Abdi Sheik-Abdi filed suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against three Macomb, Illinois, police officers and a McDonough District Hospital paramedic alleging that they unlawfully arrested and confined him in violation of his Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights. The district court denied Sheik-Abdi’s cross-motion for summary judgment and granted summary judgment for all of the defendants. We affirm.
I.
On April 2, 1990, Abdi Sheik-Abdi, an assistant professor at Western Illinois University, arrived home from work shortly after 4:00 p.m. after putting the finishing touches on a manuscript on which he had been working for 17 years. In celebration of his achievement, Sheik-Abdi began imbibing cognac. Within half an hour, Sheik-Abdi had lapsed into a somnolent state on the couch in the den where he was discovered by his wife, Zeinab, who noticed that his eyes were closed and he did not appear to be breathing. After unsuccessfully attempting to rouse her husband, Zeinab telephoned Mc-Donough District Hospital. She advised the switchboard that her husband had become unconscious after a bout of drinking and requested that an ambulance be dispatched to their residence.
Paramedics William Hagler and William Akers responded to the call and arrived at the Sheik-Abdi’s home within minutes. Zeinab Sheik-Abdi answered the door, admitted the paramedics to the house, and *1242 directed them to the den where they encountered Abdi Sheik-Abdi, lying on the floor glassy-eyed. Hagler and Akers identified themselves and attempted to take Sheik-Abdi’s vital signs, but were unable to do so as Sheik-Abdi stood up, waved his arms, and ordered the paramedics out of his house.
Akers and Hagler then retreated to the kitchen where they discussed the situation. Perceiving Sheik-Abdi to be “belligerent and uncooperative,” and fearing the development of an “unpredictable situation,” the paramedics decided to call the police department for assistance. 1 Hagler telephoned the police from the ambulance, and Officers Martin McClellan and Joseph Wazny soon arrived in separate squad cars to assist the paramedics with what they perceived to be a “domestic situation.” Hagler allowed the officers into the house and advised them that a man inside had been drinking and was possibly combative. When the police ventured into the kitchen area, Sheik-Abdi was on his feet, with his wife holding one of his arms and Akers holding the other. Upon seeing the police officers, Sheik-Abdi became verbally abusive. At that time Akers informed the police that he had observed Sheik-Abdi strike Zeinab in the chest while Hagler was in the ambulance contacting the police. According to Akers, this striking occurred when Zeinab had taken hold of Sheik-Abdi’s arm and he shoved her with a forearm in attempting to get free.
Upon hearing Akers’ report, the officers declined to further question either Akers or Zeinab Sheik-Abdi with respect to the alleged striking. Instead, after several attempts to persuade Sheik-Abdi to go to the hospital, McClellan offered him the choice of going to the hospital or to jail. Sheik-Abdi continued his verbal abuse, and, according to McClellan, cocked his arm when his wife attempted to cover him with a robe. At this point, McClellan placed Sheik-Abdi in handcuffs. Wazny then escorted Sheik-Abdi to McClellan’s squad car as Zeinab denied that her husband had struck her and pleaded with McClellan not to take him to jail.
Sheik-Abdi did not go directly to jail; rather, McClellan drove him to the hospital. Upon arrival, the paramedics noted that Sheik-Abdi was “alert and conscious.” McClellan put Sheik-Abdi in a wheelchair and transported him to a holding area known as the “trauma bay.” After removing the handcuffs, McClellan attempted to place Sheik-Abdi on a cot, but Sheik-Abdi resisted, striking the officer’s arm with a backhanded swipe. At that point, McClellan re-cuffed Sheik-Abdi, took him back to the squad car, and carted him off to jail before any medical treatment could be rendered. An information attested to by Officer Sterlon Brewer charged Sheik-Abdi with having “intentionally caused bodily harm to Martin McClellan in that he struck McClellan in the arm with his fist, and did then and there commit the offense of battery in violation of [Illinois law].” Sheik-Abdi was released about twenty-four hours later and the charges against him were dropped weeks later at McClellan’s request.
Abdi Sheik-Abdi brought suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that Officers McClellan, Wazny, and Brewer and Paramedic Ak-ers violated his constitutional rights under the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments. Specifically, Sheik-Abdi charged that the defendants unlawfully seized him from his home without a warrant or probable cause to believe that he had committed a crime and illegally subjected him to summary punishment without due process. The defendants moved for summary judgment, arguing first that Sheik-Abdi had failed to state a claim of constitutional violation, and, alternatively, that they were entitled to qualified immunity. Officer Brewer also asserted that he could not be held liable under § 1983 because he had not personally participated in the arrest. Sheik-Abdi filed a cross motion for summary judgment on the liability issues.
The district court granted summary judgment for all of the defendants and denied Sheik-Abdi’s cross motion. The district *1243 court found that exigent circumstances justified the officers’ entry into the home and probable cause supported their decision to arrest Sheik-Abdi for battery on the basis of the paramedic’s statement that Sheik-Abdi had struck his wife. Even if probable cause had not existed, the court noted that the officers would be entitled to qualified immunity. The court also found that Sheik-Abdi had failed to state a claim against Brewer, who had no connection to the arrest, or against Akers, who acted reasonably in calling for police assistance and who had no authority to intervene in the officers’ decision to arrest Sheik-Abdi. Finally, the court concluded that Sheik-Abdi had failed to state a claim against any defendant for summary punishment. 2
II.
We review the grant of summary judgment
de novo,
drawing all reasonable •inferences from the record in the light most favorable to the non-moving party.
Jean v. Dugan,
A.
We turn first to Sheik-Abdi’s claim that Officers McClellan and Wazny unlawfully seized him from his home in violation of the Fourth Amendment when they arrested him. The district court apparently treated the officers’ warrantless entry and arrest as a single episode and found that both probable cause and exigent circumstances supported the officers’ actions. On appeal, Sheik-Abdi disputes the existence of probable cause on several grounds, including the officers’ failure to investigate the charge on the scene. Alternatively, Sheik-Abdi contends that even if the paramedic’s report was sufficient to create probable cause, the officers’ decision to arrest still was improper because a minor offense such as battery does not give rise to the required exigent circumstances to effectuate a home arrest without a warrant.
1.
Allegations of unlawful arrests in the home ordinarily call for separate determinations of the propriety of the initial entry into the home and the subsequent arrest. In this case, we note as an initial matter that Sheik-Abdi apparently misapprehends the applicability of exigent circumstances, a concept that is relevant only to whether the officers had authority to
enter
the premises
for the purpose of arrest or seizure, see, e.g. Welsh v. Wisconsin,
A related, though not identical, line of cases also has recognized that emergency situations sometimes arise and on such occasions a warrantless entry into a home will be appropriate for a purpose other than to arrest a suspect or search for evidence of a crime.
See generally
W. LaFave, 2 Search and Seizure: A Treatise on the Fourth Amendment § 6.6 at 697 (2d ed. 1987). It is clear, for example, that “the Fourth Amendment does not bar police officers from making warrantless entries and searches when they reasonably believe that a person within is in need of immediate aid.”
Mincey v. Arizona,
Our colleagues on the Fourth Circuit recently explained that the distinction between the aforementioned doctrines appears to be in the perceived function of the responding officer: a warrantless entry is analyzed as an “emergency” if purportedly made “incident to the service and protective functions of the police” and as an “exigent circumstance” if allegedly executed in a “law enforcement” capacity.
Moss,
As a general matter, we are uncertain whether the circumstances that may give rise to “emergencies” are less circumscribed than those that constitute “exigent circumstances” (the Fourth Circuit thought not), but we *1245 need not resolve that question today because Sheik-Abdi does not challenge the lawfulness of the officers’ presence in his home. Citing Mincey, he concedes that while in the home, the officers presumably could have prevented any breach of the peace that occurred or was likely to occur, Br. at 24-25, and could have taken minimal action to restrain Sheik-Abdi so that he could be treated. Rep.Br. at 14. Sheik-Abdi’s objection, and the basis of his constitutional claim, is that the scope of the officer’s authority to act within the home was limited by the purpose for which they had been admitted — namely, to assist the paramedics in tending to his health needs. However, neither the emergency nor exigent circumstances doctrine have any bearing on this type of claim.
As the foregoing discussion suggests, an unconstitutional entry into the home will vitiate the legitimacy of any search or seizure effected on that occasion because the privacy and solitude of the home are at the core of the Fourth Amendment’s protection.
See Soldal v. Cook County, Ill.,
— U.S. -, - n. 10,
[T]o assume that the warrant requirement really goes to the matter of arrest rather than the matter of entry (a mistake perhaps induced by Payton’s approval of an arrest warrant rather than a search warrant as sufficient) is wrong. Because (i) there is no general requirement that arrests be made with a warrant, and (ii) an arrest within premises is no “more threatening or humiliating than a street arrest,” it should be apparent that Payton is grounded (as the Court put it) in “the breach of the entrance to an individual’s home.” That is, it is the otherwise unauthorized entry and not the arrest which gives rise to the warrant requirement.
LaFave,
supra
§ 6.1(c) at 584 (footnotes omitted) (emphasis in original);
see also White,
In this case, there is no suggestion that Officers McClellan and Wazny were searching parts of the house in which they had no reason to be or in some other way were *1246 trying to gin up a charge against Sheik-Abdi. After entering the house, the paramedic on the scene notified the officers that he had observed Sheik-Abdi strike his wife in the chest. On the basis of this information, the officers made an arrest for battery. The next (and final) inquiry into whether this arrest comported with the Constitution requires us to ascertain whether the officers had probable cause.
2.
The police have probable cause to arrest an individual when “the facts and circumstances within their knowledge and of which they [have] reasonably trustworthy information [are] sufficient to warrant a prudent [person] in believing that the [suspect] had committed or was committing an offense.”
Maxwell v. City of Indianapolis,
When the question of probable cause arises in a damages suit its resolution typically falls within the province of the jury, though a conclusion that probable cause existed as a matter of law is appropriate when there is no room for a difference of opinion concerning the facts or the reasonable inferences to be drawn from them.
Maxwell,
Sheik-Abdi contends that Akers’ report, by itself, was insufficient to establish probable cause. In view of the officers’ failure to further investigate the incident before making the arrest, Sheik-Abdi draws the “inescapable” conclusion that the battery charge was simply a pretext, and that the officers
*1247
really arrested him in retaliation for his use of the slur “Irish scum”, directed at McClellan. We note in passing that even if the officers did have bad motives for arresting Sheik-Abdi, the existence of probable cause for an arrest would preclude a § 1983 claim for unlawful arrest, false imprisonment, or malicious prosecution.
Mark v. Furay,
We find that a prudent officer would have believed that probable cause existed to arrest Sheik-Abdi for the crime of battery. Under Illinois law, a battery is committed when a person intentionally or knowingly without legal justification and by any means (1) causes bodily harm to an individual or (2) makes physical contact of an insulting or provocative nature with an individual. 720 ILCS 5/12-3. While everyone agrees that Zeinab Sheik-Abdi bore no contemporary markings of bodily harm, we believe that, in the circumstances, Akers’ statement adequately formed the basis of a reasonable belief that an insulting or provocative contact had occurred. This court has consistently held that “[w]hen an officer has ‘received his information from some person — normally the putative victim or an eye witness — who it seems reasonable to believe is telling the truth,’ he has probable cause.”'
Grimm v. Churchill,
B.
Sheik-Abdi next contends that Akers is subject to § 1983 liability because he unleashed the chain of events leading to the arrest by inviting the officers to the home, acquiescing in their decision to arrest, and failing to respect Sheik-Abdi’s right to refuse medical treatment. This claim is without merit. Section 1988 creates a cause of action based upon personal liability and predicated upon fault; thus, liability does not attach unless the individual defendant caused or participated in a constitutional deprivation.
Wolf-Lillie v. Sonquist,
Sheik-Abdi likewise provides no legal support for his argument that Akers had a duty to prevent the police officers from turning a medical mission into a law enforcement situation by arresting Sheik-Abdi. The fact that Akers did not intend to file a criminal complaint or may even have thought the officers’ actions unreasonable is of no moment here because, as the district court noted, Akers had no authority to intervene. Acting on the information they received from Akers, the police independently determined that probable cause existed to arrest Sheik-Abdi for battery to his wife. Thus, even if the arrest had been unlawful, Akers would not have been liable as he did not participate in the decision to arrest.
Finally, in view of Sheik-Abdi’s erratic behavior, we will not second-guess the soundness of the paramedics’ decision to summon the police prior to (or instead of) offering Sheik-Abdi an opportunity to sign a release form indicating his desire not to be treated. Furthermore, we note that there is no allegation, either in the complaint or the record, that Sheik-Abdi ever received any medical treatment, either from the paramedics or from anyone at the hospital. Accordingly, even if the rationales of
Cruzan v. Director of Missouri Health Department,
C.
Finally, Sheik-Abdi claims that his constitutional rights were violated when Officer Brewer signed the complaint charging Sheik-Abdi with aggravated battery even though Brewer had no first-hand knowledge of the facts to which he attested. This claim also is without merit. In a suit under § 1983, the plaintiff must show a violation of the Constitution or laws of the United States, not just a violation of state law.
Gramenos,
III.
Where, as here, a defendant has pleaded a defense of qualified immunity, it is appropriate for courts to approach a summary judgment motion using a two-step analysis: (1) Does the alleged conduct set out a constitutional violation? and (2) Were the constitutional standards clearly established at the time in question?
See Siegert v. Gilley,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. McDonough District Hospital had adopted a policy with regard to the interaction between ambulance and law enforcement personnel. That policy provided in relevant part: "If an emotionally disturbed patient is encountered, ambulance personnel should not jeopardize their own safety. Utilize police personnel in these situations to assist with patient control."
. Sheik-Abdi does not appeal the grant of summary judgment on his summary punishment claim.
. In
Olson,
the Court stated that the Minnesota Supreme Court "applied essentially the correct standard in determining whether exigent circumstances existed” to make an arrest.
. The undisputed facts establish that one of the paramedics, Hagler, admitted McClellan and Wazny to the home. Though Zeinab Sheik-Abdi never invited the officers into the house, she also did nothing to indicate that she disapproved of their presence. In such circumstances, it may have been reasonable for the officers to believe that Zeinab had consented to their entry.
See Gerald M.
v.
Conneely,
. Because we find that the officers were lawfully within the home and had probable cause to arrest, we do not reach the officers' alternative arguments that probable cause also existed under the Illinois Domestic Violence Act, 750 ILCS 60/301-304.
. According to Sheik-Abdi,
Michigan v. Tyler,
. Of course, as Judge Easterbrook has stated, the police
"may discover, to their dismay, that when they do not conduct an investigation they cannot get a conviction_ But the fourth amendment does not define as probable cause whatever good police practice requires, or whatever proves necessary to prevail at trial.... Good police practice may require interviews, but the Constitution does not require police to follow the best recommended practices. There is a gap, often a wide one, between the wise and the compulsory. To collapse those two concepts is to put the judicial branch in general superintendence of the daily operation of government, which neither the fourth amendment nor any other part of the Constitution contemplates.”
Gramenos,
