OPINION
After her arrest and incarceration as a witness in a criminal proceeding, LaTasha Adams (“Adams”) brought suit in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against Karen Hanson (“Hanson”), an assistant prosecutor in Genesee County, Michigan, in her individual capacity. Hanson subpoenaed Adams to testify in state court during the preliminary examination of a criminal defendant. When Adams arrived at the state courthouse, she and Hanson spoke about her possible testimony, and after their discussions, Hanson informed the trial court that Adams was unwilling to testify. The court ordered Adams detained based on Hanson’s representations without providing Adams an opportunity to be heard or to post bond.
In her federal § 1983 suit, Adams claims that she was unlawfully detained for twelve days as a result of Hanson’s false and misleading representations to the state trial court regarding Adams’s availability as a witness. The district court granted Hanson’s motion for summary judgment on the grounds that Hanson is entitled to absolute immunity for conduct falling within her role as a prosecutor. Adams appeals, arguing that Hanson acted as a complaining witness or, in the alternative, fulfilled an administrative function. The American Civil Liberties Union Fund of Michigan filed an amicus brief arguing that absolute immunity should not protect prosecutors from suits filed by third-party witnesses.
When making statements at a preliminary examination about the availability of a witness, Hanson functioned as an advocate for the State of Michigan and performed acts intimately associated with the judicial process. Because she is absolutely immune from suit for her prosecutorial conduct, we AFFIRM the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Hanson.
I. BACKGROUND
Hanson, an assistant prosecutor, subpoenaed Adams to testify in a preliminary examination in a gang-related racketeering case in state court. One of the defendants charged in the case was Marquan Cager (“Cager”), the father of one of Adams’s children. In 2006, Adams had filed a domestic violence complaint against Cager and provided a statement to investigating officers describing Cager’s involvement in gang-related murders and drug-trafficking activities. When Cager was charged with crimes described in Adams’s statement, Hanson authorized a subpoena compelling Adams to appear in court at a preliminary
Law-enforcement officers served the subpoena on Adams at her home the morning she was set to appear at the preliminary examination. Adams, who was six- and-a-half-months pregnant, arrived at the courthouse that afternoon and met with law-enforcement personnel. She was then taken to meet Hanson, who provided her with a copy of a report that documented her statements about Cager’s criminal activity.
Hanson advised Adams to review the report. She also told Adams that she would return in about an hour and a half to bring Adams into the courtroom to testify in conformity with her prior statements. Adams responded that she did not want to testify and that she was under a doctor’s care due to a high-risk pregnancy. When Hanson returned, Adams repeated her refusal to testify. Adams informed Hanson that she was not going to testify in conformity with the report because she had not made the statements attributed to her and the statements were not true. 1
According to Adams, Hanson returned to the courtroom and advised the judge, off the record, that Adams would not testify in accordance with the report, and that she should be held in contempt. Based on the information provided by Hanson, the trial judge signed a mittimus directing that Adams be held in jail until further order of the court. After the judge signed the mittimus, two sheriffs deputies confronted Adams and asked her if she was going to testify. When she informed them that she was not going to testify, she was handcuffed and taken to the Genesee County jail.
Adams was incarcerated for twelve days, during which she was allegedly held in isolation for twenty-three hours a day. Before she was detained, Adams was never brought before the court and questioned about her willingness to testify or her ability to return to court to testify at a later date. She alleges that she was never given an opportunity to obtain counsel or post bond, and that she was never advised of the basis of her detention, of any right to be represented by counsel, or of any right to a hearing.
In the days following her arrest, Adams submitted a kite notifying the jail authorities that she was willing to testify. In the meantime, however, the preliminary examination had been continued. A week later, when proceedings resumed, Adams was brought into the courtroom to testify, at which point several attorneys for the defendants demanded an explanation for why she had been incarcerated. Hanson first explained that Adams was held for contempt of court, but after reviewing the mittimus ordering Adams’s arrest, she stated that Adams had been held, not for contempt, but as a material witness, as indicated on the order. Adams was released from custody after she completed her substantive testimony.
Adams claims that Hanson sought to secure her detention in order to coerce her into testifying, and that she was detained for contempt of court at Hanson’s suggestion. In Hanson’s account, the trial judge ordered Adams held as a material witness and directed Hanson and an officer from the sheriffs department to write out a mittimus to that effect. Adams also asserts that Hanson made several false and
Adams subsequently brought suit against Hanson in federal district court pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for violations of her constitutional rights under the Fourth, Fifth, and Fourteenth Amendments. Hanson filed a motion for summary judgment on the basis of absolute prosecutorial immunity which the district court granted on May 28, 2009. On July 22, 2009, the district court denied Adams’s motion for relief from the order of dismissal, construing it as a motion for reconsideration. Adams timely appealed from the district court’s opinion and order denying relief from the order of dismissal, and from the order granting Hanson’s motion for summary judgment.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Standard of Review
We review de novo a district court’s grant of summary judgment, construing the evidence and drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of the nonmoving party.
Ireland v. Tunis,
B. Absolute Immunity
1. Functional Test
The district court granted summary judgment on the grounds that Hanson is entitled to absolute immunity. “Whether a defendant is entitled to absolute or qualified immunity from liability under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 is a legal question that [we] review[ ] de novo.”
Moldowan v. City of Warren,
In
Imbler,
the Supreme Court extended absolute immunity to prosecutors sued for damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, holding that a prosecutor is entitled to absolute immunity when he acts “within the scope of his duties in initiating and pursuing a criminal prosecution.”
Our cases since
Imbler
have employed a “functional approach” to determine whether a prosecutor’s acts entitle her to absolute immunity.
Burns,
Nonetheless, because “[ajbsolute immunity is designed to free the
judicial process,”
not merely the prosecutor, “from the harassment and intimidation associated with litigation,” absolute immunity protects “only ... actions that are connected with the prosecutor’s role in judicial proceedings, not ... every litigation-inducing conduct.”
Id.
at 494,
In sum, “acts undertaken in direct preparation of judicial proceedings ... warrant absolute immunity, whereas other acts, such as the preliminary gathering of evidence that may ripen into a prosecution, are too attenuated to the judicial process to afford absolute protection.”
Ireland,
2. Prosecutorial Function
Because “[a]lmost any action by a prosecutor, including his or her direct participation in purely investigative activity, could be said to be in some way related to the ultimate decision whether to prosecute,” Bur
ns,
The case thus presents an issue of first impression in this circuit: whether a prosecutor is entitled to absolute immunity for her false and misleading statements to a trial court in the course of criminal proceedings about the availability of a witness. The Michigan ACLU as Amicus argues that, as a rule, absolute immunity should not apply to actions of a prosecutor with respect to a third-party witness. Under this view, actions of a prosecutor vis-a-vis a criminal defendant should be distinguished from actions vis-á-vis a third-party witness, and absolute immunity should not be extended to the latter because the historical and policy rationales for absolute immunity do not apply with equal force in the witness context.
Other circuits that have addressed the question have held that prosecutors are ordinarily entitled to absolute immunity for conduct falling within a prosecutorial function when they seek detention of a material witness pursuant to judicial order.
See Betts v. Richard,
We conclude that Hanson’s statements before the trial court at the preliminary examination regarding Adams’s availability as a witness fell within her role as an advocate for the State of Michigan and are therefore absolutely protected. The prosecutorial function includes initiating criminal proceedings, appearing before the court at a probable cause hearing or before a grand jury, seeking an arrest warrant, and preparing witnesses.
Irnbler,
It is especially instructive that, under Michigan law, it is the prosecutor’s particular, non-delegable duty to “make a diligent good-faith effort to find and produce” witnesses in criminal prosecutions.
People v. Dye,
Because Hanson’s actions fell within her prosecutorial role, she is entitled to absolute immunity even if her statements were false or misleading. As this court has recently emphasized, “prosecutors do not forfeit their absolute immunity when they knowingly make false statements while advocating before the court,”
Pittman v. Cuyahoga Cnty. Dep’t of Children & Family Servs.,
Hanson’s allegedly improper motive in seeking and securing Adams’s detention does not alter our conclusion that Hanson’s acts served a prosecutorial function. Suggesting an investigative purpose, Adams claims that Hanson sought her detention in order to coerce her into testifying in accordance with the 2006 statement. “As the line of absolute-immunity cases make clear, however, a prosecutor’s allegedly improper motive alone is not enough to defeat absolute immunity, so long as the general nature of his actions falls within the scope of his duties as an advocate for the state.”
Cady v. Arenac Cnty.,
Absolute immunity would be defeated if Hanson’s acts and omissions were instead administrative — i.e., if representing that Adams refused to testify without also securing her appearance in court served an administrative rather than prosecutorial function. We held in
Holloway v. Brush
Significantly, the Michigan statute assigns responsibility for material-witness protections to the court. The statute provides that, “[w]hen it appears to
a court
” that the appropriate conditions are met, then
“the court
shall require the witness to be brought before [it].” Mich. Comp. Laws Ann. § 767.35 (emphasis added). The responsibility is thereby placed with the court to provide a witness the opportunity to be heard and to assess itself the materiality of her testimony and the likelihood that she would fail to appear.
Id.
Because this judicial process was not followed in this case, Adams was not provided the opportunity to be heard or to furnish bail before the trial court ordered her detained. Although we remain seriously troubled by the abrogation of Adams’s procedural rights, Adams’s “experience illustrates the importance of vigilant exercise of this checking role by the judicial officer to whom the warrant application is presented,” not that prosecutors must be held accountable for judicial error,
al-Kidd,
Along the same lines, this case is readily distinguishable from
Odd v. Malone,
in which the Third Circuit characterized as administrative the defendant-prosecutors’ actions vis-á-vis detained material witnesses and denied absolute immunity.
3. Complaining Witness
Adams asks us to view Hanson’s acts differently: she claims that Hanson was acting as a complaining witness, not a prosecutor. At common law, witnesses testifying in court received absolute immunity, Bur
ns,
A complaining witness is not entitled to absolute immunity,
Malley v. Briggs,
Advocating before the trial court in order to procure witness testimony, as Hanson did, is more analogous to the application for a warrant that the Court held to be prosecutorial than the acts of a complaining witness. First, as described
supra,
Hanson’s conduct fell within her prosecutorial role. Second, there is no allegation that Hanson provided sworn testimony. Adams asserts that the distinction between a prosecutor’s unsworn representations and a witness’s sworn representations is a distinction without a difference. But the Supreme Court in
Kalina
found determinative that a prosecutor was testifying to facts
“under penalty of perjury
” or giving
“sworn testimony.” Id.
at 129, 131,
Indeed, except for her act in personally attesting to the truth of the averments in the certification, it seems equally clear that the preparation and filing of the [sworn affidavit] was part of theadvocate’s function as well. The critical question, however, is whether she was acting as a complaining witness rather than a lawyer when she executed the certification “[ujnder penalty of perjury.”
Id.
at 129,
A prosecutor’s acts in preparing and presenting to the court information in support of an arrest, and a witness’s acts in swearing to the truth of the facts supporting criminal charges, serve distinct and essential functions.
See Kalina,
4. Policy Considerations
Finally, in addition to the prosecutorial nature of Hanson’s actions, the policy justifications underlying prosecutorial immunity support absolute immunity in this case. To determine whether a function is protected by absolute immunity, the Supreme Court considers whether: “(1) there is a common law tradition of according immunity in similar situations; (2) denying immunity would subject the prosecutor to the chilling influence of vexatious lawsuits; and (3) there exist adequate checks on prosecutorial abuse other than individual suits against the prosecutor.”
Odd,
First, regarding the common law, we find support for prosecutorial immunity in the Court’s conclusion that “prosecutors ... were absolutely immune from damages liability at common law for making false or
Second, regarding vexatious litigation, “pretrial court appearances by the prosecutor in support of taking criminal action against a suspect,” which include the summoning of witnesses to a preliminary examination, “present a substantial likelihood of vexatious litigation that might have an untoward effect on the independence of the prosecutor.”
Id.
at 492,
Third, regarding checks on prosecutorial abuse, the judicial process is available as a check on prosecutorial actions, and these “safeguards ... tend to reduce the need for private damages actions as a means of controlling unconstitutional conduct.”
Butz v. Economou,
We recognize that witnesses are particularly vulnerable because they are “not entitled to the protections available to criminal defendants, including the appellate process,”
Odd,
III. CONCLUSION
When making statements at a preliminary examination about the availability of a witness, Hanson functioned as an advocate for the State of Michigan and performed actions intimately associated with the judicial process. Because she is absolutely immune from suit for her prosecutorial conduct, we AFFIRM the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Hanson.
Notes
. Adams described their ensuing exchange as "heated.'' Denying that her behavior toward Adams was confrontational, Hanson asserts that she gave Adams the option of testifying that her previous statements were not true, but Adams flatly refused to appear in court and testify under any circumstances. For purposes of summary judgment, however, Hanson stipulates to Adams's version of the facts.
. The Supreme Court recently declined to address whether the United States Attorney General’s conduct in relation to material witnesses was protected by absolute immunity. See infra n.4.
. Material-witness arrests in Michigan are governed by the Michigan material-witness statute, which outlines the process to be undertaken by a court ordering a material witness’s detention. The Michigan material-witness statute states: -
When it appears to a court of record that a person is a material witness in a criminal case pending in a court in the county and that there is a danger of the loss of testimony of the witness unless the witness furnishes bail or is committed if he or she fails to furnish bail, the court shall require the witness to be brought before the court. After giving the witness an opportunity to be heard, if it appears that the witness is a material witness and that there is a danger of the loss of his or her testimony unless the witness furnishes bail or is committed, the court may require the witness to enter into a recognizance with a surety in an amount to be determined by the court for the appearance of the witness at an examination or trial. If the witness fails to recognize, he or she shall be committed to jail by the court, until he or she does recognize or is discharged by order of the court.
Mich Comp. Laws Ann. § 767.35.
. Reviewing whether a material-witness arrest was reasonable, the Supreme Court recently held that the Fourth Amendment is not violated by a material-witness arrest made pursuant to an otherwise valid warrant simply because the arrest was made for an investigative purpose.
Ashcroft v. al-Kidd,
563 U.S. -,
. In its most recent pronouncement on absolute prosecutorial immunity, the Supreme Court held that a prosecutor is entitled to absolute immunity even when performing an "administrative activit[y]" if the act is done in the performance of an advocacy function.
Van de Kamp v. Goldstein,
In
Schneyder v. Smith,
Like the administrative acts in
Van de Kamp,
Hanson’s conduct before the state trial court, to the extent it can be characterized as administrative, was "directly connected with [her] basic trial advocacy duties,”
. It stands to reason that "the rights of a material witness, charged with no wrongdoing, to be brought before a magistrate certainly are at least equivalent to those of a person charged with a crime.”
Stone v. Holzberger,
No. 92-3675,
If the warrant requirement is adapted to the material-witness context, an application for a material-witness warrant under the federal material-witness statute "must establish
probable cause
to believe that (1) the witness’s testimony is material, and (2) it may become impracticable to secure the presence of the witness by subpoena.”
United States v. Awadallah,
The probable-cause standard may be inapplicable, however, because "[t]he typical arrest warrant is based on probable cause that the arrestee has
committed a crime,"
which is not the standard for the issuance of material-witness warrants.
al-Kidd,
. As the ACLU noted in its brief, Adams provided an affidavit to the district court from an attorney who met with Adams and who claimed to have left a message for Hanson the day after Adams was detained, informing her that Adams was willing to testify. The parties failed to mention, much less brief, this fact before the district court or on appeal, and there is therefore nothing in the record regarding whether Hanson received the voice-mail or passed it on to the proper authorities. As a result, we cannot speculate as to whether Hanson acted properly on this information or engaged in administrative oversight by failing to notify the trial court of Adams’s willingness to testify.
. Hanson argues that there is an additional way in which Adams's complaining-witness argument fails: because Adams was not arrested on criminal charges, Hanson could not have been a complaining witness. Hanson did not ‘'initiate!] or procure!] a criminal prosecution” against Adams; rather, she sought to detain Adams in the course of the criminal prosecution of another defendant.
Kalina,
It is not clear, however, that this distinction precludes Hanson from qualifying as a complaining witness. An individual who testifies in support of an arrest warrant is a complaining witness.
See Malley,
. In 2004, United States magistrate judges conducted 4882 material-witness hearings. Charles Doyle, Cong. Research Serv., RL 33077, Arrest and Detention of Material Witnesses 3 n.10 (2005), available at http://www. au.af.mil/au/awc/awcgate/crs/rl 33077.pdf. Detentions in the context of immigration proceedings make up the bulk of material-witness arrests. See Adam Liptak, For Post-9/11 Material Witness, It is a Terror of a Different Kind, N.Y. Times, Aug. 19, 2004, available at http://www.nytimes.com/2004/08/19/us/ threats-responses-detainees-for-post-9-11 - material-witness-it-terror-different.html?src= pm.
. See Carolyn B. Ramsey, In the Sweat Box: A Historical Perspective on the Detention of Material Witnesses, 6 Ohio St. J. Crim. L. 681 nn. 60 & 123 (2009) (discussing habeas relief from material-witness detention and witness-detention lawsuits against police departments); Stacey M. Studnicki & John P. Apol, Witness Detention and Intimidation: The History and Future of Material Witness Law, 76 St. John's L. Rev. 483, 499-502 (2002) (collecting cases reviewing the validity of material-witness warrants).
.Such a check was apparently available here. Although there is no information in the record regarding the resolution of the complaint, the State of Michigan’s Attorney Grievance Commission received a request for investigation of Hanson arising out of Adams’s detention, and Hanson filed an answer detailing her conduct in the case.
