for
    each of the five crimes charged against Dempsey, the
    question remaining is whether there is “[i]ndependent
    exculpatory evidence or substantial evidence of
    [Stefanowicz’s] own unreliability” that “outweigh[s]” the
    probable cause otherwise established by the affidavit of
    probable cause. 
    Id. at 790
    . The reconstructed affidavit
    reflects two categories of recklessly omitted information that,
    42
    Dempsey submits undermines probable cause: witness
    statements contradicting Stefanowicz’s version of events and
    evidence of the amount of time the two were alone together.
    In light of the evidence corroborating in substantial part
    Stefanowicz’s story and the existence of a period of time in
    which no one disputes the two were alone together in
    Dempsey’s room, we conclude that even considering the
    recklessly omitted information, no reasonable jury could
    determine that the affidavit lacked probable cause.
    i.        Witness Statements
    Dempsey contends that omitted witness statements
    indicating that the interaction between Stefanowicz and
    Dempsey was playful and, when it was not playful,
    Stefanowicz was the aggressor, are material to the probable
    cause determination because they “contradicted Ms.
    Stefanowicz’s story in striking ways.” Appellant’s Br. 38.
    First, he argues that while Stefanowicz says she yelled
    at Dempsey while they were alone in his room, “not one of
    the witnesses in the hall heard Ms. Stefanowicz yell stop, but
    instead reported hearing playful noises.” 
    Id. But this
    contention is not supported by the record evidence. In fact,
    Kristen Brundage stated that she heard “laughing, screams,
    and crashing” coming from the room. J.A. 824 (emphasis
    added). Far from contradicting Stefanowicz’s story, it is
    largely consistent, not inconsistent, with her assertion that she
    struggled against Dempsey, as well as with her statements
    indicating that her interaction with Dempsey “immediately
    transitioned from ‘funny’ and ‘joking’ to ‘scary’ and ‘dark’”
    when the two were left alone in Dempsey’s room. J.A. 445.
    43
    Second, Dempsey avers that “the eye witnesses almost
    unanimously agreed that Ms. Stefanowicz and not Mr.
    Dempsey was the aggressor.” Appellant’s Br. 39. This
    statement is true as to what witnesses observed in the hallway
    after the two had emerged from the room, but it does not
    explain what happened while the two were in the room.
    Furthermore, Stefanowicz herself told officers that she
    slapped Dempsey “right across the face” while the two were
    in the hallway; in that sense, her story—that when they left
    the room, she was aggressive toward Dempsey—is consistent
    with that of the witnesses in the hall. J.A. 324. Bearing in
    mind that probable cause “does not require that officers
    correctly resolve conflicting evidence or that their
    determinations of credibility, were, in retrospect, accurate,”
    
    Wright, 409 F.3d at 603
    , we conclude that the existence of
    some conflict between Stefanowicz’s story and that of the
    eyewitnesses in the hallway does not undermine the existence
    of probable cause.
    Our conclusion is necessarily specific to the
    circumstances presented in this case. Were the events in the
    hallway the only basis for the assault charges against
    Dempsey, the evidence reflecting that Stefanowicz was the
    aggressor during that portion of the incident might have been
    material to a probable cause determination. But in light of the
    undisputed fact that the two were alone in Dempsey’s room
    for some period of time; the lack of any evidence
    contradicting Stefanowicz’s explanation of the events that
    occurred in the room, aside from Dempsey’s explanation, i.e.,
    that their playful wrestling “started to get more intense and
    Stefanowicz punched him in the groin,” J.A. 268; and the
    existence of evidence corroborating her version of events in
    substantial part, no reasonable jury could conclude there was
    44
    not a “fair probability” that a crime occurred, notwithstanding
    the conflicting evidence as to Dempsey’s intent and actions in
    the hallway.
    ii.        Time Alone
    Dempsey also challenges the significance of the time
    he and Stefanowicz were alone together, asserting that the
    fact that he told BUPS that they were only alone in the room
    together for one minute materially undermines Stefanowicz’s
    story about what happened during that time. In addition, he
    asks us to consider as part of our analysis Gregory Fast’s
    September 12 statement, in which Fast indicated that he
    observed Stefanowicz and Dempsey during the time she said
    Dempsey was on top of her on the futon, while the two were
    alone, as part of our materiality analysis. As we explained in
    Part 
    III.B.1, supra
    , however, that statement was received after
    both instances in which the affidavit of probable cause was
    sworn, and therefore we cannot consider it. We emphasize
    that in making the determination about the existence of
    probable cause, we examine only the information available to
    the officer at the time of the swearing of the affidavit of
    probable cause. After-acquired evidence, however significant
    for trial, does not inform an officer’s knowledge or good faith
    as is relevant for our inquiry today.
    As we have explained, we will consider not only
    Dempsey’s statement, but, as the District Court did, all of the
    information on that topic received by the officers. As the
    reconstructed affidavit reflects, the officers had information
    indicating that the two were alone in the room together for
    somewhere between one minute and ten minutes. In addition,
    the officers knew that while the accused person had stated the
    two were only alone together for about one minute, a third-
    45
    party witness, Gregory Fast, had indicated in his September 5
    statement that the time was around ten minutes. Furthermore,
    estimates of time may not always be particularly reliable.
    See, e.g., Martin v. Ill. Cent. R.R. Co., 
    23 F.2d 324
    , 325 (5th
    Cir. 1928) (“Estimates of time and distance of bystanders
    witnessing an accident are notoriously inaccurate, and entitled
    to little weight at best.”). In any event, it is not implausible
    that the events in the room that Stefanowicz described took
    place in the course of “about a minute.” Viewing this
    evidence, along with all the other evidence of record, in the
    light most favorable to Dempsey, it is not material to the
    determination that there was a “fair probability” that a crime
    occurred.
    IV.    Conclusion
    Because we conclude that no reasonable jury could
    find that the reconstructed affidavit lacked probable cause, we
    will affirm the order of the District Court.
    46
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 15-1328

Citation Numbers: 834 F.3d 457

Filed Date: 8/22/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

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